Tuesday, 30 April 2019

Google Search Algorithm Update Fluctuations From March 20th to 22nd

As you know, we had a pretty big Google update that Google confirmed as a core update on March 12th. Around March 20th, 21st and 22nd, I saw the forum chatter spike back up a bit and the tools light up – but it wasn’t as huge as that last update and we were busy with the rel=prev/next thing.

Now that both the chatter and the rel=prev/next thing have somewhat chilled, I figured I’d document this unconfirmed March 20th through 22nd update. I suspect it is related to the March 12th roll out that can take weeks to fully roll out according to Google:

That being said, I suspect these fluctuations may be related to the March 2019 core update finalizing its roll out but who knows, it can be related to something completely different.

Here is some of the chatter from WebmasterWorld around these dates:

My traffic seems to be down to a trickle today after a huge recovery last week. Whatever they did today has reversed some of the gains. I think it’s better to not get too excited anymore :/

We were not hit by any significant penalty in the past, and we got a decent boost with the initial update.

Something changed yesterday, and we are now below the pre-update level.

My homepage is showing some signs of life today. It’s sometimes popping up on page 2. No traffic increase. Desperately praying for a turnaround at this stage.

They are definitely tweaking something today. Feels like the core update.

Then, March 12, boom, I was almost back to where I was last year. Traffic climbed until March 18, then started dropping again and I’ve lost most of my gains. I’m not sure what’s going on.

Here are what the tools show:

Mozcast:

click for full size

SERPMetrics:

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Algoroo:

click for full size

Accuranker:

click for full size

Advanced Web Rankings:

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RankRanger:

click for full size

Cognitive SEO:

click for full size

SEMRush:

click for full size

Have you noticed changes from the March 12th to the March 20, 21, 22 timeframe?

Forum discussion at WebmasterWorld.

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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Google Image Search Tests Article Slide In Feature

Here is a new test spotted by Jose Varghese on Twitter where Google Image search is letting you drag up the article an image is sourced from. As you can see from the GIF or video below, Google lets you drag up the Verge article from the bottom of the image preview screen.

I personally cannot replicate this but it was captured nicely by Jose:

Can you replicate this?

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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WhatsApp future vision: ‘Private commerce’ and payments

Today at Facebook’s F8 developer conference, CEO Mark Zuckerberg made a series of announcements tied to the company’s future vision of more privacy channels for users. He also announced a significant redesign of the Facebook site and app.

WhatsApp Product Catalog. As part of a broader discussion of private messaging, Zuckerberg introduced the WhatsApp Business Catalog. This will be a way for small businesses to showcase products to users interacting with them on WhatsApp. A screenshot was leaked online not quite a year ago that pointed to such an offering.

Facebook has been building out business-friendly features in WhatsApp, including the coming introduction of ads. Launched in early 2018, WhatsApp business is primarily directed toward small business owners.

Businesses will be able to upload images and descriptions of products, though there were few details beyond the announcement itself. Conspicuously absent was any discussion of whether those products might be sold directly through the app.

Instagram expanded shoppable posts to more businesses today. There’s also Instagram in-app checkout with a limited group of brands for now. Accordingly, I would expect similar developments for WhatsApp.

Global payments platform. Zuckerberg also sees WhatsApp as a global payments platform (like Venmo or its owner PayPal). The company not long ago introduced WhatsApp Pay in India and Facebook says about a million people are currently using it.

The combination of products and payments on WhatsApp points to its future as a global “private commerce” platform. Zuckerberg called out small business use cases in particular. “It’s important for all the small businesses out there that don’t have a web presence,” he said. This describes much of the developing world, where WhatsApp is heavily penetrated.

Zuckerberg also believes that private messaging/social communication will become a “primary way” that businesses interact with customers going forward. However, it has yet to materialize on Facebook Messenger.

Facebook acquired WhatsApp in 2014 for roughly $19 billion in cash and stock. Citing differences with Zuckerberg, both WhatsApp co-founders have now departed the company.

Why it matters. WhatsApp claims about 1.5 billion users globally – a third of which use the app daily. Ads are coming this year. But it’s also clear that Facebook sees a significant commerce opportunity for the platform, which it may emphasize equally.

One interesting question is whether all of Facebook’s apps and platforms will share capabilities and feature parity and simply be positioned for different audiences. That seems to be where it’s going, with ads, commerce and cross-app communication coming to all of Facebook’s messaging platforms.


About The Author

Greg Sterling is a Contributing Editor at Search Engine Land. He writes a personal blog, Screenwerk, about connecting the dots between digital media and real-world consumer behavior. He is also VP of Strategy and Insights for the Local Search Association. Follow him on Twitter or find him at Google+.

