viernes, 30 de noviembre de 2012

3 Reasons Google Won?t Offer Car Insurance Comparisons in the US Anytime Soon

The following is a guest column written by Rory Joyce from CoverHound.

Last week Google Advisor made its long-awaited debut in the car insurance vertical -- in the UK. Given Google?s 2011 acquisition of BeatThatQuote.com, a UK comparison site, for 37.7 million pounds ($61.5 million US), it comes as little surprise that the company chose to enter the UK ahead of other markets. While some might suspect Google?s foray into the UK market is merely a trial balloon, and that an entrance into the US market is inevitable, I certainly wouldn?t hold my breath.

Here are three reasons Google will not be offering an insurance comparison product anytime soon in the US market:

1) High Opportunity Cost

Finance and insurance is the number one revenue - generating advertising vertical for Google, totaling $4 billion in 2011. While some of that $4 billion is made up of products like health insurance, life insurance and credit cards, the largest segment within the vertical is undoubtedly car insurance. The top 3 advertisers in the vertical as a whole are US carriers -- State Farm, Progressive and Geico -- spending a combined sum of $110 million in 2011.

The keyword landscape for the car insurance vertical is relatively dense. A vast majority of searches occur across 10-20 generic terms (ie - ?car insurance,? ?auto insurance,? ?cheap auto insurance,? ?auto insurance quotes,? etc). This is an important point because it helps explain the relatively high market CPC of car insurance keywords versus other verticals. All of the major advertisers are in the auction for a large majority of searches, resulting in higher prices. The top spot for head term searches can reach CPCs well over $40. The overall average revenue/click for Google is probably somewhere around $30. Having run run similar experiments with carrier click listing ads using SEM traffic, I can confidently assume that the click velocity (clicks per clicker) is around 1.5. So the average revenue per searcher who clicks is probably somewhere around $45 for Google.

Now, let?s speculate on Google?s potential revenues from advertisers in a comparison environment. Carriers? marketing allowable is approximately $250 per new policy. When structuring pay-for-performance pricing deep in the funnel (or on a sold-policy basis), carriers are unlikely to stray from those fundamentals. In a fluid marketplace higher in the funnel (i.e.� Adwords PPC), they very often are managing to a marginal cost per policy that far exceeds even $500 (see $40 CPCs). While it may seem like irrational behavior, there are two reasons they are able to get away with this:

a) They are managing to an overall average cost per policy, meaning all direct response marketing channels benefit from ?free,? or unattributable sales. With mega-brands like Geico, this can be a huge factor.

b) There are pressures to meet sales goals at all costs. Google presents the highest intent of any marketing channel available to insurance marketers. If marketers need to move the needle in a hurry, this is where they spend.

Regardless of how Google actually structures the pricing, the conversion point will be much more efficient for the consumer since they will be armed with rates and thus there will be less conversion velocity for Google. The net-net here is a much more efficient marketplace, and one where Google can expect average revenue to be about $250 per sold policy.

How does this match up against the $45 unit revenue they would significantly cannibalize? The most optimized and competitive carriers can convert as high as 10% of clicks into sales. Since Google would be presenting multiple policies we can expect that in a fully optimized state, they may see 50% higher conversion and thus 15% of clicks into sales. Here is a summary of the math:

With the Advisor product, in an optimized state, Google will make about $37.50 ($250 x .15) per clicker. Each cannibalized lead will thus cost Google $7.50 of unit revenue ($45 - $37.50). Given the dearth of compelling comparison options in insurance (that can afford AdWords), consumers would definitely be intrigued and so one can assume the penetration/cannibalization would be significant.

Of course there are other impacts to consider: How would this affect competition and average revenue for non-cannibalized clicks? Will responders to Advisor be incremental and therefore have zero opportunity cost?

2) Advisor Has Poor Traction in Other Verticals

Over the past couple of years, Google has rolled out its Advisor product in several verticals including: personal banking, mortgage, and flight search.

We know that at least mortgage didn?t work out very well. Rolled out in early 2011, it was not even a year before Google apparently shut the service down in January of 2012.

I personally don?t have a good grasp on the Mortgage vertical so I had a chat with a high-ranking executive at a leading mortgage site, an active AdWords advertiser. In talking to him it became clear that there were actually quite a bit of similarities between mortgage and insurance as it relates to Google including:

  1. Both industries are highly regulated in the US, at the state level.
  2. Both verticals are competitive and lucrative. CPCs in mortgage can exceed $40.
  3. Like insurance, Google tested Advisor in the UK market first.

Hoping he could serve as my crystal ball for insurance, I asked, ?So why did Advisor for Mortgage fail?? His response was, ?The chief issue was that the opportunity cost was unsustainably high. Google needed to be as or more efficient than direct marketers who had been doing this for years. They underestimated this learning curve and ultimately couldn?t sustain the lost revenue as a result of click cannibalization.?

Google better be sure it has a good understanding of the US insurance market before entering, or else history will repeat itself, which brings me to my next point...

3) They Don?t Yet Have Expertise

Let?s quickly review some key differences between the UK and US insurance markets:

  1. Approximately 80% of car insurance is purchased through comparison sites in the UK vs under 5% in the US.
  2. There is one very business-friendly pricing regulatory body in the UK versus state-level, sometimes aggressive, regulation in the US.
  3. The UK is an efficient market for consumers, the US is not. This means margins are tighter for UK advertisers, as evidenced by the fact that CPCs in the UK are about a third of what they are in the US.

As you can see, these markets are completely different animals. Despite the seemingly low barriers for entry in the UK, Google still felt compelled to acquire BeatThatQuote to better understand the market. Yet, it still took them a year and a half post acquisition before they launched Advisor.

