Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Geordie Carswell Interview

Sep
22

About a year ago my wife and I started to notice Google's increasingly aggressive push into demoting the organic results and extending AdWords ads. Based in large part on that we decided to partner with Geordie Carswell to create a sister site to SEO Book focused on paid search & contextual advertising - PPC Blog. I have been meaning to interview him for a while & just finally got around to it.

How did you get into pay per click marketing?

I started with Adwords around five years ago, independently marketing software apps and other consumer technology products. From there I continued running my own campaigns while blogging and doing one-on-one Adwords coaching in addition to other marketing ventures.

How has PPC changed since you got into the field?

When I started there were very few big brands doing PPC in a significant way and, at least in the niches I was working in, affiliates were dominating. That of course has flipped upside down in the last 12 months with brands dominating and affiliates being flushed out the bottom of the system.

I feel Google's implementation of various forms of Quality Score into the Adwords platform has been the highest impact spate of changes in terms of direct effect on advertiser performance.

On the platform options side, the growth of Facebook Ads as a PPC channel has also been hugely significant, notwithstanding the merger of Yahoo and Microsoft on paid search.

On organic search I feel that if you work on a big brand, SEO is mostly about information architecture & getting buy off from key players in your company. Whereas if you run thin affiliate sites you have to be quite clever with your link building strategies to build up enough authority to compete. In the same way I think PPC is likely much harder as an affiliate than as a merchant. Would you agree with that?

Well, to be perfectly candid, a pure-play affiliate effort on Adwords in particular is becoming nearly impossible over the long term as Google shows affiliates the door. There's still some room on Microsoft adCenter/Yahoo and Facebook, but the editorial squeeze is on there as well.

The affiliate play of the future would need to involve a recognizable, highly-branded site that "people have heard of" vs. one-off mini or article sites etc...

A lot of affiliate stuff seems to race toward 0 margins. I had one killer offer I was buying traffic for a couple years ago & I was paying about 25 cents a click for traffic that was worth about $6 a click. Within about 3 days someone stole my ad copy word for word and then when I raise my bid to $6 my ad still wouldn't show. How can an affiliate fight the trend toward lower margins?

That's tough. Highly successful affiliates by nature tend to be very good at finding a small sliver of inefficiency in a system and filling that gap. That tends to inevitably be a 'point-in-time' win that ends up competitively saturated.

Often, a lateral move running the same type of campaign on alternate PPC platform can work, but let's face it: competition eventually finds its way there as well, and there are only so many PPC platforms to run on. I strongly believe the best defense against the endless push towards lower margins is to test more than the other guy. Competition will always be there, but he who tests more and thereby extracts more margin wins in the long run.

In terms of leading people astray, how often would you say major search engines give self-serving advice that harms advertisers?

One of the biggest things we still see Google doing is opting advertisers into the Google Display Network (previously known as the content network) by default when creating new campaigns. I'm sure Google needs ways to generate interest in the Display Network, but they know full well that blending search and content campaigns together is a recipe for disaster and I'd like to see them step up and stop that.

Additionally, offers from reps to 'optimize' your campaigns (while well intentioned) have lead to a lot of unnecessarily broad campaign expansions that can truly destroy the profitability of an already-successful campaign.

Part of the problem comes from advertisers trusting Google a bit too much: Google is there to extract as much revenue as they can from their keyword inventory without permanently scaring away advertisers with unmanageable costs. An advertisers' job is to generate as much net profit from Adwords as possible. Those two goals are at odds by nature, so discernment is vital when evaluating why Google is offering something or making an 'improvement' to the system.

Google offers a number of automated optimization tools for advertisers. When does it make sense to use them? Who should avoid using them?

Most of the automation solutions offered by Google like Conversion Optimizer or Automatic Bidding really won't have much benefit to smaller advertisers who don't typically have enough paid click traffic to measure the results of using these offerings. That said, if you have a decent amount of traffic you can save considerable time using their optimization tools, particularly when fishing for new traffic and/or placements.

One area I would suggest some caution on however is the "New Keyword Opportunities" feature that shows up at the top of your campaigns interface. This is an awesome tool for Google to snag new bidders on additional keyword inventory in their system, but it can cost you a pretty penny if you just accept and add whatever keywords they happen to "recommend" for you. You really need to be careful with these and look at the expected avg. CPC amounts to see if you can afford to add what's being suggested. Burning through your budget unnecessarily on overpriced or untargeted keywords isn't fun.