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Daily Search Forum Recap: April 30, 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:

  • Google Earnings Show Paid Click Growth Declining With Cost Per Click
    Most Google earnings report show how the cost-per-click, the amount an advertiser pays when someone clicks on their search ads, have been getting less expensive. But most of those earnings have shown growth in terms in the number of clicks ads in general are getting. Well, not this past earnings report, which showed a 9-percent decrease in paid clicks from Q4 to Q1.
  • Give Google Feedback On The Future Of The Disavow Link Tool
    Last week we reported that Google is still undecided on the future of the disavow link tool. This came up on Reddit and John Mueller from Google asked Reddit users for feedback on how they see the future version of the disavow link tool would look like in the new Google Search Console.
  • Google Works To Fix How Many Legs Horses & Snakes Have
    For the past few days or so, folks on social media are going a bit nuts about how Google doesn’t know how many legs a horse or snake have. If you try to Google it, Google will tell you horses have six legs and snakes have four legs – this is no joke.
  • Google: Search Console Backlink Report Only Report Not Fully Fixed Yet
    I asked Google for an official update on the Search Console status, since we reported yesterday that it appears most of the reports are back to normal. Shortly after Google posted on Twitter saying that all the reports are back to normal minus the backlink report that “still needs some time to update.”
  • Google Search Snippets With Image Collage Carousel
    We know Google has image carousels in some of their search results snippets, that isn’t new. But is showing a collage of images a new feature in this image carousel? Here is a screen shot from Mordy Oberstein as he posted it on Twitter.
  • Google Broccoli – How Colorful
    Only Google can make broccoli look yummy and colorful. Well, maybe not only Google but hey. Here is a photo from Instagram showing that at the Google Dublin office they had a Google Green Market day.

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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How connected are you to your brand’s customer service?

My last post here generated some great conversations with readers, especially among people who wanted to go deeper into the concept of marketing-as-service and how to make that happen even while you’re dealing with the realities of business life.

This recurring conversation centered on one key point: Service is something we marketers have to have at the core of our lives, professional practice and skill sets. It should be the first thing you pull out of your marketing toolbox.

What I also heard from marketers boiled down to this question: “I get that, but how do I get in touch with the service component at my company? I don’t know where to start because everybody is going off in different directions.”

That’s a great point. You begin by looking at your company and thinking about everybody who has a hand in serving your customers. It begins at the top with your CEO, your founders, your CMO, then looks at  your web and customer support team, other people in marketing and sales and anyone else in your company who comes into direct contact with your customers.

I’m always telling marketers to invest a couple of hours a week in themselves to become smarter marketers. You also can apply this rule to focus on the service component of your job and your customers, too. Invest in your customer base in the same way you want them to invest in your company, whether it’s monetarily or by giving you their primary email address so you have the most dependable way to contact and identify them.

With that objective in mind, here are three easy ways to connect with the service component within your company:

1. Talk to your customer service reps.

When was the last time you sat in with people in your customer service or support department? Maybe you had a short training session when you started at your company, or you served a rotation as a marketing executive where you sat and listened in on the phone.

Your customer service/support group is your primary way to get in touch with your end users, whether you market on the B2B or B2C side. They are on the front lines with your customers every day, and they probably know them better than almost anyone else in your company.

B2B marketers: Sit in with your account execs. It’s an invaluable resource to hear what your customers want, to learn first-hand about their struggles, frustrations and questions.

B2C marketers: Put on a headset and listen to calls. You don’t have to field questions or problems yourself, but you should listen to the interaction – what’s bothering your customers, how they express their questions or frustrations and how your call-center staff people manage solutions and speak to customers.

If you’re truly in that service mindset, where you’re homing in on the age of the customer ideals, then you’ll walk away with two or three programs that you can launch via email to resolve questions.

As a marketer, part of your job is to help reduce call volume from your customer service reps. Finding ways to address issues is one way to achieve that.

Begin by asking your CS people this question: “What are your 10 most regular questions?” These are questions or issues that they can answer in their sleep without having to look at scripts or talking points.

Once you pull a list together, think about how you can solve for them. Can you answer those questions in a transactional message? Develop a trigger that sends a helpful email whenever someone meets a condition?

See if you can collect enough data to help you predict questions, then create content (emails, FAQs, etc.) to address them. This could be as easy as looking at your browse remarketing program and assigning it to a page that’s focused on customer service.

Listening to your customers through your call center (or reviewing bot or online contacts) is essential for heightening the service component of your messaging.

2. Talk to sales.

First, you learned more about your customers when they had questions, problems or complaints. Now it’s time to learn about the people who aren’t your customers yet.

B2B marketers: The best people to help you out are your sales reps. Don’t just chat with your VP of sales, though. Your top sales executives are important, but their status makes it hard for you to get close to the customers.