I spoke with an executive at a top-tier UK insurance comparison site earlier this week about Google?s entry. He mentioned that Google wanted to acquire a UK entity primarily for its general knowledge of the market, technology, and infrastructure (API integrations). He said, ?Given [Google?s] objectives, it didn?t make sense for them to acquire a top tier site (ie - gocompare, comparethemarket, moneysupermarket, confused) so they acquired BeatThatQuote, which was unknown to most consumers but had the infrastructure in place for Google to test the market effectively.?

It?s very unlikely BeatThatQuote will be of much use for the US market. Google will need to build its product from the ground up. Beyond accruing the knowledge of a very complex, and nuanced market, they will need to acquire or build out the infrastructure. In the US there are no public rate APIs for insurance carriers; very few insurance comparison sites actually publish instant, accurate, real-time rates. Google will need to understand and navigate its way to the rates (though it?s not impossible). It will take some time to get carriers comfortable and then of course build out the technology. Insurance carriers, like most financial service companies, can be painfully slow.

Conclusion

I do believe Google will do something with insurance at some point in the US. Of the various challenges the company currently faces, I believe the high opportunity cost is the toughest to overcome. However, the market will shift. As true insurance comparison options continue to mature, consumers will be searching exclusively for comparison sites (see travel), and carriers will no longer be able to effectively compete at the scale they are now -- driving down the market for CPCs and thus lowering the opportunity cost.

This opportunity cost is much lower however for other search engines where average car insurance CPC?s are lower. If I am Microsoft or Yahoo, I am seriously considering using my valuable real estate to promote something worthwhile in insurance. There is currently a big void for consumers as it relates to shopping for insurance. A rival search engine can instantly differentiate themselves from Google overnight in one of the biggest verticals. This may be one of their best opportunities to regain some market share.

Categories: 

Source: http://www.seobook.com/google-car-insurance

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

Google Copyright Transparency Report

Google timed a nice Friday evening release to update of their policy toward copyright infringement.

Starting next week, we will begin taking into account a new signal in our rankings: the number of valid copyright removal notices we receive for any given site. Sites with high numbers of removal notices may appear lower in our results.

Wow. Sounds like trouble. Surely that means that YouTube's rankings are about to get torched.

Oh, nope. One quick exemption for the video king:

This data presents information specified in requests we received from copyright owners through our web form to remove search results that link to allegedly infringing content. It is a partial historical record that includes more than 95% of the volume of copyright removal requests that we have received for Search since July 2011. It does not include:

  • requests submitted by means other than our web form, such as fax or written letter
  • requests for products other than Google Search (e.g, requests directed at YouTube or Blogger)
  • requests sent to Google Search for content appearing in other Google products (e.g., requests for Search, but specifying YouTube or Blogger URLs).

Google does not state where the thresholds will be set & grants blanket immunity for themselves, yet they (illegitimately) emphasize that they are being transparent.

Only copyright holders know if something is authorized, and only courts can decide if a copyright has been infringed; Google cannot determine whether a particular webpage does or does not violate copyright law. So while this new signal will influence the ranking of some search results, we won?t be removing any pages from search results unless we receive a valid copyright removal notice from the rights owner. And we?ll continue to provide "counter-notice" tools so that those who believe their content has been wrongly removed can get it reinstated. We?ll also continue to be transparent about copyright removals.

YouTube vs Sites Cleaner Than YouTube

Courts have ruled that embedding a YouTube video is not copyright infringement. The EFF has mentioned that embedding a video is simply a link.

And yet, a UK student faces up to 10 years in jail in the US for founding a crowdsourced site which links to sites that allow you to watch TV online.

Kim DotCom suffered a militant raid on his house & had his assets frozen for running MegaUpload, which was a tiny spec of dirt compared to the size of YouTube.

On the copyright front YouTube was rotten from the start:

  • "In a July 19, 2005 e-mail to YouTube co-founders Chad Hurley and Jawed Karim, YouTube co-founder Steve Chen wrote: 'jawed, please stop putting stolen videos on the site. We?re going to have a tough time defending the fact that we?re not liable for the copyrighted material on the site because we didn?t put it up when one of the co-founders is blatantly stealing content from other sites and trying to get everyone to see it.'"
  • "Chen twice wrote that 80 percent of user traffic depended on pirated videos. He opposed removing infringing videos on the ground that 'if you remove the potential copyright infringements... site traffic and virality will drop to maybe 20 percent of what it is.' Karim proposed they 'just remove the obviously copyright infringing stuff.' But Chen again insisted that even if they removed only such obviously infringing clips, site traffic would drop at least 80 percent. ('if [we] remove all that content[,] we go from 100,000 views a day down to about 20,000 views or maybe even lower')."
  • "In response to YouTube co-founder Chad Hurley?s August 9, 2005 e-mail, YouTube co-founder Steve Chen stated: 'but we should just keep that stuff on the site. I really don?t see what will happen. what? someone from cnn sees it? he happens to be someone with power? he happens to want to take it down right away. he get in touch with cnn legal. 2 weeks later, we get a cease & desist letter. we take the video down.'"
  • "A true smoking gun is a memorandum personally distributed by founder Karim to YouTube?s entire board of directors at a March 22, 2006 board meeting. Its words are pointed, powerful, and unambiguous. Karim told the YouTube board point-blank:
    'As of today episodes and clips of the following well-known shows can still be found: Family Guy, South Park, MTV Cribs, Daily Show, Reno 911, Dave Chapelle. This content is an easy target for critics who claim that copyrighted content is entirely responsible for YouTube?s popularity. Although YouTube is not legally required to monitor content (as we have explained in the press) and complies with DMCA takedown requests, we would benefit from preemptively removing content that is blatantly illegal and likely to attract criticism.'"
  • "A month later, [YouTube manager Maryrose] Dunton told another senior YouTube employee in an instant message that 'the truth of the matter is probably 75-80 percent of our views come from copyrighted material.' She agreed with the other employee that YouTube has some 'good original content' but 'it?s just such a small percentage.'"
  • "In a September 1, 2005 email to YouTube co-founder Steve Chen and all YouTube employees, YouTube co-founder Jawed Karim stated, 'well, we SHOULD take down any: 1) movies 2) TV shows. we should KEEP: 1) news clips 2) comedy clips (Conan, Leno, etc) 3) music videos. In the future, I?d also reject these last three but not yet.'"

