Sunday, December 22, 2013

B-to-B Web Marketing Should Help Sales People Sell

An effective B-to-B website is a salesperson's friend.

Successful B-to-B internet marketing is not only focused on search engine tactics, lead generation, and branding. Effective internet marketing also provides tangible aide and support to the business development team. A good B-to-B website should help open those proverbial closed doors and open the minds of valuable prospective clients.

A recent success underlines the importance of why supporting your sales team with good web marketing will pay strong dividends. An admirably persistent senior business development professional with decades of successful industry experience wrote the following sales report regarding a strategic key account target opportunity:

An Effective B-to-B Website Helps The Sales Process. 
"I've been trying to contact this prospective client for a while and I finally got a meeting with him. The contact explained that he typically does not meet with vendors of our size, but thought that this particular contract was warranted of some research as I continued to leave messages and emails."

"The contact went on line prior to our meeting and researched our website and was impressed with what he saw…"you guys could obviously handle the work".

"The contact has put us on the bid list and we should expect the bid package shortly."

How did internet marketing help bring about this important sales step? By helping to inform and educate the prospective client about our company, at his own time and choosing.

The website acted as a strong verification and validation of our company's capabilities and expertise, helping convince this important contact that our company offers the right products, expertise, and services his company needs. His research into our website convinced him that we were a vendor worthy of consideration, and helped our business development representative "close the deal" by putting our company into their coveted bidder's list.

For successful web marketing, "Content is King". This approach helps your sales team. Good content can be used at all the multiple stages of the sales process, from early research to validation, verification, and call-to-action. Having intelligent, precise, concise, content is key to technical B-to-B success. Like a good sales brochure, effective website content acts as an educational sales tool, helping the client navigate from the initial discovery & research phases to sale and post-sale follow-up.

How does one ensure web content is helping their sales team? Listen to the sales team, ask questions. Get feedback. Go out and meet clients. Walk in the shoes of your business development team. Mingle with clients and prospective clients at trade shows, conferences, and other events. Track industry news. Take an interest, roll up your sleeves, and get involved. Don't be remote.

Along with quality lead generation, helping salespeople close sales should be a top priority for B-to-B marketeers. Sales people are one of the main spark plugs which make a company engine run. Having been a successful B-to-B industrial salesperson myself for many years has greatly influenced my approach to marketing.

If marketing doesn't help sales people, it won't help the rest of the company very much, either.

Good marketing succeeds on the ground, in the trenches, and is viewed as a valuable resource business development people want to use. So be useful!

Give Your Sales Teams What They Crave This Valentine's Day - Good Leads.

Sunday, December 8, 2013

How to increase your budget and invest in SEO and Content Marketing?

Budget sufficient resources to a proven lead generator: Search Engine Marketing.

A marketer recently posted an excellent question on a Linkedin marketing group, asking "How do we free up budget to invest in SEO/Content Marketing?". He was hearing clients complain that their companies were not investing sufficient resources into search engine marketing when compared to traditional media such as print advertising and trade shows. He posted this question to encourage input on how to resolve this budget and resource challenge.

Budgeting for SEO is an excellent question. My answer is below:

For B2B, my 12+ years of Search Engine Marketing experience show that SEO (Search Engine Optimization) and SEM (Search Engine Marketing) are, by far, the number one drivers of new leads. This happy reality can be shared and brought home to upper management by diligent tracking and reporting. Sharing lead statistics and educating management on the evolving nature of how leads are generated really help in creating support for SEO and SEM, and both organic and paid search.

Search Engine Marketing Dominates Lead Gen.
If managed properly, SEO and SEM can produce many, many, more leads than print, trade shows, etc, and cost much less per lead. Search Engine Marketing will not replace these other activities, you need them all to be most effective.

But with search engines producing almost 75% of all business leads, according to a recent survey, B2B marketers and companies must pay attention to SEO and SEM, or risk losing business opportunities (strategic & transactional) and market share.

This new Pardot lead gen survey is very educational, and one excellent graphic in the survey is well worth showing to people in order to assist growing your SEO and SEM budget. I've blogged about it and related B2B lead gen experiences at: "Want B2B Leads? Pay Close Attention to Google Search and Content"

Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Want B2B Leads? Pay Close Attention to Google Search and Content.

A recent study by Mathew Sweezey, Marketing Evangelist for Pardot, reinforces the key role of search engine marketing for lead generation. In his paper "The State of Demand Generation 2013", the results of a user survey clearly list the main effective ingredients needed to enjoy successful B2B lead generation:

1. Obtain Search Engine Marketing Success, especially Google Search Engine Success.

2. Employ Short Content on Webpages and White Papers.... Concise, Precise, and Relevant.

In summary, B2B Buyers use Google Search, and like Relevant and Short Content on Webpages and White Papers. Worth Repeating: "B2B Buyers use Google Search and like Relevant and Short Content."

The same study indicated that an impressive "72% of product research for a future business purchase begins on Google." Nearly 3 out of 4 B2B leads start on Google.

72% of B2B Leads Begin on Google Search, per Mathew Sweezey, Pardot.
No amount of creative branding content or social media chatter will mitigate this fact. If you're not focused on winning with search engine marketing, you're at risk of missing nearly 3 out of 4 potential leads!

From my own experience, this simple formula of efficient content and effective SEO has produced over 10 years of outstanding organic search engine marketing lead generation success for B2B niche markets. I've focused on what our potential customers need and are looking for, in order to provide solutions to their problems.

Like a good consultative selling sales pitch, my webpages provide features which bring benefits to meet the prospective customer's needs. This customer-centric approach works for Google SERPs as well, based upon the superior search ranking results I commonly enjoy.

To optimize your lead generation success, craft webpage content to be efficient and relevant, focused, and concise. Content should be as short as reasonably possible, to best provide key information easily to a hectic, busy, potential client. Quickly give them the facts they need in order to be educated and motivated to contact you as a quality business lead.

Potential clients will not waste their valuable time attempting to sift through wordy webpages or white papers full of flowery, self-important, lightweight "content". They want straight facts and answers, and they want them now.

Include and use appropriate technical terms, acronyms, and jargon, because that specialized vocabulary is a key component in the business language of the targeted niche clientele. It is also good practice to spell these abbreviations out at least once on the page, as appropriate, both for visitor comprehension and search engine optimization. Make content simple and relevant for the potential client.

