Archive for the ‘Search Marketing’ Category

Goodbye WebShare, Hello Cardinal Path!

Monday, March 14th, 2011 by Corey Koberg
Google Buzz
Six years ago we started WebShare with the singular goal of passing on the knowledge and skills we had acquired in Internet marketing to our clients and partnering with them to take their digital strategy to the next level.

Over the years we’ve been fortunate to experience tremendous growth that has allowed us to continue to add expertise and experience to the team, including a stable of experts in online advertising, conversion optimization, SEM, social media, and web design.  But the area we’re probably best known for has been our analytics expertise.  Offering a full range of services, from strategy to implementation and training to deep-dive analysis, our team includes thought leaders such as WAA Innovation Award finalists, industry authors, sought after speakers, seasoned trainers, and former Google employees.

Today we take a huge step forward with that growth as we combine the expertise of three of the industry’s top firms to create a world class organization featuring some of digital marketing’s finest minds.  WebShare, VKI Studios, and PublicInsite will be joining forces to give our clients a true one-stop shop for all of their digital needs.  This will provide clients access to a team with exceptional depth and expertise across a broad range of disciplines that include search marketing, usability and conversion testing, web design & development, training, business / competitive intelligence, and more.

Above all, we realize that we could not be where we are today without you – our clients, our team of employees, our partners, and our community.  We would like to sincerely thank you all for being a part of WebShare, and we look forward to what the future brings.

If you’d like to learn more about the merger, we’ve set up a FAQ page, and don’t hesitate to contact us if you have any questions.  We’ll be blogging, tweeting, posting and conversing from Cardinal Path from here on out, so don’t forget to follow, friend, subscribe and friend.

We couldn’t be more thrilled about our future with Cardinal Path and what it will mean to our clients, partners and team — both current and future!

Signing off from the WebShare blog,

Corey & Dave




Corey Koberg
Corey is a co-founder and principal consultant at WebShare...you can find out more about Corey here.

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Strange Domain Stacking in Google SERPs? (UPDATED with Google announcement)

Wednesday, August 18th, 2010 by Adrian Vender
Google Buzz

One of our co-founders here at WebShare discovered something very strange last night, and we are still observing it today. Spurred by a random discussion about TV shows, he performed a google search for this old house and saw the following:

This Old House - Google search

The first 7 results are all from same domain??? Typically we see that a domain can have a maximum of 2 URLs appearing in a given query in the Google SERPs (not including the indented results).

We were able to replicate the scenario using another search for webshare conversion marketing:

WebShare conversion marketing - Google search

8 URLs from the same domain on page 1. Very strange.

We were able to replicate this from different locations in AZ and CA, so it doesn’t seem like geolocation is a factor.  Are you seeing the same results?  Do think this is just Google experimenting?  Or maybe just a glitch?

What do you all think?

********UPDATE***********

After confirming these results with a few other people at SES San Francisco, I did a little more research and found the following blog post by Malcolm Combs where he’s discovering the same results:

Google treating brand names in search terms as site: searches?

In the comment thread is an interesting point from Bill Slawski where he believes this activity may be associated with what is described in a Google patent:

This looks like the process described in Google’s patent “Query rewriting with entity detection” (US Patent 7,536,382). which was granted in May of last year.

For example, the process might identify Apple as a specific entity that is associated with a specific web site, and rewrite the original query to provide results from the Apple site. From the patent:

Some entity names are unambiguous and uniquely identify particular entities. A large number of names, however, are somewhat ambiguous or generic, making it more difficult to identify the entities to which they are intended to correspond when included in users’ search queries.

Systems and methods consistent with the principles of the invention provide mechanisms for determining the entities to which entity names correspond and selectively rewriting users’ search queries based on the entity names. Accordingly, a user’s search query may be restricted to a search of document(s) associated with the entity that the user intended in the search.

There doesn’t appear to be any official indication from Google whether they are just testing this algorithmic change or if it’s here for good.  This kind of change may benefit big-brand entities, but I don’t believe this is a benefit to the searcher since the search results may not be the most relevant.

********UPDATE #2***********

Official announcement from Google regarding the algorithm change:

http://googlewebmastercentral.blogspot.com/2010/08/showing-more-results-from-domain.html




Adrian Vender
Adrian is a technical lead and search engine optimization expert at WebShare. You can find out more about Adrian here.

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Famous Clients

Wednesday, May 26th, 2010 by David Booth
Google Buzz


We’re proud to be able to work with incredible clients – the kind of folks that not only walk on the cutting edge of innovation, they define it.  As part of National Small Business Week, Ross Twiddy of Twiddy & Company will be on Capitol Hill telling the story of how a 32 year old business is leveraging the Google platform to fuel the kind of growth that has resulted in the $54 billion economic impact Google has just reported for 2009.

Twiddy uses AdWords to drive traffic to its site, where almost 900 of North Carolina’s Outer Banks vacation rentals are ready to be browsed and rented.  A comprehensive installation and the use of advanced features of Google Analytics collects the data needed to make both everyday and complex business decisions, and Google’s Website Optimizer conversion testing tool has been used to run experiments that provide an ever improving user experience and impact to the bottom line.

According to Ross, “Adwords has been an extremely powerful platform for our small business. WebShare has been instrumental in optimizing that traffic–Webshare’s strategy and advice is the supercharger for Adwords traffic.”

Well Ross, we’re proud to work with you, wish you well on Capitol Hill and congratulate you on your successes!

UPDATE 6/16: Twiddy getting some more coverage on the Official Google Analytics Blog!




David Booth
David is a co-founder and principal consultant at WebShare. You can find out more about David here.

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Specify Your Business’s Service Area within your Google Places Listing

Thursday, May 13th, 2010 by Dave Reichenbacher
Google Buzz

Did anyone notice that you can specify a service area in your Google Places Listing? Google Maps began rolling out this feature in late March with little publicity. This is quite a feature for businesses that want to publicize the different locations they serve; a great feature for businesses that will come to a home or for businesses that are actually based out of a home.  Service areas listings give access to areas on the map where you may not have a physical address.  For example, your business address may be in Tempe, Arizona, but in reality you can service any location within the Phoenix metro area.

Anyone can change their business service area by logging into their Google Places account and editing your business listing.  Look for the section labeled “Service Areas and Location Settings”.   Below we are using an example from a WebShare client that sells custom doors and windows in the Orange County area.  As you can see, you can choose between specifying a radial distance from your location or simply listing the locations you want to show that you serve.  If you have multiple business locations, be sure to edit all of them.

Distance from one location view:

Google Places distance from one location

List of areas served view:

Google Places areas served

Below you can see an example of what a listing will look like in Google Maps.  This client has four showroom locations but obviously they install door and windows anywhere within Orange County. Now customers can clearly see what areas Renaissance services if they are shopping for a door and window contractor.

Google maps view of areas served Renaissance Doors and Windows

Did anyone notice that you can now specify a service area in your Google Local Business Listing? Google Maps began rolling out this feature in late March with not much publicity. This is quite a feature for businesses that want to publicize the different locations they serve; a great feature for businesses that will come to a home or for businesses that are actually based out of a home. Service areas listings give access to areas on the map where you may not have a physical address. For example, your business address may be in Tempe, Arizona, but in reality you can service any location within the Phoenix metro area.

Anyone can change their business service area by logging into their Google Local Business Center and editing your business listing. Look for the section labeled “Service Areas and Location Settings”. Below we are using an example from a WebShare client that sells custom doors and windows in the Orange County area. As you can see, you can choose between specifying a distance from your location or simply listing the locations you want to show that you serve. If you have multiple business location listings, be sure to edit all of them.

LBC-radius.jpgLBC-listareas.jpg

Below you can see an example of what a listing will look like in Google Maps. This client has four showroom locations but obviously they install door and windows anywhere within Orange County. Now customers can clearly see what areas Renaissance services if they are shopping for a door and window contractor.




Dave Reichenbacher
DR directs program management and operations at WebShare. He also is one of our Seminars for Success instructors and has an affinity toward local search marketing. You can find out more about Dave here.

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Yahoo Search Marketing Desktop Tool is Getting Better

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010 by Mike Small
Google Buzz

The Yahoo Search Marketing desktop tool had been a long time coming when it was released last fall, yet is lacked a few key features we had become accustomed to in the other PPC desktop tools. If you have not used it much since the release, you may not know that Yahoo has been adding features with each upgrade.  These new features are  designed to make the management process of your Yahoo! Search Marketing accounts more efficient. The most recent release includes some very useful features that can cut the time spent managing and optimizing your accounts significantly.

1. Cut / Copy / Paste
You can now cut, copy and paste keywords, ads and adgroups by right clicking and selecting the option you want from the menu or by using short- cut keys.

2. Revert Changes
A new “Revert All” function lets you undo everything you did or undo just a few selected changes.

3. File Import
Importing a campaign or an entire account from Google AdWords is an easy 1 – 2 – 3 process now. 1 – Download from AdWords editor 2- Upload into Yahoo Search Marketing desktop 3 – Post changes.

As the Yahoo Search Marketing desktop tool gets more robust through the addition of features such as these, it can save considerable time in your PPC management.




Mike Small
Mike Small leads the SEM and paid search efforts at WebShare. You can find out more about Mike here.

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New AdWords Search Funnels

Thursday, March 25th, 2010 by Nick Iyengar
Google Buzz

Yesterday Google announced “AdWords Search Funnels,” a major new component for its AdWords conversion tracking package. Search Funnels is an important new feature because it represents Google’s first foray beyond last-click conversion attribution for AdWords. Historically, AdWords conversion tracking has always simply looked at the most recent AdWords keyword/ad that was clicked on prior to a conversion, and given that keyword/ad credit for the conversion. While this data is by no means inaccurate, in many cases it is incomplete. Let’s take a look why that is and explore some of the ways you can make Search Funnels data actionable.

Legacy AdWords Conversion Attribution: What’s Missing?

Many online purchases are not “impulse buys,” so whether you’re an e-commerce website or a lead generation landing page, there may well be a bit of a research period that a user must go through before eventually converting on your site. For our purposes, let’s pretend you’re selling stays at an all-inclusive resort in the Caribbean. You’re going to be charging your customers’ credit cards for thousands of dollars at one go, so your users may spend weeks, or even months, researching their vacation before deciding to purchase.

If your users have been researching their vacation for weeks, they’ve likely searched on several of your keywords, and seen many of your ads. With the legacy AdWords attribution model, however, you would only get conversion data on the last keyword and ad in that entire sequence.  What you probably would like to know in this scenario is how much, if at all, your “top-of-funnel” keywords are contributing to future conversions.

Here’s a specific example. Given the AdWords attribution model, it’s common to see conversion data that looks roughly like the following:

Keyword Conversion Rate
“purchase all-inclusive vacation in Aruba” 5%
“Caribbean vacation” 0.25%

On the surface, “Caribbean vacation” looks like a vague, generic keyword you might not want to keep spending money on. But there’s probably a lot of traffic there, and a lot of your customers may start the research process with generic keywords just like that. When they’re finally ready to buy, they’ll likely be using more specific keywords, and with the AdWords attribution model it makes sense that these kinds of keywords will have higher conversion rates.  If that’s the case, then the right decision is that you’d want to make sure you continue to get in front of people when they start their research with generic keywords like “Caribbean vacation” – in spite of what looks like a miserable conversion rate. With the traditional AdWords attribution model, it’s tough to make this decision given the numbers you’re looking at.

On top of that, Google Analytics attributes conversions differently from AdWords conversion tracking. While AdWords looks at the last AdWords keyword before the conversion, Google Analytics looks at the source of the actual visit that generated the conversion – even if it’s not AdWords. What if your user clicks on your AdWords ad, then a week later does a search on Yahoo! and clicks on your organic result before finally converting? AdWords will report a conversion for that last AdWords keyword, but Google Analytics will attribute the same conversion to the last-touch, which in this case would be an organic search on Yahoo!.

With multiple attribution models in play, it’s easy to see how evaluating the true value of your keywords can get pretty complex. That’s a big part of why the new insight provided by Search Funnels is generating a lot buzz in the industry.

