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The Marketleap Report
Volume II, Issue #9, May
1, 2002
Digital Marketing - A Deeper
Slice
Digging Into What Search Engine Marketing is Really
About
By Keith Boswell
A few weeks back we covered the emergence
of more definition for marketers between digital marketing
and online advertising. Definition in this case helps
us all because marketers are beginning to understand
the subtleties between their online marketing choices.
Smarter buyers mean smarter markets. It also means
internet marketing firms can layout a variety of options
for their clients and show where they fit into a bigger
picture.
Zooming in on the concept of digital
marketing, search engine optimization stands out as
a portion of digital marketing that is vastly misunderstood.
People routinely lump paid placement in search results
into search engine optimization. Consistent, long-term
strategies are confused with short term buys for a
particular keyword.
Paid placement means just what it
says. A marketer pays to have a highly visible listing
for a specific keyword or term in a search engine,
typically presented as a sponsored or paid link. Overture
is selling an advertising buy inside of search results.
You as the marketer are writing a
headline and copy to accompany your media buy. It
feels like digital marketing. You can manipulate your
rankings in real-time, buying at higher rates to achieve
higher placement on a search results page. You can
purchase keyword pre-qualified traffic searching for
terms related to your services.
This is typically considered a short-term
traffic booster and not a long-term search engine
marketing strategy, except for those companies that
can afford the monthly or daily recurring cost of
buying high search result placement. This is online
advertising. It performs exactly what you want it
to.
A more strategic approach, and one
that dives directly into digital marketing, involves
a marketer with IT knowledge or an engineer with marketing
savvy. These people are capable of assessing, proposing,
and delivering integrated marketing/IT changes to
a website. Search engine optimization is a long-term
tactic meant to expose as much relevant data to search
engine spiders as possible about a website.
They chase the algorithms with logic,
expertise, and a more global focus on results. People
don't just look at the top three results on a page.
If they are really searching for something, they dig
deeper.
This isn't media buying at all. It's
a manipulation of data to ensure consistency and relevance.
Search engine spiders go out and search through the
web looking for new content to index everyday. It
is estimated that four to five million pages go live
on the Web daily. If a site is not optimized properly,
search engine spiders may not even know you exist,
or better yet, will ignore huge sections of a website,
sometimes as much as everything but a home page or
single sub-level underneath. The best search engine
crawlers known (Inktomi, Google, Fast) are said to
index no more than 20% of the World Wide Web.
By optimizing, a marketer is investing
in their website to ensure that it is seen and indexed
as deeply as possible. Consistent, long-term search
rankings are a mixture of analysis and good content.
This ensures that relevant content on a website can
be found by those searching for it.
To understand search engine optimization
means to grow as the search engines do. Innovation
and change are an almost guaranteed constant. Understanding
this also means to stop confusing a paid search result
with a good search engine ranking. Definition is the
golden rule - digital marketing isn't advertising.
Maintaining good search positioning,
without paying for it outright, means keeping your
site updated with content that is relevant to the
markets you serve. It may seem like a lot of work.
Just remember that search engine results provide the
most highly sought after types of clients, extremely
pre-qualified ones. And the associated ROI for most
online markets smokes anything happening with online
advertising.
This week's question
What has been your experience with paid placement
versus search engine optimization? Which has worked
better for you?
Send us your feedback and we'll do
our best to discuss them all in the next newsletter.
Responses to the last Marketleap
Report:
People responded to the news that
marketers are planning on taking over your web browser
sooner than later with questions and mixed thoughts.
"Shouldn't there be some sort
of Board or Committee that can limit these awful
tech apps invading browsers? Industry or government
driven maybe? These hucksters only damage a great
industry for their own limited short-term profit.
Freedom of speech doesn't cover intrusion into a
private choice-driven medium. As telemarketers are
about to find out as we all know. My two cents anyways."
- Eric Perrault - Montreal, Quebec
"What is the defence against
such unethical practices?"
- Douglas Lampi
"I agree with your comments
about under-browser pop-up and the new technology
sounds even more intrusive and ugly. So what can
we do to stop it? Is there some organization to
whom we can protest -- other than the Feds, and
I'm not sure they would do anything for years."
- Eleanor
My recommendation to Douglas was to
start using a web browser like Opera. I tried my own
advice and found the browser to be a good one and
I was impressed with the level of control that I had
to block unwanted actions. But many of the sites that
I visit regularly didn't work as well. I found myself
drifting back to Internet Explorer, even as I dreamed
of blowing it up.
I think my answer now is different.
We, as citizens of the Internet, must demand that
companies like Microsoft and AOL deliver web browsing
software that allows a user to walk through a setup
targeted at finding their tolerance for various types
of marketing and interaction. I don't care if 7 out
of 10 people find it confusing and not immediately
user friendly. It shows them the respect of at least
asking them before clubbing them over the head.
If we don't give the browser permission
to pop-under or take over the user experience, the
marketers trying to browe-jack us will have to resort
to more traditional methods of reaching us. The government
will never be fast enough to react to marketers' ability
to exploit web technologies. Instead we must turn
to the makers and lay out our demands.
We must also insist that web browsers
all follow the same web protocols, so that wonderful
software like Opera stands a chance of being adopted
by the masses. The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C)
does us no good if big money has the ability to alter
and adopt proprietary versions of web protocols at
their own discretion. The W3C was setup originally
to ensure that there were common protocols developed
for the rapidly growing Internet. Somewhere along
the way, as Netscape and Microsoft pushed varying
degrees of the same technology but incompatible by
design, the power to enforce or guide was lost.
Someone has to have a stamp of approval
and it can't be the company releasing the software.
I'm not sure who it should be. Business has shown
at this stage it is not prepared to organize for our
common interest. Maybe it's all of us. Grass roots,
software burning, crazy to speak up kind of people
have to start talking to others about these ideas.
They can't just lay dormant in cyberspace and newsletters.
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