Ad Blindness Is Nothing New ... and it's No Surprise Google Is Seeing It!


Google Ad Click Rates Are Going Down and YouTube Isn't Helping

Google's stock is down because its rate of growth is down according to Google's latest quarterly financial report. Google still had a 30 percent increase in payments from clicking ads, but that was substantially down from the 45 percent increase they had a year earlier.

Google is blaming this slowdown in growth on difficulties it is having monetizing its social media properties. Boiling this down Google can't get the YouTube kids to click ads! By all accounts Google is also experiencing a lower click rate on ads on its own search results and especially their Adsense partner sites.

This was entirely predictable and is likely to continue to go lower. Every ad type from banner ads to ads in emails received a high click-through rate when first introduced on the Internet and then progressively lowered to a norm of about .25 percent.

Google is battling this by dramatically increasing the number of ad impressions it serves via partnering with more content sites, acquiring sites like YouTube, increasing the number of ads per page and blending the ads in content more effectively so that people don't think they are clicking ads.

The problem for Google is that there are really no more tricks possible that will significantly combat ad fatigue. I also sense another under the radar battle the Google folks are fighting and that is complaints of lower conversion on content partner sites and extremely lower conversion for advertisers on social media sites.

This is caused by a simple fact... everybody isn't surfing the web to buy products, and especially the kids on YouTube.

Google has a great business with search precisely because there are a large number of people searching for product information. A much higher percentage of people who click an ad from a search result have a purchase intent. This is just not true when reading a news site or looking for that funny video.

AdSense Earnings Down?


Up for some, Down for others

There's word around the Webmaster World forum that publishers have been experiencing a sharp decline in AdSense earnings over the past month. There's been little consensus, lots of possible explanations, but nothing you might call conclusive.

A small poll at Search Engine Roundtable (43 participants as of this writing) shows just over half reporting a decrease in AdSense earnings, the other half reporting that things are on the level or increasing.

It's hard to say that's a representative sample with just 40 respondents, but it does match a bit with the reports at Webmaster World: some are losing, some aren't.

Many plausible explanations have been proffered without any real, thorough site examinations, as no URLs have been given by those complaining. The center of conversation though, has been around Google's "smart pricing," and whether that is the cause of lower returns on ad clicks.

AdSense Earnings Down?

An ad's cost-per-click is determined by a number of factors, according to the AdSense blog's explanation:

"More than conversion rate goes into determining the price of an ad: the advertiser's bid, the quality of the ad, the other ads competing for the space, the start or end of an ad campaign, and other advertiser fluctuations."

Keep in mind also that Google has the leader in CPC inflation rate, also.

Google denies that clickthrough rates affect the price of an ad click, though they don't go into how much weight is put on user action beyond the click, i.e., sales completed, forms filled out, engagement on the site that follows. Google describes smart pricing this way:

"Google's smart pricing feature automatically adjusts the cost of a keyword-targeted content click based on its effectiveness compared to a search click. So if our data shows that a click from a content page is less likely to turn into actionable business results -- such as online sales, registrations, phone calls, or newsletter signups -- we reduce the price you pay for that click."

But observers are right also to note that the higher quality the site, the higher likelihood the publisher gets high quality, costlier, better-converting ads. AdSense Publisher Support pretty much says so, reminding publishers that content is king:

"[Smart pricing] leads to higher payouts for publishers by drawing a larger pool of advertisers and rewarding publishers who create high quality sites…. The best way to ensure you benefit from AdSense is to create compelling content for interested users.

"This also means driving targeted traffic to your site -- advertisers don't gain as much ROI when paying for generic clicks as they do for quality clicks that come from interest in your content. Good content usually equals a good experience for user plus advertiser, which can be much more valuable than CTR."

So, this is Google's usual stance: create some relevance and we'll help create you some revenue.
Things like that have added to the cynicism in the aforementioned forum, as one member notes the lack of examples to test, and, without naming names, notes that some complaining members' sites are nothing to write home about with potential quality problems like:

  • Obviously made for AdSense (which implies lack of content)
  • Too many ads, including unrelated ads (lack of focus on content, lack of central theme)
  • Confusing layouts (not end-user focused)

Webmasters also reported conversations they had with the Google AdSense team, who told them the sharp decline likely has to do with advertiser budgets, many of which would understandably be tightened after the holiday crunch, and perhaps even more so during economic uncertainty.

So recession in the economy might mean recession in your AdSense take-in, too.

