Thursday 31 January 2019

Marketing Day: Quora keyword targeting and auction insights, Google attribution, more

Here’s our recap of what happened in online marketing today, as reported on Marketing Land and other places across the web.

From Marketing Land:

Recent Headlines From MarTech Today, Our Sister Site Dedicated To Marketing Technology:

Online Marketing News From Around The Web:


About The Author

Amy Gesenhues is Third Door Media’s General Assignment Reporter, covering the latest news and updates for Marketing Land and Search Engine Land. From 2009 to 2012, she was an award-winning syndicated columnist for a number of daily newspapers from New York to Texas. With more than ten years of marketing management experience, she has contributed to a variety of traditional and online publications, including MarketingProfs.com, SoftwareCEO.com, and Sales and Marketing Management Magazine. Read more of Amy’s articles.

This marketing news is not the copyright of Scott.Services – please click here to see the original source of this article. Author: Amy Gesenhues

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Daily Search Forum Recap: January 31, 2019

Here is a recap of what happened in the search forums today, through the eyes of the Search Engine Roundtable and other search forums on the web.

Search Engine Roundtable Stories:

  • 404 Sitemaps To Remove Them In The New Google Search Console
    Google’s John Mueller was asked if there is a way in the new Google Search Console to remove old Sitemaps files. He said you can 404 them to remove them. Maybe Google will add a button to delete old Sitemap files there but for now, 404ing them will eventually get them to be removed.
  • Most SEOs Want Fetch As Google Even With URL Inspection Tool
    Google told us the Fetch as Google tool is going away and being replaced by the URL Inspection Tool. But some SEOs, well, seems like the majority of SEOs, want Google to port over the Fetch as Google tool as well. A Twitter poll with 88 results shows about 75% want both the Fetch as Google and URL Inspection tool.
  • Bing: 90% Or More Of Their Core Ranking Algorithm Uses Machine Learning
    Yesterday at SMX West, I did a panel named Man vs Machine covering algorithms versus guidelines and during the Q&A portion, I asked the Bing reps Frédéric Dubut and Nagu Rangan what percentage of the core ranking algorithm is AI or machine learning based. To my surprise, they guessed over 90%.
  • New Google Search Console Ports Security Issues Section
    Google has ported another feature from the old Search Console to the new, the security issues section. Google said on Twitter “We hope you don’t need to use a Security Issues tab” but if you do, it has been migrated to the new Search Console.
  • Google Maps Street View Cars Fleet
    I guess this is where the street view cars live at Google. This photo was posted Instagram and the person said this is where the Google Maps cars fleet is.

Other Great Search Forum Threads:

Search Engine Land Stories:

Other Great Search Stories:

Analytics

Industry & Business

Links & Promotion Building

Local & Maps

Mobile & Voice

SEO

PPC

Other Search

This marketing news is not the copyright of Scott.Services – please click here to see the original source of this article. Author: barry@rustybrick.com (Barry Schwartz)

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Quora adds search-like keyword targeting, Auction Insights for advertisers

SAN JOSE — Quora continues to rapidly build out features and capabilities of its not-yet-two-year old advertising platform. The question and answer platform announced the launch of Auction Insights at SMX West in San Jose, CA Thursday. Earlier this week, Quora rolled out keyword targeting, allowing advertisers to bid on the keywords they may already be targeting in search campaigns.

Auction Insights. To help advertisers better understand how they’re performing against others in the ad auctions, Quora introduced three new metrics on Thursday.

  • Auctions Lost to Competition shows the percentage of auctions your ad set entered but did not win an ad impression in one of the ad slots available. Quora says its auction algorithm takes both creative relevancy and bid into consideration. If the Auctions Lost to Competition metric indicates your loss rate is high, for example, you might consider improving the relevancy of your creative or raising your bid to be more competitive.
  • Impression Share is the percentage of auctions the ad set entered and won an ad impression.
  • Absolute Impression Share reflects the percentage of auctions the ad set entered and won the very top ad slot available. If you’re winning the top spot in most of the auctions your ad set enters, you could expand targeting to get more reach or test lowering your bid somewhat to see how that affects the win rate.

Using Impression Share and Absolute Impression share together can give you a better sense of the frequency with which competitors may be beating you out for the top ad slot, if you have a high Impression Share and relatively low Absolute Impression Share.

Keyword targeting. If you’re already running search campaigns, you might consider testing your top performing search keywords on Quora. It’s a little different than search in that you use keyword targeting on Quora to show your ads against relevant questions on the platform.

Like search, keywords on Quora are targeted at the ad group or ad set level.

There are two match types — broad match and phrase match — and the ability to add negative keywords. Broad match targets “close variations” of the keyword. With the narrower phrase match option, your ad will only show when a user’s search query includes the exact keyword phrase. Exclude words or phrases you don’t want your ads to show for with negative keywords.

Why you should care. Auction Insights give advertisers more visibility into how their ads are competing, allowing them to fine-tune creative and/or bids based on those insights.

The addition of keyword targeting could make search advertisers that haven’t tried Quora yet give it another look. As in search, keywords can be grouped in any number of ways, including by customer journey stage from top to bottom of the funnel to up-selling and retention. And like search campaigns, ad creatives can then be tailored to the keywords.

Quora now offers six primary types of ad targeting, including topic, question, audience, interest, broad and keyword targeting.


