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Archive for the ‘Guest Articles’ Category

The Emerging Impact of Direct Digital Marketing

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

Josh Gordon, Director of Marketing at Knotice, discusses the importance of including a direct digital marketing strategy when developing a marketing plan.

The fragmentation of the marketing software provider landscape is well documented. As the number of digital capabilities and channels marketers have access to has increased over the past 15 years (a good thing), the provider landscape has become a jumbled mess of specialist providers (a bad thing). Marketers are forced to engage one solution provider for email, another for website improvements, another for mobile, yet another for data, and the list grows with each new channel or touch point. What consumers both crave and respond to – relevant communications – marketers are unable to coordinate across multiple channels and deliver… unless they are willing to take on the entire provider landscape and the complexity and expense that come along with it. 

What marketers need is a software partner and marketing approach capable of multi-channel campaign execution, built on a foundation of data.

Enter direct digital marketing. As defined by the American Marketing Association, direct digital marketing is, “a digital marketing method that provides relevant marketing communications that are addressable to a specific individual with an email address, a mobile phone number or a Web browser cookie. Traditional direct marketing uses an individual’s postal address. With the evolution of direct marketing to direct digital marketing, addressability comes in the form of three primary digital channels.”

Regardless of industry concentration, 2009 was a significant year for the growth and adoption of direct digital marketing.

The hospitality industry has used direct digital marketing to orchestrate easy online room upgrades during the booking process, to personalize a data-driven email program designed to educate and up-sell guests prior to their arrival, and to begin to unlock the promise of mobile with express check in and checkout and relevant text messages about the property during a stay.

The restaurant industry is using direct digital marketing, especially mobile marketing, to design customer friendly mobile programs and drive store foot traffic in real-time with incentives designed to boost sales volume immediately, not in a few days.

Retailers are using direct digital marketing to completely overhaul product launches, increasing sales by 25 percent. Mobile marketing is becoming increasingly popular within retail circles as well, either as an enhancement to a traditional campaign or to drive deeper engagement and improve the consumer experience.

The exciting developments across the entire marketing community in 2009 sets the stage for an exciting 2010. Two elements of direct digital marketing will see the most press and adoption in 2010.

First, direct digital marketing is unique because the content execution through the email, Web, and mobile channels takes place in the same software where the data is stored. The direct digital marketing data martbetter known as a universal profile management system – uses a Web service API to store known customer information like past purchase data and unique customer preferences AND capture behavioral information like keyword search activity and click path. The power of one database having so much information unlocks myriad segmentation possibilities and will be a highly sought after arrow in the marketing quiver.

 The second element of direct digital marketing that will see growth in 2010 is onsite targeting.  E-Commerce managers, for example, are eager to make improvements to the targeting and personalization of the content on their websites, but may not have the modern tools capable of helping them reach goals, or the resources to get them. Onsite targeting offers a simple approach to improving the relevance and personalization of content on a website without the cost of replatforming a website.

The ideal scenario of digital consumer engagement only seems elusive. Aligning the primary direct digital marketing channels is now not only a “can,” it is a must. To move beyond survival goals in 2010, the development of a direct digital marketing strategy must be the cornerstone of any marketing plan.

About the author: Josh Gordon is the Editor-in-Chief of the popular direct digital marketing blog The Lunch Pail and Director of Marketing at Knotice, a direct digital marketing solutions company. Contact Gordon at jgordon@knotice.com.

Keyword Research & Refinement in 3 Easy Steps

Tuesday, December 15th, 2009

Brad Geddes of bgTheory discusses the importance of constant research and refinement of your keyword list to guarantee you are reaching the correct audience.

Keyword research is the lifeblood of PPC advertising. If you do not have a matched keyword in your account, you ad does not show. While this sounds simple, this statistic from Google may amaze you:

20% of the queries Google receives each day are ones we haven’t seen in at least 90 days

There is no way to ever find every keyword. There are roughly 300 million searches on Google a day. That means approximately 60 million search queries conducted on Google every day have not been conducted in the last three month.

Continuous research and refinement of your keyword lists are necessary to reach your potential customers. You should not just be finding new keywords, but also removing underperforming keywords so that you are not paying for clicks that do not convert.

There are three steps to building & maintaining keyword lists for your PPC campaigns:

  • Finding keywords
  • Grouping keywords
  • Refining keywords

Finding Keywords

The first step to keyword research is to find new keywords. The simplest, free, tool to use is the AdWords Keyword Tool.  The first use of this tool is to input words or phrases and Google will suggest related keywords. The real power from this tool is shown when you use the second option, website content. You can input a URL and Google will crawl the page and suggest keywords based upon that page’s content.

While you should start by having Google crawl and suggest keywords from your landing pages, this tool does not restrict you to only using your own domain. There are many excellent sites you can start examining around the web with this tool. Always keep this tool in mind. Whenever you are on a site that discusses your products or services, input the URL into the keyword tool to see if you can find new relevant keywords.

Use this tool to first create a list of your keywords. Once you have a list, it is time to organize the lists into ad groups.

Grouping Keywords

All the keywords in an ad group should be closely related. The ad copy you use for that ad group should describe every keyword. If it does not, the keyword needs to be moved to a new ad group. While this type of grouping is a good place to start; you also need to understand the commercial intent of the word to determine the appropriate ad copy and landing page.

The more commercial a word is, the most likely the searcher wishes to conduct a transaction online. The ad copy and landing pages for highly commercial keywords should be focused around getting the user to conduct an immediate action.

Non-commercial words are generally informational searches. That does not mean these keywords cannot be monetized. The searcher needs to know additional information about a product or service before they can continue through the buying cycle to complete a transaction. The ad copy and landing pages should be focused first on giving information, and once that information is given, then move the searcher into the action focused sections of your website.

Microsoft has an excellent suite of tools called Microsoft adCenter Labs. One of the tools is named Detecting Online Commercial Intent. Input your higher search volume words and higher CPC keywords into this tool to determine how commercial the word is so that you can determine the type of ad copy and landing pages are necessary to engage the searcher based upon their buying cycle stage.

Refining Keywords

When you use phrase or broad matched keywords, you really do not know what the searcher actually searched for that triggered your ad to be displayed. You have some idea based upon the initial keywords you choose, but it is important to note that broad match words will never convert higher than exact match words. Therefore, you need to find the actual search queries so you can decide if you want your ad to show for those keyword variations.

To find out this information in AdWords, use the Search Query Report. This report will show what actually searched for that caused your ad to be displayed. If you use AdWords Conversion Tracking, you will also see the conversion metrics for these keyword variations. When you see keywords that are not in your account and are converting, add them as keywords so you can control the bid price and display. When a keyword is not converting, then add it as a negative keyword so you ad is not displayed for non-converting searches.

By using a three step process of finding, grouping, and then refining your keywords you will be able to create and manage robust keyword lists that reach consumers who turn into customers.

Brad Geddes is the Founder of bgTheory, a company dedicated to PPC education & training; a regular blogger, twitterer, presenter for AdWords Seminars, and a frequent conference speaker.

Keyword Research Tips- Why Keywords Are The Essential Element Of Internet Marketing & How To Find The Right Ones

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

Heather Lutze, owner of Findability Group, discusses the importance of keywords and how to find the correct ones.

Keyword research is an important first step for any Internet Marketing campaign. Everything about search engine marketing revolves around your website being “Findable” online. Of course, the necessary first question any entrepreneur looking to take search engine marketing on is – Findable where? If you are a pet retailer based in Boise, you obviously don’t want to have your website show up when people are searching for televisions in Hawaii. Essentially, you do not want to be “Findable” everywhere- you just want to be Findable everywhere your customers are searching on the Internet.