You buy traffic on most the major platforms. What business models do you feel work best with each of the major platforms - say Google AdWords, Microsoft adCenter, and Facebook ads?

I think local, education, online dating, and mobile represent some of the best fit for Facebook. Other niches can be genuinely daunting uphill push on Facebook. With Yahoo and Microsoft now consolidated into the Adcenter ad platform, managing alternate campaigns on another network is now much easier and can't be ignored given the combined search marketshare Microsoft and Yahoo have put together. There's really no excuses for not running your campaigns on both Adwords and Adcenter in tandem.

Some people have been hyping Facebook as the next Google. Is it? Why or why not?

Well, I think it's more accurate to compare Facebook Ads to Google's Display Network. They're both considered contextual advertising as Facebook search hasn't really turned out to be a particularly lucrative opportunity yet.

When comparing Facebook Ads to the Google Display Network, I think the key advantage that Google has with Adsense is the topical blend. The blending of content ads via Adsense has gotten so good that in some cases even ad professionals have to look closely to determine if a link or placement is an ad or original content. Facebook doesn't really have this advantage, pretty much every Facebook user knows that those are ads in the right siderail, and unless the image in the ad is incredibly compelling, it's just going to be ignored. As Facebook builds out their contextual ad empire, it'll be interesting to see what options come up.

I don't think however that disgruntled Adwords advertisers looking over the fence at Facebook Ads will find instant success. It's a different beast from an ad server behavior perspective and it's also extremely competitive.

When you are working with smaller clients, what are some of the most common roadblocks they run into when they begin paid search advertising?

The learning curve is number one, closely followed by issues with account architecture and Google Quality Score. From what I've heard and read, the churn rate on new small business Adwords accounts is immense as people try it, fail, and then leave. Google has tried to fix this I think with the learning center resources and videos, but most new advertisers won't even get around to looking at those.

Part of the challenge is prepping clients for the fact that PPC is going to take real time and effort to be successful, and that time has to be budgeted and weighed against other demands. Obviously it's worth it in the long run for well-organized businesses who have optimized their websites for shoppers. Those who don't have a clear path to purchase or request additional info will find their PPC spend tends to go into a black hole.

When you are working with larger clients, what is the hardest part of paid search?

Many large companies have some sort of PPC campaigns running, but it's not a core marketing focus for them to the extent that it should be. There's almost a tendency to say "what we've got going is good enough" or "we're breaking even" and leave it at that. Some of the easiest ways for the marketing team to move the needle sales or leads-wise in a large organization is to exploit paid search to the fullest extent possible. Overpaying Google and accepting less-than-ideal sales performance from PPC is something too many large clients put up with.

This is a big reason we had such a great time building out the Adwords Tax Calculator on PPCblog. When you actually quantify what you're paying in overhead to straight to Google due to a number of completely fixable campaign tactics, it's really motivating.

You have been running PPC Blog's training program and community for close to 3 months now, and it has been getting strong reviews. What are some of the most important and interesting things you have learned from that experience?

It's been very interesting. I really felt prior to running PPCblog that there wasn't anywhere "safe" to discuss advanced tactics and observations about Adwords without Google either closely watching the discussion or directly hosting it. It's been great to share and compare real campaign data in a trusted environment like the one we have going there.

Another thing I've noticed is that the level of discussion and discourse is much higher when people are paying to participate. It weeds out a lot of noise and repetition. Additionally, I've also found that I'm using the custom tools we've developed for members far more often than I had originally thought I would, and that's been helping me save time while keeping up with the community and running campaigns.

How do you feel paid search and SEO tie into each other?

Personally I feel they're both essential 'legs on the stool' (email marketing I think follows closely thereafter). It always amazes me that SEOs will spend huge bucks buying links or doing biz dev deals to get traffic that's not 100% guaranteed to flow, but they won't spend a dime buying traffic directly with Adwords or Adcenter. When you see the amount of brand bidding that goes on with PPC, its a good reminder that if you're not buying even in the least of your brand's keywords, your competitors likely are. With organic results getting pushed farther and farther down the page each year, a two-pronged approach only makes sense.

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Thanks Geordie. You can catch his latest paid search thoughts on PPC Blog & follow him on Twitter

Monday, September 27, 2010

How to: still bought links

Sep
27

Effective marketers leverage marketing channels.

Crooks & spammers ruin it for everyone else.

