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	<title>WebProNews &#187; David Berkowitz</title>
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	<link>http://www.webpronews.com</link>
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		<title>Experts Discuss Facebook Advertising</title>
		<link>http://www.webpronews.com/experts-discuss-facebook-advertising-2008-01</link>
		<comments>http://www.webpronews.com/experts-discuss-facebook-advertising-2008-01#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 03 Jan 2008 21:10:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>David Berkowitz</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Social Media]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Adam Broitman]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Advertising]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Beacon]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[David Berkowitz]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Facebook]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Howard Greenstein]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jeremiah Owyang]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Seni Thomas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Soical Media]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.webpronews.com/?p=43033</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>A firestorm of explosive debate erupted on <a title="Inside the Marketers Studio" href="http://www.marketersstudio.com/">this blog</a> recently as a record number of comments were posted to <a title="discussion on new abuses from Facebook " href="http://www.marketersstudio.com/2007/12/facebook-social.html" mk_i="59" sth_t="0">a discussion on new abuses from Facebook</a> relating to its Social Ads and Beacon advertising offerings.<br />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A firestorm of explosive debate erupted on <a title="Inside the Marketers Studio" href="http://www.marketersstudio.com/">this blog</a> recently as a record number of comments were posted to <a title="discussion on new abuses from Facebook " href="http://www.marketersstudio.com/2007/12/facebook-social.html" mk_i="59" sth_t="0">a discussion on new abuses from Facebook</a> relating to its Social Ads and Beacon advertising offerings.</p>
<p> <a href="http://davidberkowitz.typepad.com/.shared/image.html?/photos/uncategorized/2008/01/02/facebook_endorsement_1.jpg" onclick="window.open(this.href, '_blank', 'width=277,height=439,scrollbars=no,resizable=no,toolbar=no,directories=no,location=no,menubar=no,status=no,left=0,top=0'); return false" mk_i="56" sth_t="0"><img border="0" style="margin: 0px 5px 5px 0px; float: left; width: 74px; height: 117px;" alt="Facebook_endorsement_1" title="Facebook_endorsement_1" src="http://www.marketersstudio.com/images/2008/01/02/facebook_endorsement_1.jpg" mk_i="57" sth_t="0" /></a>There are over 70 comments, and they all add color to the conversation. Today I&#8217;ve invited a number of people who&#8217;ve taken part in this discussion on my blog, their blog, or both to answer a few questions in this roundtable. Others like <a title="CK" href="http://www.ck-blog.com/cks_blog/2007/12/reduced-to-a-se.html" mk_i="65" sth_t="0">CK</a> have posted their general thoughts on their own sites and have answered many of these questions in the comments on the <a title="original post" href="http://www.marketersstudio.com/2007/12/facebook-social.html" mk_i="68" sth_t="0">original post</a>.</p>
<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;Some of the questions and answers below refer to the comments there, so if you have a moment, I&#8217;d recommend at least skimming them.</p>
<p mk_i="72" sth_t="0">Our panelists today include:</p>
<ul mk_i="75" sth_t="0">
<li mk_i="76" sth_t="0"><a title="Jeremiah Owyang" href="http://web-strategist.com/blog/" mk_i="77" sth_t="0"> Jeremiah Owyang</a></li>
<li mk_i="80" sth_t="0"><a title="Adam Broitman" href="http://www.amediacirc.us/" mk_i="81" sth_t="0">Adam Broitman</a></li>
<li mk_i="84" sth_t="0"><a title="Seni Thomas" href="http://senithomas.wordpress.com/" mk_i="85" sth_t="0">Seni Thomas</a></li>
<li mk_i="88" sth_t="0"><a title="Howard Greenstein" href="http://www.howardgreenstein.com/blog/" mk_i="89" sth_t="0">Howard Greenstein</a></li>
</ul>