B2B lead generation content is usually designed to reach and influence lucrative and small market niches, not a mass audiences. You want that "1%" of the global potential audience, so talk directly to them. Don't worry about the other "99%" who will not give you any business under any circumstances.

Avoid creating excessive content. Don't 'tell a story' and yammer on telling the world how wonderful and great your company is. Potential clients can see right through this self-centered hype and quickly move on to a competitor who is more focused on the client.

In short, for superior B2B lead generation, focus on search engine marketing combined with concise and precise webpages, white papers, and other content. Include a clear call-to-action. These best practices are true big B2B lead generation winners.

A special thanks is given to Ayaz Nanji, with MarketingProfs, for his post which alerted me to Mathew Sweezey's paper. Ayaz gives an excellent overview of the Pardot report at: B2B Buyers Prefer Short Content; Rely Heavily on Google Searches.

B-to-B Web Marketing Should Help Sales People Sell.

FEED Your Website. FEED IT.

Sunday, October 27, 2013

Alternatives to Google Analytics 'Not Provided' Organic Search Keywords

Google Closes The Curtain on Organic Keyword Research

Google has mostly shut down the ability to see the organic search terms visitors use when visiting our websites, creating an unwelcome blind-spot when applying organic keyword research to search engine optimization efforts.

To understand what Google did to expand "Secure Search" and what it means to SEO practitioners, read a recent article posted by Thom Craver on September 23, 2013: Goodbye, Keyword Data: Google Moves Entirely to Secure Search.
This is not the end of life as we know it.

But using keyword research to enhance SEO is not dead!

Jennifer Slegg has produced an excellent overview on useful options and tactics to obtain meaningful keyword data for SEO: Google '(Not Provided)' Keywords: 10 Ways to Get Organic Search Data

Here are Jennifer's alternative keyword research suggestions. Read her informative article to learn more:

1. Google Experts (Avinash Kaushik, for example)

2. Non-Google Keywords (BING, for example)

3. Google Webmaster Tools

4. Analyze On-Site Searches

5. Google AdWords

6. Search Volume Tools

7. Filters to Segment "Not Provided" Data

8.  Historical Data on your website

9. Google Trends

10. Additional Ways to Capture Keyword Data

From my own perspective the action Google has taken in cloaking organic search terms is irritating from an SEO perspective, but at the same time this development is not fatal. Far from it.

Organic keyword research solely based upon looking at one's own website analytics can be risky, because like a self-fulfilling prophecy, the organic search terms you see (saw) in Analytics are there only because your webpages ranked for those search terms, and this implies that you already have related, relevant search terms in your website and webpages. But what about the search terms you don't (didn't) see, because your website either doesn't have them, or Google didn't think the content was relevant?

The bottom line is that keyword research must by necessity go beyond the organic search terms used by visitors to your website. In order to cast a wider net for lead generation and target new or overlooked lucrative market niches it is important to use all the options listed by Jennifer in her article.

The best source of valuable keywords will be from your customers and potential customers. What search terms do they use? What terminology and acronyms are important to them? Get close to your markets and customers, find keywords they find important, and you'll be able to ID lucrative opportunities your competition will overlook.

Monday, October 14, 2013

Search Engine Marketing is Industrial Strength Lead Generation (Or Should Be)

Selling B-to-B Services and Products?

Use Search Engine Marketing to give your business "Industrial Strength" Lead Generation.


With nearly 11 years of successful and global search engine marketing lead generation success under my belt, it's easy to assume that everyone should by now understand that good b-to-b marketing and lead generation should include a high dosage of brilliant PPC (pay per click), SEM (search engine marketing), and SEO (search engine optimization) at all times.

But for many companies, search engine success is clearly not working. Many B-to-B companies ignore, discount, flounder, under-invest, follow foolish or bad advice, and badly under-perform when judged by the harsh light of search engine marketing results.

Companies burdened with poor Search Engine Marketing (SEM) capabilities are literally leaving high value quality business leads (money) on the table, just waiting for someone else to pick them up. Entire business streams worth millions of dollars are won or lost this way.
Industrial Strength Lead Generation.

I know, because I've been on the winning side of these search engine wars for a long time. I'm picking my competitor's pockets over and over and over again. Your competitors may not even be aware there is a "search engine battle" for leads going on! Guess what? They lost before the fight even started.

Intelligent search engine marketing, both organic and paid, works extremely well in generating quality leads. When managed properly, SEO, PPC, and SEM work so well they should be considered as strategic "industrial strength" lead generation machines.

How well does search engine marketing work? From my experience, obtaining 67% of all monthly visits to key B-to-B websites by search engines is not unusual. Organic search can often run at over 58% of total visits, while paid search visits produce around 9% of visitor traffic. My approach is to use paid search to produce an additional, smaller, flow of quality leads. Paid search is like adding cream and sugar to your coffee, where organic search is the coffee and paid search is the cream and sugar. Organic search should ideally carry the larger lead gen load.

The percentage of leads generated from search engine visitors via the web is very high. I can't imagine running any serious lead generation campaigns without search engine marketing being a top tactical and strategic component.

Search engine marketing  pulls in leads from unexpected, previously unknown, high-value contacts. Would you like to experience a successful trade show every day, churning out valuable leads for your business on a 24/7/365 basis? Then pay attention to search engine marketing. Success will come for the diligent, the patient, and the persistent.

Stick with the basics and success with SEM will happen. With technical B-to-B, it really helps to know and understand the markets and customers you are targeting. Build relevant, concise, and precise content, using thier terminology and jargon, not yours. Be customer focused. Use proven and sound SEO and PPC practices, and ignore bad, 'trendy', incompetent, or 'black-hat' advice.

When properly designed and applied, Search Engine Marketing is true "Industrial Strength" lead generation.

Give Your Sales Teams What They Crave This Valentine's Day - Good Leads

Updated February 2017.

Saturday, September 7, 2013

Search Engine Marketing Psychology

Study Search Engine Psychology for Success, Seriously.


Customers are in "Hunt Mode" when using Search Engines.
Understand and apply Search Engine Marketing Psychology and you'll greatly increase the probability for high organic search rankings, more effective paid ads, and achieve higher conversions and quality lead generation.

