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    Beanstalk's SEO News Blog

    At Beanstalk Search Engine Optimization we know that knowledge is power. That's the reason we started this SEO blog. We know that the better informed our visitors are, the better the decisions they will make for their websites and their online businesses. We hope you enjoy your stay and find the SEO news contained within this blog useful.


    January 9, 2013

    Google Ad Words for YouTube Videos

    Google has released a new service to promote your YouTube videos online, called AdWords for Video. Google has taken many of the familiar components from their popular AdWords service and successfully applied them to video in a new video campaign management tool that allows for quick video ad creation and better video ad reporting.

    Google announce back in November of 2011 that they discontinue the original ads.youtube.com service. The new service is located at http://adwords.google.com/video. Existing users of Google AdWords can sign in with their current account credentials or sign up for a new AdWords account.

    "If you have an ad or a video, YouTube is the only place where you can surround your brand with relevant content and YouTube makes sure that it is appropriate for your audience. With the millions of views that YouTube gets every day, they are certain to find a perfect fit for your message."

    AdWords for Video screen shot

    This new AdWords service allows users to easily promote their videos on YouTube and the Google Display Network. The GDN includes videos and content from thousands of websites and claims to allow you to access to 80% of the "online video content space."

    Google AdWords for video allows you to:

    • Reach the right viewer at the right price
    • Pay only when the ads is viewed
    • Allows you to easily manage video ad campaigns

    Users will get valuable information such as the number of views, video reporting, easy to setup targeting for your preferred audience(s).

    For more information, see Google Support.

    SEO news blog post by @ 11:09 am


     

    March 30, 2012

    $200 In AdWords Coupons

    Frequently we get sent AdWords coupons from Google.  You’ll have often seen offers for $50 in free credits (if nowhere else than from your hosting company I’m sure) but we’ve recently received 2 such coupon codes for $100 each.  We generally keep them for clients but as we’re currently not taking on clients … they’re going to be going to waste as they expire tomorrow.  Since we know a lot of our readers are doing online marketing now just might be a good time to add in AdWords if you don’t already.

    The coupons are for $100 each, they expire on March 31st and I believe they’re only good on new campaigns.  I can confirm that they don’t work on campaigns where a coupon code has been entered previously.  Can’t blame us for trying Google. :)

    So if you’d like to launch into a campaign feel free to use one of these coupon codes for a $100 credit:

    3RXN-ETQL-9SAS-MJYM-T8G
    or
    KUF3-E7F8-CNG7-Q4SV-HB8

     

    SEO news blog post by @ 11:08 am

    Categories: adwords
    Tags: ,

     

    November 17, 2011

    Understanding the Adwords auction process

    As online advertising continues to be a more prominent source of revenue for both big and small businesses the importance of Google’s Adwords advertising program has also increased, emerging as the premiere method of advertising on the internet. Despite this rise in useage, many businesses still lack a thorough understanding of exactly how the Adwords process works, which is to say, they are likely spending a significant amount of advertising money on something they do not completely understand. No wonder then that many campaigns are not nearly as successful as they could and should be.

    Yesterday, Wordstream released a Google Adwords specific infographic in which the Adwords auction process is explained for potential clients in an easy to follow presentation. The infographic illustrates precisely how Google determines which ads will be shown and how much money the ads will cost (click image for full printable version).


    While the infographic is relatively easy to follow and understand, a simple explanation of Adwords can be defined as follows: The Adwords auction process is structured so that all bidders can win; an Adwords bidder need only pay the minimum amount required to beat out the person below them.

    When you use Adwords, your ad will appear along the very top or along the right hand side of the organic Google search engine results. The rank of your ad is directly related to your traffic and your traffic is related to a number of relevant factors:

    Quality Score – Rating that search engines assign to each keyword chosen by an advertiser
    Click Through Rate (or CTR) – Percentage which expresses how many people are seeing your ad and then clicking it
    Bid Price – the price per keyword an advertiser is willing to spend to gain a click
    Ad Relevance – Relevance of the text in an ad in relation to keyword

    Also in direct relation to the factors shown above is the landing page. It makes very little sense to go through the time necessary to set up an Adwords account and attain and drive traffic that ultimately takes a user through to a page that is not relevant to the ad they’ve just clicked on – you’ve wasted their time, and worse, you’ve wasted a part of your budget. The landing page is often the ‘Achilles Heel’ of many Adwords campaigns – a sensible course of action would be to have these pages built around the following criteria:

    - Easy to navigate
    - Load quickly
    - Keyword enriched content relevant to the searched word

    Landing page relevance factors heavily into Quality Score; quality score affects cost per click (CPC) as well as eligibility in the keyword auction process.