About The Author

Ginny Marvin is Third Door Media’s Editor-in-Chief, managing day-to-day editorial operations across all of our publications. Ginny writes about paid online marketing topics including paid search, paid social, display and retargeting for Search Engine Land, Marketing Land and MarTech Today. With more than 15 years of marketing experience, she has held both in-house and agency management positions. She can be found on Twitter as @ginnymarvin.

This marketing news is not the copyright of Scott.Services – please click here to see the original source of this article. Author: Ginny Marvin

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How did the Gillette video impact search traffic?

Gillette video search trends

Over the past couple weeks there was a lot of media coverage, in both traditional and social mediums discussing the Gillette “The Best a Man Can Be” ad.

The ad has a lot of layers to it.

But for the search engine marketing crowd, we know one of the most important questions is, “What was the impact on search traffic?”

What impact does creative like this have on a brand and that brand’s search volume?

This is especially interesting as we get closer to the Super Bowl. Brands have sunk millions of dollars into the ad spot and the creation of the ad itself.

Why do they make these investment choices? What is the impact to search traffic and volume?

In case you haven’t watched, here is the original video from Gillette.

Also worth watching,  Saturday Night Live parodied the video using Kool-Aid as the brand.

Now that we’ve seen the ad, let’s look at the corresponding searches.

How did the Gillette video impact search traffic?

I started by looking at Google Trends for the term “Gillette.”

As expected, it spiked over the past 90 days and was the highest since 2004.

Okay, maybe this is just people looking for the commercial, or information about the Patriots since they play at Gillette stadium.

gillette search traffic over time

So, I took a quick look at “Gillette Razor.”

Boom! Highest search traffic volume in 5 years, and not just be a little bit, but a massive spike.

gillette razor search traffic over time

So people were also specifically driven to look for the product by branded name.

This is where the magic really happens.

Taking a look at forecasted metrics from Google’s Keyword planner over the last 12 months, you can see that the average CPC is ~$1 less per click.

If you stack that up over the course of any given day or week you will save thousands of dollars.

CPC comparison between branded and unbranded keywords

Gillette is probably like a lot of us and read the articles about Nike and the Colin Kaepernick ad.

This ad had a similar affect. It was divisive and took a stand, but the end goal impact to shareholders was a 31% increase in sales.

The ad launched on September 3 and the Times published an article about it on September 10.

As you can see, Nike stock was on its way to a 52 week and all-time high, and has outperformed the Dow Jones over the past 12 months.

Nike search trends over time following Kaepernick ad

This is the type of impact that powerful branded ads can have on people.

The challenge for many of us is that we don’t have big branded budgets. We don’t work on brands that have the ability to take these types of risks.

So what information can we apply to this work in our own world?

Here are three things to consider when creating branded ads that might drive search traffic

1) Focus on quality

It doesn’t have to be a branded controversial TV ad, it just needs to be good.

Look at what Dollar Shave Club has done. They came from nowhere on the back of a quality YouTube spot which now has over 25 million views.

This is true for so many other brands who have launched themselves on Facebook, or driven significant sales on a purely direct response budget to start.

Dollar Shave Club search trends over time

2. Are you filling a consumer need with value?

Here is where a lot of brands have stepped in to challenge legacy brands, or leveraged their ability to solve problems by taking the friction out of something.

This is a big focus now with “digital transformation,” but there is a lot of truth to this when thinking about what value your ads are driving for customers.

Value can simply be selling them something they need like an iPhone charger, or removing friction from something that was previously painless, such as Uber/Lyft, or Pop sockets for phones.

Focus on the value your product is bringing and the corresponding ad space where that value is to be transacted.

This could be as simple as providing location extensions when someone is searching “running shoes” so your store can quickly and easily be found.

Help consumers get to the answer they are looking for quickly. Provide value by removing friction.

3) Are you monitoring attribution?

Watching how consumers move between tactics, and branded and non-branded keywords, is a great way to understand the impact of your advertising.

There are even some great ways to measure foot traffic now to help with “traditional” mediums like TV or Billboard. Doing your best to understand the measurement and inter-connectivity of your advertising will help justify these types of branded ads.

Takeaways

Overall, it doesn’t really matter if you liked or didn’t like the Gillette ad. The fact is it worked. It got people talking, and it drove up search traffic. Even if it has half of the impact that a similar ad had for Nike, the sales will follow.

So as much as we in search rely on consumers searching, remember there is still a lot of value in branded advertising, big and small, across mediums.

Related reading

link building techniques that work in 2019
2018 SERP changes impact SEO
google search console for small businesses

This marketing news is not the copyright of Scott.Services – please click here to see the original source of this article. Author: Jason Tabeling

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Facebook ad revenue tops $16.6 billion, driven by Instagram, Stories

After more than a year of criticism over its mismanagement of user data and privacy concerns, Facebook’s 2018 fourth-quarter earnings report for 2018 showed ad profits did not suffer. On Wednesday, Facebook reported advertising revenue at $16.6 billion for the final quarter of last year, up 30 percent year-over-year.

Total revenue earned during the quarter was $16.9 billion, with daily active users (DAU) at 1.52 billion, up 9 percent year over year.

Facebook reports strong ad revenue. Facebook reported its average price per ad decreased 2 percent in the fourth quarter, with the number of ad impressions served across its platforms up 34 percent. Facebook chief financial officer David Wehner says impression growth was primarily driven by ads on Instagram, both regular ads in the Instagram feed and Stories ads, along with Facebook mobile News Feed ads.

