Posts Tagged 'search engine marketing'

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

Share:
add to del.icio.us Add to Blinkslist add to furl Digg it add to ma.gnolia Stumble It! add to simpy seed the vine TailRank post to facebook

social media marketing and Ning

Ever fancied creating your own social network? Ning allows you to do just that.

For those that haven’t come across it yet, Ning offers anyone the chance to create their own personalised, customisable social network, with an easy to use interface system, and the facility to host on your own domain.

At the last count, Ning supports over 220,000 social networks (you’d think there are some pretty small ones in there), with some that seem to have up to 6,000+ members.

As someone remarked to me at work, things like Facebook usually start in a centralised place, before being available everywhere from multiple providers. And I guess if you look at free web based email, that stands to reason.

So will Ning overtake MySpace / Facebook as the preferred social network platform? I’d still argue no, at least for now.

Using free web email as an example again, Hotmail was the brand leader in this space over 10 years ago, and is still one of them, even though these days you can get free web email from almost anyone you choose to. Why?

Probably simply because once you have one, you don’t need another. You have a free email address, everyone knows it, and to change would be inconvenient. Or in other words, why bother with Ning when all my friends are already on Facebook? There’s a great deal to be said for being first to market sometimes.

From an advertisers point of view, I expect a few clients to be asking if they should be starting their own Ning. My answer will ultimately depend on who they are. If they genuinely have content to put online that other people will be so interested in they will want to join the group, then this is a great way to communicate with them. Bands are a great example, with fans all over the web keen to interact with their idols.

But for a financial client? It’s hard to think how much fun you can have with your bank, but maybe this is a chance for banks to change that perception. For a good example of corporate use, see the Saturn Ning link below.

Lastly, from a revenue point of view, Ning openly describes it’s business model as following:

1. Contextual Advertising. It’s free to create your own social network on Ning. On free networks, we reserve the right to run ads. Currently these ads are powered by Google AdSense.

2. Premium Services. Network Creators can buy additional features to add to your social network on Ning. These currently include the right to run your own advertising, the option to use your own domain name, the option to remove the “Create Your Own Network” promotional links, and additional storage and bandwidth.

Contextual advertising in general has been one of the success stories of the internet, but in this case it may not prove to be the most effective model. As any SEM professional will tell you, there’s a lot less value in content generated listings vs. active searches for a product, so ROI focused online marketeers are unlikely to jump on Ning as the next new volume opportunity on their schedule.

If I were Ning (and I’m sure they have), I’d think about how to use they can use all the personal data collected from users at registration to target based on demographics, as well as behaviour. In practise, combining contextual or behavioral targeting with demographics could be more lucrative. I for one can think of plenty of brand managers who would love to reach their exact target demographic who have expressed an active interest in certain products.

Anyway, the key to online ad revenues is volume of users. Get that right in a big way, and you will have fun monetising that audience for years to come. Good luck Ning!

Links:
http://www.ning.com/
http://www.imsaturn.com

Share:
add to del.icio.us Add to Blinkslist add to furl Digg it add to ma.gnolia Stumble It! add to simpy seed the vine TailRank post to facebook

Ning User Growth (Number of Social Networks)

Ning_User_Growth

seo tools overview

Using Search Engine Optimization (SEO) tools to research competitor strategy and measure the relative performance of a website is a critical part of effective SEO. It allows you to identify new opportunities to improve page and content structure, source quality inbound links, and measure improvement in keyword ranking over time (amongst other things).

A few minutes searching online turns up a seemingly limitless number of sites that offer you access to such SEO tools. So how to choose?

I’ve used a few over the last few years, and my recommendation for a great place to start is the tools section of SEO Book (link below). It’s a great overview of the different tools out there, some of them free, some paid for. Want to compare your website to the website that has top spot in Google? Try one of my favourites, the page comparison tool.

List of SEO Tools
http://tools.seobook.com/competitive-research-tools/

Page Comparison Tool
http://tools.seobook.com/general/website-comparison/

Share this:
add to del.icio.us  Add to Blinkslist  add to furl  Digg it  add to ma.gnolia  Stumble It!  add to simpy  seed the vine      TailRank  post to facebook

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

Share this:

add to del.icio.us  Add to Blinkslist  add to furl  Digg it  add to ma.gnolia  Stumble It!  add to simpy  seed the vine      TailRank  post to facebook


Add to Technorati Favorites  Marketing & SEO Blogs - Blog Top Sites