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Archive for the ‘Paid Search Advertising (PPC)’ Category

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.

Ten Practical Tips to Propel Your Search Engine Advertising Program

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

NetElixir Founder, Udayan Bose, offers ten strategies to improve your search engine advertising campaign.

Udayan BoseOnline retail sales have been completely flat in the first quarter of 2009 (comScore), and all economic indicators point to a very difficult holiday shopping season this year. In 2008, comScore data reported holiday sales were down 3 percent- the first ever decline since 2001. This year, retailers need to prepare for more tough times.

Beginning in early October and lasting through the end of December, the holiday season accounts for nearly 50% of the annual sales revenue for some retailers. It is obvious that success during this time of year is vital for companies’ survival, and competition for sales this year is going to be at an all time high. NetElixir produced a workbook, "Fresh Ideas," to help online retailers streamline their search engine marketing efforts to be as efficient as possible. Below are ten practical tips from the book to help propel your keyword search advertising program. 

1. Build your Objectives-Investment Scorecard. Quantitative methods like creating a chart with specific goals or objectives and how much money you plan to spend on each one, will help you understand how each part of your budget contributes to the overall program. Remember, what you can’t measure, you can’t control.

2. Use Strategic Keyword Bidding during the Holidays. Tailor your campaign to consumers’ holiday shopping habits by using tactics like day-parting and product category-specific bidding.

3. Sync Your SEM Campaigns with  Your Holiday Marketing Promotion Calendar. The holidays comprise peak sales days when consumers spend the most amount of money and companies earn maximum profit. Know which days (e.g. Black Friday, Cyber Monday, etc.) are important, and allocate different amounts of your budget and use targeted keywords appropriately.

4. Know Thy Competitors. Because searchers always like to compare before making a purchase, keep track of aspects of your competitors’ campaigns like product, price, promotions, and specific SEM tactics employed, etc. This research will help you understand how you stack up to your competition.

5. Use the 5 KPI’s Every Search Advertiser Needs. A portfolio of key performance indicators (KPI’s) is needed to measure SEM driven customer acquisition performance in a holistic manner. A few of them are profit per click, average order value per new customer, and the percentage of (converting keywords / all keywords). Make sure you set your KPI benchmarks before starting your campaign and then track them on a weekly basis.

6. Create A Targeted Holiday Keyword List. Gain reach coupled with high conversion probability by completing the 5 stage optimal keyword list building process of research, select and group, test, analyze, and refine.

7. Differentiate Through Targeted Ad Copy. To help you stand out and build brand credibility, make sure your ad copy writer answers questions like "At whom is your ad copy targeted?" as well as "What will compel the searcher to click on your ad?" and "Where does the searcher expect to land on your website post clicking?"

8. Use Twitter to Create Immediate Campaigns. Campaigns built around keywords extracted from tweets are more immediate and relevant, and therefore hold greater monetization potential. You will have an edge over competitors and also significantly lower your cost per click (CPC).

9. Make Transactional Landing Pages Relevant. Build trust, demonstrate consistency of message, and guide the visitor by keeping a set of important factors in mind, including keeping pages simple and establishing landing page specific KPI’s that link to overall campaign KPI’s, among others.

10. Understand the Importance of Trademark / Brand Name Keywords. Trademark and brand names are more likely to be the last clicked keyword for a conversion, and their contribution to total account conversions has increased 5-8% over the last 12 months.

Use tactics like evaluating the performance of brand terms separately from those of non-brand terms to better understand the performance of your campaigns. If you have a strong brand name, anticipate that other advertisers will bid for your trademark terms.

Udayan Bose founded NetElixir with a vision to provide online marketers worldwide with a paid search campaign optimization solution capable of delivering magical performance. To download a full copy of his workbook, complete with charts and performance indicators for retailers to fill out, please visit http://netelixir.com/semfreshideas.html

Top Tips For Referral Generation In The Internet Era

Monday, July 20th, 2009

Online Marketing with RSS Ray and RSSRay.com announces a new episode that you do not want to miss.

RSS Ray Segment One

Show Date: July 22, 2009 at 1 pm Eastern, 10 am Pacific

Bob Burg, Author of Burg-Scott Communications

Show Topic Top Tips For Referral Generation In The Internet Era

Show Guest: Bob Burg, Author of Burg-Scott Communications

About Bob Burg: Bob Burg is an author whose critically acclaimed book, “Endless Referrals: Network Your Everyday Contacts Into Sales” has sold over 200,000 copies and continues to be used as a training manual for top sales organizations throughout the world. His latest national bestseller, “The Go-Giver” has been heralded as a new business classic. It’s been translated into 14 languages and has already topped the 100,000 mark.

Sample Questions for Bob Burg:

Do you really have to do anything other than offer excellent products and services to get referrals?

Why should companies invest in increasing their referrals instead of other marketing efforts?

How big of an impact can referral generation systems make on a company’s bottom line?

RSS Ray Segment Two

Show Topic: Creating the Right Search Campaigns

Udayan Bose, Founder and Chief Executive of NetElixir

Show Guest: Udayan Bose, Founder and Chief Executive of NetElixir

About Udayan Bose: Udayan Bose founded NetElixir with a vision to provide online marketers worldwide with a paid search campaign optimization solution capable of delivering magical performance. Udayan recognized the potential of paid search as an essential advertising channel in 2002. Having experienced first hand the complexity involved in running a profitable paid search campaign, he was driven to develop a system that delivers predictable and efficient campaign performance, allowing marketers to fully leverage the power of paid search as a high value lead generator.

Sample Questions for Udayan Bose:

What is the key to successful keyword search advertising?

What are Key Performance Indicators and why are they important?

How can Twitter be used to improve your search engine advertising campaign?

How to Listen: Live on wsRadio.com or available by Podcast on iTunes or by RSS Feed.

