The Search Book Club

As someone who has worked in the SEO space for a long time, I have found that one of the most frustrating things is keeping up with all of the books, videos, and newsletters (except this one) that are available. Even using an RSS Reader or blocking out time on your calendar to read doesn’t always allow one to stay on top of the industry. In an effort to help with this I thought I may start a little book club, like Oprah’s…except I’m not rich…I don’t have a TV show…and I can’t buy you all the books we review.

If any of you are interested in submitting a book review, please contact me.

Book Title and Author
Advanced Web Metric with Google Analytics, Brian Clifton

Quick overview of the book
Advanced Web Metrics by Brian Clifton is amongst the most practical and insightful analytics discourses of late. Focused primarily on Google Analytics (GA), Clifton offers a strong technical reference source for successful implementation and configuration. Advanced Web Metrics strikes an excellent balance between educating readers on the value of web analytics in assessing performance and reaching actionable insights, and how to achieve this state of analytic enlightenment through step-by-step implementation.

What did you like the most?
Readability is fantastic, and its ease in allowing the reader to skip across to relevant chapters makes it an excellent on-the-bookshelf reference. Advanced Web Metrics holds an extensive amount of tips and strategies around segmentation, best practices and data analysis that really helps the reader to take reported data and tie it back to business goals.

What was missing?
Very little given its subject matter being limited to Google Analytics, although a discussion on how to profile a website’s cookie deletion habits would have been a bonus.

What were the most important takeaways and how would a marketer apply them?
Key takeaways have got to be:

  • Guidance provided on how to assign value to a non-transaction or e-commerce oriented website
  • How to identify poorly performing pages
  • Customizing organic search engine attribution to specific, country-localized search engines. (not just google, but google.co.uk for example)
  • How to create a custom report to match specific transaction to specific keywords and their source
  • Changing how transactions are attributed and to which referrer
  • Best practices, best practices, best practices


Rating out of 5 Stars

4.5

Review by Adam Whippy

 

Video Inclusion in Search - Conclusion

The conclusion of this series covers Video in Paid Search and Measuring Video

Video in Paid Search
Now that search engines have acclimated searchers to video in the organic listings, they are beginning to test video in paid search. Most recently, Google lead the charge testing Blackberry paid video ads in March 2008. The reach paid search has means video advertising could be a frontrunner in the digital media mix, as the prospect of delivering high quality video to consumers – those actively looking for brand messages – presents huge potential to both direct response and brand advertisers.

Traditionally, non-digital video advertising has been a push medium, where the request for interaction stems from the marketer. Online, video serves more often as a pull medium, with consumers actively searching for content. As the media consumption is intentional, advertisers have more avenues on which to capitalize, paid search marketing being an excellent channel for requested brand interaction.

In regards to branding, paid search has always had its disadvantages; it is text based and has a very restrictive copy length. Video now offers advertisers a valuable channel in which to invest “brand dollars” that would normally be invested in offline activities. Coupling video with consumer intent has the potential to be even more powerful than paid search alone. It gives advertisers the opportunity to communicate with consumers in a very different way. Search spend could become more prominent in media schedules, as more advertisers fully integrate their online and offline strategies to include multiple video channels.

From a consumer perspective, a SERP page must not become too convoluted. Search engines understand this, and it is unlikely that there will be big changes to the manner in which these pages are viewed. Search engines will make sure that additions to search functionality will not detract from the user experience and drive searchers elsewhere. For this reason, paid video listings are likely to be displayed in the form of a text ad with a drop down/expand option – different from the natural listings in which they display the first frame of the video.

Video ads may mark a fundamental change in behavior, as consumers start to make purchasing decisions before they reach the landing page. This may keep searchers staying on search engines for longer (which can only serve to benefit them) and may require the consumer to make less repeat searches. As a search result level brand element, video could potentially appropriate some of the marketing significance from landing pages. Only time will tell if video will shift consumer search behavior significantly.

Measuring Video
Success metrics traditionally associated with both paid and natural search activity will need to evolve to account for consumer engagement. Paid search technology may evolve too, as campaigns are optimized to behavioral metrics. Search agencies not utilizing web analytics solutions will suffer, as softer conversion metrics become the principal factor in evaluating campaigns. Proxy conversions may become the norm with video, and advertisers will be looking at engagement metrics as oppose to ROI. Traditional agencies may take more notice of search as a brand channel, and search may just become an intrinsic part of the marketing mix for more businesses.

Paid search video advertising could result in search becoming a more traditional advertising channel with less pull and more push to end users. Companies gain a highly effective online channel in which to invest their “brand money,” knowing that consumers are actively involved in brand interaction. This may steal marketing spend from more passively digested media such as television advertising.

Introducing video will mean the spectrum of search as a marketing tool will broaden. As search opens up to new ways of engaging with consumers the industry must redefine itself, starting with success measurement and metrics. Video may just be the format that formally moves search from a channel weighted disproportionately towards direct response to an outlet with versatile application for conglomerates and small businesses alike.

Article by Paul McDevitt and Martin Vitner

 

SMTrends Briefs

I will not make a bad Monty Python joke,,, I will not make a bad Monty Python joke…I will not make a bad Monty Python joke. Just read about The Holy Grail of SEO.

How could you not want to be at Yahoo shareholder meeting?

Much has been made about the decline of spending on TV. In this article, Michael Bloand discusses what TV can learn from search.

 

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