Posts Tagged ‘ microsoft

College Hoops: SEO Madness 2010 is Here! 14 March 2010 at 6:00 am by admin

basketballYour office pool is fun, but how about competing against fellow search marketers far and wide? It’s time for the 4th Annual “SEO Madness” College Hoops Pool, where we all make our March Madness picks, and the winner gets the links.

Teams and brackets are being announced today and you can sign-up now.

Here’s what you need to know:

What’s it cost? Nada. Free. All you need is a Yahoo account.

Where do I join? Sign-up here. This link should put you directly into the SEO Madness 2010 group, but if not, you’ll need this info:

Group ID: 60624

Group password: seorocks

That’s all! Get yourself signed into the SEO Madness group and then tell your friends on Facebook or Twitter — the more, the merrier. May the best man/woman win!

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This is a post from Matt McGee’s blog, Small Business Search Marketing.

College Hoops: SEO Madness 2010 is Here!

Related posts:

  1. SEO Madness 2009 is here!
  2. Game On: March Madness contest for SEO/PPC folks
  3. Join the March Madness contest for SEOs/SEMs

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College Hoops: SEO Madness 2010 is Here!

+ U2 Validates Benefits of SEO By admin 11 March 2010 at 2:46 pm and have No Comments

My worlds are colliding. I mean my “U2 world” and my “SEO world.” I try to keep them separate, but this story makes that impossible. Check it out on the Somerset County Gazette web site.

Apparently, a local/small business owner recently got a job fixing a broken GRAMMY Award that belongs to U2. The article makes several cheesy references to U2 song titles, but here’s the part that matters:

“…one of the band’s management team got in touch after typing in ‘trophy repairs’ into Google.”

SEO FTW!

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This is a post from Matt McGee’s blog, Small Business Search Marketing.

U2 Validates Benefits of SEO

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+ Attention Students & Parents! Search Contests & Programs that Pay Off By admin 09 March 2010 at 5:35 pm and have No Comments

In the Internet marketing industry, we’re all constantly pushing ourselves to learn more and grow what we know. It’s not unlike what you want for your own children — education and opportunities that build a foundation for future success.

Turns out the search community is interested in sharing just such opportunities with students, a.k.a. the future of the world. Right now Google, Bing and the White House are all running contests and programs for children and young adults that promote learning and education in fun and creative ways. If you think your child might be interested in taking pictures, developing software or code, or hearing the President deliver the high school commencement address, check out the following opportunities.

Earth Day Photo Contest — Open to Students of All Ages

Bing Earth Day photo contest

Contest: Youth ages 5 and older are invited to submit their original photos which celebrate Earth Day. Entries will be divided among four age groups: 5-10, 11-13, 14-17, 18+.

Prizes: The grand-prize winning photo will be displayed on the Bing home page on Earth Day, April 22. The winner of each age group will get to go to the Microsoft Campus and attend a Bing editorial team meeting. Also, first, second and third place winners will all receive an HP Pavilion desktop and monitor and a digital photo software package for their school.

And there’s more! Each day during the voting period, Bing will donate $5.00 for DonorsChoose.org to the first 20,000 people who vote. And voters get to designate what classroom projects will benefit from the donation. Everyone truly wins!

Entry Period: March 29-April 11

Voting Period: April 13-19

Web Site: http://earthdayphotocontest.com/

Juicy Ideas Competition — Open to College Students

Juicy Ideas competition logo

Contest: Eligible college students are invited to answer the question “How can you use data to help your community?” by developing a software application. This contest is open to college and university students within a 50 km radius of Google offices and datacenters. Teams must consist of three to five students.

Prize: The grand-prize winners will receive an Android-powered phone and an all-expenses-paid trip to Google’s Mountain View headquarters.

Entry Period: March 29-April 11

Web Site: http://juicyideascompetition.appspot.com/

Summer of Code — Accepting Applications from Mentor Orgs Now

Google Summer of Code 2010 logo

Program: Every year Google funds a three-month student mentoring program, pairing students with organizations to work on a coding project together. Student developers partner with a group running an active open-source software project.

Who Wins: Everyone involved! Students gain exposure to real-world software development situations and a resume-worthy experience in their field of pursued interest. The mentor organization gets to bring in and identify new developers. And more open source code is released for anyone to use.

Application Period: Mentor organizations may apply by March 12. The student application period opens March 29.

Web Site: http://code.google.com/soc/

Race to the Top High School Commencement Challenge — Open to Public High School Students

logo of White House Race to the Top

Contest: Okay, so this one’s got nothing to do with search, but it’s definitely a student contest. And the White House’s marketing efforts are worth learning from. Public high schools are invited to submit an application of four essay questions focused on personal responsibility, academic excellence and college readiness. To supplement the application, a school can also submit a two-minute or shorter video as well as data on attendance, graduation rates, and other key indicators.

