Search Engine Marketing in 2005!

The environment is changing rapidly. The core temperature of the
search engine sector is continuously growing warmer as interest in
search-advertising increases. Over a dozen consecutive quarters of
this intensifying heat is melting the ice cap that formed a glass
ceiling between search engine marketers and mainstream advertising
consciousness. Long-term revenue streams are now flooding as the melting
ice cap sends buckets of liquid capital flowing into all regions of
the sector.
Changes to an environment are often signaled by several seemingly
unconnected events, the effects of which only become fully apparent
as they unfold. The list of seemingly unconnected events grows longer
every day. For months astute observers have noted the very real effects
these events have on how search results are provided. An example would
be the effect of Blogs both on popular culture and Google results.
Another is the growing adoption of broadband in the United States.
Other examples include, Yahoo's growing relationship with Hollywood,
Google's global goals, MSN's declaration of tech-war, Ask's recent
acquisitions, and this week's purchase of About.com by the New York
Times. With search engine related items hitting the financial news
on a daily basis, multi-billion dollar revenue projections and the
sudden realization of what were once science-fiction fantasies, a
shift in corporate group-think was inevitable. One day, the print-addled
ad-execs on Madison Avenue woke up, smelled the silicone and went
to the bank.
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This shift in corporate consciousness has, to a large degree, caused
and affected the evolution of the search engine environment. Over
the past three years, various concepts of search have moved in from
the peripheries towards the middle on the radar screens of corporate
marketers. Being creatures of habit and working from their power base,
they went where the money was.
Until recently, the largest advertisers appeared to define search
as the PPC (pay-per-click) offerings of Google's Adwords and Overture,
and the myriad of smaller pay-per-click programs. Unlike the technically
challenging and unpredictable world of organic SEO, PPC programs give
marketing departments solid numbers to base budget estimates and outcome
projections on. PPC programs with their massive contextual distribution
networks caught the attention of corporate marketers and their investments
in PPC have sustained and driven both Google and Overture's bottom
lines.
The effect of reliance on PPC has had a positive effect on the business
of search, allowing both Google and Yahoo to post record profits on
astronomical revenues in the last quarter. Investment in the search
sector is also driven by the success of PPC/ad-delivery programs.
That bulk of money is being pumped back into innovation and acquisitions
with both giants and their smaller rivals expected to release dozens
of new features in the coming months.
Corporate reliance on PPC has had a negative effect on growth in
the search sector as well. With more attention being paid to paid
listings, many large corporations neglected their websites' organic
placements. Numerous studies have shown that most online traffic is
generated by the organic or unpaid listings and that actual sales
tend to stem from a holistic branding approach to search engine marketing.
Reliance on one form of search-advertising has almost certainly inhibited
online sales for many larger corporate sites, a situation which places
their confidence in search-advertising models at risk. A lowering
of advertiser confidence may be evidenced by a slight decline in the
number of ad-purchases and keyword cost-bids in January though post-Christmas
budget-shock might be an invisible factor.
For the past few weeks search engine journalists have written about
the lack of corporate interest in organic placements and the perils
of ignoring the free listings. Another study released today by Nick
Hynes of UK SEM shop, The Search Works notes that over two thirds
of FTSE100 (UK version of Fortune100) companies do not appear in the
Top20 under keyword phrases relevant to their industries. Similar
results can be found when searching for Fortune100 companies at Google,
Yahoo and MSN. This prompting is starting to have an effect with an
increase in corporate awareness about the importance of organic placements.
If corporate advertisers find a profitable balance between organic
and paid search marketing, this balance will form the basis of optimal
search-marketing campaigns for the coming years, thus providing both
advertisers and the SEMs who serve them a sense of solid ground in
the midst of the rapidly changing environment.
Ultimately, the effects on the environment have been very positive
for most of the SEO/SEM sector. Established SEM shops tend to be coping
quite well with the sudden changes and are happily netting increasing
volumes of big and small fish. They are hiring and training new SEOs
and retraining older staff in SEM technique in order to keep up. Several
independent SEOs are even turning work away as they are simply too
busy to take on new clients. Conventional wisdom says that the organic
SEO shops that learn to combine organic and PPC services (either directly
or with a third party) will not only survive the changes in our working
environment but will be in a position to provide a much more comprehensive
service to their clients.
Today's bottom line for both corporate advertisers and the SEMs who
serve them is simple; learn, adapt, evolve, integrate skill-sets and
thrive in the ever-expanding world of search.
Article by:
Jim Hedger,
News Editor - StepForth
Search Engine Placement Inc.
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