Broader Copyright Questions

There still are a lot of murky questions in Google's "transparency."

  • If a person embeds an image from Imgur, ImageShack, TinyPic, PhotoBucket or elsewhere & the page that has a hotlink gets a DMCA how does that count?
  • If a brand is large enough does it take many DMCAs to get hit?
  • Is there any analysis of the underlying business model of the site? What happens to document storage sites like DocStoc & Scribd, or even image sites like Pinterest?
  • What happens to sites that link at penalized sites too frequently?
  • What happens to ad networks that frequently fund such copyright violations?

HUGE Impact on the Web

Has anyone registered DMCASEO.com & DMCA-SEO.com yet? ;)

In terms of impact on the web for publishers, this change is every bit as big as Florida, Panda & Penguin. It may not seem so at first (as it will take time for market participants to consider the uses) but this is a huge deal. Consider some of the following scenarios...

  • You try to create something like YouTube for another form of content (Pinterest?) and it gets hit as spam for following Google's lead.
  • You offer a free blogging platform that competes with Blogspot, but it gets hit as spam for following Google's lead.
  • You decide to create a project like Google's book scanning project & you get hit as spam for following Google's lead.
  • You run an ad network & start growing quickly. As you grow some sketchier publishers enter your ad network. Like Google AdSense, a large portion of your ad network is filled with sites that have copyright violations on them. Suddenly working with your ad network gets people hit as spam because your business model is too similar to Google's.
  • You create a new social network & are struggling to compete with Google's preferential ranking & hard coded placements of their own network. You make your network more open to encourage growth & you get hit as spam.
  • If You are Amazon or eBay you can afford premium featured content to pull up your other listings. But if you can't afford their cost structure & hire freelance writers or work with outsourced workers to create some of your content & they use some copyright work without you knowing. But does Amazon now have to vigilantly review their reviews for plagiarism?
  • A competitor licenses some of their content as Creative Commons for years & doesn't mind wide use of it. Then you use it & one day they see you as a competitive threat and remove their Creative Commons license & bulk DMCA you. Or you have a lifetime syndication deal with a company, they later change the policy & claim that your documents are forged.
  • Getty images presumes you didn't license an image that you did & files a DMCA. At some point there is no purpose in targeting the webmaster or host...just go direct to Google knowing that you can create the equivalent of a "patent trolling" styled business model where you create a business model where it is cheaper for people to pay to have the issue resolved the quick way before they lodge a formal complaint. Some organizations might even have a subscription service set up where you pre-pay for immunity.
  • A former employee who wrote content for you claims you used it without permission. Or that same former employee used pirated images & longish quotes from other sources that they didn't disclose to you that they now highlight via DMCA.
  • You license data from a source & they do a mid-contract change leveraging the small print & have a bot lined up to send 40,000 DMCAs against you if you do not agree to the higher pricepoint.
  • Google is considering making an investment in your site & you want too much money. As an edge case near the threshold of this copyright limit you know you have immunity if you join the borg, but lack it if you don't work with them.
  • Big media players that play in the gray area will be fine, but smaller sites that try a similar model will be sunk by DMCAs and/or legal fees.
  • Your leading competitor realizes that your blog publishes comments by default with editorial review (and that even later has lax review) and then they file DMCA reports against you. Or they could just grab chunks of content from Google's leaderboard of complainers and post them into your web forum, knowing that those companies will file a DMCA report against you.
  • A site has some content public & some behind a paywall. With a page partially indexed, how does Google respond to DMCA requests when the alleged infraction is behind a registration wall or paywall?
  • A competitor (inspired by Google no doubt) hires off shore "contractors" to copy your site & then file DMCA reports against you in bulk. How long until people start uploading their own content to file their own DMCAs against certain sites with user generated content?
  • Even if your site is 100% legal, a combination of ignorance & crowd-driven vigilante justice can still take you down.
  • Any site that offers interactive features & has user generated content is at risk of being labeled as spam unless they have tight editorial control over user generated content. And at the same time, Google can enter vertical after vertical with scrape & displace garbage knowing that they don't have those editorial costs due to their self-granted blanket immunity.
  • If you do not register your sites with Google & counter claims (even bogus ones) then you are seen as being a spammer. And if you register with Google then when they don't like something one site does they can hit other sites all at the same time. No point going to the host or registrar, go direct to Google & start building up negative karma.

Why did Google feel the need to grant themselves blanket immunity from the policy?

That question was largely missing among the fanboi blogs & journalists who were encouraged by Google's "transparency."

24 Karat Pyrite On Sale for Only $100 an Ounce

If YouTube is going to win big, then that's a great place to invest, right?

Maybe not.

Some venture capitalists are investing in YouTube channels, but that is a fool's game.