When technical business-to-business professionals use a search engine, time is money. They want answers and solutions quickly. They don't want their time wasted! Search engine marketing is high-stakes and is not like other website traffic.

Search engines attract B-to-B customer and prospect usage when:
  • They are actively seeking information.
  • Searchers are researching. They are in hunt mode.
  • Searchers are solving a problem.
  • Searcher wants to learn more - NOW.
  • They want relevance and answers - FAST.
  • They want tangible solutions to their problems.
They usually don't care at this crucial search psychology stage about how wonderful your company history, logo, heritage, or brand are. They want relevant information, a solution, a solution provider, and they want it now.

To boost the chances of being seen in search results and 'win" with quality lead generation, focus is vital. Provide clear, concise, precise, content that a busy professional will usually "scan" (not "read") and make it easy for that prospective customer to take positive action in contacting your company.

How should webpages be optimized so that a organic search engine searcher's psychological need for content clarity and focus are met, and a lead is generated? 

The solution is simple. Focus on what is important. Cut out extraneous verbiage and clutter. 

Reduce or even better eliminate verbose, flowery, brochure-ware content, corporate-talk, and other marketing fluff. Produce lean content which will quickly impress a potential client. Don't use bloated content built to flatter and please you and your management. Focus on the core solutions, features, and benefits, instead. Use the technical terminology your potential client is going to use, remember your target market is that small but lucrative B-to-B niche... not the general public.

Reduce marginal and distracting clutter surrounding the core service or product content. Make it simple and painless for your potential customer to find what they are looking for.

Last but not least, provide a clear and easy call-to-action. Don't make the visitor think too hard about how to contact your company!

Sunday, August 25, 2013

Paid Search Engine Marketing Organization Tips


With Paid Search Marketing Structure, it is always a good idea to Start at the Top.


If you want to start using Adwords and BING Ads, and are new to paid search marketing, take the high Earth orbital view first, and focus on the big picture. Also called PPC or pay-per-click, here are some useful paid search pointers I recommend you follow before you launch any new paid search campaign.

Paid Search Campaign Structure: 

How should the strategic campaign structure of your account be organized? Allow for future growth and diversification of large and niche campaigns as your targeting and  business grows. Name your campaigns logically, and related them to the target market, service or product. Logical organization of your campaigns will save confusion and frustration later on as you expand your paid search marketing efforts.

Think of your campaign structure as you would planning the future growth of a potentially large city, think about the big-scale organization first. Then drill-down to get the major 'neighborhoods' right. Only then should you be worried about where to put the 'streets' and 'parks'.

Once you have a good strategic understanding of how you want to organize your campaigns, determining sub-categories are next. In Google, these are called Adword Groups.

Adword Group Structure:

Adword groups are the actual niche mini-campaigns which reside in each of your higher-level Campaigns. These should be very focused. It is in the Adword group where you need to think carefully about:

Keywords - What keyword phrases do you want to trigger your ads. Are they sufficiently targeted using long-tail tactics to avoid wasted clicks or hyper-competitive search terms of only partial value to you? Do the keywords you've chosen for an Adword Group make sense together, or are they too broad? Can they be split into two more focused Groups?

Negative Keywords - What (single) keywords do you NOT want to trigger your ads? Negative search terms are extremely useful to help improve focus, lower costs, improve click-through-rates, and raise conversion rates.

Ad Content - What will the Ad say? Is it relevant to the market and keywords you have targeted? Are you running alternate ads to measure relative success? Avoid one-size-fits-all approaches.

Landing Pages - Your landing webpage must be absolutely targeted and customized to the intended audience and market niche. Don't send people to your homepage or some higher level webpage, you'll only frustrate your visitors and risk a low quality score from Google, resulting in lower click-through and conversion rates.

There are more factors to consider…. a lot more. But by getting these four fundamental paid search management principles well-designed and optimized in the beginning, the other many paid search tasks and factors needed for success become easier to manage and optimize.

Paid Search, (Google Adwords, BING Ads) run in a parallel universe to organic search engine marketing. I've been successfully and efficiently managing paid search campaigns for over 10 years now, with Adwords as my paid search top priority.

Friday, August 9, 2013

SEO MOZ Video: Link Building vs. Content Marketing

SEO's Dilemma - Link Building vs. Content Marketing - Whiteboard Friday

MOZ is such a good resource for insights into search engine marketing. Today is no exception. The new Whiteboard Friday posting today is an informative SEO advice video.

If you're working in Search Engine Marketing you should invest some quality time to watch this video from Rand Fishkin for MOZ Whiteboard Friday today. Rand dives into Link Building versus Content Marketing for achieving optimal organic search engine success.

MOZ Whiteboard Friday by Rand Fishkin, August 9, 2013
Anyone who has read my blog will soon figure out that I put major SEO emphasis on content and keywords, a strategy which has produced over 10 years of niche SEO and lead generation success. But there are other paths to SEO success, and Rand Fishkin provides a nice review of the challenges, alternatives, and choices a search engine marketer can make. He offers sage advice for those looking to improve or change their SEO approach in light of Google's Penguin and Panda updates.

View the video on the MOZ website:
http://moz.com/blog/seos-dilemma-link-building-vs-content-marketing-whiteboard-friday

Tuesday, August 6, 2013

New Survey Says Leads Are Primary Goal for Content Marketers

"Leads Take Hold as the Primary Goal of Content Marketing" - 

From the Second Annual IMN Content Marketing Survey - Executive Report

The results of this just released survey indicate there is a notable shift in content-marketing types to focus more on lead generation. Lead generation was described as the most important goal of content marketing by 44%, compared to 16% last year.

From my perspective, this trend is a most healthy development. Anyone who is successful in generating quality leads by search engine marketing, for example, is deeply engaged in a form of content marketing. Search engines rank webpages by the relevancy of the content to the intention of the person running the search.

Get the content right on your webpages and quality leads will pour in.

Get the content wrong and your webpage will be a failure for lead generation... lonely, unproductive, and unnoticed by your potential customers.
Source: Marketing Charts
http://www.marketingcharts.com/wp/interactive/content-marketing-efforts-are-becoming-more-focused-on-lead-gen-35554/attachment/imn-content-marketing-program-goals-2013-v-2012-aug2013/
Lead generation is one of the most important benefits marketing can contribute to an organization - - helping to feed the business with top-line revenue opportunities, ideally with attractive profit margins for the bottom-line.