Search Funnels: A New Level of Insight

With Google’s new Search Funnels, you’ll now be able to see whether the keyword “Caribbean vacation” generates “assist” clicks, or even assist impressions for you. Assists, which Yahoo! Search Marketing has reported on for years, are defined in AdWords as clicks and impressions that your keywords and ads received prior to the user converting on your site. For example, let’s say a user searched for “Caribbean vacation” three separate times, and clicked on your ad one of those times. Then, a week later, the user searched for “purchase all-inclusive vacation in Aruba” and converted on your site. In the past, all you’d see was one conversion for “purchase all-inclusive vacation in Aruba.” Soon, however, you’ll see the following: for “purchase all-inclusive vacation in Aruba” you’ll still see the one conversion. In addition, though, you’ll see three assist impressions and one assist click for “Caribbean vacation.”

But wait; there’s more! In addition to being able to see assist clicks and assist impressions, you’ll be able to break down your conversion process by the amount of time and number of visits that it takes someone to go from initial click to final conversion.  These metrics have been available exclusively in the E-commerce reports of Google Analytics until now, and they provide invaluable insight into the sales cycle of your products and services.  Also, you’ll be able to see metrics like the number of impressions and the number of clicks it takes to drive a user from initial click/impression to final conversion.

By now you’re probably starting to see how useful this data can be in helping you make smarter, more data-driven decisions about the portfolio of keywords you buy for your SEM campaigns. To learn more about where to find Search Funnels and to see screenshots, check out Google’s new video below.

Google plans to roll out this feature to everyone over the next few weeks, so if you’ve got other ideas for how to use this data, share them with us in the comments. As always, if you want to get more great tips and tricks on AdWords, Google Analytics, Google Website Optimizer, and more, subscribe to our feed or follow us on Twitter!




Nick Iyengar
Nick is a senior analytics and web intelligence analyst with WebShare. You can find out more about Nick here.

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Video Search – New sites like Truveo offer up great search marketing opportunities

Wednesday, June 11th, 2008 by Dave Reichenbacher
Google Buzz

In these days of viral videos, there is some pretty entertaining content out there. There are millions of videos on YouTube alone, and there are plenty of other sites out there like Break.com and Newgrounds with millions of videos all their own. Even non-traditionally video oriented sites like CNN.com and Disney are posting videos for user entertainment. With so much content spanning so many sites, it is easy to spend hours searching for “that one video I saw on that one site”…enter Truveo into this new landscape of video search.

Truveo is a video search engine that indexes many popular websites for videos. It offers users a one-stop shop for search and viewing of their favorite virals. Since it pulls content from partner sites, it offers unique opportunities for search engine marketing, giving aspiring marketers another avenue to have their content reached. An effective marketing strategy can open a completely new world of millions of possible leads.

Although they were at first regarded as a way of reaching primarily younger audiences, viral videos are quickly becoming a medium for populations for many different demographics and backgrounds to come together over their mutual interests. Many companies have already leveraged these mediums effectively to create positive public buzz, and one example is Dos Equi’s Most Interesting Man in the world, which has created buzz all over the blogosphere (like this, this, and this).

Truveo’s true potential lies in its international audience, which grows daily and has reported to constitute over 70% of their traffic. Many of their most popular videos are from young emerging markets like India and China, which creates an excellent opportunity for marketers to gain a visible presence in commercially exciting areas of growth. Marketers looking to go international may be able to leverage it as a viable option for creating buzz in different markets, and it is definitely worthy of a follow-up.




Dave Reichenbacher
DR directs program management and operations at WebShare. He also is one of our Seminars for Success instructors and has an affinity toward local search marketing. You can find out more about Dave here.

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Microsoft makes bid for Yahoo!

Friday, February 1st, 2008 by Corey Koberg
Google Buzz

In by far the most significant move that Microsoft has made to gain a foothold in the search and advertising market, the company has bid $44.6 billion for the number 2 search giant, Yahoo! Inc.

