The New Algorithm of Online Affilate Marketing

       Some Times Google Serch Engin change Its New Algorithm

 

Publishers and broadcasters have long tried to offer advertisers the right audience for their products. Want to sell pick-ups to people who like sports? Buy ads at halftime during a football game. Selling luggage or airline tickets? Buy ads in the travel section of a newspaper or Web site

In digital advertising, that formula is being increasingly tested by fast-paced, algorithmic bidding systems that target individual consumers rather than the aggregate audience publishers serve up. In the world of “programmatic buying” technologies, context matters less than tracking those consumers wherever they go. And that kind of buying is the reason that shoe ad follows you whether you’re on Weather.com or on a local news blog.

That shift is punishing traditional online publishers, like newspaper, broadcast and magazine sites, who are receiving a much lower percentage of ad dollars as marketers use programmatic buying across a much broader canvas. Some sites, like CNN.com, refuse to even accept advertising through programmatic buying because they do not want to cede control over what ads will appear.

“It’s allowing advertisers to assign value to media rather than publishers,” said Ben Winkler, the chief digital officer at OMD, an agency in the Omnicom Media Group. Publishers, he said, “can’t control the price, but they can control the quality of the content and the audience on that site.”

About 10 percent of the display ads that consumers see online have been sold through programmatic bidding channels, according to Walter Knapp, the executive vice president of platform revenue and operations at Federated Media, one of the world’s largest digital advertising networks.

Advertisers like Nike, Comcast, Progressive and Procter & Gamble are now using the programmatic buying, and luxury advertisers are starting to follow. According to data from Forrester Research, all ads traded on exchanges, as programmatic ads are, increased more than 17.5 percent to about 629 billion impressions (the number of times an ad appears) in 2012, from 535 billion in 2011.

That growth is affecting publishers of all stripes, but few are willing to discuss their internal numbers. “For a publisher to admit they’ve been hurt is tough for the big guys,” said John Ebbert, the executive editor and publisher of the Web site AdExchanger.

When The New York Times Company announced its earnings last month, the company posted a profit, but said that digital advertising fell 2.2 percent. Jim Follo, the company’s senior vice president and chief financial officer, attributed the dip, in part, on a “shift toward ad exchanges, real-time bidding and other programmatic buying channels that allow advertisers to buy audience at scale.”

Programmatic buying began as a way for advertisers to place lower-cost ads for products like teeth-whitening products and belly fat pills that filled up the back pages of Web sites. But the practice has gained in sophistication and breadth, with major advertisers and many of the world’s largest ad agencies creating private exchanges to automate the buying and selling of ads.

Programmatic buying includes a number of different technologies and strategies, but it essentially allows advertisers to bid, often in real time, on ad space largely based on the value they have assigned to the consumer on the other side of the screen. Say, for example, that Nike wants to sell running gear to a particular consumer who has a high likelihood of buying shoes based on the data it has collected, including the type of Web sites that consumer typically visits. Because the ad-buying is done through computer trading, the price for that space can change rapidly.

“Accessing media is a commodity now,” said Sheldon Gilbert, the founder and chief executive of Proclivity Media, a company that specializes in digital advertising technologies. “Instead of having to commit four months in advance, you can now bid and buy an individual impression in real time.”

In the short run, the growth in programmatic buying has forced overall ad prices to fall. A media buyer who would have once spent $50,000 worth of advertising on a publisher’s site, at, say, an $8 cost-per-thousand, can now buy ad impressions on any Web site on which they happen to find their intended audience and pay less per ad, Mr. Ebbert said.

“There is no scarcity of premium online,” said Dan Salmon, an equity research analyst at BMO Capital Markets. “There’s only one Super Bowl, but there are lots of different places to buy banner ads online.”

While the “halo effect” of buying an ad against premium content has not disappeared entirely — many advertisers still want front-page placement on popular Web sites — the shift is prompting publishers to rethink how they sell their ads.

Clark Fredricksen, the vice president for communications at eMarketer, a data company, said that publishers were “going to have to double down to prove the value of their inventory as they compete with other, cheaper inventory.”

And some publishers are jumping into the game themselves. During the most recent AOL earnings call, Tim Armstrong, the company’s chairman and chief executive, said it was bullish on programmatic buying, despite being a publisher itself with properties that include TechCrunch and The Huffington Post. The company trades its ads through its own ad network, Ad.com, and others like it.

“We will continue to invest in people and technology to capture the programmatic business of advertising,” Mr. Armstrong said.

Like AOL, Weather.com is also aggressively moving into programmatic bidding. “Instead of thinking of us a publisher, think of us as a marketing engine,” said Curt Hecht, the chief global revenue officer for the Weather Company.

Neal Mohan, the vice president for product management at Google, which sells advertising though its DoubleClick network, says that in the long run, publishers could see higher returns from programmatic advertising. In the last year, the number of advertisers and publishers using the DoubleClick platform has doubled, Mr. Mohan said, while the rates for those using the platform have increased 11 percent. But that means publishers will have to play by different rules.

“Context still matters and so does placement,” Mr. Ebbert said. “But it’s only one element.”


