Friday, January 29, 2016

SearchCap: Republican Debate & Google, AdWords iOS App & Adobe Report

searchcap-header-v2-scap

Below is what happened in search today, as reported on Search Engine Land and from other places across the web.

From Search Engine Land:

Recent Headlines From Marketing Land, Our Sister Site Dedicated To Internet Marketing:

Search News From Around The Web:

Local & Maps

Link Building

Searching

SEO

SEM / Paid Search

Search Marketing

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No-Hype SEO: A Realistic Formula For Making SEO Work For Your Business, Part 2

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In part 1 of this series, we talked about the origins of good marketing, how SEO fits into modern marketing, why it’s the most dependable and consistent form of quality lead generation, and (most importantly) how to start your SEO machine.

Today, we’re diving into the last two levels that will take you from just generating leads to collecting a return on your leads (revenue).

Here are the four levels:

  1. High Level (search terms, PPC terms).
  2. Top of Funnel (indirect content).
  3. Blog Level (relevant blog topics and lead generation tools).
  4. Back End (marketing automation and database marketing).

Most marketers think of their marketing as having two distinct phases: attracting and converting.

The problem with this approach is that it leaves much to be desired on the third (and arguably most important) part of your marketing: trust building.

Based on my own experience, the most effective three-step process for a profitable marketing and lead generation system is attraction (collect the lead), trust building (earn their trust) and conversion (make the sale). Here is where this SEO formula starts to pay off.

Trust Building, Built Right In

Ideally, your prospects are searching you out. They scour the internet looking for solutions to their problems. By now, you have put together a list of the common phrases for which they’re searching (homework from part 1), and you’ve got a list of topics that attract interested prospects to your site (also homework from part 1).

Now, they read your articles, attend your webinars or otherwise consume your content and attribute the learning to you. You are the person who has helped them solve their problem (at least partially), and that generates an extraordinary amount of trust.

Contrast this with paid traffic, where the goal is to monetize as quickly as possible. I’m all for monetization, but one of the problems with it is that the leads you generate do not know you and do not trust you, which makes it hard to convert them into customers.

Never forget, your customers and clients are real people, not dollar bills; they have real problems, struggles and questions. Smart marketers offer help in trade for their prospects’ trust and attention, and only then do they offer the opportunity for the sale.

Next, let’s dive into level 3: Blog level.

Turn Visitors Into Leads

Armed with your list of PPC terms and your list of related interest terms, you can now go about creating your blog topics and “opt-in” assets.

We’ve talked about the decision patterns of your prospects, and at this level they are likely looking for buying information. Picking up the example from part 1 of this post, assume you are a digital marketing consultant from Boston.

We identified your PPC terms as follows:

  • Email marketing consultant Boston.
  • Digital Marketing Agency.
  • Experienced Infusionsoft Consultant.
  • Landing page optimization expert.

Your top-of-funnel terms include:

  • How To Make Better Email Newsletters.
  • How To Create Profitable AutoResponder Series.
  • Compare Infusionsoft to Hubspot.
  • Case Study of Email Marketing for eCommerce Business.

You’ll want to grab a pen (or open a spreadsheet) and begin crafting “opt-in” assets that can take an interested visitor and turn them into a lead. They’ve read your blog post titled, “How to Make Better Email Newsletters,” and now they want more information. This is where SEO begins to pay off.

In this case, you could have a white paper titled, “White Paper: How To Double Your Profits Using This Proven Newsletter Template.” The catch: this piece of content is “gated,” meaning the visitor must trade their contact information to download the white paper.

This is most likely not a problem, because they’ve likely searched for you on Google (using your PPC terms, such as “Email Marketing Consultant Boston”), found your site and read your articles (including “How to Make Better Email Newsletters”), and now they have trust in the fact that you are indeed the expert and are interested in helping them. They’re primed to download this white paper and become a lead.

See how this works?

Next up, you need a regimen that will maximize marketing outreach until they become a sale. That’s called “database marketing” or “back-end marketing,” and it’s Level 4 of our SEO system.

The Final Level: Turning Leads Into Money

When a lead comes into your universe, it’s important that they are segmented appropriately from the beginning. In other words, if a lead comes through the system outlined above, they are (obviously) interested in creating newsletters that create sales for their business.

Of course, you don’t want to start hitting them over the head with sales messages on unrelated topics, as they are likely to opt out. However, if someone becomes a lead off of a white paper titled, “Infusionsoft Vs. Hubspot: Pros and Cons Revealed,” then you can certainly pitch Infusionsoft, as they have shown direct interest. Segmentation is very important in making sure your SEO creates actual profits.

Autoresponder sequences can now be geared up to offer more information, more training, and sales messages specifically tailored to the type of offer the lead wants to buy. For each top-of-funnel term, you are going to need an “opt-in” offer and an autoresponder sequence specifically written for that term.

So here’s our sequence:

PPC Term > Top-Of-Funnel Content > Opt-In Asset > Custom Autoresponder

And here’s how that would look with the examples given thus far:

Email marketing consultant Boston (PPC Term) > “How to Make Better Email Newsletters” (Top of Funnel Content) > White Paper: How To Double Your Profits Using This Proven Newsletter Template (Opt-In Asset) > 12 emails directing to content and training and offers for email newsletter services

This is a powerful marketing tool for any e-commerce business. When you use your autoresponder sequences to push people back to related blog posts and content, it not only can generate more profit, but it also has the potential to further boost your SEO rankings. Think of it as a cyclical system that can be adapted to fit almost any industry.

If you have any questions related to your specific industry, please ask me on Twitter.

The post No-Hype SEO: A Realistic Formula For Making SEO Work For Your Business, Part 2 appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Search In Pics: GoogleBot Band, Inside Out Post-It Art & Hangouts Pillow

In this week’s Search In Pictures, here are the latest images culled from the web, showing what people eat at the search engine companies, how they play, who they meet, where they speak, what toys they have and more.

Google Hangouts Pillow Selfie:

Google Hangouts Pillow Selfie
Source: Google+

Google Inside Out Post-It Art Work:

Google Inside Out Post-It Art Work
Source: Google+

Google Top Contributor Summit Swag Bag:

Google Top Contributor Summit Swag Bag
Source: Google+

GoogleBot Rock Band:

GoogleBot Rock Band
Source: Twitter

The post Search In Pics: GoogleBot Band, Inside Out Post-It Art & Hangouts Pillow appeared first on Search Engine Land.

3 Reasons B2B Marketers Must Embrace Mobile… Now

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We’re all familiar with recent statistics that illustrate the growth of mobile device usage. Over the last few years, we’ve seen internet usage on mobile devices grow to exceed PC. In 2015, Google announced that mobile searches now exceed desktop searches on their search engine. And it’s estimated that nearly 75 percent of the US population now owns a smartphone.

Mobile is clearly a critical element of any successful marketing strategy. But what does increasing mobile usage mean specifically for B2B marketers? Why are so many B2B companies slow to adopt mobile marketing strategies, and how will this ultimately impact their business success?

Here are three critical reasons B2B marketers need to embrace mobile… now.

