Archive for category Search Engine Marketing

Banner Advertising Vs. Search Engine Marketing

So where should you spend your hard earned marketing budget? When you are deciding your online advertising budget, one of the most important questions you need to consider is what type of online advertising to purchase. Banner advertising on other popular websites or being a top hit on search engines when people search for your offerings? Both have their strengths and weaknesses and we’ll explore both.

Banner advertising is in a sense a more traditional way to advertise and traditionally associated with CPM (Cost Per Thousand). You are attempting to promote your product to the general public or your niche target market. You want them to know you exist, and at the same time entice them to be a customer. This in a nutshell is how print and TV advertising works. You are the one actively trying to pursue the customer and make a connection.
PPC (Pay Per Click advertising) / Search Engine Marketing is the total opposite. It is the customer who is actively pursuing information or your offering, and it where advertisers only pay when a user actually clicks on an advertisement to visit the advertisers’ website So it is your job to bid on keyword phrases relevant to your target market to make sure you’re easily found when they make those searches.

It is very important to note the behavioural differences between these two forms of advertising. Banner advertising on other websites can be viewed as evasive to the user, and tend to be ignored. When a user is surfing a site for information, they are focused on that only and are unlikely to pay attention to your banner because of their current state of mind.

In PPC Search Engine Marketing, the same user is actively searching for information on Google for instance. They are much more likely to click on your link because of their current state of mind. Instead of you trying to get their attention while they’re doing something else on another site, you’re being available and accessible when they’re ready. The chances of making a successful sale is much higher on search engine marketing simply because of the behavioural difference. On the down side PPC takes a lot more management and supervision and also some important keyword phrases could be well out of your price range e.g $50+ meaning you could be forced to opt for the more generic and less viewed keywords.

It’s also important determine what your goals are of an advertising campaign and what you are actually marketing. PPC Search Engine Marketing is more effective. The reason is because the traffic is generally very targeted and the users are in a better state of mind to make a purchase. But banner advertising gives you the ability to reach out the masses and make them aware of your offering. You can grab their attention and entice them to make a purchase which is still very important.

For example, if you have a very targeted niche market and there are popular websites out there who’s readers are this exact market, it is very important to reach out to them. It cannot be overlooked how important and effective it is to banner advertise on these sites. It is very likely that you can turn these people into customers and create some strong branding exposure.

Conclusion

In the end there is no true winner or loser here as neither PPC or Banners Ads can guarantee conversions. This will boil down to your web content, web design, products and service you offer.

Try and think about what your end goals are. If you are looking for targeted and instant visitors to your site go for PPC Serach Engine Marketing.

If you are trying to build branding value then go for Banner Advertising.

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The Impact of the Recession on Online Advertising

After weeks upon weeks of having constant news of the global financial crisis and the recessions impact on various industries, we set out to examine the impact on online advertising.

It is no secret that the financial sector, automotive, and airline industries have been hit hard by the recession. These three industries have been serious online advertisers for years and competing heavily amongst each other. They also represent a large chunk of the total spend on online advertising. Just surf the web for 5 minutes and you’re sure to see a credit card banner, car banner, or a travel (holiday) banner somewhere. But will this still be the case?

The answer I believe, is No. These industries are desperately trying to rally around cutting jobs and reducing their expenses to just stay afloat. Some of these “Expenses” are budgets that were set aside for their advertising campaigns. There is no way that a company that is in the process of cutting 10,000 jobs will pay premium prices to actively participate in display advertising on major websites. They simply can’t afford it.

My theory is that display advertising on major websites and newspapers will decrease significantly. Large Publishers will be hit hard. But advertising is still the backbone of generating sales for most companies, so online advertising will still be a priority for them. But to what extent?

These online advertisers will focus more on search engine marketing and getting strong conversions. They will spend their budgets competing on their keywords on Google searches for instance, and making a strong impression on people specifically searching for their products. The key word is Targeted marketing. Their online advertising campaigns will ALL come down to positive ROI’s.

To sum it up basically, Display Advertising and premium website buys will decrease while search engine marketing and other forms of highly targeted online advertising will continue to be strong.

The days of spending $50,000 to simply show a Auto Banner on MSN.com with the purpose of only generating strong brand awareness and not a positive ROI are over….for now.

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Increasing your CTR on Adwords

One question I see a lot on SEO forums and blogs is, “How can I increase my click through ratio on Adwords?” What’s alarming to me (and great for Google) is that the most common answer I see on these forums is, “increase your bids.” Not to say that increasing you bids and raising the placement of your ads won’t improve your click through rate, it just happens to increase your costs per click, which we all know can greatly affect the ROI of the campaign.

So let’s re-examine the question. What we need to ask is, “How can we increase our CTR while maintaining the same cost per click or even lowering the cost?” I know you’re thinking that you can’t increase results and lower cost with a pay per click campaign. This is supposedly the unattainable Holy Grail of search engine marketing. Well, we’ve found it, and we’re even going to share.

Our approach to increasing CTR’s is Testing! Testing! Testing! Testing different ad copy with Google can be labor intensive to get up and running. And without a PhD in statistics, you won’t be able to make sense of the numbers without some sort of automation. That’s what we offer. Our web based proprietary software syncs with your Adwords account and allows you to test 50 variations of your text ad for every keyword in your campaign. Our system will identify the top performing variations and provide you with easy to understand reporting, allowing you to adjust and refine your marketing efforts.

You’re probably thinking, “That’s great, but I don’t see how this will actually lower my cost per click.” You’ve got to remember that Google rewards ads that perform better. By simply increasing your CTR Google will actually lower your average cost per click, saving you money and increasing your ROI.

For more information about our multivariate testing for Adwords click here, and if you’d like to speak with a representative please contact us today!

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