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Yahoo! Rolls Out YSM Enhancements

May 21st, 2008 David Szetela Posted in Yahoo! Search Marketing No Comments »

Yahoo just made some nice changes to the YSM user interface:

Our latest enhancements aren’t going to make worldwide headlines, but they can help you do things like see at a glance which campaigns, ad groups and keywords are offline-and why. Here’s what you might notice the next time you log in:

• All names of objects (campaign, ad group, keyword, etc.) that are offline are displayed with red text for easy recognition.

• The “Top Campaigns” and “Watched Campaigns” tables on the Dashboard page now include a “Status” column to help you identify if and why any campaigns are offline.

• Minor updates to the “Campaigns” page have been made, including a new “Status” column, the ability to filter by “Status” when using the Advanced Search function, and replacing the “Campaign On/Off” button with individual “Pause” and “Unpause” buttons.

• We made minor tweaks to the Ads table on an Ad Group page, including adding a “Status” column, and replacing the “Campaign On/Off” button with individual “Pause” and “Unpause” buttons.

• New status settings have been added on the Search page, under the Campaigns tab.

• The addition of the “Status” column to the Ad Group, Ad and Keyword Search screens under the Campaigns tab.

• The ability to export (using the “Download” button) account information has been added to account-level Ad Group and Keyword pages, under the Campaigns tab.


Microsoft’s New adCenter Features: Shoring Up Third Place

April 29th, 2008 David Szetela Posted in Microsoft adCenter, Yahoo! Search Marketing No Comments »

Microsoft released a nice number of new adCenter features today - see the summary in this PDF document.

The good news: the features represent some much-needed improvements, especially in reporting capabilities. But they really just bring overall functionality closer to the 2006 version of Google AdWords - and still a distant third behind Google and Yahoo, not just in traffic but in user interface.

It’s sort of surprising that software giant Microsoft still hasn’t released a competitive ad platform, having started development in 2005. Yahoo’s been adding spiffy features at a faster pace - check out their campaign optimization and ad generator tools, for example.

But as I’ve said before: never underestimate Microsoft. Version 3.x is usually the killer app.


Google, Yahoo and Microsoft by the Numbers

April 10th, 2008 David Szetela Posted in Google AdWords, Google News, Microsoft News, Microsoft adCenter, Yahoo! News, Yahoo! Search Marketing No Comments »

The Wall Street Journal just released a nice comparison of Google, Microsoft and Yahoo revenue and profit data. Click on the thumbnails for larger views; there’s an interactive version here.

Some observations:

  • Yahoo’s fortunes seemed rosy in the 2.5 years after the Overture acquisition. They owned the search advertising space right up until the collision of Google’s superior AdWords UI with the rather disastrous Panama rollout. Wall Street noticed.
  • Interesting that the launch of Microsoft adCenter isn’t included as a milestone. The launch didn’t affect the MS stock price, but it would at least fit the context of the graph.
  • Impressive revenue per employee multiples: Microsoft = $690K, Google = $987K. Clix revenue per employee is almost as high as Microsoft’s - yessss!
  • What makes up $3.94 billion of Google non-advertising revenue?!?
  • Looks like Christmas 2007 shoppers boosted Google traffic by a huge amount - and they stayed post-Christmas.

Yahoo! Free Search Marketing Webinar Series

March 4th, 2008 David Szetela Posted in Yahoo! Search Marketing No Comments »

Anybody besides me noticing that Yahoo! has become much more aggressive about training/supporting advertisers? Here’s more evidence: a webinar series that promises some meaty advice that could benefit advertisers on any platform. See the list below and register here.

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Download the World’s Largest Negative Keyword List

February 26th, 2008 David Szetela Posted in Google AdWords, Microsoft adCenter, Yahoo! Search Marketing 1 Comment »

Our friends at Engine Ready released two phenomenal goodies today: this list of negative keywords that you can (and should!) use in your PPC campaigns right now, and AdFlint, a cool tool for brainstorming variations in PPC Ad copy.


Dear Microsoft: Please Use Panama

February 1st, 2008 David Szetela Posted in Microsoft News, Microsoft adCenter, Yahoo! News, Yahoo! Search Marketing No Comments »

Dear Microsoft,

Here’s my advice on how to wisely invest a few of the billions you have left over after you gobble Yahoo:

Microsoft + Yahoo = Mahoo?1. Please ditch the adCenter web interface and use the Yahoo Panama interface. The adCenter UI has been an embarrassment from the moment the ultimate alpha male Ballmer kicked it out the door when it was still alpha code.