    Each step of the Google Adwords auction process informs the the next step required to build and maintain a successful Adwords campaign. If you are an advertiser considering using Adwords to expand revenue, get up to speed and ensure you have a thorough understanding of how the entire process works before you spend any time or money on a campaign. Understanding the auction process is the first step towards success.

    SEO news blog post by @ 3:36 pm


     

    October 4, 2011

    Early October SEO Shakeups at Google

    New panda updates that target tag clouds and forum links? New paid adwords seems to be diminishing the quality of the free service? Landing page quality score improvements to be had with latest AdWords updates? What’s not changed over at Google this month?

    Seeking change

    Tag Clouds and Forum Links?

    For some time now it’s been easy to add tag clouds to blogs and websites, most of them are even dynamically built so they reflect the ongoing topics of your pages, and the really clever ones make each keyword a link.

    The result of all that effort leaves a typical tag cloud looks something like this:

    .. and that’s a LOT of keywords + links for a crawler to ignore! Word from some of the worst hit sites seems to place a common factor on keyword clouds as the likely component that is now the target of this most recent Panda update over at Google. We’re a really aggressive source of content with a high level of trust, so I doubt one instance of using a tag cloud will tank our blog, but I did debate making the above example an image only.

    Forum Links are Worth-Less?

    One site that’s been taking a beating from Panda over and over again (eh! rocko!) is DaniWeb. They have been acting as a lightning rod during the storm of over 500 changes Google’s made this year alone to ranking algorithms. In a recent video post from the CEO and Founder of DaniWeb on WebProNews the topic of diminished return of value from forum posts begs for testing:

    New AdWords Pro and Language improvements?

    This is a topic we can’t just lump into a big multi-post and we know needs in-depth discussion. Many SEOs are discussing how the professional offerings from AdWords coincide with ‘improvements’ to the free service that have actually been viewed as setbacks by the users.

    Right now we’re still working with the free version that all our clients are using, but I’d bet we’ll give the pro-service a trial by the years end and will have some input on how valuable we think the upgrade is. I doubt we’ll extract enough value to cover the monthly fees Google is currently asking for, but we would have to try it and see to be sure.

    The recently improved AdWords language support means that targeted ads are improving the quality score of landing pages. This could be a bit of a change depending on where your competition is based. If you are a local US market you probably won’t see much if any competition change, but if you’re an international your customers for other countries could be looking at a fresh set of SERPs. As a result, SEOs, and people watching their stats closely would do well to note this factor.

    Expect to hear more about these changes, and really any changes that effect SEO in a way that matters. It’s one thing to mention things as they happen it’s another situation entirely to have tested these things first hand and have intimate experience to share. Soon!

    SEO news blog post by @ 12:41 pm


     

    July 12, 2011

    Google Category Interest Targeting – A Powerful new tool for SEM

    As an extension of online advertising, pay-per-click marketing is invaluable. While there will always be naysayers with regard to very notion of ppc campaigns being useful, the truth is, it’s an effective method for targeting the people whom you wish to see your ads, and it continues to be refined in an effort to deliver ads with exacting precision to intended and targeted traffic. A potentially very powerful update to the Google pay per click arsenal arrived recently in the form of Google Interest Category Targeting.

    Interest Category Targeting means you now have the ability to reach beyond the constraints of relying on related content as a means of reaching a target audience. Before, you could rest easy knowing your ads were showing to intended target viewers on sites with content that was related to the user’s interests. But that’s where the relationship ended – when the user moved on to another unrelated page, you would no longer be able to have your ads shown unless the page they went to was somehow related in terms of content. Interest Category Targeting circumvents this issue.

    Google posts that they look at the types of pages a user visits and take into account how recently those pages have been visited, as well as how frequently, and then associates that information to their browser with relevant interest categories. Using these categories, you can now show ads to the users most likely to purchase your products or services – only now you can also reach them across all types of sites in the Google Display Network, regardless of content relevance, in addition to contextually relevant sites.

    Google continues to refine their profile data in an effort to make AdWords more effective, browsing habits have been researched to this end also and there are now 1700 separate categories into which a user’s relevant interests will fall. You can see for yourself how this works by visiting Google Ad Preferences (www.google.com/ads/preferences). You may be surprised at just how accurate their profiling is in regards to your likes and tastes and interests.

    The feature itself is easily accessible in your Ad Words campaign by selecting the Audience tab, once you click the tab you’ll be offered the ability to add audiences – you can search, browse and select categories of interest for your ads. Especially interesting is the added feature of custom combinations, this will allow you to use an and/or/not style functionality to create behavioral opportunities for your targeting on the display network.