“Obviously, we believe we’ve got the best advertising products out there in terms of being able to deliver measurable business results to clients. And so we think that does help us in that environment,” said Wehner during the earnings report call. The CFO did note the company is facing a deceleration of revenue growth in 2019.

Facebook did not break out advertising revenue by ad product type, but did report 93 percent of ad revenue during the fourth quarter came from mobile advertising.

Facebook Stories ads and Instagram shopping. In response to a question during the earnings call regarding Stories ad adoption, Facebook chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg reported two million advertisers were currently using Stories ads — but did not clarify if those were Facebook Stories or Instagram Stories ad units. Facebook did say that Instagram Stories has reached 500 million daily users — half of the platform’s total one billion users.

CEO Mark Zuckerberg followed Sandberg’s comments saying the company still has a lot of work to do to monetize Facebook Stories at the same level as the News Feed.

“I’m confident that we’re going to get there, but I want to make sure that we’re giving the right outlook on how we expect the near future to go,” said Zuckerberg. The CEO said the area he’s most excited about is Instagram shopping and commerce opportunities.

“There’s a lot of natural activity happening here, and this year I expect us to deliver some qualitatively new experiences around that,” said Zuckerberg.

User growth across Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp. Facebook had 1.52 billion DAUs during the last quarter of 2018 — up nine percent year-over year — and 2.3 billion monthly active users.

Of the 1.52 billion global users during the fourth quarter, 186 million were located in the U.S. and Canada.

The company estimates 2.7 billion people around the world are using Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp or Messenger each month — with more than two billion using at least one of the platforms daily.

Why you should care. Any advertiser concerns over Facebook’s ongoing user privacy issues impacting the platform’s ad performance or user engagement appear unfounded based on this latest round of earnings data. Facebook’s decreased average ad prices and increased ad impressions are a boon for marketers wanting to optimize ad dollars.

“It’s clear that overall, the Facebook family of apps has the breadth of formats and the reach marketers are looking for when it comes to engaging with their audiences and placing ads,” says Yuval Ben-Itzhak, CEO of Socialbakers — a Facebook marketing partner.

Aaron Goldman, CMO for 4C (another Facebook marketing partner) expects Facebook video advertising to see more activity this year.

“In 2019, video will become an even bigger focus with formats like Stories taking center stage across the Facebook Inc. portfolio, which includes Messenger and WhatsApp alongside Instagram and Facebook,” says Goldman, “We also expect growth with in-stream video as Facebook delivers more long-form, curated and original programming through Watch and IGTV.”

This story first appeared on MarTech Today. For more on marketing technology, click here.


About The Author

Amy Gesenhues is Third Door Media’s General Assignment Reporter, covering the latest news and updates for Marketing Land and Search Engine Land. From 2009 to 2012, she was an award-winning syndicated columnist for a number of daily newspapers from New York to Texas. With more than ten years of marketing management experience, she has contributed to a variety of traditional and online publications, including MarketingProfs.com, SoftwareCEO.com, and Sales and Marketing Management Magazine. Read more of Amy’s articles.

This marketing news is not the copyright of Scott.Services – please click here to see the original source of this article. Author: Amy Gesenhues

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Where is Google Attribution?

In May 2017, Google announced the launch of a free version of Google Attribution. In October of that year, it said the tool had rolled out to “hundreds more” advertisers. But now, more than a year and a half later, it has stayed under the radar and has yet to fully roll out.

It’s not uncommon for Google — and other tech firms — to announce something and then never release it or release it much later than anyone expected. So where does Google Attribution stand? It’s still alive, and it’s still in beta.

The company says it is continuing to collect customer feedback and does not have any updates to share at this time. Agency marketers that have had clients testing it say they have been giving Google their input. In the course of those communications, one marketer heard about a tentative timeline of late 2019 for release, but said that was not definite.

What we’re waiting for

The big selling point of Google’s free attribution tool is to help marketers make more informed bidding decisions in Google Ads campaigns by letting them capture an ad’s contribution at any point along the conversion path, and not just when it’s the last click, as highlighted in a case study of Nordic Choice Hotels from September.

It pulls in data from Google Analytics, Google Ads and Google Search Ads 360 (formerly DoubleClick Search) and applies the advertiser’s chosen attribution model, including Google’s machine learning-powered model called data-driven attribution, across channels and devices. That data can then get fed back into automated bidding strategies in Google Ads or Google Search Ads 360.

Presumably, non-brand search and display campaigns that tend to be higher funnel will be likely to get more credit when looking at the full journey, and with Google’s automated Smart Bidding strategies, bids will be adjusted accordingly.

Early concerns

Some advertisers who are testing it out said they are worried that Google may favor its own channels. Several marketers in the beta spoke to us about their thoughts on the tool on the condition of anonymity. Because there’s no way to see exactly how much credit Google is assigning various touch points, marketers are left in the dark about the weighting formulas. Google can say it treats all touch points equally, but it’s hard to tell marketers to toss aside skepticism when they can’t see the data for themselves.

Other feedback from those testing the free tool is that actionable insights aren’t easily surfaced and still require digging to find.

Another agency executive said it’s definitely a work in progress with mixed results, but that Google Attribution is still promising. That team has been providing Google with feedback on issues, and currently recommend clients use it directionally.

