Archive

Archive for the ‘PPC etc’ Category

YouTube a drain on Google

July 8th, 2009 IBabel No comments

While YouTube is undoubtedly one of the most popular sites on the web, recent figures show that Google are feeling some big financial pain from it. The delivery model behind YouTube means that much of the content delivered is not giving a return to Google. 

Goggle hopes that the cost per impression for ads carried on YouTube will gradually increase over time to start generating more significant revenue, and of course YouTube carries some major brand recognition value.

But as things stand, YouTube is losing money in a big way – estimates from Credit Suisse suggest that YouTube will lose nearly $500 million USD in 2009. Google are a huge company, but no-one likes the thought of losing half-a-billion each year…

Google has been experimenting with various advertising models to get a better return but the figures suggest that the current CPM needs to be improved something like 30-40 times before YouTube would show a profit on the current model.

Sponsored content seems to be the way to go in order to get a more guaranteed return but how many people will be keen to watch advertorials and sponsored clips? 

Google will no doubt live with the pain for a while but expect to see a shift towards sponsored content, and who knows, maybe a parting of the ways if they can’t find a cure…

Categories: Other Web Talk, PPC etc, google Tags:

Using Generic Domain Names to Improve PPC Results

April 14th, 2009 IBabel 5 comments

The results of a recent (admittedly small scale but well presented) experiment suggest that an effective way to boost a PPC ad campaign is to acquire relevant on-target generic names to enhance or enforce the ads and get more traffic from them.

The guys at Memorable Domains ran a study which showed that: “All other things being equal (same headline, same ad copy, same bids, same landing page etc.) the ads that used an on-topic generic domain name received up to twice the clicks that ads using a “coined” non-generic domain name did”.

Full details of the experiment and the results obtained can be found in the report at http://www.memorabledomains.co.uk/ppcanalysis.pdf

The results are something that many of us might have guessed at, but it’s nice to see some specific figures to back-up that intuition. Part of the reason could be down an increased ‘trust’ by the visitor in the generic sounding domain name, but the report proposes some more specific reasons, and certainly gives some food for thought.

Read the report – it’s only a few pages long. I hope it will encourage you to do some experimentation of your own with generic names.

Thanks to Memorable Domains for permission to post about this.

Categories: Domains, PPC etc Tags: , ,

Online Advertising spend up in 2008 – Some Thoughts

April 1st, 2009 IBabel 3 comments

Recent figures show that the 2008 online advertising spend in the US showed an increase of over 10% on 2007, despite the Financial Crisis that was beginning to take hold in the latter part of the year.

2008 US revenue (MOT Worldwide, just the US) came to a record $23.4 billion, surpassing 2007′s record of $21.2 billion by 10.6 percent.

The figures indicate a continuing shift from traditional to online modes of advertising, and a realisation that online provides a more targeted and measurable approach, which can be important when every advertsing dollar needs to be accounted for.

Search related advertising kept its position as the main player, accounting for almost half of the total spend, with an almost 20% increase over 2007. ‘Direct’ advertsing is also growing.

The largest vertical markets were, as in 2007, retail, financial services, computing and automotive.

The full article can be read  here:
http://www.webpronews.com/topnews/2009/03/30/online-ad-revenue-up-106
Some points that arise from this article:

  • Given that Search showed such a healthy increase in spend, this didn’t seem to be reflected in Adsense publisher’s incomes. This is anecdotal evidence of course, and there are always some publishers/sites who can show good growth but from looking around on the forums it certainly seems that the increase didn’t generally make it through to Adsense publishers’s wallets.
  • It could well be that the increased spend was spread more thinly over the ever increasing amount of Web Real Estate, or inventory. More sites, more advertsing spots, more spend but distributed across an ever increasing pool of publishers.
  • If that is the case, then will there be a ‘saturation point’ where the amount of available Web Inventory becomes just too big? Will the growth in advertising outstrip the growth in available traffic, and returns start to flatten out naturally?
  • If the online spend is being spread ever thinner, that only goes to highlight the importance of providing something different, regular site reviews, updates & changes (unlike this site recently – haha) and effective SEO to make a site stand out.
  • Is it going to be better to run loads of sites to try and catch some of that thinly spread advertsing spend, or concentrate on a few key names that you can really push – and sell off the rest of your stable?
  • Publishers should look more and more into ‘direct’ advertising (something that IM/MMO Bloggers in particular do anyway). Advertisers like PR and content, and the knowledge that traffic will be targetted, so activley pursue direct advertsing/sponsorship opportunities for all your sites.
  • Only park domains when you have to. Parking can be good as a holding option, but you’re getting an even smaller slice of that spend when you do it. Review your parked domains, pick the best potential ones (through keyword analysis, seacrh temrs, parking stats etc) and stick a minsite on them, with a combination of static and RSS/Video type feeds. Throw Adsense, Adbrite or whatever floats your boat on there – you’ll see an increase over parking revenue, the chance of gaining some PR and backlinks, a growth in organic/search traffic – and open up the potential for adding direct advertising or selling the developed site on at a profit.

