Don’t Let Your Google PPC Campaigns Get Frozen Out This Christmas

by Paul Duffield

Christmas means money to online advertisers, and in the lead-up to Christmas hundreds of thousands of small businesses do something they haven’t done all year – play in the Google PPC auction.

Attracted to a seasonal marketplace that promises year-high consumer spend, these smaller players come in their masses and combine to push up CPCs, meaning you now need to spend more for your ads to achieve to same position.

Take your eye off the ball and you might find that your ads have been swamped by these ‘Six-Weekers’ (so-called because they only advertise over the six weeks of Christmas and New Year) and you are now so far down the listings that you’re losing significant traffic and sales.

Another thing to keep your eye on this Christmas is budget…

With huge spikes in Google traffic over Christmas and New Year – and basket values at their highest – you really don’t want to be maxing out on your daily budget.

In the same way that it would be madness for a shop on Oxford Street to close its doors at 3pm with hordes of people wanting to get in and spend their money, it would be equally crazy for you to run out of budget (and therefore stop showing ads) at a time when masses of internet users are searching for the products and services that you sell.

So make an exception at Christmas and set your daily limit at a level that’s artificially high – that way you’ll never miss a single bumper sized sale.


Posted: December 8, 2009 @ 4:38 pm

Yahoo to drop Paid Inclusion

by Stuart Morrison

Yahoo have given notice that they intend to drop their Paid Inclusion program, now known as Search Submit Pro. As of 31 December 2009 this, always controversial, option will cease to be available.

Paid inclusion has always been a controversial issue. The ability to pay for a listing in the natural search results has, for some, reduced the value of the Yahoo search engine. To a great extent this opinion has stuck. Despite Yahoo affirming that Paid Inclusion only guaranteed a listing, as opposed to a better rank, many in the SEO industry remained unimpressed.

The effect of this move will be significant. For Yahoo, Paid Inclusion was not a big earner, being worth around $100M a year. However a significant number of advertisers and agencies will be affected by the change and will need to adapt their strategies accordingly.

The SEO industry will welcome this move. It is widely considered that Yahoo produces highly relevant search results, often better than those returned by the other main search engines. Absorb’s brief in-house investigation using the BlindSearch tool backed this belief. However the paid nature of some listings has always cast doubt over these results. By freeing itself from the controversy of Paid Inclusion Yahoo will remove this doubt. Whether that leads to greater market-share remains to be seen.


Posted: October 19, 2009 @ 4:45 am
Get Adobe Flash playerPlugin by wpburn.com wordpress themes