Prize: President Obama will deliver the commencement address to the winning school’s graduating class.

Entry Period: February 19-March 15

Voting Period: TBA – The White House and Department of Education will select the six finalists. The public will then be invited to vote for their top three choices on the White House Web site.

Web Site: http://www.whitehouse.gov/Commencement

Attention Students & Parents! Search Contests & Programs that Pay Off was originally published on BruceClay.com, an SEO tools provider.

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Attention Students & Parents! Search Contests & Programs that Pay Off

+ 3 Takeaways from SMX West 2010 By admin 08 March 2010 at 5:32 pm and have No Comments

SMX West was a rollercoaster of highs, lows, twists and turns. The highs of adrenaline-fueled excitement, the lows of getting the lowdown from the search reps, and the twists and turns of going with the flow during such an activity-filled week.

liveblogging
Liveblogger clearly gone mad…

I was on that ripping ride of a rollercoaster for three days, and while it was a blast and a half, I’m glad to be back on the ground where I can process everything that just happened. While reviewing my liveblog coverage of SMX West I was struck by three major points worth highlighting.

Search Community Still on the Fence about Microhoo

An opening keynote by Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer assured that discussions of Microhoo were everywhere all conference long. Ballmer didn’t give away much info himself in regards to the partnership, other than some high-level speculation:

I see the opportunity for a number of game changers. It’s really important to have momentum and progress with a differentiated point of view. Total game changer? We’ll get there. But the world is so dynamic we’ll find opportunities for game changers. The business model of search, we haven’t figured out how to remake it. But we think there’s lots of opportunity for growth on the business side as well as the technology side.

During the session Microsoft + Yahoo: What’s It All Mean?, we learned more about the details of the deal, some possible outcomes of looming questions, and the upsides and downsides for marketers regarding many of the changes.

And at The State of the Search Union keynote, this conversation seemed to cover all the bases:

Chris Sherman: What’s the reaction of clients across the spectrum?

Misty Locke: They’re excited, not only clients but also the search managers at her agency. It allows her to shift strategy, so instead of 70/20/10 it’ll be 60/40. The opportunity is big around reach and the additional volume this will bring. One question will be will Microsoft still bring us some of the highest conversion rates once Yahoo! comes in. Bing Cashback has been a big opportunity for her clients.

Avinash Kaushik: Competition is a good thing. It gets people to innovate and do better and not get stale. The way each engine works and the kind of people that use each engine is very different. You should have a strategy for SEO for each engine, a portfolio strategy because you will find more customers and find your dollars more effectively.

Vanessa Fox: She’s waiting to see how the partnership shakes out. She doesn’t know how Searchmonkey and BOSS will work when Yahoo! doesn’t have its own index. Yahoo! did have a play for innovation and for startups, so she’s reserving judgment until the partnership settles in.

Super Site Speed Speediness

runner in sunset
CC BY-ND 2.0

Speed, speed and more speed was a recurring theme throughout the conference. One session aimed to tackle the issues of speed in depth: The Need for Speed: Google Says It Matters. The session’s panelists, including Google’s Maile Ohye, presented compelling statistics about why load time matters to users; where to focus initial efforts to get the biggest bang for the fewest bucks; and a number of tools that help diagnose a site’s speed issues.

Lately Google has been aggressively pushing a message that a site’s speed should be optimized. So SEOs and webmasters have been wondering, “Is speed a ranking factor?” Ohye answered this question during the session (paraphrased):

As of today, speed or performance is not a factor in organic ranking. If performance becomes a signal, we expect to notify webmasters. But, hint: Google is pushing the importance of speed.

She also pointed to AdWords Quality Scores and its consideration of page load time as a model similar to what might be used if and when Google uses speed as an organic ranking factor. Bottom line: make sure your site is as fast as it can be. Like, yesterday!

Exciting New Options for Online Advertisers

New opportunities are rarely in short supply when it comes to search marketing, though I was struck by platforms I’ve talked about and learned about before that just haven’t taken off yet. I believe that the early adopters in these spaces could reap the benefits while the rest of the advertising world catches up.

Facebook Ad Tactics for Search Marketers: Facebook has the highest daily reach of any site and also takes the cake for time spent on a single site. Audience targeting is super granular, and consumers can be reached at any point of the conversion funnel. Plus, while adoption is still scarce, the costs are often much lower than on platforms like Google or Yahoo!

Mobile Paid Search Ads: Real Opportunities: A panel of mobile experts shared their tips for mobile search PPC optimization, Google’s various mobile PPC offerings, advertising for smart phones vs. feature phones, and pitfalls to avoid along the way.

