Tag Archives: Ask.com

Making Paid Search Pay Off

In the first half of 2006, companies spent $2.5 billion to reach consumers online, according to a PricewaterhouseCoopers and Interactive Advertising Bureau report. But, to paraphrase advertising legend John Wanamaker, how much of that expense really works? Online, it’s sometimes easier to know, especially when it comes to paying for clicks on search results. Google, Yahoo, and other search engines offer advertising programs that highlight your business when customers search for your related product — and you only pay when someone clicks on your company’s ad. “The biggest advantage lies in your ability to manage your costs and spend strategically through only appearing for people who are making search inquires,” says Garrett French, a search specialist at Market Smart Interactive, a Morrisville, N.C. Internet marketing firm. “Every small business should experiment with paid search if they have an existing website that generates leads or sells product.” Here are ways to make it pay off. TIP #1: Consider the short-term and long-term benefits Click-through ads should not only be looked at as a short-term sales opportunity, but as part of the company’s long-term brand awareness strategy. “Search engines act as brand builders as well as shopping tour guides,” says Catherine Seda, author of Search Engine Advertising: Buying Your Way to the Top to Increase Sales. “It’s interesting to note that search engine listings fall behind only print ads as a brand-building tool used by U.S. companies.” TIP #2: Know the different search engines Determine what your needs are and find what services match them best. Google AdWords is the most popular click-through service. Google provides a link to your website and a short text ad every time a potential customer does a relevant search. It has partnerships with America Online, Ask Jeeves, and Earthlink. Yahoo Search Marketing uses a system similar to Google. A key difference is the Content Match program: Yahoo takes traditional click-through ads and places them beside actual articles, not just related searches. Aside from Yahoo news content, Content Match includes articles from MSN, CNN, The Wall Street Journal and National Geographic.. TIP #3: Find out which search terms consumers use Text-based click-through ads are like classifieds: the more words, the more it costs. Choosing the right words to “trigger” your ad are essential. “Any companies new to paid search should spend time doing keyword research to determine appropriate terms for bidding on,” French says. He recommends using search engine software to find out what words customers usually use to find your site. Google, Yahoo, and other search engines can show how viewers reach you. Basic Web counter software can also give search information. TIP #4: It costs whether they buy or not Search engines charge based on how many people click through the ad — not how many people are actually buying product. Experts recommend evaluating the cost of Internet ads without assuming every ad participant will buy. Also, be wary of “click fraud,” a growing category of crime in which competitors or organized rings of thieves click on your ad to drive up your costs.

Market Research: Bloggers and Your Business

As of April 2006,  the blog search engine Technorati reported that there were more than 35 million blogs. The so-called blogosphere was increasing at such a rate that a new blog was being created every second. Considering that word of mouth is the best advertising, understanding and using the blogosphere effectively can be a key marketing strategy. Why blogs are important “Blogs tend to move at a faster pace and be more informal in tone, so you’re more likely to pick up conversation about a new product type or need on a blog than on a standard website,” says Jennifer Laycock, editor-in-chief of Search Engine Guide. “You have more immediate access to what is being talked about.” Consumer-generated media (CGM) includes online forums, blogs, message boards, opinions and reviews, and any other public content contributed by consumers. A 2004 Pew Internet study found that “more than 53 million American adults or 44 percent of adult Internet users have used the Internet to publish their thoughts, respond to others, post pictures, share files or otherwise contribute to the explosion of content available online.” “The power shift from media institutions to consumer communities means that marketers must track a diverse and growing range of influential voices,” says Peter Kim, an analyst with Forrester Research, the Cambridge, Mass. research firm. Tracking consumer generated media There are two ways to track CGM: in-house or outsourcing. “Checking out a blog search engine like Technorati,  BlogPulse or Ask.com’s Blog Search can be a great way to see if people are talking about something new,” Laycock says. However, experts warn that doing a Web search isn’t the most time-efficient nor reliable approach. It can be tough to use blogs to gauge the potential sales volume or sales cost other than to get a general idea of interest in a product, they say. Laycock recommends doing sneak peaks or products previews with bloggers. Then it’s simply a matter of watching the blog responses. There are also several companies that offer outsourcing CGM gathering and analysis. Forrester considers Nielsen BuzzMetrics and Cymfony the best of the bunch. A recent report cites Nielsen BuzzMetrics the leader in specific consumer-generated media, such as blogs, while Cymfony is better at analyzing multiple data sources including blogs. According to Kim, Web aggregators/brand monitoring firms do the following: Data collection: video, audio and/or text from media consumer and/or traditionally generated Information processing: filtering the compiled data, classify and tag the pertinent content Data analysis: focus on client requirements and specific questions. Many services stop here Insight delivery: continued updates on new data and analysis via email or another online interface He recommends going to a brand-monitoring service to get the job done. “Tools like Google’s Blog Search, Alerts, and Trends enable marketers to monitor their brand ad hoc and for free,” Kim says. “But the time required to use these tools is prohibitive, and they do not provide comprehensive coverage of data sources, particularly mainstream media.”