<p mk_i="93" sth_t="0">I&#8217;ll save my own answers for discussion in the comments or elsewhere. As for my general perspective on this, I have to be on Facebook as part of my job. Beyond that though, I love a lot of the various aspects of the site, such as applications like Scrabulous, tagging people in photos and sharing them, engaging in certain discussion groups, and other activities. Still, Facebook crossed the line here, and the outcry is not just merited &#8211; it&#8217;s not loud enough.</p>
<p mk_i="96" sth_t="0">The first question and answer are below; there are six more in the extended entry (if you&#8217;re reading this on the blog homepage).</p>
<p mk_i="99" sth_t="0"><strong mk_i="100" sth_t="0">1) Because of how Facebook includes members in ad campaigns, are you changing your behavior with regard to becoming a fan of marketers&#8217; pages or adding applications?</strong></p>
<p mk_i="103" sth_t="0"><strong mk_i="104" sth_t="0">Jeremiah</strong>: No, I assume all information I publish online is public, except my emails. (to some degree)&nbsp; What I publish, I assume it will be read in my next interview, by my enemy, or by my mother.</p>
<p mk_i="108" sth_t="0"><strong mk_i="109" sth_t="0">Adam</strong>: Yes, my behavior has certainly changed. The main reason I ever became a fan of any of the brand pages, or added their apps was research. In the beginning of the Facebook ads program I would add any app or become a fan of any page but all that has changed. I am not willing to be a poster boy for Coke in the name of research (it is pretty silly and meaningless for a guy who does not even drink Coke).</p>
<p mk_i="113" sth_t="0"><strong mk_i="114" sth_t="0">Seni</strong>: I have steered clear 100% from entering any fan groups or brand based &#8216;normal&#8217; groups after being spammed by Apple&#8217;s iTunes Student Music Group.&nbsp; However, from anecdotal evidence high school and college students are far more accepting of spam, or simply to do not care they are being spammed.&nbsp; If polled I&#8217;d bet they would say otherwise, but a number of people feel &#8216;more popular&#8217; when they receive incoming messages on Facebook regardless of origin.&nbsp; Finally, I believe that broadcasting brand loyalty to friends will be embraced by students, and extra face time through the insertion of profile images will actually make the system more attractive.&nbsp; As a crude example girls that are members of 12+ &quot;Hottest girls on Facebook&quot; groups would love to have their image associated with an Agent Provocateur ad.</p>
<p mk_i="118" sth_t="0"><strong mk_i="119" sth_t="0">Howard</strong>: Yes, I&rsquo;m quite concerned with becoming a fan now, even of brands or groups that I like. I&rsquo;m not even sure where to look to see what the policy is regarding how my &lsquo;fan endorsement&rsquo; may be used.</p>
<div class="entry-more" mk_i="126" sth_t="0">
<p mk_i="128" sth_t="0"><strong mk_i="129" sth_t="0">2) What would ultimately cause you to leave Facebook, if you haven&#8217;t already? </strong></p>
<p mk_i="132" sth_t="0"><strong mk_i="133" sth_t="0">Jeremiah</strong>: Blatant misuse of my personal information without first getting agreement from me, or at least warning me.</p>
<p mk_i="137" sth_t="0"><strong mk_i="138" sth_t="0">Adam</strong>: At this point, I am so ingrained in Facebook, and get so much value from it; it would take a severe invasion of privacy for me to leave. I cannot say what it would take exactly, but I hope we don&rsquo;t get there.</p>
<p mk_i="142" sth_t="0"><strong mk_i="143" sth_t="0">Seni</strong>: This is a tough one.&nbsp; At this point, 6 months out of college, my usage has decreased to about 10 min per week.&nbsp; However, I doubt I will ever cancel my account.&nbsp; I still get invitations to events, friend requests, and messages through facebook, however, they are all forwarded to my mail account so the site itself has become almost obsolete.</p>
<p mk_i="147" sth_t="0"><strong mk_i="148" sth_t="0">Howard</strong>: I think once I start getting spam or abuse from applications or people on Facebook, it&rsquo;s going to be less useful. Right now, even with the overload of applications and invitations, I can still get a good set of information about my friends, what they&rsquo;re doing, and what they care about. That&rsquo;s important to me in this world where &lsquo;grazing&rsquo; for items of interest is about the depth I&rsquo;m at.</p>
