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More Accountability Demanded from Search
Engine Marketing Firms
Search engine marketing firms that use tactics
designed to trick the engines into showing results that aren't directly
addressing the search query will struggle, as more companies begin to look
at the larger goals that lead them to investigate search engine marketing
services in the first place. The "traffic-centric" mindset will evolve as
companies begin to demand accountability from search engine marketing firms
in terms of bottom line increases. Ranking increases delivered by search
engine marketing services will be questioned if they do not lead to
significant traffic increases, and traffic increases will be questioned if
there is no subsequent increase in business generated from the website. This
is a good thing for quality search engine marketing firms, since the
"snake-oil" practitioners that have given the industry such a bad name will
never be given serious consideration by any company that does its homework
in the vendor selection process.
Rising PPC Costs and Increasing PPC
Frustration
As larger companies with huge budgets continue
to jump into the pay-per-click (PPC) arena, costs will continue to rise.
(Average PPC costs have increased 37% from Q1 2005 to Q1 2006) These
well-funded companies will use PPC as a branding tool as much as a sales
tool, which will squeeze out many of the current smaller advertisers. In
fact, the top 10 PPC advertising companies, based upon the number of PPC
impressions, include such names as eBay, NextTag, Vonage, Time Warner,
Orbitz, Target, and Yahoo. More large companies will continue to join the
fray, many of them throwing ROI out the window and bidding high prices for
desirable key-phrases for the sake of branding. This means that search
engine marketing firms will find small-to medium-sized companies turning to
SEO to achieve results when they no longer can afford PPC.
Increased Interest in Organic SEO
While PPC costs rise, there is also a trend
that no doubt disturbs the engines that offer PPC programs. Sixty-six
percent of consumers "distrust" paid search ads. Up to 85% of searchers say
they "tend to ignore the paid listings", while 87% of commercial clicks take
place "on the natural (not sponsored) search results." Three times as many
marketers who outsource the management of their natural SEO to search engine
marketing firms and who also participate in pay-per-click advertising
recognize a higher ROI from their search engine marketing services than from
PPC. These facts, coupled with the fact that Google has recently announced
that it will begin to take the relevance of pages into consideration when
deciding in what order the ads will appear (which will mean that effective
PPC campaigns will need at least some basic organic SEO), point to one
obvious result--an increase in the number of companies that investigate
organic SEO programs, whether internally generated or provided by outside
search engine marketing firms.
Continued Reluctance from Agencies to
Pursue Search Marketing
To most, it seems like a perfect
fit--traditional advertising agencies joining forces with (or purchasing
outright) PPC providers and organic search engine marketing services.
However, the average agency is scared to death of search engine marketing
services in any form (although some forward-looking agencies have finally
jumped on the search engine marketing bandwagon). The reasons are simple:
accountability and metrics.
Advertising agencies have for years made money
based upon a percentage of what a company spends on advertising. This model
has been the accepted norm for decades. However, it raises some ethical
issues. What is the motivation for an agency to recommend decreased spending
on non-performing initiatives? Moreover, what reasons does an agency have to
report on the effectiveness of each of its campaigns? (If an agency's
clients dug deeply into any such metrics, they would likely reduce their
advertising spend based on the performance of individual campaigns.) Many
PPC service providers have adopted this model, even though the goal of a PPC
campaign should be to monitor the metrics of a campaign to decrease the
spend (eliminating underperforming key-phrases, for example).
Good search engine marketing services offer
metrics that scare traditional advertising agencies. If these agencies were
to present such metrics to their clients, those same clients may start to
demand similar metrics for other campaigns (television, radio, magazine ads,
etc.). Until the "percentage of spend" model is altered, large agencies will
continue to reject search engine marketing services and will not recommend
them to their clients.
Continued Focus on Google for Organic SEO
In general, where Google goes, other engines
will follow. Smart search engine marketing services will continue to
optimize for Google, which currently accounts for half of searches in the
United States. However, instead of trying to trick Google by unraveling the
latest, ever-changing algorithm, search engine marketing firms will instead
need to use the "piggyback" approach. This approach entails learning from
the extensive studies that Google conducts of its users (learning by
observing the commonalities of the types of sites that consistently rank
highly) and applying those same attributes to client websites. In this way,
search engine marketing firms not only make sites better for Google, but
also for users. As other engines try to close the relevancy gap in search
engine results, search engine marketing firms will be rewarded as the
tactics they have used for Google success become the accepted industry
standard.
Conclusion
The use of search engine marketing services is
still a new, "unproven" channel to many companies. Even so, it is changing
the way that many traditional advertising agencies must do business. With
PPC costs on the rise, and the effectiveness of the PPC channel coming into
question, more companies will investigate the hiring of search engine
marketing firms using organic tactics for their Internet marketing needs.
Smart companies that outsource organic or PPC advertising will no longer say
"what have you done for me lately"--they will say "prove what you've done
for me lately." Search engine marketing services that are on top of the
curve will be more than happy to do so.
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