Right On - No Bull on LinkedIn Follow Right On - No Bull on Twitter Become a Facebook Fan of Right On - No Bull Right On - No Bull on MySpace

Archive for the ‘Search Engine News’ Category

AdWords Search Funnels Mean Huge Opportunities For Paid Search

Monday, April 12th, 2010

Learn how Google’s new AdWords Search Funnels can make a huge bottom-line difference on your paid search campaign.

google-adwords-logo[1]

Knowledge is power, and with Google’s recently announced search funnels, paid search marketers just became a lot more powerful.

The new feature, which is being integrated into Google AdWords over the next few weeks, promises to offer marketers a wealth of new information about customer purchasing decisions with which to analyze and use to better craft their paid search campaigns.

Up until now, AdWords told you the keywords that directly resulted in a sale but nothing more. What remained a mystery was all of the impressions and clicks that your customer made before finally deciding on your product.

With Search Funnels, you’ll finally see the whole picture. Each step in your customer’s buying process is carefully laid out in the 7 new reports for examination and action.

Let’s run through an example of how this might look.

Step 1: Fred types keyword “scanner” into Google search. Your ad is served but not clicked.

Step 2: After a few minutes of searching without clicking anything, Fred realizes that he needs to be more specific and does a new search for “high speed document scanner.” Fred once again is shown your ad but does not click on it.

Step 3: 10 minutes later, Fred realizes that he likes Kodak scanners so he searches for “high speed document scanners” and clicks your ad, looks at your website for awhile, but leaves without buying.

Step 4: A few days later, Fred now searches for “Kodak i1860 High Speed Color Scanner” follows a paid search ad directly to your site, and places an order.

Where before you would only see step 4, search funnels allow you to see all of the steps. You can discover how long it is taking your customers to buy, how many times your customers are seeing and clicking your ad before buying, and a lot more.

Overall the 7 new reports include:

  1. Assisted Conversions
  2. Assist Analysis
  3. First Click Analysis
  4. Last Click Analysis
  5. Top Paths
  6. Time Lag
  7. Path Length

This new feature will be invaluable for marketers looking to fine tune their campaigns. Understanding customer behavior can help with everything from landing page optimization to ad design and even to creating better up-selling and cross-selling strategies.

You can go to the AdWords blog for more information about search funnels.

2009 State of the Blogosphere Report Published by Technorati

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

New State of the Blogosphere survey examines strength of the blogosphere, trends, benefits of business blogging, and more.


Once a year, leading blog search engine Technorati publishes its annual State of the Blogosphere report. This year they have surveyed 2,900 bloggers in the largest and most comprehensive look at the inner workings of the blogosphere to date.

The 5 part report offers a fascinating glimpse into why people blog, what they write about, how they blog, how content is monetized, and emerging trends in 2009.

While the whole report offers interesting insights for online marketers, day 4 of the report examined the 14% (out of bloggers who monetized their blog) of corporate bloggers and their responses. Among corporate bloggers, a full 71% have increased visibility within their industry and 56% claim that their business blog has helped their company establish themselves as a thought leader in the industry.

Other benefits of corporate blogging include 63% who claim that prospective clients read their blog and later bought from them and 36% of respondents who have been asked to speak at industry events because of their blog.

Read the full 2009 State of the Blogosphere report.

Twitter and Other Social Media Embraced by Google and Bing

Monday, November 9th, 2009

Search engines Google and Bing to start indexing status updates from social networking sites.

This year’s Web 2.0 Summit featured some big social media news from search giant Google and its up and coming rival, Bing.

First at the Summit, Microsoft announced that Bing has formed deals with both Facebook and Twitter to index status updates and serve them for relevant searches. Additionally, a beta version of Bing’s Twitter search page was released as a way for searchers to better find tweets.

Not to be outdone, Google announced its own deal with Twitter during the Summit to index tweets on the Google search engine. These changes are expected to be made active in the next few months. They also announced Google Social Search, a real-time search indexing page that will allow users to search for content created by people in their social network.