Just some thoughts.

Nice to be back ;-)

Google Adsense and Analytics Integration

November 17th, 2008 IBabel 2 comments

Well, it wasn’t a hoax and at last Google have finally introduced a level of integration between Adsense and Analytics.

This is still being rolled out at the moment – I don’t have any details on the rollout process so I’ll just have to wait for my invite but it looks to have some useful features for Adsense publishers.

From what I can gather we’ll be able to sign-up to use your existing or a new analytics account to track your Adsense performance.

  • Once integrated, there will be a new ‘Adsense’ section within your analytics account where you’ll be able to see some good metrics at a ‘Page’ and ‘Referrer’ level – and will be able to drill down and analyse those metrics by such things as day, time of day, geographic location etc.
  • As well as providing useful information on tour best performing sites and pages, this will also let you to assess the effects of any Adsense optimisation you do, and allow a basic form of split-testing where you could experiment with different ad formats and locations on similar pages.

It doesn’t look as though you’ll be able to analyse (yet) at an individual ad level (maybe heat maps could help?) – but from first appearances this could be a very handy tool for all you Adsense publishers out there and all from the comfor of your analytics account.

Now i’ve just got to wait for my invite ;-)

Categories: PPC etc, google Tags: ,

Promotions.co.uk – a New Approach to Discount Codes

November 2nd, 2008 IBabel No comments

This is NOT a paid post.

It’s about a site i came across that looks like a novel approach to Discount Code/Coupon sites. These are a hot area, and one I’ve written about before - and they are particularly relevant in the current economic climate, but many people find that it’s difficult to get a decent Coupon site going. It can be difficult to locate good Coupons and keep the current ones on your site – and it can be a pain managing a lot of affiliate accounts.

Doug and the guys at ASAP have come up with Promotions.co.uk - a service that will let you run a Coupon site or have Coupon sections on your Content site with two big advantages: they do most of the leg work for you and, more importantly, you can get to keep most, if not all, all of the revenue ;-)

The service is still in development at the moment, and the final product will be refined as a result of feedback, but to me it looks like a fantastic idea. I haven’t got the time to be maintaining a hundred affiliate accounts or constantly looking for good and current offers that match my content – so this could just offer a solution for me, and for many of you.

Various benefits include (paraphrased from the Promotions.co.uk site):

  • Your own discount code website or subdomain or our discount codes on your site, similar to adsense. Site can be built, or you can use a CMS to manage a coupon site, or you can add some code to your site for displaying coupons
  • They collect and control all the codes on your behalf.
  • You can add your own exclusive codes if you have any.
  • They ensure that as many merchant’s discount codes as possible are live in the system, without you having to request them from a network or a merchant.
  • All you have to do is drive traffic to your site(s). You can do this any way you wish and if you want to add unique content to your discount site then you can.
  • If you have a content site you can add their code to each page and the discount codes for merchant with that product will display show. Hence protecting content/information sites from losing sales to voucher code sites.

Doug is a top bloke (check out the interview with him if you haven’t already), his ideas are usually spot-on and ASAP have great contacts with big players in the industry, so my guess is that this will be a winner.

You’ve got nothing to lose so hop on over to Promotions.co.uk and check it out for yourself.

 

SEO vs PPC Revisited

September 24th, 2008 IBabel 5 comments

In one of my first posts after taking ownership of this Blog, I described how the relative search popularity trends for ‘SEO’ vs ‘PPC’ as shown by Google Trends reflected the current economic climate.

I laid it on a bit thick to make the point but the link seemed pretty clear. Jim, from the NetFool, thought I was reading too much into it and that search trends didn’t reflect the economy.

Well they do - to an extent.

