Thursday, March 31, 2016

SearchCap: Travel & retail report, first page bids & more

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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:

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

Search News From Around The Web:

Local & Maps

Searching

SEO

SEM / Paid Search

Search Marketing

The post SearchCap: Travel & retail report, first page bids & more appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Think cross-channel to build stronger marketing

Inbound. Search. Social. Email. Web. Mobile. Events. A consistent, dependable multi-source experience can help you create ideal customers who spend 2x as much as regular ones.

Get the new Modern Marketing Essentials Guide to Cross-Channel Marketing from Oracle and start creating the most cohesive, valuable, and frictionless customer experience possible.

Visit Digital Marketing Depot to get your copy.

The post Think cross-channel to build stronger marketing appeared first on Search Engine Land.

AdGooroo releases travel and retail keyword results after Google’s right rail ad change

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AdGooroo has released its second look at the impact of Google eliminating text ads in the right rail on desktop search results. The two analyses — one on retail keywords, another on travel keywords — tell similar stories: a reduction in the number of advertisers competing in the auctions, slight increases in cost-per-click on average, but big swings at the individual keyword level.

Across the set of top 20 travel keywords, AdGooroo monitors — comparing February 1-18 to February 19-March 28 — the number of advertisers bidding per keyword fell 15.4 percent from an average of 38 advertisers bidding per keyword to an average of 32. The average cost-per-click (CPC) among the top 20 keywords increased by just 3 cents, on average (5.2 percent), from $2.65 to $2.68.  That said, there was wide variation in performance at the individual keyword level. For example, “cancun all inclusive” CPC rose 35 percent, “car rentals” rose 34 percent.

google right rail ads travel keywords adgooroo

On the whole, click-through rates increased 10 percent across the top 20 travel keywords. Just one keyword (“river cruises”) saw a slight decline of 3.3 percent in CTR.

In its earlier analysis of the top 20 retail keywords earlier this month — comparing February 1-18 to February 19-March 8 — AdGooroo found that competition was cut by 27 percent. The average CPC rose 7 percent with 14 out of 20 keywords seeing increases. However, again, several keywords saw significant decreases in CPC: “mobile phone” was off by 26 percent, “shoes” fell by 14 percent. Then there was the outlier “samsung glaxay 26” which rose by 108 percent.

Meanwhile, looking across 2500 retail keywords, the average CPC increased just 1.8 percent while the number of advertisers competing fell by 42 percent since the change went into effect.

google right rail impact on retail words

The post AdGooroo releases travel and retail keyword results after Google’s right rail ad change appeared first on Search Engine Land.

First-page minimum bids continue to rise in wake of Google desktop SERP changes

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We’re just about a month out from Google’s sweeping changes to desktop SERPs, in which text ads were removed entirely from the right-hand rail and the number of text ads appearing above organic results increasingly grew to four, where there used to be three.

As we reported a couple of weeks ago, the overall impact of the change hasn’t been dramatic, with at most minimal shifts in CPCs and traffic.

Two observations included in our previous analysis were:

  • Rising first-page minimum bids for non-brand text ads, as the total available ad inventory decreased from a maximum of 11 text ads per page to seven.
  • Decreasing top-of-page minimum bids for non-brand text ads, as the total available ad inventory above organic results increased from three to four for some searches.

In the days since, we’ve seen first-page minimums continue to steadily increase, while top-of-page minimums appear to be back on the rise.

While it’s too soon to attribute these changes precisely to causes, these are the symptoms we would expect if advertisers did get more aggressive with paid search bids as a result of the changes.

Note: All data sourced from samples of Merkle advertisers, which range from medium to enterprise-level businesses.

First-page minimum bids headed up and to the right

Looking at the median change from February 8 through March 16 for a sample of advertisers year over year, we find that first-page minimum bids continue to increase steadily since the removal of right rail text ads.

nonbrand_first_page_minimums_yoy

Looking at the first-page minimum change for 2015 over the same time frame, we find that there was a slight bump in first page minimum bids in mid-March last year.

However, using last year’s data as a gauge for the seasonality of these minimums for the sample studied, it appears most of the increases observed in 2016 seem tied to the desktop SERP changes, as opposed to seasonal increases.

Now, it’s very possible it’s just taking some time for these minimum bid estimates to get fully updated on Google’s end in light of the new auction limits and that there haven’t been any real changes in competition since the updates.

However, it’s also possible that at least some advertisers are upping bids in an attempt to get ads that fell off of the first page of results with the changes to begin showing on the first page again. Google makes this simple with their automated bid adjustments, which can push keyword bids up to the first page minimum. Thus, these steady increases could be linked to more aggressive competition arising out of the changes.

Not everyone could possibly be bidding to the first page all the time, though, or we would see constantly increasing minimums. If advertisers did start upping bids to remain on the first page in the wake of the SERP updates, bids are likely to plateau at some point as advertisers reach the absolute upper limits of how much they’re willing to pay for traffic.

Top-of-page minimum bids headed back up

As mentioned earlier, top-of-page minimums declined after the SERP changes, as there are now more available ad slots at the top of the page, and these estimates continued to decline for about two weeks.

However, during the first week of March, top-of-page minimum bids began creeping back up and are still steadily climbing.

nonbrand_top_page_minimums_2016

Again, because these estimates are provided by Google and may take time to fully update, and search behavior is ever-changing, this recent increase may not speak to the level of competition.

However, combined with the fact that first page minimum bids continue to rise, it also seems possible that advertisers are adjusting bids to get ads to show above the organic results.

Even though bottom ads have maintained most of the click share that went to ads on the side/bottom prior to the updates, top ads have still gained traffic share, which we’ll discuss in more detail later.

