Browsing articles in "Internet Marketing News"

SEO Impact from Google Instant

Sep 13, 2010   //   by dsaucedo   //   SEO  //  No Comments

ADOTAS – SEO tool maker Searchmetrics says Google Instant was a logical next step after the search giant began displaying keyword suggestions in a drop down menu as the user is typing. Introduced last week, the service simply begins streaming popular results, attempting the next leap in reading minds. It’s not search as you type, but search before you type, basing completions off of popular searches. Last week, Sarah Novotny claimed big G wants to own your brain!

Of course marketers are less concerned about mind ownership than Instant’s effect on search marketing. On the paid front, impressions start to count if a user clicks on a certain search or pauses for three seconds on a search.

But has Google effectively killed SEO? The company noted on its Analytics blog that users should expect fluctuations in traffic for organic keywords — some drastic — but no, said Google Webspam head Matt Cutts, SEO is still alive and well. Although search results won’t change, users may adjust how they go about searching, he wrote on his blog.

“Search remains search,” Marisa Mayer, vice president of search products and user experience, told TechCrunch. “The ranking remain stable. For people that have optimized their site to achieve a certain outcome, that’s still the outcome when users run queries. ”

Definitely don’t change your paid search or SEO strategy to include partial queries, Google Analytics team member Alden DeSoto told PCMag.com, noting that paid ads will be served based on predicted queries, not a couple of typed-in letters.

According to Searchmetrics CEO Dr. Horst Joepen, the likely effect of Instant on SEO is more traffic driven to the most popular and most searched sites, keywords or search phrases. And of course, that will simply make the most expensive PPC keywords more so — and more bucks for Google. The long tail is in danger of becoming even shorter as searchers looking for more complicated search phrases will be distracted mid-query.

Lead generator Response Mine further notes that Instant pushes both organic and paid results down the page, thoroughly limiting the number of results above the fold. SEO pros will have to re-evaluate the weight of one keyword position versus the effort required.

“The true impact of Google Instant on SEM and SEO still remains to be seen, but as it stands, this change will fundamentally rock the search community,” Response Mine wrote. “With that said, search is still very much alive. Those that can identify and adjust to these changes will flourish in the next evolution of search.”

Source: Adotas

AOL Extends Google Search Deal: 5 More Years

Sep 2, 2010   //   by dsaucedo   //   SEO  //  No Comments


AOL announced they have extended their search deal with Google for an additional five-years. This includes Google powering AOL’s organic and paid search results. The deal also added in that Google will power search on mobile search, in mobile apps and content. Also, all of AOL’s video content will also be on YouTube as part of this new extended deal.

In summary, the new five year deal includes:

  • Search Products: Google will provide AOL with additional features and enhancement to its leading Web search products that will improve the consumer search experience across AOL’s network of sites.
  • Advertising Products: Google will provide AOL with best-in-class ad formats, giving AOL consumers a better, more relevant ad experience.
  • Mobile Search: As AOL renews its focus on mobile apps and content, the companies will work together to expand the alliance to cover mobile search.
  • YouTube: AOL and YouTube have agreed to a content partnership that will bring AOL’s video content to YouTube. Global Focus: The alliance is international in scope and will provide improved experiences to AOL’s worldwide audience.

Tim Armstrong, AOL’s Chairman and Chief Executive Officer said:

Today is another important step in the turnaround of AOL. AOL users will be getting a better search and search ads experience from the best search company in the world – Google. After nearly a decade-long partnership in search, we’re looking forward to expanding our global relationship to mobile search and YouTube. All aspects of our partnership will be improved by this deal.

Eric Schmidt, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Google said:

We’re excited to deepen our partnership. This agreement combines Google’s expertise in search and advertising with AOL’s strength in online content. It’s particularly exciting to see our relationship expand into video and mobile. These areas are now at the heart of users’ online experiences and at the core of both of our businesses.

There was a time where rumors were that AOL might go with Bing.

Source: Search Engine Land

Yahoo! Organic Search Transition to Microsoft Now Complete

Sep 2, 2010   //   by dsaucedo   //   SEO  //  No Comments

Interesting news about the Yahoo/Microsoft Organic merger….

First let me say, wow, what a week! As I hope everyone saw our post from last week, Yahoo! began transitioning certain back-end functions for Yahoo! Search over to Microsoft’s search platform. Well, I am proud to announce that the transition of organic search between Yahoo! and Microsoft is complete (for more information, check out Microsoft’s blog post).

Yahoo! Web, Image, and Video search experiences on both desktop and mobile devices are now powered by the Microsoft platform in the US and Canada (English), with more markets to come. The speed in which this was completed is a testament to the great work and partnership between a number of Yahoo! and Microsoft employees, the ranks of which are numerous. I’d like to express my sincere appreciation for each person who contributed to this great accomplishment.

