Archive for February, 2009

Seven Wonders of the PPC B2B World

Monday, February 16th, 2009

As I have been researching ways to optimize my B2B clients’ performance, I have found many helpful articles. Below is a summary of the articles that I have bookmarked over time. For those of you who are doing some B2B soul searching, hopefully this list will help you achieve successful PPC campaigns with many more conversions to come.

1. Not All Landing Pages are created equally
In the PPC world, not all landing pages are created equally. I found this cool blog by Erik Jan Bulthuis. In this post, he writes about a great whitepaper on B2B Website Research published by Identy, a Dutch SEO company. I think this research is very thorough and relevant. Although it talks about the SEO aspects, it has some good tips on what a PPC B2B landing page should look like. They started with an executive summary that highlights the difference between B2B and B2C.

The B2B target market is smaller and has a longer buying cycle than B2C (which I’ll also touch on in a later post.) Identy then continued on talking about determining what makes for a strong B2B website. They discussed elements that impact first impressions (such as sitemaps, product overviews, use of images, simple navigation, etc.). They went on to discuss elements impacting website suitability (such as testimonials, online demos, and certificates of references of the company, etc.) I can’t wait to suggest new ideas I learned from this study for my client’s PPC landing page and you should too..

2. Vertical Horizon
Have you ever considered advertising your B2B product through a vertical search engine? If you have the extra budget, go for it! How do B2B buyers perform their search anyway? Search Engine Watch had an article back in 2007 on How Do B2B Buyers Search?

Although the titans (GYM) have taken over the world when it comes to search, many buyers lean toward vertical engines as they get closer to reaching a decision. These search engines might have lower traffic, but have higher possibility to convert due to more specialized leads.

If you think that this is feasible for you or your client, Search Engine Land has this helpful article, The Big List of Major B2B Search Engines.

This brings me to my next target, Business.com. It has been mentioned pretty frequently, as one of the leading general B2B search engines with significant numbers of syndicated business sites (e.g.: Business Week, Forbes, etc). They do have some drawbacks, such as their interface being based on categories. Additionally, they don’t have any conversion tracking which is a bummer, but in-house staff or internet marketing agencies can set up their own tracking.

3. To include or not to include
One of the highly debated topics in the PPC world is bidding on branded terms or not. I personally think it’s important to increase brand awareness and usually the CPCs are more affordable. You also want to protect your brand. If you don’t bid on your brand your competitor’s may. NetworkSolutions summarizes the reasons in this article, Should Your PPC Advertising Include Branded Keywords?

4. Don’t forget to cycle
Buying cycle, that is. The underlying difference is that users take more time to decide to purchase software and the buying cycle usually takes 2 – 3 months. Someone could sign up for the free product tour today, but he/she won’t finally be ready to purchases the product until after 2 months. Therefore, measuring ROI is not an easy task. To effectively measure and evaluate campaign performance, one needs to stay on top of lead tracking (online and offline), which will be another blog post. Stay tuned!

5. Write killer B2B ad copy
This point is related to the one above. Over the years, many articles have come up with many suggestions and tips to write compelling ad copy. I, personally, always revise and improve my ad copy every month. As a start, (again) B2B and B2C audiences are different. We need to “speak” our customers’ language. Is it a solution for businesses or individuals? Afterwards, we need to choose the appropriate call to action. The article Writing Pay-Per-Click Ad Copy for B2C & B2B Audiences has some great advice for writing B2B ads. The main take away is to write more direct calls to action, for B2B clients. It could be: “register for literature”,” watch webinars”, or “sign up for a product tour”.

6. Learn from your mistakes
Common PPC mistakes, we may have all made at one time include avoiding geo targeting, fighting for #1 spot, ignoring the seasonal copy, etc. This article lists the 17 Most Common PPC Mistakes Web Marketers Make. I have bookmarked this list and plan to look at it every time I’m building new campaigns as a good reminder of PPC best practices.

