Wednesday, February 13, 2008

Market Better, Economy Worse?

Saying goes, the stock market predicts 6-12 months out. Does this mean all of us feeling pain by living in the economy on a daily basis, but the stock market getting better? Click this blog's title to view a graph of the stock market.

Look to buy consumer discretionary and financials soon based on this article:
http://www.thestreet.com/p/_htmlrmd/rmoney/technicalanalysis/10403128.html

What doesn't kill us, makes us stronger.

Jeff
www.SalesDrivenMarketing.com
The Internet Advertising Experts

Tuesday, February 05, 2008

Who Influences Car Purchases?

My advertising business serves automotive dealerships across the country, and I want to offer you a quick read offering insightful, actionable insight to help you or your clients market vehicles.

Here's the link to an article titled, "Who Do You Trust (When Buying a Car)?"
http://blogs.mediapost.com/research_brief/?p=1633

Best,

Jeff Martin, CEO
Sales Driven Marketing LLC
www.SalesDrivenMarketing.com

Monday, February 04, 2008

Article on EBay's Needed Changes

eBay Makes a Bid to Lure Back Entrepreneurs
02/04/08 - 01:17 PM EST
Elizabeth Blackwell


When a company changes leadership, you hear a lot of talk about fresh ideas.
At eBay(EBAY - Cramer's Take - Stockpickr), the transformation has started before the lame-duck CEO has even left the building.

CEO-in-waiting John Donahoe (who will take over from Meg Whitman in March) has previewed his plans to revamp the site's core business: the eBay Marketplace.

At the company's eCommerce Forum in Washington, D.C., he announced a series of changes to the buying and selling experience, ranging from a new fee structure to an enhanced feedback system.

The reasons for the changes are apparent to long-time eBay users. Sites such as Amazon(AMZN - Cramer's Take - Stockpickr) and Yahoo!(YHOO - Cramer's Take - Stockpickr) have pounced on eBay's business by offering their own versions of online stores for small businesses. As customers have become more comfortable shopping online, many small retailers have also set up their own sites, cutting out the eBay middleman.

Now, eBay is trying to win those businesses back. That's the reason Donahoe is courting eBay's top-rated merchants, known as Power Sellers. While eBay used to pride itself on keeping sellers on a level playing field, Power Sellers now will be rewarded with better placement in search results, as well as discounts on fees.

"It's a huge break with the old establishment," says Jonathan Garriss, chief executive of the Web site Gotham City Online and executive director of the Professional eBay Sellers Alliance, which has long advocated such a move. "Before, we often felt like we were banging our heads against the wall."

Professional-level sellers have complained that the site didn't distinguish them enough from the occasional eBay users auctioning off the contents of Grandma's garage in an online version of a yard sale. The proposed changes, Garriss says, are a step in the right direction. "It gives sellers a carrot to improve the buyer experience," he says. "I've got a vested interest in this. Bad sellers impact me, because they drive buyers away from eBay."

Other relatively simple changes are aimed at bringing eBay up to current online retail standards. Ten years ago, seeing a stark list of text-only search results didn't turn off buyers. These days, visuals count. Buyers expect to see photos of products as they're browsing, and eBay charged an extra fee for sellers to include them in search results.

Effective Feb. 20, eBay will provide these "gallery" images for free, so buyers can scan pictures quickly and efficiently. Saving these potential buyers time will hopefully translate to increased sales.

"Most sellers are cautiously optimistic," says Scot Wingo, chief executive of ChannelAdvisor, which produces software used by several thousand eBay sellers, and author of eBay Strategies: 10 Proven Methods to Maximize Your eBay Business. "The company hasn't quite hit the bull's-eye yet, but they're a lot closer than they've been."

Wingo points out that the new fee structure will increase costs for some sellers. "The folks who sell at auction will be hit the hardest," he says, as eBay's take of each item's final sale price rises from 5.25 to 8.75 percent. Sellers who list their items at a fixed price -- as many of the most established eBay businesses do -- should actually benefit from the changes, thanks to a reduction in insertion fees (the cost to list an item, regardless of whether or not it sells).

The company is also courting its Power Sellers by working with PayPal to improve security for credit-card sales. Power Sellers will now be protected against unauthorized and nonreceipt claims for international transactions. "It should decrease fraud levels," notes Wingo. That might make businesses less likely to restrict their sales to the U.S., increasing their potential sales worldwide.

"We need to redo our playbook, we need to redo it fast and we need to take bold actions," Donahoe said at the conference. Now it's up to the sellers to take the ball and run with it.

"Sellers will have to re-engage," Garriss says. "They have to start advancing and looking at their practices. If they're willing to adapt, there are some very good opportunities for them here."

2/4/08 Technical Chart of the Markets

Friday, February 01, 2008

The New Power House - MicroHoo!