Therefore, advertisers may be bidding to the top of the page in order to garner more clicks, and this could in turn increase top of page bid estimates for advertisers.

CPCs up only slightly since updates

Looking at daily year-over-year CPC increases aligned for day of week, we see some slight acceleration in CPC increases over the past two weeks. However, the acceleration is slight enough to be reasonably tied to simple seasonality as a cause.

google_desktop_nonbrand_text_ad_cpc_change

Many predicted that desktop CPCs would rise in the wake of Google’s updates, but a couple of factors likely play into why there hasn’t been a clear-cut increase.

Factors working against CPC increases

1. Google’s requirements to show on the first page and top of page only affect the CPC for some clicks

The role of first-page and top-of-page minimums in the auction is complicated and took me about 10 minutes of fast-paced speaking to explain at last year’s SMX Advanced. In short, however, there are minimum ad ranks required for advertisers to show above the organic results, as well as minimums for an advertiser to show at all. These ad ranks translate to minimum CPCs required for each advertiser to reach the first page of the results and to get to the top of the page.

First-page and top-of-page minimum CPCs might be a pure result of the level of competition. This means that the first page minimum is the bid required to beat out the ad rank of the last advertiser that’s getting featured on the first page, and the top of page minimum is the bid required to beat out the last advertiser being shown above the organic results.

However, for some auctions, these minimum CPCs are required to meet Google’s minimum ad rank, as opposed to beating out competitors, as Google itself requires minimum ad ranks for ads to show at the top of the results or to be featured on the first page at all. This ensures the quality of the ads that are presented to users.

Google’s documentation puts it like this:

The minimum Ad Rank required to appear above search results is generally greater than the minimum Ad Rank to appear below search results. As a result, the cost-per-click (CPC) when you appear above search results could be higher than the CPC if you appear below search results, even if no other advertisers are immediately below you.

For auctions where first page and top of page minimum CPCs are decided by Google’s minimum ad rank, as opposed to the ad rank of the next highest competition, the changes to the desktop SERP impact the CPCs for ads shown in the last position above the organic results and the last ad featured on the first page.

However, for auctions where these CPC floors don’t come into play for the price paid, these changes would not have had an impact on the CPC for the ads shown in those positions.

All of this is to say that the desktop SERP changes very likely directly impacted the price paid for traffic for some keywords that got moved just above the organic results or found themselves in the last ad spot on the page.

However, most clicks are not impacted by minimum bids, particularly first page minimum bids, since most traffic goes to ads farther up the page.

2. Bottom ads are picking up a lot more traffic than most expected

To be honest, when I first heard that side ads were being removed completely and that there would just be more ads at the top and bottom of the page, my first reaction was that pretty much all paid search traffic would go to ads featured at the top of the page.

The likelihood of users scrolling past all of the top of page ads and organic listings to then find a relevant ad at the bottom of the page just seemed unlikely.

This would have driven up CPCs if it were indeed the case that only ads in position 4 or higher got any real traffic.

And yet, it appears that bottom ads are doing pretty well for themselves. Looking at the share of Google.com non-brand text ad traffic by the location on the page, we find that while top ad click share increased about 10 percentage points to ~80 percent with the updates, bottom ads also picked up about 10 percentage points of share to ~20 percent.

google_desktop_nonbrand_text_clickshare_by_pagelocation

This is helping to keep CPCs stable, as traffic hasn’t shifted entirely to the top position ads, which have higher CPCs tied to them.

Conclusion

As mentioned, there haven’t been huge shifts in CPC in aggregate just yet, but you can see from the way first page and top of page bid minimums are moving that the auction has indeed changed as a result of Google’s updates.

It’s still very early to assess the impact from these changes (particularly considering these updates occurred towards the end of what is considered a down period for many retailers after the holidays), and we may yet see more evidence of impacts in the weeks to come or further rollout of serving four text ads from Google’s end. Frankly, it’s too early to call the ballgame.

We’re particularly interested to see if four text ads get served above the organic results more often come the holiday shopping season this Q4. Only time will tell.

The post First-page minimum bids continue to rise in wake of Google desktop SERP changes appeared first on Search Engine Land.

From waste to win: watch how a simple change affects AdWords performance

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Over the past two years, we’ve audited more than 2,000 AdWords accounts at Disruptive Advertising.

I’ve written at length elsewhere about what we learned from all of these audits, but in this article, I want to explain how you can use our conclusions to directly improve account performance.

To begin, let’s take a look at where most ad spend goes wrong. Then, I’ll show you how controlling wasted ad spend directly improves account performance. Lastly, I’ll explain how to use your own account data to access the full potential of your AdWords budget.

Ready? Let’s get started.

Where’s your budget really going?

Ideally, your AdWords budget should be buying you clicks that are likely to convert — that’s the point, right?

Since paid search advertising is intent-based marketing, your ads should show up for internet searches that indicate a strong purchase intent. In other words, you want to be seen when people are looking to buy what you have to sell.

The question is, how do you know if your ads are showing up for high-intent searches?

Well, it’s fairly easy: just look at your Search Terms report. The Search Term report lets you see exactly what searches triggered your ad and how many impressions, clicks and conversions each search term produced.

If your campaigns are running effectively, your ads should show up when people are searching for what you have to offer. As a result, when they click on your ad, they should be taken to a landing page that meets their needs and convert.

In concept, it sounds great. In practice, though, it rarely works out that smoothly.

Across thousands of AdWords accounts, we discovered that the median AdWords account wastes 76 percent of its budget on search terms that never convert. That means the average AdWords account is wasting 76 percent of its budget.