1. Mobile Impacts Fundamental Marketing Metrics

Mobilegeddon might not have been the digital marketing calamity many were expecting, but B2B marketers must realize that there are significant and fundamental risks associated with not having a mobile-friendly website.

According to CWS, businesses that do not provide a solid mobile experience encounter the following:

  • A drop in organic ranking.
  • A loss in mobile site traffic.
  • An increase in bounce rate.

I believe that many B2B marketers remain unaware that providing a less-than-optimal mobile experience is jeopardizing fundamental online marketing success metrics such as visibility and website traffic.

2. Mobile Is Required For Customer Engagement

In addition to ensuring brand visibility and driving traffic, mobile-friendly websites increase customer loyalty, sentiment and engagement. Here’s a sampling of facts from a Google study entitled What Users Want Most From Mobile Sites Today.

  • 74 percent say they are likely to return to a company’s site in the future, if it is a mobile-friendly site.
  • 48 percent feel frustrated and annoyed if a company doesn’t have a mobile-friendly site.
  • 52 percent are less likely to engage with a company that has no mobile website.

These are fairly dramatic statistics. B2B marketers can’t afford to annoy prospects and certainly shouldn’t erect barriers to engagement.

A positive mobile experience is now absolutely required to successfully interact with prospects in order to drive engagement, leads and sales.

3. B2B Decision Makers Are Increasingly Using Mobile Devices

We know that business buyers rely on the internet during their research and selection process. But did you know that more and more of these decision-makers are using mobile devices? In fact, B2B mobile usage is intensifying throughout the entire buy cycle.

Google partnered with Millward Brown Digital to survey 3,000 B2B decision makers about their research and purchase habits. According to the study:

  • 42 percent of researchers use a mobile device during their B2B purchasing process.
  • Search activity for those using a smartphone has intensified. Google is reporting a 3X growth in mobile queries.
  • B2B researchers are not just using mobile devices when they are out of the office; 49 percent of B2B researchers who use their mobile devices for research do so while at work.

It isn’t just consumer mobile usage that is growing. These days, B2B marketers, you must understand that your customers, your prospects and your buyers are using mobile devices more frequently than ever, at the office and outside of work hours, to make critical business decisions.

Get Started: Mobile-Friendly Website Tips

So how should you determine the effectiveness of your company’s current mobile experience? I recommend taking these two very simple “get started” steps:

  1. Assess and improve your Mobile PageSpeed.
  2. Understand and implement Mobile Design Best Practices.

Along with your PageSpeed Score, Google provides specific recommendations on what you should fix to improve the mobile experience. For example, in order to improve page load speed, you may need to enable compression, leverage browser caching, minify CSS, optimize images and avoid landing page redirects.

In terms of implementing mobile design best practices, you may need to improve things by using more legible font sizes, simplifying navigation, configuring the viewport and avoiding plugins.

These two resources provide a simple and effective starting point for improving the mobile experience.

Mobile, Your Competitive Advantage

Here is the bottom line for B2B marketers:

  • The mobile experience is now directly impacting your fundamental online marketing success and affecting metrics such as visibility and traffic.
  • Providing a favorable mobile experience is absolutely required to continually engage prospects and drive leads and sales.
  • B2B decision-makers are using mobile devices across all phases of the buy cycle and throughout the day (including at work).

Take a look at your website analytics data. Even if mobile traffic isn’t a huge device segment today, it is growing and will continue to do so.

Get ahead of this curve. Start embracing our multi-screen world. Turn mobile marketing into your competitive advantage… today.

The post 3 Reasons B2B Marketers Must Embrace Mobile… Now appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Adobe: Paid Search Spend Growth Slowed In Q4, Mobile Continued To Eat Into Desktop

ppc-blue-mobile-ss-1920Paid search continued to grow in the fourth quarter of 2015, but at a slower pace than the previous year, according to the latest Adobe Digital Index report.

Spend among advertisers running campaigns on the Adobe Media Optimizer platform rose 3 percent year-over-year in Q4 2015, compared to the 12 percent increase seen in Q4 2014 globally.

Growth on Google slowed to 5 percent globally, down from 8 percent the previous year. For Bing and Yahoo, growth rates declined sharply in Q4 to 7 percent, down from 36 percent in Q4 2015.

 

 

Mobile Spend Share Rises, Clicks Remain Cheaper

Smartphone share of search spent grew to 23 percent of spend in Q4 2015, up from 15 percent the previous year. Desktop saw spend share drop from 69 percent last year to 62 percent in Q4 2015. Tablet spend share fell from 16 percent a year ago to 14 percent in Q4. 

Yet, even as desktop spend share falls, and mobile click-through rates keep rising, mobile CPCs actually fell 7 percent year-over-year globally.

Smartphone CPCs cost 26 percent less on average than desktop, yet mobile CTRs made significant gains in the final two quarters of 2015. CTRs were 40 percent higher on smartphones than desktop in Q4, up from the 20 percent seen the previous year and through Q2 2015.

adobe-q4-2015-device-cpc-ctr

Mobile Shopping Ad Spend Nearly Doubled

On smartphones, product ad spend jumped 95 percent among brand and retail advertisers. Desktop accounted for just 11 percent of the 37 percent spend gain seen overall in Q4 year-over-year.

Google continued to showing product listing ads on more queries. In North America, PLAs accounted for 64 percent of retail advertiser impressions in Q4, up 42 percent from the previous year. That was similar in the rest of the world, where 63 percent of retail impressions came from PLAs, up 78 percent year-over-year.

google pla impression share

Gemini CPCs Rose Relative To Google

Looking at Yahoo’s upstart (or restart) effort into search, CPCs remain heavily discounted but the gap compared to Google continues to shrink. CPCs on Gemini increased nearly three-fold relative to the search leader, rising from just 17 percent of Google CPCs in Q2 2015 to 49 percent Q4. google bing yahoo paid search q4 2015 - adobe

Bing CPCs also continued to rise relative to Google, increasing from 75 percent of Google CPCs in Q2 to 80 percent in Q4.

The Adobe Digital Index report is available for download here.

 

The post Adobe: Paid Search Spend Growth Slowed In Q4, Mobile Continued To Eat Into Desktop appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Thursday, January 28, 2016

New “Candidate Cards” Let Fiorina Walk All Over Others & Google’s Search Quality In #GOPDebate

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Google’s new experiment in giving US presidential candidates “cards” where they have a guaranteed position are, so far, a disaster in their debut as part of today’s Republican debate.

Earlier this week, Google said that it would be allowing US presidential candidates to post content directly to Google that, in turn, would appear in a “card” format in a guaranteed place atop its search results.

The first test of this experiment happened during today’s “undercard” debate between Jim Gilmore, Mike Huckabee, Rick Santorum and Carly Fiorina. It was quickly dominated by Fiorina.

