Search engine marketing campaigns make a local call.In today's market, online visibility is crucial for many businesses. In the call center industry alone, more than 675,000 Internet searches were executed for terms related to call centers and help desks in February 2004. Many companies rely on Internet traffic Internet traffic is the flow of data around the Internet. It includes web traffic, which is the amount of that data that is related to the World Wide Web, along with the traffic from other major uses of the Internet, such as electronic mail and peer-to-peer networks. for lead generation, e-commerce or branding, making top search engine rankings Search engine ranking is a measure of the online promotional success of a web page or website. Most search engines default to ten organic or natural listings per page. Many include sponsor links before or to the right of the results. critical. However, knowing the best way to get in front of your target audience is far from easy. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] For example, if a call center is looking to generate Web site traffic by identifying which keywords it thinks are most appropriate, those call centers may be missing out on significant potential revenue. A call center might realize that it is important to make sure it is included when a potential customer searches for "call center," but what about keeping tabs on important key words like "contact center," "call monitoring A call center feature that lets managers listen in on agents' calls in order to improve agent performance. Also called "agent monitoring" and "call logging," it can be done in real time with or without the agent's knowledge, or calls can be recorded for later retrieval. " or "contact center solution"? Modern search engine marketing (SEM) has come a long way from the days when the primary method for improving online presence was "tweaking tweaking Vox populi Fine-tuning to produce optimal results " a page title and other meta-tags, invisible information included in a Web page. Today's SEM uses both natural and paid optimization techniques and strategies to best take advantage of search potential. Natural search optimization Search optimization may refer to:
The most dramatic rise in search has been driven by the recent popularity of paid search; specifically, pay-per-click, a situation in which a company pays a fee per keyword for each time their search result is clicked. Most paid engines, such as Overture, have instituted a bidding process, wherein companies wanting the same search term compete by paying a higher price than their competition for a selected word or phrase. The company's listings are then displayed in the order of how much they bid for that position. Google, however, factors in not only cost-per-click, but click-through rate The number of times a link on a Web page is clicked compared to the number of times it is displayed. Advertising royalties paid to Web sites are often based on click-through rate (CTR), and the amount paid per click-through is considerably higher than the cost of an ad that is displayed , rewarding those ads that are popular with searchers. Executing a paid placement campaign in Overture and Google alone will position your Web site in front of approximately 95 percent of the Internet search population. Search has been proven to have both short-term and long-term ROI (Return On Investment) The monetary benefits derived from having spent money on developing or revising a system. In the IT world, there are more ways to compute ROI than Carter has liver pills (and for those of you who never heard of that expression, it means a lot). benefits. In the short term, companies with sites desiring immediate visitor action--such as those companies selling products online, those capturing e-mail addresses See Internet address. e-mail address - electronic mail address or companies that provide downloadable information--can realize the direct benefits utilizing search to attract visitors. Over a more extended period, companies providing information about products or services are able to leverage search to drive Web traffic and educate consumers prior to the actual purchase. The advance and acceptance of search as an interactive marketing option has prompted a number of companies to develop tools and metrics to measure and analyze search performance. These tools and processes, called search analytics, are based upon marketing parameters such as reach, frequency and impressions, and have been used for years in the direct marketing industry. Marketers are using these factors to improve their campaigns by changing their keyword selections for natural or paid placement, adjusting content and testing landing pages and ad copy to monitor ROI indicators against search term visitor information. Most marketers understand the value of search engine marketing and its significance as a direct marketing medium, but few know if they are receiving a strong return on their search investment. Success metrics are gauged on each individual client and that client's goals and objectives. Success for a business-to-business site will vary widely from success for a consumer site; therefore, it is critical to understand what constitutes a success for your search campaign. In the beginning of search measurement, success was defined based on the number of top "page 1" rankings that could be achieved. However, the industry has evolved to the point where measurement is based not only on ranking, but click-through rate and ultimately conversion rate, which is defined as having your customers convert on a desired action you wish them to take. For those clients who use search as a branding avenue, measurements that encompass reach, impressions and stickiness are important in determining campaign success. The search industry continues to evolve and meet the needs of the marketing professionals that most utilize the medium. Most recently, several engines have begun experimenting with localized search results, guaranteeing with localized search results, guaranteeing that when site visitors search for "Philadelphia call centers," for example, the results are on topic for both the natural and paid results. Some search engine marketing consultants are already experimenting with demographic targeting tools such as geolocation software In computing, geolocation software is used to deduce the geolocation (geographic location) of the other party, for example on the Internet. One simple approach to geolocation is looking at the IP address and determining what country, organization, or user it has been assigned to, , which can match a user's inbound IP address against a worldwide IP database down to the ZIP code zip code System of postal-zone codes (zip stands for “zone improvement plan”) introduced in the U.S. in 1963 to improve mail delivery and exploit electronic reading and sorting capabilities. level, then match against other demographic data to determine factors such as household income. In fact, according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. a recent study by the Kelsey Group, as much as 60 percent of all search engine traffic is estimated to be either implicitly or explicitly local in nature. The result is an immense impact on the local advertising and marketing market. The Yellow Pages were once considered the single most important source for local businesses, while direct mail and print advertisements in local newspapers served as secondary resources for anyone looking for Looking for In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with. a local business or service. However, local search has continued to grow steadily in recent years and is becoming one of the hottest trends in online search. The continuing trends of localized search provide businesses with another channel for their marketing efforts, which to this point has been vastly underutilized, especially for the local small and mid-sized businesses. According to the same Kelsey Group study, there are roughly 250,000 paid search advertisers globally, but more than 10 million small and mid-sized businesses in the U.S. alone. Clearly, the majority of those businesses that could achieve the greatest return from localized search are simply not using this method to reach potential clients. Search, arguably ar·gu·a·ble adj. 1. Open to argument: an arguable question, still unresolved. 2. That can be argued plausibly; defensible in argument: three arguable points of law. the oldest online marketing method, has finally found "Finally Found" was the debut single from the Honeyz. This was their most successful single in the UK and worldwide, securing a number 4 position in the UK singles chart and achieved platinum status in Australia [1] Tracklisting # Title Length its place in modern interactive advertising. The future for search as a leading method in increasing Web visibility looks bright and promising. If you are interested in purchasing reprints of this article (in either print or HTML HTML in full HyperText Markup Language Markup language derived from SGML that is used to prepare hypertext documents. Relatively easy for nonprogrammers to master, HTML is the language used for documents on the World Wide Web. format), please visit Reprint reprint An individually bound copy of an article in a journal or science communication Management Services online at www.reprintbuyer.com or contact a representative via e-mail at reprints@tmcnet.com or by phone at 800-290-5460. For information and subscriptions, visit www.TMCnet.com or call 203-852-6800. BY Richard Hagerty IMPAQT Richard Hagerty currently serves as CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board. of IMPAQT (www.impaqt.com), a search engine marketing firm. He has more than 25 years of information technology industry experience, including the founding of seven separate technology-based consulting companies. |
|
||||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion