Posts Tagged ‘Search Engine Marketing’

April 21st, 2009 by Stephanie Chan

TARGUSinfo Sponsored Workshop: The Secrets to Customer Acquisition – Data-Fueled Media & Lead Generation Strategies – Ad:tech 2009

MODERATOR:
David Helmreich, VP, Interactive Markets, TARGUSinfo

PANELISTS:
Jim Waltz, President, Traffic Marketplace
Leon Zemel, Senior VP, Analytics, [X+1]
Neil Kaplan, Senior VP, Business Development, Vantage Media
Zach Weinberg, Co-Founder and CEO, Invite Media

Drive the right ads to the right audience

High Quality Ad Network:

  • Infuse technology & deliver with relevance
  • Efficiency
  • Internal control over infrastructure
  • Transparency

Quality of leads from affiliate has degraded (increase in fraud)

Exchange 1.0 – pre-bid environment
Exchange 2.0 – agencies, advertisers, what to bid based on content

Critical for Selection of Partners for Advertisers:

  1. Trust
  2. Reach
  3. Relevance

April 21st, 2009 by Stephanie Chan

Sitecore Sponsored Workshop: Beyond the Landing Page–The 7 Habits of Maximizing Web Site Advertising Spend – Ad:tech 2009

SPEAKER:
Darren Guarnaccia, VP, Product Marketing, Sitecore

  1. Continuity of messaging throughout the process: aligning message to what customer expects
    • Bring customer back to why they started
  2. Segment & Balance user experiences with site goals
    • Build credibility with visitors & prospects
    • Example: Omni Hotel advertise around local attractions to align with what customers wants – FUN
  3. Deliver value back to your web visitors by waiting for the right moment
    • Lead scoring: scoring & waiting for visitor interactions (behavior)
    • Behavior: wait until they are ready based on their actions
    • User experience must win
    • Differentiating experience
    • Word of Mouth (WOM) Marketing
  4. Learn to Learn: listening to your segments & optimizing messaging
    • Scoring your content & actions
    • Testing & validating with plils & surveys
  5. Overcome objections & barriers using community content & engagement
    • A website is an active participant in moving prospects into the sales process: the 6th man of the sales team
    • A website helps/educates customer overcome the hurdles, objects, pain points
    • A website helps shorten the sales cycle
    • Customer look for: Affordability, Expertise, Location
  6. Get the conversation started: Long-Term customer value through engaging dialog
      Engagement in community content:

    • Customer Reviews
    • Company working out rough spots with clients publicly
    • Use to build trust & credibility
    • Use to help overcome objections
    • Social content based on relevance (provide free tips, recipes, ideas for users to use your product) to drive prospects deeper to your website
  7. Provide ongoing content & experience for which visitors hunger and return
    • Subscriptions
    • New content to bring back customers
    • Use ratings/reviews to determine what customers want
    • Creating long-term value overtime by re-engaging prospects

Tap the wisdom/behavior (the most popular stories/whitepaper/content) of the crowd as a filter.

February 27th, 2009 by Richard Lee

Introduction to SEO – Miva Merchant 2009

Introduction to SEO – Miva Merchant 2009
Speaker: Mark Simon, Miva Merchant

Conference Notes/Descriptions:

I. How Search Engines Rank Pages

  • Search Engine Rank Pages Not Websites
  • What the Search Engines evaluate (Ranking Factors)
  • Title
  • Description (keyword and selling tool)
  • Headline (Header tags, 6 tags, 1 to 6)
  • Body Text (Write for your customers, write to convert, then plug in keywords later)
  • Anchor Text (keyword vote for that page)
  • Links
  • File names
  • Keyword

II. Keyword Research

  • Target Markets & Demographics
  • Customer lingo – may not be what you think
  • Industry lingo – tribal speak
  • Number of Searches
  • Number of Competing Pages
  • Competitor Strength
  • Identifying Opportunity (lowest amount of competition for a keyword phrase vs. number of searches)
  • Keyword Tools

III. Competitive Analysis (find keywords, find links, etc.)

  • Getting into the Search Engines
  • Measure Success
  • SEO for the CEO

IV. Getting into the Search Engines

  • Links from other websites
  • Sitemaps – HTML and XML

V. Metrics – Measuring Success

  • PageRank doesn’t matter

What does matter:

  • Conversion Rates
  • Average value of visitors
  • Traffic Sources
  • Ranking for highly converting keywords
  • Inbounds links
  • Bounce rate

Q&A:

What is the difference between Indexing and Caching:
Indexing (google bot) = spider your pages and stores the data in their database
Caching = last version that google has saved