No matter what searches related to the debate that I tried, Fiorina’s posts always came up. Cards from her campaign appeared at the top of Google’s results for “gop debate,” as shown below:

gop-debate

No other candidates had cards. In fact, searching for Huckabee or Santorum by name produced Google search results where the entire top of the results were dominated by Fiorina’s cards:

huckabee

santorum

Her cards ranked tops for a generic search like “debate” and even for “who won the debate,” as shown below:

debate

who won the debate

The problem is almost certainly that none of the candidates other than Fiorina are making use of the new Google card system, which allows candidates to post content directly on Google in some mysterious way. Here’s an example of one of the standalone posts:

fiorina

Fiorina’s campaign seems to be making use of this new publishing method. The other campaigns are likely not. I certainly can’t locate any content from them. As a result, Fiorina is winning the SEO game because she’s the only one playing in this new space.

It may be that when the main debate begins, other candidates will have their own cards appear. If so, that will provide more variety. But if they don’t, or if Google reacts primarily to ranking these on a first-in, first-out type of situation, it makes a mockery of the balance that its search results have generally sought to provide. It’s allowing one savvy candidate to potentially push all the others aside.

Also frustrating, there’s no way to see all the posts that a candidate has made. With Twitter or Facebook, candidates — like anyone — have profile pages that list everything they’ve published. But with Google, the “More from” link that it provides under any particular post simply generates a new Google search, where you’re back to seeing only a subset of what’s been published. Here’s an example for Fiorina:

carly fiornia

The “More from” link shows you some of Fiorina’s posts but not all of them. It’s a handy way for Google to generate more search traffic from these cards but not useful for people who wish to track down all the things she or any candidate has posted to Google.

When the main debate gets going, I’ll be watching for how the cards change.

The post New “Candidate Cards” Let Fiorina Walk All Over Others & Google’s Search Quality In #GOPDebate appeared first on Search Engine Land.

PPC Geo-Bidding, Simplified

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Recently, I came across a social media post that — honest to goodness — went on at length about the price the poster would be willing to pay for a new brand of ketchup.

“I’d need 50 percent off to give it a try,” opined the timid tomato tester. “If I turn out not to like the product, it’s just a whole lot of wasted time, and a waste of food .”

“This calls for snark!” some alien voice urged me.

I’m not proud of it, but there was only one possible reply: “Dude. It’s just ketchup.”

Unlike the man-child clinging to the safety of the almighty Heinz brand, some people actually get paid to overthink stuff. That appears to be the case in the marketing profession.

Despite some underlying complexity in the permutations, probabilities and platforms, there are many topics in digital marketing today that could use a little dumbing down — at the very least to overcome paralysis, but also to avoid doing fake work or engaging in “doctor that actually makes the patient sicker” activity (of the type Nassim Taleb has been so eloquent in calling out).

Bidding accurately on different geographic segments is one of those topics. Let’s go.

Dive In! See, You’re Already Swimming!

In AdWords, assuming you set up your main location (i.e., your nationwide “catch-all” — say, United States) along with a few additional sub-locations of interest (a handful of cities or states, using the +LOCATIONS button), you’re already geo-targeting.

Plus, you’re already geo-bidding as soon as you enter your first bid adjustment (adjusting your core CPC bids by some percentage, for ad viewers associated with that geo segment). That wasn’t hard, was it?

(Note: Bing Ads offers essentially parallel functionality.)

I consider this screen to represent the core of any AdWords geo-bidding strategy today; it’s available on the Locations tab as one of three prominent bid adjustment opportunities (alongside mobile bid adjustments and ad scheduling).

geo bids

Somehow this powerful, basic functionality gets lost in the shuffle of PowerPoint decks seemingly bent on adding complexity for its own sake.

One conference presentation I recently reviewed finally got to this screen on slide 34 of a 40-slide presentation. By this time, attendees were no doubt visualizing the complimentary samosas, fancy ketchup and drinks available at the cocktail reception, convinced they could never handle all the complexity of data manipulation required to be “good at geo.”

Worse, little to nothing was said about this important geo-bidding screen. What should you set up, and why?

What To Set Up, And Why? No One Is Really Saying.

The above AdWords screen, obviously, is no great secret. The question is, can you be doing more with it? Can you be doing that more effectively? And are people in Phoenix as stingy as I say they are? And if Pittsburgh is such a goldmine for my clients, why the heck can’t Pittsburgh be bigger? Do special features like demographics, places of interest, colleges, central commercial areas and ZIP codes really help? When?

Another question that nags at a lot of marketers is this: What if I do it improperly? Won’t things get worse?

Faced with a lack of resources and no clear methodology to manage from, many avoid the task entirely. Or they’ll throw a few (or all 50) US states into the mix, then abandon the effort.

I’m convinced there is a solid lift to be had from geo-bidding accurately. But so far, few of us in the industry have produced usable case studies to show clearly what kind of lift geo-bidding is capable of.

Given the difficulty of A/B testing campaign-level settings, most case studies would have to be taken with a grain of salt anyway.

Beyond a certain point, there is only wheel-spinning, busywork and regression to the mean, as with so many other marketing boondoggles.

Experiment. There’s Limited Risk.

It’s worth asking — to channel Taleb once more — is this something you’d fuss with if you had real skin in the game? Not as a technocrat, but as a business owner?

In the financial, medical and environmental realms, there are awful consequences to “blowing up,” even if blowups or meltdowns are rare (black swans). Yet fast talkers and advocates of shiny new things pursue slight gains too ardently. Taleb refers to that as “the convexity of risk.”

In AdWords, you don’t get quite the same potential for catastrophe. So if you can tune out the overly eager purveyors of shiny objects, use some of your spare time to tinker. You may find you can create incremental, reliable lift without endless effort.

The Cool Thing: Geo Data Gets Beyond Black-And-White Thinking

Many marketers aren’t aware of the power of the data we have at our fingertips today, and how easy it is to tap that power.

Last year, we worked with a client who told us to exclude a number of states from their financial lead generation effort because 30 years of direct mail had taught them those areas don’t perform for them.

We are generally against putting the cart before the horse in this way. If René Descartes himself sat us down and told us that logic dictates we should shut down potential goldmine states in favor of a highly convoluted and unproven theory about how certain personas might come up with a search query, we’d introduce him to David Hume and a pitcher of ale and return when he’d come to his senses.

Basic Principles: What Are We Trying To Accomplish?