RSS Ray’s Comments: “Referral generation is an excellent way to inexpensively aquire leads, and Bob Burg is the right guy to teach you how it’s done” stated RSS Ray, host of “Online Marketing with RSS Ray.” RSS Ray went on to say “Udayan Bose is an excellent source for any company looking to improve their search marketing campaign.”

PPC Tips to Boost Business!

Wednesday, July 8th, 2009

Lorrie Thomas, founder of Web Marketing Therapy, offers 5 huge tips to having success with PPC advertising.

Web Marketing Therapy Logo

Paid search spend equates to an average of 42% of all online advertising spending on the world wide web.  Buying keywords is one of the most targeted ways a prospective customer can find you, as most people start with a search engine to find products, information or services.  Paid search messaging can be controlled, tracked and continually optimized for maximum Return on Investment (ROI).  Paid search is a valuable search marketing tool that can brand, build, and boost business….if you know how to tap this medium. 

PPC Best Business Practices:

  1. Define success criteria.  Paid search is a track-able medium.  What defines success?  Traffic?  Leads?  Email signups?  Sales?  Make sure you have success criteria defined and a way to measure success.  Google Analytics is a great free tool to track traffic and conversions (leads, sales, etc.)
  2. Select “select” key phrases and buy wisely.  Brainstorm words that define who you are, what you do and who you serve.  Make a list of key phrases that are worth buying.  Start small and snowball.  There is no need to buy every phrase upon campaign launch. Take calculated risks, measure, learn, optimize…then expand.
  3. Set up the campaign strategically from start to finish.  If you are buying the phrases “gold Celtic knot jewelry” and “silver men’s wedding band” then the ad copy needs to be specific to those key phrases – not one message for both phrases.  Generic ad copy will get you generic results.  Match it up!  Match the key phrases to specific ad copy that links to specific landing pages.  Funnel your target customer from the start of the search (key phrases) to attracting them with the right message to driving them to an appropriate landing page that solidifies the sale!
  4. Leverage paid search to support other marketing efforts.  If radio ads are running in certain geographic markets, you can target paid search in those same locations to reinforce your message.  Paid search can be used “a la carte” or “a la mode” to support other marketing campaigns.
  5. Create, Execute, and Monitor…then rinse and repeat!  Great ideas are only great if they are executed brilliantly.  Have a clear goal, plan and execute the paid search plan from sound strategy.  Then monitor the campaign.  What is working?  What isn’t?  How can the paid search campaign be improved?  How can spend work harder for its money? 

Paid search management is a process and requires thought, creativity, dedication and effort.   Marketing is about building awareness, communicating information, connecting, serving and selling.  Paid search is a tool for marketing, how it is used to brand, build and boost business is in your hands…. 

Lorrie Thomas, MA is the founder and Marketing Therapist at Web Marketing Therapy, a full-service marketing agency and self-help web marketing education resource.  Lorrie speaks nationally and teaches Web Marketing, Social Media Marketing and Search Engine Marketing courses at UCSB and Berkeley Extension.

Keyword Management Tools for PPC and SEO

Monday, July 6th, 2009

Online Marketing with RSS Ray and RSSRay.com announces a new episode that you do not want to miss.

RSS Ray Segment One

Show Date: July 8, 2009 at 1 pm Eastern, 10 am Pacific

Larry Kim, Founder & VP of Product Development of WordStream

Show Topic Keyword Management Tools for PPC and SEO

Show Guest: Larry Kim, Founder & VP of Product Development of WordStream

About Larry Kim: Larry Kim founded WordStream in 2007. He bootstrapped WordStream by providing search marketing consulting services while managing a team of engineers and marketers to productize various search engine marketing tasks. Larry currently serves as Vice President of Product Development. He is responsible for all inbound marketing efforts as well as for defining WordStream products and features.

Sample Questions for Larry Kim:

Why is keyword management important?

What are some often overlooked best practices in PPC advertising?

What is WordStream and how can it help paid search advertisers?

RSS Ray Segment Two

Show Topic: How Your Business Can Pull Revenue from PPC Advertising

Lorrie Thomas, Marketing Therapist of Web Marketing Therapy

Show Guest: Lorrie Thomas, Marketing Therapist of Web Marketing Therapy

About Lorrie Thomas: Lorrie Thomas launched Web Marketing Therapy, a smart, fun, full-service marketing agency and a recession-friendly self-help online marketing educational resource. Her “wild web woman” team serves small businesses, entrepreneurs and marketers. Their work ensures marketing treats the cause (vs band-aiding symptoms) so all marketing pieces click.

Sample Questions for Lorrie Thomas:

What is the most important measure of success with paid search?

How do you optimize your paid search campaigns?

What is one PPC strategy that not too many people know about that works wonders in your campaigns?

How to Listen: Live on wsRadio.com or available by Podcast on iTunes or by RSS Feed.

RSS Ray’s Comments: “WordStream is one of the best programs on the market for improving your results with paid search marketing.” stated RSS Ray, host of “Online Marketing with RSS Ray.” RSS Ray went on to say “Lorrie’s distinct brand of online marketing advice makes her an excllent resource for anyone looking to make money online.”

Top 9 Tips to Get the Most Out of Your Online Lead Generation Campaigns

Friday, July 3rd, 2009

Improve your online lead generation campaign with this insightful article by Apogee Search CEO and Founder, Bill Leake.

Apogee Search Logo

Now more than ever, marketers are hyper-focused on getting the most out of their lead generation investments. Here are nine quick tips to give your current online campaigns a boost and get the highest quality leads coming to your website. For the most part, these techniques can be implemented fairly easily, and are highly effective at maximizing your campaign ROI.

1. Reevaluate, reexamine, and reconfirm your objectives. Different economic times often drive different campaign objectives. Campaign success or failure is driven by getting the objectives right on the front end. Now is the time to ensure your objectives are in line with your needs.