An interesting frustration was also presented. Google's smart pricing, according to forum members applies account-wide. A webmaster with many sites but one AdSense account could experience a hit on all of his or her sites, instead of just one or two. This brings down the revenue potential of the more popular sites the webmaster owns.

The suggestion, then, is that Google adjust so that smart pricing affects individual sites and pages, rather than targeting an entire account.

8 Theories For AdSense Fluctuations


In brief: find another basket for your eggs

Recently, many web-publishers reported drastic drops in their Google AdSense earnings and offered up many theories as to why that occurred. The problem was reported in web forums, on popular SEO blogs, and in the comments section of the last WebProNews article on the subject. After all that, we've narrowed it down to 8 possible explanations.

In other words, we're closer, but not there yet. It could be innocent, accidental, natural, or orchestrated, but the majority of you seem to be reporting steep (and for some of you, I mean steep) drops in AdSense earnings. The Search Engine Roundtable poll mentioned last time grew to 135 respondents, and the percentages stayed the same: 55% are reporting decreases in earnings.

It could also be that angry people speak the loudest, but many seem pretty sane in their reporting, saying earnings are declining despite level page views and click-through rates.

But we're going to err on the side of the smaller guy, assume you're getting screwed by the big guy, and propose the most possible and/or likely reasons for that. Included with this assumption is that all of you are on the up-and-up with great content, great SEO, great business savvy, and have done everything right but still find yourselves victims of the corporate machine.

See how nice that is? Here goes.

It's the economy, stupid.

This explanation wins the Occam's Razor Award—i.e., the simplest explanation is the correct one. As the economy enters a slow-down period, many advertisers are trimming their budgets, decreasing how much they spend on branding-related advertising and redirecting those funds to more direct response ads, which would include AdWords.

One commentator noted the golden rule of the economy: It will fluctuate. This could be what's happening, and that fluctuation could be swelling on the political side of the content fence as Presidential primaries take center stage on the Information Highway.

Advice: Look into AdWords and improve organic SEO. Otherwise, wait it out like the rest of the economy.

Google got stingy with the AdSense real estate

During an increased focus on conversions rather than clicks and intensified efforts to combat click fraud, Google made AdSense ads more difficult to click. A few have reported that since "the clickable area" of ads was decreased, CTRs have also decreased. At the end of the day, the AdSense drop many publishers are experiencing is a direct result of Google's offensive against accidental clicks.

Google is another good company gone public

This is a more cynical, greed-driven, conspiracy explanation that may resonate with more distrustful element of the audience. You know how everything seems designed to make you pay more at the gas pump? Reports come out that $3.71 per gallon is the tipping point where Americans will drive less, oil is at record prices as companies collude on what to charge on a street-by-street level, and Exxon cites less supply while setting yet another quarterly profit record by pulling in $1,300 per second, and the oil profiteers in the White House hadn't seen any type of crisis on the horizon for the past 30 years.

Phew. Try to say all that in one breath. But the theory goes like that. Shareholders like profit.

So, between the third quarter 2007 and when the fourth quarter report came out last week, Google's stock plummeted from $747 to just a little over $500. No doubt they saw this coming well in advance of their earnings report and looked for ways of tightening things up earnings-wise. It's especially troubling for Google because not only do they control two-thirds of the search market and 75% of the search ad spend, they report consistent growth that would impress anybody, that would be calls for champagne for any company, except the analysts who expect more of them.

If so, it should make you feel better that they missed estimates anyway.

But as a part of that plan to maximize earnings, Google found a way to decrease what they paid out to publishers while increasing what they took in from advertisers. This would also help offset Google's recent moves against made-for-AdSense sites developed expressly for domain tasting, an action that costs Google a reported $3 million.

Admittedly though, when you're dealing in billions, a few million isn't much – unless you're trying to make estimates. But Google also reported a 30% increase in AdSense clicks over the fourth quarter 2006, and a 9% increase since the third quarter 2007. So over all, clicks are up.

Even though clicks are up, and revenues seem down for publishers, Google still reported a 34% increase in AdSense revenues over the same period last year and a 12% increase quarter-over-quarter. This is interesting because Google's traffic acquisition cost—the portion of revenue shared with Google AdSense partners—went up only 1%.

The short version: Clicks are up, revenues are up, amount shared with publishers is level.

Search clicks are better

One proposal says that Google is lowering the estimated value of content clicks in order to protect the value of search clicks, as advertisers shift from network ads to search ads in a slower economy.

You're being better-dealed

Not much explanation needed on this one. Google's making more money from big-name advertisers and big-name websites. Smart-pricing is hitting you hardest because you can't compete with international brands and websites with millions of page views. It also serves as a decent explanation for why Google is sharing the same amount of money with publishers while increasing clicks and revenues.