At this time Google has not formed a deal to index Facebook status updates. However, since only public updates will be indexed by Bing (the majority of status updates are private), this is not expected to be a huge problem for Google.

Coupons Are Key for eCommerce Success

Monday, October 19th, 2009

New poll shows the importance of coupons in online retailing during the holiday season.

Online Coupons

Want one eCommerce strategy that will result in 30% more sales this holiday season?

According to a new survey by Harris Interactive, a full 30% of adults that use the internet will not buy from an online store unless they have a coupon. 22% of those surveyed will simply go to another store that offers coupons and 8% will wait until a coupon is available.

The survey also shows that 62% of online shoppers actively look for coupons to use with their orders. This can be via a search engine (as if you needed another reason to do Search Engine Optimization), coupon websites like RetailMeNot and Coupons.com, price comparison websites like Pricegrabber.com and Shopping.Yahoo.com, email newsletters, advertisements, and more.

If your company is selling online, offering coupons is a fantastic way to entice people to your store this holiday season. Not only do you help your customers buy the products they want at prices they can afford, you also help yourself to a larger piece of the holiday spending pie.

Read the entire Harris Interactive Second Annual Benchmark Survey on Consumer Coupon Behavior report for more information.

Win $5,000 in Free Link Building Services

Monday, June 1st, 2009

If you aren’t satisfied with your website ranking, you can win $5,000 in free services to help you improve them.

Vertical Measures, an internet marketing services company, is giving away $5,000 in free services to help improve your website rankings. You can get all the entry details and giveaway particulars here.  Make sure you enter by June 15, 2009!

Our company founder, Brian Offenberger (a.k.a. RSS Ray) will be one of the judges!

Good luck.

12 Steps for Implementing a Successful New Business Development Strategy

Tuesday, November 18th, 2008

1. Write down where you want to be. Set targets for customer growth, revenue, profits, sales to existing customers and employee attrition.

2. Take a factual look at where you are at in each of the areas listed in step number one.

3. Look at the gaps that exist from where you are at to where you want to be. Analyze the gaps the gaps using an adaptation of an old method developed by Dale Carnegie:

i. What is the gap?
ii. What are all the causes of the gap?
iii. What are all the possible solutions?
iv. What is are best solution(s)?

4. Clearly understand the impacts to the organization by closing the gaps that exist between desired outcomes and current results. Identify the benefits and measure impacts in terms of revenue and profit. Identify how desired results provide long term stability to the company and its employees.

5. Set short-term, intermediate and long-term goals and establish evaluative criteria and evaluation times. You must know what you want to hit, when you want to hit it.

6. Clearly establish inspection intervals for evaluation and corrective actions when needed. Know what key performance indicators you are going to measure and how you are going to measure it. Establish how you are going to evaluate company and individual performance and how often you are going to inspect results.

7. Write down all of the critical organizational actions necessary to achieve your business development objectives as outlined in step one.

8. Involve Employees. You must determine your initial program roll out and on-going progress communication methods and intervals to employees. Let them know what you are doing, why it is important to them (people are always more interested in how something impacts them) and how you are going to measure results. Discuss rewards to the business and its employees, if rewards are part of your program. Communicate consistently to employees at frequent intervals concerning program progress. Tie results to employee compensation and bonuses whenever possible.

9. Implement the program. Nothing happens without action. Usually things get worse with inactivity.

10. Monitor the progress of your program and adapt your practices based upon measurement and actionable analysis.

11. Communicate your results to critical stakeholders.

12. Ensure that new customer acquisition in profitable ways becomes an integral part of your business culture and practices. Make it a focal part of all new employee orientation. Include it as part of your regular management and employee meetings. Tie program objectives into employee compensation plans.

 
  
 

Claim Your FREE Guide to Marketing Success In A Tough Economy



We never share your information with anyone and hate SPAM as much as you do. Youll also get our monthly Right On, No Bull Marketing Bulletin and you can unsubscribe at any time.