Not Your Father’s AdWords: The New Google Ad Formats: We all know that Google rolls out new features faster than a liveblogger’s fingertips, but I had no idea there had been so many recent changes to Google AdWords. Ad Sitelinks, local ads, product ads and comparison ads, and emerging solutions for performance attribution all hold significant promise.

So site speed, Microhoo and ad opportunities were the three takeaways of SMX West from my perspective. What were yours?

3 Takeaways from SMX West 2010 was originally published on BruceClay.com, an SEO tools provider.

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+ Keynote – The State Of The Search Union By admin 04 March 2010 at 10:47 am and have No Comments

Moderator: Chris Sherman, Executive Editor, Search Engine Land

Speakers:

Vanessa Fox, Contributing Editor, Search Engine Land
Avinash Kaushik, Analytics Evangelist, Google Inc.
Misty Locke, President, Range Online Media & Chief Strategy Officer, iProspect, Range Online Media / iProspect
David Roth, Director of Search Engine Marketing, Yahoo! Inc.

Keynote, Day Three SMX

Hi everyone! It’s the final day of the SMX West conference and I’m leaving it all here. Blog ’til you drop, baby! There’s a good-sized crowd for today’s keynote, a roundtable convo between some heavy hitters of search.

Chris welcomes everyone. When they’ve done panels like this in the past, he’s usually saying Google, Google, Google. But in the past year we’ve seen more radical change than he’s observed in the last 15 years since he’s covered the search engines. It’s really exciting, and that’s why they’ve assembled this stellar panel.

Last year this time we were in the early stages of an economic meltdown and everyone was uncertain about how the recovery would take place and what it meant for a new industry like search marketing. So does search still have a bright future?

Dave: As a search marketer, it allowed him to show their stuff and gave them a reason to shift strategies. In his experience they were able to support business goals in a shifting landscape through search marketing. Also, he’s seen a shift back to SEO and not just in paid.

Misty: Some businesses as a whole saw pain points, but e-commerce areas performed well. In some areas, e-commerce business grew when they weren’t expecting it to. Some record-breaking months and quarters were seen thanks to search. Both customer acquisition and customer loyalty were both affected positively.

Chris: The Super Bowl is the big spend event for TV advertiser. We’ve seen several advertisers pull out of it this year. Is that a shift online?

Vanessa: With Pepsi, they decided to shift their money to social media. But what struck her when watching Super Bowl ads was that many large brands were just starting to recognize search was important. It seemed better than last year, but slowly edging up and there’s still a lot of work left for large brands.

Chris: In terms of branding, there seems to be an argument that branding and search don’t mix. Do you believe that?

Avinash: What’s great about search is that relevancy and accountability are there. Branding was a great metaphor for wanting to do something without understanding the outcome. But in search, the case is that you can use it effectively for many desired outcomes. When people say, “I want to run a branding campaign,” his first question is what do you want out of it? A one time thing, a long-term relationship, and so on. Search is an effective way to show relevance for many goals.

Chris: It seems there’s finally a good number two in Microsoft and Yahoo!

Dave: It’s a huge project and a lot of resources are being put in the partnership. The proof will be in the pudding as advertisers start to migrate. When things like this happen, he’s usually the one being the guinea pig.

Chris: There was a lot of animosity early on in the media around the partnership.

Dave: Yahoo! search and engineer resources will move to Microsoft but a lot remains to be seen. Everyone on this project understands that this is a must-work project so he thinks they’ll figure out a way to make this happen.

Chris: What’s the reaction of clients across the spectrum?

Misty: They’re excited, not only clients but also the search managers at her agency. It allows her to shift strategy, so instead of 70/20/10 it’ll be 60/40. The opportunity is big around reach and the additional volume this will bring. One question will be will Microsoft still bring us some of the highest conversion rates once Yahoo! comes in. Bing Cashback has been a big opportunity for her clients.

Avinash: Competition is a good thing. It gets people to innovate and do better and not get stale. The way each engine works and the kind of people that use each engine is very different. You should have a strategy for SEO for each engine, a portfolio strategy because you will find more customers and find your dollars more effectively.

Vanessa: She’s waiting to see how the partnership shakes out. She doesn’t know how Searchmonkey and BOSS will work when Yahoo! doesn’t have its own index. Yahoo! did have a play for innovation and for startups, so she’s reserving judgment until the partnership settles in.

Chris: Google has a culture of being open and yet opaque. With Caffeine we’ve heard it’s on one data center. What impact is the Caffeine update going to have on SEO? And is Google going to continue in it’s sprit of tools and openness?

