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Mobile Paid Search

Nicholas Pirlis Wednesday, May 25th, 2011

Did you know that search is one of the top mobile activities? In today’s Deep Dive Week article, Integrated Media Supervisor Nick Pirlis gives you an introduction to mobile paid search and how you can use it to leverage this important channel for your brand or business.  If you’ve found this useful we invite you to share it with your friends or join the conversation on twitter via the hashtag #DeepDiveWeek. We’d love to hear your thoughts.
Deep Dive Week

We’ve all seen the statistics from rising adoption rates of smart phones to the increases in mobile advertising.  Some of this information was covered in one of our last deep dive week articles titled “Mobile Search – Are We There Yet?” By now it might be time to assess your current paid search efforts and make some changes. Find out how to make your PPC campaigns mobile-friendly.

Is mobile paid search for you?

  • If your campaigns are already enabled for ‘iPhones and other mobile devices’ take a look at the percentage of traffic coming through mobile.  If 10-20% of traffic is coming from mobile devices you may want to consider segmenting your paid search campaign.
    • To figure this out, go to the campaigns tab in AdWords and select ‘Segment’ then by ‘Device’.
  • Generally mobile paid search works well with lower price point/low-consideration products.  Consumers are typically looking for information quickly.  Advertising for immediate actions like downloading apps or music, or finding places to eat/drink works well.
  • You may want to consider the cost vs. benefits if your products are of a higher consideration or longer conversion process.  That’s not to say that businesses with these product sets don’t do mobile paid search, you just need to have the proper goals built in.
    • Whether the goal is an actual monetary transaction or folded into your current local search strategy, mobile PPC can be an integral and successful component in your overall paid search program.

Setup and Structure

  • The first step is to create mobile-only campaigns.  Take the desired campaigns (or all of them) and make copies denoting these with ‘-mobile’.  Then under campaign settings, change the device targeting to ‘iPhone and other mobile devices.’
  • Now uncheck this setting in your non-mobile versions of the campaigns.
    • This will split out campaigns for non-mobile and mobile giving you more options to customize ads as well as tailor landing page experiences.

Opportunities

Now that your campaigns are setup to address mobile specifically, there are a few options to provide searchers with a better user experience. Some of these opportunities synch up directly with items discussed in an article during our last deep dive week around local search.

Mobile Ad with Click to CallClick to Call (left)

  • Phone extensions allow you to place your business phone number as a clickable link within text ads.  This is useful when driving consumers to a particular retail store or place of business.

Local Search and Extensions

  • Since a high volume of mobile search queries are location focused, use extensions to easily show the location of your place of business.
  • Link to your Google Places page or a Google Maps listing to give searchers easy access to the most pertinent business information.

Mobile Site

  • Similar to the rationale for segmenting campaigns for mobile specifically, if you’ve noticed a fair amount of site traffic coming from mobile devices, it’s time to make some adjustments for a mobile friendly experience.
  • Simplify the site, cut down on copy and image clutter.  Focus on the most important information a customer might be interested in.
  • Avoid heavy imagery for faster load times.  This goes for flash as well, especially considering flash and iPhones don’t play well together.
  • Provide clear navigation to things like lead forms and store locators.
  • If your site has an elaborate lead form, try shortening or cutting down on form requirements to promote completion on mobile devices.

Considerations

  • Take a look at Google Analytics data to get a good sense of your mobile browsing audience.  Use this information when segmenting/targeting your mobile campaigns in AdWords.  Google gives you the option to segment by devices and carriers.
    • Don’t forget that a user’s mobile experience may differ if they are using a mobile phone or a tablet.
  • Spend some time optimizing keyword selections.
    • Desktop search queries vs. mobile queries vary.  Mobile queries also skew high for local results.  Along with your own research and organic keyword traffic check out Google’s mobile selection tool for assistance
  • If you have multiple locations, consider segmenting campaigns to mobile and leveraging geo-targeting.  This will provide a super customized experience for mobile searchers.
  • Ad positioning.  If you’ve just let campaigns run on mobile devices without segmentation or optimizing ad positioning, you might be losing out.  Bid up and test performance lift.  Smaller screen sizes make search real estate even more valuable.  You may find that bidding to the top one or two spots can provide considerable performance improvements.
  • For local businesses think about how local searchers might be finding your place(s) of business as well as your competition
    • Take into account the number of competitor listings a search might come across, and how you can differentiate ad copy and the user’s mobile search experience to maximize conversion.
    • For example a local pizza shop could display a special, or a bar could show their happy hour specials.  Then direct them to your mobile friendly site, places page, or Google maps listing to get directions!