2. Look at your traditional marketing assets and see what you can repurpose, reallocate, and reuse online. There’s gold buried out there in your traditional marketing spend. What events do you attend? What video assets do you already have? What great PowerPoint presentations do you have that can be turned into webinars, articles, etc? Recycling and reusing isn’t only good for the environment, it’s great on the pocketbook too.

3. This is the year to finally get end-to-end tracking and analytics. Reconfigure your web analytics, tie your web analytics into your CRM system, and get a marketing automation tool. Have all of these communicate with each other and with your vendors from beginning to end.

4. Retool your paid search campaigns. Run Google search query reports for your AdWords campaigns. Cut out irrelevant impressions, increase your click through rate and quality score, and add negative keywords. Paid search ads need to be targeted to attract relevant traffic, so make your ads specific. Sometimes it makes sense to use ads to qualify prospects too. One good strategy to reduce spend without reducing performance is to daypart-turn off ads at times of the day that do not deliver quality leads traffic.

5. Add compelling lead bait. Webinars, whitepapers, and case studies, oh my! The quantity increase in quality content can be well worth the investment, and good content will warm up the prospect too.

6. Implement nurturing campaigns and lead lifecycle management. Nurturing campaigns involve things like newsletters, seminar and webinar invites, special tips and tricks in email blasts, physical direct mailers, etc. Basically, continuing to communicate with folks who aren’t ready to speak to a sales rep or who do not yet have a budget. Best communications are always things that have value in them. For example, “Here’s something you might be able to use,” rather than, “Listen to what we have to say.”

7. Use a multivariate landing page testing tool and test all major changes to your website. Google Website Optimizer (GWO) is a free tool that enables you to conduct multivariate and A/B tests on your landing pages. Be sure to limit your variants to a level your traffic can support. Worst case scenario, you discover that some of your brilliant ideas are not so brilliant, and quickly fix them. Best case, you’ll see a triple digit improvement in your landing pages and website conversions. Apogee Search has recently been named one of a select few GWO Authorized Consultants by Google. Working with an authorized consultant can get you the answers you’re looking for to drastically improve your conversion rates.

8. Optimize past online conversions. Your problem may not be that you need more leads, but that you need better quality leads. Integrate your PPC and SEO data into your CRM system so you can have solid ROI numbers for each of your online campaigns before you need them. Once you get enough data, you can start optimizing your campaign towards activities that are generating revenue rather than leads that go nowhere.

9. Start / continue / increase your SEO efforts. SEO success builds over time and can have one of the highest ROIs. If you haven’t started a SEO campaign or you’re not seeing results from your campaign yet, keep up your efforts. While your competitors are pulling back and retrenching, or maybe just utilizing paid search campaigns because of its immediate impact, you can get a long-term lead on them by accelerating and improving your natural search impact.

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.

Insights Into Optimizing eCommerce Paid Search Campaigns

Wednesday, May 6th, 2009

Show guest Bill Leake offers advice on how to combine SEO and paid search campaigns for eCommerce success.

Apogee Search LogoeCommerce paid search campaigns measure success based on sales and revenue rather than leads generated. Most paid search campaigns are lead generation campaigns. This means that paid search strategists must design eCommerce campaigns using different tactics than the typical lead generation campaign.

SEO vs. Paid Search

Many newcomers to search engine marketing wonder whether SEO or paid search is right for them. Typically, it is best to utilize both natural search (SEO) and paid search (PPC) campaigns to expand your exposure on the search engines. However, for eCommerce sites, paid search may be the most efficient option to immediately drive traffic, while natural search campaigns may take time to build SEO ranking. Paid search can also produce valuable data on keywords that can help shape your natural search campaigns. This is important as SEO keywords are long-term time investments.

Here are several simple tactics to consider when optimizing an eCommerce paid search campaign.

Tips for eCommerce websites:

  • Have tightly themed ad groups. This helps keep ads consistent and relevant to the webpage.
  • Use relevant keywords. Don’t bid on keywords that have nothing to do with your site. Relevant keywords can improve your quality score, which is used to determine how much an advertiser will have to pay to be ranked in a certain position. The higher the quality score, the lower the cost of a higher position.
  • Have calls to action in your ad copy. If you have a current promotion, market it in your ad copy.
  • Make your ad copy timely. If you have seasonal promotions or products that make good gifts for certain occasions, promote them at those times.
  • Send shoppers to the specific product page (landing page) that they searched for rather than the homepage. Ensure consumers can make their purchase on that page without having to click around too much.
  • Adjust bids according to the success rates of those keywords. Bid higher amounts for successful keywords and bid less for keywords that convert at lower rates.
  • Use negative keywords to eliminate unqualified traffic. If there are words that are related to your industry but will not bring you qualified traffic, set these as negative keywords so you do not pay for clicks that have no chance of turning into a sale.

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.

Competitive Intelligence: Frightening Information Your Competitors Can Easily Learn About Your Business

Wednesday, December 3rd, 2008

Richard Stokes is the president and founder of AdGooroo as well as the author of the excellent new book "Mastering Search Advertising:  How the Top 3% of Search Advertisers Dominate Google Adwords". In this exclusive article he wrote for the RSS Ray blog, Rich discusses how to use competitive intelligence to research keywords, conduct search engine optimization, and even protect your trademarks.

AdGooroo Logo

Most likely, your fiercest competitor already knows your top keywords, has studied your latest campaign statistics and monitors your landing pages. They also may be hijacking your trademarked terms in violation of search engine’s trademark infringement rules.

Frightening? Yes, when you consider that they’re likely capitalizing on much of your hard work, but what do you know about them?

Competitive intelligence (CI) is essential in search advertising. Without it, marketers risk ineffective keywords, poorly developed ad copy and ultimately lost business.  But, marketers easily and cost-effectively can regain their competitive advantage. As economic conditions and the general evolution of marketing drive more dollars to search and the Web in general, the stakes will continue to rise.

Understanding Intelligence 
With competition already intense and only expected to increase, the question isn’t whether to practice CI, but which CI tools to use?