If you want to see what this will mean, check out the market share of various online properties AFTER Microsoft completes its hostile takeover of Yahoo.

http://www.marketingcharts.com/direct/combined-yahoo-microsoft-would-make-web-powerhouse-but-not-in-search-3305/#comment-1969

Happy Selling,

Jeff
www.SalesDrivenMarketing.com
The Internet Advertising Experts

Microsoft & Yahoo: What's Old Is New - Kind Of

Traffic traffic and traffic. Any website's success is dependent upon:

1. How many visits it gets a month, and
2. How well the site converts the traffic into hardcore business.

For the marketer concerned about making sure every dollar spent in advertising generates at least a dollar of profit, this deal means nothing in the near term.

For the Corporate 500 company and big ad agencies who want scale in placing display ads (brand building campaigns), once Microsoft purchases and integrates Yahoo into the fold, it'll be a lot easier to launch, manage and measure a campaigns effectiveness -- this is a year or two out.

Bottom line: this is a strategic move for Microsoft to make gains on Google's lead, and make sure they're front and center as the online marketing spend increases from $40 Billion to $80 Billion in the next three years.

What's your take?

Jeff
www.SalesDrivenMarketing.com
The Internet Advertising Experts

Thursday, January 31, 2008

MEAN OLD USA

My personal wish is for those around the world who bash this great country I live in to read the following email I received on 1/31/08. Jeff

Subject: MEAN OLD USA

Mean Old USA....

When in England at a fairly large conference, Colin Powell was asked by the
Archbishop of Canterbury if our plans for Iraq were just an example of
'empire building' by George Bush.

He answered by saying, "Over the years, the United States has sent many of
its fine young men and women into great peril to fight for freedom beyond
our borders. The only amount of land we have ever asked for in return is
enough to bury those that did not return."
It became very quiet in the room **************

Then there was a conference in France where a number of international
engineers were taking part, including French and American. During a break
one of the French engineers came back into the room saying "Have you heard
the latest dumb stunt Bush has done? He has sent an aircraft carrier to
Indonesia to help the tsunami victims. What does he intended to do, bomb
them?"

A Boeing engineer stood up and replied quietly: "Our carriers have three
hospitals on board that can treat several hundred people; they are nuclear
powered and can supply emergency electrical power to shore facilities;
they have three cafeterias with the capacity to feed 3,000 people three
meals a day, they can produce several thousand gallons of fresh water from
sea water each day, and they carry half a dozen helicopters for use in
transporting victims and injured to and from their flight deck.. We have
eleven such ships; how many does France have?"
Once again, dead silence. *****************

A US. Navy Admiral was attending a naval conference that included Admirals
from the U.S., English, Canadian, Australian and French Navies. At a
cocktail reception, he found himself standing with a large group of
Officers that included personnel from most of those countries. Everyone
was chatting away in English as they sipped their drinks but a French
admiral suddenly complained that, 'whereas Europeans learn many languages,
Americans learn only English.' He then asked, 'Why is it that we always
have to speak English in these conferences rather than speaking French?'

Without hesitating, the American Admiral replied 'Maybe its because the
Brits, Canadians, Aussies and Americans arranged it so you wouldn't have to
speak German.'

You could have heard a pin drop!

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Do You Need A Widget?

Before even thinking about widgets, make sure you're doing these must have Internet marketing tactics:

1. Effectively advertising on the three primary/largest search engines: Google, Yahoo, and MSN;
2. Measuring how many visits your site gets a month;
3. Calculating the percentage of monthly visitors who either buy or ask for more information (a.k.a. submits a lead);
4. Building (a.k.a. coding) your site with basic search engine optimization (SEO) fundamentals;
5. Posting videos on YouTube;
6. Developing a community of current, past and future customers on MySpace and Facebook; and
7. Blogging and contributing to other blogs relevant to your product and services.

Unless you're already doing all of the above, then don't even think about or pay for widgets.

Happy success,

Jeff
www.SalesDrivenMarketing.com
The Internet Advertising Experts

Tuesday, January 08, 2008

Drive Free Traffic To Your Site By Blogging

Breat article below on how to drive free traffic to your site.

Enjoy,

Jeff
Advertise on Google, Yahoo and MSN now. All budget sizes welcome. Visit www.SalesDrivenMarketing.com

----------------------------

http://www.oldschoolseo.com/2008/01/07/how-30-minutes-a-day-can-result-in-250-inbound-links/


How 30 minutes a day can result in 250 inbound linksJanuary 7, 2008 at 2:11 pm · Filed under Stumble Upon, blogging, link building, inbound links, blog comments, no follow

First, know that the 250 links will come over time - it’s not a one time event. It is actually a pretty simple strategy and will have more benefits than just getting inbound links. I am referring to the practice of strategically commenting on blogs. Sure, it’s been talked about, but the question is are you doing it? And if you are, are you doing it effectively? How do you know if it’s working for you or not?

It shouldn’t take you more than 30 mintues per day to find a new blog to post a comment on. I recommend starting in your niche with the goal of attracting similarly minded subscribers to your site or blog. In the process, you will learn of new blogs in your field, find complementary blogs closely related to your field, and get to know more bloggers in your niche, which could lead to guest blogging on their blogs. A great way to find bloggers in your niche is through StumbleUpon, and blogging guru extraordinaire, Darren Rowse (a.k.a. ProBlogger) just wrote a great article about this.

In your quest to comment, I suggest subscribing to a few blogs and really getting involved in the community aspect by becoming a top contributor as this can lead to others eventually subscribing to your blog (and that is one of your goals right?) Also, help promote those blogs by Stumbling, Digging, or whatever flavor of Social Media Marketing you utilize. As Darren points out, they will take notice.

And of course, who says you need to only post one comment per day? The more you comment, the faster you will see results. Try kicking it up to 4 a day and see what happens.

Of course, some bloggers will use the (evil) “no follow” tag which will reduce the effectiveness of this tactic, but it will still get your name out there and may even solicit a few clicks, especially if you use a unique name as opposed to “Mary”… you know, something like “Old School:

I have made a goal to do this myself and in fact even have a spreadsheet where I am tracking it (what a geek!) so I can make sure that I meet my goals. In a year, I almost guarantee that you will make huge strides in the blogging community if you practice this daily.

That’s me for now, but stay tuned for more hot blogging tips!

2008 To Do: Change To New Google Tracking Code

If you advertise on Google, set up your Adwords tracking code. They made changes to their tracking code beginning 2008, which means we have some updating to do. Here's a good blurb on what needs donw.

Enjoy,

Jeff
www.SalesDrivenMarketing.com
Advertise on Google, Yahoo and MSN. All budget sizes welcome.

------------------------
January 4, 2008

Should You Join the Migration? urchin.js Migrates to ga.js
By Caitlin Minteer, Google Analytics Support Tech

In mid-October Google announced the beta release of the new tracking code: ga.js. Then, in December, they released the new code to all Google Analytics users. So you might have noticed, within Google Analytics, that there is now a tab labeled 'New Tracking Code' within the Profile Settings > Tracking Code section.

You may be thinking, "Why should I care?" Well, here are a few reasons why the migration to ga.js is practically inevitable for those of you who want to remain on the cutting edge of the latest and greatest technology. And why, for those of you who don't want to rock the boat, it may not be necessary to switch over... yet.

With the upgrade to ga.js you will have access to several new features including Event Tracking, and Outbound Link Tracking.

Event Tracking will be especially useful for those who have Flash based sites, or for those who use multimedia on their site. An "event" is an action that a user takes on a webpage that doesn't necessarily involve a new pageview. Examples include clicks on buttons or images, navigation in embedded Flash, or Ajax events, like moving a map in Google Maps, or applying a label in Gmail.

Outbound Link Tracking will tell you which links visitors clicked on your site that direct them to another site without the manual tagging. This means that instead of adding urchinTracker to each and every one of your outbound links to see where visitors are going once they leave, you don't have to do anything.

A few other benefits of the updated ga.js include:




Faster, smaller source file - which will allow for a faster download time

Object oriented - instead of using functions

Automatic detection of HTTPS

Increased namespace safety


One question seems to keep surfacing about the migration, so I will go ahead and address that now. The new Google Analytics tracking code (ga.js) will NOT work with the previous tracking code (urchin.js). They are not compatible, so all pages on your site should be updated with the new code.

So the bottom line: Should you switch to ga.js?

Google is still supporting the urchin.js tracking code, and sources predict that that they'll continue support for another 12-18 months, so if you're happy with the current features and you're not worried about any new releases to ga.js (and the potential discontinuation of support down the line), then you're probably OK for another few months, at least. Eventually, though, you're going to need to switch to ga.js.

If you want event tracking and automatic outbound link tracking, as well as any new features that are released in the future, and you're willing to spend a little time and resources on getting everything set up properly, then you might want to consider joining the migration.

If you're looking for help, Google has written a reference guide for switching over to the code in pdf format, and if you need any assistance from ROI Revolution, an Authorized Google Analytics support partner, be sure to take a look at our Google Analytics support plans and we'll get you on the path to a seamless migration.

Sunday, January 06, 2008

Shopping Compare Sites Retailers Need On In 2008

If you're a retailer, you need to be on:

1. Shopzilla,
2. Shopping.com,
3. Yahoo Shopping, and
4. Nextag.

I hear negative results about PriceGrabber's CPO. Have you? Leave a comment if you have or haven't.