If you only look to see what’s Hot in Google Trends at any one time then of course that just reflects the relative popularity of current cultural/social/news topics – but if you narrow your search down to two competing ‘generic’ terms like this and refine your search to look at specific geographic areas then they do give some indication of the current economic state. 

Look again now at Google Trends, compare seo & ppc and look at the 12 month trend for USA, UK, Australia as opposed to say, China (India seems a different case, as SEO has always led PPC there and the pattern seems stable).

The trend I pointed out in my original post is continuing (and in the case of the UK and Australia the gap looks to be growing). SEO is gaining ground over PPC in the main English-speaking ‘Western’ (and European) markets and that’s not reflected (yet) in China. 

OK, I’m not being 100% deadly serious about this - PPC will always be here of course. It’s great for kickstarting campaigns and getting traffic boosts – and the guys with the massive generic domains (Fly.com is for sale at SEDO by the way – be prepared for a 6-7 figure price though) will always be secure anyway. For the rest of us it just reminds us that organic is best.

By the way – Wednesday seems to be the most popular day of the week for ‘SEO’ searches in the US ;-)

 

While you’re here – have a click on that nifty little ‘pencil’ in the sidebar – yes, that’s the one, it says ‘Random Post’ on it. Guess what it does? Well – if you click on it, it’ll take you to a mystery Internet Babel Post – it could be one from yesterday or a year ago and it could be about anything – you might find something you missed before. go on…Click it.

  

 

Categories: PPC etc, SEO, Traffic Tags: ,

Doug Scott – ASAP Ventures

September 4th, 2008 IBabel 1 comment

Doug Scott is a very well-known name in Affiliate and Web Marketing circles – and a great subject for an interview, cos he tells it like it is without any bullshit or ‘black art’ stuff. He’s the man behind ASAP Ventures and a host of high-profile domains particularly in the travel and car-hire sectors.

This post would have appeared under the ‘Interviews’ section, except that someone got to Doug before me. However, this interview is so good you’ll want to hear it, believe me.  Fraser, from AffiliateBlog.co.uk did the interview with Doug and they have both agreed to me posting about it and producing a transcript.


I’ve reproduced a few choice snippets here, to give you a taste, and there’s also a PDF version of the full transcript available for download – but you’ll find it worthwhile listening to the whole Podcast, if you can decipher the accents – being a Brummie I speak perfect English but these two guys aren’t as fortunate as me ;-)

The full interview comes in at 40 minutes plus but it’s a great lesson in how things really work.


On Domains:

Fraser: Fly.co.uk that’s a kind of high profile purchase you made recently wasn’t it?

Doug: Yeah, that was GBP 87,500 (approx. $175,000). 

Fraser: That’s quite a big investment.

Doug: Personally, I thought it was a bargain – I thought they gave it away.

Fraser: You think so, that’s good.  So I take it you’re a real believer in a good generic domain name then.

Doug: If you’re going to sell something it’s much easier to sell fly.co.uk rather than dougscheapflights.co.uk.  As a company, what we do is we get traffic to websites. You know, carrentals.co.uk – is a very good generic. It probably does - over the past 5 years, it’s probably done between 50 and 100 million GBP worth of sales.  If we wanted to sell that domain it’s much easier to sell that domain having it as a nice name.  It’s much easier for a corporate to understand what they’re buying.
 
If you look at carrentals alone, that domain has probably had in the region of 5 million GBP spent on it.
Therefore, you might as well spend that much money on a nice domain name.

If you look at Fly.co.uk, that was 87.5k GBP, Recycle was 152k GBP - and I just look and I think, it’s so easy.  The traffic part has never been a problem to us. I always say to people you put content on websites and give them some links – that’s all you have to do.

Traffic & Link-Building:

Fraser: So why would people find the traffic part difficult then?  I know there’d be a lot of people out trying to desperately get traffic to their websites.

Doug: I think that most people don’t believe it.  They do it for 3 months and then stop.

You know, they don’t see the results they expect. I did an explanation yesterday to a couple of people, and they had a website and my first question was how many visitors does it get? And they said 5 a day.  I said, you’ve got 5 now, whatever you did last time do it again ‘cause then you’ll have 10 and then do it again and you’ll have 20 and once you get to a certain point theyre will be a logical point where what you should actually do is turn this into a process and have other people do it or have machines do it.

There’s no point you as an individual sitting in a bedroom trying to manually do everything.

