Search marketing: November 2007 Archives

About a week ago I spoke at Netimperative's Online Publishing and Media Summit, and since my talk has been discussed by Andrew Girdwood and David Cushman I thought it was time I got in on the act.

I was talking about how publishers need to adapt different business models to cope with the threat of search. My take on this is that for many online purchases the very last click before purchase will often be via a search engine.  And that last click is very often credited with 100% of the value of a sale.  So the CPA on search looks artificially low - and any other activity elsewhere in the customer journey, like banners, will look correspondingly expensive.

One way of looking at this is at the halo effect research conducted by Atlas. This research found that where a customer has been previously exposed to online display activity, conversion rates through search are 22% higher than someone coming through search alone. 

That 22% figure is an average across eleven advertisers.  In fact the highest reported uplift by using display and search together was around 65% (and, in the interests of fairness, one unlucky advertiser managed to depress response rates slightly with its display activity).

This isn't really an anti-Google argument, as many people seemed to think at the event.  In fact I've seen Google present the same Atlas research to justify why customers should spread spend into display activity - like Google's own advertising network for instance.

But it is an argument that publishers need to get their heads around.  Unless they can persuade clients and agencies to take a more sophisticated view of online conversion attibution models, budgets will continue to drift towards search and away from display advertising.

Where does Mahalo come in? Basically search is so important to online advertising that any new models - however experimental - have to be of interest.  I like Mahalo because it promises the best of both worlds - user crafted search pages for top searches, but defaulting to Google for the long tail of searches where Google excels.

And as the founder of Mahalo, Jason Calacanis, points out in a comment to Andrew Girdwood's blog, another advantage of a review based engine is that publishers can challenge their SERPs ranking and get it changed if their case has merit.  Wow!  

 

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This page is a archive of entries in the Search marketing category from November 2007.

Search marketing: January 2008 is the next archive.

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