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11Apr/070

SES NY – Creating Compelling Search Ad Copy

Posted by Eric Long

I attended the "Creating Compelling Ads" session this afternoon. This is what these sessions should be about -- actual examples were given to attendees on what to do and what not to do. Some of the sessions I've attended so far have been very high-level and overly vague presentations about topics with little-to-no substance. Thanks to Vic Drabicky of Rangeonlinemedia.com, attendees were treated with some very helpful tips for SEM campaigns. Here are the key takeaways from this session:

5 Rules to live by when creating ad copy

  1. Include the keyword in the title and description
  2. Write tailored, clear, factual creative (avoid vague and non-descript phrases like "best deal," etc.).
  3. Avoid symbols, exclamation points, numbers, and general "cutesiness" (i.e. we sell dog toys & cat treats & other things -- use and instead of &, etc. avoid exclamation points)
  4. Avoid non-specific calls to action (i.e. "book now," "save now," *** now)
  5. Don't be "salesy." Nobody likes the used car dealer, so don't act like one. The best thing you can do is write a description and sound informative. Act like you are selling to a trusted friend or family member and talk (write) normally.

Bottom line: Make the creative informative. It will differentiate you from the other competitors who are claiming the best deal on earth with the lowest prices and largest selection of products.

SEM Title Strategy
Titles are the most important part of the paid results creative. Use keywords in your title, use dynamic keyword insertion, use param2 and alt text to further customize (Yahoo! and MSN only), and always be grammatically correct. Differentiate yourself from your competition wherever possible. A sea of sameness will only confuse the potential buyer.

Bottom line: The goal is to get every profitable click, not every click.

SEM Description Strategy
Descriptions are just as important as titles. People read them. Customization per keyword is key -- setup adgroups by creative, not by keyword. Tell your story, include your brand, and clearly indicate your unique value proposition (price, selection, etc.). Price points are hit and miss -- pick and choose your battles wisely.

SEM Display URL Strategy
Slight changes to a display URL can drastically change your CTR. Always test! Here are some examples:

  1. www.Travelocity.com = 5.82% CTR
  2. www.travelocity.com = 5.27% CTR
  3. Travelocity.com = 4.84% CTR
  4. travelocity.com = 4.36% CTR

SEM Creative Rotation Strategy
The Good: The engines will automatically optimize your creative.

  1. Use no fewer than 3 and no more than 4 pieces of creative per adgroup
  2. Make each piece definitively different
  3. Test tracking conversion at the crative level (assign different landing pages to it)

The Bad: Engines punish you for any change you make to your creative.

  1. Quality score drops even on insignificant changes (even removing a "." can drop your quality score)
  2. Try keeping one piece of creative constant while you sprinkle in additional test creatives

Three Rules and Three Theories to Live your SEM Life by

  • Rule #1: Use alt text and param2 for MSN and Yahoo!
  • Rule #2: Test often, but not often enough to hurt your quality score. Test your creative, but don't test it every day.
  • Rule #3: Get a second opinion, then a third opinion, then implement.
  • Theory #1: The goal is not to get every click, but get every profitable click.
  • Theory #2: Remember that searches may think differently from you and thus need different creative than you need.
  • Theory #3: Be aware of competitors -- don't chase them.

Bottom line: Figure out your value proposition, what you offer, where you are better than the competition, and tailor creative accordingly.

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10Apr/070

SES NY – Getting Your Site Found

Posted by Eric Long

Session #2 of the training courses on Monday of SES NY '07 was called "Getting your site found." This session really had few takeaways for me as it dealt with the concept of getting your site found by using things like Flickr, YouTube, PR services, and optimizing press releases for online services. Here are some of the highlights:

More Products + More Choices = Lower Customer Satisfaction
The point was made that consumers are being bombarded by all forms of media and advertising, the Internet makes it easier for them to find products, but with all of these products and choices, customer satisfaction is arguably at an all-time low. So, how does one address this problem? Read on.