At the enterprise level, Google deprecated the paid Attribution 360 digital attribution beta in October. There are attribution features in beta, including Model Explorer and ROI Analysis, available in Google Analytics 360. Attribution 360 is separate from Google’s TV Attribution product, which aims to show the cross-channel (i.e. digital and search) impact of television campaigns. Google is still focusing on cross-media metrics and working on evolving TV Attribution into a holistic video measurement solution that measures both TV and online video.

Google, of course, is not the only ad seller working on attribution tools to get marketers away from last click models. Amazon has an attribution tool of its own in beta. Facebook made its attribution tool available to all advertisers in October, after beta testing started in March 2017. Marketers have reported mixed reviews.

Resources on attribution and paid media


About The Author

Ginny Marvin is Third Door Media’s Editor-in-Chief, managing day-to-day editorial operations across all of our publications. Ginny writes about paid online marketing topics including paid search, paid social, display and retargeting for Search Engine Land, Marketing Land and MarTech Today. With more than 15 years of marketing experience, she has held both in-house and agency management positions. She can be found on Twitter as @ginnymarvin.

This marketing news is not the copyright of Scott.Services – please click here to see the original source of this article. Author: Ginny Marvin

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YouTube SEO: Optimizing your channel in 5 steps

youtube channel optimization

Here at Search Engine Watch we have written quite extensively over the years about how to optimize your YouTube videos to make sure they really stand out.

Ann Smarty’s top 5 tips from last year is a handy list. And for YouTube best practice, Pius Boachie’s post is a great read too.

As 2019 gets going, video is still growing as a great way to ensure visibility online and to provide web users with useful and engaging content.

It is also an increasingly competitive medium.

YouTube doesn’t disclose how many creators use the platform. And there’s obviously quite some difference between someone who posts daily and has 100k+ followers, versus anyone who’s ever once uploaded a video. Estimates, though, range from 50m to upwards of 150m.

We do know that YouTube has more than 1.8 billion monthly users — nearly rivaling Facebook’s 2.27 billion.

Optimizing your YouTube channel, then, should not be an afterthought.

Those who are really succeeding on YouTube have great channels. They look good, they showcase their best videos and they connect with others in their niche. They are a destination in their own right.

And they promote better engagement and more views of the videos there. This is massively important when it comes to having your videos rank in YouTube’s (and Google’s) SERPs.

Here are five pointers for ensuring your YouTube channel is optimized.

  1. Add channel art

Channel art in the case of YouTube refers to the banner that stretches across the top of the page in-between the search bar and the title of the channel.

It goes without saying that this should be eye-catching and on-brand – as well as being sized to the optimal 2560 x 1440 pixels – but it can be so much more.

It can also be a place to share important information about the channel, such as what day of the week videos are uploaded. Sam The Cooking Guy is a good example:

youtube channel optimization, example of channel art

As you can see, this banner is prime real estate for getting some key information across with Sam telling us what days of the week he posts new content. He also has a Call To Action (right hand side) for persuading us to subscribe, as well as links to his merch store, Facebook, Instagram and Twitter right in the banner too.

  1. Featured video or channel trailer?

YouTube also gives you the option to have a featured video or – for users who aren’t yet subscribed – a channel trailer.

Many successful channels opt to place a video they see as good example of the rest of their content. But, of course, it is possible to have more success with getting users to subscribe by making a for-purpose trailer about your channel.

example of using a description box for youtube channel optimization

Either way, be sure to use the description box to full effect by including around 100 words (or about 500 characters) to signal to visitors and the Google/YouTube algorithm what your channel is all about.

In the above example, Binging with Babish is very kindly linking out to Vulfpeck. But I would also recommend there being a CTA with links out to your website from here – it’s a really visible part of the page.

  1. Playlists

Once you really start building up your YouTube content, playlists certainly help make things more navigable.

Grouping together popular videos or those with a similar theme are good options. You will know your content best when it comes to working out what videos work well together. There’s no hard and fast rule here.

Remember, from an SEO point of view, videos which are getting good traffic and engagement tend to rank better.

So, make videos as easy to find by grouping and linking out to other similar videos/playlists in your channel from each video description. This will make things easier for viewers.

Don’t just rely on YouTube to get your content next in-line after other similar videos.

Be bold with playlists and link to them.

  1. Don’t forget the ‘About’ tab

It’s not the most visible page, but YouTube does provide an ‘About’ tab for you to add a description for your channel.

By the looks of things, you can be as wordy as you like here. You can also add a business email and links to website/social media/etc.

Links within the body text there aren’t clickable – but there’s a designated link area at the foot of the page.

  1. Link to other relevant channels

Linking out to the competition might seem a little odd, but it is in keeping with the community spirit of YouTube.

I find it best to think about it in terms of giving value to you visitors/subscribers. Make it easy for them to browse other great and relevant content.

Be part of the conversation.

Make sure you are uploading the best content that you can. And you might just find other channels start linking to you.

Takeaways for YouTube channel optimization

YouTube channels can really be used to great effect to ensure your video content is as visible as possible.

Good channel art, putting your best content front and center, and making your growing collection of video content more navigable via playlists and links are really important.

Graham Charlton points out in his piece How to optimize your videos for better ranking in YouTube that there are a great number of ranking factors that go into YouTube’s algorithm.