Best,

j. Bruce
www.SalesDrivenMarketing.com
The Internat Advertising Experts

Friday, December 28, 2007

Media's Outlook for 2008 By TheStreet.com

Internet advertising is, well, media. And, people who make a living in advertising, should have their finger on the pulse of where things are going within media. Here's a good article to help capitalize on where things are going. Enjoy.

j. Bruce
www.SalesDrivenMarketing.com
--------------------------------------------------



Media's Mixed Outlook for 2008
By Steve Birenberg RealMoney Contributor12/21/2007 10:00 AM ESTURL: http://www.thestreet.com/p/rmoney/media/10395562.html

Media stocks face several headwinds in 2008. Advertising growth across most media is decelerating. Fragmentation of time spent using traditional media continues.

Regulatory change is either not helpful or punitive. Merger and acquisition activity will be low because of problems getting financing. The writers' strike could bite hard on the revenue side of the TV business and confuse the outlook for the movie business in 2009.

Not all is lost, however. Political spending will set records and tighten up inventory-producing upward pressure on rates. Cost savings are driving margins and will get a boost from the writers' strike. Internet and digital revenues are becoming material for many companies and growing very quickly. Balance sheets are in good shape and free cash flow is high, giving management several options for enhancing shareholder value. Lack of M&A activity is viewed positively by investors, because most big media deals have not produced value.

Against this confused backdrop, it will be hard to make money across the sector in 2008. However, as Jim Cramer says, there is always a bull market somewhere, and positive change is happening at many companies.

My best ideas for absolute dollar profits in 2007 are Central European Media Enterprises (CETV) , Discovery Communication (DISCA) and News Corp. (NWS) . On a relative basis, I also like Disney (DIS) , Meredith (MDP) , Regal Entertainment (RGC) and National Cinemedia (NCMI) .

Advertising Outlook

Advertising growth, the largest driver of media fundamentals, was poor in 2007, particularly in traditional media in U.S. markets. Universal McCann believes that total ad spending in the U.S. in 2007 will grow less than 1%. If you eliminate Internet advertising, which will grow north of 25% in 2007, total ad spending was slightly negative. The major trend in 2007 was weakness in local advertising offset by strength in national and Internet advertising.

For 2008, the outlook is not much better, with the exception of political advertising. Political advertising is spent mainly at local media outlets such as TV and radio. The volume should be enough to push TV growth into positive territory and prevent radio growth from decelerating further into negative territory. However, investors are unlikely to pay for politically driven ad growth.

Within the U.S., the best-performing categories -- you could even call them growth categories -- will remain Internet, cinema, outdoor and cable TV networks. Internet should continue to grow near 20%, and cinema advertising should continue to gain share and grow 15%.

Outdoor and cable TV networks may be the only traditional media to offer growth in 2007 when political is backed out. Outdoor growth is decelerating rapidly but should hold at least in the upper single digits. Cable networks have already decelerated from 15% to upper single digits but should stabilize in the 5%-7% range.

The only other growth in advertising in 2007 and 2008 is international, which is being driven by emerging markets. In 2008, international growth should again run in the range of 4% to 5% -- still a premium to politically driven U.S. growth of 3%-4%.

To get an idea of the growing influence of emerging markets, Zenith Optimedia is forecasting that Central and Eastern Europe will see its share of global advertising rise from 5.5% in 2006 to 8% in 2010. In 2010, the region will have greater advertising revenue than Japan. Similarly, Asia ex-Japan will see its share of global advertising grow from 11.7% in 2006 to 14.2% in 2010. In 2010, advertising in Asia ex-Japan will be two-thirds the size of that in Western Europe.

TV Guide Cable stocks have been smashed in 2007 by fears about competition from satellite TV providers and telco TV. I don't expect sentiment toward cable to change for at least six months, but I do believe the reality is far better than current stock prices imply. Therefore, I believe patient investors will be rewarded for buying cable stocks at current prices. Comcast (CMCSA) is my top pick.

I expect current optimism toward satellite stocks to wane as 2008 progresses. The bottom line is that macro trends in multichannel TV affect all three subsectors more equally than stock prices reflect. Thus, investors should buy the most out-of-favor group when valuation and sentiment reaches extremes. For now, that is cable.

The TV business will benefit from political advertising but faces secular challenges, which will be exacerbated if the writers' strike continues through spring. Local TV revenue will return to positive territory, including political, but multiples in the group are too high, given underlying negative growth.

Broadcast network TV is especially challenged by the strike, and investors will be more worried about the secular challenge than about the cost savings. The best growth is outside the U.S. Therefore, Central European Media Enterprises is my best idea for investing in the TV business. Cable network growth is stabilizing, it benefits from the writers' strike, and it is more easily transferred to the Web. Discovery Communications is best positioned here.