    There are over 500 million users interested in these categories who visit the Google Display Network every day. Search engine marketers now have a very powerful and advanced tool to reach these users on an almost one to one basis with highly relevant ads. This will undoubtedly have a very noticeable and positive impact on paid search ROI.

    SEO news blog post by @ 5:22 am

    Categories: adwords
    Tags: ,

     

    June 13, 2011

    Meaningful SEO Metrics – From SES

    Sitting beside my radio co-host Jim Hedger I have the pleasure of attending the “Meaningful SEO Metrics” session with June Li, Horst Joepen, and Chris Boggs are speaking with Richard Zwicky moderating.

    This is a “as it happens” post so you’ll have to pardon if it’s disjointed – I’m going to be including the points as fast as I can. :)

    tape measure
    June Li started by discussing the importance of first determining what data is meaningful. CTR, conversions and all the conflicting opinions are relevant provided that you understand the purpose of the data or that data segment.

    She agrees with moderator Richard Zwicky’s statement that if you filter what you don’t want you may miss opportunities you didn’t know existed. She then goes on to reinforce the importance of clearly defining what the goals are for each type of traffic and understand what you’re looking for in the data and the opportunities. She paints the right picture when she tells us to be a teenager again and ask, “So what?” What does the data mean and why should we care. These questions need to be re-asked periodically to determine what’s relevant as time passes.
    SES panel

    She discusses how important it is to look at the big picture.  The conversion funnel and seeing who is exiting will help shape future efforts be them to improve the experience for though not converting or shifting the focus away from them.  The keyword/message/landing page combinations for the non-performing traffic may well provide new opportunities.  The question may not be the phrases, it may be the ad or the site itself.

    It’s important to look at technical sides of the site if you see high time on site but lower conversions you need to look at what those visitors are doing and see if there’s a technical issue stopping them such as a broken form.

    She recommends the same book I did in this blog a few years ago – Waiting For Your Cat To Bark.

    Horst Joepen is up next.  I had the pleasure of interviewing him for Webcology just a couple weeks ago.

    His company pulls massive data over broad numbers of phrases.  He starts off discussing keyword metrics when determining targets.  Watching phrases and search volumes over time, he believes, is a key to selecting good targets.

    He uses a ranking score in their systems to rate the keywords based on search volumes, potential to to convert just to name a couple metric points.

    He brings up graphs relative to the huge drops JC Penny took after the penalties.  He didn’t discuss the issue itself but rather used it as an example of their software’s ability to measure and record data.

    Chris Boggs is up last.  He starts chatting about ROI models (and how to gain more budget for SEO).  His talk is more geared to SEO’s and how we can measure and predict ROI to gain more marketing budget from clients.

    Predicting ROI for SEO is complex but possible.

    He believe we shouldn’t be caring about rankings but rather traffic.  I personally agree and disagree but that’s a side point. :)

    To predict ROI one needs to know conversion data and knowing the strategies underway and keyword volume, one can predict (loosely) what the traffic growth would be and thus, the ROI based on average conversion data.  This assumes that the broad keywords for longtail phrases gaining traffic from content generation have roughly the same conversions and/or you have separate calculations for the traffic anticipated for these phrases.

    He points out that it’s important to discuss with clients that it’s not a silver bullet and it can take month and that in the short term, traffic may actually drop depending on the changes necessary.

    He went into the math of determining the ROI – I will link to that info when it is available online as there were graphs that would make a written post irrelevant.

    Now for the Q&A:

    Q – Justification of using PPC metrics for organic SEO?
    A – Yes as long as you take into account quality score, etc.

    Q – 3 most common error in analytics?
    A – ignoring brand terms with modifiers.  A little disagreement between Horst and Chris on whether you should bid your brand on PPC if you rank organically.  Chris thinks you should always go for both if you have the budget.

    Q – Bid value for PPC ?
    A – Base bidding on the ROI not position.  Determine what a phrase is worth and base the bids on what it’s ROI is, not just to rank.  Also, considering the combined value (are searchers searching twice and click paid once and organic another?)  The first time I heard this discussed was in 2006 with a whitepaper on just the topic.

    I’ve had to summarize a LOT and I hope you found some value it this post.  For more information you’ll just have to attend the next event. :)

    SEO news blog post by @ 7:02 pm


     

    November 30, 2009

    Free AdWords Credit

    Well – I had sent to me a couple AdWords credits and haven’t been able to use them. They expire today so better to give them away than waste them. :) We already have an AdWords account and they won’t let us apply our credit to an existing account. Darn them. :)

    The credits are only good until the end of the day and they’re worth $75 Canadian. I’m not sure if the AdWords account has to be in Canada or not.