Vanessa: Once she looked at all the changes by Google in the last year, normally she tells people not to think much about SEO besides the foundation, but now it’s really important because there have been so many changes to Google search. With Caffeine, she doesn’t think it will have an SEO impact, because there’s no rankings change, other than indirectly, for instance being able to crawl a site quickly.

Avinash: If every Googler woke up and decided they would answer questions from webmasters, he doesn’t think we’d ever be able to answer all the questions. One part of the tool strategy is trying to help people at scale and give you the transparency and info you need to make better decisions. Also, the tool strategy is to help you make better decisions with search better. He’s been “orgasmic” about the amount of data Google has made available, like Insights for Search, geo and trends organic search data all there.

Chris: There’s a little confusion of who’s doing what regarding Yahoo! and Microsoft.

Dave: Yahoo!’s committed to search, and one way is on the sales side. They’ll be managing both display and search for their network, and maintain the high-touch with big customers. A lot of smaller and self-service customers will be managed on the Microsoft side. With the platform, he thinks the goal is to make the adCenter platform the platform of choice for both Bing and Yahoo!

The question is what can we do given the data and assets we have to serve ads better for the consumer. Buying behavioral and demographic targets, there are teams focused on creating better ad products and technologies for consumers and advertisers.

Chris: People say we’re seeing social media replacing search for interactions online. What can search marketers do, not just to be social, but to anticipate what’s going to happen in the next 12 or 18 months?

Vanessa: Someone was interviewing her and said that search is old news, so why are trying to get people to optimize for search? People aren’t done searching. She doesn’t think there’s an either or thing for search and social.

Misty: She thinks social elevates the opportunity for search marketing, breaking down the boundaries between marketing departments. If she’s looking at a marketing campaign, search is being given the responsibility to drive campaigns. Lift campaigns, branding campaigns, and so on, marketers have that ability at their fingertips through social and real-time info to drive search volume.

Dave: He’s always said, sit tight, the rest of the marketing community is coming your way, search marketers. Search engines are pulling social into search, which is great. All the discipline and accountability that search has grown up with is going to be a huge advantage for companies.

Avinash: The media loves “or” stories even though we’re in an “and” world. There’s no either or, and that brings me back to my point about having a search marketing portfolio and that each channel is used for what it’s good at. You wouldn’t want to use the shouting from TV ads within a social media campaign. If you execute each strategy optimally, the bottom line impact you’ll have is much broader than you’d have imagined.

Chris: If you’re going all of sudden from mass market messaging to individual touch, how do you manage that info overload? And will we see siloing, with search absorbed in a silo of an organization?

Avinash: We put on the wrong lens when we say, “How do we make advertising more relevant?” Instead, what we do today is try to influence people, and one emerging way to influence people is to have these conversations. What is sure is shouting at people is going away. He believes the single greatest reason for Google’s success is relevance. Marketers have to accept that the way we influence people is changing, because marketers don’t decide what works, the customers do. With question two, he doesn’t see search going into a silo, because it’s used for a broad spectrum of goals.

Dave: If you look at social media managed in an organization, you see it’s the first channel that’s delivered on the promise of customer engagement. Q: Who should own social media in an organization? A: Well, who owns the paper in an organization?
That puts it succinctly. Social is breaking down the barriers because it has to be implemented across an organization.

Vanessa: With data, if all the areas of marketing can share the data there’s going to be much more understanding and it benefits them all.

Chris: What happens when unethical marketers get a hold of all that data?

Avinash: If you look at the sides of the Egyptian tombs, there are spam comments in that. Spam will continue to be a problem for a very long time. The best advertising channels can do is do what they can to suppress it and to provide incentives to doing things the right way.

Misty: There will always be spam. The trick for ethical marketers is overdoing our efforts for authenticity Consumers can sniff it out and sometimes be judged too harshly.

Dave: There’s the potential to do unethical things as well as criminal things. There’s not enough awareness and understanding of advertising mediums by the public and by the government. The risk of regulation is that there’s a big lack of understanding and it’s scary to think what regulation can do to marketing. Legislators aren’t up to speed on technologies like these.

Chris: Let’s shift to global. What’s the opportunity for search marketers? And with regulation, how do you work with restrictions and censorship of certain countries? Opportunity or keep watching?

Vanessa: You should always understand your audience. It’s not enough to just localize your content. Understanding the culture and government, you’ll see audiences are very different. I think the government stuff is a whole other issue, but start by understanding the audience.

Avinash: Search marketers outside the U.S. tend to be sophisticated marketers, though there is still a reliance on shout channels. But they’re getting up to speed fast and there’s an opportunity to come up with something very creative in the global market.

Chris: Outside the U.S. we see a big mobile internet population. Is mobile here?

Dave: It’s here but it may not be what we thought it would be. We’ve seen 20 percent smartphone penetration hit, and that could be a sign of big things.