<p mk_i="154" sth_t="0"><strong mk_i="155" sth_t="0">3) Much of the debate was sparked when commenter Alana said we should all just &quot;get over it&quot; and use Facebook on Facebook&#8217;s terms, with CK noting that&#8217;s a typical attitude for marketers. Is there any truth to the &quot;get over it&quot; approach? Could we be overreacting?</strong></p>
<p mk_i="158" sth_t="0"><strong mk_i="159" sth_t="0">Jeremiah</strong>: I see this from two sides: 1) companies need to be responsible citizens in the ecosystem, and be respective of users rights.&nbsp; On the other hand, members forget that they are the ones who put the information on these websites; didn&#8217;t they read the terms of service?</p>
<p mk_i="163" sth_t="0"><strong mk_i="164" sth_t="0">Adam</strong>: You can never overreact when it comes to matters of privacy. We need the extreme individuals to regulate the market and keep lawmakers honest.</p>
<p mk_i="168" sth_t="0"><strong mk_i="169" sth_t="0">Seni</strong>: I 100% agree with CK&#8217;s perspective that a precedent must be made; however, I also believe that memes of this nature get a little overblown within these online circles.&nbsp; Again, the majority of students don&#8217;t care, and they are still by far the most active users, even though non-student total users has increased significantly.</p>
<p mk_i="173" sth_t="0"><strong mk_i="174" sth_t="0">Howard</strong>: No, &ldquo;Get over it&rdquo; is not a response to a customer, even if the customer is a &lsquo;free&rsquo; customer. Free customers have value in an ad supported business model. They also have potential to be paying customers of your other customers/interested parties. Yes, occasionally customers who abuse the system should be fired. But this is not such a circumstance.<br mk_i="177" sth_t="0" /> <br mk_i="178" sth_t="0" /> <strong mk_i="179" sth_t="0">4) What&#8217;s a greater offense, Facebook enlisting its members in advertisers&#8217; campaigns without members being able to opt in (or even opt out), or Google forcing you to have a Google Account to leave a comment on Blogger blogs?</strong></p>
<p mk_i="182" sth_t="0"><strong mk_i="183" sth_t="0">Jeremiah</strong>: Misleading question, no answer&#8230;&nbsp; &nbsp;;)</p>
<p mk_i="187" sth_t="0"><strong mk_i="188" sth_t="0">Adam</strong>: Both are pretty stupid (to say the least). That question is almost like asking, &ldquo;would you rather me stab you in the ankle are the arm?&rdquo;. It is a tough call.</p>
<p mk_i="192" sth_t="0"><strong mk_i="193" sth_t="0">Seni</strong>: Harkens back to the walled garden debate.&nbsp; Usage, demographic info, and behavioral data = $$$.&nbsp; I&#8217;d say both are on equal footing.</p>
<p mk_i="197" sth_t="0"><strong mk_i="198" sth_t="0">Howard</strong>: Facebook, of course. It&rsquo;s annoying to not be able to comment, but you&rsquo;re making an active choice if you comment on Google/Blogger blogs. The Facebook situation was totally an unknown option.</p>
<p mk_i="204" sth_t="0"><strong mk_i="205" sth_t="0">5) A recurring theme in general here is about the idea of giving consumers control over their marketing, privacy settings, and ways people can interact online (with each other, with brands, with publishers, etc). Over the past year or so, do you think the Web has become more open or more closed? Are trends pointing in favor of the consumer or those who have historically wielded control (eg marketers and publishers)? What do you expect for 2008?</strong></p>
<p mk_i="208" sth_t="0"><strong mk_i="209" sth_t="0">Jeremiah</strong>: Expect to see more marketing done by looking by both using the preference behavior (gestures) of users, as well as their implied relationships in social networks. This is just the start.</p>
<p mk_i="213" sth_t="0"><strong mk_i="214" sth_t="0">Adam</strong>: I actually think that we may have taken a step back in 2007 in regards to control over marketing and privacy issues, but this is one area that Facebook has had a major impact on. Many people in the mainstream still do not know what behavioral targeting is, but Facebook, and all the concerns surrounding privacy that it has unearthed, has shed light on all tactics employed by interactive marketers (including traditional behavioral targeting). Due to increased awareness of such tactics, the mainstream will be more demanding in regards to transparency and control in 2008.</p>