I’d argue a well-optimized channel is a good way for pushing up some important ones.

Other YouTube ranking factors

  • View Count – “Still an important indication of popularity,” according to Graham. Better visibility in a well-optimized channel may give a new video a view boost before having too much time to rank. This may help keep the counter ticking up well after the video is established. In turn, this signals to YouTube that it’s still important.
  • View Density – Graham says: “View density matters to YouTube. If your video receives a lot of views in a short space of time, it’s more likely to be pushed up the rankings.”
  • Likes – “These provide an indication of the engagement around a video,” Graham says. And, simply, the more visible your video is thanks to your channel, the more potential there is for likes and positive sentiment. (Assuming your content is brilliant!)
  • Comments – “A way for YouTube to gauge the authority and relevance of videos,” according to Graham. And more likely to give you the opportunity to respond, generate buzz, and keep YouTube’s community spirit alive.

Note: the YouTube Creators Academy is also a great resource. Check it out!

YouTube is quite generous in what it allows you to do.

If your video content is strong and well optimized – you owe it to yourself to make sure the channel in which it resides shines too.

Related reading

This marketing news is not the copyright of Scott.Services – please click here to see the original source of this article. Author: Luke Richards

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First Page Search Bids: Should You Go All In?

The number of insight-driven tools Google and Bing have given us over the years has grown. As someone who loves to assess risks ad nauseam, bid simulator metrics have been a real treat for me. But I have found that the standard options they offer don’t always jive with how I like to plan. When looking at keywords that are living below the first page, I want to understand the impact of giving those keywords a boost. Not a 300% boost. Not a first position boost. Just an elbow nudge of a boost.

In this post, I’ll walk you through my way of projecting (read: a little manual, a little granular) impact of keywords buried at the bottom of the deck and how to evaluate if the financial risk is worth getting them to see the light again.

Ante Up

You have a pretty good bid strategy set up, focusing on boosting your top performers, getting the most for your buck with dayparting. All those things are great but inevitably a keyword’s visibility fluctuates. Increased competition, seasonality, current events–all can drive a keyword up and down.

And when a keyword is down, sometimes it just hangs out there a while until you give it a nudge again. When you customize your columns, you can choose from several different options. All will help you understand the potential impact of changes.

Unfortunately, it doesn’t always work out when you look at things.

Okay so these have 0 clicks now and no sign of improvement if I raise the bid? Can that be accurate? I like to think no. But I’m not about to pour money into keywords if I don’t really understand what it is going to do to my bottom lines: Cost and CPA.

Throw It All Down

Steps to understanding impact:

  1. Download 30-day (or 14- or 90-) keyword report for all enabled keywords
  2. Include clicks, impressions, CTR, cost, conversions, CVR, lost IS (rank), lost top IS (rank)
  3. Calculate the difference between your current bid and the first page bid
  4. Assume anything with 0 impressions will get at least 1 impression with your bid change
  5. Assume anything with 1 click will get at least 1 click with your bid change
  6. Assume anything with 0 conversions will continue to have 0 conversions

Are you thinking, “Why would she assume people are going to click but not assume people are going to convert?” I’ll tell you why: I’m a pessimist.

Kidding aside, I want to assume there will be a financial impact but I don’t want to assume the financial impact will have positive results. I am assessing risk here, remember?

So you have your Excel sheet.

Now let’s calculate the impact.

  1. Difference between current Max CPC and First Page CPC
  2. Estimate New Impressions
  3. Estimate New Clicks
  4. Project cost assuming CTR remains the same
  5. Project conversions assuming CVR remains the same.

Now, about all the other keywords floating around with bids currently set above first page. Just leave them alone. Don’t touch those guys. Pretend they are going to perform exactly the same in the next 30 days (when we all know they are really going to perform better, right? Because of your next-level bid optimizations you got going).

Put it all together and what do you get?

Now you have an aggregate look at what you could expect if you wink-wink nudge-nudge those little keywords to the first page. Then you can ask yourself:

  • If I don’t get any more conversions, will this be worth it?
  • Do I have a plan in place to keep an eye on search queries?
  • What is my threshold for testing these keywords at the higher bid? At what point do I say “these keywords are no longer valuable to the account”? (Do you know when to hold ‘em? Know when to fold ‘em?)

If you were paying attention, I told you to download lost IS metrics when you downloaded your report. Why did I do this?

Full House

Because now you can understand where you are losing out and come up with a tiered bid strategy to remain competitive.

Build out custom bid rules layered with conditions to protect yourself from overdoing it.

If you have been in the PPC game for 8 months or 8 years, you know nothing is ever certain. Odds are things out of your control will require you to shift your strategy. But I find doing a wee bit of work on the front end will allow you to mitigate your risk in the long game.

Now that I’ve shown my hand, what do you have? Let us know @ppchero!

This marketing news is not the copyright of Scott.Services – please click here to see the original source of this article. Author: Lauren Rosner

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3 powerful ways to maximize data to grow your e-commerce business

Those on the outside think the e-commerce game is an easy way to make some quick cash.

But, operating an e-commerce company is no effortless endeavor and building a profitable brand is even more challenging. Transforming new visitors into loyal customers can sometimes seem to be a difficult feat, and a costly one at that.

Part of the difficulties in these undertakings is learning which offers, messaging, tactics and techniques yield the most fruitful results across a business’s funnels.