CI is not a purchase to make lightly. Besides cost, the decision is complicated by a market cluttered with options and marketers who don’t truly understand CI.

In part, CI is about understanding your competitors, but, the real gain is insight into your business practices. While some CI applications track competitors’ keywords and landing pages, they also help marketers improve ad copy, identify seasonal trends, monitor pay-per-click statistics and fix campaign issues.   

But not all CI tools perform these tasks.

As the leading provider of CI to search engine marketers in the world (35 of the top 50 agencies and such leading brands as Southwest Vacations, Target and Turtle Wax), AdGooroo offers a comprehensive suite of tools which includes SEM Insight, Trademark Insight and AdGooroo Express.

These tools track all search advertising activity in any given industry, empowering sophisticated agencies and advertisers with competitors’ top keywords, ad copy, campaign statistics, daily alerts and other information needed to generate the highest possible return on advertising investment – and provide the much-desired competitive advantage.  Here’s how AdGooroo’s tools targets competition.

Elements of CI
Keywords
Learning what keywords your competitors are targeting may be your best source of competitive advantage in online advertising. Advertisers with larger keyword lists win more traffic at a lower cost per visitor than their competition.

Why?

Search engine users tend to type in specific, 2-4 word phrases to find what they’re looking for. When your targeted terms match what they’re looking for, your ads are shown more prominently and receive a higher click-through rate than the ads targeted to more general terms.

Furthermore, because most online advertisers tend to target broad, generic terms, there are fewer competitors for these longer, more specific keyword phrases. This translates into a lower cost-per-click and cost-per-conversion when using these long tail keywords.

AdGooroo’s SEM Insight researches the exact phrases that drive the most traffic to your competitors’ Web sites, allowing you to increase targeted traffic and lower your cost-per-acquisition.

Here’s an example. For one Web site, the broad search term "spyware" results in a $3.01 cost-per-lead. The more specific phrase, "spyware remover," results in a cost-per-lead of only $1.96. For this Web site, the savings on this one term alone is more than $20 per day. The entire portfolio of 343 specific terms results in a total savings of about $12,200 per month for those leads generated by this campaign.

In his book, Mastering Search Advertising: How the top 3% of search advertisers dominate Google AdWords, Rich Stokes, AdGooroo founder and chief Gooroo, delves further into keyword research, including insights on rules of thumb for setting initial bid prices for new keywords, how to increase traffic and managing bids without expensive software.   

Trademark Infringement
Another element of competitive intelligence is trademark infringement. Yet, even among search insiders, many don’t understand it well or the steps to mitigate losses.

Marketers first need to understand the rules. Each of the leading search engines allow marketers to bid on competitors’ trademarked terms but prohibit the use of these terms in the actual ad copy. So Kohl’s can bid on the term Target and Target can bid on the term Kohl’s, for example, but neither can use the other’s trademarked terms in their ad copy.

Although the rules are clear, marketers often don’t feel an urgency to act. Many seem to think the engines will tackle these rule violations on their behalf or avoid it entirely because they find the task overwhelming.  Whatever the reason, marketers often don’t see the urgency to protect their trademarks in search.

First and foremost, marketers risk losing a customer that actively sought them out. We’re talking about the brand as a keyword here; so any resulting ads get triggered by the user entering the marketer’s trademarked term.  

This is detailed well in Eric Enge’s October 14, 2008 post in Search Engine Land on Trademark Protection Using AdGooroo.

Beyond the loss in sales, traffic and brand equity a marketer stands to lose, the rightful owner of the trademarked term also risks setting up a consumer for a bad experience or permanently losing that customer to a copycat site.

If trademark infringement is suspected, the marketer needs to identify the culprits and file paperwork directly with the search engines to order the violator to cease and desist. Once documentation and paperwork has been submitted, Google, Yahoo!, MSN and the other engines will take action to address the advertisements in violation of the trademark usage policy.

Automated tools, such are as AdGooroo’s Trademark Insight simplify the process. Trademark Insight monitors all search engine advertising on a 24/7 real-time basis and alerts marketers to unauthorized trademark use. It will even automatically generate infringement complaints ready for submission to the search engines!

Catch the full interview with Richard Stokes today at 6:00 PM Eastern, 3:00 PM Pacific on Online Marketing with RSS Ray.

Using Competitive Intelligence to Grow Your Business

Monday, December 1st, 2008

Online Marketing with RSS Ray and RSSRay.com announces a new episode that you do not want to miss.

Richard Stokes, Founder, President, and CMO of AdGooroo

Show Date: December 3rd, 2008 at 6 pm Eastern, 3 pm Pacific

Show Topic: Competitive Intelligence: Frightening Information Your Competitors Can Easily Learn About Your Business

Show Guest: Richard Stokes, Founder, President, and CMO of AdGooroo

How to Listen: Live on wsRadio.com or available by Podcast on iTunes or by RSS Feed.

Guest Biography: Richard is a long-time Internet marketer with more than 13 years experience in technology and advertising management. 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 at the Kellogg Graduate School of Management (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”.

Sample Questions:
How does knowing your competitors keywords help with your own marketing?
Is it a good idea to attempt to target all of the same terms as your competitors?
What can you learn from your competitors landing pages?

RSS Ray’s Comments: “Using competitive intelligence can give you a big edge in pay per click advertising and natural search engine marketing. I expect Richard to provide some excellent insight into this exciting field.” stated RSS Ray, host of “Online Marketing with RSS Ray.”

AdWords Display Ad Builder Creates Professional Quality Banner Ads For Free

Friday, November 7th, 2008

Google recently released the AdWords Display Ad Builder to allow online marketers to create professional looking banner ads within minutes for use within the Google Content Network.

Recently Google released the AdWords Display Ad Builder as a way to let AdWords advertisers quickly create professional quality banner ads for free. Those ads can then be placed on specific websites in Google’s content network or be placed contextually by keyword throughout the network.