If some of my page isn’t indexed how do I get them in there (site:website.com):

  1. Sitemap
  2. Interlinking top pages (link from top popular internal pages)
  3. Social Bookmarking

Some tools and resources mentioned during the SEO session at Miva Merchant

  • SitemapPro.com
  • SEORecon.com
  • Linkscape Tool from SEOMoz.org
  • SEObook.com

February 10th, 2009 by Stephanie Chan

Boot Camp: Paid Search Fundamentals – SMX West 2009

Speakers/Panelists:

Mona Elesseily, Director of Marketing Strategy, Page Zero
Matt Van Wagner, President, Find Me Faster

Conference Notes/Description:

The basics of how to purchase ad placement, usually on a Cost-Per-Click (CPC) or Pay-Per-Click (PPC) basis, from major search engines including best practices.

Paid Search Flow Chart:

Campaign -> Ad Group(s) -> Keywords -> Ads -> Landing Pages
Note: Don’t forget the landing page

Ask.com:

Displays own ads as well as fill its extra space with Google Ads resulting in possible double display of your ads.

Additional Features:

  • Geographic Targeting
  • Time of Day, Day of Week
  • Demographic Targeting
    • MSN: Available but when used does not mean the ad is exclusive within the area. Those targeted sites will have the Bid Boost.
    • Google: Available but only within the Content Network.

Use Ad Targeting Preview Tool for testing preview of your ads so to not count as an impression and skew the metrics.

Keyword Tools:

  • www.compete.com
  • Wordtracker
  • www.spyfu.com

Tips for Ad Text:

  • Stick to 2 to 3 words keywords
  • Use 1 word keyword conservatively
  • Test phone numbers on Ads (phone numbers give a sense of authority)
  • Include keywords and Call to Actions (CTA)
  • Lead generation sites does well for Content Ads
  • People do not like acronyms
  • Filter clicks by targeting specific audience
  • Use appropriate tone

Test:

  1. Price
  2. Reassurance (official site or 24/7 phone support)
  3. Deals (offer ending soon)
    • Free Multivariate Testing Tool: www.adcomparator.com
    • At least 100 clicks for sufficient data
  4. Multivariate Testing:

    Buy Cycle:

    Different Ad Copy during beginning or end of buy cycle.

February 10th, 2009 by Richard Lee

The Dozen Most Common Search Marketing Mistakes That CMOs Make – SMX West 2009

Speakers/Panelists:
Keith Dieruf, Manager, Online Marketing, Ameriprise Financial
Jody Farmer, Vice President, Strategic Marketing, CreditCards.com
Jane Flint, Manager, Kaiser Permanente Internet Marketing Services
Brian Kaminski, EVP and Managing Director, iProspect San Francisco
Karen Weber, Vice President, eMarketing, Irwin Union Bank

Conference Notes/Description:

The 12 most common strategic mistakes that companies make in their SEO and paid search initiatives and gain insight into these critically important concepts surrounding search marketing and its role within the entire marketing mix.  Advice and perspective on these dozen critical mistakes, how to avoid them, and how understanding them can dramatically increase your search marketing results.

Mistake #1: Failing to Set Measurable Goals for Your Campaigns

Most CMO’s don’t set goals when it relates to Search Marketing.  When you do that, how can you:

  • Improve performance
  • Gauge success
  • Set baseline measurement
  • Able to flag things working vs. not working

Mistake #2:  Failing to Assign $ Values to Every “Conversion Action” Available on Your Site

Many actions help with the sales process.   Measuring key actions help measure the success as well as help you optimize.  Measuring actions such as a signup to RSS feed, newsletter, contact info form.   Assign a conversion value to areas that have a strong correlation to a sale.

Mistake #3: Assessing the Success of Search Marketing Using Solely a Direct Marketing Model

Many CMO’s and execs see the bottom line solely tied to the direct sale.  However, much of marketing helps or assists with maturing a user to the final sale of your product.

Yahoo & Comscore = 92% of of online traffic converted offline (on phone and in store)

Mistake #4: Treating SEO as a Project and Not an Ongoing Process

SEO is not “Set it and forget it”.  SEO is not a one time project.

One agency that tracked customers that went on their own with a “Set it and forget it” strategy, ended up losing 1/3 of page 1 ranking in 6 months.  Due to changes in algorithms, competitors, internal website changes, etc. It takes 1 year to make up for the 1 year you skip and then you are still 1 year behind the competitors.