Avinash: On vacation he was looking for something to do with the family and he picked up his Nexus phone and did a voice search. Six seconds later he had driving directions from where he was. In that six seconds the query went to the Google servers, translated the text, found what he was looking for and delivered him an answer. All that is search. It made him think that he has to rethink his search strategy for that kind of a use case, and he doesn’t think people are thinking of that as search. It’s not just a WAP version of a Web page.

Misty: When a client comes to them and says they want to optimize for mobile, she starts by asking lots of questions about the usability of a site. After that, then the client can think of advertising.

Vanessa: The ubiquity of mobile opens up the door for new search opportunities. Users don’t even know if they’re searching when they do things like Urbanspoon or Google Goggles. Most of the world has never had a smartphone before the iPhone, the first time smartphone had a mass audience. Mobile is here.

Keynote – The State Of The Search Union was originally published on BruceClay.com, an SEO services company.

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Keynote – The State Of The Search Union

+ Bring In The Bling Via Bing Cashback By admin 03 March 2010 at 12:01 pm and have No Comments

Moderator: Matt Van Wagner, President, Find Me Faster

Speakers:

Meagan Rochelle, Search Solutions Specialist, Microsoft
Nicholas Ward, Product Manager, Range Online Media

How many people are using Bing Cashback, Matt asks? About a quarter of the audience raises their hand. The rest are interested to find out how it might work for them. Matt is excited for Bing Cashback. The program gets to the heart of Bing’s problem. Bing is a good decision-making search engine, and the program gets people to at least try another engine. Empowered shoppers and advertisers are showing that Cashback is a great opportunity.

At yesterday’s keynote by Steve Ballmer, he said that he thinks Microsoft will continue to invest in the Bing Cashback program. So what’s the general feeling about it?

Analysis of Bing-related tweets shows about 40 percent positive and 60 percent negative.

In Bing forums, the comments are almost all neutral. Typically, the authors were playing it safe with their comments and are actually ambivalent. Though, these forum members are there because they believe their feedback will be taken by Microsoft. As far as Bing reps, a little more than half the sentiment is positive and the rest is negative. The reps are positive in their communications but they’re uncertain about the still-new product.

Meagan Rochelle

Meagan is now on the podium. She’s on the Cashback team. She’s going to talk high-level about why Microsoft is investing in shopping and Cashback. She’ll also go into detail about how this audience can use Cashback.

When Bing launched they wanted to focus on four core verticals, with one being shopping. They’ve tried to provide tools and resources to help shoppers find and purchase a product they want.

State of the Retail Economy

Consumers ranked what they use to help them shop:

  1. Search Engines
  2. Coupon Sites
  3. Comparison Sites
  4. Auctions
  5. Classifieds

Shoppers employ numerous online resources. Retail e-mails and coupon sites are widely used by online shoppers. Social media, consumer reviews, blogs and discussion boards resonate with shoppers. Shoppers are doing a lot of research to get the best deal.

Bing Shopping Experience

The shopping vertical is meant to be research heavy and offers education around Cashback. When a product search is performed, they’ve laid it out to help refine search, given the option to look only at Cashback products, or browse related categories. On an individual product page there are reviews, price comparisons and details on the product.

Two Cashback Models

Bing Cashback Search:

  • Advertisers participate in paid search ads (CPC) through adCenter
  • Customers perform a product search on Bing, click the ad and are brought to the advertiser’s site

Bing Cashback Shopping:

  • Advertisers participate in a comparison shopping (CPA)
  • Customers search for a product in shopping Vertical Search and select to go to the advertiser’s site

The rest of the presentation will focus on the latter.

From the consumer side, the flow is cashback.com > compare prices > advertiser site

Search

  • Search for specific items
  • Browse featured products and stores

Compare

  • Highest ranked seller has the lowest total price

Buy

  • Wait 60 days
  • Receive money

From the advertiser side, the opportunities include:

  1. Cashback Search and search ads
  2. Cashback shopping CPA data feed
  3. Shopping CPC data feed

Cashback Momentum

  • Over 44 million offers in the product catalog
  • Over 1200 active merchants
  • Over $100 million of earned rewards

Seasonal promotional offers are another opportunity for participating merchants. They’re really working to market the program to the consumer. Bing Cashback users are heavy shoppers. Cashback users and Bing shopping users are heavy shoppers, averaging more shopping visits per month than a typical shopper.

Bing leads in driving conversions across categories

Bing users are equally or more likely to convert than other searchers

Bing users are significantly more likely to make an apparel, electronic and home décor purchase compared to Google and Yahoo users.

Bing Cashback Slide

The higher the rebate offered, the higher the average order size.

