|
|
|
|
July 11th, 2008
As the weekend approaches, here is a great way to get a little inspiration to last you through to next week. Spend 3 minutes watching the video available through this link. It will make your day and just may change the life of someone you share it with.
http://www.212movie.com/
Bookmarks [ del.icio.us | Digg it | Blogmarks | Diigo | FeedMarker | Google | Netscape | Yahoo MyWeb ]
Tags: Inspiration Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
July 9th, 2008
Yesterday search giant Google announced that it has updated its Keyword Tool to include the approximate search volume by month as well as the approximate average search volume for all of its keywords.
The Google keyword tool has always been one of the best tools around for selecting keywords to use in an ad campaign. Marketers looking for additional keywords could enter a single phrase into the system and get numerous suggestions for similar keywords from Google. Additionally, the tool provided data on how competitive each keyword was to advertisers.
With the addition of search volume numbers, marketers can get a more thorough understanding of each keyword and can therefore make more informed decisions about which keywords to target. These numbers are important to not only Google AdWords advertisers, but also to search engine optimization practitioners who can use the data to figure out what words to optimize websites for.
Here is a sample result using the improved Keyword Tool:

If you want to get more information about the Keyword Tool, Google has an excellent guide on how to use it.
If you need help selecting keywords for your search engine optimization or Google AdWords campaign we can help. Contact BizGrowth SEO today to learn more.
Bookmarks [ del.icio.us | Digg it | Blogmarks | Diigo | FeedMarker | Google | Netscape | Yahoo MyWeb ]
Tags: Google, Keyword Research, Keyword Tool, PPC Advertising, Search Engine Optimization, seo Posted in Google, Paid Search Advertising (PPC), Search Engine Marketing, Search Engine Optimization | No Comments »
July 3rd, 2008
The BizGrowth office will be closed tomorrow for the Fourth of July.
We’ll be back next Monday.
We wish everyone a safe, fun July 4th weekend.
-The BizGrowth Team

Bookmarks [ del.icio.us | Digg it | Blogmarks | Diigo | FeedMarker | Google | Netscape | Yahoo MyWeb ]
Tags: Announcements, July 4th Posted in Announcements | No Comments »
June 26th, 2008
Google has begun penalizing advertisers who have slow landing page load times by lowering their quality score in Google AdWords.
Advertisers looking to improve their quality scores and lower their minimum bids using Google AdWords now face an additional obstacle to achieving quality score perfection.
The Google Adwords team has announced that, effective immediately, the load time of a landing page will affect the quality score given to an AdWords campaign. This means that slow loading pages will be penalized with higher minimum bids whereas fast loading websites might see their minimum bid price decrease.
Google has implemented this change as a part of their “fast is better” way of thinking and aims to further improve the user experience by discouraging slow loading times.
Google has been providing information to advertisers about their landing page load times through the keyword analysis tool in AdWords since May of this year.
If you are experiencing slow load times for your landing pages, your problem may stem from one of the following issues:
• Multi-second meta refreshes
• Slow redirects
• Multiple redirects
• Interstitial pages
• Slow servers
• Large page size
Google has offered a number of suggestions on how to fix these problems here: Improving Landing Page Load Times.
By fixing these issues you can significantly increase your quality score and cause your minimum bid price to go down.
Do you need help with your Google AdWords campaign? BizGrowth Search Engine Solutions can help. Contact us today.
Bookmarks [ del.icio.us | Digg it | Blogmarks | Diigo | FeedMarker | Google | Netscape | Yahoo MyWeb ]
Tags: Google AdWords, Load Times, Pay Per Click, PPC, Quality Score Posted in Google, Paid Search Advertising (PPC), Web Design | No Comments »
June 26th, 2008
Handling a mere 9% of internet searches in the United States, Microsoft has a long way to go to catch up with Google’s 62% or even Yahoo’s 20% of the market. However, with a new program unveiled last month, Microsoft is hoping to narrow that gap.
The Live Search cashback account allows users to get some of their money back on everything they buy at hundreds of online retailers. Boasting rebates of between 2% and 30% Microsoft has already signed up hundreds of merchants for the program including eBay, Barnes & Noble, Overstock.com, Sears, Circuit City, The Home Depot, and Zappos.com.
To qualify for the rebates, users must sign up for a free account with Microsoft and perform their searches through a special website that lists every participating retailer. Users can alternatively use Microsoft’s Live Search page where participating merchants are marked with a gold coin. From there, users make purchases as normal and Microsoft takes care of the rest. Following a 60 day waiting period, members can opt to receive their refunds of $5 or more by check, PayPal or they can choose to have the money deposited into their online bank account.