<p mk_i="218" sth_t="0"><strong mk_i="219" sth_t="0">Seni</strong>: The question is if too much control is handed over, will people just turn advertising off?<br mk_i="222" sth_t="0" /> <br mk_i="223" sth_t="0" /> Sure people argue that if it is relevant I won&#8217;t mind ads, or that if the creative is brilliant I will be awed and consider advertising entertainment.&nbsp; You&#8217;ve got to be crazy.&nbsp; If people can turn off ads they will, period.&nbsp; I know I would. <br mk_i="225" sth_t="0" /> <br mk_i="226" sth_t="0" /> Advertising is necessary to subsidize media production, but consumers are fighting back and their voice must be heard.&nbsp; I don&#8217;t think it is as much a matter of control as it is respect.&nbsp; Make it a two-way conversation.&nbsp; Listen to the consumers and don&#8217;t betray their trust, because they will find out. <br mk_i="228" sth_t="0" /> <br mk_i="229" sth_t="0" /> To hit the other points, I would say that a core principal of social media, new media, web 2.0, etc. is openness to facilitate community development and contribution.&nbsp; Thus, in my opinion the overall net has become more open with a few large bastions that need to be cracked&#8230; and they will, it is only a matter of time.</p>
<p mk_i="232" sth_t="0"><strong mk_i="233" sth_t="0">Howard</strong>: I think the efforts in the VRM working group towards giving end customers the ability to control their data, and to shift the dynamic toward the customer as central and in control, are important. Even if that effort only partially succeeds, it is a leading edge indicator of what a subset of customers wants &ndash; but they&rsquo;re a vocal and leading edge subset. Marketers will do well to pay attention to these efforts to put customers in charge, and see how the systems and projects they&rsquo;re developing in 2008 and beyond will react to such a challenge.<br mk_i="236" sth_t="0" /> <br mk_i="237" sth_t="0" /> <strong mk_i="238" sth_t="0">6) Who&#8217;s doing the best job of giving control to consumers? It can be a brand, website, anyone/anything.</strong></p>
<p mk_i="241" sth_t="0"><strong mk_i="242" sth_t="0">Jeremiah</strong>: Open source initiatives and websites that believe in the open web. Mozilla for one.</p>
<p mk_i="246" sth_t="0"><strong mk_i="247" sth_t="0">Adam</strong>: That is a tough one. Nothing jumps out at me!</p>
<p mk_i="251" sth_t="0"><strong mk_i="252" sth_t="0">Seni</strong>: Again, all the social media properties are tools for consumers, thus consumers wield a incredible level of control.</p>
<p mk_i="256" sth_t="0"><strong mk_i="257" sth_t="0">Howard</strong>: I think Staples is a good example. They recently called my wife&rsquo;s company to remind the company they had outstanding rewards points that were going to expire. They actually reminded them to use up an expiring rebate. Amazing. Plus, even without paying for overnight shipping, a huge percentage of stuff arrives the next day. They underpromise and overdeliver. Bravo.<br mk_i="260" sth_t="0" /> <br mk_i="261" sth_t="0" /> <strong mk_i="262" sth_t="0">7) In the interest of giving up control to you, what questions should I be asking everyone?</strong></p>
<p mk_i="265" sth_t="0"><strong mk_i="266" sth_t="0">Jeremiah</strong>: Generation Y is notorious for telling us what they did, how much alcohol they consumed, and sometimes who they&#8217;ve &#8216;hooked up with&#8217; (actual Facebook lexicon) how will this impact the future of communication?&nbsp; Will they integrate this behavior into the workplace, or will it disperse as they mature?</p>
<p mk_i="270" sth_t="0"><strong mk_i="271" sth_t="0">Seni</strong>: Does X new media execution really make sense for your message and your brand?&nbsp; Let&#8217;s try to fight off shiny new object syndrome and really synchronize media selection with what makes sense for the brand instead of jumping at shadows.&nbsp; This is the only way to increase credibility in the space.&nbsp; Then we can really have fun.</p>
<p mk_i="275" sth_t="0"><strong mk_i="276" sth_t="0">Howard</strong>: I think it bears study as to when you&rsquo;re advertising for a brand, even if you don&rsquo;t know it. I have a whole post on this &ndash; stay tuned.</p>
<p mk_i="280" sth_t="0"><em mk_i="281" sth_t="0">Thanks to all our panelists; for convenience, the links to their blogs are repeated below. Answer any or all of the questions and respond to them in the comments.</em></p>
<ul mk_i="284" sth_t="0">