AdWords Display Ad Builder

Creating an ad with the Ad Builder is simple, simply choose a premade template from Google’s collection and then fill in your own text and upload a logo. Google has created templates for a number of industries including entertainment, financial, local, retail, technology, travel, and all purpose ads. You can also change the color of the ad, the display URL, and more. Once you have created your first ad, Google automatically resizes it to fit a number of banner ad formats. Google’s Display Ads 101 tutorial has all of the information you will need to get started today making banner ads.

Ads created with this system are managed through the normal AdWords control panel, but they offer you the opportunity to use either Pay-Per-Click (PPC) pricing or cost-per-thousand-impressions (CPM) bidding.

While display ads are in no way new to Google AdWords, the ability to create a professional quality ad quickly and at no cost, along with effective keyword targeting and ad testing, will likely open up this much ignored option to a whole wave of search engine marketers looking to improve their profits during these troubling economic times.

Learn more about Google AdWords Display Ad Builder.

The Best Free Marketing Tools to Improve Your Website Results

Thursday, August 14th, 2008

By: RSS Ray

Ask any contractor what he needs to do a job right and the first thing he will tell you is he needs the right tools. Online marketing is no different. If you want to get excellent results with your website you will need the right diagnostic tools to test, measure, and improve everything you do. Online marketers need tools for establishing a search engine optimization campaign, using web analytics to understand websites, preparing the latest keywords for a pay per click campaign in Google AdWords, preparing email marketing campaigns, and a whole lot more. Here is the best of the best free tools for online marketers.

The usefulness and design of these tools tends to range from downright awful, to absolutely amazing. Price ranges can also vary widely, but thanks to the efforts of a number of innovative companies and individuals, many of the very best tools are absolutely free.

Today we are going to take a look at twelve tools that are the absolute best of the best free tools for online marketers. Thanks to creativity, design, and in some cases a whole lot of money, these tools are the most innovative and useful tools you will find in 2008.

#1 Google Keyword Tool    

Drawing from the largest collection of search data in the world, the Google keyword tool has always been an incredibly useful way to discover hundreds of new keywords for your search engine optimization and paid search (PPC) campaigns. As of a few months ago, Google managed to up the ante even more by providing monthly estimates of the search volume for each keyword it suggests.

Anyone looking to do keyword research online would be wise to start by using this tool for keyword suggestions, ad competition data, and information on average search volume. To make things even better, Google allows you to put the keywords you like right into your account so that you can target them with an AdWords campaign.

Google Keyword Tool

 

#2 SEO Book Keyword Suggestion Tool

Like the Google keyword tool, The SEO Book Keyword Suggestion Tool provides tons of suggestions for other keywords you might be interested in. However, unlike Google’s Tool, this one also gives estimated values for all three major search engines. Additionally, the tool allows you to easily use a number of other tools from Google, Yahoo, and others to get a lot more information on each keyword it suggests.

It’s unclear how accurate the search data is as it seems to differ significantly from Google’s numbers, however, with the numerous options and many helpful suggestions this tool makes, it should be a part of every serious online marketer’s toolbox.

SEO Book Keyword Research

#3 SpyFu    

SpyFu is an incredibly useful tool that might make you wonder “is this even legal?” followed quickly by “how can that be free?” Eventually you will realize you don’t care either way as you dive into the nitty-gritty of your competitors’ ad campaigns.

By entering in the website address of nearly any competitor, you can see exactly what their daily ad budget is, how many clicks they are getting through their ads, and even how their spending has changed on a monthly basis. You can even see which keywords they are targeting and exactly what ad they are using for each keyword.

SpyFu goes even more in-depth by showing every word that a website ranks in organically, as well as that website’s top competitors both organically and through paid search. Needless to say you’ll be hooked.

SpyFu

#4 Compete.com

Compete.com is most often referenced for keeping track of the search engine wars. Those in the know are constantly checking to see if Google is at 74% market share or 78%. Fortunately, that same technology that tracks the search game is freely available to anyone who happens to visit the Compete.com website.

By entering in the URLs of up to five websites you can see monthly or daily graphs of traffic volume, customer engagement, and website growth. What this means is that in only a few seconds you can see the visitor count, length of visitor stay, and growth of your largest competitor in a series of easily downloadable graphs. What’s more you can compare all of this data against your own website so you can see how you stack up.

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#5 Quantcast  

The depth of demographic information that Quantcast provides about nearly any website is simply staggering. The tool was made as a way for media buyers to discover valuable websites to advertise with based on traffic, user demographics, and ad type offered. Even if you are not interested in buying ads, this free tool will provide you with incredibly detailed demographic information about your own website as well as your competitors’.

Quantcast is able to provide some incredibly detailed data for most well trafficked websites including data on visitor gender, age, ethnicity, parental status, income, and education. Additionally the site provides monthly traffic data and classifies visitors into addicts, regulars, and passersbys. 

Another feature that Quantcast offers is the ability to see other sites that visitors like, visit, and search for. This is excellent for marketers doing keyword research or link building.

Quantcast

#6 Xinureturns  

Xinureturns is relatively simple compared to some of the other tools on this list but its usefulness should not be underestimated. By entering your URL into the tool you are given a complete assessment of your website in just a few minutes.

The tool starts by checking your Meta tags, your domain info, and your HTML and RSS validations. Once it is sure that everything is set up properly, it starts to check your rankings at various sites and directories, any social bookmarks that point to you, and all of your indexed pages. Finally you are shown the number of backlinks you have with several search engines including a few you might have never heard of. 

This tool is incredibly useful for those of us who like to know exactly how our site is doing at every second, and it also allows you to identify any shortfalls that can likely be easily overcome with just a little bit of work.

Xinureturns

#7 Google Analytics  

What can be written about Google Analytics that has not already been said a hundred times before? In releasing this tool free to anyone who wants it, Google has created a host of super informed marketers who can quickly asses any issue on their website and compare it to the entire past history of the website.