While “blind growth” can certainly occur, it’s a bit of a gamble and can be drastically enhanced through effective learning to leverage and utilize the data available to an eCommerce proprietor. This is critical for establishing business longevity and vitality.

In fact, an IDG study found that 78 percent of companies claim that data collection holds the potential to fundamentally alter how they do business.

Data collection and analysis enable retailers to uncover customer preferences, needs and personalization opportunities that will help to gain and retain an increased number of prospects, augment conversions and grow sales exponentially.

Fortunately for digital merchants, in today’s tech-laden landscape, customer data and collection tools are abounding. Once you learn how to pull out meaningful data points and turn them into actionable solutions, you can considerably scale your business.

Here are three powerful ways to leverage data to effectively increase sales.

Expose customer interests

Prospects have a wide range of needs, desires and interests that they research, analyze and fulfill online.

Google can help you figure out what those interests are so that you can better serve your customer’s needs and desires.

While it’s important to understand demographic information like your audience’s age range, gender split, location and so forth, Google Analytics helps e-commerce merchants drill down into consumer details with its Affinity Categories report.

This report details, “…lifestyles similar to TV audiences, for example, Technophiles, Sports Fans, and Cooking Enthusiasts.” Moreover, the In-Market Segments report discloses product-purchase interests.

These bits of information are invaluable for e-commerce purveyors as it helps to uncover what consumer categories are products your audience is interested in – crucial to increasing sales.

The utilization of this data can help your brand more closely align with the things that are valuable and noteworthy to your users, while also serving to generate superior content marketing efforts that can improve your site’s search rankings, backlink profile and repeat patronage.

Increase Average Order Values

A site’s average order value (AOV) is one of the most important KPIs for e-commerce businesses to measure and maximize. Higher values mean that you are likely providing a fantastic shopping experience via curation and design elements.

Your AOV is simply your shop’s total revenue for a period, divided by the number of orders placed in that same timeframe.

For instance, if your store generated $15,000 last month from 986 orders, the revenue ($15,000) divided by the number of orders (986) would equate to an average order value of $15.21.

While there are several ways to grow your e-commerce business (i.e., acquiring more customers, increasing repeat business, etc.), boosting your AOV is the tactic that costs the least, if anything at all.

There are various strategies for bolstering this number. You can:

  • Cross-sell relevant products.
  • Offer free shipping for orders above $XX.
  • Provide discounts for purchases on multiples of the same item.
  • Supply coupons for the next purchase that reaches a specific dollar amount.

The key to reliably increasing the AOV comes through analyzing the data generated by each of the various strategies.

Try A/B testing every strategy to see how they compare to one another and to establish which technique increases the AOV most, and most reliable.

Reduce shopping cart abandonment

According to the Baymard Institute, the average shopping cart abandonment rate is approximately 70 percent.

There are a variety of reasons the desertion occurs; however, the top three reasons are:

  • Extra costs too high (shipping, tax, fees)
  • The site wanted me to create an account
  • Too long/complicated checkout process

By examining your site’s bounce rate, you can establish exactly where consumers are leaving your site and if your store is harming itself with any of these prevalent sales roadblocks.

To dig down into this data and obtain meaningful insights, segment your bounce rate in a variety of ways–particularly by “New vs. Returning” users and by “Device.”

Depending on where you find that visitors are leaving your site, you can optimize the checkout experience to effectively reduce your cart abandonment rate.

If users are leaving at the beginning of the checkout process, you are likely experiencing issues around account creation and possible lack of guest checkout options. To solve this, implement guest checkout to encourage new customers to purchase as simply as possible.

If prospects bounce in the middle of the process, your site’s checkout is probably too long or complicated. If this is the case, reduce your checkout to as few pages and fields as possible.

If consumers abandon their cart at the very end, it is likely a result of fees. Ensure that users are aware of any potential fees beforehand and consider providing them with shipping information and a tax calculator to establish this information before the final screen.

However, doing this may not prevent them from bouncing. In this case, it can be wise to utilize exit surveys that incentivize consumers to complete their purchase with coupons or other offers. These are particularly effective on shopping cart pages.

Learning to harness the data at your disposal can be a bit intimidating. However, effectively learning to do so provides your business with the necessary information to increase sales and traffic while gaining a leg up on competitors who fail to analyze this digital gold.


Opinions expressed in this article are those of the guest author and not necessarily Marketing Land. Staff authors are listed here.


About The Author

Ronald Dod is the chief marketing officer and co-founder of Visiture, an end-to-end e-commerce marketing agency focused on helping online merchants acquire more customers through the use of search engines, social media platforms, marketplaces and their online storefronts. His passion is helping leading brands use data to make more effective decisions in order to drive new traffic and conversions.

This marketing news is not the copyright of Scott.Services – please click here to see the original source of this article. Author: Ronald Dod

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New Google Search Console Ports Security Issues Section

Google has ported another feature from the old Search Console to the new, the security issues section. Google said on Twitter “We hope you don’t need to use a Security Issues tab” but if you do, it has been migrated to the new Search Console.

Google made a new section named “Security & Manual Actions” in the side bar, it was previous just “manual actions.” In that section is a link to see “Security Issues.” Here is a screen shot:

Hopefully after you click on it, you see this:

Here is an example screen shot Google shared with less exciting news:

You can learn more about the types of security issues would post here in this help doc at Google.

Forum discussion at Twitter.