Best Practices for Cashback Optimizations

  • Use highest Rebate percentage your margin will allow for competitive net price to consumer
  • Review the performance of your offers periodically and remove from your feed offers that do not perform up to your expectations
  • Utilize information about Bing Cashback in your offline promotions
  • Capitalize on Bing Cashback marketing promotions.

Getting Started

  • Benefits of Cashback shopping CPA data feed
  • Only pay for actual sales
  • Shares back 100 percent of the advertising spend with the consumer
  • Zero click fraud concerns
  • No complicated web analytics necessary
  • Sell all of your products at the ROI you set in the merchant center

Implementation

  • Set up merchant account/billing
  • Implement order tracking via pixel/batch
  • Upload product catalog (datafeed)
  • Allocate resources for ongoing program management
Nicholas Ward

Nicholas is up next to talk about Cashback from the advertiser’s side. Cashack traffic grew almost 500 percent YoY for his clients. It’s great because it’s a flat CPA and they know what to expect. Cashback has been a success for his early adopting clients.

  • Stable traffic with consistent growth
  • Predictable return
  • The ability to scale Cashback percent

The two entry barriers:

Barrier 1: Is Cashback right for our brand?

  • Many brands are already here
  • Better integration = higher importance
  • Program differences drive flexibility

If you move forward, plan to:

  • Answer your users
  • Monitor religiously, especially social
  • Invest in proper integration
  • Regularly audit results

Barrier 2: The documentation is a little (too) complicated

  • 35: the number of pages of the implementation doc
  • 5: the number of pages it should be
  • 2: out of 5, the average difficulty of implementation

Bring In The Bling Via Bing Cashback was originally published on BruceClay.com, an SEO services company.

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Bring In The Bling Via Bing Cashback

+ SMX West 2010 Liveblog Coverage By admin 03 March 2010 at 11:07 am and have No Comments

Follow all of Bruce Clay’s Liveblogging Coverage of SMX West 2010 here. Session names will take you to the coverage and show you what’s upcoming. Session descriptions link you to the SMX conference site.

Enjoy!

Day 1: Tuesday, March 2

Time BCI Liveblog Coverage Session Description
9:00 a.m. Keynote Conversation: Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer Session Description
10:40 a.m. Mobile Paid Search Ads: Real Opportunities Session Description
1:15 p.m. Not Your Father’s AdWords: The New Google Ad Formats Session Description
3:00 p.m. Google’s Personalized Search Revolution Session Description
4:30 p.m. Supercharging Your Descriptions With Sitelinks Session Description

Day 2: Wednesday, March 3

Time BCI Liveblog Coverage Session Description
9:15 a.m. Keynote: Peter Norvig, Google Session Description
10:45 a.m. Bring In The Bling Via Bing Cashback Session Description
1:30 p.m. Dealing With Domain Names, URLs, Parameters & All That Jazz – Technical SEO Tactics Session Description
3:15 p.m. Facebook Ad Tactics For Search Marketers Session Description
4:45 p.m. The Need For Speed: Google Says It Matters Session Description

Day 3: Thursday, March 4

Time BCI Liveblog Coverage Session Description
9:00 a.m. Keynote – The State Of The Search Union Session Description
10:00 a.m. Microsoft + Yahoo: What’s It All Mean? Session Description
11:30 a.m. Measuring How Search Ads Drive Offline Conversions Session Description
1:30 p.m. Analytics Action Plans For PPC & SEO Session Description
2:45 p.m. Social Media, Search & Reputation Management Session Description

SMX West 2010 Liveblog Coverage was originally published on BruceClay.com, an SEO services company.

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SMX West 2010 Liveblog Coverage

+ Mobile Paid Search Ads: Real Opportunities By admin 02 March 2010 at 12:28 pm and have No Comments

Moderator Greg Sterling, founding principal, Sterling Market Intelligence, asks how many people were in the Steve Ballmer keynote this morning? Everyone raises their hand. Who found it substantive and interesting? Most keep their hand raised.

One of the things that came up a number of times in the conversation is the growth of mobile search. Even Ballmer was surprised the volume, the monetization and the clicks in the mobile arena.

A user’s search behavior on a mobile device is often much more immediate and focused than it is on a PC, Greg explains. So with that, let’s take a look at the marketing opportunities in mobile search.

Speakers:

Marc is up first with a presentation on how to take advantage of mobile search opportunities. He’ll cover the basics, along with Web site optimization and strategy.

Mobile search differs from computer-based search. On computers people have a long conversion process. On mobile devices it’s much quicker because people are on the go. To advertise on mobile, you want to sell something and you want to drive consumers to brick and mortar locations. This raises issues with tracking.

