Archive for the ‘Search Engine Marketing (SEM)’ Category

Google shows who links to non existing pages

Saturday, October 18th, 2008

Google Webmaster Tools unleashes information about who links to pages of your site that do not exist.

With this information you now have the power to create re-directs to altered URL’s or to block sites that are spamming your website. This is yet another step Google takes to get the internet tidy and clean, giving you information you would probably never get unless you are keeping up with your 404 logs.

With this information I was able to correct some broken links that were introduced during the migration of my blog from dasBlog to WordPress and the upgrade from older versions of WordPress to the latest version.

Google Webmaster Tools 404 Not found 1

Google Webmaster Tools 404 Not found 1

Google Webmaster Tools 404 Not found 2

Google Webmaster Tools 404 Not found 2

 Follow me, visit Google Webmaster Tools and get these problems solved !

Filter out Parked Domain Sites from Google AdWords

Monday, March 10th, 2008

In my post of October 12 last year I wrote about the inability of being able to exclude Parked Domain Sites from your Google AdWords Content Network campaigns. There is some good news on this issue; the new Site and Category Exclusion tool gives you the ability to get rid of these sites.

Google AdWords Site and Category Exclusion tool

Tagging Google AdWords campaigns for analysis in WebTrends

Monday, November 19th, 2007

We get a lot of questions about WebTrends tagging instructions for Google AdWords campaigns or Search Engine Advertising campaigns in general. Most of you may know about the existance of the WT.srch=1 parameter but there is more to think about.

If you add the WT.srch=1 parameter a destination URL will look like: www.omtrends.com/?WT.srch=1 This Query Parameter only tells WebTrends that the visitor came from a Paid Search advertisement, nothing less and nothing more.

To determine which Paid Search program was used (ie. Google AdWords, MSN AdCenter, Yahoo Search Marketing), WebTrends will capture the Referral information also. So if this visitor came from an AdWords campaign, WebTrends will see a Referring URL like http://www.google.com/search?sourceid=navclient&ie=UTF-8&rlz=1T4EGLC_enNL238NL238&q=visual+workstation+hbx and translate this into “Google AdWords”, with help of the file keywords.ini:

[Google AdWords]
ID1=.google.com
KeywordIndicator1=q= 

As you can see WebTrends will capture the q= parameter to retrieve the keywords. These are the keywords the visitor used in Google.

So for instance, if I search for “visual workstation hbx”, I might see iMETRIX in one of the Google AdWords advertisements. WebTrends will pick up the Search Phrase “visual workstation hbx” and report this in the out-of-the-box report Most Recent Search Phrases (Paid). Alrighty! you think?

Not really :) WebTrends reports on the Search Phrase the visitor searched on, not the phrase you are advertising on. This means that you cannot match your WebTrends reports with your Google AdWords reports. Let’s say you are advertising Broad Match on the word “HBX” and the user searches at www.google.com on “visual workstation hbx”. Google AdWords will report a clickthrough on the word “HBX” while WebTrends reports “visual workstation hbx”. There is no way to match both reports and if you didn’t know about this - you should have had a lot of discussion with your Google AdWords Professional already.

So now we know that  your reports probably aren’t displaying the data you think they are displaying. Let’s fix it rightaway!

We are going to use a Visitor History parameter. WebTrends has 4 available for you; WT.seg_1, WT.seg_2, WT.seg_3 and WT.seg_4. These Visitor History are meant to be used for segmentation purposes but actually can be used for anything you would like to store. A great advantage of using a Visitor History parameter is that it will store the information in a database so that if a visitor visits your site on day 5 of the month through Google AdWords and converts 20 days later, WebTrends will be able to report on this. If you’d use a regular parameter, ie. kw=<keywords>, WebTrends will only be able to report on behavior of the specific visit that has this information.