For advertisers, Microsoft has attempted to make the deal more attractive by forgoing the pay per click structure used by Google and Yahoo. Instead the program will charge by the number of online sales generated. This allows companies to calculate the exact ROI for each product they list.
If you are interested in marketing your business with Microsoft’s Live Search Program BizGrowth Search Engine Solutions can help. Contact us today.
Bookmarks [ del.icio.us | Digg it | Blogmarks | Diigo | FeedMarker | Google | Netscape | Yahoo MyWeb ]
Tags: Cash Back, eCommerce, Microsoft Live Search, Online Advertising, Paid Search Advertising Posted in MSN, Online Advertising, Paid Search Advertising (PPC), Search Engine Marketing, eCommerce | No Comments »
June 25th, 2008
In their never ending quest to make online search both easier and more intuitive, Google has managed to come up with yet another way to make your search queries more relevant.
Announced recently, Google has significantly improved their algorithms to process the newest information much faster then previously possible. What this means to us regular searchers is a much more current search result that includes websites that were added yesterday, not last week.
Nowhere is this change more evident then with the related search suggestions feature. For those unfamiliar with these suggestions, Google will sometimes offer you alternative search terms that it feels may help you find what you are looking for. For instance, search for the ‘US Open’ and Google will offer you the related term ‘US Open 2008’, click on that and Google goes one step further with ‘US Open 2008 leaderboard’.
Thanks to its increased speed, Google will now update the related search suggestions at a much more rapid pace. This means that if the movie ‘Attack of The Killer Tomatoes’ was suddenly much more popular then the current ‘salmonella tomato scare’, then a search for ‘tomatoes’ might suggest the onscreen masterpiece instead of the health scare.
Google also claims to have teams of people manually working and experimenting to ensure that the related search suggestions feature returns the most relevant, user friendly results.
Bookmarks [ del.icio.us | Digg it | Blogmarks | Diigo | FeedMarker | Google | Netscape | Yahoo MyWeb ]
Tags: Google Rankings, Related Search Suggestions, Search Results Posted in Google | No Comments »
June 25th, 2008
In 2005 BusinessWeek published a cover story titled “Blogs Will Change Your Business.” Blogs, according to the article, were to be the great equalizer that could give any employee a voice potentially more powerful then the entire public relations department. The authors further warned that your customers and competitors were already learning this blogging stuff and that those who didn’t start to blog would be left in the dust. They had no idea how right they were, or how many people would take notice.
The article was a sensation, attracting loads of visitors, tons of links, and even a few professors using the article as required reading. To this day performing a Google search for “blogs business” reveals that same old 2005 BusinessWeek cover story as the number one result. While most companies would give their right arm to have top ranking on a highly searched Google term, BusinessWeek had a problem; in the last three years the world of blogging has transformed beyond belief, and more problematic then that, social media had far outgrown the narrow confines of simple blogging.
So what’s a magazine to do to preserve the hits yet give relevant information? Update the article of course! “Social Media Will Change Your Business” is the new and improved version of the 2005 classic that has expanded its reach to encompass all of the new media that now dominates the internet as well as the fantastic changes to blogging itself.
Obviously a lot has changed in three years so to highlight the changes in the two articles, the June 2, 2008 issue of BusinessWeek features the article “Beyond Blogs” to fill us in on the three year progression into social media.
As it turns out, blogging wasn’t the only technology to come about and revolutionize the internet. In the past three years sites such as YouTube, Twitter, Wikipedia, Facebook, and MySpace have come from nowhere and developed into dominant properties with millions of users and some major high-stake backers.
While only about one fourth of adults read a blog every month according to new a study by Forrester Research, many more people are excited to communicate virtually through networking sites, videos, pictures, and the million other ways that continue to spring up every day. This means that it is now up to companies not just to establish blogs, but also all sorts of social media to keep up with the Joneses so to speak.
One company that has thoroughly embraced this new social media is the British telecom company BT. Employees there are encouraged to keep up wikis that operate on the same technology as Wikipedia. However, instead of editing the Beatles encyclopedia entry so your name is next to Ringos’, their wiki lets employees post and edit on the site to “write software, map cell-phone base stations, [and] launch branding campaigns.” Everyone from senior engineers to interns has the same access to the site, and employees from around the world can access the wiki to collaborate on projects.