Resolve Buyer's Remorse Before the Purchase
Truer words have never been spoken and it was the "ah ha" moment for me during the session. When you think in these terms, it just makes sense. This is particularly true for my day job where we have historically (for the past 90 years) been a manufacturing company whose business has 100% relied on big box and independent retail channels selling our products to consumers. Too often companies (manufacturers, retailers, service providers, etc.) focus on the newest features of their products and offerings that they fail to answer the most basic questions a buyer wants to know.

This ultimately leads to buyer's remorse after the buyer has shelled out their hard-earned dollars only to be completely dissatisfied with their purchase. We've all been there, and to add insult to injury, many of us never bother to return the product because of the hassle in dealing with customer service in the process. What a horrible situation to be in for a retailer or manufacturer!

Buyer's remorse has lead to the success of social media and blogging for consumers
This is why social media and blogging have become such powerful tools for consumers to vent frustrations and to seek out help and assistance from other consumers who feel their pain. Even being a marketer, I still dread dealing with customer service because it is a considerable time investment. It's much easier for me to hop online, post a question, and deal with the resolution on my own terms and on my own time (companies who monitor blogs will win these consumers back!).

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10Apr/070

SES NY 2007 – Search Engine Optimization Workshop Key Takeaways

Posted by Eric Long

This is my first Search Engine Strategies conference I've attended, and SES NY '07 promises several new sessions. I attended the Monday training sessions (extra $$$) to brush up on SEM and SEO. Here's my review and key takeaways:

Session 1: Search Engine Optimization Workshop
This session was hosted by Shari Thurow of Grantastic Designs. Prior to this session, I had not heard of Shari before, but she made every effort to point out her knowledge of the subject by mentioning how lawyered up she was over the sharing of content of her new and upcoming SEO book. Aside from being overly opinionated at times and acting like a classic "tech person" does in the face of newbies, her session was very good at driving home this underlying theme: Keep it simple, and don't take any short cuts.

So, what exactly does this mean? Web design is about the end-user, building an experience that is easy to use and to-the-point -- allowing the user to get the information they need quickly.

What to optimize on your site for natural search
Additionally, optimizing your product pages for keywords and phrases is an important component to search engine optimization. Key areas to keep optimized are as follows:

  • title tag
  • meta description
  • breadcrumbs (home > products > my product name)
  • Initial h1, h2, h3, etc. tags
  • Initial paragraph content

If you look at your web analytics software package, you'll see that the top keywords and phrases that drive search traffic to your site will most often appear in one or more of the above 5 bullets. If you are looking to improve your natural search results with other keywords and/or terms, you'll want to make sure these terms are sprinkled into your copy in the above 5 bullets.

One of Shari's clients, medicinenet.com, trumps WebMD in virtually all natural search for topics relating to medicine (do a keyword search for "medicine" and you'll see medicinenet.com show up #2 -- and no sign of WebMD). She also claimed that medicinenet.com has never done any paid search simply because natural search has been a high priority and has been optimized over several years.

Breadcrumbs serve 2 important purposes
1.) Breadcrumbs are a great visual reference for site visitors to get a sense of where they have landed on your site. Too any web developers and designers leave out this important navigational element because they think it is obvious that the user knows where they are when they navigate a site. This may be true, but what they fail to take into consideration is the fact that many visitors will stumble upon a page within a site (from an external link, search engine, or some other means). This means the user is dumped right into the middle of your site, with no introduction and no immediate understanding to the organization hierarchy of your site. This is where breadcrumbs come into play. Jakob Nielson loves them, too (I thought it was interesting how this article came out a day after Shari's session).

2.) Cross-linking was referred to by Shari as the most under-utilized and incorrectly-implemented component of search engine optimization. Breadcrumbs are an excellent resource for improving natural search. They take up such a small foot print in your site's design, but they can serve a critical role in providing search engine friendly copy very high up in the code of a webpage. Use this area to alternately label sections -- remember, users search in many different ways. For example, we have products called "Premium Hardwood Blinds" but users are searching for "wood blinds." We can put "wood blinds" in the breadcrumbs and leave the page title as the official product name -- or vice versa.