2. Please use a few spare programmers to create an offline Panama editor that lets advertisers and agencies manage their Panama/adCenter campaigns and their Google campaigns. As I advised a few years ago, your goal should be to make your online advertising services the place where advertisers start their campaigns (currently they/we start with Google and later - reluctantly - “migrate down” to Panama and adCenter) - and a consolidated offline editor would make agencies and big advertisers start with you in a heartbeat. Heck, you already own 90% of the code!

Thanks for listening.

P.S. Brian McAndrews (formerly aQuantive CEO) looks like a great choice to head up Microsoft’s advertising efforts. He clearly “gets” advertising and advertisers - as evidenced by his “State of the Advertising Union” missive yesterday:

I think it is safe to say that 2007 was a historic year for aQuantive, as we became the largest acquisition in the history of Microsoft. As a result, we enter 2008 as a combined entity, excited to take on the challenges and opportunities of the digital advertising world as the Microsoft Advertiser & Publisher Solutions (APS) group.

Of course, several key milestones happened in addition to the Microsoft acquisition, so I thought it might be helpful to start by sharing a brief recap of what we were up to before the acquisition closed and highlight the momentum we continue to generate as the APS group within Microsoft. A lot of work has gone into shaping this new organization and our integration efforts are paying off.

Looking back

In what would be aQuantive’s final earnings announcement on May 8, we enjoyed record growth for aQuantive and its three business units: Atlas, Avenue A | Razorfish and DRIVEpm. Each performed extremely well, with 42% organic growth and revenues of $142.6 million, an increase of 55 percent over the first quarter of 2006. Some of the top news highlights from our teams included:

  • Abroad, Avenue A | Razorfish made an investment and formed a business alliance with Dentsu’s digital subsidiary Digital Palette in Japan, and acquired Duke in France.
  • We introduced Atlas AdManager Version 10 to help digital publishers increase revenue from under-utilized impressions. This was our first innovation resulting from our Accipiter acquisition in December 2006.
  • Atlas signed a global partnership deal with Media Contacts, the interactive arm of Havas, to support its global network, comprised of 30 cities in 23 countries.
  • aQuantive was named #9 in Advertising Age’s list of the World’s Top 25 Marketing Organizations - the first interactive operating company to crack the top 10.
  • Avenue A | Razorfish was the No. 1 interactive agency in Advertising Age’s list of top interactive agencies.

The day Microsoft closed the acquisition of aQuantive on Aug. 10 was a pivotal moment not only for us but for the industry. Our new business group is now responsible for growing Microsoft’s ad platform to better serve the advertiser and publisher community. Under my leadership, the APS team helps build and market all components of our ad platform, including Atlas, DRIVEpm, MSNDR and Microsoft adCenter, along with emerging media types such as in-game (Massive) and mobile ads (Screentonic). It also includes Avenue A | Razorfish, one of the largest global interactive firms, led by CEO Clark Kokich.

Our vision is to make buying and selling media simpler, smarter and more cost-effective across media and devices in the Microsoft network of properties and beyond.

I am proud of the fact that we were able to secure some quick, yet significant wins following the deal close. We believe these wins communicate to the market that we are gathering momentum even as we continue to develop our roadmap for the year ahead. Here are a few:

  • Atlas secured nearly 60 publisher wins in the second half of 2007, including significant deals with IAC, The Associated Press and Viacom.
  • DRIVEpm opened offices in Australia, Germany, France and Italy last year. Combined with Microsoft’s owned and operated inventory and the recent syndication deals we recently made, we are firmly within the top five networks worldwide when evaluated on reach and available impressions.
  • Microsoft’s investment in Facebook in November continues to position us as a strong and viable contender in the global digital advertising market.
  • Microsoft adCenter launched its contextual advertising offering, ContentAds, as well as a beta of Project Gatineau, its new web analytics offering.
  • Avenue A| Razorfish won 11 W3 awards, which recognize the power of web creativity, Amnesia, our Australian agency, won interactive agency of the year, and Forrester Research cited the AA|RF as an interactive marketing leader among only six other agencies.
  • To finish off 2007, we signed a multi-year deal with Viacom (alluded to above) to be their ad syndication, discretionary inventory and content distribution partner.

Looking ahead

While search has been the main driver of the blistering growth of online advertising in the past, at least partially because of the “last ad clicked” performance measurement standard (pioneered by Atlas in the late 90s), we do not believe this will necessarily be the case in the coming years.