By adding a simple piece of code to their website, anyone can track the exact way that their visitors are interacting with their pages. Google analytics provides traffic data, number of pages visited, average time on site, the location of visitors, and even where the traffic is coming from. The program also allows you to track conversions and a lot of other information about how users interact with your site.

Any competent online marketer should have this powerful free tool on each and every website he or she works on. The information it provides is critical to maximizing conversion rates and eliminating wasted opportunities.

Google Analytics

#8 Ranks.nl Keyword Analyzer Tool  

The Ranks.nl Keyword Analyzer Tool is the best example of a spider simulator I have come across as an online marketer. In addition to showing you how search engines view your site, this tool breaks down the keywords you are using by density, prominence, and location. The tool also has a keyword cloud that shows you visually the prominence of various keywords on your site.

Using a tool like this one allows you to make sure that you are correctly targeting the right keywords in natural search by including them often enough in your copy. It also helps by showing you some words that you are not targeting well enough or that you had not thought of targeting.

Ranks.nl Keyword Analyzer Tool

#9 Google Website Optimizer    

The Google Website Optimizer is the last of the free Google tools on this list, and also maybe the most important. Using this tool, marketers can test each individual aspect of their website to see how conversion rates can be improved.

The tool makes use of A/B split testing as well as multivariable testing to measure each and every part of a landing page in order to find how best to convert visitors into sales or leads. Marketers can test such aspects as pictures, headlines, text, free offers, and anything else they can think of.

By serving visitors different versions of a landing page, Google is able to demonstrate which features are helping the bottom line and which are hurting it. Marketers can then take this data and create the landing page that will offer them the highest overall sales.

Google Website Optimizer

#10 Website Grader 

The Website Grader is the like a report card for search engine optimization practitioners. In each of five categories, the tool assesses any website’s success in implementing proper SEO strategy. Each category including on-page SEO, off-page SEO, blogosphere, social mediasphere, converting qualified visitors to leads, and competitive intelligence, receives a score and at the end of the report a final score up to 100 points is assigned. The final score is a fairly accurate measure of how well a website is optimized.

In addition to being aesthetically pleasing and easy to use, this tool is an incredibly useful way to discover any optimization strategies that you might have not implemented. It is also a great way to track your progress in search engines, social networks, and blogs. Thanks to its automatic saving feature, you can compare your current results against and previous website grades you have received from the site. This way you can see how you have progressed after making the changes that it recommended.

Website Grader 

#11 Constant Contact

Constant Contact is by many accounts the gold standard of email marketing. With over 300 customizable templates available to quickly and easily create a professional looking email newsletter, promotion, or invitation, the online software is, without a doubt, essential to any marketer looking to increase profits with email marketing.

Once you sign up for an account with Constant Contact, you can easily import an existing email list or you can use their software to begin creating a new email list from scratch. With your list created, you can build a professional looking email such as a newsletter using their template wizard and set it to go out at a predetermined time and date. Once your email has been sent, the program provides you with analytics on open rates, click through rates, and more.

Unfortunately, Constant Contact is not a free tool; however, they do offer a 60 day free trial to get started.

Constant Contact

#12 AWeber

AWeber allows you to send out professional looking emails to your email lists; however unlike their competitors at Constant Contact, AWeber also allows you to set contacts into an email cycle that sends emails to specific customers at specific times. By building an email sequence, each new name that you enter into the program is sent a new email every day, month, or however long you choose to set each cycle. This way you can be sure that the right promotions or programs go to the right email address at the right time. For instance a new customer might get a special introductory offer right away while a lifelong customer will receive a special offer for valued customers on that same day.

Where Constant Contact only allows you to send out the same email to your entire email list, AWeber will likely have each of your contacts receiving different emails on different days. It is because of this distinction that Constant Contact is popular for newsletters while AWeber is much more popular for a continued sales cycle.

Unfortunately, AWeber is not a free tool; however, they do offer a free trial that is well worth your time to check out.

AWeber

If you need help with using any of these tools, or with starting an online marketing campaign for your company, we can help. Call us today at (877) 837-8803 or contact RSS Ray to learn what you can do to skyrocket your success online.

How To Strategically Implement Search Engine Marketing

Monday, April 28th, 2008

CEO Paul BruemmerBe sure to tune in this Wednesday at our new time slot, 3:00pm Pacific Time as RSS Ray has a guest with a lot of information to share to help online marketers make more money. RSS Ray will grill CEO Paul Bruemmer about how to strategically implement a search engine marketing program. Paul has provided search engine marketing programs for thousands of companies. He is also a well regarded columnist and speaker at many local and national conferences. Paul will share with our listeners his tested and proven methods he uses when mapping out all the steps of a search engine marketing campaign, and the strategic thought process behind each step.

Google AdWords Expert Howie Jacobson’s Tips and Tactics For AdWord Success

Friday, April 25th, 2008

Book Google Adwords for Dummies I had an outstanding discussion with Google Adwords expert and AdWords For Dummies Author Howie Jacobson during Wednesday’s edition of Online Marketing with RSS Ray. Howie’s website can be found at http://www.AskHowie.com.

Howie shared with me tips for getting started with advertising on Google as well as tips for established Google AdWord marketers. His insights into keyword selection, campaign organization, testing, analytics, and optimization were packed full of put-to-work now information sure to grow your bottom line.

You can access the entire interview at no charge through May 1, 2008 at:

http://www.wsradio.com/internet-talk-radio.cfm/shows/
Online-Marketing-with-RSS-Ray.html

You can also have free unlimited access to all past editions of the show right here.