Search Engine Screw Ups

The Web offers an awesome marketing advantage for small and medium-sized businesses — providing you don’t bungle the art of getting your website to show up under the right search engine keywords and categories. Google alone handles 91 million queries per month, according to the trade publication Search Engine Watch. That gives a business millions of opportunities to get your products and services in front of potential customers. However, opportunities don’t matter if the company website isn’t organized properly. “Without careful planning, I have personally seen businesses spend thousands or millions of dollars in unnecessary advertising expenses,” says Shari Thurow, head of Web design firm Grantastic Designs, of Carpentersville, Ill. and author of the upcoming book Search Engine Visibility. Microsoft Online claims 42 to 86 percent of Internet users rely each day on search engines and directories to find websites. And if you happen to be making the following mistakes, potential customers won’t be finding your business online anytime soon. Screw up #1: I’ll think about Web search optimization later The more frequent mistake that companies make when opening for business online is not planning ahead of time for search engine optimization, the art of having your website show up under certain keyword and category searches, experts say. Thurow says poor site planning means: The content management system isn’t search-engine friendly. The content itself contains few or no accessible keyword phrases. The content is mostly image or video-based, meaning no text for search engines. “Search engine optimization, as an online marketing strategy, has existed for over 10 years, yet businesses still have the attitude, ‘Build my site first, then optimize it for the commercial Web search engines,’” Thurow says. With a poorly planned site, she says,  “Search engine advertising will then be necessary for any type of search engine visibility.” That means paying for something that should be for free. Screw up #2: Trusting miracle workers and not doing your homework Some companies claiming to be search engine experts offer pie-in-the-sky results for a nominal fee. Their advertising pitches go like this — “Move up in Google rankings” and “Get thousands of links.” Their services come with a fee, of course, but some of their tactics could lead your company to be bounced off search engines if you’re not careful. On one hand, Web optimization is something that everyone is doing. There are all sorts of programming tricks and techniques that can fool the search engines into moving a webpage up in the rankings. On the other hand, some of the tricks — such as creating off-topic links to get more traffic, keyword spamming, hidden text, interlinking — are considered “black hat” tactics that can get a site expelled from certain search engines. “Any search marketing firm that gives these sales pitches are called ‘black-hat’ search engine marketers, and this group does not follow all of the terms and conditions set forth by the search engines,” Thurow says. “By not following search engine guidelines, websites get penalized or completely removed from a search engine index. I see it happen all of the time. Believe me, it is no easy process to get a site unbanned.” Screw up #3: If you want to do it yourself, do the research In the world of entrepreneurs, many times marketing becomes a do-it-yourself thing. It may be tempting to put together a website on your own with an off-the-shelf Web publishing program. While it may work as a starting point, consider hiring (or better yet, bartering) with someone who knows the ins-and-outs of making a website search-engine friendly. Or plan on doing some research. A variety of resources exist now that can give you the low-down on certain techniques to try to improve your rankings. Many categories are broken down by the different search engines. Recommended resources include: the book Google Power by Chris Sherman and the websites Search Engine Watch and Search Engine Guide. Screw  up #4: Not knowing where your customer is coming from Some entrepreneurs just type in their product category into Google or their favorite search engine to better know their market. Then they use that information to target keywords or categories for search engine optimization. Jennifer Laycock, editor-in-chief of Search Engine Guide, says, “The problem with this is that it doesn’t really cover the full scope of possibilities.” Laycock recommends going a step further and doing keyword research, a process that allows you to tap into the databases of searches consumers are conducting on the major search engines. You can then find out what unusual searches actually lead to your site  – and which natural searches are leading to your competitors. Some keyword research services are Word Tracker and Trillian’s Keyword Discovery. Screw up #5: Assuming everyone just uses Google Google may seem like the end-all, but experts say optimizing your website for other search engines, such as MSN Search and Ask.com, is just as important. In fact, some argue that Yahoo! gets better search results and follow-through from consumers. Determine what search engine consumers are using to get to your website and plan accordingly. Even the most basic site tracking software can tell you how customers are linking to your page. “Without analytics software,” Thurow says, “website owners are just guessing.”

