Archives for posts with tag: yahoo

Microsoft have conducted a piece of research which goes further towards showing the need for an integrated approach to digital marketing where display advertising and search engine marketing are concerned.  Off the back of the overused Atlas example which suggested a 22% uplift in conversion could be produced from a combination of search and display, and Yahoo’s piece which suggest similar impact, Microsoft have launched their own research which backs up the previous reports.

The figures which have come out of the Microsoft report show a 2x improvement in website visits through a combined approach along with a 54% increase in likelihood of a user conducting a brand search if they had been exposed to a display advert.

You have to take into consideration the producers of these pieces when reviewing the results they show you.  Atlas earn their money based on the amount of activity you are undertaking so have a vested interest in increasing it (plus they earn off both impressions and clicks with display).  Yahoo have seen a downturn in the last quarter in the premium CPM display advertising and so it is in their interest to get you buying more.  And similarly Microsoft need something to prop up their lack of progress in paid search.

So you have to take what they say with a pinch of salt, but that’s not to say there is nothing at all in it.  i do believe an effective online plan involves a balance of all elements.  Search as the flexible, movable return based feast, affiliate marketing as the finite guaranteed return and display advertising to boost the brand and increase awareness.  That said I am an advocate of flexible solutions for display advertising and don’t think that any placement is worth more than £10 CPM, there isn’t enough branding to warrant anymore than this amount.

So whilst I would view the actual stats displayed with an air of scepticism, the general principal is sound in my opinion.  A balanced approach with a blend of channels means you get the best of each without placing all your eggs in one basket.

View Microsofts findings here

Yahoo have disclosed their Q3 revenues and they aren’t good, a measly 1% increase on the same period last year and down $20 million on Q2.  The announcement comes hand in hand with them announcing they would be cutting 10% of their workforce to improve cost efficiencies.  This is no great shock in the current economic client but it is the breakdown of revenues which shows the most interesting facts.

Paid Search and performance based display advertising, such as Right Media and their Yahoo Direct Programme, were actually up a much greater percentage than the overall picture with the drop in revenues coming from “premium display advertising”, i.e. the CPM based placements across the Yahoo portal.  This ties in with what I have spoken about before regarding the future of digital media buying being a more flexible, reduced cost environment with many more placements being bought on an auction model or at the very least on a CPC basis.

There are two main causes for me believing this is the way digital display advertising needs to go:

1. The Global Economic Climate: advertisers cant afford to be paying premium CPM rates in the name of “brand building” when the economic climate is so fragile.  The next 12 months for advertisers, both on and offline, is about making sure a return is gained on advertising spend, and £20+ CPM, is never going to bring about a direct return no matter who you are.

2. Advertisers are Getting More Savvy: being from a paid search background and working for a results driven agency, when I spent some time media buying I was astounded at the stunts that some publishers tried to pull with their CPM’s.  Just because it is a high traffic or niche area of the site does not mean that anybody is paying anymore attention to the ad on that page than they are on the less popular pages.  An ad is an ad and 99% of Internet users can spot them a  mile off.  Thankfully more and more companies and media buyers are now beginning to think this way too and not buying the expensive slots thus meaning prices fall.  The old model of media buying also doesn’t play to the strengths of online, they make no sense.  So I am advertising online, where I can review performance real time, change ads real time, but your telling me I have to book for a minimum one month period no matter how it performs? It just doesn’t add up.  Publishers need to start operating in the online world rather than the offline media buying world.

So even more evidence from Yahoo that traditional media buying online is on its way out, but who can be the first to capitalise from it with an effective flexible ad platform?

as you all should be aware Google made uturn on their gambling policy at the end of last week and now allows gambling advertisers, who can produce a valid gambling license, access to the Google Adwords programme.  I thought Id produce a quick list of the people this is going to have a major impact on as the change takes hold and more gambling websites start to go live on Adwords.

Google: Obviously this going to have a slight impact the company which made the change!  This is a massive market for online and is bound to generate a large amount of revenue for Google with some stories quoted figures as high as £300 million.

Gambling Companies: Google has opened up a huge new revenue stream for gambling advertisers which had been frustratingly out of their grasp in the past.  Having to make do with traffic and registrations from Yahoo and MSN had meant that these companies, who were willing to spend large amounts on new sign ups, were unable to reach all the available users.  This has all changed now and gambling companies are rubbing their hands together at the prospect of all the new sign ups they are set to receive from this new channel.

Affiliates: Affiliates willing to push the rules had for a long time been making the most of Google’s ban by employing out of hours bidding and trademark bidding to cash in through the gambling affiliate programmes.  With the new changes, and the requirement of a gambling license, affiliates will find it harder to bypass the system, but will also be priced out by the gambling companies as their returns are lower and so they wont be able to compete on CPCs.

Search Engine Optimisers: I’m not sure how big an impact this will have but I just wondered how the introduction of PPC listings is going to reduce the SEO volume in gambling on Google.  In theory it should remove about 20-30% of the available traffic which could impact the time and money invested in SEO by the big gambling companies.

Agencies: If you have gambling clients, rejoice!  Their value has just increased 10 fold.  So long as you are quick off the mark and get them live you could be looking at a good Q4.

Yahoo and MSN: Gambling has been a large part of Yahoo’s revenues for a while as they have made the most of the Google ban.  Now this is lifted they could see a large dent in their revenues from this channel as gambling marketers allocate more of their spend to Google.  The affect will be two fold, with advertisers looking to free up budget for Googled so reducing overall spend, and a natural reduction of competition on Yahoo and MSN which will  bring the market CPC levels down, so its a double edged sword for them.

The market is yet to settle down, and we wont know the full extent until it does but it is certainly one of the biggest announcements google have made in a while and should help their share price a little!

I blogged about the purchase of the analytics tool Indextools by Yahoo! earlier in the year (Yahoo! acquires Indextools).  Now they have finally made the move to bring the tracking solution under their own brand , to be labelled, Yahoo Web Analytics.  Not very imaginative with the name but you can imagine they wanted to keep the Yahoo association very strong.  Even still they could have come up with something which sounded a bit less than a me too version of Google Analytics.  After all Indextools is a far superior tool to Google’s offering and Yahoo need to play on this to gain any competitive advantage that comes with their purchase.

I wonder how long before this is offered direct from Yahoo’s search interface with integration of action reporting to their PPC reports.  I think they may need to simplify the installation a little as in the past Indextools has been a little trickier to implement than Google Analytics but if they get it right, analytics will defintiely be one area where they have the uper hand over Google.

According to Search Engine Watch the Yahoo buyout of AOL may be back on with the Yahoo board approving talks with Time Warner.  The buyout/merger saga has been going on for an age now with many seeing it as the only way to get a true competitor to Google.  Is it finally going to happen? (previous post here)