As I've said here many times over the years: "Content is King".

Concise, precise, and relevant webpage content will help bring success with organic search engines and thus produce bonafide, high-value, leads.

Sunday, August 4, 2013

Search Engine Marketing: A Look Behind the Curtain

Search Engine Marketing presentation at the Business Marketing Association in August 2013 luncheon, Houston Chapter:

What goes on with Search Engine Marketing?


There is a lot of depth and detail to Search Engine Marketing. Despite the complexity, success with Search Engine Marketing can be achieved if basic core principles are followed.

In Houston on August 15,2013, I was invited to present a 40 minute overview of search engine marketing to over 100 fellow professional Houston area B2B marketers at the Houston Business Marketing Association's Luncheon for a "Look Behind the Curtain on Search Engine Marketing" (SEM), at the Courtyard-on-St. James Place in Houston.

During the luncheon I shared my 10+ years of success and experience with SEM and Search Engine Optimization (SEO) and provided a look into how I and others have developed and exploited international search engine marketing strategies and tactics to drive significant, sustained, organic growth and strategic outsourcing and acquisition opportunities.

If you've wanted to learn more about Search Engine Marketing from an actual (fanatical) practitioner, this short, useful, and informative luncheon presentation can help motivate you to start using SEM, get better at SEM, inspire increased usage of SEM, and re-inspire you to improve and expand current SEM efforts.

Download the Search Engine Marketing presentation. (.pdf)

Learn more about the Houston BMA Search Engine Marketing luncheon.

Join the BMA Houston Chapter.

Search Engine Marketing: Behind the Curtain

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

How to diagnose a drop in search engine rankings - Matt Cutts

Google's Matt Cutts presents suggestions and resources which may help address a sudden, mysterious drop in your website organic search engine rankings. Anyone concerned about poor search engine result pages (SERPs) should watch this video for an overview of possible fixes and remedies. "What steps can I take to diagnose a drop in ranking?" is worth viewing even if your websites do not (presently) have organic search problems.



Matt Cutts is Google's Chief Engineer in charge of Google's web search quality regarding spam.

Also view What to expect in SEO in the coming months from Matt Cutts, issued on May 13, 2013.

For additional resources, try the Google Webmasters Resource site for valuable insights and guidance on optimizing a website for Google Search.

Sunday, July 7, 2013

Promote Your Business - Wear The Brand

Inexpensive branding is easy when employees wear the Brand. 

Looking for a cheap (cost-effective) way to promote your company and brand?

Look no further than the shirt or blouse on your back. Wearing branded shirts while conducting business with clients and during business travel is an inexpensive, economical, and effective way to promote your company and business.

When travelling on business and attending business events such as seminars, conferences, and expositions, consider wearing branded shirts, where appropriate.

Wearing a company branded shirt while attending an industry event and during business travel by air, subway, and train, enables your company name and logo to be seen by hundreds, even thousands, of people in a single day.

A company branded shirt brings instant recognition from potentially valuable contacts who might have heard of your business and want to know more. Existing clients will introduce themselves and present an opportunity to further strengthen your business relationship.

Wearing a branded shirt is a great low-cost marketing tactic straight out of the Guerilla Marketing playbook. Any business can take advantage of this simple but valuable method for promoting attention to your business, from a local Mom & Pop operation to a global Fortune 500 company.

Sunday, June 16, 2013

Lessons Learned from Ten Years with Google Adwords

10 Years Managing Google Adwords

Happy Anniversary Adwords! I've been using Google Adwords for 10 years. Adwords has supported me ever since with a never-ending stream of high quality leads and highly visible branding.

I opened my first Google Adwords account on April 4, 2003. I still manage that account and have added others. My knowledge, experience, and skills managing Adwords have grown, as Adwords itself has evolved over the years.
10 Great Years with
Google Adwords.

In those 10 years, this original account has generated over 3.8 million visits (clicks) for niche B-to-B technical and industrial service websites I manage and/or promote. This history includes Adwords campaigns in English, Spanish, Portuguese, Dutch, German, Arabic, Chinese, French, and other languages targeting over 30 nations.

Thanks to continuing education and hands-on use of Adwords, my click-through-rates and conversion rates are strong and continue to rise incrementally in a continuous improvement process. While nothing, and I mean nothing, can replace organic search ranking optimization for quality lead generation, the intelligent use of Adwords has been an indispensable weapon for my success with search engine marketing.

