Showing posts with label Google. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Google. Show all posts

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Automated rules now available to all advertisers

Back in December, Google Adwords announced the limited release of AdWords automated rules, a new feature that lets you save time by scheduling automatic changes to your account based on criteria that you specify. Today we’re happy to announce that this feature is available in all accounts.

If you regularly log in to your account to pause or enable ads, adjust your bids, or perform other manual tasks, automated rules may be just the tool you need to manage your account more efficiently. For a step-by-step guide to creating an automated rule and best practices to get you started, visit the AdWords Help Center.

Keep in mind that when scheduling automatic rules, it’s important to check your work periodically to make sure your rules are having the desired impact on your account performance.

Once you’ve given automated rules a try, we want to hear about it! Share your feedback and ideas for improving automated rules by filling out this survey.




Sunday, October 11, 2009

7 Considerations for Tracking Social Media Success

7 Considerations for Tracking Social Media Success



With more and more marketers jumping onto the social media bandwagon, a lot of questions come up. Is it possible to track metrics and ROI? What are other companies doing? Why isn’t it working? Being prepared to answer questions like these can make a difference in how a company interacts with social media and if they can succeed.

How can we track social media?
Unfortunately, there is no one “most effective” social media tracking system. Marketers across the web are still working to figure out how to measure social media, how to attach ROI, and how to sell the benefits of participation on the social web to those that don’t “get it”.

Social media marketing isn’t like an email campaign where you can track the number of emails sent out, the number that were opened, the number of clicks, visits, leads and conversions all in one process. Much of what happens in the social media world happens behind a login and the old ways of tracking web visitor analytics just doesn’t work in that scenario.

Just like any kind of marketing, each company has their own set of objectives and reasons for reaching them via social media channels. That means different methods and approaches to the listening, monitoring and measuring of both social web and web marketing activities at large. The field of social media analytics is still very new. Here are 7 considerations as you evaluate what will work best in your social media tracking.

Quality over Quantity
This has been said again and again and lots of people still feel that the more followers/friends/subscribers/connections they have, the better. The reality is, quantity is not and end goal for lead or sales generation outcomes. What good is it to have 13,000 followers if 1/3 of them are spam accounts and 1/3 are auto followers who will never engage with you? Sure 13,000 looks good to those who can only focus on numbers, but what is the quality of those 13,000? Seth Godin mentioned at the MIMA Summit that all you need is an audience of about 1,000. But it needs to be the right 1,000 people.

Hearing vs. Listening
Have you stopped to think about who is actually paying attention in social networks? A person or a brand may have X number of followers or friends, but how many of them are actively listening at any given time? How many people do you ACTUALLY reach when you post a tweet, make a status update or blog post? Subscriber counts and reach are two different things. Think of it like a college professor talking to students: How many of them are paying attention during a lecture? With social media participation it’s the same thing; you need to realize that not everyone is always hearing what you have to say and factor in the difference between connections and actual reach.

Engage & Participate
Effective social media marketing is about is engaging and participating. If a marketer joins a social network and focuses on promoting themselves, product or company, they’ll get an entirely different set of outcomes than those they have goals for. Think about it. Social means to be conversational, friendly, helpful. When participating in social channels, talk to other members of the community, participate in the conversations and give people a reason to interact with you. Add a little romance before you ask to get engaged  

Social Media is About Being Where the Conversation Is.
Marketers need to stop and think about where their audiences are online and where relevant conversations are happening. That could be niche social networks, forums and blogs. Those niche areas may have fewer people, but will more than likely have more engagement value for relevant products or services being shared. To find those niche communities and conversations, use social media monitoring software. Free tools include Google Alerts or Social Mention. Low cost tools include Trackur and PostRank Analytics.

Assign Value to Get Value.
Whether it’s a tweet, retweet, a status update, comment, photo upload or story submission, if you want to find out how valuable it is you have to assign a value. It doesn’t matter how or what that value is, but setting up some sort of system will help determine what’s working and what’s not.