This is where the importance of keywords comes in. A keyword is any word or series of words (also known as keyphrases) entered into a search box on a search engine. Keywords are the starting point for every prospect or customer when performing a search or making a purchase online. They are how your customers navigate the search process and how the search engines deliver results pages to searchers.

For this reason, I have developed this blog of 3 keyword research tips that anyone trying to figure out what their best keywords are should know.

Keyword Research Tips- Tip #1: Use a tool- and by the way it’s FREE. One of the best keyword research tools available is completely free- the Google external keyword tool. Obviously this tool only measures Google traffic, but as Google makes up roughly 80% of the search market, it’s obviously a statistically significant portion of the population. You can find this tool at https://adwords.google.com/select/KeywordToolExternal. Before you look to invest hundreds of dollars in a keyword tool, take a look at Google’s tool- it provides all the bare essential data you need to find your keywords.

Keyword Research Tips- Tip # 2: Bigger is Not Necessarily Better- When selecting your best keyword, you will see keywords getting millions of searches per month. Many first-time marketers fall into the trap of competing for high level words like “pet” or “shop.” This is why Google gives the “Advertising Competition” graph in the first column. The more that bar is filled in, the more difficult and expensive it will be to rank for that keyword. Try to find keywords that have some search volume, but much lower levels of competition- avoid keywords with totally green competition bars!

Keyword Research Tips- Tip # 3: Take advantage of Targeting- One of the most valuable elements of search engine marketing is the amazing targeting potential at work. Just think- you can target someone who (1) self identifies as a member of your target audience and (2) is actively interested in your product at that time. When conducting keyword research, pay attention to the keyword tails and what they are saying about that potential customer. “Cheap dogs for sale in Boise” is a lot different target customer than someone searching for “Pure Bread German Sheppard Puppies for Sale in Boise” – one customer wants a low price and the other wants high-quality. Select keywords based on your competitive advantage in the market.

I hope these keyword research tips help you along your path to finding your keywords and getting found online. Good luck and I will see you at the top!

Visit www.FindabilityGroup.com for more information on our Internet Marketing firm.

7 Characteristics of Highly Effective Twitter Pages

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009

Donna Maria Coles Johnson, Founder and CEO of the Indie Beauty Network, discusses the seven characteristics of highly effective Twitter pages.

Since I’ve been on Twitter for a little over a year now, I sometimes forget how confusing and overwhelming it can be to be just starting out. A few days ago, I posted an article about how to coordinate numerous social networking activities. Today, I want to share some of the key elements of a Twitter page that is professional and communicates messages effectively and efficiently.

This article is aimed at small business leaders and people who are clearly using Twitter as a marketing tool. As you consider these 7 characteristics, please don’t lose sight of the fact that, no matter how you use your Twitter page, it should be a reflection of your unique personality and passions. In other words, don’t lose your individuality in a sea of suggestions and recommendations from me or anyone else. Above all, be your authentic self. Remember: you are the cake. Twitter is just icing.

  1. Highly Effective Twitter Pages Contain Clear Images Of You. A few weeks ago, I communicated with a fellow business owner at someone else’s blog. I did not know the person personally, but when I discovered that the person was on Twitter, I Tweeted the blog post we commented on, and referenced how the comments we shared reflected our agreement on a particular topic.In my Tweet, I referred to the person as “she,” because the name at the blog comment and on Twitter sounded female to me. That turned out to be an incorrect assumption on my part and I apologized. For this and other reasons having to do with portraying a professional image for your business, it’s always best to use your photograph as your avatar.

    Some people use caricatures that clearly reflect what they look like. Those are fun but not as professional as your genuine mug shot (and I see lots of people abandoning them for real photos).

    People want to do business with other people, not a logo or a picture of whatever it is that’s for sale. And they certainly don’t want to do business with the ugly brown and blue Twitter default thingy. Your smile and the personality that shines through in a photo is far more appealing.

  2. Highly Effective Twitter Pages Contain Your Brand Name(s) and/or Your Given Name. These days, it’s not unusual for one person to use a given name and more than one brand for business purposes. Since you never know for sure how someone may find you if they are looking, it’s a good idea to reserve all of the names you use on Twitter. In this way, you make it easy for people to find and do business with you.For example, I Tweet at IndieBusiness, but I reserved DonnaMaria as well, since many people look for me using that name. To prevent confusion, note that I set up a Tweet at DonnaMaria to refer people from that page to IndieBusiness.

    You will have to decide whether you Tweet from one or more of the names you reserve (and there are some inherent inefficiencies in Tweeting from more than one), but whatever you decide, make it easy for people to find you by being present at those URLs where you know your customers and other stakeholders may use to search for you.

  3. Highly Effective Twitter Pages Are Well Maintained and Professional.Your Twitter page is just like any other website you maintain. If you want it to reflect positively on you and your small business, it must be professional and well maintained, just like you and your small business.

    This means that your Twitter page should contain coherent Tweets and a clear photo of you. I also believe (and some disagree) that each Tweet should be able to stand on its own. No one should come to your Twitter page and be confused or perplexed about what you are all about.

    Example: I recently received an email from the publicist for an author who wanted to be a guest on the Indie Business Radio Show. The author’s Twitter page was a string of automated ping.fm blurbs, many of them containing broken HTML code. Because I like to provide my listeners with guest who are knowledgeable about how to use technology to maximize business success, I could not invite this author to be a guest on the show until the Twitter page was cleaned up.

  4. Highly Effective Twitter Pages Contain A Balance Of Conversational and Individual Tweets. Twitter is about conversation, but as I mentioned above, that doesn’t mean your Twitter page should be a stream of one-word answers. “@___ love that!” or “@___ good job!” is OK now and then, but consider that those Tweets mean nothing to the people who are following you. They also mean nothing to the people who will visit your Twitter page long enough to decide whether or not to follow (or unfollow) you in the first place.I know it takes longer to Tweet, “@____ Great job on getting the new job at Avon,” than it does to Tweet “@___ good job!,” but one Tweet is obviously a better reflection on you and your business than the other. It’s worth a few extra seconds per Tweet to make your business look good, don’t you think?

    In addition to these kinds of conversational Tweets, it’s also great to include a balance of standalone Tweets that point to an informative article at your blog, a fun video, an interesting news story, links to things you are learning how to do, links to other people’s Twitter pages, etc. The list is endless.

    Integrating standalone Tweets with conversational ones reflects a well rounded human being who has something to say and people to say it to.

  5. Highly Effective Twitter Pages Include Multi-Media. People love pictures and videos. Pictures of rainbows after storms. Videos of kids doing cute things. Pictures of speakers at conferences. Pictures of new products. Pictures of people enjoying new products. Pictures of farmer’s markets. Pictures of the decadent chocolate cake you are eating. Pictures. Videos. Pictures.Put some color and movement at your Twitter page as frequently as you can. It’s spontaneous and reflects your personality in ways that words just cannot. Here are some suggested image sharing links: YFrog, Tweetphoto, Twitpic, Flickr, YouTube and Flixwagon.
  6. Highly Effective Twitter Pages Are Shared. It’s a good idea to put your Twitter page link in as many places as you can so as many people as possible can find you on Twitter. Email signature lines, email newsletters, blogs (and also in blog posts), business cards and brochures, product labels, e-commerce sites, etc. (And see the photo at the top of this post for another great example of what I mean.)If you’re on Twitter, your Twitter page cannot work for you unless you tell people where in the world it is. No piece of marketing material should be without your Twitter URL. My friend JoAnn Hines, the Packaging Diva, has an interesting post on this topic at her blog.
  7. Highly Effective Twitter Pages Have Backgrounds That Reflect A Clean and Professional Image. When someone lands on your Twitter page, they should get a snapshot of you as a professional business owner. Use an attractive background graphic to make sure this happens.Some people, like Kelley Maddison, use product photos as a background. Shelley McNamara of System Bath does this too. Others, like Jamyla Bennu at Oyin Handmade, use a corporate logo. Others, like Debbie Weil, use a recent picture that is personally meaningful to her. Still others, like Ron Hudson, use a basic yet informative design with contact options so visitors can easily contact them using the method that suits them best. Each of these examples is a clear, professional and fun reflection of who the Tweeter is.

It’s pretty clear that there are no hard and fast rules to using Twitter as professional networking tool, but I think incorporating these 7 characteristics into your Twitter page will help make it as effective as possible for your small business.

Question: Do you have things at your Twitter page that I left out? What other things can you add to the list?

Don’t Battle the Marketing Democracy – Embrace It

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009

Chris Marriott, Vice President, Global Digital Agency Services for Acxiom discusses how to win elections in the new Marketing Democracy.

If you need remember one single fact in regards to your marketing, it is this:  In general, consumers trust each other more than they trust you.  They even trust someone they have never met more than they trust you.   Now combine that unsettling thought with the idea that these very same consumer often choose to remain “unaware” of anything you might want to say to them until they decide to inform themselves.   In other words your marketing is a faucet and they have their hands on the spigot.  OK, now you can begin to understand the challenges facing marketers these days.  I call this “The Marketing Democracy”.  And you better say “hello” to it!  Because it isn’t going away.  And you don’t want to fight it, you need to join it.  In doing so you stand a better chance of winning elections in this new world.

 I can’t go through everything you need to do to succeed in this new world in one blog post, but I can give you the three most important components of election success.  I call this, the “Groundhog Day” approach to marketing (named after the Bill Murray movie).  The first is to recognize your customers across channels and to remember those interactions in the future.   While a lack of memory and recognition can be very funny in a movie, it isn’t funny to the people who are your customers, and it can be very unprofitable to you. 

 The second key to election success is to learn from every interaction you have, and to fuse that learning into the medium of your next interaction.  In doing so, you can increase the probability of a positive outcome.   You can use this learning to understand & predict things like:

  • Explicit & inferred preferences
  • Wants & needs
  • Motivations & attitudes
  • Social influence circle
  • Cross-channel behavior

The third key to success is the ability to fuse this insight (and your ability to recognize the consumer) into the medium itself.  You want to personalize every interaction with the consumer, in the channel they prefer, and with an offer based on past behavior, future interests, and other people “like me”.

 In closing, let’s take a look at it from the voters’ perspective:  You want my attention?  My loyalty?  Then know me & be relevant!  I expect you to:

  1. Build strategies around me
  2. Find more people like me
  3. Know where I’ll be seeing you
  4. Whenever & wherever I see you, recognize me & treat me like an old friend
  5. Know what I might – & might not – be interested in at that moment

 Sounds like a tall order, right?  Well the good news is that my company, Acxiom, specializes in providing clients with the tools, insight, advice, people and campaign platform to win elections in the new Marketing Democracy.   We can help you win your elections, have happier customers, and much great ROI.

 Christopher S. MarriottVP, Global Managing Director 
Acxiom Digital Agency Services
www.acxiom.com

5 Common Mistakes With Search Marketing Campaigns and How to Fix Them

Wednesday, September 16th, 2009

Richard Stokes, Founder, President, and Chief Gooroo of AdGooroo explains common mistakes people make in search marketing campaigns and what you can do to fix them.

There are over 850,000 companies advertising their goods and services on the search engines this month (September, 2009) yet only a handful truly excel at it. At AdGooroo, we monitor virtually every advertiser in the world and see some common mistakes. Here are the top five which can stop your campaign dead in its tracks!

Mistake #1: Failing to Track Your Visitors

Pretend for a moment that instead of promoting your business over the web, you were to take a more traditional approach such as television advertising. You might be prepared to spend upwards of a quarter million dollars just for production, to be followed by potentially millions of dollars of national media buys.

With so much at stake, it seems unlikely that you would simply write a check and forget about it. Not by a long shot. I bet that you’d be watching the sales figures like a hawk to see if your campaign was bringing customers in. And if it didn’t perform, you’d cut your losses quickly (and probably fire your marketing manager.)

Most of our businesses will never grow to the scale where we can afford big-ticket television buys. Fortunately, internet advertising now gives us a way to purchase smaller, more reasonably priced blocks of traffic.

The downside of this is that these less expensive campaigns tend to fall off the radar of most managers and entrepreneurs. There is a false sense of security that comes from spending “only” $500 a month or so on search. We tell ourselves, “Maybe it will come in, maybe it won’t,” or “Let’s just start it and see what happens.”

This is nothing more than a shortcut to failure and I don’t want you to fall into that trap. So please take this firm, but friendly, piece of advice:

If you don’t track your campaign… you will lose. Period.

If you blow off the numbers behind your business, your marketing will be mediocre because it will be built on opinion and guesswork.

Guesses and opinions are the enemy of good marketing. If you let the numbers tell you the truth, you’ll make your website better. You’ll make your advertising better. Your sales will end up 5x, 10x, even 100x over where you started.

Mistake #2: Trying to Save a Bad Website with PPC Advertising

Hands down, the surest way to improve your PPC results is to improve the efficiency at which your website converts visitors into buyers.

Too many marketers hope that adding an AdWords campaign will redeem a low-performing website or product. If that doesn’t fix their business, they compound their error by raising their bids. They make the same mistake that many “dot com” companies made during the late ‘90s; they pour money into a losing business in a mistaken attempt to “grow to profitability”.

To do it right, you have to accept pay-per-click advertising for what it is: a way to multiply your existing business. If you add PPC to a bad business, you’ll simply lose money faster.
On the other hand, if you add PPC to a good business, you will make more money… if you do it right.

A proven technique for improving the efficiency of your online business is through website optimization. Website optimization is the art and science of enhancing the user experience of a website with the goal of converting visitors into customers.

There are several good books on the subject. One I recommend is Tim Ash’s book, “Landing Page Optimization.” Tim’s book is quite in-depth, so I’ve also written an extensive treatment of the subject aimed at time-pressed website managers in my upcoming book, “The Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising” (Entrepreneur Press, February 2010.)

Mistake #3: Targeting Too Few Keywords

In both organic and paid search marketing, keywords are the bait that lures prospective customers to your Web site.

People will find your site based on the keywords where your ads appear. For this reason alone, it’s important to expand your campaign with as many relevant terms as possible. Yet according to Marketing Sherpa, the average B2B (business-to-business) advertiser only bids on fifty terms. This is not a recipe for success!

Keyword selection may not be the most important success factor for paid search, but it’s certainly in the top five. The time you spend perfecting your keyword list will dramatically improve the potential results of your pay-per-click advertising campaign.

There are many good tools for this. Some are free, some are not. In the free category are the Google AdWords keyword suggestion tool. In the paid category are WordTracker and AdGooroo. Each of these tools generate keyword suggestions in different ways and the resulting lists are very distinct from one another, so you should try to use several tools to get the best coverage possible.

Mistake #4: Gladiator Bidding

Gladiator bidding refers to the practice some marketers have of trying to buy the top spots at any cost and without regard to ad quality. This is often the mentality at large corporations who are long on dollars and short on search expertise.

What ends up happening in these cases is that the advertiser succeeds at capturing the top side ad placement and pushes other, higher-quality advertisers further down the page. However, their low quality score fails to secure them the coveted premium ad spot (above the organic results) and it ensures they will pay a price close to their maximum bid.

I cover the math and provide some in-depth examples of this in my book, but the takeaway here is that Gladiator bidders pay a 48% premium over the expected CPC price. Yes, you can buy that #1 spot, but you will pay dearly for it.

Mistake #5: Ignoring the competition

Gone are the days when you could run your pay-per-click campaigns in a silo. The search engines’ increasing focus on relevance as well as high demand for ad placement means that advertisers are judged against one another to determine which ads will be shown and which will not.

If you want to take a bigger bite of the apple than your competitors, you have to keep close tabs on them. This practice is known as Search Engine Intelligence (or SEI for short).

At a tactical level, you need to know when competitors are making improvements to their quality score and bids. As they succeed in doing so, your relative advantage to them will be diminished. Having even one competitor close the gap can put the hurt on your campaign. Having a few do it can be catastrophic. This is the main reason why campaigns which are left to their own devices invariably decline after a few months.

The price you pay for your ads is determined in no small part by your competitors’ aggressiveness and the ratio of your optimization efforts to theirs. Your quality score relative to other advertisers in your industry also determines the placement of your ads and the amount of traffic you’ll receive from paid search. And finally, it also plays a huge role in determining how much of the available search traffic your ads will be exposed to (coverage.)

Another important tactical benefit of watching your competitors is that it allows you to defend against such tactics as bid jamming, which can result in dramatic drops in impressions and clickthrough rates, or even result in your being banned from valuable keywords altogether.

Paying attention to competitors’ paid search efforts can pay off strategically as well. Because PPC is so measurable, many companies test new products, features, and services on the search engines prior to widespread launch. You can get advance notice of these changes if you’re watchful.

You can also use paid search to peek inside of your competitors’ business models. If a competitor launches a new pricing model or brand while aggressively increasing CPCs, keep a close eye on them for awhile. If they later drop CPCs and/or pull the model, you’ve found something which didn’t work. Our competitors have saved us countless times at AdGooroo from launching features which the market truly didn’t want.

This wraps it up for our discussion on common mistakes. There are others of course, but most search advertisers would be well served by simply focusing on these basic rules. Good luck in your online marketing efforts!

About the author: Richard Stokes is a long-time internet marketer over 15 years experience in technology and advertising management. He founded AdGooroo, a leading search intelligence company, in 2004. He was previously a technology executive at Publicis Groupe/Leo Burnett. He has a BS in Computer Engineering from the University of Illinois and an MBA in Entrepreneurship and Technology Management from the Kellogg Graduate School of Management at Northwestern University. Richard is a regular speaker on search marketing topics, is a certified expert in both email marketing and conversion optimization, and is the author of “Mastering Search Advertising – How the Top 3% of Search Advertisers Dominate Google AdWords”.

What Every CEO Should Know About Marketing on the Web

Wednesday, September 9th, 2009

Bill Kisse explains the importance of using relevant search terms when optimizing your index pages.

I didn’t start out with the intention of spending hours learning all about search engine marketing to help promote my business but I’m glad I did.

Internet search results have been good to me and my efforts have paid handsomely for the many hours that I just worked on “good faith” that the Search Engine Gods would recognize our company and the services we provide.

What’s the first thing you (or just about everyone I know) do when you need information?

You “Google it” or look it up on the web.

Why?  I began to get the idea that the Internet was the future of advertising, well the future is here and it pays to learn what benefit it can bring to your business.

What is the purpose of a well-designed B2B website?

-       An online brochure or catalog describing our business and the benefits of doing business with us

-       Something that adds “credibility” to our business (i.e. we aren’t just a home-based business, we actually have employees and a business presence

-       A place for prospects to learn about how we can help them with a product or a service to solve a problem

-       A place for existing customers to learn about our new products or services to help them fill a need

Is this today’s model of why we have an Internet presence?

Of course not!

Websites today have a much more valuable purpose and to make this value stand-out among our many competitors we must “search well” by having a commanding presence in search engine results.

It’s no secret that if you’re not in the top 10 of search results – in many cases the top one or two – you are losing many business opportunities.

Why?

Because the Internet is how people or the average consumer or business do research.

And research we do – hundreds of times per week.

So people actually FIND you on the web, what will you ask them to do?

A Call to Action!

Make it easy for prospects to contact you or fill out an online form that has only a few but relevant questions that help the prospect think about he really needs.

This will give you sufficient information on the prospect so that when YOU CONTACT HIM you will be in a position to ask the right questions and lead him on to the sale.

Note that this is not the ONLY way to begin the sales process as there are many e-commerce sites on the web, but most of us still have to communicate with our prospects via email or telephone as the next step of the sales process.

OK, all the detail – how do I actually DO all of this?

The first thing to remember is that your business name or website name MAY NOT have anything to do with your business!

Say you are an HVAC contractor and your business name is “The Apple Group” with a website address of www.theapplegroup.com.

Nice name – it may even be your LAST name, but it may be hard for people to find you.

Do you only have ONE chance to be indexed by the search engines?

Of course not!

But…if you expect to have a wonderfully-optimized index page that has all relevant search terms then you should be aware this is NOT the ideal way to be found with “organic” search.

Yes, you can spend a lot of money with paid advertising and paid advertising should be a part of your marketing budget, but I’ve discovered something more important.

It’s not the website that counts, it’s the exposure you can get with relevant wording of your search results.

Remember that a website is NOT just a static index page, but a series of pages that address specific questions or services/products that you have to offer your prospects.

Optimize your index page of course, but don’t forget that you can create literally hundreds of “specialized index pages” (pages that may look similar to your index page but each addressing difference prospect needs or interests).

You should also consider web names that SAY WHAT YOU DO.

Which web pages would have a greater possibility of showing up on the first page of Google results for an HVAC service company?

-       www.theapplegroup.com

-       www.HVAC-Services-Memphis.com

-       www.Heating-Cooling-Services.com

-       www.Reliable-Furnace-Repair.com

-       www.Same-Day-HVAC-Service.com

There’s a good chance that a prospect living in Memphis, TN may enter a search term of “HVAC Services in Memphis” as his search string.

And…all things being equal, Google will reward you with a prospect who can easily find you and will immediately know what you do!

Of course this is only a very small aspect of Internet search marketing, but at least considers the value of a web address that is part of the most common search term(s) for your service or product.

Bill Kisse is the CEO of Electronic Systems Services, one of the largest national independent point-of-sale computer equipment service organizations serving the fast food and quick-service restaurant industries.

Electronic Marketing – Secrets the Techies Don’t Tell You

Tuesday, September 8th, 2009

Bob Negen, Founder of WhizBang! Training, explains how electronic marketing can help to market to existing customers and to your hottest prospects.

Let me just get straight to the point: electronic marketing is the perfect marketing tool retailers. 

It is an incredibly cost effective way to increase customer loyalty, increase the number of transactions you get from each of your customers and it’s an effective way to get new customers.

The Truth about Web Sites

Regardless of what the techies and web gurus say, as a small business your web site isn’t going to bring you vast hoards of NEW customers, let you compete with the “big boys” in your industries, or make you rich. 

It’s just not true.

What your website and your social media sites can and should do, however, is be a wonderful tool to market to your existing customers and hottest prospects. 

More and more customers are going to go online to find out your store hours, if you’re open on Sunday, if you carry a brand of products they are looking for, what’s new at the store this month, or even what your phone number is!

Every business should have at least a “brochure” type website with 3-7 pages about their business.  It’s just good customer service. If you’re not making it easy to shop with you, your customers will eventually go elsewhere.

Which brings us to the very interesting subject of how to get people to visit your site in the first place…

The “If You Build It, They Will Come” Myth – Revisited

Just like opening the doors to your store and doing little marketing, merely creating a website, or starting a Facebook fan page and doing nothing to entice people in will get you very few visitors.

There are lots of search engine optimization strategies and fancy marketing maneuvers you can do to drive online traffic to you, but these are not usually tactics that are feasible for small business owners.

The best, easiest, most sure-fire way to get your customers to visit your site is to use e-mail marketing, and if you have the time, combine it with an active presence on a social networking site like Facebook or Twitter.

This e-marketing strategy is so important, easy, and inexpensive that I think everyone ought to be doing it!

Electronic marketing is quite simply the cheapest, easiest, and fastest way to stay in touch with your customers.   Here’s why…

It’s Cheap

Almost any message you decide to send to your customers via snail mail can also be sent via e-mail and through social media sites – and you avoid the printing, materials and postage costs!  It’s definitely a big savings.

It’s Easy

Sending an e-mail and posting to social media sites is easier than sending regular mail, too.  You don’t have all the hassle of designing, printing, stuffing, stamping, and hauling. All you do is write your message and click send!

It’s Fast

No more waiting around for the postman to deliver your letter… When you send it, it gets there immediately!  This is great if you have time sensitive offers, like a special price only good through the end of next week or a last minute event reminder.

Big Bonus!

Here’s one of the biggest plusses with electronic communication – you customer has an EASY, IMMEDIATE way to respond to you.  All they have to do is hit reply, write a comment, or click a link to your web site. They don’t have to decide to pick up the phone, they don’t have to put anything in the mail, and they don’t have to wait for regular business hours. Making it easy for your customer to do business with you is very important.

All this adds up to one thing. You can – and are much more likely to – communicate frequently with your customers and build great “Top of Mind Awareness”. As a result, you’ll get stronger, deeper, better customer relationships.

Here’s ways you should be using electronic marketing…

Notify your customers about sales, special events, and promotions.

E-mail and online social networking is a perfect way to notify your customers about promotions, seminars, sales and special events.  In fact, if you really want to push an event you can send a series of e-mails to promote it.  The first would be a “mark it on your calendar” message about 4 weeks out, then a “don’t forget” reminder about a week and a half out and finally a “it’s happening this weekend” reminder a day or two before the event.

Every event doesn’t warrant a series of e-mails but your major events certainly do.

Generate immediate interest in your products or services.

During the shoulder seasons, or if you get a big order of new items in, post it to your Facebook page, or send an e-mail and fill your store fast. These types of messages are generally more “off-the-cuff” but can still be very successful. There are two tricks….

One is to make sure your message puts the “Law of Scarcity” into play (“one day only”… or “for the first 27 customers”… or “just three more ultra widgets left”). This makes taking action an urgent priority. The second is to give them a special offer if they do take action quickly.

This example does both:  “My pain is your gain – UPS dropped off 47 boxes of new holiday decorations today and I don’t have quite enough room for all these beautiful garden gifts in the store. So to make extra room, I’m offering you a special two day deal. On these two days ONLY, get 25% off any purchase in the store plus I’ll throw in a bottle of tree preserver ($11.95 value) as a special thank you.”

Time Sensitive Offers

Electronic messages are very effective for perishable items or for any weekly/daily specials that are only available for a short period.

For instance, if you’re a garden center and have a weekly plant special, post it online or e-mail your list the day before it arrives to generate interest and remind people to stop in. You could even post care instructions and a picture of the plant!

Inform your customers about changes that affect them.

Electronic messages are an easy way to get the nitty-gritty details about your business out to your customers. It’s quick, easy and inexpensive.

If you hire a new employee, let your customers know. If your fax number changes, blast out short message.  If you change your store hours, get the word out. It’s important information – plus it’s one more communication from you that keeps your name at the top of your customer’s mind.

Also if you ever plan on moving, posting that information online, plus having a solid list of your customers e-mail addresses allows you to make the move with minimal interruption to your customer base.  If you can’t contact them and notify them of what’s happening you will surely lose a lot of them with your move.

Establish yourself as the expert.

E-mail and online forums are a great format for sending out a weekly or monthly tip, article, or idea – something that will position you in the mind of your customer as an “Expert”.   

Regular communication reinforces your position as the expert and does an awful lot to keep your customers loyal.  Note that this kind of message is not exactly like a newsletter – these should be short and have one simple point, not try to do too much.

Drive customers to your website

E-mail marketing an online communication via social networking is the best way for small businesses to drive customers to their websites. Not search engines.

In the text of your e-mail message and in your online posts, just include a link with an invitation to get more information on your website. Like this… “Just click here www.yourwebsite.com for complete information about.”  Facebook has easy to use applications to allow you to put a “badge” or “fan box” on your e-mails and your website.  Get that traffic going both ways, and get your customers used to visiting you online frequently!  The more they visit the more likely they will use you and you alone as their favorite retail store.

This strategy of using e-mail lists and social media as actively as possible; sending a short, informative e-mail every week, and posting to social media sites like Facebook every day, combined with having an information rich, customer-friendly website, can take the place of thousands of dollars in traditional media advertising.

Using this strategy of getting the absolute most from your existing customers through electronic marketing diminishes your need to constantly find new customers through advertising.  It adds up to more loyal customers, more efficient marketing and more money in your bank account.

Bob Negen is a speaker, author and expert in electronic marketing for independent retail businesses.  He is also the co-owner of WhizBang! Training, (www.whizbangtraining.com) and its associated product line.  He can be reached at 800-842-1660 or at bob@whizbangtraining.com

If Content is King, Why So Many Peasants?

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009

Mike Schultz, President of Wellesley Hills Group, offers an eight point litmus test for your web content to ensure you are establishing yourself as an authority in your field.

Everyone says, “Online marketing is all about content!” Too bad most of it is terrible.

If you want to generate content that sings, that makes a difference, and that, over time, will truly position you as a leader and authority in your field, it’s got to meet an 8 point litmus test.

  1. Distinction. Does your content say something? Do you take a position? If it’s run of the mill or wishy washy, it’ll get you nowhere.
  2. Salience. Salient content isn’t just noticeable, it thrusts itself into attention. Think of your intellectual capital as a spark waiting to start a fire. If it’s not salient, it’s like a spark in the middle of a damp swamp; much as you might try to keep it going it’s more likely to go out than anything else. But if it is salient, your spark is sitting on a pile of tinder. Just the slightest blow…
  3. Relevance. Your content needs to matter to people.
  4. Consequence. Your content needs to pass the “so what” test.
  5. Defensibility. Even the greatest business ideas have their detractors. While few business ideas will be bulletproof (as much as you might think they are), you do need to be able to defend the ideas on their merits.
  6. Realism. Your ideas need to be able to make the leap from theory to implementation.
  7. Elegance. Convoluted models and hard to remember concepts don’t capture the attention of the masses.
  8. Presentation. You’ve got to present your content well. Bad grammar, poorly produced videos, and scratchy sounding podcasts will always bring you down.

Say Goodbye To Batch And Blast Email Marketing And Start Engaging Your Subscribers and Customers With Greater Relevancy And Less Effort

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

Ross Kramer, CEO of Listrak, explains how Event Triggered Messaging allows you to design and decide the conversation you want to have with your customers.

Automated email marketing, also known as Event Triggered Messaging (ETM) is NOW technology that will enable virtually any sized business to greatly energize its email marketing. What does that means in business terms? It means improving customer relationships and customer care and it means increasing purchase frequency and brand loyalty. It also means reduced time and money compared with manual processing and management.

How does that work? Automated email messaging is designed to send transactional email messages that are triggered by subscriber actions or profiling attributes. You can trigger messages from just about any customer or subscriber touch-point and you can lead each recipient down the path that is most relevant to their needs.

So for example someone makes a hotel reservation online, after which they are automatically sent a confirmation email. A set number of days prior to their hotel stay they are automatically sent another email containing links to various local activities and hotel amenities. Depending on the action, or in-action, of the recipient, they will then receive a further more specific email related to the area or activity they clicked on that prompts them to make an actual booking or purchase. If they choose to do nothing – after a set period – they are removed from the conversation.