Fraser: So processes for things like getting the content written, doing the link building, those kind of jobs?

Doug: We do processes for everything.  I say we do factory SEO. We have probably about 300 writers now around the world who write content for us.  We used to write it ourself but then it became cheaper to give to someone else in bulk. 

If we do link building, we have machines that do requests, we have people who do requests.  Basically we’ll trial something, trial something, work out how it works and then we will try to make it an automated process or a manual process.

Fraser: That you can then outsource, so you’re not stuck having to doing it yourselves?

Doug: You can outsource or you can build a machine.
 
Fraser: So how do you mean, can I explore that a little bit “build a machine” – you just mean an application that does it for you or what?

Doug ScottDoug: If I’m very simple about it, if you’re looking for links in a sector, what most people will do is, they will go to Google.  They will search for terms relating to their sector, they will try to find the contact forms and the email addresses of those people and then they will manually contact all of them. 

Now, aside from saying the legalities of how you contact them, the collecting of that data, well a machine can do all of that much, much faster than an individual will ever do it.  Now you may put a sanity check in – where we’ve now got all the data, we now get people involved, who then basically before we touch someone will look at the data to make sure it’s what it’s meant to be.

Fraser: Right yeah, so you’re emailing the right people and not asking the wrong sites for links and that kind of stuff?

Doug: Yes, in most cases it’s very limited in what we do about asking people for links anymore.  We have processes now – we’ve just learnt as time goes on that the efficiency of asking people is not the best way of doing it. 

If I went back 4 years ago we would have been doing very much more traditional asking for the link.
 
Now what we would do is we will try and create something and then tell the relevant people who really want to link to it because if you can kick that snowball down the hill the effect is dramatic.  It’s one of the discussions, you know going back to the domain name purchases  – you look at the 2 big ones which people know that we bought was Fly and Recycle.  Now have a look at the back links at any time you want of Fly and Recycle and you’ll see there’s a lot of them and there’s a lot of them based because of how much we paid for it.

Fraser: Right, that’s almost kind of self fulfilling, yeah you spent that money on an instant success because people talk about it because of how much you spent on it.

Doug: Anytime I mention it, anywhere, like here, other people will link to it. It’s the same on my blog, my blog has taught me a huge amount of how to create controversy.

Link-Bait

Fraser: Do you think that’s a good method? I know that some people have frowned at that link bait at money.co.uk saying that if the story’s not true it’s misleading and unethical, I mean  what’s your stance on it?

Doug: Depends on where you going with it.  Ethically wise, I would say I agree, it’s not ethical. Lyndon’s view is, commercially it’s hugely viable. Now if you’re Google what do you do with that I don’t know. What we’ve done in the past is we prefer to create a story – we play – rather than rifle shooting we play a lot more of a random game, a shotgun, where what we will do is we will create a 100 stories and some will get picked up – we don’t know which ones will but once one is picked up we will then exploit it.

So we let the world decide what the story is that wants to be told.

Paid Search:

Doug: Paid search to me now is pure arbitrage business. You know, it’s exactly what happens in money markets and share trading markets.  What you’re looking for is a hole in the market. And there’s enough data out there, if you’ve got access to the data – that’s what it very simply is – at one point we were running one paid search campaign with 4.5 million key words in it.  An individual can not do the analysis on that data – it’s just not physically possible. So you need to have a machine.

You’re changing your bid prices, time of days and things like that but you need to be able to take the data you’ve got and react to it.  It should be possible with enough data to take the click through value, the click through rates, the amount of money you paid on a position in Google – you should be able to forward forecast and reverse forecast what any price should be at any time of the day for any keyword in any month.

From our experience, if you’re in a very targeted niche, say if you’re doing car insurance, an individual will win every time because an individual will physically look at the ads and see how good they are, bad they are, in comparison to what other people are doing, and be able to make gut instinct changes – a machine can’t do that. 

But as soon as you go past the 100 key words – we proved it most of last year, ‘cause we ran 2 parallel campaigns on 2 different sites, and that’s exactly what we found.  The machines just won every time. 


These are just a few snippets from what is a very interesting interview.

Hear the full Podcast at: http://www.affiliateblog.co.uk/doug-scott-asap-ventures-interview.html

Download the full transcript here

I hope you find it entertaining and educational.