Define an Objective.
Before jumping into social networking, it’s essential to set an objective. Going in and participating with social network and media sharing sites just to participate may not bring the kind of results you’d like. A clear objective as part of a social media strategy should be set so you know what you are working towards. It will guide your messaging, behaviors, networking activity as well as the kind of content you seek and share.

Social Media is An Investment.
Social media success takes time. The seeds of relationships need to grow and you’ll need to invest what’s needed to make it work for whatever end goals that are set. Expecting results in a month or two isn’t realistic; it may take a year or more. It really depends on the Roadmap that guides your: Audience > Objectives > Strategy > Tactics > Tools > Measurement. Effective social media participation is about building a network and building trust. That doesn’t happen overnight. Be patient, do it right, and you’ll be rewarded in the long run.

What other considerations should be in this list? If you’ve undertaken new social media programs with your company, what were some of the measurement and analytics hurdles that you overcame?


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Wednesday, April 1, 2009

All Technology predictions for 2009, and beyond

  • A.J. Kohn, 2009 Internet and Technology Predictions on Blind Five Year Old
  • 1. Facebook Becomes A Portal
  • 2. Identity Systems Fail
  • 3. Video Advertising Succeeds
  • 4. Microformats Go Mainstream
  • 5. Banner CTR Becomes Obsolete
  • 6. RSS Adoption Spikes
  • 7. Kindle 2.0 Flops
  • 8. Google Search Share Stalls
  • 9. FriendFeed Surpasses Twitter
  • 10. Someone ‘Dies’
  • Jo Best, Five tech predictions for 2009 on Silicon.com
  • 1. The rise of 'free as in beer' software
  • 2. iPlayer ushers in the death of the TV licence
  • 3. Big boys feel the pain
  • 4. Google reveals another surprise
  • 5. Mobile broadband beats fixed
  • Jeremy Liew, Consumer Internet predictions for 2009 on Vator
  • 1. Consumers seek cheap thrills
  • 2. Trading real money for virtual goods
  • 3. Web 2.0 leaders pull further away from the pack
  • 4. on line ad prices continue to fall, alternatives help make up some of the ground
  • 5. Getting serious about monetizing non U.S. traffic
  • Dion Hinchcliffe, The Top Internet Predictions for 2009 on Social Computing Magazine
  • 1. Site mergers/acquisitions for some of the weaker social network platforms
  • 2. Stronger push towards identity portability and friend (social graph) portability.
  • 3. The future of social media is user's owning their data, deciding who to send it to.
  • 4. Companies finally building for revenue in the social and any other space on line.
  • 5. Social Media will cease to be such an 'experimental' field in marketing and will start to become part of the main core of good campaigns.
  • 6. The opening of social networks so that they can exchange profiles, social relationships, and applications.
  • 7. Social media in 2009 becoming more and more accessible to mainstream audiences.
  • 8. Much richer integration of location-aware services with a variety of devices.
  • 9. Collaborative mapping - people working together with friends and colleagues to build shared maps of places they care about.
  • 10. Location based services will proliferate and become more useful to the end user.
  • 11. We'll see the tech take shape and make more money in 2009.
  • 12. Aggregation services will change from just drinking from the fire hose to become very specific aggregation tools, perhaps with very specific use cases.
  • 13. The pace of evolution may really slow down by comparison, but the user experience will be far better.
  • Ori Fishler, Top 5 Web Technology Trends for 2009 on Edgewater Technology Weblog
  • 1. Actionable Web Analytics as part of Enterprise BI and Dashboards.
  • 2. Phone Browser Compatibility
  • 3. Location based services
  • 4. Increased reliance on open source infrastructure products and technologies
  • 5. Free is always a powerful word. Strong and reliable open source environments allow
  • Richard MacManus et al., 2009 Web Predictions on ReadWriteWeb (added 2008-12-31)
  • 1. Twitter announces they have a plan to make money.