Like your customer-service people, your sales reps are your front-line troops. Ask them questions like the ones you posed to your CS people: “What are the top 10 questions you get from prospects? What are the top themes you hear? What are the top objections that keep people from doing business with us?”

If you’re in the right service mindset, you’ll come up with automation programs that speak to these objectives, reflect themes or answer questions. You might be able to address them in an onboarding or welcome program or in dedicated emails.

Later on, you can go back to your sales reps and see if these questions keep coming up.

B2C marketers: Talk to your web team – the people who are in charge of developing your site and analyzing the results.

If you have physical locations, head out to one or more. Walk around, and watch people as they shop. Talk to the manager and employees and find out what they see as the demographics of your company, what people ask about and what they say when they return purchases.

Talking to the people who sell to your customers will help you understand better how to craft your message. As an example, you might learn ways to use headlines, images, product descriptions and disclaimers more effectively.

3. Talk to your customers.

No, I’m not telling you to set up a focus group. Focus groups are expensive and tricky to set up. You have to structure them correctly to be sure your participants tell you what you need to know instead of what they think you want to hear.

Instead, pull a panel together from the people who have bought from you, such as customers in your loyalty group or shoppers in your local stores. Then, meet with them in person several times over a year or longer so that you get to know and trust each other. A panel like this will deliver richer, less structured information than you can get from a focus group or survey.

This isn’t as much a focus group so much as a gateway for customers to talk to you openly during the lifecycle and an idea lab for testing out ideas. For you to bounce ideas off of.  They’re not the end all and be all of your decision process, but can provide insight and opinion on your terms.

Find the time, it’s there

Over the last couple of columns, I’ve asked you to do more in your job than you think you have time for. Marketer after marketer tells me they don’t have enough time, resources or money.

I get it. I’ve been there on the front lines. I’ve run and consulted for massive email operations for major retailers with brick-and-mortar locations.

The noise of the day permeates all that we do. We get into a monotonous cycle of spinning stuff out because the goal is doing a job instead of elevating a channel.

But, think a moment about what I want you to do. It’s a low-threshold ask, just an hour a month or week. It’s there if you look for it.

On average, people spend about four or five hours a day on the work they’re actually paid to do. The time is there if you look for it. And, it’s important. You don’t need a statistic or a motivational quote to justify spending that time.

Finding better ways to serve your customers is enough of a reason to make the time.

I can tell you from my own experience in real life that it’s worth it. It works. And it will make you a better, smarter marketer.


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


About The Author

Ryan Phelan is co-founder of Origin Email and brings nearly two decades of worldwide online marketing and email experience. Ryan is a respected thought leader and nationally distinguished speaker with a history of experience from Adestra, Acxiom, BlueHornet, Sears Holdings, Responsys and infoUSA. In 2013 he was named one of the top 30 strategists in online marketing and is the Chairman Emeritus of the EEC Advisory Board. Ryan also works with start-up companies as an advisor, board member and investor.

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

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Nice Interior Photo Of Google NYC Office

Interior Photo Of Google NYC Office

Ryan Warrender, a Googler and also a UX guy, snapped this photo of the Google New York City office and posted it on Instagram. People are really liking it. You can see the greenery within the NYC office from a nice angle.

Here is the photo on Instagram, check out all the comments there.

Hat tip @si1very.

This post is part of our daily Search Photo of the Day column, where we find fun and interesting photos related to the search industry and share them with our readers.

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 check for duplicate content to improve your site’s SEO

Improving your site's SEO by checking duplicate content

Publishing original content to your website is, of course, critical for building your audience and boosting your SEO.

The benefits of unique and original content are twofold:

  1. Original content delivers a superior user experience.
  2. Original content helps ensure that search engines aren’t forced to choose between multiple pages of yours that have the same content.

However, when content is duplicated either accidentally or on purpose, search engines will not be duped and may penalize a site with lower search rankings accordingly. Unfortunately, many businesses often publish repeated content without being aware that they’re doing so. This is why auditing your site with a duplicate content checker is so valuable in helping sites to recognize and replace such content as necessary.

This article will help you better understand what is considered duplicate content, and steps you can take to make sure it doesn’t hamper your SEO efforts.

How does Google define “duplicate content”?

Duplicate content is described by Google as content “within or across domains that either completely matches other content or are appreciably similar”. Content fitting this description can be repeated either on more than one page within your site, or across different websites. Common places where this duplicate content might be hiding include duplicated copy across landing pages or blog posts, or harder-to-detect areas such as meta descriptions that are repeated in a webpage’s code. Duplicate content can be produced erroneously in a number of ways, from simply reposting existing content by mistake to allowing the same page content to be accessible via multiple URLs.

