Paying for Brand Clicks? Get More for Your Money |  | Visited: 1004 |
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| | by Michael McVeigh August 06, 2008 |
| Michael McVeigh |
Michael McVeigh is the Associate Director of Strategic
Analysis with the Search Engine Marketing Group at Zeta Interactive, an Ad
Age Top 50 Digital Agency.
Michael has been active in SEM since 2003
and has directed winning search programs for Zeta’s Fortune 1000 client
portfolio. An expert in analytics, Michael also develops advanced
reporting solutions for use with Zeta’s suite of integrated online marketing
tools. |
| Michael McVeigh
has written 5 articles for PromotionWorld. |
| View all articles by Michael McVeigh... |
"Why does search get the credit for
everything?" is a question that’s been asked frequently in marketing
departments in recent years. It’s even the title of the keynote at this month's
Search Engine Strategies conference in San Jose. There will be a lot of search
marketers in that room, and while I’m confident most of them stopped boasting a
while ago about big returns driven through paid search on a company’s own
branded terms, I’m not sure how many are giving full consideration to what
search marketing can do to measure the value driven by efforts from other
channels.
For historical reasons, search
marketers tend to get defensive about branded search advertising. It took years of convincing brand owners to
accept the concept of paying for search clicks on branded terms. CMO’s and
CEO’s were adamant that it was foolish to pay for clicks when there was a
perfectly serviceable free natural link at the top of the page, and it took
test after test showing the incremental value of brand paid search to make them
believers. Eventually, the word ‘cannibalization’ stopped being bandied about,
and business lunches became all the more pleasant.
Brand search is still considered
something of a freeloader. Customers searching on branded keywords are the
proverbial fish in the barrel, and we know those customers were first baited
and hooked by other anglers: Television, Display Advertising, Radio, Social
Media, Print, Email, Direct Mail and, not to be forgotten, SEO and SEM
campaigns on non-branded search terms. All of these channels impact branded
search. Turn them off, and you’ll dial
down your branded search volume the way the jets from a sprinkler die down when
you crimp a garden hose.
But how much organizations have
leveraged brand search behavior to understand the performance of the whole
marketing mix that fuels it has been far less evident. Brand search ads do
offer an opportunity to measure and analyze performance in other marketing
channels. If your brand ads just serve as a proxy for the natural listing
located an inch further south, you’re most likely missing some valuable
insights. Here are some examples:
Imagine your brand is “Simon’s
Smoothies” and you have 1,000 stores around the nation serving delicious
blended fruit beverages. People search for your brand to find stores and
navigate to your site to learn about new flavors and promotional offers. You serve a national brand search campaign
which generates high click through rates averaging over twenty percent. You
also run TV ads, radio, direct mail and display advertising in your target
markets. Here are some ideas to get some extra mileage out of your brand search
ads:
- Find Surges in
Search on Your Brand: Say you have stores in San Francisco and Chicago and
recently started blanketing the air waves in each market. Many people search
online for directions to the locations but since they mostly interact with
Google Maps, not enough visit your site to give you a true feel for enhanced
demand. Your brand search campaign can give you that search volume detail by
day and by hour, and if you create a local targeted version of the campaign for
both markets, you easily can view the uptick comparatively between San Fran and
the Windy City. The data may also help you determine which ads at which time of
day or day of week are generating the greatest interest.
- Click-Through
Rate Testing: Search is one of the easiest mediums to create and implement
tests in. For starters, rotate your
brand ads evenly and test which tag lines or type of messaging drive higher
click-through rates for your text ads. If “delicious smoothie” messaging has a
15% lift in CTR over “healthy smoothie”, maybe that’s what you should be
leading with in other channels.
- A/B Route
Splitting: Split test your landing
pages to find creative that resonates. Try a 20% off coupon versus a $2.00 off or determine which glistening
smoothie picture generates greater engagement. Use what wins in other channels. This type of test marketing also works well
with display advertising and non-branded search, but consider routing that
traffic to different tests to segregate retention versus acquisition
performance.
- Direct Response
Measurement: If you end all of your
print, radio or TV ads with a call to visit the hard-to-type
“simonssmoothie.com”, you won’t be able to differentiate which ads had greater
impact. One alternative to advertising vanity URLs is to encourage recipients
to Google ‘simons coupon’ or another unique query, which you can buy cheap on
exact match and differentiate by offline ad campaign. Although this may encourage competitors to
bid on your keyword, the value in learning which offline placements really drive
interest may outweigh the downside.
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