There is a long line of this on the Internet ...

E-mail was personal, so it was easy to automate & became loose. guestbook and blog comments were a way to add value to be sources of free connections; links was a message of relevance, that were bought and sold in bulk.


As people get burned the Internet as a whole takes more cynical.Crooks steal from wells of honest people like Internet adapt to a new level of cynicism ... any more cynical than the last time round. That is why you have to show people that you will get a 20 x return when buying from you because a six criminals already ripped and the time that they have no confidence in the Internet marketers (and perhaps none for humanity).

This is why people see SEO as a scam, just like anything else in marketing ... most people get online jump hosed.

Sometimes costs protects a channel; for example, because they pay people to be a member of our forums, we really do not process messages spam there.But in terms of media formats go, things that start as expensive and often can be done more cheaply through systemization & outsourcing ... so any given was too expensive to make a bad end time becomes available for bulk with marginal quality (blogs can be created automatically, so that the books, video ever cheaper and infographics can be cheaper, if you're not relating to the quality).

Things about infographic promotions is that it's easy to like ... part of what makes it attractive media is the great lengths they go to find new, innovative and interesting ways to format the content.Years of learning go creating graphics such as this, which can be consumed in 5 minutes But that will be used every interesting form so abused.

More infographics created by independent Webmasters design advertising? Absolute the costing thousands of dollars to create (in terms of research, editing, formatting and promotion), especially if you do well.

The big question in any form is in form, but the pollution on the market. Pollution leads cynicism, which destroy the market for all those that are not unsolicited bulk kærning out the rubbish.

Not long ago, there was a thread on tabs IamA highlighting how their vacancies & infographic seems to have led to an infographic that have been created about how off-topic infographics seedy. That used to promote sites marginal quality.

What did the obligation to answer; not only does not stop or change strategy, but increased their volume and began offering to pay people to publish their infographics.

I know you're busy, so I will try to do this quickly and humanely. my name is Sarah and I are working with a company that creates and distributes infographics. I wonder if you would like to be part of our distribution list infographic. we are willing to pay you for each infographic that you enter.

Here are some examples of the work we are doing:
Mashable.com/2010/05/10/iPod-Revolution-infographic/
huffingtonpost.com/Brian-Clark-Howard/the-meteoric-Rise-of-crai_b_649183.html
Neatorama.com/Spotlight/2010/06/17/13-Things-Worth-Knowing-About-Super-Mario/

We love gives you content, while you pay for this, please do not hesitate to contact me with questions ... I hope to hear from you soon!

Thank you!

What has the Super Mario Bros with insurance home owners; it is an easy way to purchase hyperlinks. But, probably, will not last long, because they kill media unrelated rubbish.

Subscribe to our blog via email or RSS to receive more great posts like this!

Posted in: marketing by Aaron Wall your thoughts?

Sunday, September 12, 2010

RAND Fishkin Talks

Sep
08

It is no secret that the former rand, and we had some small difference of opinions (mainly concerning the personal appearance).;)

But in spite of them, we cannot deny that this is a clever Marketer .so my trøde would be fun to ask him about the background in SEO and the wording of take on how some of the differences in opinions. Interestingly, it turns out, we share many more views than me trøde! hope that you enjoy the interview.:)

Throughout your story in the field OF SEO, what are some of the biggest personal performance?

First, there should Dig me (and my mother) of the bankruptcy, when we were still a little sole proprietorships, since then there have been many times fantastic:

The first time I spoke at the Conference (SES Toronto 2004) transition from a consultation for a software company businessTaking capitalBuilding Group (not only makes it hires out) during dinner to Secretary of the UN (Ban Ki Moon), and now the CTO at SEO-it would be fantastic to hear stories about how people in conflict-ridden parts of the world uses search to find refuge, escape and disseminate information, and the United Nations have lost opportunities around SEO Thought never really us. practice as having life-or-death consequences. list Inc 500 fastest growing companies in THE UNITED STATES (under a nasty recession) is probably my biggest personal achievement, however, is my relationship with my wife, I know that ... what will happen with me in any other part of my life, I have the support and love forever. what gets a type I through very difficult times.

How Google Instant changes the landscape SEO

Sep
08

Google Instant started. is always a new search experience, where Google is trying to complete a keyword search by predicting what you are looking for the keyword as you can type more letters change the search results.