What I learned during 10 Years with Adwords:
  • Get Adwords Educated:
    Nothing helps manage Adwords better than learning from experts and keeping up with the latest Adwords features and the latest strategies and tactics. Adwords education saves time, improves efficiency and effectiveness, allowing you to spend less money, reduce wasted efforts and increase quality lead generation and ROI. Keep up with the latest Adwords developments.
    Brian Geddes
    is a highly rated Adwords expert you should follow, and there are others. Search Engine Strategies (SES) and Search Marketing Expo (SMX) are perhaps the best big conference meetings to learn more about paid search marketing updates, tactics, and advice. The depth of knowledge shared can be amazing. PPC Hero is another paid search blog and newsletter service full of tips and tactics, and they sponsor a devoted all-pay-per-click search conference in the USA.
    Google offers extremely valuable Adwords 101, 201, 301 classes. Take these classes! Take the 301 class again after a few years, as Awords is constantly evolving.
  • Control your spend in the face of rising pay-per-click costs:
    Take intelligent steps to manage spending limits with Google. When I started out in 2003, the CPC rate was very low, especially for long-tail search terms. My competitors were oblivious or ignorant of the lead generation and branding power of Adwords for many years, often leaving me a monopoly on key search terms. But between direct and indirect competitors 'waking up'  to coveted search terms and Google tweaking Adwords to force higher CPC rates, the general long term trend for CPC is going up, not down. 
  • Budget:
    Google loves you. But Google loves your money even more. Adwords is extremely profitable, and it is the core source of Google's revenues. If you are too generous in your Adwords search settings and parameters, Google will find innovative ways to spend your budget down to the last penny. To reduce waste or bankruptcy, make sure budget settings are locked down, and monitor your spend. While click fraud is rarer these days, you should monitor for sudden trend changes and anomalies. I tend to avoid runnning Adwords in some countries specifically because I experience high click volumes of low quality.
  • Campaign Structure:
    Organize and Structure your Adwords campaigns and groups logically and effectively.
  • Ad Ranking:
    Being "Number One" in Adwords is not always an advantage. It can be expensive and wasteful, inviting many lower quality clicks. Targeting Rankings alone is not the best approach. What is your real goal: Conversions or Click Throughs? Do you already enjoy high organic search rankings? Then you can look at running ads ranked number 2, 3 or 4. Lower ranked ads will result in lower click throughs, but they will produce a higher quality click rate, attracting more motivated leads and enhancing conversion rates at a lower cost. The top right hand side of Google SERP results is a good position for an Ad.
    There is no simple answer to ad  placement. If the campaign has great filtering for where, when, and to whom, ads are shown, it becomes more cost-effective to target a number one ranking with less risk of wasted spend.
  • Keyword Research:
    This may seem like common sense, but it is surprising how much opportunity is missed, or waste produced, from insufficient keyword research. Long-tail search takes work
    , experimentation and patience, but the results are well worth the effort. Keyword candidates can be found using the Google Keyword Tool, external resources like Wordtracker, your customers, your target markets, your employees, and other sources.
  • Adwords Experimenting and Investigating:
    Running multiple ad versions to improve adword group performance is essential and will help improve your ad copy and performance.
    Want to conduct low cost market research? Using Adwords is a very cost-effective way to measure keywords related to potential market interest or popularity.
    Exploit your growing wealth of historical data in Adwords, it can be a true "Big Data" resource for trends and keyword data mining.
  • Filter, Filter, Filter:
    With Adwords, less is more. Avoid the easy route of using just broad search terms... you'll get a lot of impressions and clicks, but most will be worthless. Take the time to add long-tail keyword terms, use the vocabulary of our target markets. Use negative search terms (really important). Use Geographic, Language, Device, and Time Zone options as needed. 
  • Embrace Your Negative Side When Managing Paid Search Campaigns.
  • Track, Track, Track:
    I can't imagine using Adwords without having the Conversion tracking enabled and working. CTR is a good indicator for ad popularity. Conversion Rates are a great indicator for quality. Separate your Display Ad Campaigns for better clarity. I keep my Display Ad Campaigns in a totally different account.
  • Know Your Goals:
    What are important to you: Conversions? Visits? Impressions? CTR? Conversion Rate? CPC? Mastering an optimal blend of these factors is idea for lead generation and branding, while keeping to a reasonable budget. Managing Adwords successfully is essentially the equivalent of juggling. Everything is dynamic, fluid, and in motion. An important feature in Adwords is the ability to set your campaign settings to optimize for conversions or clicks. I find greater value from optimizing for conversions, but your goals may differ.

Sunday, May 12, 2013

10 Ways to Increase Your PPC Click-Through Rates

10 Ways to Increase Your PPC Click-Through Rates Today - A webinar presentation from WordStream and Hanapin Marketing.

If you directly manage or supervise Paid Search Campaigns, like Google Adwords or Microsoft BING, this presentation on click through rates (CTR) is highly suggested.

We benefit from higher click through rates with more efficient campaigns, lower cost per acquisition (CPA) and higher conversion rates, if thoughtful targeting, organization & structure, keyword selection, negative search terms, and other campaign settings are used to better weed out non-relevant (wasted) clicks and spending.

Presented by Larry Kim (Founder, CTO of Wordstream), Sean Quadlin (Writer and account manager at PPC Hero & Hanapin Marketing), this presentation on "10 Ways to Increase Your PPC Click-Through Rates Today" is well worth watching and learning. You'll be inspired to improve the PPC CTRs for your own campaigns.

 

Friday, May 3, 2013

Success with International Trade Shows

Success with International Trade Shows is as Easy as Uno, Dos, Tres.

Have you been tasked with managing a trade show or conference overseas? Calma te, there is no need to panico!

By following good practices for exhibitions and preparing & planning with care, the odds are greatly improved that your overseas event will be a solid business success.

Local country conference support can make the difference
 between success and failure.
I've successfully managed, supported and/or participated in numerous industry exhibitions and trade shows in  in North America, South America, Asia, and Europe. The countries include the United States, Canada, Mexico, Spain, Venezuela, Panama, Germany, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, Korea, China, Singapore, and other locations. Combined teams from "global staff" and the host countries, when available, have ensured success. I've learned some best practices along the way which increase the chances for a productive event.

International Trade Shows: Evaluate the worthiness of the event.

Just because a trade show is in Monaco, Lake Tahoe, Bali, or some other attractive locale doesn't mean you should participate. Evaluate the event on its own merit, irregardless of location. There are plenty of expensive near-worthless trade conferences in exotic locations which have little real business value. There is a global cottage industry of boiler-room salespeople promoting many industry events of dubious value. Don't be fooled into investing into a poor quality conference.

Use Unbiased Business Assessments to Determine:

A. Is the event under consideration really relevant to the business? 
B. Do real decision makers and influencers attend who can affect the business?
C. If yes to A & B: should delegates be sent to exploit the event?
D. If yes to A, B, C: is the added cost of exhibiting or sponsorship worthwhile and promises decent ROI?
E. Will your local management, if you have some, be able lend support for the event?

An evaluation strictly based on business potential will determine if a conference or event is a suitable candidate for follow-up. If yes, research and contact the event organizers for input and options. Of course the conference promoters will be positive and enthusiastic, that is expected. Buyer Beware! Get the opinion of major stakeholders close to that market niche - - inside and outside your company - - and from relevant employees in the region or location of the event, if possible.

Best Trade Show Booth Practices Apply, in any language:

Business is truly global, but many key business
interactions occur face-to-face at the local level.
No matter where a conference or trade show is held, basic best practices are required. Select your best "A" team from local and international sources. Don't use slackers, wallflowers, holiday seekers, or unmanageable personnel at the booth - - these conferences can be expensive... so invest in good, professional, people who want to WORK the event. Follow good trade show etiquette. Train the booth staff on your products and services, and know who on the team has specialized knowledge the team can exploit. Make sure everyone is aware of local culture, simple greetings, and other protocols. Promote your company's presence using SEO, PR, Email, Conference Program and Trade Publication Ads, etc. Select the best booth location possible. Focus on the target customers and the target market.