Dave 

Coupon Codes – Leverage Your Existing Site

August 30th, 2008 IBabel 5 comments

Coupon Codes, vouchers, discount codes – whatever you want to call them, they’re still a hot thing, highly searched and can generate a lot of traffic and loyalty/return visitors.

So it’s understandable that you’d want a piece of the action. Trouble is, there are a million people out there setting up new coupon sites at the same time, so you’re working in a very competetive marketplace. But there’s a way to get ahead of the pack, and that’s by NOT setting up a Coupon site.

Instead, use your existing Web presence to kick-start your Coupons.

How?

Assume that you already have a site (or sites) out there (Blogs or Content sites or whatever) which means you’re already indexed with your existing content. Your site has some history, it has some visitors, it has backlinks and it maybe has some PR or other ranking.    

So why not make the most of that advantage by adding Coupon codes and Vouchers to your existing sites?

You can do this by adding new pages or sections to the site, or by adding a content block or sidebar to certain pages, listing latest or rotating offers.

Why?

  • Because - Time IS Money You’ll have a population of existing site visitors who’ll see these offers immediately, and of course you’ll be able to utilise any existing subscriber/mailing lists you might have.
  • Your Coupons will be being presented to an audience who are more likely to ‘trust’ you as opposed to the million other straight-up coupon sites out there.
  • You’ll be able to contextually target your coupons to the specific site or even page audience, so your coupons and vouchers will be being shown to a demographic that’s going to be more likely to show interest in them. 
  • People are searching more and more for specific types of discount codes (products, brands etc) and you’ll likely attract a proportion of these people to your site as well.

Sure, there will be some effort to target and monitor your coupons/vouchers and so on, but you’re going to have a head start on all the ‘generic’ coupon code sites out there.

It doesn’t have to degrade from your site appearance or aesthetics, and it’s easy to trial it on selected pages or for a period of time – so give it a go. Leverage the advantage your existing site will give you.    

Based on an original idea from “Gorgeous” Doug Scott

 

Cost Per Day (CPD) and PPC together – TextAdMarket.com

July 23rd, 2008 IBabel No comments

A site that caught my eye a few days ago is TextAdMarket.com – they’ve got a nice angle on providing a hybrid CPD-PPC ad solution.

TextAd Logo

For those of you don’t know the term, CPD (Cost Per Day) is a type of paid-advertising where (strangely enough) the Publisher gets paid for each full day that they carry an Advertiser’s ad on their site. There aren’t too many CPD providers around but there has been more talk about them lately, as they have the potential to offer a regular and known income stream without having to tie-in to any long term deals.

Background

TextAdMarket started out as a CPD ‘marketplace’, where Publishers could showcase their sites/ad-slots and advertisers can bid for those slots for an agreed period of time. Publisher’s can join up for free, and advertising ‘credits’ can be purchased in amounts as low as $20. TextAdMarket provides the mechanism for bidding, the embed code to use and various monitoring facilities.

The site went live in May 2008 and to date (23rd July) just over 300 Publishers/Advertisers have signed up.

CPD/PPC

One of the potential drawbacks with such a system is that ‘unused’ ad-slots can remain empty on sites, so the guys at TextAdMarket came up with a novel twist by also allowing PPC ads to be run whenever a CPD slot is not being used. Obviously these PPC ads are just paid ‘per click’ but all revenue goes into the same account.

Publishers can opt to sell their ad slots at a fixed price, or have their ad prices rise and fall on a nightly basis, based on ad popularity and other factors.

TextAdMarket say that they work on a fixed commission of 20%, regardless of the type of advert being carried.

This all seems like a good approach to me – I’m certainly going to sign up and try it out on a few of my sites (from both a publisher and advertiser perspective).

Conclusion

It’s early days yet of course, and the site’s success will hinge on the take-up rates, and also on the quality and breadth of advertising available. However, I think it’s certainly worth a closer look and the guys deserve some encouragement and exposure for bringing a pretty novel idea to the market.

The site can be found at http://www.TextAdMarket.com

Ben at TextAdMarket has also kindly offered an ‘opening special’ coupon code – for an extra 10% ad credit on all purchases until September 30th. Code: “10-GRANDOPEN”

This has not been a paid or commissioned review – just a service I came across that might be worth a punt. I’m not endorsing or making any claims for the site, nor am I getting any fee for this. Just saying it’s probably worth checking out.

I’d really like to hear your thoughts on this type of service, and feedback from anyone who signs up either as an Advertiser or a Publisher.