Archive for August, 2010

Aug 30 2010

The Integration of Search Marketing and Display Advertising

Display Advertising & Search Marketing Integration

We have below republished a recent post from MarketingMag.com.au, written by Tom Skotidas, First Rate’s Head of Marketing and Business Development:

I have always felt that search marketing and performance display were fraternal twins; that is, not identical, but definitely sharing the same DNA.

Think about it: both are built on cost per click (CPC) and cost per action (CPA) pricing models. They require constant testing and optimisation. And they are definitely direct response focused.

It was only a matter of time before both channels were recognised as such, and integration took place.

There are three technologies in particular I want to highlight, which have been successful in integrating search and display. In doing so, they have opened up many new possibilities.

1. Paid Search Video Ads

Google Adwords and Yahoo Search Marketing have released a new type of paid search ad.

They are called Google Video Extensions and Yahoo Rich Ads in Search, and allow advertisers to integrate video content within their standard text ads.

Google Video Extension Example

Yahoo Rich Ads in Search

The importance of this integration is two-fold:

  • Consumers are empowered with richer information about the product they are viewing, and
  • Advertisers can build their brand awareness as they drive direct response.

The last point is especially important for industries that have traditionally not invested significant ad dollars into paid search. For example, the FMCG industry is well known for its light adoption of search marketing. With video ads, they can now satisfy their brand awareness-building requirements while driving traffic to their product websites.

Google Video Extensions are in limited beta mode and not currently available in Australia. However Yahoo Rich Ads are currently live in Australia, and have already received significant interest from advertisers.

2. Cross-channel, Multi-Click Conversion Attribution

We know that consumers don’t usually convert into a lead or sale after just one click. A more likely scenario involves a consumer searching, viewing, and clicking on several ads, often over the course of days or weeks, before they convert.

The ability to track and de-dupe conversions across channels (so you are not paying twice for the same conversion) is powerful, and currently available through advanced analytics platforms, like Omniture or Site Intelligence.

The problem with last click attribution

The problem lies in the conversion rate disparity between search and performance display. Compared to display, search almost always converts at a higher rate, and very often captures the last click. So paid search often takes the credit for the sale – even though display had generated an earlier click in the consumer’s journey.

Because of the last click attribution model – which is the standard in our industry – investment in performance display is usually just a fraction of search, which prevents full integration and synergy of channels from taking place.

Multi-click conversion attribution

There is a new technology that is solving the issues associated with last click attribution. It is allowing marketers to track all clicks across multiple channels, and recognise their collective contribution to the conversion. This technology is called multi-click conversion attribution.

Multi-click conversion attribution captures all of a consumer’s clicks within all channels, which took place before a consumer converted into a lead or sale. The technology then assigns a % conversion credit to each of the clicks and channels.

This is equivalent to giving a % goal credit to each player in a football team, for passing the ball around until a goal takes place.

Interestingly, the multi-click attribution model always takes a chunk of credit away from the last click (as it should), and distributes that credit among the rest of the clicks that contributed to the conversion.

Multi-click conversion attribution has profound implications for marketers investing in search and performance display. It allows marketers to:

  1. ‘See’ each click and channel, and how they interact.
  2. Determine performance display’s true contribution to producing conversions (instead of missing out on the last click which is often captured by paid search), and
  3. Identify the true CPA of paid search and performance display.

What is the biggest benefit to marketers? Once true CPA is identified, re-allocation of channel budget can occur with full confidence. This drives incremental sales while saving money (less wastage on poorly performing keywords, banners or sites).

3. Demand side platforms

Demand side platforms (DSPs) are a technological innovation in the field of performance display. Although currently not available in Australia, they are quickly becoming mainstream in the US.

DSPs are technology tools that aggregate the inventory of multiple publishers and ad networks, and then allow advertisers to bid on this inventory in real-time. What’s more, this real-time bidding is done on a per impression basis.

The parallels to paid search are clear. And it is these parallels that have fuelled even further technological innovation.

Several SEM bid management and optimisation platforms (i.e. technology platforms that bid exclusively on paid search), have recognised the efficiency and business potential in integrating DSP within their own SEM platforms.

Examples of leading SEM technology firms that have integrated DSPs within their own platform include SearchIgnite and Efficient Frontier.

What does this mean? Well, it appears that within the next 12–24 months in Australia, marketers will be able to bid on paid search and performance display, in real-time, per impression, all within the same dashboard. This is a compelling proposition if you are trying to maximise performance, efficiency and integration across both channels.