    I don’t normally allow for comments in our blog (mainly because I don’t have time to moderate them) but if whoever uses the credit can post that they did (we’re allowing comments on this post) then I’ll post up the second. And please – don’t be greedy. If you use one of them don’t use the other – the spirit of the codes is to let people try out Google AdWords. So let them.

    These credits are a GREAT way to test out Google PPC while minimizing up-front risk. You can also use AdWords to test keywords for your organic campaigns.

    To redeem the code you’ll have to go to www.google.ca/ads/offer.

    The code is – 8MZC-BUQM-LEX9-PLJE-XR2

    Enjoy. :)

    Note: Code One used.

    SEO news blog post by @ 5:20 pm

    Categories: Uncategorized
    Tags: ,

     

    July 17, 2008

    A New Article

    Inspired by a combination of an excellent research paper from Richard Stokes of AdGooroo, Google’s Q2 earnings report and the recent happenings in the now getting tiring story of Yahoo! and Microsoft – the most recent article by Beanstalk’s Dave Davies is out today. Titled, “The Search Landscape Reflected In Paid Results” it discussed some of the recent changes, how they’re affecting the search engines themselves and what we can expect to see in the paid and organic results because of this.

    I hope you enjoy reading it as much as I enjoyed writing it.

    SEO news blog post by @ 8:15 pm


     

    July 9, 2008

    Google Keywords & A Test Of Links & Webmaster Radio

    Google Keywords

    Google has just started showing the estimated monthly search numbers in their keyword suggestion tool. For the first time in a long while we’re now able to see the estimated search numbers on the engine who’s results we most want to see the results of.

    As a word of warning, after using it and comparing the numbers with the click through volume for a number of phrases, the number appear to be a bit high – that’s because it defaults to Broad Match but you can select Exact Match from the drop-down and get the the numbers you’re looking for.

    You’ll find this new feature added to the Google tool here.

    A Test Of Links

    Also, there was an interesting test run by Johannes Beusand published on the MarketingFan.com site regarding the value of multiple links to a single page on residing on a single page of a website. He basically strives to answer the question, if there are two or more links on a single page of a site and they point to a single page on another site – how are they treated?

    I’m not going to be mean and note everything from the site here and steal their traffic. :) You’ll find the link to this interesting test here.

    Webmaster Radio

    And today on Webmaster Radio Jim Hedger and I had the pleasure of interviewing Kevin Ryan – the man behind SES. Kevin discussed the show, the organizing of it, and some of the great sessions that’ll be held in San Jose.

    After that (and some ranting by both Jim and myself about the stupid fees we Canadians are charged for cell phones and specifically web usage on them) we had on Dave Szetela from Clix Marketing discussing the recent changes Google has made to the quality scores for it’s AdWords advertisers.

    Again, I could repeat the discussion but it was based on a couple posts covered elsewhere here and here.

    SEO news blog post by @ 3:09 pm


     

    Google Keywords & A Test Of Links & Webmaster Radio

    Google Keywords

    Google has just started showing the estimated monthly search numbers in their keyword suggestion tool. For the first time in a long while we’re now able to see the estimated search numbers on the engine who’s results we most want to see the results of.

    As a word of warning, after using it and comparing the numbers with the click through volume for a number of phrases, the number appear to be a bit high – that’s because it defaults to Broad Match but you can select Exact Match from the drop-down and get the the numbers you’re looking for.

    You’ll find this new feature added to the Google tool here.

    A Test Of Links

    Also, there was an interesting test run by Johannes Beusand published on the MarketingFan.com site regarding the value of multiple links to a single page on residing on a single page of a website. He basically strives to answer the question, if there are two or more links on a single page of a site and they point to a single page on another site – how are they treated?

    I’m not going to be mean and note everything from the site here and steal their traffic. :) You’ll find the link to this interesting test here.

    Webmaster Radio

    And today on Webmaster Radio Jim Hedger and I had the pleasure of interviewing Kevin Ryan – the man behind SES. Kevin discussed the show, the organizing of it, and some of the great sessions that’ll be held in San Jose.

    After that (and some ranting by both Jim and myself about the stupid fees we Canadians are charged for cell phones and specifically web usage on them) we had on Dave Szetela from Clix Marketing discussing the recent changes Google has made to the quality scores for it’s AdWords advertisers.

    Again, I could repeat the discussion but it was based on a couple posts covered elsewhere here and here.

    SEO news blog post by @ 3:09 pm


     

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