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Posts Tagged ‘ads’

Why PPC Will Always Cost More Than SEO

Monday, October 27th, 2008

In The Disconnect in PPC vs. SEO Spending, Rand Fishkin demonstrates that “SEO drives 75%+ of all search traffic, yet garners less than 15% of marketing budgets for SEM campaigns. PPC receives less than 25% of all search traffic, yet earns 80%+ of SEM campaign budgets,” then asks: “Why does paid search earn so many more marketing dollars?”

No doubt the comments to Rand’s post will reveal many reasons for this differential, but here are three that spring immediately to mind:

1. The perception that people click on natural search results when they are seeking information, but on sponsored search ads when they are ready to buy. This presumption certainly justifies proportionately greater spending if it’s valid. I suspect that just the opposite may in fact be the case, but don’t have sufficient data to back that up.

2. The “media cost” is inherent in PPC. Companies can spend very similar amounts for SEO activities and SEM program management–in fact, they can even spend more on the former than the latter–yet still have much larger budgets for PPC than for SEO. That’s simply because PPC includes a “media cost” of paying for the sponsored search clicks from Google, Yahoo, MSN, or another search engine.

3. PPC is applicable to a broader set of search terms. Some terms (most commonly one- to three-word search phrases) are simply very, very difficult to SEO for, either because they are highly competitive, very common, or ambiguous. With SEO, you can spend a lot of money to try to rank well for these terms yet still end up with disappointing results. With SEM, you can guarantee your site will appear, then control total costs through day-parting and geo-targeting.

It’s also very difficult to show up well in the natural search results for a competitor’s brand name. PPC not only gives you a spot on page one for these phrases, it lets you customize the message (e.g., “consider the more cost-effective alternative”).

The bottom line is that SEO is both more effective and less expensive than PPC, which makes it a no-brainer for any website.

*****

Contact Tom Pick: tomATwebmarketcentralDOTcom

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Why PPC Will Always Cost More Than SEO

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Average CTR for Banner Ads - New Data

Tuesday, September 16th, 2008

MarketingSherpa just published a short article, Banner Ad Size and Click Rate: Bigger a Bit Better, But It’s Clicks that Count, that includes this chart:


Three observations stand out:

1) The data haven’t changed much since last year, when it was reported here that “The average CTR for banner ads is roughly 0.25%, with a reported range of 0.17% to 0.40%.”

2) Click-through rates are pathetic regardless of ad size, so don’t use CTR as the primary metric for evaluating banner advertising. In the words of MarketingSherpa, “Online ads are branding tools. Direct clicks are simply a happy byproduct.” Banner advertising is most commonly sold on a CPM basis (and with CTR’s like that, it’s no wonder). CPMs on B2B publisher sites typically range anywhere from $30 t0 $120, meaning that a banner advertiser is paying $15-$60 per click based on the average CTR of 0.21%.

3) The best response rates come from 300×250 ads, which are typically positioned in the top right corner of a web page—no suprise, as that is generally considered the most prime real estate on any web page. Both the 728×90 and 468×60 horizontal banners are typically used at the top of a web page, but notice the significant discrepancy in CTR; when buying real estate at the top of a page, size clearly matters. The remaining ad sizes shown in the chart are skyscraper ads, most commonly positioned on the right and left sides of page content well below the top of page, often below the fold. Interestingly, size doesn’t seem to matter much on skyscrapers.

Conversion rates for B2B ads continue to average about 2.8%. That means, on average, you’d need 17,000 impressions to generate one lead—at an average cost of $1,258! So again: banner ads are branding, not revenue or lead generation. They may very well have a role to play in your marketing mix, but it’s important to understand what that role is.

*****

Contact Tom Pick: tomATwebmarketcentralDOTcom

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Average CTR for Banner Ads - New Data

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Vyatta - Extremely Creative B2B Marketing

Thursday, August 28th, 2008

Someone recently forwarded me the Vyatta newsletter. Vyatta provides open-source router and firewall solutions. Intriguing in and of itself, but in addition, the company does an exceptionally creative job of marketing.

The newsletter is nicely put together, with important news at the top (they get PR), a silly but probably effetive free offer about half way down on the right side (they get humor) and links to their Facebook and LinkedIn groups (they get social networking).

What really caught my attention, however, was the link at the bottom to Vyatta Ads Not Fit for Print. This would have been a $200,000 web page if an agency produced it, but by developing it in “open source” fashion through input from their users, they (presumably) slashed that cost significantly.

Nice.

*****

Contact Tom Pick: tomATwebmarketcentralDOTcom

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Vyatta - Extremely Creative B2B Marketing

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B2B Marketing Fast Fixes

Monday, July 14th, 2008

The slowdown across some sectors of the economy is forcing B2B marketers to pull back on spending, yet continue to produce great results (or else). With that in mind, MarketingSherpa last week presented their Top 10 B-to-B Marketing FastFixes: How to Generate & Nurture More Qualified Leads. Here are the highlights from the webinar.

Revisit SEO

Technologies, needs and customers change over time. If your website is still optimized for the same keywords as 18 months ago (or longer), now is a good time to re-validate your key search phrases. Start by looking in your analytics program to identify the top phrases prospects are using to find you.

Next, run those phrases through a keyword tool to find similar phrases and their relative search frequency. Finally, make sure your site is well optimized for those phrases that are both frequently searched and most relevant to your prospects.

In addition, since those phrases resonate with your prospects, make sure to incorporate them in your copywriting and SEM programs as well.