  • 2. New real-time web app launches that integrates Twitter, FriendFeed & more.
  • 3. Professional twitterer becomes a real job.
  • 4. Twitter will start to embed advertising into its users streams.
  • 5. Twitter will be acquired (probably by Facebook).
  • 6. Twitter is going to continue to grow and eventually get acquired, while Facebook is going to see further decline.
  • 7. Facebook signs up to OpenSocial.
  • 8. Facebook will continue to surprise.
  • 9. Big companies will have incentive to give OpenID more support because of Facebook's domination.
  • 10. Facebook Connect becomes new de facto way to login to web sites.
  • 11. Facebook Connect authentication will become dominant method.
  • 12. Facebook has one security incident too many, leading to a decline in popularity.
  • 13. Microsoft will double-down on its Facebook investment, garnering more control of the company - and more access to the data.
  • 14. Microsoft resurrects WebTV after buying out Netflix.
  • 15. Microsoft will launch a competing platform with Apple's App Store.
  • 16. Microsoft releases a cool online version of Office, but then Google releases an amazing new version of Google Docs.
  • 17. Gmail will be the de facto login credential on the Web.
  • 18. Google Reader gets themes.
  • 19. The browser wars will further heat up.
  • 20. Google Chrome adds plugins....
  • 21. Google backlash begins.
  • 22. Google will finally offer a comprehensive online storage solution and some kind of travel product.
  • 23. Google loses goodwill, Yahoo gains.
  • 24. Yahoo sells to a big media company, but it won't be Microsoft.
  • 25. Amazon will further strengthen its position in the cloud computing market.
  • 26. eBay oscillates between break-up and acquisition; it will eventually be acquired by Amazon.
  • 27. The usual suspects will remain unacquired in '09: Digg, Twitter, Technorati. The one that does get bought is FriendFeed - by Google probably.
  • 28. Lifestreams will continue to evolve.
  • 29. iTunes adds social networking features; but it's still a closed development system.
  • 30. If Apple finally enables its push server, mobile social networks and geolocation enabled apps will become a major topic.
  • 31. New iPods released...now with VOIP app built-in.
  • 32. New iPhone is released with video recording capabilities.
  • 33. One of the major gaming platform companies will acquire iPhone development shops to corner the market on iPhone gaming.
  • 34. Under pressure from iPhone, Android, Symbian, and RIM; Windows Mobile will attempt to reinvent itself.
  • 35. Digg still not acquired by anyone.
  • 36. Lifestreaming apps like FriendFeed will remain niche products.
  • 37. Mixx concentrates on usability and starts gaining ground on Digg.
  • 38. LinkedIn will grow in the public's consciousness and grow their revenue dramatically.
  • 39. Apps that do filtering, inferring and recommendation have a great year.
  • 40. The value of data portability and single sign-in becomes unmistakable after a privacy breach.
  • 41. Consumer and regulatory backlash make online privacy into a key differentiator for major players.
  • 42. Have cake and eat it too solutions will emerge as a strong option.
  • 43. Exciting new open source projects will emerge and grow.
  • 44. More contextual browsing technologies will hit the market.
  • 45. Streaming web video to the living room will go mainstream.
  • 46. P2P shows value for reducing cost of server farms.
  • 47. VCs jump onto the SAAS bandwagon, but most ventures don't need the cash.
  • 48. 2009 will be like 2002 for raising money or exiting.
  • 49. More Indian start-ups go global with price-smashing strategy.
  • 50. Health web apps start getting attention from mainstream people and media.
  • 51. Netbooks stay hot...get lighter, faster, thinner, line between notebooks and netbooks blurs.
  • 52. Media properties prominently experiment with different and innovative types of online advertising.
  • 53. One or two interface developments will blow us away.
  • 54. Out of work journalists band together and create some killer blogs.
  • 10 Predictions for the Internet for 2009 on Trade Radar (added 01-01-2009)
  • 1. More blogs!
  • 2. Google will continue to dominate.