To put the exercise on a solid foundation, consider the following basic principles:

  • The purpose of geo bid adjustments is to maximize PPC campaign volume and/or ROI by bidding accurately on some configuration of different geographic areas (a number of states and metros within the US, for example).
  • This “bid adjustments” functionality, called Enhanced Campaigns when first rolled out by Google, is a powerful advancement over the old methodology where you had to set up a separate campaign for every geo-specific bid strategy you wanted to deploy. Granted, bid adjustments may not be the only geo-strategy in many accounts. But for many PPC accounts — possibly the majority — it’s a great time-saver to lean more on bid adjustments and less on elaborate account structures, geo-specific ad copy and so forth.
  • At a certain point, you must accept that complex stories are irrelevant to this exercise because of what it entails: many of the resulting actions will be small bid adjustments of less than 10 percent. In much rarer cases, those adjustments may be 20 percent, 40 percent, or all the way up to 100+ percent if you are looking at a highly localized type of business. In all cases, what you are doing is fiddling with bids. It’s that simple. Hearing an elaborate story about neighborhoods and personas does zero to alter the course of events. Just normalize each segment to hit your target KPI on all of them.
  • Geography is not being used as a bid factor for its inherent characteristics, presumably, but because it is a good enough proxy for propensity to purchase. That propensity doesn’t derive solely from income, but from a mix of demographic and cultural characteristics, including the nature of employment or common pastimes.
  • For simplicity’s sake, it’s worth remembering that we are essentially on the lookout for differing conversion rates (though you can opt to manage to ROAS, CPA or whatever you like, of course). A greater search query volume, because “people like salty snacks in this region,” doesn’t necessarily translate into more dollars to the business, since we’re paying for clicks.
  • The behavior of the segments has to be significantly patterned in a manner distinct from just random data fluctuations to be worth adjusting your bids to. Put another way, long-term patterns that are distinct enough from the mean to build up a high statistical confidence level warrant attention. Stuff that just bounces around short-term but results in regression to the mean shouldn’t be “chased” — at best, you’re getting no farther ahead; at worst, you do even worse than if you had not managed it at all.
  • Following from that, I’ll save you some time: If you’re getting excited about how to best market to a bazillion ZIP codes, keep randomness and statistical confidence in mind. Maybe don’t bother unless you’re very advanced and have a very large account.
  • Behavior will vary from industry to industry, from account to account and from campaign to campaign.

Slightly More Advanced Principles

Now consider the following slightly more advanced principles:

  • A thematically organized account may help, as long as the resulting campaigns are large enough. Poorly organized accounts — say, accounts that have unnecessarily large campaigns — may wind up “blending” interesting behaviors to a less interesting aggregate. This can mask interesting behaviors that break down by, say, type of product.
  • This stuff isn’t all that easy or common to automate, but there’s no doubt you can and should automate it, past a certain point of time being wasted.
  • Big-city dwellers may exhibit behavior that meaningfully departs from the “hinterland” (rest of the state); in this case, managing a combination of cities, metros and states may be important.
  • For your particular account, combined with your unique insights into how certain parts of the world “tick,” you might be able to hit on some clever approaches to geo-bidding in highly populated areas. Get creative. Pick a suburb you know, and add it as a geo-segment, along with the DMA and the state.

Don’t worry about data, though, if you don’t add a given segment. You can look up the past data at any level using “View Location Reports,” available from the same AdWords screen. That might be an awfully important place to research your strategy!

Sunset Superfluous Stuff

Finally, after a considerable period of time, consider sunsetting the pieces of your geo-bidding edifice that do nothing to further the cause. If a state or metro area is going to regress to the mean (for, say, the whole United States), then maybe you’re better off admitting that it isn’t interesting to enough to manage separately.

If you no longer want to manage a geo segment separately, simply “remove” it (not the same as excluding it). The “unmanaged” segments now simply pool in with the catch-all (e.g., “United States”) and should — if you’re adept at reading the data and making a solid prediction — make management simpler with no loss in performance.

With the time you save, you might just be in a good enough mood to pay full price for condiments. Pass the ketchup.

The post PPC Geo-Bidding, Simplified appeared first on Search Engine Land.

iPhone Users, The AdWords App For iOS Has Arrived

adwords app for ios

The AdWords app for iPhone users is finally available for everyone. Google announced Thursday, that the AdWords app for iOS is now available globally.

In early December, Google had invited advertisers to join the iOS app beta through the holidays.

With the app, you can get campaign performance stats and update budgets and bids on the go. You can also take action on campaign suggestions and get billing and ad status notifications from the app. And you can call an AdWords rep if you need support.

And the quartet is complete; this roll out means that there are now AdWords and Bing Ads apps for both Android and iOS devices.

You can download the iOS AdWords app from the App Store now.

The post iPhone Users, The AdWords App For iOS Has Arrived appeared first on Search Engine Land.

SearchCap: Google Guidelines, Yahoo Redesign & Local SEO

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Below is what happened in search today, as reported on Search Engine Land and from other places across the web.

From Search Engine Land:

  • Google Updates The General Guidelines Section Of Their Webmaster Guidelines
    Jan 28, 2016 by Barry Schwartz

    Google has made significant changes to the content on their Webmaster Guidelines documentation.

  • Yahoo Redesigns Home Page & App To Deliver Consistent Experience With More Relevant News
    Jan 28, 2016 by Amy Gesenhues

    With its now nearly infinite news stream, Yahoo users no longer need to open news articles in multiple browser tabs.

  • When You Rank High Organically But Not Locally (Case Study)
    Jan 28, 2016 by Joy Hawkins

    You’ve done everything right in terms of local SEO — you’re even ranking high in organic results — but you just can’t seem to get a place in the map pack. What’s wrong? Columnist Joy Hawkins explores.

  • 7 Traits That Will Make You A Great SEO
    Jan 28, 2016 by Will Scott

    Knowledge and expertise are important, but columnist Will Scott asserts that there are certain intangible qualities which SEO rock stars all seem to share. Do these apply to you?

  • The 411 On Content Marketing
    Jan 28, 2016 by Digital Marketing Depot

    In our consumer-empowered world, it’s become more difficult for marketers to cut through clutter and a lot more challenging to garner loyalty with their audiences. That’s why smart content delivered in context will make you stand out in the crowd. The Modern Marketing Essentials series from Oracle gives marketing leaders and practitioners the opportunity to […]

  • Final Call: Early Bird Rates Expire Saturday. Register For SMX West.
    Jan 28, 2016 by Search Engine Land

    Supercharge your search marketing campaigns by attending Search Engine Land’s SMX West. Join others obsessed with SEO & SEM March 1–3 in San Jose, CA. Early bird rates expire this Saturday, so register today! Don’t miss out on three days of: Performance-boosting SEO & SEM sessions. View the agenda. Industry leaders presenting proven tactics for […]

Recent Headlines From Marketing Land, Our Sister Site Dedicated To Internet Marketing:

Search News From Around The Web:

Link Building

SEO

SEM / Paid Search

The post SearchCap: Google Guidelines, Yahoo Redesign & Local SEO appeared first on Search Engine Land.

The 411 On Content Marketing

In our consumer-empowered world, it’s become more difficult for marketers to cut through clutter and a lot more challenging to garner loyalty with their audiences. That’s why smart content delivered in context will make you stand out in the crowd.

The Modern Marketing Essentials series from Oracle gives marketing leaders and practitioners the opportunity to supplement their existing marketing strategies with helpful insights. Check out this guide on content marketing and get:

  • Tips from leading content marketers and thinkers
  • Content planning best practices
  • 7 must-have content marketing metrics
  • Checklists galore

Visit Digital Marketing Depot to download your copy.

The post The 411 On Content Marketing appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Final Call: Early Bird Rates Expire Saturday. Register For SMX West.

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Super charge your search marketing campaigns by attending Search Engine Land’s SMX West. Join others obsessed with SEO & SEM March 1-3 in San Jose, CA. Early bird rates expire this Saturday, so register today!