Leverage your local advantage:

If the event is held abroad, the risks from unknowns increase. If you are lucky enough to have local people in the country where the trade conference is being held, they can be a helpful resource and ensure success.

It is vital to get input from suitable employees from your company who work and are familiar with market conditions in that locale and the surrounding region. For example, a  trade show in Belgium will likely attract potential business from other nations in Western Europe, along with global visitors. So advice and input from relevant colleagues in surrounding nations is suggested. DON'T go charging into an event "blind" or trust the event organizer's 'guidance' alone - - this can lead to potential failure and wasted resources.

Managing your company participation at an international conference or
exhibition can be painless and productive, if best practices are followed.
Local support varies according to infrastructure, resources, and attitude. Remember the event must be relevant for them, too. If the event makes sense for the local staff to participate, then the hard work needed on your part becomes easier. Mutual cooperation, coordination, and optimization for best effect will evolve during planning, preparation, and execution.

Trade show logistics, such as the booth, promotional items, literature, etc can be shipped directly to your own offices in that country, and on-site delivery can be arranged once you are on site. The locals can perhaps set-up the exhibition on their own. Materials transport, translations, and more, become much easier. If your local colleagues see potential value in an event for their local business, they will more be motivated to work with you to help make it a success. You may have a local or regional 'champion' who is capable and eager to mange many of the exhibit details needed for success. Support, encourage, and work with such a person, as they are going to be your best friend for this event!

If the local staff are well connected to people in the industry targeted by the conference, then their value as company delegates and booth staff becomes extremely high. They will know the locals, the market, the culture, and the language far better than you do, in most cases.

It is often assumed that attendees of large internationally focused trade conferences know English. This is only partially true. Many people, while perhaps also knowing English, find it easier and more comfortable to speak their own language, such as German, Spanish, or Chinese. Having a multi-lingual and multi-cultural booth staff and conference delegate team is the best approach.

Invest in your local advantage:

Invest in the local team's participation. Pay for their delegate and exhibitor passes, don't make this event a burden on their budget if the focus is global. Work with them to review, and if needed, produce local sales literature in their own language (if requested), for use during and after the conference. If logical, invest in a trade show booth for permanent local use, if potential payback is promising.

New business opportunities and synergies happen when global
and local teams collaborate at trade shows and conferences.
For local operations strapped for marketing funds but blessed with latent and/or promising market potential, trade show investments can act as an investment "trigger" for future actions which spur growth. Your investment into enhancing  local marketing resources around a specific event such as a trade show can "spark" improvements, moving local capabilities and attitudes up to another level. By supporting and investing into the local marketing team you're investing in the future, enjoying marketing dividends long after the original trade show.

I've found one of the most long-lasting benefits of multinational participation at large international trade conferences is the enhanced professional networking and personal ties created between colleagues, which helps to strengthen the company locally and globally.

For conferences with a 'global' focus, there will always be important local and regional influences. Take full advantage of the knowledge your local staff bring. The use of booth staff from the local country will greatly enhance your effectiveness at the event.

No Locals? Then Plan the Conference Like You're Going to the Moon.
If you're going to have to manage a exhibition and conference in another country on your own, all is not lost. You must take extra care to ensure every logistical step is covered. You'll have to do much of this work anyway, even with local support. Like NASA, plan and review in detail. Double-check all tasks. One mistake or oversight and you may face trade exhibit disaster, only to be salvaged with lots of time and money.

1. Paperwork: 
Make sure you understand all the exhibition forms and orders you must submit. Fill them out, send them, confirm receipt. You don't want any nasty surprises. Trade show horrors can include not having electricity, the booth is missing or damaged, promotional items go missing, or that mandatory "Shell Scheme" you forget to order is now going to be imposed upon you at an expensive "floor" price. Be complete, be thorough. Be prepared for contingencies, and don't lose your cool.

2. Have a good reliable booth and materials shipping service. 
Fed-Ex is quite good for international shipments. Ship as early as possible, and label contents correctly, to ensure they don't get trapped in customs and disrupt your plans. Follow conference instructions so you'll be confident your stuff will be waiting for you at the conference hall or hotel when you arrive. You should consider if bringing the materials with you on your flight is the best option. You might need a local customs agent to help move your materials through bureaucratic delays.

3. Passport, Visa, Airfare, Hotel, Local Transportation Options are all really important. 
Bring Your "A Team" for best results.
Take care of logistical details as early as possible. Ensure proper documents, travel, hotel, and local logistics options are arranged. Avoid nasty surprises because your Passport expires soon or you forgot to obtain a Visa. Get hotel reservations as soon as possible. Large conferences sell out of decent hotels early on. Quality, convenient hotels may be gone at an affordable price. You may get stuck in a hotel far away from the conference center, or have to stay in a run-down dump in a dodgy part of town.

4. No locals to help? Don't know the local language? No worries - start studying!
Try to have translations of your key brochures and services, even if just basic overviews. This will help prospective local clients, and you. Another technique is to show them key webpages on your local language website (if it exists) or your English language website. You might be able to use the "Translate" option on the Chrome browser so they can view the page in their local language.

Conference attendees will normally appreciate your effort to communicate in their language, and even simple translations of products and services will enable comprehension on the part of the potential client much faster if their English skills are not sufficient or lacking. I've often found that I can have a more in-depth, technical conversation with Spanish Speakers if a little "Spanglish" is used to fill the gaps. I remember one trade show where several Italians approached the booth and wanted to discuss business. Their English was very poor, my Italian was even worse. But if I used Spanish, and talked slowly and clearly, we could actually communicate. In that case, Spanish was similar enough to Italian where using a third language was possible.

Learn some of the local language, if relevant. Too many people don't even try, and this can hurt them. Learn basic phrases like 'hello', 'thank you', 'Sorry', 'I do not speak....', etc. Get a translation phrase book to help with small comments. Learn about local culture and customs and try to be aware of and respect these cultural practices as much as possible.

Speak your English at a slower cadence for better comprehension. If they know English, be aware it may be a second or third language for the speaker. Be friendly and smile, and be patient. These traits will help you extract valuable business contacts and potential.

Plan, Review, Confirm, Execute:

Managing exhibits at international trade shows and conferences in a foreign country is not daunting if sufficient time and resources are applied to the project. The entire operation can be accomplished with relative ease and a minimum number of problems or hassles. The business rewards to your company can be significant.