  • 3. Linked-In will soar as waves of unemployed try to bolster their personal networks.
  • 4. Amazon will take its place beside Google as one of the two technology leaders on the Internet.
  • 5. Facebook will surpass MySpace in unique traffic and begin to pull away.
  • 6. E*Trade will be acquired.
  • 7. Advertisers will push publishers to accept CPA versus CPC.
  • 8. With location awareness becoming ubiquitous, anonymity on the web will be degraded.
  • 9. Monetization of certain popular sites will stall.
  • 10. Yahoo will sell its search capability to Microsoft and Google will buy what's left.
  • Ryan Lawler, Contentinople's Top 10 Predictions for 2009 on Contentinople (added 2009-01-03)
  • 1. Hulu will hit 1 billion streams worldwide
  • 2. Online video ad units will look more like broadcast units
  • 3. Users will start to ditch pay TV for broadband
  • 4. Behavioral ads will be 'targeted' by Congress
  • 5. CDN consolidation will begin in earnest
  • 6. Digital 3-D will go mainstream
  • 7. Twitter will pull in 'significant' revenue
  • 8. Online ad spend will start catching up to eyeballs
  • 9. Royalty issues will kill streaming music sites
  • 10. Internet video will be stuck on PCs - for now
  • Mary Meeker,Technology / Internet Trends [PDF] on MorganStanley.com (added 2008-01-05)
  • 1. Undermonetized Internet Usage Growth Drivers – Video + Social Networking + VoIP + Payments
  • 2. Broadband + Mobile + Internet = Especially High Global Growers
  • 3. Lots of Retail Share to Gain Amazon.com Should Continue to Gain Share USA; Online Penetration = 6% and Rising
  • 4. Lots of Ad Share to Gain $288 Per Home vs. $818 for Newspapers Implies Upside
  • 5. Search Should Continue to Become More Important
  • 6. While CPMs / CPCs May be Under Near-Term Pressure, If Targeting / ROI
  • 7. Continue to Improve (as they should) There Should Be Long-Term Upside
  • 8. Best News = History Proves That Ads Follow Eyeballs, It Just Takes Time
  • Sharon Besser, One 2009 Prediction you can count on on Imperva Blog (added 2008-01-05)
  • 1. Companies with cogent business models that provide consumer value should survive / thrive
  • Stanley Tang, 5 Internet Marketing & Social Media Predictions For 2009 on Stanleytang.com
  • 1. Twitter Will Get Bought Out
  • 2. Mobile Applications Will Take-Off
  • 3. A New Tool To Help Us With Organization
  • 4. Videos - Interactive And Live Streaming
  • 5. Social Media Continues To Grow
  • Jeff Nolan, 2009 Predictions on MyVenturePad (added 01-01-2009)
  • 1. Consumers re-evaluate the notion of value.
  • 2. Word of mouth marketing increases in importance.
  • 3. A major American city will be without a daily newspaper.
  • 4. Advertising as a primary business model for consumer web services will be abandoned.
  • 5. Enterprise software nuclear winter
  • 6. What SMB gives, SMB takes away
  • 7. Role of government in business
  • 8. Younger employees will simply be thankful to have a job
  • Adam Weinroth, Nine E-Commerce Predictions for 2009 on Shop.org
  • 1. Real-Time Customer Service
  • 2. Communal Conversion
  • 3. TWOM = Trusted Word of Mouth
  • 4. E-Commerce Sovereignty
  • 5. Focus on Per-Customer Value
  • 6. Widespread UGC
  • 7. Growth Through Accountability
  • 8. International Intensity
  • 9. User Experience Innovation
  • What’s coming in on line retail and technology on Guidance.com
  • 1. Mobile will NOT be the killer app for eCommerce…
  • 2. The lines between on line and offline shopping will blur
  • 3. Consumers will create their own personal shopping malls
  • 4. “Smart” retail sites will treat shoppers as individuals
  • 5. Commerce will become even more collaborative
  • 6. The next wave for video? Customer reviews
  • 7. Configuration: beyond the product, configure the entire purchase
  • 8. Use tweets to capitalize on buzz
  • 9. Corporations will “become” social
  • 10. People might increasingly turn to social networks
  • 11. Retailers will need to have someone (or a team) designated to be the “personality” of the company on line


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Saturday, March 21, 2009

A Case Study on Strategy :Yandex Resist Google's World Domination

Check out this SlideShare Presentation:
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