Targeting Niche Audiences -- AOL's New Branding Strategy |  | Visited: 1972 |
|
|
| 5.0/5.0 (1 votes total) |
|
|
| | by Scott Buresh May 23, 2008 |
| Scott Buresh |
 Scott
Buresh is the founder of Medium Blue,
a search engine optimization company. His articles
have appeared in numerous publications, including MarketingProfs, ZDNet, SiteProNews, WebProNews, DarwinMag, ISEDB.com, and Search Engine Guide. He was
also a contributor to The Complete Guide to Google Advertising (Atlantic, 2008) and Building Your Business with
Google For Dummies (Wiley, 2004). Medium Blue has local and national clients, including Boston Scientific,
DS Waters, and Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center, and was named the
number one organic search engine optimization company in the world in 2006 and
2007 by PromotionWorld. Visit
MediumBlue.com to request a custom SEO guarantee based on your goals and your data. |
| Scott Buresh
has written 56 articles for PromotionWorld. |
| View all articles by Scott Buresh... |
AOL, once considered a pioneer in internet
technology, has fallen on hard times over the years, unable to devise an
effective branding strategy. A failed merger with Time-Warner, a non-focus on
search while Google built an empire (the AOL search engine eventually began
serving up Google results on its portal site), and declining dial-up business
are all contributing factors to the ongoing difficulties of AOL and its search
engine.
However, AOL seems to have a new branding strategy
in mind for the AOL search engine, which would revamp its services and target
specific niches. And while many "analysts"
claim that it is already a failure before the results are in, it is too soon to
tell how this will affect AOL and the search engine that bears its name. Personally, I think it's a smart play for the
company – and something that bears watching. If the branding strategy is successful, another huge company may want to
follow AOL's example.
You see, AOL understands that the AOL search engine
and its other services are not a brand beloved by many. Or even, the AOL search engine and AOL itself
is seen as somewhat ancient, old school, 56k, etc. Nightmare stories about its online services
are not in short supply. I haven't done
any specific studies on this, but in my circle of friends and business
acquaintances, people consider an AOL subscriber a little behind the times.
The point is (in my opinion) that the "AOL brand"
itself has decreasing value and may actually have negative value if the
specific sites that it owns or has recently purchased are brought in under an
umbrella branding strategy. These sites
include those catering toward everything from country music fans to moms
sharing photos to guys trying to pick up women. In some cases, the niche sites do not even display their affiliation
with AOL or its search engine (or if they do, it is not featured very
prominently).
The logic behind this branding strategy is
clear. First of all, the AOL search
engine and portal weren't attracting new visitors. Secondly, the AOL search engine and brand
itself are not particularly hip or fresh. Third, and probably most importantly, specific portal sites attract
specific types of users, which are usually highly targeted, prompting a
potential for more ad revenue (in theory).
Basically, the AOL search engine and portal have
stopped trying to be all things to all people. Google is able to pull off the "all things to all people"
approach primarily because it doesn't have issues with a branding strategy yet
– in fact, the new vertical searches that it adds under the Google "branding
umbrella" are augmented by implied hipness and coolness. However, as AOL has discovered, hipness
usually has a shelf life. If people
began to see Google as the huge corporation that it is now, rather than the
uber-cool underdog, the company may not be able to keep this record up. There have already been some cracks in its veneer,
although by and large, the Google brand is still very positive and powerful.
There is another company much bigger than AOL that suffers
from much of the same problems (and in some cases, worse problems) than AOL
does but still wants to take on Google head to head. I refer, of course, to Microsoft.
In terms of a brand, Microsoft is almost universally
disliked. The monopoly issue may be one
thing. The fact that it is seen as 'old
school' may be another. Gates and
Ballmer don't exactly have reputations as "nice guys," like Sergei
and Larry do (the fact that it seems natural to refer to the former two by
their last names and the latter two by the first may help illustrate this
point). And the list goes on.
The bottom line is that I have a hard time seeing
MSN.com gaining the kind of traction that Google has, simply because the brand
is less than sexy. This means, of
course, that any additional vertical search options that MSN adds to its site are
bound to be appreciated only by the dwindling few who already swear by the
portal.
AOL has decided that its branding strategy for the
AOL search engine and niche sites is not nearly as important as the amount of
traffic and ad revenue that the site commands. This is not uncommon in the publishing industry, where many different
publications on many different topics may be owned by one large (but largely
silent) entity. Many of these offline
publications have moved online and are beginning to monetize their diverse base
of websites. AOL seems to have a similar
model and branding strategy in mind for the AOL search engine and other niche
sites.
If it works for AOL and its search engine, it could
be the best possible branding strategy for Microsoft to follow. Lord knows Microsoft has the money. The company has already bought the ad
networks that can service sites under its own new branding strategy. But if pride dictates that it keep everything
under the MSN name or add a huge "brought to you by Microsoft" banner
across the top of any popular online property that it decides to buy, MSN is,
in my opinion, shooting itself in the foot.
I never said it was fair, but your brand and
branding strategy can either be an asset, neutral, or a detriment. Microsoft has to realize that most people
consider its brand to be in the neutral to detrimental range and that most
people consider Google to be in the neutral to asset range (and that's probably
being charitable). Microsoft should not try to compete with Google head to head
without considering the disparities in the conceptions of their respective
brands.
|