Don’t miss out on 3 days of:

  • Performance-boosting SEO & SEM sessions. View the agenda.
  • Industry leaders presenting proven tactics for SEO, paid search, local/mobile search, social and more.
  • Connecting with hard core search professionals at multiple functions including Google Dance, networking lunches, expo hall reception, Janes of Digital and more!
  • Breaking down the basics of keyword research, ad copywriting, link building, paid search and SEO-friendly web design at SMX Boot Camp.
  • Meeting premier sponsors Google and Twitter and other industry solution providers at the expo hall.

Register for an All Access Pass to take advantage of these benefits. Bring your colleagues and save even more with team rates. Hurry! Don’t miss this final chance to save BIG.

Register today!

†Tickets limited. Open to the first 500 3-Day All Access Pass holders.

The post Final Call: Early Bird Rates Expire Saturday. Register For SMX West. appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Yahoo Redesigns Homepage & App To Deliver Consistent Experience With More Relevant News

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Yahoo is rolling out a new homepage today in the U.S, along with a refresh to its app. According to the site, the updates offer a more consistent experience, making content easier to find and consume.

“You no longer need to open individual articles in multiple browser tabs,” says Yahoo of its now nearly infinite news stream, “Instead, you can simply scroll through related stories inline.”

The new Yahoo homepage includes editor-selected news stories at the top of the page, with content most relevant to a user alongside the top stories. As more content is viewed by a user, their Yahoo stream will be curated to match their interests.

Yahoo news update

Also, breaking news stories can now be followed in real-time on Yahoo, with an option to get instant notifications when a story is updated.

Yahoo news update

In an effort to make users more engaged with content, Yahoo has added comments directly inline with news stories.

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Yahoo said it based its updates on the latest mobile trends, noting a Flurry Trend Report that showed news and magazine app usage grew 141 percent last year.

The post Yahoo Redesigns Homepage & App To Deliver Consistent Experience With More Relevant News appeared first on Search Engine Land.

When You Rank High Organically But Not Locally (Case Study)

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I always enjoy solving Local SEO puzzles, but there’s one that has baffled me for the last couple of years. I’ve had many other professionals in the Local SEO community look at it, and they were equally stumped. It was one of those cases that seemed to make no sense at all, until it finally hit me a week ago.

The issue was with a handyman company I work with in Florida that has multiple offices. All their offices rank wonderfully for the keyword pattern “handyman + [city]” — except one. Their office in Tampa has always had an issue that I hear about quite often in the Local SEO world: They rank very high organically, but not in the local results (the 3-pack/map pack).

Whenever I come across a situation where organic ranking is high but local ranking is low, it always makes me cringe. It seems to be one of the biggest mysteries out there in Local SEO. I’ve learned a lot in my quest to solve this one and wanted to share it.

If you look at the search engine results pages (SERPs), you’ll see that The Handyman Company ranks first organically for “handyman tampa.” This is the case with most of their locations.

Handyman Tampa - Google

Compare this to Orlando’s office. As you can see from the screenshot below, they rank first locally and organically.

handyman orlando Google Search

Most (if not all) of the other business locations rank in the 3-pack, as well as the top three organic positions.

And then there’s Tampa. Their local position for “handyman tampa” has not changed in more than two years. It fluctuates one or two positions, but it seems stuck around the ninth or tenth position in local results.

Most people in Local SEO instantly think, “Oh, that location must have NAP issues.” In other words, the assumption is that the name, address and phone number (NAP) aren’t consistent across the web.

This is not the case. We’ve been down that road many times. His citation record is almost perfect. (There is no such thing as “perfect” in citation world, in my opinion.)

It gets more confusing. When I use the Google Ad Preview Tool, set my location to Tampa and search “handyman,” I get The Handyman Company locally as B.

Handyman (from Tampa)

Then it hit me why they rank for one but not the other.

They are not in Tampa.

I hear all the time from Local SEOs that the way to figure out what address to use is through USPS. This is wrong. Google does not care what your mailing address is; they care what your physical address is, and there are tons of cases where those two are different. The Handyman Company definitely has a mailing address in Tampa, but their physical address is not within the city limits.

How Do You Tell What City A Business Is In?

The first way is to go to Google Maps and search the city name (and state). Google will highlight the area on the map that belongs to that city. If your business doesn’t fall inside that highlighted area, it means you aren’t in the city limits. If you aren’t in the city limits, you don’t have a physical address in the city, and this is the #1 ranking factor for the Local 3-pack.

The Handyman Company

The second way to see what city you’d want to use is to go to Google Map Maker.

  • Search the city name, and zoom into the map until you see the location of your business.
  • Click the red “ADD NEW” button and select “Add a Place.”
  • Put the marker down on the map exactly where your business is.
  • Select any random business category and a fake name, and hit “Continue.”
  • On the record that comes up, the city that is automatically populated in the city box is most likely the one that Google Maps would consider your address to be in. If it lists a county (as in this case), it’s most likely because the area you are in is unincorporated.
    Hillsborough County

Conclusion: Why Does That Impact One Keyword And Not The Other?

  • Keywords without a city name (e.g., “handyman” searched from a user in Tampa, FL) rely more heavily on traditional organic ranking factors.
  • Keywords that include a city name (“handyman tampa”) rely more heavily on true local ranking factors, including:
    • The physical location of your business (if it is in the physical city limits of the city searched).
    • The categories you are using in Google My Business or Map Maker.
    • The presence of a duplicate listing (a huge negative factor if one exists).
    • Inconsistency with your name, address or phone number (NAP) in the major online directories and data providers.

If you find your business in the same situation as this one, my advice would be to focus on gaining organic ranking for the keywords that include city names and gaining local ranking for the keywords that do not. Overall, if you are paying attention to all ranking factors and not just focusing on one thing, your business should see some fantastic results.

The post When You Rank High Organically But Not Locally (Case Study) appeared first on Search Engine Land.

7 Traits That Will Make You A Great SEO

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It’s hard to believe, but as of this month, I’ve been the owner of an SEO and online marketing agency for 10 short, yet very long years.

If you’re reading this, you’re probably “in the industry,” or at least aspire to be — so you don’t need me to tell you how difficult it can be to attract and retain quality employees in an ever-evolving, high-stakes and fast-paced work environment.

It’s certainly something my leadership team and I have spent countless hours trying to figure out. It’s also one of the questions I get asked most often from colleagues in the industry: What makes a great SEO employee?

Though qualities like knowledge of HTML or information architecture are useful, the one thing SEO rock stars all have in common is that they seem to have certain “intangible” qualities. Personality traits like self-motivation, leadership and the constant thirst for knowledge top the lists and seem to be a predictor of long-term success.

While the Millennial generation, or Gen-Y, has a bit of a negative reputation among older professionals, there are many qualities that make them great employees — and make the SEO industry a perfect fit.

They’re looking for a challenge, to be constantly learning and to connect their work to a greater purpose. When hiring Millennials, keep in mind that you need to do your part as a company to engage these high-potential individuals.

Gen-Y will soon make up the majority of the workforce around the world. Recent research shows that by and large, Millennials are misunderstood by managers. Whether your company, like mine, already consists of a majority of Millennial employees or is on its way there, clearly defining the “intangibles” that your company values most will aid you in your hiring and retention.

