Posts Tagged 'adwords'

LIVE Search Cashback - How to Sign Up (and Should You?)

This question probably sounds like a no - brainer to advertisers with products to sell online. So if you’re ready to go, you could just skip to the LIVE Search Cashback link below and complete the application.

But an announcement like this from Microsoft does raise some questions, and for big advertisers might lead them to question the benefits.

In some circles, LIVE Search Cashback has already drawn derision. As many will note, publishers prefer to monetize advertising space on a CPM basis, guaranteeing their yield per thousand ads (note: this is how Google launched Adwords, before switching to CPC in 2002). And if CPC doesn’t finish the job, publishers will sell on a CPA basis as a last resort in order monetize unsold inventory.

In this scenario, MSN looks out of better ideas, and by sharing the CPA with the end user is effectively nulling any actual revenue for themselves from the transaction (although perhaps they will take a % on each sale as per the affiliate marketing network model).

On the other hand, there is reason to be positive. Advertisers and their digital agencies are sure to jump on board, as a CPA deal is hard to resist. And by incentivising users to join in too, this seems to cover all the bases.

But for me, there’s really just 2 questions that matter:

1) Will LIVE Search Cashback offer users genuinely useful functionality that they can’t get elsewhere?
2) Will it drive additional new sales for advertisers?

The first question is up to MSN to prove. Cashback schemes have been around online for a while, without redefining the way most people search and shop online. Sure, MSN will attract some premium brands affiliate marketing has failed to, but what it really needs to do is offer new and useful functionality that users can’t get elsewhere.

The second question is for advertisers to examine. Signing up to LIVE Search Cashback will doubtless register some sales, but are these sales you would have received anyway? Or to put it another way, how many of those sales are incremental?

This is probably less relevant to most small, medium, and even some large advertisers.

But for companies who are market leaders in their segment, and spend big budgets on brand advertising both online and offline to make sure people know all about their products, will this kind of advertising sell any additional units, or will it just subsidise people who would already buy one?

One example of this could be Apple and the ipod. Is it really conceivable that Apple and the retailers that stock their products will sell more ipods in the next 12 months as a result of listings on LIVE Search Cashback? Or will they sell exactly the same number, but have to pay people a small % in the process.

My advice, as the direct response mantra goes is “test, learn, optimize”. But in this instance, pay particular attention to bottom line sales and see if there is any noticeable shift, or if the source of sales has simply moved from one column to the next.

Links:
How it works for Users
http://search.live.com/cashback/howToUs

Advertiser Sign Up Form
http://advertising.microsoft.com/advertising/cashback

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image search trends and tools

Looking for new trends in search engine marketing? New developments in image search are improving the user experience using specialist browser plugins, while the major search engine results pages still look the same as ever.

This is not to say the results themselves aren’t changing, but the format of results and the way a user interacts with them seems to have gotten stuck. Remember the early Google results, a white page with blue links. And what is it now again?

Of course, that simplicity coupled with relevant results propelled them to the top. But will that approach really last forever? Admittedly, Universal search brings image, maps, shopping, video, photo results etc, but the experience is pretty disjointed.

Let’s say I want to research a Plasma TV to buy. A search on ‘plasma tv’ brings me retailer and manufacturer text listings, maps of installers near me, prices and spec in shopping, and some random user generated videos and photos of TV’s.

But what if I want to see the latest Plasma TV’s up close, spin it around, zoom in, look at the controls, all integrated with the price/spec/location of retailers etc. Off I go on a (potentially long) journey through the web until I find a site that can help.

Presenting more visual search results would seem an obvious way to step up the user experience in some cases. So perhaps the only thing that’s holding back Google, Yahoo!, MSN etc. is figuring out how to integrate those handy sponsored links that drive $500 share prices.

I wouldn’t doubt Google is looking at constantly improving results for users, but their commercial motive is ultimately to increase Adwords clicks rather than reduce them.

A couple of cool examples of image search results are below, from companies that don’t have Google Adwords revenue to protect.

Image search links:
http://cooliris.com/
http://beta.searchme.com/Initial.html
http://www.like.com/

Google image search update:
http://www.informationweek.com/blog/main/archives/2008/04/google_refines.html
http://technology.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/tech_and_web/article3833337.ece

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creative search marketing - sixt

Not the most traditional way to start a discussion on the most effective use of search engine marketing, but it was fun to see the way this agency approached delivering standout in the Google Adwords results.

You can be sure that this was probably not the most effective ROI based search campaign, as measured by traditional cost per sale or ROI metrics, but you can’t argue this wasn’t a clever way to use search results to differentiate the product.

http://www.bannerblog.com.au/2007/12/sixt_ascii_text_ads.php

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