The result is a natural, progressive conversation with each customer that provides them with useful individualized information, without the marketer or business having to reach out or respond manually. Even elaborate email campaigns can be mapped out in minutes, empowering businesses to build deeper relationships with customers and prospects – while spending less time managing them.

As an example – automatic cart abandonment emails aimed at encouraging shoppers to complete or even increase the level of their transaction by the inclusion of discount offers or free shipping have proven highly effective and have much higher open rates than promotional emails.

Not all Event Triggered Messages are complex. Simple auto-responders like welcome messages are triggered by someone completing a form online. And anniversary or birthday messages based on information captured from online forms, can be set up to automatically send an email with a special anniversary discount offer every year at the same time.

In a nutshell ETM lets you design and decide ahead of time what sort of conversation you want to have with your customers and subscribers, and what messages you wish to send them based on their actions or profile characteristics. It’s this one-to-one interaction and the ability to integrate dynamic content that builds engagement and encourages ongoing, profitable relationships.

Listrak Conductor™ from Email Service Provider Listrak is a new event triggered messaging solution built in to Listrak Professional and Enterprise accounts. It’s both powerful and easy to use. It’s also priced so that just about any business can afford to use it, not just the big guys. There are no upfront costs, volume pricing and pay per use pricing are both offered, plus accounts receive 500 free Conductor messages every month. Pretty much a no-brainer to try.

In terms of easy to use, Conductor lets marketers plot their email conversations “whiteboard style,” giving them a quick snapshot of every conversation path.  Plus, the system includes a bunch of time-saving features like ready to use templates and visual reporting tools that make it easy to edit the conversation flow, create and save the emails, define the timing for each message, and select the events to kick off the conversation.

If you need more convincing to try automated email marketing (event triggered messaging), refer to Forrester’s June 2009 US Email Marketing Forecast 2009-2014. According to the report, email remains an indispensable low-cost communications tool for consumers and businesses alike – with an ROI that is 2 to 3 times higher than any other form of direct marketing.

The report also forecasts greater adoption of relevancy empowering tactics, such as triggering, segmentation and dynamic content – as businesses face increased clutter in the in-box and the need to get serious about relevance. Forrester also suggests that any business innovating now to increase relevancy, will have a tremendous opportunity to outpace any competition that choose to defer adoption due to the current economy.

What are you waiting for?  For more information, visit www.listrak.com/conductor or call us at 877.364.4556. 

Simple Strategies to Increase Your Conversion Rate

Friday, August 14th, 2009

Bill Leake, CEO of Apogee Search, offers simple strategies that can significantly increase your website’s conversion rate.

Bill Leake

SEO and PPC efforts can drive qualified traffic to your website, but in order to justify the time, effort, and expense, the site must be able to convert that traffic into either a lead or a sale. Different websites experience different obstacles, such as building trust, brand recognition, or simply experiencing high abandonment rates, and therefore require different solutions for improving conversion rates.

The best place to start analyzing your conversion rate is to look at entry pages with the highest traffic, such as home pages or high ranking landing pages. These pages are extremely important in forming the right first impression with any visitor or potential customer to your site. If visitors are only spending a brief amount of time on these pages and you are experiencing a high bounce rate, consider using bullet points, bolded text, and more compelling headlines that grab every visitor’s attention and gets your message across in a clear and concise manner. If an individual is spending a great deal of time on your website then leaves without completing any sort of action, consider adding more calls to action to guide them into the conversion process.

Lead form optimization is also an effective way to increase conversion rates on your website. In order to increase the amount of lead forms that are submitted with complete and accurate information and avoid abandonment, it is important to ensure that your forms are simple to complete, establish more trust with individuals, and only ask for information that is necessary and beneficial in obtaining a lead. Improving the conversion rate for e-commerce lead forms is slightly more involved. The amount of steps required in an e-commerce website can make conversion optimization seem daunting. Let’s separate problems with e-commerce purchases into three buckets:

  1. Customer’s ability to find the product they want
  2. Process of adding products to the cart
  3. Process of purchasing the product once in the cart

Web analytics data can help you identify which of these steps is causing problems. These common problems can be resolved by working the individual into a pipeline, increasing the persuasion on the pages, inserting more calls to action, and discarding unnecessary requests for information that may deter an individual from completing the process.

In general, analytics tools like Google Analytics can help you pinpoint problems; while usability analyses, best practices lists, and case studies can help you identify possible solutions. However, replicating a method that may have worked for someone else is not guaranteed to work for you. Testing different solution ideas is crucial for ensuring an improvement in conversion rates.

Bill Leake is the CEO and Founder of Apogee Search, the largest search engine marketing firm in the Southwest, one of the 20 largest in North America and one of the fastest growing companies on the Inc. 500 list. In addition to leading Apogee Search, Bill also serves as the president of the Austin Interactive Marketing Association, and as the chairman of the SEMPO (Search Engine Marketing Professionals Organization) committee.

Creating Excellent Content with Interviews

Wednesday, August 12th, 2009

Heather Vale Goss, Content Director of LWL Worldwide, Inc. explains the importance of conducting good interviews for your business.

Heather Vale GossIt’s a standard recommendation from internet marketing teachers: if you want to build a list, drive traffic to your website, or create a quality product fast, find some experts in your niche and interview them.

After all, interviewing allows you to leverage many aspects (that means you do a little work for big results). You can leverage knowledge (you don’t have to know a lot about the topic, because your expert does), celebrity name power (people will buy your product based on who you interviewed) and traffic (you can have the expert promote your interview to their subscribers and customers).

You can use your interviewing skills to host teleseminars, podcasts, create information products and books, and more. You can use them to sell products that are yours, products that you’re an affiliate for, or you can make the interview the product itself.

It’s the perfect solution… and it’s easy, right?

Well, it certainly is simple, but that doesn’t always mean easy.

First of all, how do you get those experts to say yes?

And then once they do, how do you know what to ask them?

Most marketing teachers will leave you to flounder on your own, because while they know how powerful interviews are, and often even have a natural skill for it, they don’t know how to teach what they do. In fact, they usually don’t know that they’re doing anything besides having a conversation and recording it, so that’s what they’ll often tell you to do.

But a regular conversation differs from an interview in a few ways. A regular conversation is weighted pretty equally, while an interview puts the spotlight on your guest. And a regular conversation is between two people, while an interview is all about that invisible third party: the audience.

And honestly, let’s face it… most conversations aren’t worthy of being recorded or sold. They’re just plain boring.

Going into an interview thinking it’s just going to be just like a conversation is one of the three biggest mistakes new interviewers make. And what they end up with is a bunch of lightweight, shallow fluff rather than hard-hitting, deep, informative content.

If your interviews don’t deliver on providing information that your audience doesn’t know, or can’t find elsewhere, you’ve failed. Your interviews won’t drive traffic, or help build your list, or get you loyal customers. You might get people at first who are hoping for something good, but once they hear the quality of what you’ve created, they’ll never support you or buy from you again.

Knowing how to ask the best questions possible for any situation, and how to draw unique content from your guest, is vitally important to conducting top-quality interviews.

The good news is, it’s not that difficult to learn the techniques and methods that the best interviewers in the world use. You can do it by watching and listening to other interviewers, determining exactly what they do that works, and then using the process of trial and error in your own efforts; or you can get some guidance from someone who’s been there.

Personally, I did a combination of both, over 15 years ago. I made a lot of the same mistakes other beginners make, but I couldn’t let them keep happening. My interviewing career started on TV, with a lot of people watching, so I had a lot of motivation to get good, fast!