On a suggestion from our hiring leads, we embarked on a mission to do exactly that: to figure out, and then put into words, the intangible qualities and values that make great employees at our organization. We came up with seven traits, which form the acronym CHARGED:

  1. Collaborative
  2. Hungry
  3. Agile
  4. Reliable
  5. Genuine
  6. Effective
  7. Dedicated

 

The SEO industry is full of smart people, some of whom have been doing this type of work for years. We’ve found that we can teach anyone the expertise to be successful, so long as they possess these values and traits. From there, skill in the area of SEO can be honed and refined with time and practice.

I’ll give some more context to how each of these seven traits can make an individual a highly effective SEO, as well as some interview tips for those of you looking to snag that coveted SEO position below.

Collaborative

To be an effective SEO, one can’t be a one-trick pony. Achieving optimal search engine presence (or better yet, dominance) is a collective effort involving a multitude of areas of expertise: technical SEO, on- and offsite factors, strong content marketing, strategic analysis of your target audience, great online PR, social media and more.

Maybe there are a few unicorns out there, but I don’t know many people who are stellar at all of those things. Being an effective SEO means you’re willing and able to collaborate with other experts and find ways to leverage their strengths to get results.

Approaching teamwork with a positive attitude is a complete must in our company (and should be in yours, too).

  • Greenlight: Be sure to look for candidates who provide real examples of their collaborative spirit by describing projects they worked on with others, highlighting their teammates’ contributions and the overall success. Candidates who talk about their learnings from a failed project or team assignment and key in on what they would do differently next time make for great team players.
  • Red flags: Candidates who bad mouth teammates or colleagues or place blame on others for failures are likely not willing to own their own contributions or play well with others.

Hungry

At the pace with which an agency moves, you need employees who are never satisfied with the status quo and who are always willing to better themselves, their work and the results they achieve. Hunger for continued knowledge and exploration is vital if you want your company to stay on the cutting edge.

  • Greenlight: Test for this value by asking candidates to describe something they recently taught themselves. Good candidates will have several answers to this question and will be able to describe how they did it and how it impacted their lives professionally and personally.
  • Red flags: Candidates who don’t have any questions throughout the interview process are likely lacking an innate curiosity and hunger for information.

Agile

In the world of SEO, you must accept the fact that you’re at Google’s mercy. It’s rare that we get advance notice of a big algorithm change or manual action sweep — which means our systems, tactics and most importantly, our people, have to be agile and adaptable to change.

Constant innovation and improvement should always be a goal if you want your company or agency to remain competitive. The only way to achieve that is to staff with agile people who understand the vision and can make it happen.

  • Greenlight: One way to test for agility is to ask your candidates to describe a challenging situation they’ve faced. Great candidates will describe how they approached the challenge, adjusted their strategy/tactics and ultimately learned something from the experience.
  • Red flags: Candidates who look at change as a negative or unwanted adjustment are not going to be agile enough to last in the SEO world.

Reliable

Nordstrom, known worldwide for its impeccable customer service, has literally one rule in its employee handbook: “Use good judgment in all situations.”

At any company, in any industry, you need to be sure you can trust your people. Clients need to be sure they can trust their SEO team to do the right thing.

The more the SEO landscape changes, the more important it is for SEOs to leave behind old practices that once moved the needle but can be detrimental today. Reliability isn’t doing the right thing once; it’s doing it consistently over time.

  • Greenlight: Candidates whose resumes demonstrate tenure with a company and a record of growth are sure signs of a highly reliable and trusted employee.
  • Red flags: Candidates whose resumes demonstrate a complete lack of commitment to a company, industry or interest may not be reliable in the long term.

Genuine

Your best employees will show an enthusiasm for the work and the company and go to bat for their ideas. In SEO, we frequently try something new only to fail or produce no results. When working with clients, your employees need to be able to own their mistakes, possess humility and laugh at themselves.

  • Greenlight: A candidate who can talk about a failure with humility is likely a good fit. Ask client-facing candidates how they’ve handled a situation that went badly.
  • Red flags: Believe it or not, we’ve actually had people admit they lied to a customer to cover a failure. If they’re willing to admit this in an interview, they’re highly likely to do it again. Transparency is important when clients are trusting you with their business.

Effective

SEO doesn’t matter if you don’t move the needle and see improvement in the metrics. Being results-oriented and understanding metrics is crucial to being effective, both in your career as an SEO and in getting results for your clients.

To be a great employee in an SEO agency, you also need to G.S.D. (get stuff done)! I think I can speak for all agencies when I say that the pace of work doesn’t leave us any room to micromanage you.

  • Greenlight: Our rock star employees have their own personal productivity methods, whether they’ve adopted the Getting Things Done methodology or simply created their own approach. Great candidates will be able to talk about how they keep themselves organized and can work independently.
  • Red flags: Candidates who don’t even mention a to-do list when talking about how they keep organized are a no-go. Also, candidates who’ve had no experience being held accountable to metrics or tangible results won’t make a good fit in this metrics- and results-driven industry.

Dedicated

Individuals who commit to their craft, company and clients are people you want on your team. You wouldn’t get married to someone without a commitment or show of dedication, right? Well, most of us wouldn’t.

Blind dedication to a cause or leader can be dangerous, which is why this value is listed last. An individual should possess the other traits listed above, as well as a dedication to embodying them on an ongoing basis.

  • Greenlight: You want to look for candidates whose definition of going above and beyond for their clients or colleagues matches up with yours.
  • Red flags: Candidates who answer the “above and beyond” question by describing a basic expectation don’t know what it means to be dedicated to results or their customers.

Influencing The Culture

Once we defined and documented our core values, we sought to also incorporate them organically into the agency culture. Our already vibrant “kudos board” in the common area was a great place to immediately apply these values and keep them top-of-mind.

We created new “kudos cards,” each outlining one of our core values (plus an eighth in the event you just want to give someone a kudos for being themselves and being awesome).

CHARGED-4

CHARGED-6

I would love to know your thoughts. Do your SEO colleagues have these traits, too? Or do you feel we left out an important intangible? Maybe you have something like this in place at your company and would like to share your story.

Here’s to another great 10 years. (2025, can you imagine?)

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Google Updates The General Guidelines Section Of Their Webmaster Guidelines

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Google has quietly updated their Webmaster Guidelines document, which is one of the first places webmasters should go to when learning about SEO best practices and do’s and don’ts.

Google updated the general guidelines section of the document expanding on examples around how to help Google find your web pages, how to give them better ideas on what those pages are about and how to make web pages that are good for your web site visitors. The quality guidelines section of the page has not been updated.

Google also removed a line in the first section, the section read:

Following these guidelines will help Google find, index, and rank your site. Even if you choose not to implement any of these suggestions, we strongly encourage you to pay very close attention to the “Quality Guidelines.”

Now that section removed the “even if you chose not to implement any of these suggestions” and reads:

Following the General Guidelines below will help Google find, index, and rank your site.