Ok I assume you are not using the WT.seg_1 yet, so we will add it to your URL. The value will be the keyword that you are advertising on at Google AdWords, resulting in this Query Parameter to be used in your landing page URL: WT.seg_1={keyword:nil} Google AdWords will automatically replace {keyword:nil} with the keyword you were advertising on. In this example it will eventually look like: WT.seg_1=HBX. More information about Google AdWords Keyword Insertion can be found here.

Google AdWords keyword insertion

As you can see we also use the WT.mc_id campaign parameter. We add this to see which overall campaign performance in our campaign overview report. The gclid parameter is being added by Google AdWords because of the Google Analytics auto-tagging of AdWords destination URLs.

Eventually, when you would click on the Google AdWords adversitement, the destination URL will look like:Google AdWords Destination URL
http://www.imetrix.nl/producten/Visual_Sciences.stm?WT.srch=1&WT.mc_id=PRHB&WT.seg_1=hbx&gclid=CKemrfi56I8CFQuuQwod6hU4Dw

Google AdWords Parked Domain Ads

Friday, October 12th, 2007

Do you remember the last time you made a typo when you wanted to visit your favorite site? You probably entered a site that was filled with advertisements and auto-installers of the Google Toolbar.

Google actually supports these irritating sites as they probably generate a lot of advertising Dollars for Google. There is no specific content found on the site so what’s your next step? Right, you either click one of the links or leave the site by typing the correct url. The term Google uses for these sites is “Parked domain sites“. The advertisements are called “Domain Ads“ and will also appear in your Google AdWords reports as “Domain Ads“. Two example sites:

htGoogle Domain Park site exampletp://wwwyourtube.com/
http://www.madonnashop.nl

Google Domain Park site example 

 Interestingly, when creating a Placement report in Google AdWords, the URL’s of these Domain Ads  are hidden. They simply show as “Domain Ads” in your report. I think Google does this as these Domain Ads or  are highly lucrative and they know advertisers will add negative sites to their campaign or even stop advertising on the Content Network when they notice their Dollars are being spent on these sites.

Google AdWords Domain Ads

In this screenshot you see that Domain Ads have a very high CTR.

As far as I know it’s not possible to create a site exclusion to exclude Domain Ads. Stop fooling us, Google!

Visual Sciences, HBX, Certificate in Digital Marketing and Google AdWords

Monday, October 8th, 2007

HBX Analytics 

I have had some busy weeks lately. Last week Fulton Yancy from Visual Sciences visited our office for a HBX Analytics training. Fulton Yancey has previously worked for WebTrends and since we work with the WebTrends software extensively he has been able to give us a good understanding of the differences between HBX Analytics and WebTrends. It actually made me forgive the fact that HBX Analytics is an ASP based service instead of hosted-yourself.

Visual Sciences 

This week my colleague and I flew to London to have a Visual Sciences training for Visual Site at the EMEA Partner Certification days. This training was our first real handson experience with the software where we could actually work with it. Our first experience was at the partner day in Hoofddorp last May. We absolutely love the products, it is such an high level analytics tool you just have to have it when you see it. After the 3 days of Visual Sciences brainwashing :) After the training we did an examination which was quite demanding actually.

Google AdWords

Dave Verzijl - Google AdWords Qualified IndividualMy Qualified Google AdWords Professional certification is about to expire in November. That means that I will have to re-examinate soon. Actually since iMETRIX saw the light two weeks ago this couldn’t be a better moment to browse through all new features that have been added to Google AdWords over the past two years. Some things that come in mind are advertising on Google Maps, mobile ads, the AdWords editor software, Website Optimizer, Google Analytics etc. etc. I can imagine a lot of people who are not using Google AdWords every day will get lost somewhere and won’t be able to get all out of the system.

Certificate in Digital Marketing

In one of my previous posts I mentioned the digital marketing plan I had to make as my first assigment for the IDM Certificate in Digital Marketing certification. I have been working hard for it but managed to output a digital marketing plan on time and actually I was happy with the result. Last Friday I received my mark and I’m happy to tell that I passed this first assigment. YAY!!! :)

Ad placement in the Google Content Network

Monday, September 3rd, 2007

Google recently added a nice new feature to the Google AdWords Reports section. You now are able to see which sites displayed your Content Network ads.