SEO needs to be an ongoing process

Mistake #5:   Making a #1 Ranking as Your Most Important Objective, When It May Be Costing You Business

  • You don’t always have to rank #1
  • Ranking 3-5, or first page, in many instances will help attain your ROI
  • Your desire for position 1 may cost you your ROI
  • You have a finite amount of resources, so you need to allocate that time wisely

Mistake #6:  Focusing on “Big” Keywords and Forgetting the Long Tail

“Big” one keyword phrases like Car is more expensive than 2 or 3 word phrase keywords

Long Tail keywords are less expensive, convert better, capture customers further in the buying process, makes it easier for customers to find your product.

Buy Car  or  Car Loan vs. just the keyword Car

Last year 28% of keywords never been searched before
Learn now while the new words are less exp ($0.50 vs. $11 a click)

Mistake #7: Engaging in Paid or Natural SEM but Not BOTH

Having combined natural/organic search and paid search has a multiplier effect and synergistic effect  1+1 = 3.   Customers seeing you in both areas increase credibility in your brand.

Paid search also helps in help with test new keywords for meta tags and content with SEO

Mistake #8: Using Your Langauge, and Not that of Your Customers

You need to understand how your customers are searching versus how your company would want them to search

Fitness String vs. Jump Rope
Financial Advisor Managing Your Assets vs. Asset Manager
Rubbing compound vs. Scratch remover (3M)

Show how people are actually searching

Mistake #9: Optimizing Only Your Web Pages and Not Your Other Digital Assets

Some companies focus only on optimizing the website
You need to optimize Press Releases, Blogs, Social Marketing Areas, Video/YouTube, Reviews, etc.

Mistake #10:  Treating Your Search Marketing and Other Channels Separately, Instead of Integrating Them

Integration is key to have higher results as a total

TV = Create Demand
Search = Capture Demand
67% as a result of offline channel, 39% made a purchase

Ask dept to insert terms that you are targeting into their writing

Ask offline dept what words they are using that you might not be using

Search Insurance =  For TV Ads think about what words people might use to search on

Mistake #11: Failing to Bid on Terms for Which Your Site Ranks Highly Within the Organic Results

Reinforcing several of the earlier points, is that Bidding on terms will help build credibility and synergy within your marketing campaigns.
Test having Paid and Organic dual placements.

Organic Listings is great for Branding
PPC is great for Lead Generation, Direct Reponse Messaging, in addition to Branding (Not always about direct marketing)

52% = using the SE as their first step in the buying decision

Mistake #12: Bidding Solely on Branded Terms and Ignoring Non Branded Terms

Definitely don’t skip PPC for non branded terms, otherwise you are talking to people who already know you if you only bid on branded terms.
Other problems of only bidding on branded terms:  i.e Bidding on Laptop will bring in more customers than bidding on Dell Latitude Laptop harder for a company like HP.

Bonus Mistake:

Attributing Conversions to the Last Click, When There May Have Been Many Clicks

Attribute model, what’s helping you convert through out the customer funnel

Q&A:

How to Find What Keywords Customers are Searching On:

  • Website Log File
  • Internal Site Search
  • Paid Search Data
  • Content on Website
  • Keywords in Blog Comments

Feeds on people talking about your product on Twitter  (mine public information to be a partner)

Not good example:
Customer Focus Group  (not a good sample size for good keywords)

August 20th, 2008 by Ted Truong

SES SJ – 2008: Omniture – 5 Things No One Will Tell You About SEM

I attended the SES conference in San Jose. Here are key notes from the conference that you may find informative:

Summary: Omniture – 5 Things No One Will Tell You About SEM

1. Discussion on long tail keywords

  • Increasing search traffic for brand keywords and 1-2 keyword phrases. People are more trained on using the web to search from brands and for navigation
  • 3-4 long tail keyword phases are diminishing
  • Due to Google quality score, really long tail keywords are not getting the same high quality score (panel theory)

2. Discussion on content network

  • Search is people seeking for your services / Content is you seeking for that customer
  • 90% content are poor traffic
  • Break content network campaigns into new account so not to mix with search performance
  • Use different success metric for content vs. search

3. Broad match

  • Google is pushing Broad Match, Campaign Optimization, and YouTube/MySpace
  • Most of this stuff is a joke / No solid return at this time
  • Depend on client

4. Stay focuse

  • Focus on the Search Engines and campaigns that are bring in the most return
  • Before branching out to new search engines, campaigns, or doing many long tail keywords – evaluate the performance return. The time needed to optimize these additional campaigns may not be worth the value returned.
  • Optimize what is working until you can not anymore