Now, to be fair, when a company spends more on AdWords, they do get more productive spend:

productive-vs-wasted-ad-spend

But, even looking at total ad spend across all accounts, 61 percent of ad spend is still wasted on the wrong search terms.

Fixing the problem

Fortunately, wasted ad spend is a very easy problem to fix. You control your keywords, which gives you control of your search terms. So, if a search term isn’t converting, you can stop paying for it!

After discovering how much ad spend is wasted, we made eliminating wasted ad spend a key part of how we manage our clients’ AdWords accounts. The results have been astonishing.

most-important-gif-ever

Check out the charts above. On the left, you can see how much is spent on each term and how many conversions that search term produces. On the right, you can see how that translates into total ad spend and total conversions.

As our clients stop wasting money on the wrong search terms, spend drops and conversions spike.

And the improvement isn’t linear… it’s exponential. In most cases, each 10-percent decrease in wasted ad spend (e.g., 70 percent to 60 percent) decreased the cost per conversion by 30 to 60 percent.

That’s each 10-percent decrease.

So, if you’re wasting 76 percent of your ad budget today, and you drop that number to 66 percent, your cost per conversion could drop by as much as 60 percent. And if you get your account down to 56 percent wasted ad spend, your cost per conversion could drop another 60 percent. And so on… and so on… and so on…

For example, as one client’s wasted ad spend dropped from 91 percent to 68 percent, their cost per conversion dropped from $160.38 to $38.58!

cpa-vs-wasted-spend

And it all happened in a matter of weeks.

“But Jake,” you might ask, “what about sales? It doesn’t mean much if all of those cheap conversions don’t turn into sales!”

Remember, this approach doesn’t actually change which terms we bid on, it just focuses the budget on what’s working. As a result, our clients simply got exponentially better results from their productive keywords and search terms.

And it showed in their sales numbers, as well. While not all of our clients report their exact sales numbers back to us, we regularly see results like 300 to 500 percent more sales or 25 to 65 percent lower costs per sale using this approach.

How to take control of your wasted ad spend

Now, at this point, you’re probably thinking…

how do I get that goodness in me?

Fortunately, tightening up your Search Terms report is fairly straightforward. It takes some time and commitment, but the results are well worth the effort.

Get your conversion tracking working

To begin with, you’ll want to make sure that you have great conversion tracking in place.

In our audits, we found that although 58 percent of AdWords accounts have some level of conversion tracking in place, only 29 percent actually track conversions effectively. It’s not enough to simply track form fills. You need to track every type of conversion that comes from your ads: phone calls, chat messages, purchases… everything!

This is actually a lot easier than it sounds; you just have to take the time to do it.

Hopefully, if you’re a Search Engine Land regular, this should already be done. However, if you know you’ve got holes in your tracking, now’s the time to take care of them. Stop, go get your tracking set up (For help, click here for AdWords and here for Google Analytics) and come back when you’re done.

do it, do it now

Pull your Search Terms report

Once you’ve got a few months of quality conversion data in your account, you can see where your budget is really going.

It’s important to run your analysis on at least a month (preferably three to six months) of data. On any given day, or even week, there can be a lot of variability in which search terms produce results, so you need to look at a large window of data to get a good feel for how things are working.

To see where your budget is going, open AdWords and go to the Keywords tab. Make sure your date range is set appropriately, and click on “Search Terms.” From there, you can see how much ad spend each search term consumed and how many impressions, clicks and conversions it generated.

This is helpful, but to see how much of your ad spend was wasted, you’ll need to click the Filter drop-down menu and “Create filter” for “Conversions < 1” as follows:

search-terms-report-example

Scroll down to the very bottom of your filtered list, and look at the “Total – all filtered search terms” row. The number in the “Cost” column is how much you spent on search terms that never produced a single conversion.

Divide that number by the total amount you spent on all search terms, multiply by 100 percent, and you’ve got your percentage of wasted ad spend.

Discard the waste

Now comes the fun part: fixing your account.

In my experience, the Search Terms report usually evokes one of two reactions:

1. “What in the world?”

For some accounts, the problems are so extensive that there seems to be little rhyme or reason to the Search Terms report. This is usually a sign of poor campaign structure.

If your Search Terms report leaves you wondering, “Why have I been paying for that query?” or “What does this search term have to do with my campaign?,” you probably need to consider rebuilding your account from the ground up.

i don't understand it

Create new, highly focused campaigns around the keywords and search terms that are working, and then let things run. This alone will improve your campaign performance, but you’ll want to run this same report again in a few months when your account is running properly.

2. “Well, that’s interesting.”

On the other hand, if your account is working decently, you should be able to use this report to identify a variety of specific problems.

For example, if no one is converting on a particular search term that seems highly relevant to your business, it may be time to revise your advertising strategy for that term. Maybe that term needs a dedicated ad or landing page. Maybe you just need to test different ad copy to find something that works. Maybe the term isn’t as relevant as you thought it was.

Alternatively, you may find search terms that seem to occur rarely, but they all share something in common. Together, they indicate a major flaw in your keyword strategy that needs to be fixed.

Regardless of the specifics, looking at where your ad spend is being wasted will give you a ton of insight into how to improve campaign performance.

What we shoot for

As a general rule, we usually shoot for < 40 percent wasted ad spend in the accounts that we manage. This keeps your budget highly productive, while giving you room to test out new keywords.

However, even getting your wasted ad spend down from 76 percent to 50 percent will have a profound effect on your campaign performance, so don’t despair if that < 40 percent mark seems unattainable.