BT has also launched a Social Network in the hopes of bringing the “value of the water-cooler conversations” to the internet. J.P. Rangaswami who runs technology at BT says that the company now has the ability to “understand what these relationships are, how information and decision-making migrate. We see how people really work” This will allow them to pinpoint the people who will work well in teams as well as the people who are transmitting ideas throughout the company.
Best Buy is another company that has used social networks to great effect. Their Blue Shirt Nation network has more then 20,000 active participants and in a company with 60% turnover, the network boasts a turnover of only 8.5%. In addition, a promotional drive on the site helped persuade 40,000 employees to sign up for 401(k) retirement accounts.
The article warns that while these social networks are incredibly useful, the quieter employees could fall through the cracks while those who network, create buzz, and promote their brand surge ahead.
Even the blogging world, the lynchpin of the 2005 article has changed significantly and not followed predictions. Then they expected the old media sites to learn the tricks of the trade and be surrounded by small niche bloggers. However with the advent of “megablogs” with paid staff such as TechCrunch and GigaOm as well as aggregating sites like Techmeme and Digg, the old guard have been pushed aside in favor of these new blogging giants. In fact some of these new blogs arguably have more power then even large newspapers and magazines.
Read the 2005 article Blogs Will Change Your Business
Read the updated 2008 article Social Media Will Change Your Business
Read the June 2 cover story article Beyond Blogs
If your company is ready to get started with Blogging or Social Media BizGrowth Search Engine Solutions can help, click here to contact us.
Bookmarks [ del.icio.us | Digg it | Blogmarks | Diigo | FeedMarker | Google | Netscape | Yahoo MyWeb ]
Tags: Blogging, business blogs, Social Media Marketing, social networks Posted in Blogging, Social Media Marketing | No Comments »
May 28th, 2008
The best way to maximize your marketing results is by testing various elements of your marketing to find out what works best. BizGrowth founder Brian Offenberger gives you an overview of how testing can help you boost profits while lowering costs.
To be able to effectively analyze how to get the best results and profits from your website, it is crucial that you understand what online testing is and why it should be a major part of your online marketing efforts.
You may have heard the joke about the business owner who said, “Half of my marketing is working real well……I just don’t know what half.” Testing will answer that precisely, so that you know exactly what is working and what is not, often in just a few hours. As a business owner, it’s important to understand that you are not your customer, so any attempts to figure out what they will respond to versus what they won’t are just guesswork. Testing removes all the guesswork and shows you in real numbers, in terms of traffic and dollars, what will get your prospects and customers to act.
So what is testing? Testing is changing of an element or elements of your marketing message, tactics, channels, design, pricing, promotional offers, etc. to determine what works best. Testing allows you to ‘do things wrong quickly’, and get rid of what doesn’t work before you waste a lot of your marketing dollars.
Why should you want to do this?
- Testing allows you to get the maximum return for the minimum investment, the ‘holy grail’ of all marketing.
- You can cut your losses quickly and get rid of ineffective marketing
- Learn what your prospects and customers are willing to pay for
- Gather marketing intelligence that can be applied to other sales channels
As with many things, there is good news and bad news with this. The bad news is that it takes a lot of trial and error to determine what works best; the good news is that when you determine what works best, what marketers call ‘the control’, you can use it successfully for years and years.
What Are The Things I Can Test?
There are many aspects of your marketing you can test online. You can test:
- Price points
- Promotional offers
- Website design
- Headlines and copy
- Email messages and subject lines
In the beginning of your testing, you want to test one variation at a time. For instance, you would have one landing page with one price point, and another one with a different price point and measure which has more conversions. Many people who test price points test with the regular price and a lower one, but experienced marketers know that testing the upper limit is more profitable! They keep testing higher pricing levels until orders start to drop off dramatically to determine the highest price with the corresponding higher margin and profits they can sell for.
Common Types Of Testing
The most common type of test is the A/B or split test, where one group gets a message, and the other gets a different message and you see which one gets better results. It’s important to test properly to get a relevant result! You can compare one price point against another, one headline against another, different ad copy, even the background color of the website; just make sure the comparisons are ‘apples to apples’.
Another method of testing is called ‘multivariate’ and as the name implies, in this test you are testing a combination of things at the same time.
Then there is ‘Taguchi’ testing, which is like a multivariate test on steroids.
You do not need to do all of these tests, for most people getting started the A/B split test is the easiest to perform and there is no guess work or interpretation that is involved. One thing works better, gets more sales, and you go with that one and discard the other. With the other types of tests, there is some subjectivity and interpretations as to which of the changes produced the better result.