When visitors come to your page and begin reading what seems to be newly posted content only to realize they’ve read it before, that experience can reduce their trust in your site and likeliness that they’ll seek out your content in the future. Search engines have an equally confusing experience when faced with multiple pages with similar or identical content and often respond to the challenge by assigning lower search rankings across the board.

At the same time, there are sites that intentionally duplicate content for malicious purposes, scraping content from other sites that don’t belong to them or duplicating content known to deliver successful SEO in an attempt to game search engine algorithms. However, most commonly, duplicated content is simply published by mistake. There are also scenarios where republishing existing content is acceptable, such as guest blogs, syndicated content, intentional variations on the copy, and more. These techniques should only be used in tandem with best practices that help search engines understand that this content is being republished on purpose (described below).

SEO audit report that helps spot and rectify duplicate content

Source: Alexa.com SEO Audit

An automated duplicate content checker tool can quickly and easily help you determine where such content exists on your site, even if hidden in the site code. Such tools should display each URL and meta description containing duplicate content so that you can methodically perform the work of addressing these issues. While the most obvious practice is to either remove repeated content or add original copy as a replacement, there are several other approaches you might find valuable.

How to check for duplicate content

1. Using the rel=canonical tag

These tags can tell search engines which specific URL should be viewed as the master copy of a page, thus solving any duplicate content confusion from the search engines’ standpoint.

2. Using 301 redirects

These offer a simple and search engine-friendly method of sending visitors to the correct URL when a duplicate page needs to be removed.

3. Using the “noindex” meta tags

These will simply tell search engines not to index pages, which can be advantageous in certain circumstances.

4. Using Google’s URL Parameters tool

This tool helps you tell Google not to crawl pages with specific parameters. This might be a good solution if your site uses parameters as a way to deliver content to the visitor that is mostly the same content with minor changes (i.e. headline changes, color changes, etc). This tool makes it simple to let Google know that your duplicated content is intentional and should not be considered for SEO purposes.

Example of resolving duplication of meta tag descriptions

Source: Alexa.com SEO Audit

By actively checking your site for duplicated content and addressing any issues satisfactorily, you can improve not only the search rankings of your site’s pages but also make sure that your site visitors are directed to fresh content that keeps them coming back for more.

Got any effective tips of how you deal with on-site content duplication? Share them in the comments.

Kim Kosaka is Director of Marketing at Alexa.com.

Further reading:

Related reading

SEO writing guide From keyword to content brief
Using Python to recover SEO site traffic (Part three)

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

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Twitter puts focus on exclusive media partnerships to attract video advertisers

Twitter announced multiple video content partnerships with a variety of news and entertainment outlets on Monday during its Digital NewFronts event. The list includes deals that will bring exclusive video content to the platform from Univision, Wall Street Journal, Time Magazine, NFL, Live Nation, MTV and others, giving way to making more premium video ad inventory available to advertisers.

Why we should care

Twitter has made video a central pillar of its revenue growth strategy. More than half of its ad revenue already comes from video.

The partnerships span a range of original content. The Wall Street Journal is launching an original video show called “What’s Now,” and Univision will be delivering Spanish-language sports, news and entertainment content. Time is producing video content for Twitter connected to its “Time Person of the Year” and “Time 100” events.

Live Nation will host a content series, and MTV will be broadcasting VMA (Video Music Awards) programming content.

The broad mix of outlets partnering with Twitter cover news, tech, politics, music and sports and speak to a mix of demographics — aimed at appealing to a wide spectrum of brands.

More on the news

  • Twitter outlined a total of thirteen deals, including updated ones with existing partners such as the NFL, MLB, BuzzFeed and CNN.
  • Last month, Twitter introduced its “Everything is Timing” tool that gives marketers and publishers an aggregate view of when people on Twitter are watching video to help determine the best time post content.
  • Twitter reported revenue gains of 18% year over year for the first quarter of 2019, with ad engagements up 23%.

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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Optimizing for Searcher Intent Explained in 7 Visuals

Ever get that spooky feeling that Google somehow knows exactly what you mean, even when you put a barely-coherent set of words in the search box? You’re not alone. The search giant has an uncanny ability to un-focus on the keywords in the search query and apply behavioral, content, context, and temporal/historical signals to give you exactly the answer you want.

For marketers and SEOs, this poses a frustrating challenge. Do we still optimize for keywords? The answer is “sort of.” But I think I can show you how to best think about this in a few quick visuals, using a single search query.

First… A short story.

I sent a tweet over the weekend about an old Whiteboard Friday video. Emily Grossman, longtime friend, all-around marketing genius, and official-introducer-of-millenial-speak-to-GenXers-like-me replied.

Emily makes fun of Rand's mustache on Twitter

Ha ha Emily. I already made fun of my own mustache so…

Anywho, I searched Google for “soz.” Not because I didn’t know what it means. I can read between lines. I’m hip. But, you know, sometimes a Gen-Xer wants to make sure.

