The Search Engine Professionals at Rank for $ales.com --- In business since 1997.
Back to our Homepage SEO Tips that will make a big difference in your rankings and our most popular ** How To ** section The most common myths about SEO -- Read what the experts have to say about today's most common SEO myths and misconceptions Frequently Asked Questions to Search Engine Optimization and Positioning Search Engine Optimization Industry News -- Stay in tune with the most recent developments in search engine technology and the SEO industry Contact Rank for $ales today and get your site's rankings high in the engines-- Right where they should be!

  SEARCH FOR:   CITY or STATE:

Search this site


Internet search engine marketing sees major gains

October 14, 2003

Term-Targeting Becoming a Killer App For Online Marketing

Term or 'key word' search advertising allows marketers to instantly and precisely target individuals who express a certain personal interest in their seaches.

Last week Microsoft ended its licensing deal with Internet search provider LookSmart, signaling its intent to carve out its own piece of the lucrative search-related advertising sector. Two days later, punctuating Microsoft's move, Yahoo! cited paid-search revenue as a major reason its third-quarter earnings doubled.

The two events were the latest evidence demonstrating how paid-search is rapidly emerging as a central muscle of the Internet advertising business.

Revenue up 50%
The category, currently cominated by Google and Overture Services, has grown nearly 50% to $1.6 billion this year, according to Jupiter Research, outpacing all other forms of online advertising. Overture bullishly estimates the market will hit $8 billion by 2008.

Simply put, marketers are flocking to the tool. Paid-search advertising refers to the process of linking the display of online ads to the individual searches executed by users at major search engine sites like Google. If the individual performs a search for, say, "Hummer," their results include actual Web sites of Hummer-related content like Hummer.com, as well as a series of "sponsored links" from vehicle dealers such as newscars.com and carsmart.com as well as wackyplanet.com, a retail site selling Hummer t-shirts, hats and gifts. The sponsors pay each time their their ad is served up to user who enters a relevant search term.

In large measure, paid-search has quietly converted search engines into a new sort of customer mining device, systematically matching hundreds of millions of specific consumer searches each day against advertising campaigns precisely aimed at certain search terms. According to comScore Networks, U.S. consumers are conducting more than 4 billion search-engine searches each month.

Most appealing to marketers is the amazing precision with which search-related ad responses can be documented and analyzed. "Basically, everyone's in this mode right now of getting to a granular level on their metrics," said Tim Armstrong, vice president of advertising sales at Google. He said that increasing numbers of marketers are investing profits tracked to search back into more search advertising programs.

The accountability of search advertising has already turned it into a mainstay of the hyper-competitive auto category where rival brands compete to buy up key words for, say, every imaginable configuration of SUV-related phrases on the major search engine sites, including automotive sites like Edmunds.com.

Targeting similar consumer psychographics, they frantically bid for inventory that will get them in front of the consumer at the key moment in the auto-purchase process. At Ford Direct, Ford Motor Co.'s online arm, search makes up 20% to 25% of the overall media budget and will exceed 25% in 2004. Ford Direct President Steve St. Andre said: "Our goal is to drive online transactions, we want key words to convert into leads and then sales. Search allows you to rethink the entire advertising model and immediately see which keyword buys are successful and which aren't." Managing the process carries a risk, however: "The open bidding process [on key words] can cause costs to run up," he added.

40% return
Auto site Edmunds.com favors search for its precise targeting and ability to generate high-quality, qualified traffic. "We know what works and what doesn't. We're generating a 30% to 40% return on what we buy," said Seth Berkowitz, vice presidnet of business development.

Other sectors have also started to ramp up their search ad spending. United Airlines' UAL Loyalty Services began using it in March: "For us, every dollar spent must come back to the bottom line. … It's purely about ticket sales," said Pam Stein, Internet marketing manager. Ms. Stein said she'd like to see search account for 25% to 50% of the online marketing budget. The one downside she mentions is the bidding: "Orbitz and Travelocity are driving up costs."

Focusing on key words
Amanda Gooding, Hewlett-Packard Co.'s consumer marketing manager, HPShopping.com, agreed: "We've typically stayed away from bidding on competitors' key words. We're focused on key words that make our conversion as strong as possible." This issue of the way that search words are typically bought is, in the eyes of many, the biggest threat to the continued success of the tool.

Jeffrey Housenbold is VP-business development and Internet marketing for eBay, one of the biggest users of search marketing. He warns: "If you peel back the numbers, most of the growth is coming from rising costs, not rising number of queries. As more people are adopting it, the demand for key words is increasing, so price is increasing … At a certain point you've got diminished marginal returns."


Article by Tobi Elkin
Source: Adage.com

Back to the top of the page.         
Fill out your e-mail address
to receive our free newsletter!

Read Serge Thibodeau's daily blogs on search engines at Serge Thibodeau Live. We strongly suggest you bookmark our web site by clicking here.

Tired of receiving unwanted spam in your in box? Then get SpamArrest™ and put a stop to all that nonsense. Click here to get all the details.
Tired of receiving unwanted spam in your in box? Get SpamArrest™ and put a stop to all that SPAM. Click here and get rid of SPAM forever!

Get your business or company listed in the Global Business Listing directory and increase your business. It takes less then 24 hours to get a premium listing in the most powerful business search engine there is. Click here to find out all about it.

Rank for $ales strongly recommends the use of WordTracker to effectively identify all your right industry keywords. Accurate identification of the right keywords and key phrases used in your industry is the first basic step in any serious search engine optimization program. Click here to start your keyword and key phrase research.

Pay Rank for $ales securely with your Visa, MasterCard, Discover, or American Express credit card through the secure PayPal network. (Note: PayPal is an eBay company, and maintains a net free capital of US $ 50 Million).
VisaMasterCardDiscoverAmerican Express

You can link to the Rank for Sales web site as much as you like. Read our section on how your company can participate in our reciprocal link exchange program and increase your rankings in all the major search engines such as Google, AltaVista, Yahoo and all the others.

Powered by Sun Hosting          Protected by Proxy Sentinel™          Traffic stats by Site Clicks™

Site design by GCIS              SEO enhanced by Pagina+™            Online sales by Web Store™


Call Rank for Sales toll free from anywhere in the US or Canada:   1-800-631-3221
email:   info@rankforsales.com

| Home | SEO Tips | SEO Myths | FAQ | SEO News | Articles | Sitemap | Contact |


Copyright © Rank for Sales 2003    Terms of use    Privacy agreement    Legal disclaimer