<li mk_i="285" sth_t="0"><a title=" Jeremiah Owyang" href="http://web-strategist.com/blog/" mk_i="286" sth_t="0"> Jeremiah Owyang</a></li>
<li mk_i="289" sth_t="0"><a title="Adam Broitman" href="http://www.amediacirc.us/" mk_i="290" sth_t="0">Adam Broitman</a></li>
<li mk_i="293" sth_t="0"><a title="Seni Thomas" href="http://senithomas.wordpress.com/" mk_i="294" sth_t="0">Seni Thomas</a></li>
<li mk_i="297" sth_t="0"><a title="Howard Greenstein" href="http://www.howardgreenstein.com/blog/" mk_i="298" sth_t="0">Howard Greenstein</a></li>
</ul>
</div>
<p><a href="http://www.marketersstudio.com/2008/01/facebook-advert.html#comments">Comments</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>SIS &#8211; Search Insiders Speak</title>
		<link>http://www.webpronews.com/sis-search-insiders-speak-2007-12</link>
		<comments>http://www.webpronews.com/sis-search-insiders-speak-2007-12#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 21 Dec 2007 16:28:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jordan McCollum</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Search]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Aaron Goldman]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bob Heyman]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[David Berkowitz]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Gord Hotchkiss]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Search Insider Summit]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[SIS]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.webpronews.com/?p=42873</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><em>Every day, MediaPost&#8217;s Search Insider columnists illuminate the search landscape. Now it&#8217;s time for them to get off their pedestals and face your toughest questions first-hand. They&#8217;ll mouth off on all the most pressing search issues and the hot topics discussed at the Search Insider Summit so far.</em></p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>Every day, MediaPost&rsquo;s Search Insider columnists illuminate the search landscape. Now it&rsquo;s time for them to get off their pedestals and face your toughest questions first-hand. They&rsquo;ll mouth off on all the most pressing search issues and the hot topics discussed at the Search Insider Summit so far.</em></p>
<ul>
<li><strong>David Berkowitz</strong>, Director of Emerging Media &amp; Client Strategy, <a href="http://www.360i.com/">360i</a></li>
<li><strong>Aaron Goldman</strong>, Director of Client Strategy &amp; Development, <a href="http://resolutionmedia.com/">Resolution Media</a></li>
<li><strong>Bob Heyman</strong>, Chief Search Officer, <a href="http://www.mediasmith.com/">Mediasmith</a></li>
<li><strong>Gord Hotchkiss</strong>, CEO &amp; President, <a href="http://www.enquiro.com/">Enquiro</a></li>
</ul>
<p><strong>Will there be a Google killer?<br /></strong><br /> <strong>Aaron</strong>: In the short term, I don&rsquo;t see that happening. Can someone cobble together assets that they already have? Can somebody potentially put together the pieces to put together the next wave of web monetization? I think so. I don&rsquo;t see anybody taking away from Google&rsquo;s core business. But I see Facebook, if they can get their act together, doing that.<br /> <strong><br />Gord</strong>: As long as Google stays good at its core, I don&rsquo;t see that. But we&rsquo;re breaking down the silos. Search is going to change in its function as the web becomes richer. But I think it&rsquo;s misleading to think that search as we know it now will be the same for a long time.<br /> <strong><br />David</strong>: Looking at MySpace with twice the traffic of Ask; YouTube search rivals some search properties&rsquo; traffic. With Hakia&mdash;I can&rsquo;t figure out how to use it (and he&rsquo;s spent a fair amount of time with new search engines). Powerset &amp; Powerlabs&mdash;they do their own search of Wikipedia&mdash;I could barely tell the difference. To be better than Google at search, you have to be SO much better. Google could just be okay with search for a while and people will still keep using it.<br /> <strong><br />Bob</strong>: I predict that anything that gets labeled a Google killer or an iPod killer won&rsquo;t kill anything. In video, Google search doesn&rsquo;t really have a cross-platform search.<br /> <strong><br />David</strong>: YouTube doesn&rsquo;t want us to think of them as a search.<br /> <strong><br />Greg</strong>: I see it moving more and more to a mobile platform. I was talking to Max Kalvinov (sp?): the incumbency effect. For something to bump us out of our rut, it has to be a quantum leap better.<br /> <strong><br />David</strong>: Look at the number of people still on Hotmail: people&rsquo;s habits are ingrained (also convenience of not porting data). People will stick with something inferior for a long time.</p>