Conclusion

Wasted ad spend is a huge indicator of the health of your AdWords account. Fortunately, wasted ad spend is also a metric that is almost entirely under your control.

So, if you need to cut cost-per-conversion and boost sales, take a hard look at your Search Terms report. This critical report offers the vital information you need to eliminate waste and dramatically improve campaign performance.

Try it out and let me know what happens!

The post From waste to win: watch how a simple change affects AdWords performance appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Wednesday, March 30, 2016

New report from the Local Search Association on SMB advertiser churn

This report from the Local Search Association and Vendasta explores some of the triggers and potential variables behind SMB advertiser churn using new data from Vendasta.

The data come from more than 275,000 small business accounts, and Vendasta made its aggregate customer data available as a source for this report in an effort to help isolate and identify churn variables and potential triggers and causes.

Some of the findings are counterintuitive and may surprise you.  Visit Digital Marketing Depot to download “SMB Advertiser Churn: New Data For An Old Industry Problem”.

The post New report from the Local Search Association on SMB advertiser churn appeared first on Search Engine Land.

SearchCap: Google AMP, knowledge graph & auto ads

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:

Industry

Local & Maps

Searching

SEO

SEM / Paid Search

The post SearchCap: Google AMP, knowledge graph & auto ads appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Google launches its giant mobile search ads for auto makers in the US

Google is launching its specialized mobile search ads for automotive manufacturers and dealers. First announced in beta last May, Model Automotive ads and Dealer Automotive ads are now available to eligible advertisers in the US.

Original equipment manufacturer (OEM) automotive advertisers can run Model Automotive ads are on searches for auto makes and models. The ads feature large-format images, performance details and links to the manufacturer’s website, nearby dealers and other information. google mobile search ads for automotive launch

Toyota and Ford are currently running the new ad formats for some models. Google says engagement rates on Model Automotive ads have shown to be 30 percent higher on average compared to standard text ads. “Across our core line of car models, we’ve seen a 45% increase in conversion events and a 30% decrease in CPA compared to standard text ads,” Dionne Colvin-Lovely, director of traditional and new media for Toyota Motor Sales, U.S.A., said in a statement.

The Dealer Automotive ads are available to franchise and authorized auto dealerships in the US. The ads include location, directions, and a click-to-call button for nearby dealerships and display at the top of mobile search results. The dealer ads also integrate with the Model Automotive ads, accessed from the “Dealers” tab in those ads.

google mobile dealer ads

Why these specialized mobile ad units for automotive? The search giant says that half of automotive searches on Google now occur on smartphones — up 51 percent from a year ago. Searches for pictures of cars and truck brands rose 37 percent year-over-year with 80 percent now occurring on mobile. And searches for “car dealerships near me” have doubled, also with 80 percent of these searches now happen on mobile.

The post Google launches its giant mobile search ads for auto makers in the US appeared first on Search Engine Land.

International PPC: How to deal with currency fluctuations

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One issue I’ve seen with international PPC is how to keep track of your spend and ROI abroad compared to at home. When setting up billing, you can either choose to use the target market currency or use your home currency. There are pros and cons to both, though I don’t intend to discuss them too much here, as most advertisers would have already made a decision a long time ago.

What is critical is that regardless of the currency you select, Google’s (and maybe Bing’s) internal auction is converted to USD in order for AdRank to be calculated. So without actually changing your bids abroad, you are bidding more and less aggressively based on currency fluctuations and competitor currencies.

Below, I’ll share a dashboard that we use for international PPC clients at Brainlabs (my employer) to track these movements and make adjustments where necessary.

This Google Sheets dashboard has all the currency information you will ever need to take back to your PPC reporting. Use this sheet to help keep currency conversions simple and up-to-date. There’s a brief explanation of how it works at the end of the article, along with a bit of code for those of you who want to convert currencies in JavaScript.

There are many reasons you may need currency data. Here are a few we thought of:

1. Improve your analysis and compare performance across markets

When analyzing your business across markets, it’s difficult to compare cost-related metrics unless everything is the same currency.

You might also want to check out the volatility of a currency before moving into a new market, especially if you’re going to need to convert money to make payments — if the exchange rate changes by 10 percent over the course of a month, you may end up paying much more at the end of the month than you would have at the start.

2. Use for reporting and billing

Like many of our clients, you may do the majority of your business in the country in which you’re based but have branched out to do some international business, too. Whether your operations are digital or otherwise, it’s usually preferable to have these international ventures use the local currency. For AdWords, this means setting up a different account in a different currency and getting billed for it at the end of the month in this currency.

It also makes reporting a bit of a nightmare — if you’re advertising in the US, Canada, Mexico, the Bahamas and Bermuda, you have to manually look up the exchange rate for each of these each day just to know how much you’re spending. Using a currency conversion function makes this automatic, keeping the exchange rate current, so that you always know your total spend in US dollars.

3. Bespoke paid-for currency conversion software can be expensive

Currency conversion software can cost anything from $5 to $1,000 a month, depending on how heavy your usage is, how frequently you want rates to update and how flexible you want to be with the currencies you use. In general, the more recent and accurate you want your data to be, the more you are going to pay.

Back in 2011, Google had its own finance service that retrieved exchange rates (and other financial data) for free, making it easy to perform currency conversions in scripts. The service itself has now been deprecated, but a method to access this data lives on through the GOOGLEFINANCE function in Google Sheets.

The Brainlabs Currency Converter

Now to the Brainlabs Currency Converter dashboard.

Brainlabs Currency Converter

To use it, click on the File menu, and then “Make a copy….” Save the copy to your Google Drive, and then it’s ready to use.