Brief force here:

Long time shown here:

I can't see it yet; you can safely disable it here (although it may also be logged into a Google account in some countries), when Google plans to make it a standard feature on almost everyone (except those with slow service and older browsers), and if you don't like, it's easy to turn to the right of the search, but to turn it off, to use a cookie, if you remove cookies enable right back.

Here is a picture by using the size of Google's browser, shows that, when Google includes 4 ads are only 50% of the browsers to see fully 2nd organic listing, while only 20% will get to see the complete 4th organic listing.

Sunday, September 5, 2010

How to write good

Yes, the deliberate wrong:)

The problem when people write bad, huh. When authors write very well, words are almost an invisible. Focus away from the technical details, and then type the message.

There is an easy way to write a better blog post; e-mail; Web copy?
Let's take a look at three guidelines for Web writing.

1. If you can say this, you can type the

Dilbert mission statement Generator-unfortunately now come offline with portentous Pearls:

"Our challenge is to give an economically sound methods for network capacity-building so that we can negotiate continuously infrastructure performance based"

Satire, a hope.

The US air force uses, however, send the following:

"The Mission of the United States air force is to provide superb opportunities for defence of the United States and its interests in the world-to fly and fight in air, space, and Cyberspace"

"Deliver sovereign settings"?

Who speaks like this? well, except for the u.s. military.

None.

Good web writing is the same as good spoken languages. Use short sentences, short words, simple structures and natural and predictable flow of ideas; Avoid waffle, and words, hides the importance. When you finish with a piece of writing, you must read it aloud. Clips or alert statements sound kinds of bulky because they want to read the bulky, too.

Ink sounds warm and human.

The human voice is extremely important for online distance. communication is particularly two-way communications on new people to help people more easily connect with one another, pay yourself to write in a warm and modern style that mimics a personal conversation when carried out in close and physical presence.

When you think about how you would like to say something, especially to a specific person, select the words, phrases and structures on the basis of their personal connection. try to imagine that this person with your registration.

This approach works well for all applications-from authoritative sites legal personal Web sites.

2. Design

Planning what you want to tell you, it helps to carry out any work written more quickly and easily.

1. identification and list your objectives. What is the message; what is the action that you want, you want the reader to take? what are the key trøde you want your readers to take?

For example, a list of objectives are as follows:

Your opinion as Google?

Sep
03


No, not like that, but in a good way!: D

The following is a guest post by highlighting Jim Kukral, one of the most essential tips for success online.

You never really taken a step back from all the technical stuff SEO and thinking about why Google wins? real reasons why mass ratio, and why should continue to dominate?, should be, because once you understand how to start thinking like Google, you can start to go further than simply rank best, but also how to be a master marketing Internet, so you can find more sales, leads and publicity.

Of course, once found, he now to convert otherwise is a waste of time.

Why win Google because Google is bigger and better, the problem of the world, the truth is that there are only two reasons why we connect, using Google or not. These two reasons are as follows:

1. to have a problem solved
2. in order to

Is it.everything, and I think everything you can do online belongs to one of these categories; For example, suppose you expect cooking your wife favorite chicken marsala dish for your anniversary. you log on and perform a search for "chicken marsala recipes".Telescopic, you now have videos and pictures and recipes and cookbooks and all kinds of information can help you solve your problem.

Another example, suppose you wanted to relax after work and keep track of your favorite music in the game, some of your favorite songs. you go to YouTube and do a search for "Rolling Stones" and the video boom you are currently viewing your video content in question.

YouTube, Google, which are already the number two most searched in the search engine on the Internet (behind Google, of course). This means that people actively searches today billion Web video content; It also means that as a result of the public rapidly growing mass hunger for content into video format that regular people and businesses can now benefit from the creation of video content, he said.

The truth is that Google (and your company) is to solve problems for customers (you), Internet searcher. If (you) cannot do that, to lose customers (you) is the black and white.

Please again have Sat and is calculated from this larger problems of your target audience? if you have not already done so, you should do so now. Anticipate what they need to understand their pain and then create the products/services to take away the pain.

Just like Google.

For more than 15 years, Jim Kukral has helped small businesses and large companies such as Fedex, Sherwin Williams, Ernst & Young and progressive auto insurance understand how to find success on the Internet, Jim is the author of the book, "warning! this book will make you money, as well as a professional speaker, blogger and Web business consultant ... find out more by visiting www.jimkukral.com.du also can follow Jim on Twitter