Speak Up

Speaking engagements are an excellent source of high-quality leads. When budgets are tight, focus particularly on local gigs to minimize travel-related expenses. To spread your reach without breaking the bank, seek out opportunities to be interviewed for podcasts by well-known traditional and social media types in your industry.

Optimize Ads for Content and Search

MarketingSherpa recommends setting up completely separate accounts for search and content network ads. At the very least, keep the two in separate campaigns. Why? The environments are completely different—in search, people are looking for relevant ads. They are on a search page and are going to click on something based on the results of their search. Your ad is competing only against the other search results.

On the content network, people are doing other things, such as reading articles, so ad copy has to be punchier and more action-oriented to get someone to click away from the page they are reading.

Also, on content networks, investigate the sites your ads are showing on, particularly those sites which are drawing the best results. This research is excellent for finding new sites for PR, direct advertising buys or blogger outreach.

Test Their Knowledge

Quizzes are a relatively inexpensive, easy and fun way to collect leads. People love to be tested on their knowledge, particularly engineering and IT audiences. In addition, you can mix in “research” type questions that can be used to collect information for later production of a research report / thought-leadership piece.

Small companies can use tools like SurveyMonkey, SurveyGizmo or Zoomerang to create quizzes. Larger enterprises and government agencies may already have an enterprise survey management application such as Vovici or Kinetic Survey in place.

Quizzes can be promoted through PR, blogger outreach, AdWords, home page promotion and through company email.

Give Your Knowledge Away

Studies have shown that dropping registration barriers for content such as white papers, webcasts and podcasts significantly increases the exposure to your materials—according to MarketingSherpa, by about a factor of seven on average.

Still, many marketers are reluctant to do this; “If I give away my white paper, how will I ever capture the lead?”

The answer, again according to MarketingSherpa, is to offer some knowledge of value free and then ask for contact information once you have the prospect’s interest. For example, Red Hat software has provided no-registration-required webcasts. At the end of each webcast, prospects are presented with another offer (such as a whitepaper download or live webinar registration) which does require them to provide contact information.

Love the One You’re With

Maintaining and even increasing sales during an economic downturn isn’t just about generating new leads, but also moving the prospects already in your database along in their buying process. In round numbers, 80% of the leads in your database are people who aren’t immediate prospects, but do have longer term potential.

According to MarketingSherpa, about 10% are mid-term prospects who could potentially be converted to more immediate opportunities. The remaining 70% are either long term prospects (who could be converted to mid-term prospects) or influencers (who could help immediately with lead generation).

Follow-Up is Crucial

When you manage to capture a precious lead, handle with care. Make sure your auto-responder email is engaging and interactive. And follow up with a phone call quickly—if you are slow in responding to a sales opportunity, prospects assume you’ll be even slower to respond once they are a customer in need of technical assistance or inquiring about a billing issue.

IT staff in particular work all hours and expect fast response. The first vendor to respond to an inquiry—particularly if that response is fast, within the first 30 minutes or so after contact—has an inordinate chance of winning the business.

Use Plain Old Snail Mail

With email burnout increasing and ever-tightening spam filters in place to keep out anything that smacks remotely of marketing, email promotion is becoming less effective. Although physical mail obviously costs more, it can help your offer stand out. First, the medium has become less crowded as more marketing dollars have shifted online. Second, it shows the prospect that you’re willing to pay to get their attention; they know as well as you that email is easy and virtually free, while postal mail requires greater effort and expense. Third, it offers unique creative possibilities (and people will almost always open “lumpy” mail, curious about what’s in the package).

Evangelists, Branding and Measurement

A few final points from the webinar:

  • Few companies do a good job at reaching out to evangelists in their industry, such as bloggers. Flag evengelists in your marketing database, court them properly and you’ll both increase your credibility and generate more pre-qualified leads.
  • Even in a downturn, branding is critical. A CEO isn’t going to download your whitepaper. But the CEO may very well be asked to sign off on a final purchase, and is likely to question a purchase from a vendor he or she has never heard of. PR, brand advertising, and speaking opportunities are all great ways to go beyond lead generation and increase brand recognition with C-level executives.
  • Measure the right things. Particularly in a downturn, it’s crucial to have metrics that demonstrate the value of marketing to sales and the business. Tracking the right measurements will not only protect existing budgets (and maybe even make room for small experiments), but also ensure that you are focused on the highest value-added activities for the organization.

Again, you can download the Top 10 B-to-B Marketing Fast Fixes slides here.

*****

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Contact Tom Pick: tomATwebmarketcentralDOTcom

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Coming in June: iGoogle canvas view, ads

Thursday, May 22nd, 2008

Google will overhaul its iGoogle interface in June and give people a way to advertise on its personalized home page service, the company said.

The ads will be an option for iGoogle’s “canvas view,” which lets iGoogle applications
expand to fill the whole browser screen, Google said Tuesday on its iGoogle developer blog.

“Those of you with existing applications should add a canvas view to take advantage of more screen real estate. And using canvas view, you can also monetize with ads,” said Dan Holevoet of Google’s developer programs group, on the blog.

In April, Google launched a “sandbox” to let developers try the canvas view along with an iGoogle interface change that adds a left-hand navigation pane with a user’s list of Web site gadgets.

Later this summer, Holevoet said, Google will add the OpenSocial API to iGoogle. OpenSocial is a cooperative effort including several Google rivals that lets programmers create Web site applications that can run on any OpenSocial-enabled site.

Also coming later this summer are iGoogle updates and notifications, where for example an application can notify a user’s friends of some event such as a new high score in a game.

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Coming in June: iGoogle canvas view, ads

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