The sheet has four pages:

  • The Current Exchange Rate sheet. This is a table of the current exchange rates between various currencies, updated by Google every three to 20 minutes. Feel free to add in any currencies you are interested in; you can look up their three-letter currency code here. If for some reason it’s not providing you with the exchange rate, it could be that GOOGLEFINANCE doesn’t support exchange rates for that currency.
  • The Detailed Exchange Breakdown sheet. This is for looking more deeply into the exchange rate trends — how much has it changed over the last month? Over the last year? After choosing a lookback window, it gives you the exchange rates at close for each day, as well as graphing them and giving you the highest, lowest and average values in that time. If you want this detailed breakdown for several different currencies at once, you can duplicate the sheet and have a different conversion on each copy. To use, just enter a lookback window in days in cell B1 (or custom start and end dates in cells B2 and B3), then the three-letter code for the currency you’re converting FROM in B4, and TO in B5.
  • The Exchange Rate To Single Currency sheet. This sheet gives you a slightly less detailed look at the exchange rate to a single currency. Alter any of the red boxes to get exchange rates from many different currencies to just one, with the current exchange rate alongside the average, maximum and minimum exchange rates for a given time period.
  • The Useful Date Formulae sheet. A little bonus — this sheet contains some formulae for date periods you may want to use in the detailed exchange breakdown. These correspond to some of the date windows used in AdWords — useful if you’re in SEM and are using it to convert currencies.

If you’re more technically inclined and would like to implement currency conversion in code, here’s a JavaScript template to get you started:

The post International PPC: How to deal with currency fluctuations appeared first on Search Engine Land.

A century of celebrating Mom: smart ad strategies for the mother of all holidays

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In 1914, Woodrow Wilson signed a bill recognizing Mother’s Day as a national holiday. A century later, the holiday has become much more than a celebration of more than 85.4 million mothers. Mother’s Day is now the third-largest retail holiday in the US, with total spending at $21.2 billion, according to the National Retail Federation (NRF).

No one likes to skimp on Mom. The NRF reports that the average shopper plans to spend $173 on their mother this year, with gifts ranging from consumer electronics to jewelry to flowers. And a new favorite gift is on the rise: the gift card. The NRF estimates that 44.2 percent of shoppers plan to buy Mom a gift card, with total spending expected to reach $2.2 billion.

How do you make sure your ad campaigns are working as hard as possible for you this Mother’s Day? Here are Bing Ads’ top tips for Mother’s Day success.

Timing is everything

Mother’s Day searchers begin a month in advance and are most active the week prior to the holiday — particularly those in search of flowers, gifts and greeting cards (Microsoft internal data, 2015).

SEL Bing Ads Mothers Day 1 SEL Bing Ads Mothers Day 2

Make it mobile

Mobile searches continue to grow; last year, within the Bing Network, Mother’s Day mobile searches saw a 39-percent increase. This year, smartphones are expected to play an even bigger part in Mother’s Day shopping. According to the Retail Insight Center‘s Mother’s Day Overview, here’s how they will be used:

  • Researching or comparing prices (43 percent)
  • Purchasing gifts (28 percent)
  • Looking up retailer location, store hours, directions and so on (25 percent)
  • Using apps to research or purchase gifts (16 percent)

Pay attention to click-through rate (CTR) by category

Click-through rates and volumes trend by gift category, so make sure to identify when CTR is high and cost-per-click is low for your category so you can capitalize on this opportunity.

mothers-day-bing-cpc-ctr

Choose words that work

A recent Microsoft Internal Data study (April 1, 2015–May 15, 2015) shows that specific word combinations make a big difference during Mother’s Day campaigns. For instance, a Flowers/Cards/Gifts/Candy ad highlighting “Online” in the title and “Cards” in the description has high ad quality.

mothers-day-bing-keywords

[Click to enlarge]

If your category is Flowers, top-performing ads should include the words Online (“online,” “official site,” “order online”) and Gifts (“apparel,” “bags,” “baskets”). For mobile devices, use % Off (“%” or “save %”) in the ad title, combined with Online in the ad description.

For Cards, include the words Delivery and Shipping (e.g., “day delivery,” “fast delivery,” “free shipping”). On mobile devices, Price/Pricing (“cash,” “affordable,” “price”) works best in the ad title when paired with Cards (“gift cards,” “cards,” “postcards”) in the description.

Align your Gifts category ad copy to what your audience is searching for by using Brand terms in the ad title and using Dynamic Keyword Insertion in the ad description.

For the Candy category, Brand names rule once again when it comes to driving performance in the ad title. For PC, combine Gifts in your ad descriptions with Free; for mobile, use Flavor (e.g., “vanilla”) in your ad titles.

And finally, the Jewelry category ad copy performs best when there are Style/Type details in the ad title (e.g., “unique,” “colors,” “styles”). Pair this with a Call to Action (“buy,” “order now,” “get free”) to increase ad quality. For mobile devices, make sure you use a Call to Action in the ad title to boost ad quality.

SEL Bing Ads Mothers Day 5

Product ads: a compelling picture

Use high-quality images. Use images with a white background to make them pop. Do not include any text within your images (e.g., promo messaging for free shipping). Test different images of the same product to determine which image performs best

Put as many relevant keywords in the product title and description as possible. Also important, add negative keywords to prevent ads from showing on items you do not offer. Test multiple promotional text options to determine which one is resonating most, and then apply larger bids to best-sellers.

Make sure you optimize your data feed for Mother’s Day, and validate your data. It pays to ensure your product feed is properly formatted.