How To Turn Leads Into Gold Using Google Adwords

Monday, April 21st, 2008

Be sure to tune in this Wednesday as RSS Ray interviews Howie Jacobson on how you can transform your business when you know the secret of Google AdWords. Howie Jacobson, PhD, is the author of AdWords For Dummies and has been an internet marketing strategist since 1999. He specializes in helping clients use Google AdWords to grow their businesses. He is the creator of Leads Into Gold, a home study course that teaches small business owners how to become their own direct marketing agencies. He is also co-creator of another home study course, Internet Marketing for Smart Beginners.

Jacobson has been a featured speaker at internet marketing workshops and seminars throughout the country and internationally. He is a regular contributor to HorsesMouth.com, a performance improvement site for financial advisors, and leads seminars on beginning and advanced AdWords topics.

Do It Wrong Quickly with Mike Moran of IBM

Tuesday, November 13th, 2007

RSS Ray’s second guest is Mike Moran of IBM. RSS Ray and Mike will discuss the release of his book, Do It Wrong Quickly. Mike is an expert in search marketing, search technology, publishing, Web personalization and Web metrics. He has authored many books and his latest hits the target with online marketing. Mike suggests to “Do It Wrong Quickly”, get your search advertisement out there and then listen to what customers have to say and respond quickly. Mike will share how smart you can look by following the steps outlined in his latest book.

Listen live this Wednesday 1pm Eastern/10 Pacific on wsRadio.com

Search Marketing for Online Retailers

Tuesday, July 31st, 2007

Alan Rimm-KaufmanWould you like to learn more about search marketing and how it can help your business? Alan Rimm-Kaufman, CEO of The Rimm-Kaufman Group, will be giving you powerful insight on how online retailers drive profitable sales to their websites, call centers, and stores using paid search and paid inclusion. Other topics that will be discussed are website usability, site conversion, and natural search engine optimization.

Listen to this weeks show on Online Marketing with RSS Ray 10am Pacific/1pm Eastern.

Interview with Search Industry Magazine Publisher Boris Mordkovich

Friday, June 29th, 2007

RSS Ray recently had the opportunity to ask search industry magazine publisher Boris Mordkovich some questions about how search marketing can work for locally-based businesses.

As founder and publisher of Search Marketing Standard , Boris has been directly involved in online marketing for several years. Through his publication’s work in providing quality search marketing articles, tips and interviews, Boris has put himself at the forefront of online marketing knowledge.
In addition to publishing Search Marketing Standard, Boris is co-founder and director of operations for MordComm, Inc . His company is responsible for several tools used by internet marketers regularly, including AdWatcher , a tool for tracking and managing ad campaigns, and Pay Per Click Universe , a popular information portal for search marketers.

-How did you get started in the field of search marketing?

My search marketing background started off, as for many people in the industry, by accident. A number of years ago, I was running a web hosting company when GoTo.com (later Overture, now Yahoo! Search Marketing) first launched. Although everybody was saying that their pay-per-click concept would never work, as people would not search paid listings, we decided to give them a shot and got terrific results for our hosting company.

Fast forward a few years, and I got so interested and involved in the search marketing industry that I eventually sold the hosting business and began developing a service to help advertisers track the performance of their search marketing ads and detect and prevent fraudulent activity. After a year of R&D, AdWatcher.com debuted.

Luckily, it has gone all uphill from there. In the next few years, I co-authored a print book on pay-per-click (PPC) advertising, our company launched another website for PPC advertisers at PayPerClickUniverse.com, as well as a bid management service at AdScientist.com. Our plan was to develop a suite of services and informational sites to help others get involved in search marketing.

All of that eventually led up to the magazine.

-What was the motivation behind starting your magazine?

In late 2005, I was approached by a colleague who was working as an SEM consultant for a print wedding magazine, and he proposed the idea of a print publication for the search marketing industry. Although our experience with print was minimal, I liked the idea of doing a print publication. Plus, no one else was targeting that space in such a fashion, so we saw potential and decided to give the idea a go. We hired him as the editor-in-chief, recruited a terrific designer and half a year later, the first issue came out.

In terms of motivation, there were a few different factors involved.

First of all, we realized that it would be very difficult to launch a regular website or a blog and compete with the hundreds of existing ones that cover the industry so well. In order for us to develop an audience, we had to do something unique and something that hasn’t been done before. Launching the magazine allowed us to gather an audience of over 50,000 readers in just a little over a year.

Second, from personal experience I know that many marketers and business owners struggle to keep on top of all the latest developments in the industry. The useful and practical tidbits of information that they could actually use to enhance their business are spread over hundreds of blogs and thousands of articles. We felt we could do a better job at covering emerging trends and offering well-researched and well-edited commentary and insights without overwhelming the reader.

And, if the feedback is any indicator, we have been able to do just that. And that’s the biggest motivation one can ask for.

-How is your magazine different from other information resources people have available to them about search marketing, especially more what some may consider more timely information delivered via blogs, podcasts, and RSS feeds?

I strongly feel that we are not competing directly against each other, but rather each resource tends to complement what the others offer.

Blogs are great because they offer instant information, news reporting, and various viewpoints. I personally subscribe to over a hundred blogs that I read on a daily basis to stay on top of the latest developments. We also have a blog on our website where several authors contribute on a daily basis.

I am also realistic enough to realize that blogs, podcasts, and RSS feeds have us beat in terms of delivering information instantly. However, with print, we are able to do something different.

With print, we are able to select a topic that we feel is practical and useful for our readers and spend the time and resources to research, write, and edit it to make it easy to understand and implement. We have top experts in the industry contribute to us on a regular basis to share their insights with our audience. And because they have a few months to research and write about the topic, and it goes through extensive editing, it turns out to be an excellent article truly worth reading.

Each issue contains solid articles with advice, strategies, and practical information that doesn’t get lost in press releases, news, and other content that’s not necessarily useful to the reader.

-Should local and regional businesses be advertising on search engines, or is that best left to national and international companies?