  • Google is also investing in select channels (like Machinima). It is quite hard to outperform Google in returns while investing into a platform that they control & thus have better data on than you ever could.
  • As YouTube's dominance increases (and it will now that competing platforms with a similar business model will be smeared as spam), you can count on them offering premium partners crappier revenue share deals in years to come. They will offer nice deals to Warner Bros. & such, but the independent smaller players will get cut out of the ecosystem in much the same way as they did in Google's organic search results.
  • Google, prince of transparency (for everyone but Google), requires that premium publishers *not* disclose the terms of their deals: "The Partner Program forbids participants to reveal specifics about their ad-share revenue. Rates can vary depending on the size and demographics of the partner?s audience and an array of other metrics."

Note that I don't claim YouTube is a bad host for your own content, but that I am skeptical in applying the VC model to it with a belief that you can out-invest Google on their own site; particularly when they own the dominant platform, control the non-public revenue share rates, invest in competing channels & can offer free promotion + higher rates to anyone they invest into in order to dominate the category.

And the issue isn't just video either. The same dynamic can apply to just about any other infrastructural layer. For instance, Google could buy out a torrent site (say like uTorrent) and have that site gain immediately immunity for being part of the borg, while other sites that compete now absorb both greater editorial filtering costs & greater risks that destroy their ROI.

As Google continues to lock down search, you can expect more smart publishers to hedge investments in search and YouTube with investments in proprietary non-search applications that Google can't take away.

The Devil is in the Details

"We are optimistic that Google?s actions will help steer consumers to the myriad legitimate ways for them to access movies and TV shows online, and away from the rogue cyberlockers, peer-to-peer sites, and other outlaw enterprises that steal the hard work of creators across the globe. We will be watching this development closely ? the devil is always in the details ? and look forward to Google taking further steps to ensure that its services favor legitimate businesses and creators, not thieves." - Michael O?Leary, Senior Executive Vice President for Global Policy and External Affairs of the Motion Picture Association of America, Inc.

The concerned with Google pitching themselves as the preeminent authority on copyright is they have consistently played both sides of the fence.

When Google was competing against YouTube, this was how they viewed copyright internally.

Business Objectives Drive "Relevancy" Signals

Google is a big player in business online and off. They can sell private data exclusively & their online profits are so huge that they are now buying auto loan bonds.

Now that Google wants to sell premium content they (sort of) respect copyright (& are willing to hold the rest of the web to a higher standard than themselves to create this impression).

I have long believed that relevancy signals were often politically driven & that internal business development goals often lead or create various signals. Certainly that was obvious when Google+ was hardcoded in the search results. It was equally true when Knol outranked the original content sources. Google frequently pretends to be (belligerently) unaware of externalities, but when the issues impact their own business they gain an elevated sense of importance.

And these business objectives not only influence the relevancy algorithms, but also the editorial guidelines.

And even while Google is rolling out this "copyright violators are spammers" algorithm (which they are exempt from) they still chug on with their ebook offering:

They posted several of my 41 books up as free downloads (some were missing a few pages at most a single chapter) It took several e-mails from me pointing out that they were infringing copyright before they took them down. During the time my books were free on Google my sales of e-books fell dramatically. " - K C Watkins

When Google started scanning books an internal document stated: ?[we want web searchers interested in book content to come to Google not Amazon? ... or, as put another way, in that same document, ?[e]verything else is secondary ? but make money.?

Categories: 

Source: http://www.seobook.com/copyright-spam

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

How to Execute The Perfect Cart Abandonment Email [Infographic]

This week’s infographic is courtesy of SaleCycle.com, presenting stats on email timing, subject lines and content and their effect on cart recovery emails based on a study of 200 brands. Click to blow up this infographic Takeaways and comments: Timing matters. Conversion rate drops as time passes from abandonment – 50% within 24 hours. Within [...]

Source: http://www.getelastic.com/how-to-execute-the-perfect-cart-abandonment-email-infographic/

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

SES Chicago: Building the B2B Social Media Machine ? 6 Steps for Success

It’s day 2 of SES Chicago, and the online marketing education is flowing full force.� I saw an excellent presentation about building a�killer B2B social media strategy with Adriel Sanchez (@Adriel_S) of SAP.� With the sea of platforms, tactics, and schools of thought around B2B social media, it can be difficult to put together an [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/OnlineMarketingSEOBlog/~3/yjDf5eMC6QE/

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

User Contact Fields in WordPress

WordPress comes with a “default” set of user contact fields, which has always looked random to me: AIM, Yahoo IM and Jabber / Google Talk, instead of what I’d want to have there: Twitter, Facebook and Google+. A while back I got frustrated enough to have a look at how this was actually dealt with…

User Contact Fields in WordPress is a post by on Yoast - Tweaking Websites.A good WordPress blog needs good hosting, you don't want your blog to be slow, or, even worse, down, do you? Check out my thoughts on WordPress hosting!

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/joostdevalk/~3/gHUBwi4FUAk/

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

The Journey to Our First $1,000,000 ? 10 Lessons Learned Along the Way

The Journey to Our First $1,000,000 ? 10 Lessons Learned Along the Way

Post from: Quality SEO Services & Link Building Services

The Journey to Our First $1,000,000 ? 10 Lessons Learned Along the WayPost from: Quality SEO Services & Link Building Services � We thank our clients who helped reach the 1 million dollar revenue mark It is an almost universal truth that making your first million is always the toughest. There are umpteen references to [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/quantumseolabs/~3/7zh6d83rLX4/

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

Building a Niche Website

Everyone who has more than 17 minutes of SEO experience and decides to start up a blog/website has visions of Mashable-like, server-crushing traffic on the day of a new iPhone launch. However within 6 months of not making it onto Techmeme once, they give up, littering the digital highway with yet another abandoned WordPress blog. [...]