Product discoverability is of the utmost importance. Use the SKU column and unique identifiers to help differentiate product titles and descriptions that may only differ in size or color. Make sure all unique identifiers are consistent between data feeds, and use descriptive titles with all the relevant information as possible. Go beyond the required attributes and populate your feed with as many recommended attributes as possible for each product offer.  The more information you make available in your title, the more likely your product ads will be shown for relevant searches.

Create at least one campaign that targets all products in the feed. This will help you gain insights about products that may deserve attention but are not currently captured by other product groups. Target specific products in your feed beyond “all-inclusive,” and include specific brands, product types or individual products that align with your business goals

Create custom labels that can help you group your products and target more successfully. For instance, labels can be created specifically for high-margin products, items with low or high return on ad spend and so on.

And, last but not least, given that Mother’s Day is a very short seasonal event, refresh your feed daily.

Happy moms, happy customers

Remember, Mother’s Day is a big retail holiday, one that warrants a solid strategy.

So plan accordingly, and start your campaign planning early. Depending on what you sell, consider timing for your ads, your device strategy and word combinations, and include enough information to make sure your Product Ads are shown.

After all, when Mama is happy, your customers will be, too.

For a closer look at these insights and more, check out Mother’s Day Insights for Digital Marketers from Bing Ads:

The post A century of celebrating Mom: smart ad strategies for the mother of all holidays appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Google Adds Share Feature To Knowledge Graph Panel

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Now when Google shows a knowledge graph panel for a search query, the knowledge panel contains a share icon which let’s searchers share the search results on Facebook, Twitter, Google+, through email or with a short link. The share icon is situated on the left of the logo in the right side knowledge panel.

Here is a picture of how it looks:

google-knowledge-graph-new-1459339474

When you click on it, it pops open this sharing box, giving you the option to share the search page on Facebook, Twitter, Google+, through email or with a short link. Here is a picture:

share-google-knowledge-graph-1459339664

Hat tip to @AaronFriedman.

The post Google Adds Share Feature To Knowledge Graph Panel appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Google AMP Listings Feature Live In 12 Countries

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On February 23rd, Google began showing AMP listings in the mobile search results but it only rolled out to select regions.

A month later, Google has only rolled out the AMP based news carousel in 12 different countries. Elena L. from Google listed the countries where you can find AMP powered news in a help thread, they include:

  • United States
  • Brazil
  • Germany
  • Spain
  • France
  • United Kingdom
  • India
  • Indonesia
  • Italy
  • Mexico
  • Japan
  • Russia

There is no word on when it will expand to other regions or beyond the news carousel.

To learn more about AMP, see our Google AMP project category.

The post Google AMP Listings Feature Live In 12 Countries appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Tuesday, March 29, 2016

How to achieve top app store search rankings

Improving search ranking within app stores has become critical to an app’s success. Marketers are increasingly focused on various elements of app submission and marketing techniques to help achieve higher ranking in an app store’s search results.

This white paper from NativeX addresses the various free and paid solutions available to better understand the scope of what to do in order to achieve better app visibility, discoverability and conversions.

Visit Digital Marketing Depot to download your copy.

The post How to achieve top app store search rankings appeared first on Search Engine Land.

SearchCap: Google image saving, link building outreach & more

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

The post SearchCap: Google image saving, link building outreach & more appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Learn cutting edge strategies & tactics in earned, owned and paid social media marketing at SocialPro

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Join professional social media marketers just like you learning the latest ROI-driven tactics at Marketing Land’s SocialPro, June 20-21 in Seattle, WA. We’ve changed the date and location of this event based on your feedback to help you get a head start with your campaigns and end of year planning.

Whether you practice earned, owned or paid social media marketing, SocialPro has tactic-packed sessions and an incredible speaker lineup from companies, agencies and brands like MMI Agency, Avalaunch Media, BMC, Pinterest, Allrecipes, E! Online, Microsoft and many more!

Leaving SocialPro felt like leaving summer camp! What a warm, friendly environment to forge connections with a great group of smart marketers. Many social media conferences provide abstract ideas about community and engagement, but it’s rare to find one that offers as much actionable data and strategy as SocialPro.

– Courtney Seiter, Raven Internet Marketing Tools

See what other past attendees like Joel had to say.

Save now with super early bird rates

Make attending SocialPro a priority this year! Register for an All Access Pass by April 23 and pay $1395 — you’ll get two days of keynotes, measurable tactics, networking with the pros, and conference amenities for an exceptional value.

Register today!

-The SocialPro Conference Team

P.S. – Need more info? Check out these useful links:

  • Is your time limited? One day passes are available – learn more.
  • Sign up as a group of 3 or more and save between 10%-20% with team rates.
  • Your time and money will be worth the investment – we guarantee it.
  • Want more info on SocialPro? Marketing Land’s Founding Editor Danny Sullivan explains it all.
  • Have additional questions? Email registration@socialproconf.com or call (877) 696-7401, Monday through Friday, 9am to 5pm ET.

The post Learn cutting edge strategies & tactics in earned, owned and paid social media marketing at SocialPro appeared first on Search Engine Land.

The real impact of Google’s new paid search ad layout on organic search

Over the years, the Search Engine Result Pages (SERPs) have changed a lot. Features like news, images, videos and the Knowledge Graph have impacted the display, sorting and order of SERPs, dramatically impacting organic listings.

Recently, Google decided that paid search ads will no longer appear on the right-hand side of search results for desktop users globally, and up to four paid search results will appear at the top of the page (up from a maximum of three previously).

Paid search ads that fall below the fourth rank will appear at the bottom of the page, which has limited visibility to end users, for a total of seven ads per page max.

This is a big change, but how does it really impact organic search?

The answer is a number of different ways, which I will explore shortly. But before I do, let’s examine why Google is doing this.

