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THE WHOA FACTOR

Search Engine Marketing: June 2008 Archives

The Sorry State of Newspaper Advertising

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Dozens of pop-up ads covering a desktop.

Image via Wikipedia

A couple weeks ago I sat down to read the Sunday Chicago Tribune.  It looked weird. Why? Because the front page was half covered by an advertising page wrapped around the first section. I couldn't start reading until I took the ad page off.

Then I go to the sports section - same thing! Scores and recaps covered by ads.

What are the newspapers thinking? Readership continues to decline, advertisers continue to drift away, and what do the papers do? They go out of their way to annoy the few remaining readers they have with the worst kind of interruption marketing. I don't get it.

In terms of online advertising, one thing everybody knows, whether they surf the Web or not, is that pop-up ads are universally hated.  So what does the Tribune do? They come up with a print version of a pop-up ad. Well, I didn't bother to read it, but if I had, I wouldn't be much inclined to buy anything from any of the advertisers.

I wonder if newspapers ever ask readers what they'd like see in their publications. My view may be typical. I'd love to read a newspaper that was free of advertisements. If a paper listed its advertisers on a single page (page one for all I care), I would go out of my way to patronize each and every one of them. If that's not feasible, how about putting all ads in a single section dedicated to advertising?

Well, maybe the Tribune is listening after all. The wrap around ad pages have disappeared. But papers need to new more than maintain the status quo if they expect to hold on to their subscribers, let alone attract new ones. Fresh ideas are needed.


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15 Telltale Signs Your Web Site Needs a Makeover

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KColorEdit

Image via Wikipedia

Building an attractive, appealing, and engaging Web site is an exercise in continuous improvement - new content, new designs, and new features. Some companies, though, put a site up and leave it alone. Leave it alone long enough, and you may be better off without a site at all. Here's are 15 features of a Web site in dire need of a makeover.

  1. The color scheme looks straight out of the '90's
  2. The last link in the Company News section is from 2003
  3. No Company News section
  4. The About Us section has biographies of executives who no longer work there
  5. No About Us section
  6. The site has a splash page
  7. Text is too small to read
  8. Text is clownishly oversized
  9. Pages take forever to load because of too many graphic images
  10. Animation anywhere
  11. Pages that require side scrolling
  12. Pages that don't display properly in all browsers
  13. Pages that don't display properly in any browser
  14. Egocentric, feature-oriented, and/or formal content style
  15. Light text on a dark background
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Paid Search Marketing Is Still a Solid Investment

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With all the hoopla surrounding social media marketing, paid search engine marketing is in danger of falling into the dread class of "traditional" marketing activities. However, if paid search has become an integral component of today's marketing budget, it's because paid search gets results -- and we have no shortage of statistics to prove it. Here are a few reasons why companies continue to invest heavily in paid search campaigns.

Paid search gets immediate results. Search engine optimization, or SEO, takes time, often quite a bit of time, to have a noticeable effect on search engine rankings. Conversely, paid search provides immediate search engine exposure and with it, Web site traffic.

Paid search drives targeted traffic.
No doubt SEO is worthwhile, but how often does your Google search query display sites having nothing to do with your intended search? It's a common problem, and explains why a lot of R &D is going into contextual search engine technology. But a well written and strategically placed pay per click ad will attract site visitors with a qualified interest in your offering.

Paid search requires less labor. While the hard costs of  paid search  may  exceed  those of social media marketing (and even there, arguments can be made either way), the internal time commitment to support paid search should be less than what is required to execute a full blown social media program. Writing, brand monitoring, and networking takes time and, except for very large companies, is far more difficult to outsource than a paid search campaign.

Paid search is measurable.  What's the ROI on your sales brochures? How about the ROI on your blog? Hard to measure, isn't it? Now, that hardly means those types of marketing activities should be abandoned, but it does mean to have a balanced marketing program you need measurable activities in the mix. Nothing this side of direct mail is more measurable than paid search marketing, which leads to its most important benefit ...

Paid search produces continually improving results.
Since paid search is measurable, campaigns can be compared to each other using simple A-B split testing. Sometimes, a single word change can result in high percentage increases in traffic. Careful testing and monitoring allows companies to launch more effective ads with every new campaign. If you think paid search marketing is smoke and mirrors, you may need to investigate further or work with a different search marketing firm.



 
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