Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Data Challenges for Small PPC Campaigns

Friday, November 13th, 2009

Small PPC (define) marketers have it tough. We have many customers asking if we can help them manage their small (under $5,000 per month) search engine marketing campaigns. I respectfully decline and often steer them to one of the technology or service providers focusing on the small business market. Some small businesses want tools to help them manage their own campaigns. Most, however, want to know that a SEO professional is handling it for them, because small business marketers believe search marketing to be difficult, and (depending on whom you ask) they may be entirely right.

Regardless of whether the small business chooses to manage its own paid search advertising campaign or to have it managed “professionally,” the reality is there are hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions, of businesses spending under $2,000 on PPC search and online yellow pages listings each month. These small business marketers face some unique challenges relating to their search spend. One big challenge they face is actually shared by larger-spending advertisers with very broad keyword sets and low data validity at the keyword (or perhaps even ad group) level.

Most of us have it easy. Spending sufficient funds on PPC means that we can watch conversions from our power keywords flow in on a daily or hourly basis. These conversions make it easy to calculate the appropriate bids for keywords given our ROI or profit objectives, because we’re generating a statistically valid sample of data. The challenge with low spending accounts in general is that statistically valid sample data takes a long time to generate, at every level of the campaign (from campaign to ad group, down to the keyword or phrase level).

With a bid at a specific level and an average position at a particular range, only three possibilities exist: the bid is too high, too low, or just right. How can one know if the data is missing or statistically suspect? One can’t, not really. But there are some solutions.

Wait it out: If you wait long enough, you’ll have statistically valid data (arithmetically) even on a keyword level. However, if your business is even slightly seasonal, the variation in the likelihood to convert (to an order, lead, or call) for clicks is changing over time. This makes waiting for valid data an iffy proposition.

Cluster “like keywords” together: Hopefully, you’ve done a good job organizing your campaign so that keywords in an ad group represent very similar search intent. This means searchers are likely to be very similar. Therefore, clustering the data at the ad group level or even combining ad groups may allow you to make a decision faster.

Cluster at the campaign level: The ad group level may not be enough for really low spending accounts. If the campaign was well constructed, one could make decisions at the macro level.

Try to attribute offline conversion behavior to the campaign at some level: While it may not be worth instituting phone tracking at anything other than the campaign level (or by simply asking customers which keyword they used to find you), chances are you don’t rank organically for most of your paid keyword choices anyway.

Use micro conversions or proxy conversions:
If you have a site with a dozen or more pages, some pages may be used as a signal to indicate the click source was a good one, or at least better than average. For example, a “contact us” page or a product page might serve as a micro conversion. Using data from micro conversions will allow you to start differentiating between good clicks and poor clicks sooner.

Use the click-forward rate (opposite of a bounce rate): Users arriving on your landing pages can take only three actions: click back (bad), close window (bad), or click forward into the site. Like micro conversions, the idea of determining which clicks stayed (instead of left) can provide a valuable data set.
Even if you do all of these things, you probably won’t be changing bids nearly as often as a larger spending business would, so you may find that the bid landscape is swirling around you. Therefore, your bid velocities (speed of changing bids) are fairly low on a comparative basis. Eventually, as you learn more about what is working, your bids will align in the approximate correct range.

Dealing with data scarcity is a matter of trade-offs. The more keywords for any low budget, the longer it takes to move individual keyword bids to an optimal level. Conversely, high keyword click concentration can help speed up the process.

Online Success Measurement – It’s not just about Clicks and Conversions

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

by Jonathan Marshall

We truly live in a digital world these days. Traditional advertising budgets have practically vanished and are being replaced by online advertising budgets that are proportionally growing alongside total budgets. New digital media is erasing traditional media, and marketers are constantly looking for better ways to measure their ROI. Because of this, many digital marketers have positive outlooks as to their future careers, especially when the economy turns around and total media budgets finally begin to rise again. Harry Gold from ClickZ had a great blog this morning about measuring online success, and not just by clicks and conversions. He goes on to discuss online branding, reverse IP lookup, social and viral sharing and amazingly enough- even phone calls.

Even better is that branding dollars are moving online at an unprecedented rate. And why not? Online branding doesn’t just drive impressions. If done properly, it encourages high-value brand engagements. And these engagement open the door to a new world of measurement possibilities that go way beyond clicks and conversions. These new metrics also have far more immediacy than awareness studies and traditional brand measurement methodologies.

Today I’ll share a list of high-value brand interactions that can be measured and reported. These items are often overlooked metrics that can be shared with your clients, who are more anxious than ever to show value and ROI (define) from their advertising investments.

* Video views. Get people to watch an entertaining branded short, quick sales presentation, educational content, or even an ad.