Like many companies, Google has seen mobile traffic grow at an accelerated pace over the past two years. This new layout makes the desktop experience very similar to the current mobile SERP. It will allow Google to provide more relevant results for end users and also provide better performance for advertisers.

The key here is the fact that Google is very good at understanding intent. Google can distinguish a transactional query from an informational query. So, if I did a search to buy a camera and got an organic listing first to download the manual, I would see that as bad user experience.

Alternatively, if I received a bunch of paid ads selling cameras and didn’t even see any organic listings, that would be a better user experience. If four paid ads suit the intent, even if they push everything else down below the fold, it’s still a good experience.

How does this impact organic search?

Now that paid search ads are taking up more organic real estate, click-through rates for organic search listings — especially in the first two positions — will probably decrease because the organic results have been pushed farther down the page. Indeed, on mobile, we were already seeing SERPs where no organic listings appeared above the fold.

Since the organic search results will be relegated to further down the list, this will cause more advertisers to get more visibility from the top paid search ads, but it comes at a high cost.

If brands really want to get the most out of search, they’ll need to create an integrated organic and paid search strategy with focus on top rankings and paid ads to maintain visibility and be in front of their target audiences.

This change will also make local search more important if you have a brick-and-mortar business, because end users will see paid ads, then the local pack, before even getting to organic results. This makes appearing in that local pack more critical than ever before.

This latest SERP change is going to impact the content that brands produce at all stages of the buyer journey, too. Modern consumer behavior has been characterized by Google as a series of intent-based moments (“micro-moments“) enabled by the high usage of mobile, which can be described as “I want to know, I want to go, I want to do and I want to buy.”

This is where the consumer comes into the fragmented path to purchase; the “funnel” that marketers often refer to doesn’t exist. The path to purchase is no longer linear.

Therefore, you must have content to reach the user at different stages of the user journey to turn these people into customers. That means differentiating your paid and organic landing pages and creating content that suits each.

With more paid listings appearing for “highly commercial queries,” you’ll need to focus paid landing pages towards searchers in the buying/decision-making stages, whereas your organic landing pages should be better positioned (and possibly expanded) to capture visitors in the research/consideration stages.

In summary, it will be more important to rank in the first two organic positions to capture the most clicks and visibility from organic search.

Since the organic results are getting pushed farther down the page now, both paid and SEO must work together to make 1+1=3. Don’t be afraid to compete with yourself and show the holistic value of integration.

Final Thoughts

The SERPs will continue to evolve as Google looks for new and innovative ways to make the desktop experience similar to the current mobile SERP and provide the most relevant results for end users.

Agencies and brands must adapt to the dynamic landscape of the SERPs and put together results-driven strategies and tactics using both paid and organic search together to maximize ROI, capture more conversions and provide end users with relevant content in their moment of need.

Also, perhaps this is a good way to “train” end users into accepting paid-only results at times on mobile phones, especially because of the limited real estate on mobile devices.

The post The real impact of Google’s new paid search ad layout on organic search appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Manual link building’s 7 worst outreach offenses

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I get incredibly annoyed when I receive an email offering SEO services, especially when the sender notes that he or she has looked at my site, checked my rankings and can tell me why I’m doing so poorly in Google. If you’re an SEO, I’m sure you get tons of these emails, too.

While I know that it’s just automated spam, I’m still offended. This type of email clogs up inboxes and likely prevents legitimate outreach requests from being read. Since our main method of developing links involves email outreach, this poses a serious problem for us.

I’m not trying to slam automation at all here, either. It definitely has its place, and in many cases, it can be used very well. But this is a perfect example of automation at its worst. Just slap in some email addresses and spam us all. Send us enough spam in one day, and we’ll delete anything that doesn’t come from someone we know.

My number one rule for my link team is this: check the target site. If human eyes aren’t on that site and on it for enough time to verify that they’re a worthy candidate to reach out to, we have no business contacting them.

That takes time, though. It takes effort, and it takes human labor. To me, it’s worth it — and it’s why our response rate and conversion rates are much higher than they were when we used to cast a wide net and deal with what we pulled in.

Outreach is tough work, and I see so many poor examples of it, so let’s take a look at what I consider to be the 7 worst outreach offenses.

1. Reaching out to people who do what you do

I covered this in my opening, but let me harp on it some more. When you contact someone who does what you do, and you expect something from them, you’re just making yourself look sloppy in every possible way.

As an SEO, my first thought is that you are using automation and don’t have the brains to check your list. A non-SEO might just be really annoyed. Regardless, we’ll all think poorly of you — and even if you contact us with something legitimate in the future, we won’t be open to it.

John SEO

2. Reaching out to people who have the content you’re peddling

I accidentally did this recently when I was rushing to help out with a new campaign. I was doing outreach for a client who had a DIY article about something, and I approached a blogger who had a lot of DIY articles. I didn’t see a big section about my particular interest, and I found a great page where I thought my client’s piece would be a nice addition.

Unfortunately, I got back this response:

“Not sure why you think we’d link to this considering we have a very similar article on our site already, so no thanks.”

If I had taken the time to do more internal searches on the site using the main keywords for my client’s piece, I would have caught this and not bothered them. This amounted to wasted time for both me and the webmaster, and it had the added benefit of making me feel extra idiotic, since I had violated my number one rule!

I took this experience as a good reminder that no one is above making mistakes, but even now, I’m kicking myself for it.

3. Using the wrong name

While I’m not a fan of being addressed as Webmaster or Sir (seriously, that happens more times than I can count), it’s even worse when someone addresses me by the wrong name. I’m even okay with a misspelling; I am not okay with being addressed as Kelvin. I’m not a fan of Mr. Joyce, or just Joyce, either. I occasionally get emails addressed to Jay, but he’s our CEO, so I just grin and bear that. I will never get over Kelvin, though!