Conclusion

Regardless if we’re actually in the ‘Year of Mobile’ or not, it’s clear that smartphone adoption is on the rise as well as mobile search usage.   With a small amount of effort you can easily segment and tailor your target audience’s mobile experience.

Mobile paid search can certainly prove positive for specific KPIs and objectives, but be sure to test and optimize accordingly. Make it easy for searchers to get the information they desire, and test messaging as well as bidding strategies.

Local Search – Google Maps, Google Places, Paid Search

Nicholas Pirlis Wednesday, April 20th, 2011

 

Deep Dive Week

In some aspects online marketing best practices and tactics apply to both standard and local marketers, but (in the most obvious fashion) local search layers on geographic information as the anchor. Think of various ways a consumer finds businesses online. Now layer in the geographic factor and strategies shift greatly. With the increase in opportunities around local search, businesses can find themselves in the proverbial dust if they don’t adapt and overcome.

So what are the different opportunities out there for those looking to integrate their marketing efforts on a local level?

Google Local Search and Places Pages

Google and other search engines provide localized listings to increase relevance when appropriate. These listings include nearby businesses as well as additional address/contact Information.

The components of Google’s local results;

  • Google provides a ‘Places’ filter on the left navigation to only see results by Places pages
  • Reviews, Places pages, and a map display the local results on the search engine results page (SERP).
    • The map displays the top results for places. Depending on the number of listings, they typically show between 7 and 10 listings.

As can be seen in the screenshot below, reviews are given priority placement in the SERP compared to the company’s Places page. Reviews can also be linked up to your Places page. However, customer reviews are key to providing potential consumers assurance. In addition, review pages create additional content for search engines to index!

coffee houses in local searchGoogle Merchant Center (GMC)

If your business sells products and has a product feed, then Google’s merchant center will provide two distinct opportunities.

  1. Managing feeds through GMC allows a business to list their products on their linked Google Places page, in organic results, and of course Google (Shopping) Product Search.
  2. Submitting store data through GMC allows consumers to not only find the products they are looking for, but also which brick and mortar locations carry the products, and even if they are in stock!
    • Truly a great integration of online driving brick and mortar sales.
    • TIP – listings can be managed or uploaded individually, but for businesses with 10 or more stores, it’s recommended to utilize a bulk business listings file. Be sure the ‘store codes’ match up exactly what you have in your Google Places feed so Google matches your products to the appropriate store location.

For more information on Google Merchant Center read Mark’s post from Monday on Google Product Extensions

Examples below show the integrations on Google’s organic search results, Google Shopping, and Google Places:

Organic Listings in SERP

organic listings in SERPGoogle Shopping & Google Places Integration

google shoppingGoogle Places with GMC Integration

google placesAdwords and Business Location

  • If you are running paid search, then a great option is synching up your local business account with Adwords.
  • This will show the business address directly in the sponsored ad copy, with the option to expand and show a map view.

adwords and local integration

Increase Presence in Local Search Landscape

  • The whole goal of local search is to anticipate the various ways consumers might find a business and optimize your visibility within that landscape. Many of the tactics above are specific to increasing your presence on Google, but there are many other ways to optimize your business online in terms of your website, local search services/listings, paid and non-paid marketing, as well as SEO and Social efforts.