* Newsletter and e-mail opt-in. The most overlooked and underappreciated metric of them all. Opt-in e-mails are the gift that keeps on giving. No marketer who has a big e-mail list will deny that it’s the most valuable asset he has in his online marketing arsenal.

* Material downloads. The Web can be the ultimate way to hand out flyers, coupons, white papers, anything you want to get into people hands. Yet the tendency is to make people fill out a form to get the item. Try removing the form and letting the material flow! Encourage people to download, print, and share, and measure the results.

* Page views per visit. Try landing people on an engaging page that funnels them through a messaging sequence that builds your brand and escalates sales. Measure the results and optimize on the path that gets people to the end of the sequence. Also, measure the lift in total page views of your site’s high-value product pages. Did the pages that educate consumers about your products go up?

* Reverse IP lookup. This is the most overlooked metric in business-to-business. Let’s say you drive 100 clicks from a source like Google AdWords and only 5 percent convert. Typically, marketers apply zero value to the 95 clicks that didn’t convert into a form complete or lead. Use reverse IP lookup to show them the companies that took the time to visit the site, and suddenly the value of those nonconverting clicks will go through the roof.

* Phone calls. OK, these are conversions but very often they aren’t being measured. We apply very complex technology to measure everything online, yet rarely is that level of sophistication applied to inbound calls. Try dynamically publishing the phone numbers on your site and landing pages by source and apply the incoming calls to your online campaign’s ROI. We have clients who more than double their online ROI by simply tracking the source of their incoming calls.

* Social and viral sharing. Turn one click into many impressions and more traffic. Socially enable your ads and content with strong chiclet-based calls to action. If even a fraction of your traffic engages in these activities, your efforts will pay huge dividends.

* Social connections. I’ve heard metrics putting the value of a Twitter follower or Facebook fan as low as $2 and as high as $10. I would put that value at the higher end of the spectrum. Incorporate friend and follower calls to action into your campaign and then measure their lift!

* Return visits. This is an easy one! A visit to a site is good, but a return visit is better. It shows a high level of interest, and of course many conversions happen long after the first visit. What percentage of the visitors you drove to a site come back?

* Comments, content, and opinions. Have you run a poll asking people about their tastes or opinions? Have you run testimonial content? Asked people for a story, a photo of themselves with your product, or a product review? Not only are these great high-value brand engagements, but they also create very precious content you can use in your search engine optimization and other marketing initiatives. Ask people to engage with your brand and add their content to your site. You may be surprised at how many people say yes.

* Direct sales escalation. Are you driving clicks to bricks? Measure the things that drive people into your client’s stores and into your reps’ and resellers’ arms. Actions like store locator queries and rep searches should always be measured and are clear indicators that a future purchase may be imminent.

There are many more interesting success indicators that could be measured, which I’ll list in a follow-up article. In the mean time, please feel free add in the comments section below any you think should be included.

Facebook Hits One Billion Video Views

Monday, July 27th, 2009

FB Video

According to Dara Kerr at CNET News, Facebook has hit another milestone–over one billion video views last month. Since launching Facebook Video in June 2007, video views have steadily grown, and now, there are four times as many video views as actual Facebook members.

In a promotional video that Facebook posted on its Career site Wednesday, two engineers, Soleio Cuervo and Chris Putnam, talk about how they conceived of Facebook Video and then built it out at a “Hackathon” in January 2007.

At Hackathon events, Facebook engineers spend one night, all night, working on ideas that have been simmering for the few months prior. The goal is, “to change the ‘That would be hot!’ sentiment to something real and live on the site,” explains a Facebook engineer, Aditya Agarwal, on the Facebook blog.

When Putnam and Cuervo starting thinking about video, they knew there were already tons of video sharing sites. But, none really allowed for distribution strictly to their friends. With YouTube, videos are either public or private, users can’t pick and choose. They wanted to use the Facebook platform and let people tag kiddie videos or sweet guitar riff videos without fear of the whole world watching.

FB Video

When Facebook Video upgraded in December 2008, not only could social networkers upload higher quality videos, they could also embed their Facebook videos on other Web sites, like personal blogs. This presumably helped up Facebook’s video view numbers.

However, Facebook doesn’t need much help in the numbers department. According to an article on Mashable, widget company AddToAny has calculated that with 24 percent, Facebook dominates content sharing on the Internet. It’s followed by Yahoo with 14.4 percent and email with 11.1 percent.

One billion video views is no small number, but it still pails in comparison to YouTube video views, which are 1.2 billion per day. But, as Hackathons continue, there’s no doubt Facebook’s engineers will continue to strive for more numbers, (it already holds the top place for photo sharing). And, as Cuervo says in the video, “some of the best products we’ve ever shipped arose from a single night’s effort.”