This marketing news is not the copyright of Scott.Services – please click here to see the original source of this article. Author: barry@rustybrick.com (Barry Schwartz)

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How to Leverage Natural Syndication Networks to Earn More Links

As a content marketer, I believe that the best way to improve domain authority—and therefore search engine ranking—is to earn a large number of links from high-authority publishers. To do this successfully, you have to produce top-quality, relevant and interesting content that journalists will want to write about.

In my last post for SEMrush, I talked about how digital PR specialists can improve their outreach emails, citing an internal analysis of my team’s successful pitches as evidence of what works. I talked through a few major points: subject lines, pitch length, closing, and follow up best practices.

If you read that post, you already know how to write a successful email pitch. In this post, we are going to cover who to pitch. That is, which publishers deliver the most bang for your buck (or, the most ROI on your pitch) when it comes to content marketing outreach.

In 2018, our media relations team earned 41,545 press mentions for our client content marketing campaigns. These press mentions appeared on a variety of top-tier, national, international, and local websites across all verticals. Note: 1,135 of those press mentions were the result of direct outreach to a journalist by one of our media relations specialists.

So, where did the other ~40,000 stories come from? Two words: natural syndication.

What Are Publisher Syndication Networks?

My first encounter with a publisher syndication network occurred over three years ago when I earned my first placement on USA Today; a great placement for someone new to media relations. After the initial excitement of seeing the story I pitched come to life wore off, it was business as usual. I continued pitching the content to other publishers. As I was list-building, however, I came across the same USA Today story—by the same author—published on multiple websites with unique domains. How could this be?

USA Today is owned by Gannett Company, an entity that owns over 100 daily newspapers as well as close to 1,000 weekly newspapers. While the article didn’t syndicate to all of Gannet’s properties, it did get published on about 20 separate online newspapers.

So, a single email pitch earned placements on 20 unique domains with distinctive audiences? That is some high ROI if you ask me.

USA Today isn’t alone in this effect. Other publishers act as hubs, or influencers, publishing articles that are either automatically syndicated (like in USA Today’s case) or organically “picked up” by other journalists looking for reputable stories to feature within their beat.

So, which publishers act as the biggest influencers of content distribution?

After three years of pitching content to nearly every online publisher in the United States, I have developed a deep intuition of which domains have the most syndication potential for our clients’ content. But my team wanted to learn more.

Using SEMrush, Fractl co-founder, Kristin Tynski, took a look at the link networks of the top 400 most trafficked American publishers online. She then used Gephi, a powerful network visualization tool to make sense of this enormous web of links. Essentially, the visualization below shows the relationships each unique publisher has with each other.

Publisher Syndication NetworksPublisher Syndication Networks – Fractl Research

Tools like SEMrush and Gephi allow us to more deeply understand how online news publications and influential niche blogs interact with one another. We were able to gain insight into how content is distributed and syndicated through link networks.

Click here to interact with the visualization.

There are some immediate relationships we can recognize just from clicking around on the visualization:

  • Nodes clustered around each other are publishers that link to each other often. A good example is NBC.com, MSNBC.com, and Today.com. They are all owned by the same proprietor. The closeness of these nodes is the result of heavy interlinking and story syndication.

  • Some news publishers grouped near other news publishers have similar political leanings. Liberal-leaning publishers Politico, Salon, The Atlantic, and Washington Post are all grouped together, while more conservative publishers Breitbart, The Daily Caller, and BizPac Review are grouped.

Why Understanding Syndication Networks Will Vastly Increase Campaign Success

If you had the choice of sending a pitch and earning a placement or sending a pitch and earning 20 placements, which would you choose?

When you start to understand which news outlets have the largest syndication networks, you are empowered to prioritize those high-syndication publications over publications with lower reach.

After all, not all placements are created equally.

It all comes down to list-building. While both a travel writer at PopSugar and a travel writer at Reuters might enjoy your data-driven travel content, the Reuters writer has a wider influence, plain and simple.

As a result, the content you are pitching will earn significantly more widespread link pickups.

By using the visualization above, you can clearly identify the top publishers for list-building. They are not surprising: CNN, The New York Times, BBC, & Reuters are immediately obvious. The New York Times enjoys earning the most Pulitzer prizes of all time—and that should give you an indication of why they are a trusted source for other journalists to find authoritative story ideas.

If your content gets picked up by any of these sites, it is almost guaranteed that you will earn dozens—if not hundreds—of press mentions from other websites without any additional outreach on your part.

How to Leverage Natural Syndication Networks to Expand Your Reach  

Step 1: Create Newsworthy, Relevant, Unique, and Share-worthy Content

There is a reason that earning a placement on the New York Times is such a big deal—it is notoriously difficult to do. If you are trying to organically earn exposure on influential content hubs like the NYT, the Washington Post, or CNN, you can’t start with a drab piece of content.

So what makes newsworthy, relevant, unique, and share-worthy content? According to SEMrush, “quality content relies on precise analytics and trustworthy data. When content is not supported by data, one can never be sure that it will directly hit the audience’s pain points.

After years of experience, I confidently agree that “data-driven content marketing is what produces the most high-quality backlinks we receive for our clients. Here are some ideas for finding the data sources that can become the basis of your content strategy: 

Once you have your data, learn what makes content worthy of high-authority placements by including these three characteristics of high-quality content.