The current system for tracking ad conversions , while the best available for years, is not optimal because it gives all credit to that last ad seen or clicked - often a search engine - and not any credit to other ad units the consumer may have seen prior that helped influence the user to seek more information about the advertiser. Thus, Search has gotten more than its share of the credit, but that’s starting to change. We’ll be making significant inroads here in 2008 through our continuing ground-breaking work in the area of “conversion attribution,” a new Atlas technology offering that will do a better job of “giving credit where credit is due.”

That said, we’re not discounting the importance of Search as it continues to drive a lion’s share of digital advertising budgets. Our goal is to help advertisers and agencies make their Search campaigns as relevant, targeted and highly converting as possible. We’ve made great strides toward this end, and will continue to make deep investments in both our Live Search engine and Microsoft adCenter to improve the value of our Search offerings for customers.

We’re also excited by the opportunities we’ll see in emerging media formats this year.

Online video advertising will experience significant growth. In fact, video is expected to be the fastest growing ad category on the web for the foreseeable future. The alignment of factors including broadband penetration, the ubiquity of connected devices, audience shifts and video ad-serving advances mean online video is growing in popularity with both consumers and advertisers. Atlas was the first technology to integrate in-stream video into its product; we expect to continue to lead the way in this area.

In-game advertising will also begin to make meaningful inroads. With seven-figure deals and the metrics to make them pay, dynamic in-game advertising is growing up as a medium for branding and selling. With its unique insights into this non-interruptive, entertainment-oriented, highly interactive and user-directed environment, our subsidiary Massive is leading the way for marketers of every size and sector to incorporate games into multi-channel campaigns.

Mobile advertising is still a nascent market, but one with huge potential. Here you’ll see us invest in our Atlas toolset, working very closely with our subsidiary ScreenTonic and our colleagues in Windows Mobile, to make significant progress with new mobile advertiser and publisher tools, mobile syndication, and new advertising clients.

For advertisers specifically, the future of digital advertising is not about creating a video ad out of a recycled TV spot or designing a gimmicky web site camouflaged as a social media experience. Avenue A | Razorfish’s goal is to help advertisers get their brands into more conversations so they can empower consumers to share brand experiences with each other. Looking ahead, Avenue A | Razorfish will continue to help advertisers build relationships with their consumers through the power of social media. And be sure to look out for the agency’s 5th annual Digital Outlook Report at the end of February, which outlines media spending for the previous year and provides expectations and trends for 2008.

Through our combined resources, technical expertise and marketing experience, APS will deliver in 2008 on its unique offering for advertisers and publishers. It will no doubt be another incredible year and a fast ride.


The Coolest Tool I’ve Seen in a Long, Long Time

January 31st, 2008 David Szetela Posted in Google AdWords, Microsoft adCenter, PPC Content Advertising, Yahoo! Search Marketing No Comments »

You will certainly love what you see in my post today on the SEW Blog. I guarantee it. Go there now.


Free Textbook on Yahoo! Search Marketing

January 24th, 2008 David Szetela Posted in Yahoo! Search Marketing No Comments »

And the hits keep right on coming - as if these other free resources weren’t already a treasure trove of a toolkit for educating search advertisers, Yahoo has just released a great free 43-page PDF eBook you can download here.

Yahoo’s synopsis:

It’s a guidebook geared especially toward the beginning search marketer, but it also offers tips for the more advanced Yahoo! Search Marketing advertiser.

Yahoo! Search Marketing Specialist “Sharon Goodsense” shows how the decisions you make with your account play a key role in your search marketing success. In this easy-to-read booklet, Sharon takes you through the steps of creating effective campaigns and offers helpful advice of how to make good decisions. The Smart Start Guide includes chapters on:

  • Getting to know your account
  • Building a foundation with strong keywords
  • Organizing ad groups for success
  • Writing effective ads
  • Making sure your ads are high quality
  • Matching keywords to your customers’ searches
  • Determining effective bids
  • Targeting your ads geographically
  • Advertising on content sites other than Yahoo.com
  • Tracking your results

Don’t Be a Loser, Part 2

January 13th, 2008 David Szetela Posted in Google AdWords, Microsoft adCenter, Yahoo! Search Marketing 3 Comments »

Hundreds of people have downloaded the free ebook Scientific Marketing that I posted last week. It seems the message “internet marketers have a lot to learn from dirt-world experts” resonated with young marketers everywhere.

So I decided to dig deeper and find a free resource that’s a gold mine of information specifically for PPC advertisers. It addresses one of the biggest challenges we face: writing persuasive ad copy with only 95 characters or so to play with.

Turns out the issue precedes PPC advertising - generations of marketers have faced the same challenge when writing classified ads for print publications.

So I found a great ebook that teaches effective classified ad writing - you can download it here. It’s a great read, especially for the lists hundreds of of persuasive words and phrases, and the AIDA “master formula.”