Cross-linking is good. Here's how:
Cross-links are links to other related areas of the site. Cross-linking will help search engines index related content on your site. Link to product pages in more than one place on your site for a good cross-linking strategy. Don't force users to go back to the homepage or products page to get to products. Provide cross-links to other related products and services (like Amazon.com). Search engines loves this and will gobble up your content even more. The takeaway here is that you don't want to dead-end critical pages by not providing related links to other sections on your site.

Archival links are good to have
Press releases, articles, old product information, etc. are all OK to keep on your website. Not only do they help increase the number of indexed pages of your site in search engines, but you can simply cross-link from old/outdated product data/information to the newer information. Nothing is worse than finding search results and linking to a site where they have changed the navigational structure or discontinued a product and show no more information or related links on it. You've just lost that visitor!

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4Dec/060

Title tag optimization

Posted by Eric Long

This article got me thinking on how I handle title tags on various sites. It's a good, quick read and great points are made by both strategies (put brand/site name first in the title tag, or put it last). Title tag optimization should also take into consideration any SEM intiatives you have in place. SEM can help drive home your brand on a search engine results page (serp) (sign up for this hitwise whitepaper on brand marketing in search engines, or read an excerpt here). For example, for Levolor.com, we have the following (typically 1st placement in SEM results and always the 1st placement in natural results when searching for "levolor"):

levolorserp.jpg

As you can see, we employ a combination. Because this industry is dominated with independent online retailers, we attempt to improve natural search results using the above title tag on our homepage, thus the reason for "window blinds, treatments, shades, & drapery hardware." These keywords hit home on most popular search phrases that drive traffic to our site in combination with products we offer. Natural search results are very important to us right now as we came into the online world late in the game and have a lot of traction to make up. Our home page title tag is a bit wordy right now and by itself, doesn't lend to obvious clicks if you're really looking for the Levolor site. Additionally, we are a well-known brand name to many, but the blind and shade industry is home to many new consumers who are brand agnostic -- it's very possible for consumers to initially discover us via search engine results without having heard of us before.

Using the meta tag and a combination of SEM, we can very easily craft our message to drive home the point that this is the official manufacturer site, and not an online retailer selling our product (of which there are several). The fact that we are the first natural search result also gives us flexibility to be a little more "wordy" with the homepage title tag. Levolor is a very well-known brand name and as a result, we also place Levolor at the end of every title tag on the site. There is slight overlap in the "official manufacturer line" which could be tweaked in either our SEM or homepage meta tag. Since it's already established in SEM, we may modify the homepage meta tag in the future so we have less redundancy. This will take some A/B testing to prove out which method is more effective at driving clicks.

On the flip-side of this coin, let's take a look at SuperMotors.net search results:

supermotors-serp.jpg

As you can see, we've got some work to do. First, we do not do an effective job of indicating on the hompeage in the title tag (or meta tag, for that matter), that this is SuperMotors.net. Actually, the data is there, but the title tag is so long on the homepage, that is gets truncated on the serp. Furthermore, the title tag and meta tag are very redundant. The title tag should almost be converted to "SuperMotors.net | Photo, audio, and video hosting" and just leave it at that. In anyone's bookmarks list, the current homepage title is really too long and isn't easily identified as SuperMotors.net.

In the second result on this page, you can see how SuperMotors.net is included in the title tag. This is done dynamically on every page of the site. Having your brand name or domain name in the title tag of each page is recommended if users will see it in their bookmarks or on serps. Placing it before the title of the page or after the title of the page will be a decision you make on a case-by-case basis depending on your brand recognition, competition for natural search, and your current SEM initiatives that pick up where your natural search leaves off.

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