This post originally came from Building a Niche Website

  • Building a Mobile Website Should be Your #1 IT Project If I had the ability to reach through the screen,...
  • Will Facebook Niche For Dollars Or Food? Ed Berrera contends that as Facebook advertising gets more niche,...
  • Building Links & Driving Traffic with How To Posts When you are looking to build links and drive traffic,...
  • Site Targeting and Niche Blogging I’m not the first one to say this, and I...
  • How To Silo Your Website: The Footer This post is part of a series on How to...
  • Source: http://www.wolf-howl.com/seo/building-a-niche-website/

    more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

    ?Why did our PageRank go down??

    Recently a newspaper contacted me. Their PageRank had dropped from 7 to 3, and they wanted to know why. They genuinely didn’t seem know what the issue was, so I took some time to write them an in-depth reply. Part of the motivation for my blog is to provide information in more scalable ways, so [...]

    Source: http://feeds.mattcutts.com/~r/mattcutts/uJBW/~3/Z3ZWX7CvtNE/

    more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

    Out for a few days: my grandfather is in the hospital

    My grandfather has been seriously ill this week, so I’m flying tonight to be with him in Tennessee. If you’re waiting on me for a reply about something, it will probably need to wait. I still hope to attend PubCon next week but I can’t promise that I’ll be able to make it. Added: My [...]

    Source: http://feeds.mattcutts.com/~r/mattcutts/uJBW/~3/O588_mIayoA/

    more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

    Counterspin on Shopping Search: Shady Paid Inclusion

    Bing caused a big stink today when they unveiled Scroogled, a site that highlights how Google Shopping has went paid-inclusion only. A couple weeks ago Google announced that they would be taking their controvercial business model global, in spite of it being "a mess."

    Nextag has long been critical of Google's shifts on the shopping search front. Are their complaints legitimate, or are they just whiners?

    Data, More Reliable Than Spin

    Nothing beats data, so lets start with that.

    This is what Nextag's search exposure has done over the past few years, according to SearchMetrics.

    If Google did that to any large & politically connected company, you can bet regulators would have already took action against Google, rather than currently negotiating with them.

    What's more telling is how some other sites in the shopping search vertical have performed.

    PriceGrabber, another player in the shopping search market, has also slowly drifted downward (though at a much slower rate).

    One of the few shopping search engines that has seen a big lift over this time period was Yahoo! Shopping.

    What is interesting about that rise is that Yahoo! outsourced substantially all of their shopping search product to PriceGrabber.

    A Self-Destructing Market Dynamic

    The above creates an interesting market dynamic...

    • the long established market leader can wither on the vine for being too focused on their niche market & not broadening out in ways that increase brand awareness
    • a larger site with loads of usage data can outsource the vertical and win based on the bleed of usage data across services & the ability to cross promote the site
    • the company investing in creating the architecture & baseline system that powers other sites continues to slide due to limited brand & a larger entity gets to displace the data source
    • Google then directly enters the market, further displacing some of the vertical players

    The above puts Nextag's slide in perspective, but the problem is that they still have fixed costs to manage if they are going to maintain their editorial quality. Google can hand out badges for people willing to improve their product for free or give searchers a "Click any fact to locate it on the web. Click Wrong? to report a problem" but others who operated with such loose editorial standards would likely be labeled as a spammer of one stripe or another.

    Scrape-N-Displace

    Most businesses have to earn the right to have exposure. They have to compete in the ecosystem, built awareness & so on. But Google can come in from the top of the market with an inferior product, displace the competition, economically starve them & eventually create a competitive product over time through a combination of incremental editorial improvements and gutting the traffic & cash flow to competing sites.

    "The difference between life and death is remarkably small. And it?s not until you face it directly that you realize your own mortality." - Dustin Curtis

    The above quote is every bit as much true for businesses as it is for people. Nothing more than a threat of a potential entry into a market can cut off the flow of investment & paralyze businesses in fear.

    • If you have stuff behind a paywall or pre-roll ads you might have "poor user experience metrics" that get you hit by Panda.
    • If you make your information semi-accessible to Googlebot you might get hit by Panda for having too much similar content.
    • If you are not YouTube & you have a bunch of stolen content on your site you might get hit by a copyright penalty.
    • If you leave your information fully accessible publicly you get to die by scrape-n-displace.
    • If you are more clever about information presentation perhaps you get a hand penlty for cloaking.

    None of those is a particularly desirable way to have your business die.

    Editorial Integrity

    In addition to having a non-comprehensive database, Google Shopping also suffers from the problem of line extension (who buys video games from Staples?).

    The bigger issue is that issue of general editorial integrity.

    Are products in stock? Sometimes no.

    It is also worth mentioning that some sites with "no product available" like Target or Toys R Us might also carry further Google AdSense ads.

    Then there are also issues with things like ads that optimize for CTR which end up promoting things like software piracy or the academic versions of software (while lowering the perceived value of the software).

    Over the past couple years Google has whacked loads of small ecommerce sites & the general justification is that they don't add enough that is unique, and that they don't deserve to rank as their inventory is unneeded duplication of Amazon & eBay. Many of these small businesses carry inventory and will be driven into insolvency by the sharp shifts in traffic. And while a small store is unneeded duplication, Google still allows syndicated press releases to rank great (and once again SEOs get blamed for Google being Google - see the quote-as-headline here).

    Let's presume Google's anti-small business bias is legitimate & look at Google Shopping to see how well they performed in terms of providing a value add editorial function.