The results confirm my guess, but they also helped illustrate a point of frequent frustration I have when trying to explain modern vs. classic SEO. I threw together these seven visuals to illustrate.

There you have it friends. Classic SEO ranking inputs still matter. They can still help. They’re often the difference between making it to the top 10 vs. having no shot. But too many SEOs get locked into the idea that rankings are made up of a combination of the “Old School Five”:

  1. Keyword use
  2. Links to the page
  3. Domain authority
  4. Anchor text
  5. Freshness

Don’t get me wrong — sometimes, these signals in a powerful enough combination can overwhelm Google’s other inputs. But those examples are getting harder to find.

The three big takeaways for every marketer should be:

  1. Google is working hard to keep searchers on Google. If you help them do that, they’ll often help you rank (whether this is a worthwhile endeavor or a Prisoner’s Dilemma is another matter)
  2. When trying to reverse why something ranks in Google, add the element of “how well does this solve the searcher’s query”
  3. If you’re trying to outrank a competitor, how you align your title, meta description, first few sentences of text, and content around what the searcher truly wants can make the difference… even if you don’t win on links 😉

Related: if you want to see how hard Google’s working to keep searchers on their site vs. clicking results, I’ve got some research on SparkToro showing precisely that.

P.S. I don’t actually believe in arbitrary birth year ranges for segmenting cohorts of people. The differences between two individuals born in 1981 can be vastly wider than for two people born in 1979 and 1985. Boomer vs. Gen X vs. Millenial vs. Gen Z is crappy pseudoscience rooted in our unhealthy desire to categorize and pigeonhole others. Reject that ish.

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

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Quora, Pinterest ads pixel integrations now available in Google Tag Manager

Quora’s Google Tag Manager integration.

Pinterest and Quora are now approved Google Tag Manager vendors, making it easy for marketers to manage their Pinterest and Quora Pixels via Google’s platform.

Why you should care

The native integrations for Quora and Pinterest makes it much easier to set up those pixels in Google Tag Manager (GTM) to track ad campaign performance from those channels. No more having to create a custom HTML tag in GTM.

Within GTM, you can set up your pixels from channels to track user behaviors such as viewing a piece of content, or adding items to the cart, without having to alter the code base.

Currently, Pinterest and Quora’s Google Tag Manager integrations only support tacking from websites not apps, according to Google’s supported tag manager list.

More on the news

  • Both Pinterest and Quora shared quick steps for adding each platform’s tags into your Google Tag Manager account: Pinterest instructions here. Quora instructions here.
  • Google Tag Manager currently supports more than 80 websites natively, including LinkedIn, Twitter, Adobe Analytics, Microsoft Ads and more.

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.

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Airbnb’s new video strategy lets experience and branding drive profits

Airbnb is turning its eye towards developing original shows in an effort to create lasting relationships with travelers, Reuters reported last week.

It seems like every company is getting into the media game these days, with the scope of projects limited only by their resources. But, by going all-in on video without a clear blueprint or quantifiable expectations for what that content will do for the brand’s bottom line, is Airbnb just another startup with more money than sense?

The leap to creating shows and films may not be as big as it initially seems for the online rental property platform, and its success or failure may be a fascinating case study for ambitious content marketers across all industries.

Doubling down on content to drive business

“The more we put content out there, the more you’re going to bring people to the platform,” Chris Lehane, Airbnb’s senior vice president of global policy and communications, told Reuters.

The company is considering a variety of options, including streaming through its own app as well as through other video services.

“We’re very much in the R&D phase here,” Lehane said. “It’s not just limited to video. It could be audible. It could be physical.”

From a practical standpoint, unconventional marketing tactics could help set Airbnb apart from hotels and other online travel agencies. It could also generate interest for additional offerings such as restaurant reservations, transportation or community-led experiences that can all be booked through Airbnb’s platform.

airbnb experiences screenshot

Bookings through Airbnb now go well beyond rooms.

These add-ons, combined with its expansion into more traditional, high-end accommodations, have the potential to propagate the brand’s growth at a time when it’s facing regulatory pressures on its short-term rental business in multiple regions.

Airbnb’s content play is a long game

As with just about any content marketing strategy, there’s an emphasis on hard-to-quantify factors that could heavily influence customers’ perceptions and decisions.

Just under two years ago, Airbnb gambled that publishing its own branded magazine would bolster its travel lifestyle association. The circumstances back then mirror the present situation: an ambitious and costly content objective, limited experience with the format, and unpredictable outcomes in terms of revenue. Running a print publication isn’t suitable for every business, but it may have helped push its public perception beyond the confines of a booking app.