Offering $31 per share, a full 62% over and above yesterday’s closing price, Microsoft is attempting to make it very difficult for Yahoo! to ignore the bid, presumably in the hopes that the combined forces of Yahoo! and Microsoft in the search arena can be a viable threat to Google, the company that currently controls ~60% of the extremely profitable market.

Yahoo! has struggled in recent quarters, both in financial terms and in a declining market share, and Microsoft’s MSN / Live search as of last quarter held a meager 3.55% of the market as reported by ComScore.

Advertising is the name of the game in terms of revenue generation for the search giants, and Microsoft has much to gain from Yahoo!’s Search Marketing solution. A solid rival of Google’s Adwords, Yahoo! Search Marketing provides many of the same features and has come a long way over the past year to make advertising easier and more effective. Microsoft’s adCenter has been easily recognized as the inferior of the three advertising systems, presenting difficulties primarily in usability and reach.

While Yahoo! evaluates and decides what course of action to take with respect to the bid, the rest of us will be waiting to see what implications the potential takeover would have in the search landscape.




Corey Koberg
Corey is a co-founder and principal consultant at WebShare...you can find out more about Corey here.

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WebShare Video Series – Google Analytics Setup with new GA.js Code

Thursday, January 24th, 2008 by Adrian Vender
Google Buzz

Are you ready to set up Google Analytics on your website? If so, then you’ve found the right place. In this 7 minute video, you’ll learn how to create a Google Analytics account, install the new GA.js tracking code, and be on your way to a wealth of information about how people find and use your website:

 

 

Google Analytics help Webshare is a Google Analytics Authorized consultancy and can help you set up, configure, and analyze this invaluable data. We offer customized analytics training as well as Google Analytics consulting for any project.



Adrian Vender
Adrian is a technical lead and search engine optimization expert at WebShare. You can find out more about Adrian here.

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Google Testing a New Knowledge Aggregate System Called Knol

Friday, December 21st, 2007 by Corey Koberg
Google Buzz

In early December Google began testing a new tool called Knol, and of course it is getting a lot of buzz. The theory behind Knol is to apply Google’s “knowledge” of relevance analysis into creating a web space where you can go to find useful information on topics “from scientific concepts, to medical information, from geographical and historical, to entertainment, from product information, to how-to-fix-it instructions.” They named it Knol because they feel this term should be known as one unit of knowledge. Udi Manber, VP of Engineering at Google explains that “A knol on a particular topic is meant to be the first thing someone who searches for this topic for the first time will want to read.” The structure of the tool will include an endless number of Knols.

With the advent of Knol, the search engine giant may intentionally or unintentionally be trying to pull traffic from Wikipedia and social networks like Facebook. The competition to Wikipedia is easily recognized when Google describes their aggregate system as a place to find knowledge. Just like Wikipedia, Google is asking people to write a trustworthy article on a particle subject for their Knols. However Google is claiming that the main idea of Knol’s design is to highlight the authors. The thought here is that if you know or recognize the author, you can then make a judgment on the level of authority the person has on that particular subject. At first it might be surprising that Google would start a competition with Wikipedia since it seems like you can’t do a search these days without getting a Wikipedia result on the first page of Google’s search results. Looks like Google has just recognized another great place to advertise and who wouldn’t want their own knowledge aggregate system on their home turf?

With respect to social networking sites, Knol may also be stealing some traffic. There is no better authority to write on yourself or your company than YOU, and this concept is similar to other social networking sites already out there. The difference here is that Knol would allow others to write on a subject with competing pages and claims of being authoritative. People like people and they don’t mind some drama – by allowing readers to know the author, they can get content with some background behind it. At this point it is too early to tell how much of a search marketing opportunity Knol could pose for individuals or organizations but it certainly looks promising.

Google has proven they are the online relevance king for search results (those results can be found in the latest search activity numbers). Thus we expect they can apply all that “knowledge” to create a great information aggregate system that is useful and relevant. Udi Manber stated “We are very excited by the potential to substantially increase the dissemination of knowledge.” We are also excited.




Corey Koberg
Corey is a co-founder and principal consultant at WebShare...you can find out more about Corey here.

See more posts by Corey Koberg