Using the Web for Market Research

Each year, about 600,000 new businesses are started in the United States, according to the U.S. Small Business Administration. And last year the SBA backed 100,197 loans to businesses adding up to $19 million in 2005 — a record amount. It sounds like a wonderful time to start your next business, but more loans available also could mean more competition. It is equally important to make sure your idea is original and solid. After all, you have to pay the money back. Here are some smart ways you can research with your fingers. Use Keyword Search A step beyond doing a simple Web search, keyword search actually tracks what people are looking for most using Google, Yahoo! and similar engines. You can type in your business product or service and gauge the public interest in finding it. Keyword search is handy for two reasons. “First, you’re going to be reminded of product niches that you might not of thought of.” says Jennifer Laycock, editor-in-chief of Search Engine Guide, an online guide to search engines, portals and directories. For instance, typing in “babysitting services” may also give the search frequency for “animal sitting services.” “Second, these services will also give you a guesstimate of how many existing sites already use that phrase,” Laycock continues. “How many existing sites already offer that product.” She says it’s not uncommon for certain keywords to be heavily searched for, but have few site offerings. “In other words, you can find a hole in the market,” she says. WordTracker and Trellian’s Keyword Discovery are popular keyword search engines. Find competitor links If you are going to use a traditional search engine to test business ideas, use it to find competitor links. For instance, typing “link:www.competitor.com” into Google will tell how many sites link to the website. “It is a great way to see a competitor’s link development and PR campaigns,” says Shari Thurow, Web expert and author of the upcoming book Search Engine Visibility. “Is the competitor promoting a product or service similar to your own? Maybe you can get publicity because you have a new or better product.” Read blogs The newest trend, personal, business and critic blogs are updated much faster than traditional websites — and can be another gauge of public opinion. You can search them by using Technorati, Blogpulse or Ask.com’s Block Search. “Blogs tend to move at a faster pace and be more informal in tone, so you’re more likely to pick up conversation about a new product type or need on a blog than on a standard web site,” Laycock says. Conduct online surveys Online surveys are yet another way to gauge public opinion. Surveys have traditionally been conducted to help do market research about whether an idea or a product will be appealing to consumers. The Internet actually provides a less expensive alternative to in-person surveys or telephone research. Now many companies offer to conduct online research for you or give your company the tools to carry out your own surveying. Some online survey companies include EZquestionnaire, KeySurvey, and WebSurveyor.

Squelch the Summertime E-tailing Blues

Summertime is fast approaching. Many e-tailers embrace this time of year with excitement, while others are plagued with fear. Why? The difference lies in that some e-tailers sell products that are ripe for the summer months–think a swimsuit apparel e-tailer–while others who sell ski equipment may be bracing for a few slow months. It’s always been my experience–unbiased, of course as a marketer–that e-tailers should be spending on marketing when times are good as well as when they are bad. Spending on marketing when times are good usually ensures you of taking a larger slice of the pie, while spending when times are bad ensures you a better chance of overall business survival and recovery. So if the summer doldrums stand to affect your business, you should be looking at stepping up your search marketing efforts. Search marketing works–and works well–because it puts the customer in the driver’s seat. Web shoppers are searching for specific products and services–your products and services–using major search engines. Helping them find you when they’re ready to commit or spend can close sales for your business. That’s where search marketing comes in. Though natural or organic search–whereby a website’s owner optimizes its content with relevant keywords–is a must for any e-tailer, there is no guarantee on placement. That means your website could be shoved down to page three of the results. Today, pay-per-click search is a growing option and has become a must-have in driving traffic to e-tail websites. Pay-per-click search works on a keyword-based, bidding process. Essentially, e-tailers create a small text ad, select a geo-territory (local, regional, nationwide), upload a bunch of keywords that describe their products or services, and then individually bid against competitors for the “top positions.” Google and Yahoo! account for a very high percentage of searches, making Google AdWords and Yahoo! / Overture’s services a must in your arsenal. However, Ask.com, MSN.com, 7Search, ABC Search, and Search Feed are others that account for a very high percentage of the pay-per-click market. As an e-tailer, you’ve made a commitment to sell online–period. The only way to ensure that the commitment will pay off is to ensure you’re reaching the highest percentage of people searching for your types of products and services. Exposure to potential buyers is the only way you can be fully in the game. The bottom line is that you can’t rely on one method only. Business owners need to constantly test their search marketing efforts. While you may be enjoying Google AdWords, it’s logical that a test budget for Yahoo!, MSN, or Ask.com is in order But just like you’ve done in the past with other marketing initiatives, you must be diligent in ensuring that you know what’s working, and the only way to do this is to track and measure to the best of your company’s abilities. Be sure to understand where your traffic is coming from and how much of it is converting to sales, because at the end of the day your efforts need to impact your revenue. If they’re not, it’s time to re-examine your search initiatives.