No fixed advertising contract means no fixed advertising pay-out

One theory is that Google is making deals with others (bigger, higher-budgeted companies) for fixed compensation while slowly increasing their take among AdSense publishers, who have little-to-no control over CPC, or even context. If you don't have a very specific deal with Google, they can pretty much do what they want.

Ad blindness and Firefox adoption is hurting you

This is an interesting theory because it is simple and plausible. People are ignoring ads at a higher rate, and this has been evidenced by eye-tracking studies, especially when the ads appear in the places they expect them to appear. But also there are ad-blocking programs available via the Firefox browser (and other browsers) that block ads altogether.

It may be that your visitors just can't see your ads, either by choice or by software.

Google needs a real competitor

Not only does Google run two-thirds of search, but also controls 75% of the search advertising spend. Yahoo gives them a run for their money in display ads, but nobody is even close to knocking the king off the hill.

If you were in that position, what would you do? Would you make it easier for publishers to make money while you made less? When there's no alternative, you can pretty much do what you want.

What we're left with

We're left with what we're always left with: the same as when webmasters lose ranking in the SERPs. If there's a sudden drop in search ranking, businesses are on the line, most often because the business is relying too much on Google. We could theorize all day, but if your entire business model is based on what Google can do for you, then your entire business model has a good chance of being sunk.

All your eggs + one basket = fail.

Got Conversion Optimization?


Google suggests ways to make CPA work well

Google has ideas for advertisers who want to capitalize on cost-per-acquisition (CPA) through the AdWords bidding process.

Google's playing with words again. Most people think of CPA as cost-per-action, but Google did a Microsoft on that and tacked a couple more syllables onto it. Google also calls tags 'labels', while 99.9999 percent of the Internet (figure provided by Aether Statistical Service) calls them tags.

Let's talk about money. Google wants AdWords clients to make more of it. Doing so means taking greater advantage of conversion opportunities, advice for which appears on the Inside AdWords blog.

The tips published here cover a lot of the more frequent questions hitting Google about using Conversion Optimizer with their campaigns. Google needs to see 200 or more conversions track through the campaign on a monthly basis to be eligible, for starters, so it isn't available for new campaigns.

Some suggestions were about what Conversion Optimizer can't do. Campaigns using it can't be modified from the AdWords editor, and it won't use conversion data from Google Analytics.

The AdWords editor probably has Conversion Optimizer functionality in its future, as Google noted it's a commonly requested feature.

Google's biggest tips concern bids when using Conversion Optimizer, something advertisers need to keep squarely in mind:

The Conversion Optimizer works on a maximum CPA, not an average CPA. While we aim to avoid any conversion that costs more than your maximum CPA bid, changes in your conversion rate may cause your average CPA to exceed your maximum CPA.

Keep in mind that if you choose a CPA lower than the recommended maximum CPA bid, you are likely to get less traffic than you did with your old CPC bids. It's a good idea to start with this recommendation and adjust based on the results you observe.

More tips may be found from the webinars Google conducts on the Conversion Optimizer feature.

YuMe Serving Google AdSense For Video Ads

By David A. Utter

AdSense for Video beta should debut today

Online video ad network YuMe has a deal in place to overlay display ads in the Google AdSense for video beta program.

Everyone online loves videos, but few have figured out how to turn that interest into sweet revenue streams. An assortment of technologies compete for the best way to mate ads with videos.

YuMe gets their shot as part of Google's AdSense for video beta program. The company announced its InVideo ad technology will place display overlays for its publishers who are currently AdSense participants as well.

Google could more fully disclose its video advertising plans as early as today. The New York Times cited a Google product manager, who called AdSense for Video "a one-stop shop for people interested in in-video advertising."

The one stop includes the hugely successful YouTube video sharing site and the AdSense network of publishers who display Google advertising. According to the Times, the AdSense for video beta will start with about 20 partners, who stream at least a million videos a month.

Google Prepares Video Ads For Search Results

By David A. Utter

Revenue knocks at Google's once-pristine door

Visual ads, long absent from Google's search results, opened on the site in the form of expandable video ads today.

Google took another step away from its history as a minimalist provider of relevant search results. Along with the One Box ads atop search results, and the right sidebar of ads, Google will place another monetization component on those pages.

Details of the move appeared on the Bits Blog. Google VP Marissa Mayer described why after all of their success with text ads that they needed to take this step:

“The big insight of Google wasn’t text ads; it was that the ads should be conducive to the format,” Ms. Mayer said. “We were doing text-based search that was all textual. Visual ads don’t work in that format.”