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How to Market a Affilate Business Online - 2013

        Grow Up Online Marketing - Opinion By Experts

           Consumers increasingly look online for local service providers
 But it’s sometimes hard for those service providers to become visible, so consumers can easily find them. Brendon O’Donovan, product marketing manager for Vocus, an online marketing tools provider, recently spoke with Web Marketing Today to discuss how to market a local service business.



Web Marketing Today:
Assume I’m a local service provider, such as a CPA or an electrician. How should I market my business online?

Brendon O’Donovan: The first thing you want to do is to have a website where people can find information about you. Once you have your web presence, there are many other tools and a lot of other ways to build that presence. Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn — these are all free social media sites where your customers are. You just have to find them. They are free tools that you can use for this. You can network with your customers and really promote your business, with next to no cost.

The next thing is being in the places that people are looking for you — a lot of the places you look now to find local business. such as Google, Yahoo!, Yelp, depending on your business. So if you’re an electrician or a local CPA or a plumber, people do searches for their local area to try to find you in those places. List yourself there and then when people look for an electrician in Washington, D.C., for example, you’re one of the first results that pop up.

Once you have listings and once people can find you there, it’s also important to make sure that they can find your website. Search marketing, from organic search marketing to paid advertising through Google AdWords, gets you in front of the right people and drives traffic to your website. Finally, when you’re talking about online marketing — when you start getting this traffic —  people will opt into your information. Email marketing is a wonderful opportunity to keep that relationship and those communication channels open with your prospects and your audience.

WMT: Do you know the percentage of leads that are coming in online versus traditional printed yellow pages?

O’Donovan: Local search results now have over three billion page views. That’s people who are actually searching for local items online. When you think about the way that people look for businesses, they’re out with their mobile phones, they’re out with their tablets or they’re sitting at Starbucks with their PCs. They don’t need another resource. The shift from trying to find a business in, say, the traditional printed yellow pages to finding it at YellowPages.com has been dramatic in the past few years. It’s definitely becoming the primary source for research when it’s coming to local businesses.

WMT: One of the issues that local service providers have is obtaining the expertise to market themselves online. How can a CPA be a social media or an SEO expert?

O’Donovan: Anyone can really be a social media expert. Some people just really like technology. Those people are just going to jump right in. They’re going to try through trial and error and see what works and what doesn’t. They’ll be able to read the extensive information that’s on the Internet now. There’s that type of person that really likes technology and really likes that type of interaction with the web or with their community online.

But that’s not everybody and that’s really not the majority of people. For most of the small businesses, time is of the essence. They really need to get something done efficiently. They don’t necessarily want to take the time to learn how to be the expert. That’s where small business consultants and marketing consultants really come in. Even software packages that help guide you through the process. There are a number of software tools that simplify your process and bring your information that you’re looking for from a sense of your Twitter conversations or your Facebook friends and give you the ability to see it in one place and make recommendations on what to do with that. That’s really the helping hand that can make a small business person go from zero to hero very quickly.

WMT: Walk us through the online conversion process for a smaller service provider. The first step is presumably to get traffic to the website. The next step is enticing visitors to call or fill out a form or something similar. Ultimately, they hopefully will become a customer. Explain the easiest way for a local service provider to do that.

O’Donovan: It starts with getting people to your website. That starts with search marketing, such as writing a news release that shows up well in results to get people notified that you have a website. Do some things with paid ads to increase the prominence of your site. Use social media, making contacts, and getting those followers to share with their followers.

That’s the first thing, the awareness of your website. Then how do you get people to call you? How do you really start getting that connection with your audience? Once you get their interest, there are a number of things that you can do. It can be an offer. If you’re a CPA, you could create a guide, such as “10 Helpful Tips for 2013 Tax Season.” You can capture people’s information from that. You can get them to call you. You can get quality content pushed out to have people associate you with being the expert. If you’re an electrician or some other consumer service, consider coupons, which everyone loves. Those are great ways to drive people to give you their information, or to call you.

WMT: Tell us about Vocus, the company you work for.

O’Donovan: Vocus has been around since 1992. We offer a marketing suite for everything from a small business to mid-sized company that gives you a number of tools to use to market your business efficiently. We help with search marketing. We help with social media and local listings. These are all things that our software helps local businesses do. We offer the ability to keep track your social networks. We give you recommendations on what to do with content, who to respond to on social media, who to follow, who to connect with. We offer something we call “buying signals” that help you connect with somebody that has a need for your service for advice for your product. Then we also offer search marketing through things like press releases to get your name prominently out into the search engines, so when people are looking for tax advice, for example, you’ll be able to be found. What our suite really does is simplify the process and make it approachable for any level of expertise.

WMT: What is the cost for your service?

O’Donovan: Our software starts around $3,000 a year. That would get you everything: social media management and social media recommendations, email marketing, alerts, a number of different things to really help keep your business well marketed.

WMT: Can you give us examples of companies or customers that have come to Vocus and what it’s done for them?

O’Donovan: We have a number of customers that have had wonderful success with our software. There’s a company called Living Fuel. It sells health supplements and nutrition food. They use our buying signals. For them, they watch social media to connect with people to offer them vitamins or supplements or some other sort of nutritional food. They’re able to get about 20 to 30 new leads from social media through the software each day. That puts them directly into contact with people who are able to buy from them directly. Living Fuel is a great example of a small business that’s really able to tackle social media in a big way without having to do a lot of major investments or a lot of major hires.



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