There are a lot of sites where it’s almost impossible to figure out the name of the webmaster. Sometimes they just use a moniker, or maybe there are 10 major writers and you aren’t sure which one will get your email. That is understandable, and most likely, “Webmaster” or something similar won’t be a giant offense there because they have to know it’s tricky to get a name.

What isn’t okay is sending an email to a webmaster called Laura Daniels and forgetting to change the name so you’re saying “Hi Isabelle!!” instead.

Just as I was writing this very paragraph, I received the following email in the screen shot below. Note that it represents everything bad about an outreach email. The [FNAME] bit is always a nice fail.

famous bloggers

You know where emails like this go? In the trash.

4. Assuming the person getting your email has no power

This one really gets under my skin. I once got an email saying “ask your boss if he’ll send you to x meetup!” which was really annoying because I am the boss, and anyone checking my site could see that I own the company. I’ve also seen emailed surveys with no selection to choose that you are indeed the boss and the end of the line. Highly bothersome stuff.

There are cases when you really and truly do not know who you need to speak to, though. I ran into this recently myself when doing some outreach work for a scholarship. I found numerous contacts listed for the financial aid office, but it was unclear which person I needed to contact.

However, instead of assuming I had the wrong person automatically, I wrote the emails as if I did and then briefly apologized if I did have the wrong person and asked if my email could be forwarded to the correct individual. As far as I can tell, that didn’t offend anyone.

5. Email is too long or too short, with no clear expectations

We’ve experimented with all types of emails for outreach. You read all sorts of advice about how to get your email read, and some of it involves making that personal connection.

While I agree with that, I think it’s very obvious when that is disingenuous. I get emails asking for me to participate in a group interview, and it takes me five minutes to read the emails.

I also get some that are so short they’re practically rude. It’s hard to find middle ground here. I’ve recently responded to an email where I asked, “What exactly are you asking me to do?,” and that was after reading the email three times. No one has time for that sort of thing.

emojis

Your subject line is critical here, so make sure you aren’t being vague or trying to catch their attention with loads of emojis. Even when I’m emailing my team about how I have to run out for a bit, I try and get their attention with a subject as simple as “out for a bit!” Then, in the body, I tell them for how long. I used to say way too much in cases like that (and probably still do), as I always feel like I owe everyone an explanation, but honestly, all they care about is that I will be unavailable for the next hour. They don’t care that I have a doctor’s appointment or need to run to the bank.

When you’re going to ask a webmaster for something, use a clear subject line (like “interested in your feedback for my latest article on x site”) and don’t write eight paragraphs in the body. Don’t send a ton of images or attachments or throw in five URLs for them, either. Keep it simple and to the point.

6. Trying to get a link on a dead site

A very well-known and respected brand keeps emailing me about getting a link on a local news site that I run that has not been updated in close to a year.

Not only did they email me once, they’ve now emailed me three times and at every single address listed on the site. It really has made me lose respect for the brand. Why aren’t they paying attention?

7. Hammering the same person with outreach, over and over

I appreciate a follow-up. I do not appreciate being sent the same email every few days for weeks on end, with various changes to it such as “maybe you missed this email the last 10 times?”

I must have told some sales guy 50 times that I do not need the service that he offers, but in addition to trying to change my mind (“Have you considered how not offering our video conferencing package to your clients is costing you money?”), he also emails me again, with another initial outreach email, like he’s never talked to me before. I feel like all this guy does is try to figure out ways to sell me his video conferencing system and that he won’t rest until one of us dies.

I’ll tell you something. If I ever am in need of a system like that, I’ll go with anyone but his company.

I’ll also add that you should consider not emailing the same person with every single new piece of content that you put out. Just because I’ve helped you out once doesn’t mean I want to help you out every single day.

If this is how you work, consider separating that one big email list into five or so smaller ones, and rotate the lists each time you have something new. Otherwise, you’re just becoming annoying and I’ll eventually start ignoring you.

To summarize:

  1. Don’t bother people who do what you do.
  2. Don’t bother people who have the same content you’re offering.
  3. Get the right name.
  4. Don’t think the person you’re emailing has to ask her boss for permission to do whatever you want.
  5. Keep it short and to the point. Give the recipient a clear idea of what you want.
  6. Don’t email dead sites!
  7. Don’t bug people.

Remember how many emails you get, and delete, every single day. I can’t leave my computer for 15 minutes with getting 10 emails! If you want to get through the clog and get that email opened, you need to up your game, because it’s only getting muddier.

The post Manual link building’s 7 worst outreach offenses appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Monday, March 28, 2016

Google images can now be saved on desktop & accessed via a mobile device

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After making it possible to save images via a mobile browser, Google has expanded its image-saving feature to desktop.

Now, users signed into their Google account can save an image to Google while on their desktop using the star icon, and then access saved images via their mobile device.

Google desktop image save option

Google also notes images can be grouped together using tags to better organize image collections.
Google desktop image save tags

Google originally launched this feature on mobile devices in November of last last year, allowing users to save Google images to their collections across all major browsers on both Android and iOS.

The post Google images can now be saved on desktop & accessed via a mobile device appeared first on Search Engine Land.

SearchCap: Google AdWords revamp, Google Maps iOS Spotlight & more

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:

Industry

Local & Maps

Searching

SEO

Search Marketing

The post SearchCap: Google AdWords revamp, Google Maps iOS Spotlight & more appeared first on Search Engine Land.