The nature of digital means it can have significantly broader reach than a custom magazine. Airbnb is betting that video content can inspire curiosity, convince viewers to plan trips in their heads, and then turn that daydreaming into real travel demand. A mix of vacation nostalgia and aspiration served up in video content can act as the foundation of the brand’s affinity with those feelings and long-term customer loyalty.

From curation to original video content

Airbnb launched its first YouTube video in October, 2010, and has steadily grown the channel to 172,000 subscribers by uploading over 500 videos in numerous languages and creating playlists like “Airbnb for Work” and “Not Yet Trending,” that are aimed at customers and hosts alike.

The company is testing the original video content waters with Gay Chorus Deep South, a feature-length documentary that will be premiering at the Tribeca Film Festival this week. It’s also working on a series entitled Home, which will be available on Apple’s upcoming TV Plus streaming service.

Airbnb’s forthcoming video offerings could be dismissed as just another branding effort — if there was a clear road map to return on investment. However, there’s not, and the company seems confident enough to experiment and committed to its audience enough to let experience drive profits (not the other way around).

Whether Airbnb’s gambit turns out to be a game changer or a total flop, it may just set a precedent for marketers, who stand to be emboldened by its successes or learn from its mistakes.


About The Author

George Nguyen is an Associate Editor at Third Door Media. His background is in content marketing, journalism, and storytelling.

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Google Earnings Show Paid Click Growth Declining With Cost Per Click

Most Google earnings report show how the cost-per-click, the amount an advertiser pays when someone clicks on their search ads, have been getting less expensive. But most of those earnings have shown growth in terms in the number of clicks ads in general are getting. Well, not this past earnings report, which showed a 9-percent decrease in paid clicks from Q4 to Q1.

Paid clicks on Google properties dropped 9 percent from Q4 2018 to Q1 2019 (QoQ) but increased 39% from Q1 2018 to Q1 2019 (YoY). Cost-per-click on Google properties increased 5% from Q4 2018 to Q1 2019 (QoQ) but decreased 19% from Q1 2018 to Q1 2019 (YoY). Here is that chart:

click for full size

With that, and other disappointments such as the sale of Pixel devices, Google is down almost 8% in pre-market trading.

Greg Sterling wrote on Search Engine Land “Paid clicks increased 39 percent year-over-year but decreased 9 percent sequentially. Cost-per-click was down 19 percent compared to last year – but up 5 percent since Q4 2018. Traffic acquisition costs (TAC) came in at $6.86 billion (22 percent of ad revenue), while analysts expected TAC of $7.26 billion. While paid clicks were up YoY, growth of paid clicks has declined vs. earlier quarters. This was attributed substantially to the deceleration of growth in YouTube ad clicks. Google hinted that smart display and smart speaker Home Hub and Google Home Mini were performing well and teased an announcement in this category at the forthcoming Google I/O.”

Is this a concern for Google? I don’t know, let’s see if the next earning report keeps this trend going?

Forum discussion at WebmasterWorld.

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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Give Google Feedback On The Future Of The Disavow Link Tool

Last week we reported that Google is still undecided on the future of the disavow link tool. This came up on Reddit and John Mueller from Google asked Reddit users for feedback on how they see the future version of the disavow link tool would look like in the new Google Search Console.

Just to catch you up, John said the other week “We don’t have any plans announced for that yet” in regards to if/when the disavow link tool will be migrated. John then had to explain on Reddit that this doesn’t mean the tool is going away, it is just undecided at the moment. John said on Reddit:

There are some features we clearly decided not to keep, which are already removed (like HTML suggestions). For the rest, not having an announced plan doesn’t mean anything. Once we have something to announce about any particular feature or functionality, we’ll announce it :).

In general, I think there’s room to rethink some of the workflows from the old Search Console. So even when we migrate a functionality, it might not be exactly the same as before, but still enable users to do something equivalent. For example, the crawl errors have gone away in favor of the new index coverage report — it’s not the same (and I understand that not everyone like change), but it does help you discover issues that are affecting your site’s indexing.

How would *you* see the disavow links functionality? How would you see it in the new Search Console? Do you still find it important?

So tell John on Reddit how you’d like to see how it works in the new Google Search Console.

Forum discussion at Reddit.

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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Google Display & Video 360 to default to ads.txt inventory, support app-ads.txt

Google announced several brand safety-focused initiatives Tuesday for advertisers using its Display & Video 360 (DV360) DSP. They include defaulting to ads.txt inventory, supporting app-ads.txt and providing a central hub for brand controls in the interface.

Ads.txt default. Starting in August, campaigns will default to ads.txt-authorized inventory only. In turn, that means only publishers that have adopted the standard and have placed ads.txt files on their sites will be eligible for bids from DV360.