With this week’s milestone behind us, Yahoo! will continue to drive technology innovation in the search experience to bring more value to users and advertisers alike. We are focused on creating rich, immersive experiences that foster serendipitous discovery for people across the Yahoo! network. As we shared last week, we are also working hard on finalizing our revenue model for the Yahoo! Search BOSS program going forward, and will be offering other search-related tools for publishers in the months to come.

We continue to achieve our goals and I look forward to the opportunities ahead of us all.

Shashi Seth
Senior Vice President of Yahoo! Search Products

Source: Yahoo

Yahoo advertisers can now begin account transitions to Microsoft adCenter

Sep 2, 2010   //   by dsaucedo   //   Internet Marketing News, Paid Search  //  No Comments

Last week, Yahoo completed the transition of the back-end technology for English-language Yahoo! organic search results in the U.S. and Canada. This week, advertisers can start transitioning their paid Yahoo! Search Marketing account, in anticipation of the Yahoo! ad serving transition which is expected to start mid-October. Yahoo encourages users to transition their account before the ad serving transition begins, so that you are ready to reach more than 159 million searchers in the U.S. and 15 million searchers in Canada* on Yahoo! Search, Bing and our partners.

Start your account transition now
Beginning today, users may log in to your Yahoo! Search Marketing account and initiate your transition to Microsoft Advertising adCenter. Yahoo has created a detailed Transition Checklist that you should review now, to help ensure that you’re prepared to make a smooth transition to adCenter, as well as a Feature Comparison Guide, to help you get familiar with adCenter’s features and capabilities.

Internet Marketing News

Sep 2, 2010   //   by dsaucedo   //   Internet Marketing News  //  No Comments

Gmail enhancements will force marketers to target effectively

Sep 2, 2010   //   by dsaucedo   //   Email Marketing  //  No Comments

E-mail marketing industry experts shrugged off Google’s debut of the “Priority Inbox” enhancement in Gmail this week, saying it may even help them target consumers more effectively. The feature prioritizes e-mail messages for consumers.

Priority Inbox filters incoming e-mail messages into three sections: “important and unread,” “starred” and “everything else.” Messages are automatically categorized as they arrive to a consumer’s inbox. Google is offering the feature to consumers on a rolling basis.

“Gmail uses a variety of signals to predict which messages are important, including the people you e-mail most and which messages you open and reply to,” Google explained on the Google Blog.

“This is a welcome change to mailers like us,” said Marc Haseltine, manager of e-mail marketing at the National Geographic Society, noting the “incredible amount of inbox clutter” many consumers experience. “I think some of what we’ll do is to be a little more proactive on segmenting our reports by ISPs so we’re not seeing any problems with what they are implementing.”

Haseltine said the company will examine deliverability, inbox placement and response rates by ISPs more closely with every campaign it develops.

Tom Sather, director of professional services at Return Path, said the move is no cause for concern for marketers who use best practices and have active user files.

“They will get an extra bonus by having their e-mails prioritized more effectively if their subscribers are engaged,” he said, adding that brands should be able to improve the subscriber’s experience in the process.

Relevancy will be key for marketers to navigate the ISP changes, said Spencer Kollas, director of delivery services at StrongMail, an e-mail marketing firm.

“If you are not relevant, it won’t matter - you never will be. You’ll always be in that ‘everything else’ bucket,” he said. “It’s really about what consumers want – and if you’re not giving that to them now, it doesn’t really matter.”

A Microsoft spokesperson told DMNews that the company released a series of enhancements to Hotmail in May and will unveil more in coming weeks.

“There are going to be a lot of false positives. [Marketers] may have a knee-jerk reaction to a decrease in response of e-mail addresses,” said Melanie Attia, product marketing manager for Campaigner, an e-mail marketing service provider. “I would try to address those more on an ad hoc basis, especially if he or she is an existing customer and you know he has been reading your e-mails.”

Attia added that marketers could even point out to customers, in a subject line, that they are no longer reading messages.

Dennis Dayman, chief privacy and deliverability officer at Eloqua, a marketing automation and demand generation firm, said marketers have had a tendency to use “batch and blast” while not focusing on relationships with consumers. The changes made by the ISPs, he said, may force marketers to monitor these more closely.

“If you can watch their digital body language and monitor their behavior, you can [begin to better] target messages,” he said.

Haseltine added that the changes to Gmail will force his organization to be more creative – “not too predictable” – in its promotional e-mails.

“We’ll look to mix it up and not have similar subject lines when we send them out,” he said.

The ISP changes will also force brands to try new strategies to see what works, said David Daniels, CEO of The Relevancy Group, an e-mail and digital marketing consulting group.

“The notion of direct marketing — digital, measureable direct marketing — is built on the notion of testing and failure, which if embraced drives optimization,” he said.

Source: DMNews

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