Enjoying Entertainment

Entertainment companies have exposure across most media sectors. Disney, Time Warner (TWX) , and News Corp. are the three primary plays. All three stocks offer relative performance upside in 2008 for different reasons:

Disney is very tightly managed and has great momentum from a multiyear hot streak in content production.

Time Warner is cheap and could see a dramatic restructuring under new management.

News Corp. offers the best growth, and estimates and guidance are too low unless the U.S. has a legitimate recession. News Corp. is my top choice.

Printing New Lows

Newspapers are looking at another tough year. Classified advertising is moving to the Web, and there is nothing newspapers can do about it. Even if they develop good Web businesses, they will lose massive market share at lower CPMs.

I expect another year of negative growth. The stocks have gotten hammered and could get a dead-cat bounce at any time, but the secular trend is clear. If you want to bottom-fish, Gannett (GCI) is by far the best idea. It is cheap and financially strong.

Too Much Static in Radio

Radio growth just went negative, and investors are only beginning to appreciate the secular challenges it faces. Local advertising is losing share to national, and radio is losing share to other music delivery mechanisms.

Multiples in the group have come in but remain at a significant premium to other media stocks. I believe radio in 2008 and 2009 will follow the path of newspaper stocks in 2007. Avoid the industry.

Glossy Returns for Magazines

Magazines have shown surprising strength -- advertisers like the narrow genres, and the industry has done a good job launching new titles and reinvigorating older titles. In addition, magazines have done a better-than-average job of moving their brands online. Meredith is an excellent relative performance idea for 2008, particularly if it turns out to be a tough year for the stock market.

The Not-So-Great OutdoorOutdoor has been a favored sector, but growth is decelerating fast. The stocks still trade at a significant premium multiple compared with other subsectors.
I believe that decelerating growth will make it difficult to make money on an absolute or relative basis in outdoor in 2008. Therefore, I have no long recommendations.

Movie Ads Moving Forward

Cinema advertising came into its own in 2007 with the IPO of National Cinemedia. Cinema advertising has a tiny market share in the U.S. compared with Western Europe. I believe market share will rise steadily for the next several years, fueling consistent mid-teens growth. NCMI is not a cheap stock, but I believe media investors will reward growth given the lack of growth across most of the sector.

One headwind NCMI will face in 2008 is tough box-office comparisons. This could also hamper the performance of theater stocks. Nevertheless, with great dividend support and underappreciated growth drivers from the transition to digital and 3-D, the recent collapse in theater stocks due to a weak fourth-quarter box office has set up a good entry point. Regal Entertainment will do particularly well if the stock market does poorly, because of its stable dividend that produces a current yield of greater than 6%.
-------------------------------
At time of publication, Birenberg was long Disney, Regal Entertainment, News Corp. and Central European Media Enterprises in client and personal accounts; and he was long Time Warner in a client account; but holdings can change at any time.

Steven Birenberg is president and chief investment officer of Northlake Capital Management, LLC. Northlake specializes in managing equity portfolios using a combination of exchange-traded funds and special situation stocks. Birenberg appreciates your feedback; click here to send him an email.

Thursday, July 19, 2007

Malicious Computer Code Found In Online Ads

80% of malicious computer code on the Internet is found in online ads, according to computer security firm Finjan Inc.

As an advertiser, stay away from putting your ads on content sites. This is where most the click fraud occurs. I ran a campaign for a client who sells all over the world. If I do place ads on content sites, I limit my risk by only bidding at most $0.05-$0.10 per click, and you should have seen all the fraud click throughs coming from Korea. This is just one example, but through my experience, click fraud for advertisers occurs on the content partners of Yahoo and Google.

Be safe out there,
j. Bruce Martin (Jeff)
http://www.salesdrivenmarketing.com/
The Internet Advertising Experts.

Sunday, July 15, 2007

Online Video Ad Rates for 3Q 2007

Video still doesn't provide the bang for buck that Internet search does, or any CPA ad buy can give you; however, many Fortune 500 companies that don't understand how to truly evaluate their ad buys, are paying:

$40-$50 CPM per short video ad.

Barron's 7/9 Technology Week article states consumers can tolerate maybe 3 video ads in a free hour long video program, which costs advertisers $150 per 1000 viewings ($0.15 in revenue per user).

Take high quality videos out of the equation, many advertisers will pay only $1.00 CPM for ads on user generated content.

j. Bruce Martin (Jeff)
www.SalesDrivenMarketing.com

Monday, March 05, 2007

Medical Focused Search Engine

MSN's Medstory Story by Mark Simon, Monday, March 5, 2007

LAST WEEK, Microsoft announced plans to buy health search engine Medstory. More than just a buy into a great product, that purchase might be Microsoft's secret weapon into winning the search wars.