Ads.txt launched in 2017 by IAB Tech Lab to reduce programmatic ad fraud by listing authorized ad sellers in a file placed on publishers’ sites. DSPs can crawl the public listing of authorized sellers to screen out unauthorized impressions.

More than 90% of publishers have adopted ads.txt.

App-ads.txt support. Google will also support the newer app-ads.txt standard, which is designed to add inventory transparency for apps on mobile devices as well as connected TVs. It became available in March. In the coming months, Google says DV360 will stop buying unauthorized app inventory. When adoption increases, it too will become the default for campaigns.

“While it’s very early days for app-ads.txt adoption, we’re actively working to encourage app developers to publish app-ads.txt files,” said a Google spokesperson. “In the next few months, Display & Video 360 will stop buying unauthorized app inventory as identified by app-ads.txt files. When adoption of app-ads.txt reaches sufficient levels, we will allow marketers and agencies to choose to buy only app inventory that is authorized.”

Brand Controls dashboard. The new Brand Controls view in DV360 centralizes the various brand safety controls available in the platform and the settings applied to each campaign. That includes a view of exclusions, use of ads.txt-only authorized sellers and verification services for display, video, app and TrueView campaigns.

You can make bulk edits with Structured Data Files to brand control settings from the dashboard. And invalid traffic reports show the percentage of pre-bid traffic filtered out and why.

Why we should care. These brand safety initiatives are part of ongoing, and industry-wide efforts to clean up the digital advertising ecosystem and help ensure advertisers that the inventory they’re buying is real and adheres to their brand standards. (Of course, advertisers have repeatedly protested the brand safety of Google’s own YouTube inventory.) Google gave advertisers the option to exclude inventory from publishers without ads.txt files last July.  Given its market influence, Google’s support for app-ads.txt will likely speed adoption by app publishers.


About The Author

Taylor Peterson is Third Door Media’s Deputy Editor, managing industry-leading coverage that informs and inspires marketers. Based in New York, Taylor brings marketing expertise grounded in creative production and agency advertising for global brands. Taylor’s editorial focus blends digital marketing and creative strategy with topics like campaign management, emerging formats, and display advertising.

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CRO: Great UX Isn’t Random or Coincidental

Think about your favorite websites. (Or if you don’t have favorites, just think about some of the better ones you’ve seen.) Pause. Now, think about why you chose them or what made some pop into your head over others. Was it the content? Layouts? Imagery? Colors? It could be a plethora of things of course, but I want to emphasize (1) that they were all probably created with intention and (2) that intention is often driven by lots of research, analysis, and testing to result in positive user experiences like the ones you just recalled.

At this point, you may be thinking, “Of course that’s what drives positive user experiences. Isn’t that how all websites are created?” The answer is…not quite. Often times when someone is explaining why something is one way over another, the answer is too frequently “I don’t know” or “It just looked good.”

In this post, I want to shed light on some broader concepts that we use to approach CRO strategically—and to demonstrate that great UX doesn’t happen by just saying, “Yeah, I think that will probably work.” There are reasons as to why you feel like some websites are better than others. The best ads, landing pages, and websites didn’t just happen by coincidence or chance. (Check out this post to read more specifics about Hanapin’s CRO program, testing, and types of analyses.)

Some Concepts to Consider

If you’ve never considered CRO or UX, here are a few concepts to get started. I’m just mentioning some high-level notes and providing a few examples, but they’re ones I’d recommend diving into sooner rather than later.

Functionality, Accessibility, & Usability

Functionality, accessibility, and usability are three of the most fundamental aspects of an online experience. (Check out what the Persuasion Pyramid looks like here.) If a site isn’t all or any of those things, finer details like messaging and imagery suddenly become much less important. When users are scrolling through a page or interacting with different elements on your site, everything should work as intended and be easily accessible—regardless of device or browser. And I’d say because these concepts seem fairly straightforward, they’re often overlooked or not given as much time and attention. On the contrary though, I’d say websites with great UX nail all three of these.

Messaging

Messaging should be clear and consistent. It should also meet users’ expectations. You never want to try to mislead or trick someone into visiting a page or adding something to their cart. If you’ve ever seen an ad, clicked through to the landing page, and purchased something because you thought, “This is perfect! It’s exactly what I need,” I’d guess messaging had something to do with it. It’s important to speak to your target audience with the right messages at the right time. And on this topic, I’d like to emphasize my recommendation against just throwing words onto a page or into ads and hoping they do well. Be intentional with word choices.

As you can see here, this test improved the conversion rate for demo requests by 170%.

Content, Processes, & Layouts

All three of these play a lot into motivation and usability. If content or the order of content don’t make any sense, no one is going to be motivated to continue looking at the page—or the rest of a site for that matter. Likewise, if a page layout or process (like filling out a form or checking out) is confusing or overwhelming, users generally don’t stick around to figure it out. It’s important to make every aspect of your site clear, consise, and intuitive so that users have to think as little as possible. They should never have to ask, “What’s next?” or “How does that work?” or “What does that mean?”