We strongly encourage you to pay very close attention to the Quality Guidelines below…

Again, the quality guidelines did not change yet but the general guidelines did get a pretty big overhaul. I went through them line by line and nothing stands out as being mind-blowing. Google did go through the effort of adding a lot more content to this section, giving more examples, links to resources and reorganizing the list to coincide with what is most important to the end user.

I have taken before and after screen shots of the web page so you can compare yourself:

Before (also see it on the Google Cache while it lasts):

old-google-webmaster-guidelines

After:

new-google-webmaster-guidelines-expanded

Google revamped their Webmaster portal section the other week. This may be a continuation of those efforts.

Google has made many changes to the webmaster guidelines section over time, here are some of those:

The post Google Updates The General Guidelines Section Of Their Webmaster Guidelines appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Wednesday, January 27, 2016

SearchCap: Google AdWords Columns, Apple Street Views & FairSearch Funds

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Below is what happened in search today, as reported on Search Engine Land and from other places across the web.

From Search Engine Land:

  • Bing Adds Lottery & Powerball Numbers To Search Results
    Jan 27, 2016 by Barry Schwartz

    Did your odds just increase? Bing added winning lottery numbers to their quick answer box.

  • Brand Bidding & PPC Optimization: How We Got Here (Part 1 of 8)
    Jan 27, 2016 by Lori Weiman

    The biggest question facing paid search advertisers is how to get meaningful growth numbers out of PPC. Columnist Lori Weiman believes the answer lies with brand bidding.

  • Microsoft Pulls Funding For Anti-Google Lobbying Group FairSearch
    Jan 27, 2016 by Greg Sterling

    According to a report in Re/Code appearing last week, Microsoft has pulled financial support from FairSearch, an anti-Google “watchdog” or lobbying group that has been at the forefront of advancing European antitrust moves against the company. We sought comment from Microsoft when the report appeared, but the company declined to respond. The FairSearch site lists […]

  • Is Apple About To Launch A Competitor To Google Street View?
    Jan 27, 2016 by Greg Sterling

    Google Street View is a dramatic and sometimes useful feature of Google Maps that helped set it apart from competitors such as Nokia Maps and Bing Maps a few years ago. Now, there’s evidence that Apple may be seeking to create its own version of Street View. The following posting appears on Apple’s site: It […]

  • The State Of Cross-Channel Paid Search, Part 1: SEM & Social
    Jan 27, 2016 by Josh Dreller

    In this first in a series on cross-channel marketing, columnist Josh Dreller discusses how paid search and paid social efforts can work together to improve overall marketing efforts.

  • Math! Now Available Right In AdWords Custom Columns
    Jan 27, 2016 by Ginny Marvin

    Use formulas to get even more out of custom columns in Google AdWords.

  • Find Your Technology-Powered Solutions At MarTech. See Who’s Exhibiting.
    Jan 27, 2016 by Search Engine Land

    Join us at MarTech, where marketing meets IT. The strategy-packed agenda is only part of what makes MarTech an exceptional conference. The expo hall is packed with leading industry vendors waiting to provide you with the next tool or solution. Pass options are available. Register today!

Recent Headlines From Marketing Land, Our Sister Site Dedicated To Internet Marketing:

Search News From Around The Web:

Industry

Link Building

Searching

SEO

SEM / Paid Search

The post SearchCap: Google AdWords Columns, Apple Street Views & FairSearch Funds appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Bing Adds Lottery & Powerball Numbers To Search Results

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Bing announced you can now check to see if your lottery ticket matches the winning lottery numbers just by searching Bing.com. Weeks ago, both Bing and Google failed at showing lottery numbers in their search results.

Now you can search for [powerball] or [california lottery] and so on on Bing to pull up the quick answer box to show the winning lottery numbers for that specific lottery.

Here is a screen shot:

Powerball2

Just to be clear, Google Mexico does support Mexican lottery number winnings but they do not support U.S. based lotteries, yet.

Bing will also show you information about the lottery network and related lotteries so you can diversify your lottery odds.

The post Bing Adds Lottery & Powerball Numbers To Search Results appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Find Your Technology-Powered Solutions At MarTech. See Who’s Exhibiting.

Join us at MarTech, where marketing meets IT. The strategy-packed agenda is only part of what makes MarTech an exceptional conference. The expo hall is packed with leading industry vendors waiting to provide you with the next tool or solution. Pass options are available. Register today!

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exhibitors_section_2_noborder

exhibitors_section_3_noborder

The post Find Your Technology-Powered Solutions At MarTech. See Who’s Exhibiting. appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Brand Bidding & PPC Optimization: How We Got Here (Part 1 of 8)

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Welcome to part 1 of a series for search marketers on brand bidding and PPC optimization. This series will answer the biggest question facing PPC advertisers in 2016: How do I get meaningful growth numbers out of a crowded and competitive PPC market?

Unless you are completely new to PPC, it is tough to get the big gains that we once saw. As a marketing tactic, PPC has been mature for years, and few “easy wins” still remain. Many categories are dominated by large players (e.g., Amazon), long-tail keywords have become expensive, and the most advanced marketers have complex technology and expensive agencies on their side.

When you look at CPC data from Google, however, you hear a different story. Their 2014 10K stock filing shows a decline of eight percent in aggregate CPCs across their entire network from 2012 to 2013, and five percent from 2013 to 2014.

Look at just AdWords, and just the all-important first-page bid, and you see a different picture. First-page bid costs keep rising for both branded terms (+300 percent from mid-2014 to mid-2015) and non-branded ones (+75 percent for the same period), as RKG/Merkle showed in 2015.

Further, many advertisers still struggle with how (and whether) to bid on their own keywords. Bing released data at the end of 2015 showing that when advertisers bid on their branded terms, they received 31 percent more clicks (for retail ads) and 27 percent more clicks (for travel ads).

The Bing data recommended a strong brand defense to save lost clicks. Their data showed that when a retail brand did not bid on its branded searches, 34 percent of the missed clicks went to other ads, and six percent went to other organic listings.

With first-page CPCs on the rise, however, advertisers are tempted to look for any opportunity possible to reduce costs, and sometimes brand campaigns end up getting the axe.

So how do PPC marketers achieve meaningful growth today?

Brand Bidding: Your Secret Weapon

At The Search Monitor (Disclosure: my employer), we’ve found a promising solution: brand bidding. Or better said, the process of running an effective brand-bidding strategy focused on revenue growth and protection.

This solution didn’t arrive overnight. My company reviews ad monitoring data for thousands of branded searches. We’ve verified that competition for branded keywords is on the rise. If our clients simply do nothing, the result has been higher CPCs, lower average rankings, and even instances of advertisers and partners unknowingly working against each other.

Our data has revealed that executing a proper brand bidding strategy provides incredible value to an advertiser. We see that:

  • Consumers love branded searches. The volume of branded searches is quite impressive. Using the AdWords Keyword Planner, for example, we see that in December 2015 alone, there were 24 million US searches for “macys” and 850K US searches for “Macys jackets.”
  • Branded searches convert well for brands. Advertisers receive a large portion of their traffic from branded searches. One of The Search Monitor’s clients, a well-known travel brand, shared that by sponsoring their brand terms they were able to capture two-thirds of the paid search clicks generated by those branded keywords. In other words, if this client were not to sponsor its brand, then it would be giving up 66% of the clicks on its brand terms to competitors.
  • Clicks decrease rapidly with more competition. Our data show that brand owners can lose 50 percent of their click potential as competitors increase.
  • CPCs increase significantly with more competition. We also see that CPCs can jump more than 60 percent when competitors vie for the top three spots.
  • Affiliate competitors distort metrics. Affiliates can throw off bid automation and conversion metrics by 20 percent or more.