Successful trade show management tips:

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Periodic Table of Google Analytics

Jeff Sauer of jeffalytics.com has created a nice visualization tool for Google Analytics.

This "periodic table" is a useful at-a-glance look that the multiple features and functions of Google Analytics. Google Analytics is a free website analytics package which produces a huge amount of useful historical visitor and visitor behavior data for your websites, including integration with Adwords. A person can literally spend hours diving into Google Analytics for data... lot's of data.

Click the image to see the original version, which is rather large!

You can view an updated version of the Periodic Table of Google Analytics here.

Monday, April 8, 2013

Google Adwords Scripts

Fred Vallaeys of Top Tier Marketing is a 10 year Google Adwords veteran, including Google's Adword Evangelist, before starting his own company. Fred's presentation at HEROPPC during the "Winning in a Hypercompetitive Market" session today was very informative, sharing how anyone managing Adwords accounts can use a useful tool provided free by Google Adwords to help make campaign adjustments and analysis easier and more automated.

Learn more about Google Adwords Scripts in this video from Google, "Go Bigger, Faster, with Adwords Scripts":



The Adwords Scripts video is nearly one hour long, and is deep on detail, so make sure you have some quality time to view it. You can also visit the Google Developers website to learn more: https://developers.google.com/adwords/scripts/.

Access and use complete Adword scripts from Google: https://developers.google.com/adwords/scripts/docs/examples/complete-scripts

Sunday, March 24, 2013

60% of Consumers Ignore Banners - Study

Poor Engagement Results for Banner Ads Indicate Need for Better Targeting.

Thanks to an article by Kristina Knight with BizReport, and a Linkedin post by Larry Bassani promoting Kristina's article, a recent study by InfoLinks on Banner Ad results has come to my attention. Keeping in mind this is just one study by one advertising agency, which has a vested interest in pointing these things out. Even so, the performance numbers cited are worrisome for banner advertisers and platforms.

Key findings from the InfoLinks study read like a banner ad disaster movie:
  • 14% recalled the last display ad they saw online and the company or product advertised. This means 86% could not recall the last display ad they saw.
  • Less than 3% said the ad they saw was relevant to them. This means 97% did not see relevancy in the banners ads they saw.
  • 35% of those surveyed click on 5 or fewer display ads per month. 
  • 50% never click display ads. This means 50% do click.
  • From the 40% who did view the banner ads, 75% were on a computer and 25% used mobile devices.
Referencing the Infolinks banner ad study, if less than 3% said the ad they saw was relevant to them, there is a dire need for better targeting. Search Engine Marketing does a fantastic job of targeting compared to banner ads by comparison. What Banner Ads need for targeting are less shotgun approaches and better sniper capabilities.

And yet 40% of consumers did remember seeing the banner ads, and some of the other 60% might have subconsciously acknowledged the banner ad. From direct experience, I know that banners can attract new business (mostly indirectly), improve competitive 'mind share', and help build brand presence and awareness.

Banner Ads, along with print advertising, have a place in B-to-B marketing. They need to be put into perspective.... useful for branding, building 'mind-share', and creating favorable conditions for future business conversions. But for targeting and efficiency, as compared to search engine marketing, they are not even close.

But that is not the point. Banner Ads and Print Ads complement Search Engine Marketing. To learn more about the role of print and banner ads for successful B-to-B marketing, please read: In Praise of Print Ads, within limits.

Friday, March 15, 2013

A to Z Lists on Websites Really Work

A-to-Z lists help visitors and search engine bots find what they need in large, complex websites.


Recently I worked on a website development project in Bogotá, Colombia as part of an Americas multinational and multilingual team. We were tasked with training, building and launching multiple company country websites en Español. The Latin America websites project was a great success and worthy of a 'case study' review. I'll share this success in a future blog article, for another day.

But first, I have an important list I want to share with you.... an A-to-Z list.

In Bogotá during some intense training on CMS, content optimization, SEO, visitor usability, and navigation tactics, a eureka moment appeared when we could demonstrate for the new web content-masters the formidable benefits of relevant A-Z lists of linked services and products in a complex website.

It is worth praising, yet again, the virtues of including A-to-Z internal content link lists on your website. A-to-Z list advantages were first brought up in this blog back in 2009, with Back to the Future with Static A-Z Directories.

Like a city map, A-to-Z lists benefit
 visitors as effective road maps
  in large, complex websites.
A-to-Z listings are mini-directories, tables of contents, and indexes. They are also, in effect, mini-site-maps which make finding pages in large websites easier and more logical for humans (customers) and search-engine bots. They do not replace or challenge internal search engines, they complement them.

Make a logical A-to-Z list of webpages focused on similar or identical core markets, products, or service niches, list them A-to-Z (include A-Z subcategories if needed), then link each of them to their source webpage. Add a link to your new A-to-Z page in your appropriate higher-level indexes or navigation menus, as appropriate. Then wait... interesting things, wonderful things, will happen to your website over time.

Do A-Z lists work? From years of pouring over website analytics for multiple long-running websites, data clearly show the advantages of A-Z lists. Here is what I've seen, over and over again:

The main advantage of A-Z lists on Websites is high quality customer involvement. The large majority of visitors to A-Z lists are already in your website searching for answers, solutions, and products. A-Z lists are a popular search method for this activity. A-Z pages are for quality visitors, who are engaged enough to dive in and search for information and services in a logical and linear manner.

Below is top-level analytics data showing visitor activities for one service niche A-to-Z webpage, tracked for five months:
2,600 visits 
2,050 unique visits 
Landing page entrances: 1.0%
From previous pages in website:  99.0%
To next pages in website: 81.0%
Exits:  19.0%
The exit rate is significantly lower than the website average. Visitors find superior value and utility in the webpage. Landing page entrance rates for other A-Z pages can be higher, this particular example was at the lower range.           

When looking at navigation data in detail, visitors to these pages come from a diverse (but similar 'theme') list of internal webpages. The visitors research and review their options, and then fan out to new webpages in the website which spike their interest. Just like the intelligent behavior shown when people look at table of contents in books, indexes, and other alpha-beta listed data resources. A-Z lists have real, tangible utility.

