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Tag Archives: online
Microsoft’s Bing Down for 45 Minutes
Microsoft's Bing.com search engine is facing a mini PR crisis after going down for 45 minutes last night starting at 7:10 PST. Microsoft used its Twitter account and blog to keep Bing visitors and fans informed: From Twitter : Continue reading
Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click
Tagged configuration change, detection, incomplete results, nbsp, online, online-services, outage, pacific-time, queries, satya-nadella, search, search-engine, time users
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Cyber Monday Sales Reach $887 Million
Cyber Monday sales were up 5 percent compared to a year ago reaching $887 million and matching the heaviest online spending day on record, December 9, 2008, according to the latest report from comScore. "We've seen an encouraging start to the online holiday shopping season and it would appear that retailers' aggressive and early marketing efforts have so far succeeded in persuading consumers to open their wallets online," said comScore chairman Gian Fulgoni. "Thanksgiving Day and Black Friday were atypically strong online sales days this year, and Cyber Monday has continued that trend by outperforming the season-to-date average growth rate and matching last year's record day of $887 million in online spending. Now, it will be important to see if spending continues to grow over the balance of the season -- because the heaviest spending day online typically occurs in mid-December." Cyber Monday's 5 percent growth in sales versus a year ago was driven mainly by an increase in the number of buyers, reflecting consumers' increasing comfort with online buying, while average spending per buyer was down slightly. Specifically, the number of online buyers grew 6 percent to 8.7 million, while the average dollars spent per buyer declined 2 percent to $102.19. On Cyber Monday this year, more than half of dollars spent online at U.S. websites took place from work computers (52.7%), an increase of 2.3 percentage points from last year. Buying from home made up the majority of the remaining share (41.6%) while buying from international locations accounted for 5.8 percent. "comScore data have shown that Cyber Monday online sales have always been driven by considerable buying activity from work locations," said Mr. Fulgoni. "That pattern hasn't changed. After returning from the long Thanksgiving weekend with a lot of holiday shopping still ahead of them, many consumers tend to continue their holiday shopping from work. Whether to take advantage of the extensive Cyber Monday deals offered by retailers or to buy gifts away from the prying eyes of family members, this day has become an annual ritual for America's online holiday shoppers." Continue reading
Minds of the Media Gather to Discuss Future of News
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) is hosting a 2-day workshop on "Journalism and the Internet Age" today and tomorrow. Featured at the event are a number of high profile media executives and gurus. The cast ranges from News Corp. CEO Rupert Murdoch to Huffington Post co-founder Arianna Huffington. The event appears to be designed to present all possible angles regarding the state of the news industry and the web's role, as well as the government's role, if any. Danny Sullivan at Search Engine Land, who is appearing on a panel at the event himself, has a liveblog running, covering much of the discussion (and there is a lot of it), providing a good source for actual quotes. The newspaper industry is obviously struggling right now, and a common theme discussed throughout the workshop has been that the effects of the recession may be skewing the long term view. In other words, maybe it's not really as bad as it seems right now. That said, publications clearly have to adapt to the online lifestyles of readers, whether that means the death of print newspapers or not. Let's look at comments made by Murdoch and Huffington, because they basically represent opposing sides of the spectrum on a number of sub-topics to this discussion (Although to be fair, it's probably not as black and white as that. There is certainly a lot of gray area in the discussion, which has been going on for years). Murdoch says three things have to happen: media companies have to deliver the news consumers want in ways that meet their lifestyles and must innovate like never before, they have to convince consumers that good journalism isn't free, and the government needs to "clear obstacles." Murdoch goes on to discuss other related topics, including that of fair use. He rips aggregators, calling aggregation "wholesale theft." Huffington , whose site is largely known for aggregating content, says Murdoch is confusing aggregation with theft, but says they link to the Wall Street Journal every day and never get a complaint. She says that if it was wrong, they'd have heard about it. She also says aggregation is part of the web's "DNA" and that Murdoch plays both sides, noting that some of Murdoch's own sites also aggregate or "steal" content. Huffington also discusses things like social and collaborative news, and the concept of citizen journalism. There are many other speakers and opinions being voiced at the FTC's event, and Sullivan's liveblog captures a great deal of them. It will be interesting to see if the event leads to any significant progress in the ongoing discussion. On a related note, Google has posted about the ways it is focusing on helping news publishers gain traffic, engage audiences, and increase revenue. Related Articles: > Continue reading
Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click
Tagged angles, internet age, media executives, news corp, online, rupert murdoch, search, search-engine, words
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Google Changes How it Handles Paid Content
Google has made a change to the way it treats its "first click free" option for publishers. The option was designed for legitimate publishers to get around Google's cloaking policies, which discourage the showing of one web page to a crawler while the user sees something different. With the policy, Google users have been able to access one article from a publication that has a pay wall in place, but are then unable to access other content via links on the site without registering. However, users have been able to get around this in the past, simply by searching for the desired piece of content and starting over from Google. Now Google has implemented a change that will only allow users to view five pages of content from such a source in a 24 hour period. In a post today on the Google News Blog, Senior Business Product Manager Josh Cohen explains , "If you're a Google user, this means that you may start to see a registration page after you've clicked through to more than five articles on the website of a publisher using First Click Free in a day. We think this approach still protects the typical user from cloaking, while allowing publishers to focus on potential subscribers who are accessing a lot of their content on a regular basis." "In addition to First Click Free, we offer another solution: We will crawl, index and treat as 'free' any preview pages - generally the headline and first few paragraphs of a story - that they make available to us," Cohen notes. "This means that our crawlers see the exact same content that will be shown for free to a user. Because the preview page is identical for both users and the crawlers, it's not cloaking." Google would label stories like this as "subscription" when indexed in Google News. According to Cohen, they would rank based on the same criteria as other sites (paid or free). He points out that paid content may not rank as well, simply because of the popularity of the content. Less people are likely to link to content that requires a subscription to read, particularly if there is a similar piece of content that is available for free. Google has always favored links and it would be not different in this case. Related Articles: > Continue reading
Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click
Tagged blocking-news, Business, business product, crawler, crawlers, josh cohen, online, paragraphs, paywalls, product-manager, street, user
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Is Retargeting the Most Under-Utilized Marketing Strategy?
Advertise.com and the Search Engine Marketing Professional Organization (SEMPO) have shared some interesting findings from a survey about online ad technology. The two organizations found that there is a lot of untapped opportunity for retargeting in online advertising. Retargeting is basically when you market your product from a different angle or to a different market altogether. There's a good explanation of it at answers.com: Marketing efforts to spur demand for a product that is experiencing declining demand by marketing it as though it were a new product. Almost half (46.3%) of respondents said that remarketing (also known as retargeting) is the online marketing technology they feel is most under-utilized. Other technologies respondents feel are under utilized include: - Geo-targeting – 18.3% - Traffic source optimization – 15.9% - Keyword targeting – 13.4% - Other – 3.7% - Category targeting – 2.4% 69.5% said they have never utilized display remarketing in their online advertising. Only 30.5% said that they had or do. Out of the ones that have, most (53.1%) said that display remarketing made their advertising more impactful. "As online advertising continues to grow, newer technologies are recognized and evaluated against the more traditional approaches," said Daniel Yomtobian, founder and CEO of Advertise.com. "We're interested in taking a closer look at why Remarketing is underutilized. We know that retargeting can boost ad response up to 400 percent so it’s definitely something online advertisers need to stay informed about and use more strategically." "As the industry matures, SEMPO recognizes that new technologies and tactics, such as retargeting, will become increasingly important to the search marketer," said SEMPO President Sara Holoubek. "We look forward to a fruitful industry discussion on how search and Remarketing can best be married for maximum ROI." 81.7% of participants said they implement local search advertising campaigns and that the following forms of online advertising provide the best ROI: - Search – 70.7% - Cost-per-action (CPA) – 14.6% - Email – 6.1% - Social – 3.7% - Other – 2.4% 52.4% utilize CPA to drive sales leads, 13.4% use it to drive traffic, 6.1% use it to drive brand awareness, and 26.8% do not utilize CPA at all. (1.2% said "other"). Related Articles: > Continue reading
Posted in Business, Email Marketing, Online Advertising, Pay-Per-Click
Tagged amp, heineken-study, online, Online Advertising, search, search engine marketing, sempo, technologies
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