And I’ve spent the last five years interviewing hundreds of experts online.

That means I know exactly what to do… and what not to do.

I’ve also interviewed numerous other top online interviewers to find out what they do to get the best content possible from their interviews. And I put it all together in an easy-to-understand physical package called Interviewing Unwrapped, so you don’t have to do this the hard way.

Interviewing is something everyone can learn to do well, if they want to. Just like any other endeavor you undertake, it all boils down to the desire to do it.

Sure, it can be scary at first… but if you go ahead and do it anyway, you’ll find it becoming easier, and your content getting better, every time you get behind the mic (or the phone).

Heather Vale Goss has been interviewing experts and celebrities since 1993, when she began her media career as host and producer of an award-winning TV show. She is now on a quest to share the interviewing skills she has developed with others, so they can create top-notch online content too, through speaking engagements, interviews, and her physical home-study resource Interviewing Unwrapped.

Beyond Web 2.0: Delivering on the Promise of the Engaged Web to Win Business

Thursday, August 6th, 2009

AJ Harring, President, EPiServer US offers a glimpse of the “engaged web” and explains how to profit from it.

AJ HarringMost marketers understand that one-way communication with customers is no longer effective in today’s Web 2.0 world.  Knowing this is one thing; understanding how to effectively utilize Web 2.0 platforms to form meaningful connections with prospects and customers is another.  In fact, while many marketers still struggle to understand Web 2.0 and social networking, the next generation of “the engaged web” has arrived – and with it even greater opportunities for organizations to effectively turn web traffic into qualified leads and revenue.

Rather than cling to traditional approaches of building web sites on pillars of content, companies should take advantage of new interactive, community and conversation-based tools and services that engage visitors. The current Internet generation no longer simply browses; they interact. They create content, share opinions, show videos and join communities to connect with others who share similar interests.

So how can we, as marketers keep up with all the changes taking place, and how should we leverage the engaged web to create more meaningful customer interactions?

First, we must stop thinking about how to push content and messages to key audiences, and instead focus on a) understanding and b) addressing the individual needs and preferences of those audiences. This may sound complicated, but by simply investing less time and energy in promoting ourselves, and more time fostering compelling, two-way conversations with the audiences we want to reach, we’ll be able to create more meaningful relationships.  As a result, we have a better chance of winning their business, and we might prompt word-of-mouth referrals too.

Here are a few tips outlining how to successfully market products and services in the new, conversation-based Internet economy:

  • Focus on users rather than content: Personalize web content for individual users and make their online experience more meaningful by fostering two-way communication.
  • Think “relations” rather than “sessions:” Create a website with individual users and their specific needs or issues in mind rather than maintain a website using a “one size fits all” approach.
  • Use what you know: Use the data you have at hand to gain insight into user behavior and preferences – whether it’s from software that tracks how they interact with your site or click-through analytics – and deliver an online experience that matches their needs.

Only when we fully understand the individual needs and goals of our customers can we develop deeper, more fruitful relationships with them.  Companies that fail to make the leap to dynamic web engagement may not survive the transition into the next digital age.

As President of EPiServer’s North American organization, A.J. Harring has more than 17 years of IT software sales and management experience.  Prior to joining EPiServer, A.J. led teams at leading companies like Check Point Software Technologies, Pointsec Software Technologies, Compuware, and Platinum Technology. Contact: aj.harring@episerver.com.

Profiling a Web Searcher With Log Data

Wednesday, August 5th, 2009

Dr. Jim Jansen, Assistant Professor at Pennsylvania State University explains what relevant information can be found about your customers using search logs.

Jim JansenOne of my conference presentations, To What Degree Can Log Data Profile a Web Searcher?, addresses research about developing a profile of a Web search using just the few fields in a search log.

Typical search logs really don’t have that many fields, a dozen or so at most. Even when one enriches the logs (i.e., combining fields to make new ones of greater insight), the logs are still sparse.

So, in this research, we set out to determine what we could find out about a user based on a record or so in a search log. We found out that we could actually determine a lot!

Here are some examples.

- With the IP address, we can get a fairly accurate pin point of the location. From geo-targeting data in the query, we can tell the location of focus.

- From the query, we can do a topic analysis to determine the searching focus.

- We can use algorithms already available to determine what type of content is desired (e.g., informational, navigational, transactional).

- We can determine if the query has commercial intent and where in the buying cycle the user is at.

- Using session level data, we can determine the level of engagement (i.e., how motivated is the user to get the desire content).

- Based on pattern analysis, we can determine with a fair degree of accuracy what will be the next query reformulation.

- Using out-of-log sources, such as http://adlab.microsoft.com/Demographics-Prediction/, we can determine the gender bias of the query.

- Using neural network techniques, we can determine the probability of the user clicking on a result listing.

- With enough temporal data, we can reasonably determine the identity of the searcher.

I am not a big online privacy dude, but the results surprised me when you put all the techniques together. And, techniques are just going to get better and better.

There are some really interesting aspects for advertisers, great possibilities for consumers, and concerns for all.

Dr. Jim Jansen is an associate professor in the College of Information Sciences and Technology at Pennsylvania State University. Jim has more than 150 publications in the area of information technology and systems, with articles appearing in a multi-disciplinary range of journals and conferences. His specific areas of expertise are Web searching, sponsored search, and personalization for information searching. He is co-author of the book, Web Search: Public Searching of the Web and co-editor of the book Handbook of Weblog Analysis.

Measuring the Value of Digital Display Media to Offline Channels

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

Principal Consultant for Analytics at Razorfish, Craig Schinn, explains why measuring online purchases may not be the most accurate metric for digital marketing success.

Craig SchinnFor years, I’ve struggled with my agency to show the total value of display media budgets.  You’d hear things like

  • Why is this CPA so high on my branding campaign?
  • This ROI is not acceptable compared to my catalogue.
  • Sure we hit the goal, but how many of these sales would I have gotten anyway?

As an industry, we’ve invented tons of ways to measure these things.  We ran control/exposed surveys where we measured brand lift, but those only help so much.  We ran intricate cookie-level analyses where we looked at the behaviors of cookies at every frequency and mix of ads.  But again, this only helps so much.  Even when we measure the lift in purchase behavior from exposure to ads, we only do it for online purchases.  Some products necessitate online research, but the purchase actually occurs elsewhere.

Enter pharmaceuticals.  At Razorfish, we have a large health practice.  The challenge with pharmaceutical marketing – aside from the obvious legal concerns and government regulation – is measurement.  It’s very challenging to know how to optimize a digital marketing campaign when there is no on-site monetary transaction.  So many other verticals allow the advertiser to see how many conversions are taking place and what the value of those conversions are.  But in pharma, the real conversion is going to the doctor’s office, receiving a prescription, and then going to the pharmacy to fill it.  The conveniences of cookie-based measurement break down when this happens, and marketers are forced to estimate.

This was my first major assignment at Razorfish five years ago.  I had to help my client assess the value of our campaigns and determine ways to optimize media.  This was a challenge because my work at my previous employer used PII and had detailed CRM data.  For my client at Razorfish, we assessed a number of different ways to solve this challenge, but we settled on the following:

  • A site survey that could be tied to digital media exposure and interaction
  • The tagging also allowed us to track on-site behaviors
  • Finally, we collected an email address (blinded in our dataset) that allowed us to recontact the respondents after a period of time.

An anonymous identifier allowed us to match the respondents in the first survey to those in the follow-up.  We began an ambitious roadmap with my client:

  • Who was coming to the site?  What segments existed?
  • What were our site visitors looking for and how could we use that information to improve the relevancy of our media?
  • What affect was our site having on their attitudes and opinions?  Did they receive the medication?
  • What site content seemed to resonate with each segment of the audience?  Were there KPIs we should use to assess relevancy of the site experience?