25 Ways to increase Friends, Followers and Fans

Friday, July 24th, 2009

by Jonathan Marshall

So your client or company has set up multiple social profiles and channels, and friends and family members have all been found. The big question now is how to build up large communities with people whom you have never met. You have to do things that offer some kind of incentive/expertise/interesting information to these people in order for them to become your friend, fan or follower. Harry Gold from ClickZ did a little survey in his office and got a lot of great suggestions from co-workers, and then he made a list. Below are 25 of the best suggestions Gold and his co-workers came up with, of course there are more, but 25 is enough for now.

Place a personal ad. Use online media (display banners, Flash ads, widget/gadget ads, etc.) to drive traffic to your social media channels. Facebook pages can make great landing pages. They also let you present very high-value brand interactions that spark viral distribution through existing social technologies.

Start with people who know your company. Add Facebook or Twitter addresses to the bottom of your company’s e-mail signature.

Pepper your site. Add calls to action to your site inviting people to become your company’s friend, fan, or follower. Put the icons and links on the bottom of every page and in your “contact us” section.

Create a social hub. Make sure your site has a social hub page in the “about us” section that includes calls to action to friend, fan, or follow you and links to your profiles and channels.

Weave your social Web. Make sure your company’s Facebook page has links to your Twitter page. Also, periodically tweet the benefits of becoming a fan of your Facebook page.

Give them a reason to join. Tell people what they get by being your company’s friend, fan, or follower. Timely industry news, cool content or great offers? What is in it for them?

Shout about it. Drop a press release about the launch of your Facebook page, Twitter micro-blog, or SlideShare channel.

Wrap your product. If you sell packaged goods, make sure your packaging promotes your profiles. If people like you enough to buy your product, give them the chance to connect with you in the places where they want to connect.

Make yourself visible. Join other social networks to establish a well-rounded presence. If you are already on Facebook and Twitter, do you have a Flickr page, SlideShare account, and YouTube channel for your visual content?

Use tools built into social networks. Instead of just listing an event on your Web site, make it Facebook event as well. These tools allow users to interact with your event through RVSP features, photos, and a Wall option. It’s more likely someone notices an event in this way than a static calendar on your site.

Be inquisitive. Everyone is fighting for the spotlight on the social Web and no one likes a know-it-all. Ask questions through Twitter and status updates to not only engage your current followers and fans, but help encourage experts to speak up.

Let go of your secrets. Sharing your knowledge with other people breaks down barriers of engagement. Don’t sell a success package for $19.99; instead start a blog. (For example…this article!)

Don’t give a hard sell. Both Twitter and Facebook are about having a casual conversation with your customers; think Starbucks, not a boardroom. Your corporate brand message in 140 characters will not gain any new fans or followers for most. Instead give information that folks can use day to day that represents your service offering in some manner.

Check the chatter. Use free tools like monitter.com and search for keywords related to your business that Twitter users have used. If they are writing about what you do, start a conversation. Be sure not to use any canned replies. Remember, on Twitter, everything is public.

Daypart. While it may seem odd to some, it’s vital to think about when your target clientele is on Facebook or Twitter and what messaging works at a particular part of the day. Do you target the early morning, lunch, or after hours crowd, and with what message?

Remember: location, location, location. Really think about how someone uses your site. It’s easy to include chiclets, but if they are not in the right location they can easily be lost in a site’s clutter. This can be especially true for sites with heavy advertising such as news sites.

Reach out to key people. There are very influential people on social networks. If you reach out to them in the right way, you can have a great networking experience and prove your worth to others. Find people with a large fan base and see if you can join into their conversation.

Follow trends and join in. Every day on Twitter there are “hot” topics happening. Find out what #hashtags and keywords are being used, and state your opinion. Chances are, hundreds of people are following those conversations and you will instantly be noticed.

Take it offline. Is your Twitter name on your business card? Your Facebook page at the bottom of all letters? How about your print ads and direct mail?

Create a conversation. Don’t let your followers and friends feel like you’re talking at them instead of with them. When their friends see them interacting with you, they could become a friend or follower as well.

Follow back. If you don’t follow people back, you look like someone who only wants to be heard and doesn’t care to listen. That’s not a good way to build relationships.

Have a consistent stream of content. If you start to go dry, people will forget about you. Having an ongoing flow of content and information allows you to stay at the top of your followers’ minds and helps you get noticed. So create a publishing schedule.

Sponsor a contest. People love to win (or the chance to win), and hosting or sponsoring a contest will spur an increase in the number of fans and followers.

Don’t spam. Keeping existing friends, fans, and followers is as important as gaining new ones, so do not generate animosity by being one of those annoying social media spammers.

Do not waste friends. This is the big one! Campaign-specific Facebook fan page are a waste. When you are done with the campaign Facebook page, re-skin the page for the next campaign. Do not just abandon the fans you have made. Campaign-specific Facebook pages that end after the campaign are so 2008!