In the past it wasn’t easy to see where your ads were being displayed. But with this addition to the Reports section you exactly see which sites displayed your AdWords advertisements and what your results were for each site. This way you can easily remove sites from your campaign that eat your money and spend it elsewere.

AdWords Ad Placements in the Content Network

Search Engine Optimation - An hour a day

Wednesday, July 11th, 2007

Recently I bought the book Search Engine Optimization : An Hour A Day. This book is written by Gradiva Couzin (who calls herself the left brain) and Jennifer Grappone (who calls herself the right brain). I assumed this book would give me new insights to my already broad knowledge of search engine optimization.

Search Engine Optimization - one hour a dayWith a flight trip of 14 hours to and from Bangkok - Thailand in front that should be enough of time to spam my both brain sides with a lot of new information about SEO. Unfortunately my assumption wasn’t justified. The book seems to be written for people who are completely new to search marketing. It takes your hand and uses a lot of words to explain relatively simple things. After some pages I decided to skip everything I didn’t already know and actually I was at the end before I knew.

Unfortunately I just can not reccommend this book unless you are really new to the world of left and right brains ;) If so, buy the book at Amazon: Search Engine Optimization: An Hour a Day

Use Robots.txt to publish your SiteMap to the world

Thursday, April 12th, 2007

You can now point spiders to your sitemap from your robots.txt.

Just add this to the robots.txt:

Sitemap: <sitemap_location>

See http://www.sitemaps.org/protocol.html#submit_robots

SEO: Better results without frames

Friday, March 9th, 2007

Last year one of our clients came to us asking us how to get higher positions in search engines. We advised to rebuild the initially in 2002 built site from a frame to frameless site. The results are promising.

 

Both absolute and relative number of visits through Search Engines are still on the rise. The chart below shows you number of avarage daily visits on the site and through search.

 


Visits Search Search%Visits Change%Prev
June 432 71 16,49%  
July 372 55 14,90% 90,39%
August 389 65 16,79% 112,69%
September 363 63 17,38% 103,51%
October 385 92 24,00% 138,10%
November 423 114 26,92% 112,16%
December 449 108 24,06% 89,37%
January 597 159 26,60% 110,57%
February 590 171 28,95% 108,81%
March 619 192 31,06% 107,31%
Google Google%Visits Google%Share
June 55 12,71% 77,13%
July 46 12,48% 83,77%
August 56 14,47% 86,17%
September 53 14,59% 83,95%
October 81 21,01% 87,53%
November 105 24,83% 92,22%
December 98 21,75% 90,39%
January 145 24,21% 91,01%
February 158 26,73% 92,35%
March 179 28,85% 92,87%

 

The number of visits through Google has already tripled. Note that December is a bad search month. This is the only month in which traffic from search has declined.

 

Besides this, Google’s PageRank has increased from 3 to 5. This means that in general results from this site have better positions than it used to have.

The Other Search

Thursday, March 8th, 2007

WebSideStory has published an interesting article about “The Other Search” - which actually means your onsite search. It gives the term Search Marketing a new dimension. In my opinion tis article is literature for every online advisor. 

Introduction:

Once Internet search has brought a customer to your site, his next step will be using your site search box or navigation on your site. Are you watching what happens and making the most of his visit? Or does your interest in your customer end when he reaches your site?

Customer activity that begins on an Internet search engine doesn’t end at the entry point to your site. You should sustain attention to visitors until they have either completed their objectives or abandoned them. Site search and the information it offers can help you determine how to surpass customer expectations and also reduce the number of frustrated visitors. The site search box itself is a tremendous gift to you from your customers: they are telling you exactly what they want, in their own words. They are inviting you to make your best offer. But in order to hear them, you need a plan for monitoring and managing the seeker experience.

WebSideStory - The Other Search.pdf (421.31 KB)