As a vertical engine, Medstory's search functionality is fantastic. It's a genius at showing health material and weeding out non-health results -- as a search for an ambiguous term like "wine" will show. When I ran that search, the engine was great at avoiding non-health "wine" results (like results for wine stores or wine recipes); non-health listings only seemed to sneak in around results page 90. (On searches around medical personalities, though, Medstory's filtering looked a lot weaker.)

On top of its excellent relevance, Medstory is also spectacularly effective when it comes to granularity. Along with standard specialty searches like audio and video, Medstory allows searchers to drill down for items like drugs, experts, and even genes that relate to a keyword.
But Medstory's true value only begins with what it offers as a health-search engine. It will undoubtedly make a killer app within MSN Health & Fitness, but that's just the start. It also looks like its technology will be copied across all of the vertical content sections within the MSN portal, like MSN Autos, MSN Music, and MSN Money. Currently, those content areas offer only a site search within the content area itself, and access to run a non-specialized search on Live.com. Visitors to those content sections would gladly welcome -- and use -- a Medstory clone that's geared towards their topic of interest. And that new wave of vertical search traffic would create many more opportunities for highly targeted search advertising.

Medstory, meanwhile, is hardly ignorant of its potential for expanding beyond health alone. As CNet's Carolyn McCarthy points out, "Medstory's Web site hints that health is only the first topic for which it plans to implement its... technology," and that "other 'complex fields' of inquiry may be on the way."

Even vertical search, though, might not be the ultimate goal that's on MSN's mind with Medstory. If there's anything that AdCenter has taught the world, it's that Microsoft is a master at taking the data it already has, and repurposing it into smarter search. A small army of Medstory clones will allow Microsoft to do just that, at a whole new level -- as it will contain a huge inventory of behavioral data on vertically-minded searchers and search queries. MSN can use that data to deliver more relevant organic results, and better ads, within vertically-minded searches on Live.com itself.

Indeed, as CNet's Ina Fried reported Tuesday, Microsoft Chief Software Architect Ray Ozzie has made clear his plans to push Medstory out "within Microsoft's broader Live search engine;" and that, in Fried's words, "vertical search pages are just one of the possibilities." Presumably, Live.com is another one of those "possibilities."

All of this bodes extremely well for Live.com, as MSN pushes to move from search underdog to leader of the pack. More relevant listings -- i.e., better-targeted listings --mean more clicks, as Yahoo's post-Panama clickthrough surge has shown us. And it's not much of a leap from there to saying that more relevant listings generate increased traffic overall, long-term.

And so in buying Medstory, MSN has purchased a great asset within the health market; the next big thing in vertical search overall; and a golden ticket to making more money off of advertising within Live.com. I'd say that isn't bad for the purchase of a tiny search engine.
Am I 100% right about where Microsoft wants to go with the Medstory purchase? I think I am, but we'll have to wait and see. But I can guarantee that, wherever the planned purchase goes, Medstory is just the beginning of the story.

Saturday, March 03, 2007

ROI Tracking for Web Marketing Campaigns

A good customer of mine asked how to market his services on ESPN.com w/o this web propoerty offering conversion metrics.

I did some brainstorming and here are some solutions:

1. Look into web analalytic packages that you can integrate into your website. This can be expensive, confusing and time consuming. At the end of the day, you want to simply know how many clicks you received, at what cost, and how much did it cost to drive each sale.

2. Place ads on ESPN with a unique URL, then every month, look at how much you spent with ESPN, and then look at your web logs. For this to work, your ISP's web logs need to be able to tell you the referring URL's for the sales you generated. Then, though a little more manually intensive, you can calculate your cost per sale on sites like ESPN by matching the number of sales from your site with the specific unique URL's. TIP: to start, just ad a "partner code" unique identifier, like ESPN, to every ad you put on ESPN.com.

If you have other solutions not mentioned above, please share them!!

BACKGROUND: My company calculates avg. cost per sale for our clients for free with their campaigns on Google, Yahoo and Microsoft's MSN by using the "scripts" placed on all the checkout screens. Just recently, due to pressure from big advertisers, sites like ESPN, and a few other major web properties, stopped using Google's adsense product because advertisers did not know where their ads were showing up -- maybe next to a few innaproprieste sites! As a result, ESPN now uses a different ad display company. Now, any biz can target their ads to appear on ESPN, and still pay on a pay-per-click basis; however, ESPN does not offer the free conversion tracking capabilities like Yahoo and Google offer.