Going Up Against Google

It was almost midnight, but David Sifry was still sitting at his office computer, nervously zinging instant messages back and forth with friends and employees. Sifry knew that his fledgling business, the popular blog search engine Technorati, was about to get a gigantic new rival: Google. It was a moment Sifry had been anticipating. When he founded Technorati in 2002, he knew that if blogging became as big as he anticipated, he’d almost certainly face competition from the giants. Indeed, he had spent the previous three years trying to take maximum advantage of Technorati’s first-mover status, the better to protect his company when the big boys made their play. On September 14, 2005, that day arrived. Google Blog Search was making its debut. Similar offerings from Yahoo and Microsoft were said to be in the works. If Technorati was to survive, Sifry reasoned, it would have to do so on the basis of its technology. From the outset, he had been pushing his programmers to refine Technorati’s novel way of searching the growing number of weblogs. And despite the long and admittedly scary shadow cast by Google, Sifry’s instincts told him to ignore the new competition and stick to his plan. Google, after all, had added other new services without killing its smaller rivals. The search engine Ask Jeeves, for example, remains viable. And Shopping.com, a shopping search engine, not only survived Google’s 2002 launch of Froogle, but wound up being purchased by eBay for $620 million in June 2005, which was hardly a bad outcome. Still, it was hard to imagine sitting back and doing nothing as one of the most powerful companies in the world encroached on his turf. “I take them extraordinarily seriously,” Sifry says. “These are very smart people, smarter than me, and they’ve made tons of money.” But Sifry didn’t see many options. Launching a major brand-building campaign to reinforce Technorati’s image as the original blog search engine wasn’t viable; after all, who can outspend Google? And he didn’t particularly want to cut and run and start looking for a buyer. A computer geek at heart, Sifry had a lot of faith in the technology he’d developed. Indeed, his bet all along had been that Google’s approach to searching the Web wouldn’t be the right fit for the blogosphere. The company’s famed PageRank algorithm indexes keywords and looks at the number of people linking to websites in order to establish the best matches for a search. In essence, Google treats the Web like an enormous library, sifting through millions of pages and displaying the most relevant ones, regardless of how old they might be. Sifry believes the blogosphere is different. It’s not so much a library as a conversation, and old blog entries get stale fast. That’s why he’s made sure that the first page of Technorati search often yields items posted in the past 10 or 20 minutes. A former Wall Street analyst, Sifry developed the technology in early 2002, while working as chief technology officer at Sputnik, a wireless computer networking start-up he had co-founded. On the side, he kept a blog, mostly to expound on tech issues, and he was curious to know who was reading it. So he spent an evening writing software code that would help answer the question. At the time, most bloggers were techies like Sifry or teenagers posting their diaries. But the phenomenon took off, and Sifry’s website, which he had dubbed Technorati, was seeing rapid traffic growth and even some paying customers–including The New York Times and Reuters, both of which licensed the technology to track what bloggers were saying about their articles. When AOL called and said it wanted to collaborate with Technorati on its new blogging service AOL Journals, Sifry realized that Technorati was no fluke and could be a lot more than a hobby. He wound down his relationship with Sputnik, signed a deal with AOL, and started raising some angel capital. In September 2003 he devoted himself full-time to Technorati. Its mantra: “Be of service.” Sifry’s instincts about the blogosphere proved correct, and Technorati has been scrambling from the outset to keep up with the blogging world’s explosive growth. In 2004, the company raised $6.5 million in venture capital. By the fall of 2005, more than 15 million blogs were being read by 30 million people, and Technorati was performing millions of searches a day. The company wasn’t profitable. But it was building a real business, using a business model not unlike Google’s–selling advertising and sponsorships, and syndicating its technology to other websites. It had much better brand recognition than its competitors, most of them start-ups such as Feedster, PubSub, and Bloglines. But going head-to-head with Google would be an entirely different matter. Sifry wondered what Google had up its sleeve. It might, for instance, have more effective ways to deal with the growing number of blog spammers trying to game the search engines (spammers had generated lots of complaints about Technorati). Indeed, the company was vulnerable on a number of fronts. Keeping up with demand was a constant challenge. Searches on Technorati