How To Get Started With Testing
- Determine what part of your marketing you want to test
- Put the test online
- Begin testing with search engines, either organically or through paid search
- Use the FREE testing tools provided by the search engines
You want to use the search engines first because of a number of reasons:
- You get a consistent, and often predictable flow of traffic
- You can control how much money you spend on the test
- You get more and better marketing and customer data from this source than any other option
- You have the most control over the testing process.
- Once things work well with search engines, they will most likely work with all other methods.
Following the roll-out plan (below) in the order listed. The costs and risks, and the lack of measurability increase with each channel. This is the most important reason to start with search engines first. It’s cheap and measurable!
The Marketing Channels – Get It Right and Spread The Word
1. Search engine test
2. Search engine optimization of website (conversion optimization)
3. Other search engine advertising
4. Email promotions and newsletters
5. Blog tagging, podcasting, and other online channels
6. Affiliate marketing
7. Press releases
8. Direct mail
9. Print advertising
10. Other media (radio, TV)
I can’t stress this enough; start with search engines because it is least expensive and you get unambiguous results fast. Once you have success with the search engines, then expand your marketing efforts with these other channels using the same things that led to that success. Many marketing plans have been failures because people have started with the most expensive methods and have gone broke waiting for meaningful results.
Google is by far the most used search engine on the planet, and they provide serious analytic tool for FREE if you set up a Google account. The three most important tools they offer are:
Numerous books and countless articles have been written on each of these Google tools. The more you learn, the more you will earn!
A Word About Statistical Validity
When I went to college, I had to take several courses on statistics and validity scores. Very complicated formulas that I won’t bore you with, but you do have to have some understanding about statistical validity or you can make the wrong conclusions and sabotage your efforts.
The most important rule is that you have to have enough data to make any valid determination of what your customers are ‘telling you’. For example you cannot make any real determination of results from 50 website visits. A test with only 50 people landing on your test sites is not nearly enough to draw any conclusions. You probably need several hundred before you can start to see the real patterns emerge. Some companies won’t make any conclusions from a test until they have thousands of pieces of data to interpret. Depending upon your traffic patterns, you could achieve this in a day or a month or more. The more data you have, the more relevant the results.
Google AdWords and Google Optimizer will help you to determine validity, but be careful, these are only basic tools.
If you need help setting up a testing program for your business, tell us how BizGrowth can help you.
Bookmarks [ del.icio.us | Digg it | Blogmarks | Diigo | FeedMarker | Google | Netscape | Yahoo MyWeb ]
Tags: a/b testing, AdWords, Google analytics, Google optimizer, Marketing Testing, multivariate testing, online testing, testing Posted in Advertising, Conversions, Google, Marketing Testing | No Comments »
May 23rd, 2008
I had the pleasure of conducting another webinar for SEMA yesterday. The title of the webinar was, “Ten Things You Can Do Today To Improve Your Website Results Tomorrow.”
Take a look at the presentation slides here.
Bookmarks [ del.icio.us | Digg it | Blogmarks | Diigo | FeedMarker | Google | Netscape | Yahoo MyWeb ]
Tags: Search Engine Marketing, Search Engine Optimization, Search engine rankings, SEMA, seo, serp Posted in Best Marketing Practices, Google, Lead Generation, Marketing Education Resources, Search Engine Marketing, Search Engine Optimization, Web Design | No Comments »
May 15th, 2008
Brian Offenberger, President of BizGrowth Search Engine Solutions will be speaking at the National Marketing Academy Workshop Wednesday, June 18 at the Sheraton Phoenix Airport Hotel in Phoenix, Arizona.
The workshop is from 7:30 am to 5:00pm, and Offenberger will be conducting the session ‘Paid Search and Local Markets’ from 2:45 – 4:15. The Search Engine and Internet Marketing Workshop is designed for business executives, marketers, and public relations executives who are trying to get an understanding of topics like search engine marketing, viral marketing, blogging, social media, and local search To find our how to register, click here.
The presentation focuses on how to get the most bang for your buck from the major paid search engines by choosing the right keywords, writing relevant ads and optimizing your landing pages. Offenberger will cover topics including tracking your users, pay per click campaigns, copywriting, how to begin a campaign, and using local search to target prospects in single geographic areas.
To register for this event at special low rates, contact the National Marketing Academy.
Bookmarks [ del.icio.us | Digg it | Blogmarks | Diigo | FeedMarker | Google | Netscape | Yahoo MyWeb ]
Tags: Brian Offenberger, internet marketing training, internet marketing workshop, National Marketing Academy, Vertical Measures Posted in Announcements, Marketing Education Resources, Search Engine Marketing | No Comments »
|
| |
|
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|