7. Be Negative!
This is my last point and just as important as the first one. Be generous with your negative keywords. I have setup a reminder to check my Google Search query report regularly. By doing this, we can eliminate inefficient spend. Komarketing associates compiled this 200+ Negative Keywords to Consider for B2B PPC.


25+ sites giving keyword data for free & how to use it to drive SEO success

Wednesday, February 11th, 2009

A topic I touched on while speaking at Pubcon last year was using other people’s data to help you in keyword research. In that presentation I illustrated how so many companies put their data “out there” with links to popular searches, and thought it would be helpful for many of you to have a list of some of these sites 25+. Sure it is one thing to see something get hot on Google trends but what if you are in a Hispanic market, a sports market, a travel market, how can you use OPD to help you?

#1 – OPD helps you to uncover trends
#2 – OPD helps you gain some competitive insights into your foes
#3 – OPD gets you insights into topics that you could write about to your blog to take advantage of surging traffic

What can naughty by nature teach us about other people’s property (data)…well OPD how can I explain it…

Naughty BY Nature

So lets start with an easy one like Amazon:
With this information you can easily see the top sellers in any category, if your web site is strollersdirect.com and you decide that you’d like to list out the top 5 most popular baby strollers — you could do that based on the data you have or you could use a site like Amazon’s top sellers for Baby Travel Systems which is updated hourly to make sure you are using the most popular strollers in your top 5 or top 10 list every day.

If you are still thinking, how does this impact MY SEO strategy, then here’s another angle:

Most websites SHOULD NOT list the top 30-40-50 or more products on the homepage, why? It kills your internal link juice flow, and often looks like crap — using amazon’s best sellers at any point you can update your top 5 or 10 to be in accordance with what is likely a much larger data set meaning it is likely to be more accurate.

Here’s another few in many shopping categories:
Shopping General – http://www.mysimon.com/9098-1_8-0.html
Shopping General – http://www.shopping.com/top_searches (page no longer active)

But some of us are in totally different categories not general e-commerce, all is not lost here are some others that should help:

Mobile Accessories and Games – http://handmark.resultspage.com/
Programming – http://corp.koders.com/zeitgeist/ & http://koders.com/info.aspx?page=LanguageReport&la=ruby
Halloween Costumes – http://halloween-costumes.spirithalloween.com/
Fine Dining – http://search.mikasaandcompany.com/
Healthcare caregivers- http://www.healthcentral.com/caregiver/top-searches.html
Healthcare cholesterol – http://www.healthcentral.com/cholesterol/top-searches.html
Healthcare breast cancer – http://www.healthcentral.com/breast-cancer/top-searches.html
Healthcare Top searches 2007 – http://www.webmd.com/a-to-z-guides/features/top-10-searches-2007
Healthcare (look right) – http://www.healthcare.com/popular-searches/
SEOmoz Meta popular search – http://www.seomoz.org/popular-searches
eBay Pulse – http://pulse.ebay.com/
Local results – http://la.backpage.com/online/classifieds/PopularSearches (just swap LA with Connecticut, new York, etc)
Local results UK – http://www.touchlocal.com/business/popularsearches
Fashion / shoes – http://www.roadrunnersports.com/rrs/popularSearches/PopularSearches.html
Fashion / shoes – http://www.zappos.com (look under the search bar)
Beauty – http://search.ulta.com/
Fashion – http://search.vivre.com/
Sports – http://search.espn.go.com/
Sports (monthly) – http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/news/story?id=3872535
A great way to get story ideas
Travel – http://search.travelchannel.com/

So to Recap, use this data to:

#1 – uncover search trends on other sites to augment your data or use to influence top 5,10,20 lists
#2 – gain some competitive insights into your foes, what are people seeking the most, which products, brands, etc let this help you develop strategies to outrank them for terms that people are looking for on their sites
#3 – get a spark on new topics to write about, blog about, and in general get links for by understanding what trends and words are getting hot in different niches

How else can this data be used? Let me know what you think.