In this test, our team focused on breaking down a conversion process into one that was simpler and easier. As a result, the conversion rate for information requests increased by 46%.

Colors

Colors can be strategically used to do things like impact emotion, emphasize consistency, or create contrast. Some folks are against tests like button color changes due to the perception that they’re small and unimpactful. However, results often depend heavily on reasoning.

As you can see from these results, you shouldn’t underestimate the potential impact of color-related tests. In this case, a color change lead to a $21,000 increase in revenue.

Final Thoughts

Poor user experiences can not only cause someone to abandon a cart or stop filling out a form, but they can cause someone to associate negative feelings or thoughts with your business. If a user goes to your site, for example, and thinks it’s one of the worst online experiences they’ve ever had, it’s possible they may never want to click on one of your ads or visit your site ever again. Granted, that might be a little dramatized for the purposes of conveying a point but thinking about these things is becoming more necessary every day in today’s competitive digital landscape. Great UX and heroic results don’t happen on their own!

If you don’t have the time or resources to devote to UX and CRO but want to optimize your landing pages or website, reach out to us. We’d love to hear from you!

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

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We must demand a higher standard of quality for online advertising

We enjoy an ad-supported internet based on fair value exchange. Consumers incur virtually zero cost for consuming content like text, video or apps in exchange for seeing an online promotion from brands. While we’ve seen the natural ebb and flow of consumers exerting power over their online experience – in the form of ad blocking or removing cookies, for example – the fact remains that content producers must be compensated for the utility they provide. Either brands will subsidize the content continually produced and consumed online, or consumers will. For the current paradigm to continue, online advertising must perform. Every player in the ecosystem has a stake in making sure it does just that. Consider the consequences if advertising were suddenly to disappear; we’d be looking at paywalls and micropayments that would gate consumer access to content.

For online advertising to work, baseline criteria for quality must be met. These criteria are captured in impressions that are collectively fraud-free, viewable and brand-safe across all advertising environments – including walled gardens. They must authenticate media quality as well as qualify purchased impressions in terms of their potential to drive outcomes. Any inventory that fails to comply with this higher standard is compromised in its ability to power campaign performance. The result is inefficiency and waste for the brand.

Many brands have solutions in place to measure their digital advertising effectiveness. DSPs, for example, offer fraud-free guarantees or segments that target properties and placements characterized by high viewability in the past. However, the industry should demand a more stringent quality standard – for every impression that is transacted. This more stringent standard would meet all of the following core criteria:

  • The ad is fully viewed
  • The ad is viewed by a real person
  • The ad appears in a brand-safe environment

Let’s consider for a moment the magnitude of issues that brands face today that impede quality ad delivery.

Viewability

Display ad viewability in 2018 was at 56% and video ad viewability at 63% in 2018. While viewability numbers for display and video ads have risen year-on-year, viewability is clearly an industry problem, as it remains below the 70% threshold established by the IAB. On the positive side, progress is being made to expand third-party viewability measurement across social platforms, mobile app platforms and OTT/CTV.

Fraud

The adage holds true – fraud follows the money.  The industry has seen a dramatic shift in fraud targeting mobile supply – with a concentration in mobile apps – as well as new schemes targeting emerging inventory types, such as CTV.

Brand safety

Brand reputation has become a cornerstone concern for digital advertisers – with brand safety incidents making headlines throughout 2018 and into the new year. A recent Verizon Media study found that 99% of advertisers are concerned about brand safety. Brand safety violations increased by 25% in 2018 – with spikes of up to 50% following major news coverage of violence. Fake news is 70% more likely to be shared than genuine news articles and, over the last year, the volume of content classified as extreme violence and hate speech nearly tripled.

It’s not enough to deal with the knotty problems of viewability, fraud and brand safety on an inconsistent or siloed basis. Transacting industry-wide based on impressions that collectively meet ALL of these criteria would boost campaign efficiency and effectiveness, giving brands clarity and confidence in their digital investment – while simultaneously rewarding quality publishers and content producers with a higher yield. Such a dynamic fosters a sustainable value exchange that not only encourages campaign performance but also preserves the Internet as we know it. Let’s build a better industry.


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


About The Author

Dan Slivjanovski is chief marketing officer at DoubleVerify, responsible for corporate and product marketing, and sales empowerment. Dan brings over 20 years of senior operating, strategy and marketing experience to his role as CMO. Prior to joining DV, Dan served as both COO and CMO at RhythmOne, where he helped to transform the company into a leading, independent programmatic platform for engaged audiences at scale.

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