    A couple days ago I was looking for a product that is somewhat hard to find due to seasonal shopping. It is often available at double or triple retail on sites like eBay, but Google Shopping helped me locate a smaller site that had it available at retail price. Good deal for me & maybe I was wong about Google.

    ... then again ...

    The site they sent me to had the following characteristics:

    • URL - not EMD & not a brand, broken English combination
    • logo - looks like I designed it AND like I was in a rush when I did it
    • about us page - no real information, no contact information (on an ecommerce site!!!), just some obscure stuff about "direct connection with China" & mention of business being 15 years old and having great success
    • age - domain is barely a year old & privacy registered
    • inbound links - none
    • product price - lower than everywhere else
    • product level page content - no reviews, thin scraped editorial, editorial repeats itself to fill up more space, 3 adsense blocks in the content area of the page
      • no reviews, thin scraped editorial, editorial repeats itself to fill up more space, 3 adsense blocks in the content area of the page
      • no reviews, thin scraped editorial, editorial repeats itself to fill up more space, 3 adsense blocks in the content area of the page
      • no reviews, thin scraped editorial, editorial repeats itself to fill up more space, 3 adsense blocks in the content area of the page
      • the above repetition is to point out the absurdity of the formatting of the "content" of said page
    • site search - yet again the adsense feed, searching for the product landing page that was in Google Shopping I get no results (so outside of paid inclusion & front/center placement, Google doesn't even feel this site is worth wasting the resources to index)
    • checkout - requires account registration, includes captcha that never matches, hoping you will get frustrated & go back to earlier pages and click an ad

    It actually took me a few minutes to figure it out, but the site was designed to look like a phishing site, with intent that perhaps you will click on an ad rather than trying to complete a purchase. The forced registration will eat your email & who knows what they will do with it, but you can never complete your purchase, making the site a complete waste of time.

    Looking at the above spam site with some help of tools like NetComber it was apparent that this "merchant" also ran all sorts of scraper sites driven on scraping content from Yahoo! Answers & similar, with sites about Spanish + finance + health + shoes + hedge funds.

    It is easy to make complaints about Nextag being a less than perfect user experience. But it is hard to argue that Google is any better. And when other companies have editorial costs that Google lacks (and the other companies would be labeled as spammers if they behaved like Google) over time many competing sites will die off due to the embedded cost structure advantages. Amazon has enoug scale that people are willing to bypass Google's click circus & go directly to Amazon, but most other ecommerce players don't. The rest are largely forced to pay Google's rising rents until they can no longer afford to, then they just disappear.

    Bonus Prize: Are You Up to The Google Shopping Test?

    The first person who successfully solves this captcha wins a free month membership to our site.

    Categories: 

    Source: http://www.seobook.com/shopping-search

    more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

    How Google is Filled With Hypocrisy and Will Steal Your Intellectual Property

    If there is one thing Google is good at, it’s framing themselves and their actions as being “good for the user” and for the benefit of others while playing down how their actions are self-serving. However, those of us who have been around the block a few times know that Google plays fast and loose [...]

    This post originally came from How Google is Filled With Hypocrisy and Will Steal Your Intellectual Property

  • Google Suggest – Broken and Filled with Porn and Children In recent weeks Google has been launching a higher than...
  • Google Hypocrisy Seems the guys at Googleplex may need to reload if...
  • I Wish We Had Google Understand Not Google Instant Search Earlier this week Google launched the latest�iteration�of the SERP’s, Google...
  • Google Current and Google Zeitgeist So there I was cruising over to Google Zeitgeist hoping...
  • Google Personalized Search – Don’t Become a Google Traffic Addict Recently I was doing a bit of research on personalized...
  • Source: http://www.wolf-howl.com/google/google-filled-with-hypocrisy/

    more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

    How to find blogging inspiration & 20 blogging ideas

    Even if you have the best intentions in the world, coming up with a constant stream of new ideas for blog posts can be pretty intimidating. All too soon, the ...

    © SEOptimise - Download our free business guide to blogging whitepaper and sign-up for the SEOptimise monthly newsletter. How to find blogging inspiration & 20 blogging ideas

    Related posts:
    1. Content Strategy for Small Businesses
    2. Social Media Research & Insight

    Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/seoptimise/~3/icaTQbGTiEY/how-to-find-blogging-inspiration-20-blogging-ideas.html

    more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

    Reputation Matters: The Best Offense Is A Good Defense

    “Reputation matters because your behind is always behind you.? �- Happy Masina - It is simply amazing how many successful people don?t own the website correlating to their name, even lawyers and billionaires. And so few understand that the first few Google SERP entries can best be managed by regular content sharing, participation, and the [...]

    The post Reputation Matters: The Best Offense Is A Good Defense appeared first on Search Engine Journal.


    Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/SearchEngineJournal/~3/sJlrF9WtOCw/

    more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

    Getting More Positive Responses for Your Guest Post Requests

    Guest posting has long been recognised as a good way to build not just your personal brand (reputation building), but to get links and traffic as well. The problem is, however, that it is just not that easy to get …

    Getting More Positive Responses for Your Guest Post Requests was originally posted on the Phoenixrealm SEO Blog by Gary Cottam.

    You can connect with Gary on Google+, on Twitter @garycottam, or follow these links to find out more about Doublespark SEO or Doublespark Web Design.

    Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/phoenixrealm/UynW/~3/tU1yNAz89dQ/

    more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

    WordPress Archive Pages: the tutorial

    On any bigger site, you’ll get archive pages of some sort. Whether they are taxonomy or category archives, like this SEO category, Custom Post Type archives like this one for our WordPress plugin reviews�or my speaking engagements,�or even date archives: they all share the same common traits. In WordPress an archive will, by default, consist…

    WordPress Archive Pages: the tutorial is a post by on Yoast - Tweaking Websites.A good WordPress blog needs good hosting, you don't want your blog to be slow, or, even worse, down, do you? Check out my thoughts on WordPress hosting!

    Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/joostdevalk/~3/ituadafIpro/

    more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

    Google Takes A Legal Hit Down Under

    No this isn’t about anyone getting hit below the belt. It’s about a legal ruling in Australia that claims Google’s treatment of content that appeared in their search results was harmful to someone. What you ask?! Isn’t that going to open a Pandora’s box which every search result / ambulance chasing lawyer would like to [...]

    Source: http://www.marketingpilgrim.com/2012/11/google-takes-a-legal-hit-down-under.html

    more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

    Saving Abandoned Carts: The Experts Weigh In

    Last week?s infographic Friday post on how to execute the perfect cart abandonment email generated a lively discussion with intelligent questions. Because blog comments typically don?t see much light of day once the article is more than a day old (and most of our loyal readers subscribing by RSS or email), I wanted to dedicate [...]

    Source: http://www.getelastic.com/saving-abandoned-carts-the-experts-weigh-in/

    more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

    Insulating Ourselves From Google's Whims

    Ranking well for our chosen keywords involves putting in a lot of effort up front, with no guarantee of ranking, or reward.

    Even if we do attain rankings, and even if do get rewarded, there is no guarantee this situation will last. And this state of flux, for many seos, is only likely to get worse as Google advises that updates will be ?jarring and julting for a while?

    Even more reason to make every visitor count.

    If we can extract higher value from each visitor, by converting them from visitor to customers, and from short term customers to long term customers, then our businesses are less vulnerable to Google?s whims. We don?t need to be as focused on acquiring new visitors.

    There is great value to be had in optimizing the entire marketing chain.

    Hunting For Customers Vs Keeping Customers

    It comes down to cost.

    According to a Harvard Study a few years back, it can cost five times as much to acquire a new customer as it does to keeping a current customer happy. Of course, your mileage may vary, as whether it really costs five times as much, or three, or seven really depends what your cost structure.

    However, this concept is an important one for search marketers, as it?s reasonable to assume that the cost of acquiring customers, via keyword targeting, is rising as Google makes the marketing process of keyword targeting more expensive than it has been in the past. This trend is set to continue.

    If the cost of customer acquisition is rising, it can make sense to look at optimizing the offer, the conversion rates and optimizing the value of existing customers.

    Underlying Fundamentals

    If you have something a lot of people desperately need, and there isn?t much competition, it typically doesn?t cost much to land those customers. They come to you. If you have something genuinely scarce, or even artificially scarce, people will line up.

    The problem is that most businesses don?t enjoy such demand. They must compete with other businesses offering similar products and services. So, if there is a scarcity issue, it?s a scarcity of customers, not service and product providers.

    However, by focusing on a specific niche, businesses can eliminate a lot of competition, and thereby reduce the marketing cost. For example, a furniture manufacturer could conceivably make furniture for a wide variety of customers, from commercial offices, to industry, to the home.

    But if they narrowed their focus to, say, private jet fit-outs, they eliminate a lot of their competition. They?d also have to determine if that niche is lucrative, of course, but as you can see, it?s a way of eliminating a lot of competition simply by adding focus and specialization.

    By specializing, they are more likely to enjoy higher quality leads - i.e. leads that may result in a sale - than if they targeted broadly, as it is difficult to be all things to all people The cost of marketing to a broad target market can be higher, as can the level of competition in the search results pages, and the quality of leads can be lower.

    Conversion Optimization

    Once we?re focused on our niche, and we?ve got targeted visitors coming in, how can we ensure fewer visitors are wasted?

    Those who do a lot of PPC will be familiar with conversion optimization, and we?ll dive deep into this fascinating area over the coming weeks, but it?s a good concept for those new to SEO, and internet marketing in general, to keep at front of mind.

    You?ve gone to a lot of trouble to get people to your site, so make sure they don?t click back once they arrive!

    Here?s a great case study by a company called Conversion Rate Experts. It outlines how to structure pages to improve conversion rates. Whilst the findings are the result of testing and adaptation, and are specific to each business, there are a few few key lessons here:

    Length of the page. In this case, a long page improved conversion rates by 30%. Of course, it?s not a numbers game, more the fact that the longer page allowed more time to address objections and answer visitor questions.

    As Conversion Rate Experts point out:

    The media would have us believe that people no longer have any capacity to concentrate. In reality, you cannot have a page that?s too long?only one that?s too boring. In the case of Crazy Egg?s home page, visitors wanted their many questions answered and that?s what we delivered. (If you?d like more people to scroll down your long pages, see the guide we wrote on the topic.)?

    It?s best to experiment, to see what works best in your own situation, but, generally speaking, it pays to offer the visitor as much timely information as possible, as opposed to short copy if there is a analytical, need-oriented motivation. Short copy can work better if the customer is impulsive.

    As we see in the Crazy Egg case study, by anticipating and addressing specific objections, and moving the customer closer to the point of sale, the webpage is doing the job of the salesperson. This is an area where SEO and PPC, linked with conversion rate optimization, can add a ton of value.

    The second interesting point was they optimized the long-term value of the customer to the company by making a time-sensitive offer.

    The one-time offer test illustrates another important principle of conversion optimization: Don?t let the fear of a short-term loss stand in the way of a long-term gain

    The offer they made turned a short-term customer into a long-term customer. If we have a lot of long term customers on our books, it can take some of the pressure off the need to constantly acquire new customers.