Brand bidding as a tool for PPC growth became more evident during a panel I sat on at the Search Insider Summit in late 2015. The panel focused on the monetary gains from both brand advertising and protection. It also featured representatives from Marriott Hotels and their search agency.

As we each shared our experience with brand bidding, it became quite clear that we all shared the same perspective: the volume of brand bidding is on the rise, it requires considerable effort and focus to combat it, and brand protection in PPC can produce giant revenue results.

When I say “giant” results, I mean exactly that. Some of our bigger brand clients have told us that their strategy of protecting branded searches has earned them (or saved from loss) hundreds of millions of dollars annually worldwide.

As I share this message — and especially the revenue figures — with advertisers, the response has typically been: “We’re seeing the same thing, but we don’t know what to do.”

This Series: A Guide To Effectively Managing Brand Bidding

As a result, I created this educational series. The series will provide search marketers with a detailed understanding of brand bidding and how it should be managed to drive meaningful PPC growth. The series will be divided into eight parts:

  1. Historical Context Of PPC Optimization (See below): I will discuss the evolution of PPC optimization from past to present, showing how brand bidding is the natural next step in this evolution.
  2. Keywords: Once the historical groundwork is laid, it’s time to discuss the branded keywords themselves. This will be a metrics-driven article using The Search Monitor’s ad monitoring data covering brand and brand-plus keywords and their value to the advertiser.
  3. Best Practices: Once keywords are analyzed for brand bidding and unwanted competition, it’s easy to make recommendations. This article will provide best practices in both quick responses and longer-term protective measures for your branded searches.
  4. Partner Relationships: This article will describe one of the most effective brand bidding tactics: working with affiliates and partners to coordinate brand bidding and bolster your brand.
  5. Addressing Competition: This article will share tips on how to deflate the rising costs associated with competition on your branded searches. I will discuss tactics such as copywriting, landing page development, rank and bids.
  6. Legal Responses: Yes, there are legal recourses to reduce competitors on your branded searches. This article will discuss what the law says and how to make it work in your favor, and it will describe responses such as submitting complaints to the engines.
  7. Effective Brand Bidding Techniques: Brand bidding can be very productive if done appropriately. This article will explain how to effectively bid on other advertisers’ brands and will show a few examples of larger brands who have figured out the winning formula.
  8. The Future Of Brand Bidding: The brand bidding series will conclude with a summary of every tip previously discussed, as well as advice on how to keep your brand bidding strategy flexible in 2016 to adjust for inevitable changes.

The Historical Context Of PPC Optimization (Part 1)

The history of PPC is a short but intense journey. It started less than 20 years ago, in 1998, when GoTo.com introduced the pay-per-click concept at a TED conference. The company later turned into Overture and then was bought by Yahoo in 2003. Google, meanwhile, jumped into search in 1999 with 350 initial advertisers. A year later, it launched AdWords, then introduced a PPC version of AdWords in 2002.

The search engine landscape at that time was filled with lots of engines with even funnier names than Google. Remember FindWhat, Kanoodle, and LookSmart? Further, the notion of a black box of advertiser data hadn’t taken hold yet. Advertisers could see everyone’s bids, which the search engines hoped would drive up bidding

Eight years of fast growth went by before Yahoo and Microsoft teamed up in 2010 to offer PPC advertising across both search properties (Yahoo! Search and Bing) under a single ad platform, as an alternative to Google AdWords. Even in 2010, keyword costs remained low.

As competition increased, search marketers looked for ways to optimize their campaigns. In fact, “optimization” became a giant buzzword in PPC. Looking back, I have noticed five distinct cycles in PPC optimization, each with an increasing degree of difficulty. As you read through these five below, ask yourself where you think you currently are — and where you’d like to be.

Cycle 1: Keyword Lists

This initial optimization tactic was focused on the breadth of your keyword list. It was relatively easy because everything was new. Keywords were cheap! When pay-per-click was introduced, quality, decent-volume keywords could be purchased for five cents or less. Even five years later, a search marketer who bid more than a few dollars on a click would be laughed at.

With bid prices so low, search marketers were happy to experiment with the new channel. It was a learning environment, and competition remained low for years. Gains in revenue were tremendous as a result.

In 2011, Google reached approximately one million businesses advertising on its site. Bid prices followed the rise in competition, especially for the deep-pocket spenders. In 2011, the most expensive CPCs were paid by insurance companies. In 2015, law firms took the title, as certain clicks related to the health condition mesothelioma were priced at more than $1,000.

Cycle 2: Analytics

After building an exhaustive keyword list, marketers focused on their performance analytics for PPC optimization. They studied CTRs, conversion rates, CPCs and anything else they could monitor, then tweaked their strategies ever so subtly.

Google acquired Urchin Software Corp. in 2005 in response to advertisers’ increasing need for detailed performance data. Entire analytics departments were founded to process the huge volumes of click and spend data and find the next opportunity for optimization. As budgets increased, marketing executives started demanding more ROI and ROAS focus and wanted to see better attribution between click and sale.

The addition of advanced analytics enabled PPC gains to remain considerable.

Cycle 3: Bid Automation

After analytics, advances in technology made it easier to automate many of the huge data chores associated with optimization. In particular, the automation of bids let advertisers change their costs in real time to reflect changes in product costs or consumer demand.

Millions of PPC bids could be controlled by bid automation systems, and the quality of the data inputs (the analytics) became even more vital to PPC optimization. This new technology helped usher in the next cycle in PPC optimization.

Cycle 4: Pruning

After gains from analytics and automation were exhausted, the seasoned marketer took an even closer look at their campaigns for available refinements in performance.

Engines were constantly rolling out new optimization features for advertisers, and the popular ones were negative match, search queries and other cost analysis tools. They used these to prune out the big cost drivers that didn’t deliver the performance. Another huge leap of gains happened in cost optimization.

Cycle 5: Relevancy

The most recent cycle in PPC optimization occurred when marketers optimized their campaigns against the new arena of Quality Scores and search engine mandates for relevance.

The engines value greater relevancy at all costs and have rewarded those marketers that complied with cheaper CPCs.

Brand Bidding As The Next Cycle

Fast forward to the present day, and marketers are looking for the next tool or technique to generate large gains from PPC performance. This series will introduce the notion that brand bidding is the next cycle in PPC optimization.

The brand bidding genie is out of the bottle, and you now know the secret to driving meaningful PPC growth in 2016. I hope you’ll stay along for the ride as we dive deeper into the huge revenue potential offered by a successful brand bidding strategy.

The post Brand Bidding & PPC Optimization: How We Got Here (Part 1 of 8) appeared first on Search Engine Land.