25+ sites giving keyword data for free & how to use it to drive SEO success

Wednesday, February 11th, 2009

A topic I touched on while speaking at Pubcon last year was using other people’s data to help you in keyword research. In that presentation I illustrated how so many companies put their data “out there” with links to popular searches, and thought it would be helpful for many of you to have a list of some of these sites 25+. Sure it is one thing to see something get hot on Google trends but what if you are in a Hispanic market, a sports market, a travel market, how can you use OPD to help you?

#1 – OPD helps you to uncover trends
#2 – OPD helps you gain some competitive insights into your foes
#3 – OPD gets you insights into topics that you could write about to your blog to take advantage of surging traffic

What can naughty by nature teach us about other people’s property (data)…well OPD how can I explain it…

Naughty BY Nature

So lets start with an easy one like Amazon:
With this information you can easily see the top sellers in any category, if your web site is strollersdirect.com and you decide that you’d like to list out the top 5 most popular baby strollers – you could do that based on the data you have or you could use a site like Amazon’s top sellers for Baby Travel Systems which is updated hourly to make sure you are using the most popular strollers in your top 5 or top 10 list every day.

If you are still thinking, how does this impact MY SEO strategy, then here’s another angle:

Most websites SHOULD NOT list the top 30-40-50 or more products on the homepage, why? It kills your internal link juice flow, and often looks like crap – using amazon’s best sellers at any point you can update your top 5 or 10 to be in accordance with what is likely a much larger data set meaning it is likely to be more accurate.

Here’s another few in many shopping categories:
Shopping General – http://www.mysimon.com/9098-1_8-0.html
Shopping General – http://www.shopping.com/top_searches (page no longer active)

But some of us are in totally different categories not general e-commerce, all is not lost here are some others that should help:

Mobile Accessories and Games – http://handmark.resultspage.com/
Programming – http://corp.koders.com/zeitgeist/ & http://koders.com/info.aspx?page=LanguageReport&la=ruby
Halloween Costumes – http://halloween-costumes.spirithalloween.com/
Fine Dining – http://search.mikasaandcompany.com/
Healthcare caregivers- http://www.healthcentral.com/caregiver/top-searches.html
Healthcare cholesterol – http://www.healthcentral.com/cholesterol/top-searches.html
Healthcare breast cancer – http://www.healthcentral.com/breast-cancer/top-searches.html
Healthcare Top searches 2007 – http://www.webmd.com/a-to-z-guides/features/top-10-searches-2007
Healthcare (look right) – http://www.healthcare.com/popular-searches/
SEOmoz Meta popular search – http://www.seomoz.org/popular-searches
eBay Pulse – http://pulse.ebay.com/
Local results – http://la.backpage.com/online/classifieds/PopularSearches (just swap LA with Connecticut, new York, etc)
Local results – http://newyork.kijiji.com/c-PopularSearches (pitbulls! WTF!)
Local results UK – http://www.touchlocal.com/business/popularsearches
Fashion / shoes – http://www.roadrunnersports.com/rrs/popularSearches/PopularSearches.html
Fashion / shoes – http://www.zappos.com/Search (look under the search bar)
Beauty – http://search.ulta.com/
Fashion – http://search.vivre.com/
Sports – http://search.espn.go.com/
Sports (monthly) – http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/news/story?id=3872535
A great way to get story ideas
Travel – http://search.travelchannel.com/

So to Recap, use this data to:

#1 – uncover search trends on other sites to augment your data or use to influence top 5,10,20 lists
#2 – gain some competitive insights into your foes, what are people seeking the most, which products, brands, etc let this help you develop strategies to outrank them for terms that people are looking for on their sites
#3 – get a spark on new topics to write about, blog about, and in general get links for by understanding what trends and words are getting hot in different niches

How else can this data be used? Let me know what you think.

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