    Optimize Everything

    We engage in SEO because there are many similar sites.

    The benefit of SEO is we can occupy premium real estate. If we appear high on the search result pages, we are more likely than our competitors to command the customers attention. But we stand to gain a lot more stability if we are not wholly reliant on occupying the top spots, and therefore less vulnerable to Google?s whims.

    Categories: 

    Source: http://www.seobook.com/insulating-ourselves-googles-whims

    more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

    Don't Get Scroogled: Microsoft Launches Anti-Google Holiday Shopping Campaign

    In a message geared toward holiday shoppers, Bing is calling out Google for it's new paid ad shopping results model. Microsoft has launched a national campaign trying to spotlight Bing as what honest search results should look like.

    Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/sewblog/~3/OncmcKxcERA/Dont-Get-Scroogled-Microsoft-Launches-Anti-Google-Holiday-Shopping-Campaign

    more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

    Trench Warfare: Google Analytics? Best Updates, Common User Mistakes

    We recently had a sit down with Jen Cykman, Web Analyst and Instructor for Cardinal Path, a digital analytics and marketing agency that offers training seminars on Google Analytics. Jen is a self-professed data nerd that likes nothing better than to sit down and hover over a big ball of data and tease it into [...]

    The post Trench Warfare: Google Analytics’ Best Updates, Common User Mistakes appeared first on Search Engine Journal.


    Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/SearchEngineJournal/~3/HQjO8jlQQ-Q/

    more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

    A Content Marketing Thanksgiving Feast, With All The Fixings

    After months of waiting (or stressing) Thanksgiving is finally here.� Your relatives are on their way, you?ve gathered all of the last minute ingredients (hopefully), and you?re ready to start cooking the meal you?ve been planning. When tackling an entire Thanksgiving feast it doesn?t take much to become overwhelmed.� As you begin rehashing the planning [...]

    Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/OnlineMarketingSEOBlog/~3/QZvFdPqGfik/

    more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

    Google+ Serves As ?Plumbing? of New VetNet Program

    Google is getting creative with Google+ by embedding it into, or as they put it ‘providing the plumbing’ for, a new combined offering called VetNet. In a nutshell, VetNet brings together a few strong organizations that help vets find a new career in civilian life and, if this video is any indication, is relying on [...]

    Source: http://www.marketingpilgrim.com/2012/11/google-serves-as-plumbing-of-new-vetnet-program.html

    more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

    5 Ways SEO Will Change in the Future

    5 Ways SEO Will Change in the Future

    Post from: Quality SEO Services & Link Building Services

    5 Ways SEO Will Change in the FuturePost from: Quality SEO Services & Link Building Services Trying to predict the future is a great deal like playing James Bond?s favorite casino game, baccarat ? ultimately, you might guess correctly but then again, you could also lose your shirt and end up with nothing to show [...]

    Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/quantumseolabs/~3/fUhCZYNtJLo/

    more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

    PeopleBrowsr Takes Twitter to Court over Firehose

    Twitter’s rocky relationship with third party developers makes headlines again, this time in a case of data access. The microblogging company was sued by PeopleBrowsr, a social networking data analysis company, and appeared in the San Francisco Superior Court on Wednesday, where the judge granted PeopleBrowsr a restraining order compelling Twitter to provide full Firehose [...]

    The post PeopleBrowsr Takes Twitter to Court over Firehose appeared first on Search Engine Journal.


    Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/SearchEngineJournal/~3/xsKc5ukh_Sc/

    more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

    5 SEO Strategies That Will Work In 2013

    5 SEO Strategies That Will Work In 2013

    Post from: Quality SEO Services & Link Building Services

    5 SEO Strategies That Will Work In 2013Post from: Quality SEO Services & Link Building Services When working on your SEO strategy it can quickly become overwhelming. This is due, in part, to the high volume of material across the internet about SEO and internet marketing.� It is all too easy to get lost in [...]

    Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/quantumseolabs/~3/obvZ2Z9yrRk/

    more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

    Report Says Social Media Ad Revenues Will Top 9 Billion in 2016

    According to BIA/Kelsey,� U.S. social media ad revenues added up to a cool $4.6 billion in 2012. But that’s nothing compared to where we’re going. Their newly published forecast has us hitting the $9.2 billion mark by 2016. Google makes $9.2 billion before breakfast but social media has had a harder time collecting ad dollars [...]

    Source: http://www.marketingpilgrim.com/2012/11/report-says-social-media-ad-revenues-will-top-9-billion-in-2016.html

    more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

    Does Your Small Business Need a Facebook and Twitter Social Media Account

    It’s 2012 and social media and social networking sites like Twitter and Facebook are constantly mentioned on mainstream media news and entertainment websites and broadcast programs. Print ads for everything from movies to toothpaste have those ubiquitous little Facebook and Twitter logos, hashtags, and often special social media vanity URLs. The question is does your [...]

    This post originally came from Does Your Small Business Need a Facebook and Twitter Social Media Account

  • New Twitter Account @graywolfseo Now that twitter lists have taken off and are being...
  • How to Create a Local Twitter Account Most of the the tutorials on the web dealing with...
  • How Small and Local Businesses Can Use Facebook If there’s one aspect of social media that mainstream press...
  • Facebook vs Twitter: Which is More Valuable? Recently there has been a lot of talk about Facebook...
  • How to Cross Post From Twitter to Your Facebook Page One of the questions I get asked by clients who...
  • Source: http://www.wolf-howl.com/socialmedia/small-business-need-facebook-twitter-social-media/

    more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here