We learned a lot, and the client was thrilled.  Overall, we helped lift intent to request the drug from the doctor by 15%.  But that was purchase intent – a great metric for the industry, but soft compared to what it could be.  Other verticals offered us an opportunity for more robust metrics.

Enter retail – a sector I love after 3 years as a sales associate at a major US retailer during college.  Retail is such an amazing space.  It combines the all of what I find interesting about marketing – hard science, creative, fleeting consumer opinions, price competition, etc.  The margins can be thin for some retailers and being efficient in the digital space is a major challenge for well-optimized direct marketers.

At Razorfish, we have many retail clients, and they are all extremely savvy direct marketers who often seek the highest return on ad spend.   But digital media has gotten more expensive, and it’s getting tougher to get the low CPMs and CPAs of years past.  Clients look at the return on ad spend every week in our reports, and often we optimize out of media that does not meet stringent standards.  But as an industry, we usually only evaluate what happens online.  This doesn’t seem fair. 

Some products justify research online but consumers are more comfortable buying offline – technology and furniture are categories like this.  So my question to retailers and similar businesses is this:

  • What are you doing with your customer data?
  • How are you collecting data on your site visitors and tying that to offline purchases such as in store, through your catalogue, and via the phone?
  • Are you tagging emails with purchase confirmations to do cross-channel media analytics? 
  • Do you have a loyalty program that you use for this sort of thing?  How about warranties?

Many studies have been published on the effect of digital media to in-store and offline sales, and I work on a daily basis on these types of analyses.  I can tell you, the studies I’ve read are supported by the data I’ve seen.  Much more sales occur for cross-channel retailers in store than happen online.  Optimizing only to a cost per action on your website can take you out of the media channels that contribute the most to in-store conversions.  It’s imperative that cross-channel players begin to understand this dynamic, because it can lead to a significant advantage over competitors who are not. 

There are companies out there that can help.  Unica offers a great technology for this sort of thing, but it requires much more in addition to technology.  Usually, client web analytics practices are much too small.  Marketers need staff to perform this analysis.  This is usually much more costly than the software required to join disparate data sources and analyze the merged file.  Additionally, we have seen that client divide their website business from their traditional practice.  This can lead to political and organizational difficulties in assigning cross-channel reporting responsibilities and in acting on the findings.  For example, the retail practice might benefit from a certain type of placement or search keyword group, but the website team needs to pay for it.  This is a much more challenging issue than simply measuring what the benefit is to each organization.

I think thinks is the next major frontier for savvy digital marketers.  Your customers are interacting with your brand online and offline.  Use digital data to understand what happens offline, and you could be at a significant advantage over your competitors.

Craig Schinn is a Principal Consultant at Razorfish, the digital marketing agency. His team specializes in measuring and optimizing marketing performance.  Craig can be reached at craig.schinn@razorfish.com.

5 Easy Ways to Put Your Site Search to Work and Deliver a Better Online Experience

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

Shaun Ryan, CEO of SLI Systems explains how to use site search to improve your SEO rankings and paid search campaigns.
Shaun Ryan, SLI Systems

If you’re like most digital marketers, you probably don’t realize the hidden treasure in your possession that can improve your search marketing, email marketing and other campaigns, and create a more meaningful online customer experience.  Yet the little white box on your web site – the search box – can mean so much more than simply helping people find products and information on your site.  When used appropriately, your site search solution can help deliver more targeted messages to your customers and result in an improved online experience for them (which improves the bottom line for you).

Below are 5 tips you can use to improve the effectiveness of your site search to improve your marketing efforts and deliver a better customer experience online.

  1. Improve the relevance: Examine your search logs and check that you’re delivering relevant results. Start with the most popular search terms. A great way of doing this is to examine what results people are clicking on and bringing the results people click on the most to the top. Relevance is the single most important aspect of site search.
  2. Connect search to customer ratings and reviews: Your online visitors love to read the opinions of others. Make it simple for site visitors to sort through these reviews based on their own likes and dislikes. Another customer of ours, an online tea retailer, has configured its site search so that shoppers can narrow the search results to see items with reviews based on similar preferences (like full-bodied teas, or ones with good aromas). The result: a refined, more relevant group of items in the search results, making it even easier for shoppers to find the right products.
  3. Leverage site search data for more successful SEO and paid search campaigns: It can be a huge struggle to figure out which search terms will generate the most referrals from search engine traffic, or will create the best paid search efforts. However, there’s a gold mine of information in your site search system – including “long tail” terms that aren’t used as often but which convert much higher than more commonly used search terms. The site search terms show the language that your visitors use on your site – they’re use similar language when they’re search the whole web and you should be optimizing and buying keywords based on this Shoppers’ most commonly used keywords might be different than what you’d expect – or they might change at various times of the year without you realizing it.
  4. Index all your content: Many ecommerce sites have a lot of content beyond their products, such as blogs, guides, forums and faq’s. All of this should be indexed and should be accessible through your site search.
  5. Bring rich content into the search: Video is appearing on more and more company web sites.  Make it easier for shoppers to find this rich content by incorporating them in search results – for instance, create a video icon that lets searchers know that there’s a related video to view, or show the videos in a section of the search results. 

Shaun Ryan is CEO of SLI Systems, a provider of hosted search solutions that learn from the people who use them to continually improve relevance of results. Shaun can be reached at shaun.ryan@sli-systems.com or on Twitter at www.twitter.com/shaunryan.

Improve Your Website’s Effectiveness with Google Website Optimizer

Friday, July 24th, 2009

Apogee Search Founder, Bill Leake, explains how to use Google Website Optimizer to improve your website effectiveness.

Bill Leake

Driving traffic to your website is only half the battle. Your site also needs to be constructed to convert those visitors into leads or sales. A valuable first step to making your website more effective is to utilize Google Website Optimizer.  Google Website Optimizer is a free tool that website owners can use to determine the most effective combination of content on their site through a variety of tests. The results from these tests can then be used to maximize conversion rates among existing traffic to your site.

GWO can conduct both A/B testing and multivariate testing. A/B testing will test two different pages against one another, and multivariate testing will test the various elements on the page to determine the best combination.

Strategies to keep in mind when using Google Website Optimizer:

  • Ask big questions. You will only receive answers for the things that you actively test. You should test drastic changes rather than slight changes to obtain statistically significant data.
  • Spend time developing well-written copy to test.
  • Wait for significant data. GWO will indicate when a sample is large enough to be useful.

Different situations in which one would want to use A/B testing versus multivariate testing:

  • Multivariate tests compare different elements of a page. Google uses a full factorial test so it is very easy to generate a large number of combinations even when testing just a few elements. These tests require a high amount of traffic to achieve statistical significance.
  • A/B testing is suited for sites with less traffic because it requires a much smaller sample size to achieve statistical significance. This is the best option for testing a complete site redesign.

Rules to follow when using Google Website Optimizer:

  • Wait for statistically significant data. As discussed earlier, initial results might reflect random chance, so wait until you have had enough traffic for the information to be significant.
  • Limit the elements being tested. If you create too many different combinations, it will take a great deal of time for GWO to produce meaningful results from your test.
  • Spend as much time developing content for a test as you would for a website. Even though this is a test, you are testing potential real options for your site. Do not get sloppy with the content just because it is a test.

Bill Leake is the CEO and Founder of Apogee Search, the largest search engine marketing firm in the Southwest, one of the 20 largest in North America and one of the fastest growing companies on the Inc. 500 list. In addition to leading Apogee Search, Bill also serves as the president of the Austin Interactive Marketing Association, and as the chairman of the SEMPO (Search Engine Marketing Professionals Organization) committee.

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