However, depending upon depth and length, A-Z lists are not set-up for search engine optimization. As SEO landing pages, A-Z pages are usually poor performers, as the very essence of A-to-Z listing means displaying diffuse and dilute keyword phrases. Having dedicated niche webpages for SEO are absolutely required.

But for helping guide visitors and prospective clients to the B-to-B services they want and seek, A-Z list pages serve an important usability role, giving users an alternative way to find the data they want while complementing internal search engines.

The advantages of A-Z service niche directory lists are as manifestly beneficial today as when I first discussed them in 2009.

Saturday, March 2, 2013

New Google Interactive Infographic: How Search Works

Here is a great review and update on Google's search criteria for ranking quality organic search results, courtesy of Danny Sullivan and Search Engine Land.

You can view the animated and interactive Google infographic in the Google.com "Inside Search" website section: HOW SEARCH WORKS - From algorithms to answers ("The Story").

Google has now searched and indexed over 30 Trillion webpages, which is one of the reasons why Google is the best search engine around and dominates the global search engine market.

Search Marketing Expo – SMX West is this month (March 2012) in San Jose, California.

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Give Your Sales Teams What They Crave This Valentine's Day - Good Leads

Give your sales teams that special Valentine's Day gift they will love - good, actionable business leads with potential, profit, and success. 

Surprise your sales teams with a few real diamond-quality leads, not a lot of zirconium, and they'll be asking for more.

Cupid knew a thing or two about
effective sales and marketing. 
Staying focused on good lead generation helps validate you and the marketing campaigns you are responsible for in the eyes of Sales and Executive Management. Good lead generation, done well, helps feed the business with opportunities to grow market share, enter new markets, and raise top-line gross margins and profitability.

Though I have a business administration degree with a specialization in marketing, I've also spent many happy, productive, and lucrative years in B-to-B technical and industrial sales.

I know first-hand when my marketing departments were feeding me juicy leads laden with potential, or burdening me with near-worthless piles of junk. A worst-case scenario happens when jaded sales people ignore marketing leads because so many are a waste of time - resulting in high-value leads being lost or ignored.

As a consequence, it's been my top priority as a marketer to feed the best sales leads I can to the top of the sales funnel, as many as possible, by all marketing channels, by all possible means.

Quality B-to-B lead generation should be a Prime Directive for any marketer. Certainly other marketing priorities are important, such as branding and PR, but lead generation should be a central core value and a top priority.

The bottom line is that quality leads are better than quantity leads.

Search Engine Marketing is Industrial Strength Lead Generation (Or Should Be)

B-to-B Web Marketing Should Help Sales People Sell.

What Web Marketing can do for you in 2017.

Updated February 2017.

Sunday, February 3, 2013

In Praise of Print Ads, within limits.

Surprisingly Supportive of Print Ads.

Print Ads still have an important niche in the advertising eco-sphere. Consider using print advertising to target key or spot-market opportunities. When used wisely, targeted print ads will bring tangible value to your marketing campaigns. Print ads are useful branding tools when used properly, giving your business more exposure to quality B-to-B influencers and decision-makers, even if just for a few seconds.

Print ads, however, have intrinsic cost and data tracking disadvantages when compared to internet ads. The problem with print ads was identified over 100 years ago by a famous American retailer, John Wanamaker:

"Half the money I spend on advertising is wasted;
                                                               the trouble is I don't know which half."   

Wanamaker, John

Full disclosure: I am a dedicated internet marketer first and foremost. When it comes to generating quality leads for technical business-to-business, nothing I've found in over 10 years beats Search Engine Marketing (SEM), nothing. If you know how to play the SEO game well, both organic and paid search create a powerful fire-hose of quality leads. These leads can be tracked and reviewed with various analytics and CRM data-tools to assess performance data and analytics. SEM gives us both quality and quantity results. The low cost-per-lead with SEM is attractive, and the ROI measurable.

But search engine marketing is not the only way prospective customers will find or remember us. Ignoring other ad options, like print ads, can limit your visibility to potentially key prospective customers.

John Wannamaker was conflicted
 with Print Advertising, too.
Similar to banner ads, the print ad can make a fleeting but favorable impression upon the reader. They may scan the ad and flip the page in a second or two, but the impression has been made. By including unique email addresses, QR tags, landing pages, and phone numbers, you can attempt to better measure direct response and lead quality rates. In most cases those response rates, along with banner ads and display (Adsense), will usually be significantly lower than with Adwords.

But trying to achieve a nearly impossible equivalent "click through rate" as compared to Adwords ads shouldn't be the prime goal with print ads. By carefully placing a print ad in the right place at the right time, with the right message, positive results can occur. Encouraging the reader to take positive actions later on, by positively recognizing your brand and company at trade shows, conferences, during web searches, etc, is a key benefit.

The print ad, if designed correctly, helps alert the target market to your company's existence, amplifies your value message and plants a valuable, latent, call-to-action which can generate a lead and business opportunity later on. We're talking mind-share here!

Opening the mind, Opening the Order Book:
Print ads are like bill-boards, helping to embed your company into the brain of the potential client. I've witnessed this happy result at trade shows and conferences, where key potential customers had learned about us first through print ads, and when we met them they already had a positive recognition of our company and services. Just one such lead turning into regular business will pay for a print advert many, many times over.

When and Where to use Print Ads?
In technical B-to-B marketing, the great news is that we can be very selective. Run a print ad campaign in a niche industry journal or magazine, or run periodic spot ads because that publication will be distributed at an important conference or trade show, or your company is one of the sponsors at an industry event. All of these options are valid, and you can keep your print ad budget costs down and within reason.

For niche B-toB, don't waste limited marketing budgets on lavish print-ads in general interest or mass-market publications. Find and target niche publications, evaluate their audience claims, check the validity with your own internal and external contacts, then test the waters. Cost can be controlled, often a simple classified ad running in a back-section of an industry publication will be enough for consistent lead generation. Running a 1/2 or 1/4 page ad can work and grab attention, if designed well.

"Just say No" to most print media telemarketers... often their print and online offerings can be of dubious value and aren't worth your time - they will devour your entire marketing budget if you let them. If they sound like penny stock brokers or used-car salesmen, end the conversation quickly and get back to real work.

Print ads are a useful advertising weapon in your marketing arsenal. Use print ads wisely and in a limited fashion, and you'll see benefits. Just don't turn off your Adwords any time soon!