<p><strong>I was kicked off Google for too much search volume (they thought he must be a bot), so he went to Ask. There are lots of other ways that they can kill their marketshare.</strong><br /> <strong><br />Gord</strong>: Looking at Ask&mdash;they don&rsquo;t want to be a Google killer, they have some relevancy issues, but they&rsquo;re good for alternate search.</p>
<p><strong>Ideas to take advantage of Wikipedia. A year ago, I used to go in there as an SEO/SEM to maintain links, but now nofollowed, I passed that to the PR team.</strong><br /> <strong><br />Aaron</strong>: It&rsquo;s a different lens, but they&rsquo;re still value. Having a presence, having your company in there, as long as you&rsquo;re represented. Build up your own involvement in Wikipedia, have your own authority. I look at it as this whole notion of ceding control. Being there in Wikipedia is a second chance at the top 10.<br /> <strong><br />David</strong>: We do a lot of work with Comedy Central&mdash;Stephen Colbert tries to mess with Wikipedia, and that drives traffic to CC site, Wikipedia gets traffic. Also interesting when other companies try to tap into the Wiki model: <a href="http://amapedia.amazon.com/">Amapedia</a>.</p>
<p><strong>Will SEMs ever &lsquo;get&rsquo; display?  Will you be able to work with it?  </strong><br /> <strong><br />Gord</strong>: I think we already are. We&rsquo;re all looking at integrating display. Because we do a lot of usability testing with different forms of engagement&mdash;the assumption marketers make is the more &lsquo;bandwidth&rsquo; the more effective&mdash;I&rsquo;m not so sure that&rsquo;s the case. I&rsquo;m not so sure that when we&rsquo;re looking for information on a search page and we&rsquo;re starting to see universal results come into that, I don&rsquo;t know how they react to that. We&rsquo;ve seen test ads kick as far as performance goes across a lot of channels.<br /> <strong><br />Aaron</strong>: I see too many firms jumping into display just to grow their revenue.  It&rsquo;s just going to cause clutter.<br /> <strong><br />Bob</strong>: We think search is a medium that should be planned with display and interactive.<br /> <strong><br />Aaron</strong>: I think it&rsquo;s interesting that it&rsquo;s led by search. I&rsquo;d like to see that happen with larger holding companies as they acquire more SEMs.</p>
<p><strong>Will we get to a point where people will enter personally identifiable information directly on the SERP (auto insurance)?</strong><br /> <strong><br />Gord</strong>: Search is about satisificing: quickly narrowing down to 4-5 brands to consider. Start building your consideration set, often with a generic search. Unless it&rsquo;s a totally commoditized product (ie it doesn&rsquo;t matter where you get it from).</p>
<p><strong>How is the global market impacting your businesses? Effectiveness across campaigns, esp. where search engine marketshare doesn&rsquo;t mirror US&rsquo;s.</strong><br /> <strong><br />Aaron</strong>: Makes it a lot harder for us. Depending on the space there&rsquo;s a lot of differences in savviness. The biggest challenge is who leads that process. If US-led, have people on the ground in the important regions. Standardization is the biggest challenge. It&rsquo;s a whole different set of realities that you have to plan against. More often than not, it is led here in the US, because we lead SEM.<br /> <strong><br />Bob</strong>: Google dominates more outside the US than in&mdash;but in China, you can&rsquo;t buy into Baidu unless you speak Mandarin and have someone in China, basically.<br /> <strong><br />Gord</strong>: When you talk to Chinese users, they&rsquo;re using Baidu for different purposes. Baidu is great for MP3 downloads. Looking for facts, go to Google. To get those nuances, you have to be on the ground and understand where you need to get your buy.<br /> <strong><br />Bob</strong>: Don&rsquo;t underestimate the language challenges, too. Note that in languages like Dutch/German: same words are twice as long, and you have the same character limits.</p>