Note: the book is in the form of an .exe file (a Windows application); sorry, non-Windows folks!

Note again: Here’s a PDF version of the eBook (courtesy of blog reader Wes).


Early Holiday Results for Clix PPC Retailers

December 14th, 2007 David Szetela Posted in Google AdWords, Microsoft adCenter, Yahoo! Search Marketing No Comments »

Now that we’re at the beginning of the end of the eCommerce holiday buying season, some trends are evident among Clix Marketing’s retailing client PPC campaigns:

1. The number of impressions and clicks is down from previous years. It’s likely that online buyers, armed with a broader range of gift choices and savvier searching skills, are starting their gift-giving research with keywords that are more specific than those used in previous years.

2. Click-through-rates (CTRs) and conversion rates are up considerably from last year - our clients are averaging 7-15% CTR and the high end of 5-10% conversion rates. This reflects increased refinement of ad groups, and implementation of new technology like our dynamic landing page software.

3. Average cost-per-click is around 30% higher across the board - reflecting increased competition over previous years.

4. Yahoo clicks and conversions have increased sharply over previous years - reflecting an improvement in click quality and inventory. Microsoft still has the best conversion rates - one of our clients is getting an average of 25% - but click inventory is still very low.

One clear trend: the competition for Google AdWords keywords and clicks has ballooned. Advertisers will need to get savvier to attain the high CTRs and conversion rates that have, in the past, been easy to reach. This coming year we’ll be focusing on Content Network advertising, where click inventory is high and growing quickly, building on techniques described in previous Clix blog posts and my Search Engine Watch column.


Yahoo! Holiday Advertising Webinar - Submit Questions

November 11th, 2007 David Szetela Posted in Yahoo! Search Marketing No Comments »

We received the following info and invitation from our Yahoo friends. They’re conducting a Holiday Advertising webinar on Wednesday, November 14, and they’d like Clix blog readers to submit questions you’d like to have answered. Post your questions as comments to this post - Yahoo will be monitoring them and will feed them to Pato Spagmoletto. Here’s their pith:

Patrizio Spagnoletto, Senior Director of Marketing at Yahoo! Search Marketing, is hosting a webinar on Wednesday, November 14, that I thought you and your readers may be into. It’s called “2007 Holiday Consumer Overview and Search Best Practices” and a ton of insight will be shared – from search best practices, to the impact of combining search and display, to 2006 holiday results/ consumer trends.

Here are a few interesting stats that will be reviewed in the webinar:

Users move between paid and algo listings

66%of clicks are from consumers clicking marketers’ listings multiple times.

37% of conversions come from consumers clicking more than one of marketer’s listings, natural or paid.

12.6% of conversions credited to natural search results were actually preceded by clicks on a marketer’s paid listings, more than twice as many as occur in converse scenario.

Campaigns managed holistically – where keywords used in sponsored search also rank well in algo – deliver superior performance

 39% lift in revenue.

31% lift in perception of campaign.

Some best practices tips for marketers:

Apply seasonal modifiers to keywords.

Plan ahead and use scheduling for short term promotions and include special messaging in title and descriptions.

Create robust gift guides to encourage cross shopping to different categories and drive traffic to that gift guide.

Here’s the page where people can sign up.


Yahoo to Allow Site Exclusion

October 1st, 2007 David Szetela Posted in Yahoo! Search Marketing No Comments »

Starting within the next two weeks, advertisers on Yahoo! Search Marketing will have the option to block domains of sites where they don’t want Content ads to appear - the functional equivalent of Google AdWords’ Site Exclusion capability.

We’ve asked Yahoo whether they’ll be supplying a report showing the domains where ads are appearing - similar to the Placement Performance report Google supplies. We’ll post their answer; meanwhile, here’s Yahoo’s description of the Blocked Domains capability:

Blocked Domains
Yahoo! gives you more control over your campaigns by letting you specify partner websites or sections of a website that don’t meet your business needs and on which you don’t want your ads to appear.

As you know, with Sponsored Search your ads can appear in Yahoo! search results as well as search results throughout the Yahoo! distribution network. In addition, if you choose the Content Match option your ads can appear alongside content on Yahoo! or throughout the Yahoo! distribution network. Blocked Domains lets you specify sites on which you don’t want your ads to appear, whether they’re competitors of yours, or have products or content that you don’t want associated with your brand.

Blocked Domains lets you block up to 250 domains. These can be an entire domain, a subdomain, or up to two subdirectories per domain.

Update: Yahoo is looking to offer Content site reporting “…down the road.” They advise advertisers to review web logs and other site data.