Friday, February 23, 2007

New Ad Platforms to Try In 2007

Give these new ad platforms a try in 2007:

www.Turn.com
www.adify.com
www.admob.com (mobile ad network)
www.spotrunner.com (TV)

Test and learn,

j.Bruce
www.salesdrivenmarketing.com

Wednesday, February 14, 2007

Google Radio and Competitors

Why Can't Google Sell Premium Radio Ads?
by Erik Sass, Wednesday, Feb 14, 2007 8:30 AM ET

WITH THE DEPARTURE OF DMARC founders Chad and Ryan Steelberg last week, industry observers are buzzing about Google's ongoing attempt to penetrate the radio market with low-cost online ad sales and placement. One of the key issues is the quality of radio inventory Google can offer through dMarc's automated interface. Here, Google finds itself in a Catch-22.
Before it was acquired by Google, dMarc trafficked in remnant inventory--the "leftover" air time that stations sell at low prices at the last minute. To make dMarc's system attractive to advertisers, Google has to demonstrate that it's also effective in selling premium inventory. But they face a couple of major obstacles.

Foremost, Google doesn't allow advertisers to choose specific stations where their ads will run because they're selling remnant inventory. Station managers fear that identifying their station as the source of remnant inventory would undercut the price of their premium inventory. In short, advertisers might just wait until the station is desperate before buying.
According to the marketing materials Google sends to participating stations: "To protect your local [rate] card, we do not allow our advertisers to buy/target specific stations." This, in itself, is sufficient to deter most existing radio advertisers.

Conversely, station managers have their own reasons to be leery about turning over inventory--premium or remnant--to Google. dMarc's digital system begins selling remnant inventory automatically at the end of every business day, with no oversight from station employees. Managers don't know which ads will be broadcast the next morning. Although Google offers the option of reviewing and rejecting ads before they air, the "just-in-time" nature of the service makes this difficult in practice.

In addition, it costs about $75,000 to install dMarc. That's a pricey system, even for big radio stations that sell remnant inventory. Although Google offers a barter deal, installing the system for free in exchange for a certain quantity of remnant inventory, this involves charging a 50% commission on remnant ad sales over a period of several years--effectively removing any near-term incentive for station managers to participate.

Finally, radio stations in desirable markets employ sales teams to move their premium inventory, and station managers chafe at the idea of paying Google's commission on top of salaries (or agency fees). Sales executives also fear that cooperating with Google will undercut their sales teams.

In recent months, Google was reported to be negotiating with CBS Radio to buy more than $1 billion of premium inventory. But to offset the commission costs and the risk of sales "cannibalization," big radio groups like CBS will probably charge top dollar for their premium inventory.

Such an investment would constitute a risky gamble for Google--especially to fuel a system that hasn't yet attracted significant advertiser interest.

Investors have maintained unrelenting pressure on Google to keep share prices up, and they may find the high price tag of a big inventory deal excessive. Plus, Google's inability to offer premium inventory, in turn, means that demand will stay sluggish. Constrained by risk-averse shareholders, it will be difficult for Google to break out of this cycle of low demand and insufficient supply.

Adding to Google's woes, dMarc faces competition from other automated radio sales firms, like SoftWave Media Exchange. SoftWave allows marketers to choose stations and schedule their campaigns well ahead of time, while station managers can set prices and review campaigns before they run.

These capabilities have helped SoftWave build a network of stations in the top 50 markets that reach about 11 million listeners on an average quarter-hour basis, compared to just 947,000 for dMarc. Most importantly, station managers are comfortable selling premium inventory through SoftWave, with about 70% of its traffic falling in this category.

Meanwhile, Bid4Spots, a Los Angeles-based digital clearinghouse, employs a reverse-auction model in which multiple stations compete to sell their remnant inventory to a single buyer during weekly online auctions. Because stations have nothing to lose when unloading unwanted inventory, they drive prices down during the auctions, benefiting the buyers. More than 2,300 stations around the country are participating in the Bid4Spots system.

Monday, February 12, 2007

Second City Stats

State of the Virtual World – Key Metrics, January 2007
Friday, February 9th, 2007 at 5:50 AM PST by: Zee Linden

In December I posted a number of key metrics for the first time. As part of our effort to drive toward complete transparency and openness, Logan Linden and I have upgraded some of our internal systems to create the Excel Workbook posted here. (If you need a viewer, click here, check back later for a PDF). Please consider this a preliminary version of the report. With feedback from the community we will continue to improve the data, the explanations and – most importantly, continue to add more data over time. As you can imagine we have more data to analyze than we have time and people - so thanks for your patience as we roll out more and more of the statistics you are asking for.

The Size of the Virtual World - January was another record month for Second Life in many ways. The size of the world, as measured by the virtual square kilometers of simulation, expanded 23% over December to 361 square kilometers. In fact, continued brisk sales have left us with roughly a two-week backlog for new Island order delivery. (Thanks to everyone for their patience on this.) The backlog has also affected our ability to expand the mainland sufficiently to meet. demand. As a result, the average price for mainland auctions is up higher than I think anyone would like to see it. Over the next several weeks, we hope to rectify both situations with a greater volume of server delivery from our supplier. With a recent release of more than 40 regions of mainland, the addition of a new mainland continent & and doubling of the daily release of new mainland regions I would hope that we will satisfy the seemingly insatiable demand and stabilize the mainland auction market to a more sustainable price.
The Virtual Economy - The virtual economy, as measured by LindeX volume and user to user transactions, grew faster than the land mass in January. User to user transactions in-world increased 37% to 6.1 billion consistent with the 47% increase in user hours from December. On the other hand, Linden Lab sold fewer L$ than we sold in December - primarily driven by January having 25% fewer weekend days than December causing the supply of L$ to increase at a slower rate of 18%.