Random Easter Eggs

  • Consider customizing landing pages on your site based on the geography or site location they are coming from. Providing a customized user experience can maximize a consumer’s buying experience and improve conversion rates greatly.
    • If a consumer runs a search on a search engine and is then forced to run that same search on your site that’s likely to be more work than a consumer is willing to do – especially when Google is probably showing 100 other competitors with the same product! Make it easy for a consumer to make a purchase from your store.
  • If you are running any form of sponsored advertising with search engines, try testing or adding in the city, state, or neighborhood information in the ad when appropriate for the keyword set. This brings the relevance to a much higher level, once again focusing on increasing conversions.
  • With the increase in mobile usage, it’s important to optimize the user’s experience via the mobile web. When consumers are out and about, they spend a lot less time on your mobile site, so keep the user’s needs in mind when building the functionality.
  • Before implementing your local search program, test out your address on as many mapping sites as possible to ensure they all read it and display the correct location. Ensuring consistency is very important. You never want to get the consumer so far into the purchase process and to your brick and mortar only to have them drive up to an empty field.
  • Optimizing and submitting your business information to major sites that have local components is imperative to being visible at the time of intent. Personally I’ve seen instances where a business 10 times better than the competition has zero presence anywhere, allowing the less desirable competition grabbing the local tourists up and local searchers.

Check out our blog tomorrow when Jody Pirrello, VP Technology, talks about video search best practices and trends.

If you enjoyed this article and want to stay on top of future Deep Dive Weeks, sign up for our mailing list for more great articles, PDF downloads and other happenings in digital marketing.

Social Media Cross Platform Integration

Nicholas Pirlis Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

With all of the buzz around social media, companies are searching for best and most effective ways to dive in and connect with consumers. For most the question is how to utilize social media in a way that will engage users and elicit/maintain a meaningful dialog, and for others it is providing those doors for users to consume and digest content in one location or central hub. In the later, companies approach this with developmental integrations. Microsoft has opened yet another door to the largest gaming network and the 20+ million active users on the Xbox LIVE! Marketplace. For those who are not familiar, the Xbox LIVE marketplace, available through the Xbox 360 gaming console is an online gaming and digital media delivery service created and operated by Microsoft. Xbox LIVE is an evolving entertainment hub with seamless integration between gaming and media needs. Through LIVE users have access to online gaming, streaming HD movies through Netflix, video chat with friends, photo sharing, and early access to content and exclusive discounts.

Microsoft has now integrated Facebook, Twitter, Zune, and last.fm. Users with an Xbox LIVE subscription will now be able to connect with friends, tweet, listen to music, and stream more HD media.

Facebook
Share status updates and photos with friends in real-time, as well as gaming moments right from the Xbox dashboard to Facebook. This provides gamers another avenue to share their achievements and favorite gaming moments on Facebook, and keep up with friends right from their console and TV.

Twitter
Read, reply, and post Tweets to Twitter through Xbox LIVE. See what friends and family are up to, connect to celebrities, learn about news as it happens, and follow online trends.

Last.fm on Xbox 360
With Last.fm, members can select music preferences to explore personalized radio stations with a library of more than 3.5 million tracks. Skip, “ban,” or ‘love” tracks to tailor the radio station to your tastes. Share music with friends, manage customized radio stations, and create personal soundtracks. A social component allows users to discover new music based on what other friends are listening to.

HD Entertainment with Zune
Zune on Xbox LIVE gives users access to full HD video entertainment, with the ability to rent and buy the latest movies and TV shows. HD content is in 1080p and 5.1 surround sound. A Party mode allows users to watch movies and share the experience with up to 7 friends in an online ‘movie theatre’ setting. Any download will provide the option to download again and watch on your PC or Zune HD player as well.

What does this mean for users? To the 20 + million subscribers, this is all the more reason to remain in one outlet digesting various levels of gaming, entertainment, and social. Instead of streaming music from your computer or switching off your console to watch a movie in high definition, everything can be done right from your Xbox console. You can keep all of your friends updated on what you are listening to, watching or playing.

What does this mean for agencies and their clients? As LIVE grows the plethora of services offered, so does the amount of time users stay connected, and the number of reasons they stay on LIVE. This provides us even more opportunity to reach these elusive demographics by volume in a highly targeted environment. Among the various search and display opportunities being utilized through Microsoft, with LIVE provides the ability to tailor campaigns using standard ad placements, multimedia such as video, audio and animation, as well as custom sponsorships/contests. Developing branded theme packs for users to skin their dashboards is also an option to engage the audience, essentially creating a downloadable homepage takeover for their dashboard experience.

Xbox 360 Dashboard Preview

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