Getting Started

  • Opt-out: you are already on mobile
  • What to do?
    • Assess opportunity
    • Qualify users
    • Define PPC strategy
    • Optimize web site

Site Design: WAP vs. HTML

  • Design for usability of the core function of the site. Don’t design for comfort or style.
  • Wireless Application Protocol (WAP) should be enabled.

With smart phones, you want to have:

  • Light graphics for faster load times
  • Use Java, not Flash, because of iPhone limitations
  • Site.mobi vs. m.site.com vs. site.com/mobile: test them to find which is the most successful
  • Tracking: sniffers, cookies, pixels…
  • To host or not to host: probably best to use a similar to solution to the one currently used for your site, and you’ll want the one that gives the fastest user experience

Example: Home Depot. The Home Depot has a great Web site. If you click on Home Depot’s main PPC ad, the resulting site is too hard to navigate. A much better example is Best Buy. They’re design is very different than their traditional site, and is designed around generating conversion.

PPC Mobile Campaign

Isolate mobile into a unique campaign: The CTR and quality score will likely be lower in mobile, so isolating the campaign will likely help with this scenario.

Visibility: If you’re not in position 1 or 2, you’re likely not going to get a click.

Mobile vs. PCs: Don’t drop the long-tail keywords in your mobile campaigns. If you have a low rank, you have a low click-through rate.

PPC Optimization

  • Quality score: should be equal to PC campaign
  • Rank: views unequal to impression share rank layout
  • Bids: CPCs lower. Mitigate the margin
  • Query mining: common misspellings
  • Test, test, test

Reid is next. He’ll be covering the maturity of the mobile search market. Microsoft has offered handset targeting for a while but it would be nice if they beef up the support. Yahoo! has mobile search platform, but we understand that anything built on the Panama platform will be short-lived, so focus more on Microsoft. Google app store display URLs.

Trademark Terms: As expected, trademark terms perform well in mobile. CPCs are lower for mobile. With impressions and clicks, there’s a big difference with mobile at the low side of a large gap, however it is up from the past.

With a number 1 ranking, the clicks are very similar between mobile and desktop. And conversion rate is equalizing between mobile and desktop as well.

If we can target by handset, and a certain handset is owned primarily by men and women 18-25, we have a sloppy way of demo targeting. Think about the business-minded Blackberry demographic.

There’s not a lot of data they can present regarding conversion rate by handset, but there’s a slightly higher rate of conversion for Android than iPhone, with no data available for BlackBerry and others.

Usage patterns: desktop traffic peaks at 8-9 am, while mobile search peaks around 10-11 pm.

Percentage of clicks without referring domain is about 32 percent for mobile and 20 percent for desktop. Percentage of clicks without referring keyword is 70 percent for mobile and 26 percent for desktop. This makes it very hard to find negative keywords and how to split off new campaigns for mobile.

Search term length: 414 broad match queries captured, average query length 2.8 words

In summary:

  • Have to be in rank 1 or 2
  • Gap between desktop and mobile is shrinking
  • CPCs are stabilizing/dropping
  • Android is growing fast
  • Traffic is strong in evening
  • Don’t count on metadata

Should the iPad be categorized as a mobile device? Persistent data connection combined with the fact that it’ll be out in the wild soon, he thinks it should. It’ll be a question we have to answer.

Cindy is next with a presentation on Google Mobile PPC. Almost every year, the world wide mobile search advertising spend is doubling. By format, mobile message advertising is the highest and mobile search advertising is growing at a million dollars a year.

What are Google’s Mobile PPC Offerings?

True Web browsers:

  • iPhone
  • Android phones
  • Blackberry storm

WAP browsers:

  • Bb curve
  • Nokia phones

Four mobile ad formats:

  • Text PPC: click to site
  • Text PPC: click to call
  • Text PPC: click to site or call
  • Image PPC: click to site

Major differences:

Smart phones true web browsers

  • Run with normal PPC
  • Same character limits
  • But only 2-4 ads per page
  • No click to call
  • No need for site
    • Google maps
    • App store
    • Android marketplace
    • YouTube
  • Segment mobile ad groups from traditional

Feature phones – WAP browsers

  • Only 2-4 ads per page
  • Different character limitations
  • Click to call
    • No need for a mobile web site
  • Relevance formula
    • Lower emphasis on quality score
    • More emphasis on CTR
  • Targeting and segmentation
    • By browser type
    • By carrier
    • By click result (site vs. call)

Mobile messaging strategies:

Traditional web and iPhone:

  • 25-26 title
  • 35-36 on second line
  • 35-36 on next line
  • 35-36 for display URL

Mobile Web: Character counts are much shorter. Note that URLs aren’t allowed to have hyphens. It’s a glitch

  • Popular verticals: sports, celebrity, news, wallpapers, videos, ring tones
  • Reinforce mobile friendliness: “mobile optimized”, “4 Ur Phone”, “Mobile Ready”
  • Text speak is allowed: “try it 4 free”, “come in 2day” – should get past editorial in mobile
  • Shorter more generic
  • Less need for exact or phrase match
  • CTR is frequently high, even when relevance is low
    • Especially if you offer a unique mobile service
    • People still happy to learn about new mobile services

Words of caution:

  • Sending traffic to a mobile vs. non-mobile page
  • ROI and mobile payment
  • Online forms
  • JavaScript tracking and cookies

Raj is next to talk about mobile search and mobile search ad opportunities. Mobile search is going mainstream.