Step 2: Identify High-Authority Publishers with Large Natural Syndication Networks

Build out a list of dream publishers for your content.

When evaluating whether to select a publisher or a journalist for outreach, there are four main qualifiers you should be thinking about. 

1. Topical Relevance 

Identify a few choice writers or editors that cover the specific beat that your content is relevant to.

It might seem obvious, but this key qualifier is often neglected by PR practitioners that care more about pitch volume than their reputation. Irrelevant pitches are very high on the journalist pet peeves list and will land your email in the trash folder 99% of the time. 

prfail

2. Domain Authority 

Domain Authority (DA) is “a search engine ranking score developed by Moz that predicts how well a website will rank on search engine result pages (SERPs). A Domain Authority score ranges from one to 100, with higher scores corresponding to a greater ability to rank.” — Moz

Domain Authority is a third-party metric developed by Moz to help marketers identify the strength of their website. While Google isn’t completely transparent about their ranking algorithm, DA is a scoring system that you could use to compare websites against each other. Domain Authority is a good qualifying metric to use when building an outreach list. Generally, the higher the DA of a website, the wider their audience, and the more likely that they have broad natural syndication networks. 

A good rule of thumb is to select publishers for your outreach list with a Domain Authority of 60 or higher, depending on the content you’re promoting. Moz created a free Google Chrome extension called the MozBar that you can use to check the DA of the news publishers on your list. 

3. Social Engagement

The goal of any good outreach activity should be to get whatever you are pitching in front of as many eyes as possible, within your target audience. For example, if you are representing a fitness brand and promoting jogging-related content, who would be better to pitch than a health and fitness journalist at a lifestyle publication with an active social media presence and a broad reach? And, how might you find this journalist? 

Buzzsumo is one tool that every marketer should have in their arsenal — I use every day to help find the most powerful influencers within any given niche. Here’s how a quick Buzzsumo search can help you identify who to pitch in a matter of minutes. 

Buzzsumo

First, head over to Buzzsumo.com and select the Influencers tab at the top. Then, type in your search query.

For this example, I wrote “fitness writer”. Buzzsumo allows you to filter results, and for this query, I selected Bloggers, Influencers, Companies, and Journalists (I deselected “Regular people”). I also selected “Active Influencers” to ensure that this person actively engages on social media and “Verified Influencers” to weed out unverified Twitter users. After you have typed in your query and selected your filters, click “Search”.

Here is one of the first results I see from my “fitness writer” query: 

buzzsumoresultamanda.png

When you check out Amanda Loudin’s Twitter profile, it is plain to see that she would be an excellent outreach target for a running campaign. Not only is her featured image a picture of her running, but her Twitter bio clearly shows her authority as a fitness writer for the Washington Post, Outside Online, Runner’s World, and ESPN Woman. She also has 11,000 followers and has tweeted in the last 3 hours. Who better to pitch than her for your jogging campaign? It is that easy. 

amandatwitter.png

4. The Potential for a Broad-Reaching Syndication Network

Unfortunately, not every target on your list can have broad-sweeping syndication networks. But you can be sure to at least include a few targets that have the potential to naturally syndicate content across the Internet. 

By using the one-of-a-kind interactive visualization our co-founder created using Gephi and SEMrush, you can easily identify top publishers with massive link networks to include on your outreach list. 

To figure out which sites enjoy the most links from the widest variety of sites, look to the most central nodes on the visualization. You will immediately identify Reuters, CNN, and the NYTimes are located at the center, with large volumes of links incoming from all over; this basically means that these sites get linked to the most often from other sites, often as sources. If CNN covers something, other journalists might pick up the same story and write it for their own publication. 

You also may realize that the tighter the cluster of nodes are together, the more interlinking happens between them. Publishers that appear closer together are often either owned by the same company (like Gannett) or have built-in automatic link syndication relationships. A good example is the Gizmodo Media Group. Gizmodo owns Deadspin, Gizmodo, Jalopnik, Jezebel, Kotaku, and Lifehacker. The closeness of nodes in this group is the result of heavy interlinking and story syndication.

After you have identified which publishers with large linking networks you would like to target, you can search for individual journalists at those publications using Google search operators. For example, say I want to include CNN on my outreach list for the jogging content. I might enter “site:cnn.com exercise” and filter results from the last year. 

On the first page of results, this article comes up: “Three benefits of (and three precautions about) outdoor winter exercise”. The author of the article, Dr. Melina Jampolis, writes a column for CNN and might be a good fit for your data-driven jogging content. A placement with CNN could be the first of many as a result of CNN’s broad natural syndication network. 

Step 3: Send a Killer Pitch

If you have great content, and you have built a list of influential journalists and publishers in your topic vertical, the only thing standing between you and a massive, diverse backlink portfolio is your pitch.

Between the subject line, the introduction, the pitch body and the close, that is a lot of pressure on a single email! Learn how to optimize your media pitch in my previous SEMrush post.

Not All Placements Are Considered Equal

Taking advantage of natural publisher syndication networks can mean the difference between generating less than a handful of links or hundreds of press mentions for your content.

I encourage you to test this strategy out with your next content marketing campaign. If you do, let me know how it went in the comments below!

The link graphs of news syndication networks were built using backlink exports from SEMrush. The visualization we created is free for you to use to optimize your own content outreach practices.

This marketing news is not the copyright of Scott.Services – please click here to see the original source of this article. Author:

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