Final thoughts

The technologies mentioned above represent the next-generation approach to integrating paid search and performance display. And while they might not yet be widely used or understood in Australia, their growth in the US and UK are certain to make them mainstream in the near future.

Marketers who recognise this and take steps to prepare themselves, will be in a superior position when that moment arrives.

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Aug 24 2010

Energy Supply Online: Switched-On or in the Dark?

Published by Forsyth under Industry Reports, Only NZ

Electricity / Power Company Online Market Research: Search Visibility

The energy supply market has become increasingly competitive in recent times, and with the internet the primary research tool for a large proportion of New Zealanders, being found online for a (new) provider is indeed important, unsurprisingly.

What is surprising, however, is that the online search visibility for New Zealand power companies is very low compared to other industries, despite the pressures energy companies are under to maintain customer loyalty and grow market share.

First Rate’s first industry report for energy companies provides some key insights looking into the performance by provider against the 49 most-trafficked search terms on Google NZ (brand terms were excluded). With the position on the search results page determining in large part the amount of traffic a website receives from any given search, there is a lot at stake.

Our research shows that there is a huge variance in the adoption of online – from Powershop.co.nz utilising search as well as social media marketing, both integral parts of what is the world’s first online energy store, to other providers that perform significantly less well as the report shows. Overall, natural search performance is the worst of any industry surveyed by First Rate!

In industries like Insurance scores of over 70% are observed. In the energy supply market, Mercury Energy performed strongest of the suppliers as far as SEO is concerned, but with a score of just 12% visibility!

In paid search, Contact Energy are the clear leader, with a balanced strategy of keyword bidding and a score which is 70% greater than their nearest competitor (53% visibility). So whilst the market is hugely competitive, few providers are realising the opportunity which online represents.

Download First Rate’s comprehensive report today: Power Company Online Market Research.

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Aug 23 2010

What Website Investment Can Generate 100% ROI Within 12 Months?

CRO - Monopoly Financial Payback Example

Answer: Conversion Rate Optimisation (CRO)
The process of Conversion Rate Optimisation for e-commerce websites focuses on converting a greater proportion of your visitors into customers. In other words, it is the process of improving your website’s ability to sell for a given marketing budget.

Getting Started with Conversion Rate Optimisation

The optimisation is performed by finding your website’s weak pages, making changes to them – guided by best-practices and customer research – and testing the new pages directly against the originals in a statistically-valid “A/B” experiment (or “multivariate”, in more complicated scenarios). The experiment is important, because it lets your customers “vote with their clicks”. Your visitors aren’t made aware of the experiment and your website continues functioning as normal, while our software counts the conversion rate for each version of the page and quietly determines the winning page.

As a greater proportion of visitors to your website convert into paying customers, the ROAS of your marketing campaigns and the ROI of your website both increase

Should Your Company be Doing CRO?

If you operate a website whose objective is to get visitors to perform a desired action (to “convert”), then you have a website eligible for conversion rate optimisation.

The desired action can be anything from buying a product, registering for a subscription service, downloading a report, or spending a certain amount of time on the page. All of these actions can be measured using industry-standard website analytics software, and once you start measuring your conversion rate, you can improve it.

A small improvement in your website’s conversion rate can result in a relatively large lift in your website’s ROI. For example, an improvement in your website conversion rate from 2% (good) to 3% (better) is equivalent to a 50% increase in ROI. Going from a 2%-conversion-rate to a 3%-conversion-rate would allow you to reduce your marketing budget by one third, while keeping sales at the same level. This budget can now be re-invested into other sales-generating initiatives such as SEM, PPC advertising or SEO.

Can CRO Really Generate 100% ROI Within 12 Months..?

So can conversion rate optimisation get you 100% ROI within 12 months? Let’s do the math here in Monopoly money.

Say it costs your Monopoly website 500 Monopoly dollars to run a conversion optimisation project. Your current conversion rate is 1% on 100,000 monthly visitors and your customer lifetime value is $1.

To get 100% ROI on your 500 Monopoly dollars within 12 months, the conversion optimisation project needs to raise your conversion rate to an achievable 1.08%, as you can see in the table below:

Payback ROI calculations for conversion rate optimisation example project

In our experience, this is an achievable goal for many New Zealand websites.

If you are ready to increase your website’s conversion rate, please contact us for a no-obligation chat.

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