What are people looking to do on mobile?

  • Entertainment and answers = 23 percent
  • Business and person = 35 percent
  • Maps and directions = 20 percent
  • Traffic = 7 percent

When designing Bing for mobile, they focused on:

  • Map your way: free maps, driving directions and traffic info
  • Act locally
  • Quick answers
  • Type less, search more: voice search, auto-suggest, Bing 411

Decision making on mobile: Mobile search chains are much shorter than PC search chains. Analysis of query chains shows users tend to act quickly based on the information they get from their mobile search experience. This shows the power of mobile to influence users’ decisions close to the final point of purchase.

Multiple screens work better together: adding mobile aspects to a PC campaign multiplies the effectiveness.

Key takeaways:

  • Users are using mobile today to find quick answers do research on the go, navigate in the world and inform their purchase decisions.
  • Combination of a multi-functional device with access to users’ real-time location that is present with users 24/7 enables very compelling search and navigation scenarios.
  • Advertisers should think of mobile as a force multiplier rather than a stand-alone medium. Multi-screen adverting shows better results across multiple metrics as compared to single screen advertising.

Final Takeaways

Marc: Make sure when you run a mobiles search campaign, focus on mobile. If it’s too broad it won’t work. Have strong visibility. Above all, make sure the conversion can happen on your site

Cindy: Target and segment appropriately. Make sure you know what you’re getting and don’t lump everything into the same ad group

Reid: Today’s announcement about click to call is important. Sometimes you can’t get everything done on a phone, but it is a phone. Be able to field calls.

Raj: Users are looking to use mobile closer to the point of decision making. Get in early and start learning as the industry becomes smart about this channel you’ll be at the forefront.

Mobile Paid Search Ads: Real Opportunities was originally published on BruceClay.com, an SEO services company.

Read the original here: 
Mobile Paid Search Ads: Real Opportunities

+ SEO Benefits of Blogging: More Search Traffic By admin 01 March 2010 at 6:23 am and have No Comments

It’s sometimes hard to imagine or even quantify the specific SEO benefits of a business blog, but credit the gang at HubSpot for doing a good job of it. If you missed their blog post from a few weeks ago, I think these stats are worth sharing here:

A study of 2,168 HubSpot customers shows that businesses that published at least 5 blog articles in the last 7 days draw 6.9 times more organic search traffic and 1.12 times more referral traffic than those who don’t blog at all.

Here’s all that in a more visual piece of evidence:

blog-seo

You should click through to read the HubSpot post because they have additional stats showing how site traffic goes up the more blog posts you publish.

All of this is a nice complement to HubSpot’s earlier stats, which showed how companies that blog get more traffic, more inbound links, and have more pages indexed in search engines.

A good company blog is an exceptionally powerful SEO weapon.

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This is a post from Matt McGee’s blog, Small Business Search Marketing.

SEO Benefits of Blogging: More Search Traffic

Related posts:

  1. Blog Benefits: Traffic, Links, and Indexed Pages

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SEO Benefits of Blogging: More Search Traffic

+ Friday Recap: Dance Like You Mean It Edition By admin 26 February 2010 at 5:46 pm and have No Comments

So I’m getting pretty anxious. I don’t know if it’s the caffeine IV drip from this morning or the tornado brain I get before leaving town for a monster search relay like SMX West, but things are getting all Fri-dazed up in here.

I mean, is it true that I might really hear Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer address a house packed with search marketers? As Marty Weintraub of aimClear wonders, could the occasion of Ballmer keynoting a search conference usher in a new SEO era? How refreshing to think that Microhoo may support the SEO industry!

Here’s a story that seems to defy understanding. Facebook has been awarded the U.S. patent for the (implicit) social network feed. According to All Facebook, the implicit feed refers to the list of actions taken by friends and not the updates voluntarily posted by friends. As my industry friend @Pamela_Lund so aptly put:

tweet by @Pamela_Lund

I’ve been thinking for a while how awesome it would be to have a complete guide to microformats, listing all the different kinds of microformats and how to implement them. As soon as I scrawl “guide to microformats” on my wish list, voil