<p><strong>We&rsquo;ve heard a lot that organic is 80% of the traffic, but paid search just dominates&mdash;everybody is just focused on paid search. What can we do to help get us away from paid search?</strong><br /> <strong><br />Aaron</strong>: Therapy. Paid search is the crack of SEM. We have to tell them that eventually they&rsquo;ll burn out, but it&rsquo;s great to see those instant results.<br /> <strong><br />Bob</strong>: SEO is just too slow for some people.  PPC gives you time to get your value proposition, etc., in.<br /> <strong><br />Gord</strong>: The hard thing is that it&rsquo;s tough to fight with the clients like that. There&rsquo;s not nearly the mismatch of expectations in paid. I agree completely with you on the power of organic. We still do a a lot of organic optimization. But I have yet to have &ldquo;the dream optimization&rdquo; project. I would hate to see that advantage die because we&rsquo;re tired of butting heads.<br /> <strong><br />David</strong>: It&rsquo;s so easy to define &lsquo;media.&rsquo;<br /> <strong><br />Gord</strong>: From the pure business perspective, it&rsquo;s not a great business. There&rsquo;s a long learning curve, decreasing returns Unless you&rsquo;re passionate about it as a practice, it&rsquo;s not an attractive model.<br /> <strong><br />David</strong>: Although PPC has its own challenges, too.  The margins aren&rsquo;t so that people are dying to get into it.<br /> <strong><br />Gord</strong>: But aren&rsquo;t we failing as an industry into Arron&rsquo;s analogy. Yeah, it&rsquo;s hard, it&rsquo;s micromanaging, but relative to organic, it&rsquo;s a walk in the park on a sunny day.</p>
<p><strong>Point: I see SEO as a workaround. Telling the CEO that the site that he loves actually sucks isn&rsquo;t fun (and doesn&rsquo;t work). You have CEOs that have built up their experience from TV, they see text-based sites and say, &ldquo;Huh?&rdquo; You&rsquo;re going in there changing the business models.</strong><br /> <strong><br />Gord</strong>: Example from yesterday&rsquo;s site review. You&rsquo;re going to have to make a decision. How important is organic visibility to you as a business decision? Are you going down this path?<br /> <strong><br />Bob</strong>: Good design and good SEO are still antithetical.</p>
<p><strong>How do you feel about paying to appear inorganic results (ie Yahoo shortcuts)?</strong><br /> <strong><br />Aaron</strong>: we&rsquo;ll do it as long as they let us.<br /> <strong><br />Bob</strong>: Yahoo wouldn&rsquo;t sell it to us for a news aggregator because it works too well for news.  Overall it&rsquo;s yesterday&rsquo;s product<br /> <strong><br />Gord</strong>: It&rsquo;s a weird anomaly in the space.</p>
<p><strong>Paid versus organic. Is there a different client&egrave;le in paid versus natural&mdash;do 80% of clicks = 80% sales, or does 20% of paid clicks = 50% of sales?</strong><br /> <strong><br />Gord</strong>: I personally think the 80/20 thing is because we&rsquo;re not doing a good job of matching our messages to our customers. They&rsquo;re in the wrong phase of the funnel. I think that&rsquo;s why there&rsquo;s disproportionate organic clicks, but as we match intent better, we&rsquo;ll see those ratios drop.<br /> <strong><br />Bob</strong>: I&rsquo;d love to see % of clicks and conversions.  Paid search is successful because you can link it back to conversions.<br /> <strong><br />David</strong>: I&rsquo;ll disagree with Gord here because I think marketers have come a long way with how they&rsquo;re segmenting intent, etc. As the ads are generally very relevant to them, they&rsquo;ll still get clicks, but people are training themselves not to look at advertising as much. There has been some research in the past for, say, retail queries get more clicks on ads.<br /> <strong><br />Aaron</strong>: As we&rsquo;re seeing the move toward universal search&mdash;the eye goes right to the image then sniffs around. As that happens more and more, that will get more eyeballs in the organic results. The biggest click factor is image ads in the SERPs could again change the clicking behavior.</p>
<p> <strong>Gord</strong>: Scanning behavior is going to change a lot as they change formats.</p>
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