were taking longer and were increasingly generating error messages. Customer support was overwhelmed, with some queries taking as long as a week to answer, sparking more complaints among bloggers. What if Google’s technology simply worked better? What if the company had developed entirely new approaches that Sifry hadn’t even considered? Could he really just stand by and do nothing? The Decision The prototype of Google’s Blog Search went live at midnight on September 14, 2005. Most of Technorati’s work force of about 30 was online, waiting. Sifry spent about half an hour checking it out, then posted a welcome note to his new competitor on his blog, including some friendly trash-talking about all the things Technorati could do that Google couldn’t, such as image finding. Then Sifry went home and got some sleep. There were no big surprises. Google Blog Search, he concluded, was solid but simple. It seemed to have a hard time keeping up with the dynamism of the blogging world; many search results it displayed were more than 24 hours old, which is ages in the blogosphere. On the other hand, Google delivered those results in less than half a second, compared with at least a full second for Technorati. It sounds minor, but in the world of Web search, that’s a big difference. “We knew we had a lot of work to do,” Sifry says. Since then, the company has been scrambling to keep its edge by launching new features. First up was a tool that provides constant updates of the things that matter most to people who write and read blogs at any given moment–such as the most-discussed books, movies, and news items on the Web. Then in October, it added a feature that is able to determine who is the most authoritative blogger on any particular topic. In November, a “Mini” search window debuted that automatically refreshes users’ favorite searches while they’re doing other things online. And in December the company introduced a prototype called Technorati Explore, an experiment in creating a newspaperlike front page from blog posts. Traffic growth slipped slightly in September. But it rebounded in November and is still growing faster than Google Blog Search, according to Hitwise, a company that monitors Internet traffic. As of mid-December, Technorati was tracking some 23.4 million blogs, adding some 70,000 more to the list every day, and getting 1.53 visitors for every one visitor to Google Blog Search. Sifry, of course, knows that Google’s product will almost certainly get better. He’s also facing new competition from Yahoo, which rolled out a blog search function on its news page in October. But he remains confident that Technorati will not lose its technological edge for some time. “What we’re building is fundamentally difficult,” he says. “If it were easy, everyone would be doing it.” Another advantage: Unlike Google, Yahoo, or any other major player, Technorati needs to keep its focus on just one thing–the blogosphere. With blogging more popular than ever, Sifry says he’s currently evaluating more than 100 potential deals–primarily advertising, sponsorship, and syndication deals. And a lot of the credit, he says, goes to Google. “I no longer have to explain what a blog is,” he says. “It’s absolutely an easier business discussion now.” The Experts Weigh In Switch to services Technorati has some good technology, but I’m not sure that it has a strategy that can keep it alive. In fact, I’m not sure what its strategy is. I’d like to see Sifry build a business around services, not search. Many of Technorati’s rivals are offering private label services for Web publishers or platform services to bloggers, like hosting and tools. Technorati seems to be doing neither. It has introduced some very clever technology, but I don’t think an advertising-based revenue model is enough to sustain the business. Susan Mernit Partner, 5ive, a digital media consultancy in New York City Look for a buyer Technorati can point to different features it has that Google doesn’t, but that’s only for now. Technorati’s best bet is to try to get acquired. It needs to stop worrying about search technology and take the head start it has in creating online communities and leverage it. Bloggers come to Technorati for more than just searching. Building on that community will make Technorati more than just another search engine. Anything it can roll out that makes it harder for people to switch will make it a sweeter acquisition target. Stephan Spencer President, Netconcepts, a Madison, Wis.-based Web consultancy It’s all in the execution I use Technorati every day to see what’s being said about my blog. It’s not clear to me what Technorati thinks its market is. Is it trying to be an entry point for consumers? Or a tool for blog publishers like me? Compared with Technorati, Google is terrible, especially in terms of timeliness. On the other hand, Technorati is overwhelmed by spam. Technorati’s strategy is not unique, so its execution has to be perfect. Sooner or later, somebody’s going to get it right. I hate to say it, but it’s probably Google. Peter Rojas Co-founder, Engadget, a New York City-based blog about tech gadgets