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Posts Tagged ‘metrics and measurement’

Metrics and Measurement: What Questions Do You Have?

April 14th, 2009 by John Rasco

Speaking at IA09
I’ll be chairing a panel on Metrics and Measurement at Interactive Austin 2009, and tasked the panel (Ian Strain-Seymour of Apogee Search, Pam O’Neal of BreakingPoint, Michael Wilson of Small World Labs, and Andy Meadows of BudURL fame and Live Oak 360) with coming up with questions we think people will be interested in. We’ve got a couple of search marketing gurus, a couple of guys with companies wrapped around social media marketing, and Pam’s a B2B social media maven, with some great success stories and real-world experience to share.

Please take a few minutes and complete this questionnaire on the topics, focus and specific questions YOU would like to have answered. We will be a much more focused, relevant panel if we can get your input. Hope to see you at IA09!

Click Here to take survey

Search and Research

March 22nd, 2009 by John Rasco

This is a very interesting time, as we’ve got multiple projects requiring keyword research, and very different requirements:

  • Revisiting a national marketer’s site after almost 2 years of client inactivity
  • Finessing a technology client’s site after doing our PPC experiments
  • Optimizing a couple of new healthcare technology sites
  • Starting up a PPC campaign for a client marketing to IT managers

Working on new sites is always like solving a puzzle, because you have to dig into their business quickly, take the keyword research you have, and apply our marketing experience to make recommendations about how the site should be structured. You have to think about the one person making the initial search (when they have a vague idea of how to solve their problem), and then multiple visits from multiple people as the solution is researched, the company is closely inspected, and the search activity becomes a genuine lead. You have to write for awareness, consideration and evaluation, writing good marketing copy, but interweave the best search terms in such a way that the prospect doesn’t notice.

Technology companies are especially challenging, because you use the vocabulary of an engineer, who may be searching on heat dissipation, cooling, fans, heat sinks, or thermal management. (Doesn’t that sound just like an engineer? Optimistic that the problem can be completely controlled, if the right technology can be found.) Over the space of a few months, a leading edge technology will engender more and better searches as the topic gets presented at conferences and in the trades, so we have to stay open to the change, refine our research, and revise our strategy. Quickly adapting to the trend gets you a lot more search, because you’ve already established some authority for the topic.

The PPC campaign for IT managers is also very interesting professionally. The client had been with a PPC agency on the West Coast, but it was obvious that they didn’t do their homework…generic keywords, vague terms, scattershot campaigns, and an absurd offer. After doing technology marketing for 20+ years, I understand that our clients’ prospects are usually very intelligent, marketing-averse people. Fortunately, I’m curious about technology, like to dig into the details, and can generally help the client communicate more clearly–and certainly more persuasively, but without the condescending cuteness of “agency creative.” Taking that experience into the field of paid search, with a classified ad to communicate and one shot to get the prospect to register, requires some real focus (and the willingness to test several approaches). I’m excited about it because I get to work with some very analytical marketers, and because we’re doing an experiment which can be replicated for other clients.

Tech marketing via PPC ads isn’t easy, especially when you know only 20% of the prospects are willing to click on an ad, but if we can generate good results with this tough audience, we know the effort was worthwhile…and we do want all of our clients to succeed. Because search marketing is measurable, it’s all about the metrics and measurement of results…and in taking the time to understand the prospect and doing the keyword research to find the terms that are most likely to convert.