What is the Linden Dollar? Technically, the L$ is a limited license right to participate in and use certain features of Second Life. The value of the L$, as reflected on the exchange, is based on the demand for a limited supply of L$. “Sources” – such as stipends to premium users and direct L$ sales on the exchange - are the ways in which Linden Lab put L$ into the virtual economy. “Sinks” – such as the L$ fee that we charge to post classified ads or upload images – represent ways that the L$ are taken out of circulation.

How does the LindeX work? The LindeX is the Linden Dollar exchange market. Linden Lab operates the exchange as a peer-to-peer trading platform in which users can buy and sell Linden Dollars from and to other residents. Just like in a real economy, there are consumers (the buyers of L$) and producers (the sellers of L$). The ratio of buyers to sellers is approximately 10 to 1. The number os sellers is consistent with the number of in-world business owners with “Positive Monthly Linden Flow“. In January, buyers and sellers traded just under USD $5 million– up more than 29% from December. That’s an average daily volume of USD $158,000. To be sure, this is still a very tiny economy relative to countries, states, cities or even towns in the real world, but it’s probably not hyperbole to surmise that it’s the fastest growing economy on the planet (up more than 9x in the last 12 months!). A handful of the largest buyers on the exchange are reselling them in local currencies, languages & payments systems - such as the Dutch Exchange here. Third party exchanges agree to use the Exchange Risk API to to identify sellers who’s historical behavior doesn’t match the amount of Linden Dollars they are selling.

How is the exchange rate determined? In the face of this growth, the floating exchange rate continued to hold steady throughout the month as Lawrence Linden has done an amazing job managing the exchange rate by managing the supply of L$ in-world balancing the “sources” and “sinks” of L$ in world. Our strategy is to keep the L$ sinks to Linden Lab high enough such that the only lever we need to balance supply and demand on the LindeX is to expand the supply by selling new L$ - something that we can do in real time in response to the vagaries of the market.
Resident Population vs Unique Users vs Log Ins vs Active Users. With this report, I’ve released some more detailed population information including a comparison of total resident population to unique residents who have logged in - both grew approximately 38% over December. Residents with Premium Accounts increased 16% to more than 57.7 thousand. There has been a lot of controversy regarding the Total Residents number on SecondLife.com (A Resident is a uniquely named avatar with the right to log into Second Life, trade Linden Dollars and visit the Community pages). Unique users represent approximately 63% of Total Residents.

Approximately 10% of unique users have logged in for 40 hours or more. Committed usage at this stage of Second Life’s growth requires a great deal of effort. Mitch Kapor has said that giving away Second Life for free to everyone is comparable to if we were giving out Apple ][+ computers for free to everyone in 1980. Clearly not everyone is going to find relevance, and be able to build on a technology at this early stage. Interestingly, it appears that blogging has a similar ratio of committed users to registrations as indicated by Live Journal.
Usage by country and gender. The top five countries are the US, France, Germany, the UK, and the Netherlands. I’ve also included the percentage breakdown of unique residents by self-reported age and self-reported gender.

Thanks again. That wraps up the update for January. I am committed to continually improving the data that we provide about the metrics within the virtual world and I look forward to reading your critical and constructive feedback and questions each month. I’ll try to incorporate more of them into the metrics and this analysis that I’ll publish each month.

Friday, February 09, 2007

Radio Ads By Google's dMarc

While Google started using dMarc to test radio ad sales last year, the initiative faced some obstacles. First, dMarc is affiliated with only around 700 stations--too few to provide radio ad inventory on the scale needed to achieve high revenue targets. Second, before the Google purchase dMarc mostly trafficked in remaindered ad inventory--unsold air time that is low-value by definition. Google has struggled to ramp up both the quantity and quality of inventory available through dMarc, with limited success. Although Google is rumored to be in talks with CBS Radio to acquire over $1 billion in premium ad inventory, so far nothing has come of the reported discussions.

Despite the rocky year with dMarc, Google remains intent on penetrating the offline or "traditional media" ad business. Over the last two years, it has experimented with selling newspaper and magazine ads--but these have been limited beta forays, and Google is circumspect about their results. Google's Vice President of Ad Sales, Tim Armstrong, has also indicated the company is interested in TV ad sales. Significantly, dMarc's digital ad placement system can also be used in TV.