Local and regional businesses should most definitely advertise on search engines – more so now than ever before, as one huge trend in search is the move towards localized and personalized search. Consumers are moving away from traditional sources of local information, such as yellow pages and classifieds, and are accessing the same search engines they use for all kinds of different things to find local business listings. For example, according to a recent Nielsen/NetRatings study, 46% of the 2,866 surveyed reported using the web to find a local business within the previous 90 days.

-What kinds of local or regionalized businesses best benefit from geographically targeted paid search?

Anything and everything, really. Research indicates that people are increasingly investigating a potential purchase using online sources (seeking information on products, conducting competitive analyses, reading product reviews, etc.) to support a local purchase. Many products or services sought are almost inevitably local in nature – gardeners, home improvement sources, computer repair shops, hair stylists, etc. Even national or international franchise businesses, such as McDonalds or Burger King, offer products geared towards local consumption.

One key thing to remember, however, is that the major difference between local and general search engine marketing is that the goal of local is not just to bring people to your website, but rather get them to your actual front door where you can convert them into customers.

-Do people search using city names or zip codes for most of the information they are shopping for?

That is quite common. Increasingly, however, search engines try to guess the user’s location either based on their IP or on their profile information. For example, Google markets a free account you can use to easily access all of their services. Once you create that account profile, they use your geographic location to serve you local ads with Google search results.

Another approach that search engines are currently working on is using your search history to figure out your location. Here, if you typically search for things in Brooklyn, New York, the next time you search for something more general (such as an “attorney”), the search engine will try to provide you with results from the Brooklyn area.

-Is there any way I can determine the amount of search activity on Google within a local market for defined search terms prior to actually running a paid search campaign?

Tough question. It is definitely possible to search for keywords that contain your location on Google or Yahoo!, but it wouldn’t necessarily show the total search volume. Keep in mind that in addition to people searching for “x” service in “New York”, there are a lot of searchers who don’t input the actual location into their query, and the search engine simply uses its own data to determine it.

Furthermore, local search is not even entirely all about “searching” in the traditional way. For example, Google offers an option to create a local business ad that will be displayed when someone uses Google Maps to view your neighborhood. They also allow businesses to offer a discount coupon that the visitor can simply print out and redeem at your location.

Yahoo!, on the other hand, offers local listings for a flat fee. There is no bidding or keywords involved. Rather, they determine the fee based on your business category and the location. For many, this offers a simplified way of managing their local listings without the upkeep of managing traditional PPC-type listings.

All in all, you’ll find that there is a lot of merging of information, so that local ads are being displayed all over the place – regular results, maps, etc. This makes it pretty difficult to determine the potential volume without actually launching a campaign.

-Google only shows the number of impressions that were used within a given month for a search term. Is there any way to know the total number of impressions that resulted in someone clicking on an ad, including ads of other advertisers?

Unfortunately, no. Advertisers put a lot of effort into testing, optimizing, and improving their ads. And while they reap the rewards, they probably would not appreciate having all of their conversion data public for their competitors to see. After all, they are the ones that have spent the time and effort in coming up with that perfect ad.

However, do keep in mind that Google can estimate the amount of clicks you will receive from a certain keyword based on the keyword volume, your cost per click, competition, and so on. And that can provide you with quite a bit of insight into the campaign even before you launch it.

-What are some of the bigger mistakes you see local businesses making in their search marketing programs and how can they best be avoided?

The biggest mistake that we see is the “set it and forget it” type of thinking. Small, local businesses are usually so busy with other tasks that they simply set up the ads and just leave them on auto-pilot expecting them to convert. However, as with most things, that’s not enough. When a local business sets up the campaign, they need to do the following:

– Research all of the popular local advertising options, such as Google, Yahoo!, Local.com,
SuperPages.com, etc.
– Research all of the options each has to offer. The Google coupon system may not be their
most advertised feature, but it is a very effective tool that can influence a visitor to select you
over a competitor.
– Figure out whether your target audience lives exclusively in your area or could be visiting
from other areas. A restaurant or a night club might attract out-of-town visitors, while an
attorney or a car repair shop usually attracts locals, except for that emergency lawsuit or
brake failure.
– Spend time to research your keywords, develop your ads, and take advantage of all the
options a search engine has to offer.
– Develop a custom landing page for visitors. Remember that a visitor searching for local
information is interested in different things than someone searching for something to buy
online. The landing page should reflect that.
– Track and improve your performance. With the proliferation of affordable and effective ad
tracking services out there (shameless plug for our AdWatcher.com), there is no excuse not
to track the performance of your ads. And when you track, make sure to experiment with
new ads and new landing pages and always try to improve your conversion rates.

-What are some of the upcoming stories you are working on for the magazine?

It’s kind of ironic that you ask that because our next issue, Winter ’07, is actually focusing on the opposite of local search – international markets. The idea came from noting that a lot of advertisers are interested in expanding into markets outside of the United States, but aren’t really sure where to start.

Unfortunately, simply translating your website into another language such as French or Japanese is often not enough, because the search industry varies significantly in other countries. Google doesn’t dominate the market everywhere and, even where it is popular, there is a lot more to success in international markets than simply changing your ad account so your ads show up in search engines based in other countries.

For the upcoming issue, we recruited a number of local specialists from the UK, China, Russia, and Italy to give us an overview of the search advertising market in their own country and offer advice and resources for our readers on how to go after this market most effectively.

But that’s just the cover story. We will have a ton of strategies, trends, and advice for those businesses and marketers that simply want to improve their existing campaigns, as well.

-How can people subscribe to the magazine?

I’m very glad you asked. Typically, a subscription costs $15 per year, but we would like to give your readers a special deal – a one-year subscription to our magazine at no charge. Simply go to http://www.searchmarketingstandard.com/free-subscription.html to sign up today.

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About Our Radio Show

Online Marketing with RSS Ray is a weekly radio program about internet marketing best practices. It is carried live on wsRadio.com, the internet's leading talk station with more than 3 million listeners. You can listen live Wednesdays at 1pm Eastern/10am Pacific or get free podcast versions of the show.

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