By contrast, she said text ads are not as effective on pages with search results that include images and video. The eyes of users automatically gravitate to the images more than the text, she said. Now that Google’s main search results pages include more images, video links and other elements, it is more appropriate, she argued, to have corresponding advertising formats.

"It’s the end of what was once considered one of Google’s major strengths, and opens the doors for up-and-comers to go back to Google’ s original spartan approach to search," Mashable editor Adam Ostrow commented.

Google is in a position where they may feel a pressing need for better ad performance. Between a small slip in their Q4 2007 financials, and Microsoft ready to raise the Jolly Roger and pillage Yahoo, there's probably no small amount of The Fear wafting through the Googleplex these days.

How Google Applies Science to Search (Part 1)

By Kalena Jordan (c) 2008

Dr. Craig Nevill-Manning is a New Zealander who joined Google in 2000 as a Senior Research Scientist to develop more precise search techniques. Previously, Craig was an assistant professor at the Computer Science Department of Rutgers University, where he conducted research in data compression, information retrieval and computational biology. Before that, he was a post-doctoral fellow in the Biochemistry Department of Stanford University, where he developed a software suite used by pharmaceutical research laboratories to identify the role of particular proteins within cells.

A scientist at heart, Craig is probably best known as the developer of Froogle (recently re-named Google Product Search) and the founder of Google's software engineering center in New York City.


This article is a summary of his presentation at Webstock 2008.

Google's Spelling Bee

Craig started his presentation by talking about one of his first challenges in his job at Google: the spelling correction tool. As the popularity of the search engine grew, Google needed to be able to spell-correct lots of obscure words. So his solution was to take a sampling of content from the entire web. Craig's team came up with a algorithmic model and ran it over the web. He discovered that there were several correct answers to the same question. For example, words like "kofee" could mean either the searcher is seeking a cup of java or information about Kofee/Kofi Anan.

To combat this, Craig came up with an interesting solution: the "Did you mean?" alternative spelling option, based on predictive examples of searcher spelling patterns. You can see this in action if you type in "kofee anan" in Google. Above the search results is a line that reads: "Did you mean: kofi annan" and links to the search results for this spelling variation too.

But the research went even further. Craig's team worked out how to take into account the context of the search query by studying the two or three other keywords surrounding the query, for example "kofee cup" or "kofee anan". The research used the science of bigrams and trigrams to better understand how people search. Bigrams are groups of two written letters, two syllables, or two words, very commonly used as the basis for simple statistical analysis of text. So Craig and his team applied this knowledge to Google's spelling correction system and now, Google's algorithm can determine the searcher's intent with much more accuracy, based on the context of the search query.

As an example of the spelling challenges that Google faces, Craig showed the audience the huge number of ways "Britney Spears" is misspelled on the web. He said it's encouraging to see that the most popular spelling is also the most correct one. Scale is important!


Google Maps Lead to Apps

The Google team wrote the code for Google Maps many years ago but the code was actually built into your browser. When Google maps first launched, people took the dense data-script and worked out how to reverse engineer it for their own use. Google engineers decided to release an API key to make these mash-ups easier after seeing so many people reverse engineer Google Maps without Google's help. Now people can mash-up Google maps within minutes to create their own applications.

To show how easy this is to do, Craig took the audience through the steps to create an interactive application with Google Maps. In the space of about two minutes, he signed up for an API key, grabbed the HTML code and pasted it into his page. He then hacked the map to show Wellington Town Hall (our location) and made the point how easy it is to create really useful tools out of technology that is already available.

As an example, Craig showed the audience Seattle Bus Monster. This site uses an API key for Google Maps to make Seattle bus data and tracking available 24/7. Anyone who needs to catch a bus can look online and instantly find their nearest bus location and run to the bus stop in time to catch it. It's these types of interactive applications that add value to both corporate and government sites.

Craig referenced Rodney Brooks from MIT whose provocative paper "Fast, Cheap and Out of Control" offered new logic and a completely different view of machines. The idea is that there is no center of control among robots so you should make lots of them; don't treat them so precious. Craig said developers should use this logic to create lots of small apps that you can replicate and tweak, rather than one big expensive app that can go horribly wrong. Scale trumps smarts every time!


Experiments in Scale That Have Impacted Google's Operations

Precision vs. Recall

Back in the early 90's, information retrieval on the web was limited to things like Lexus/Nexus. So at that stage, Google would take queries and apply it to the broadest possible search. This was great recall at the cost of precision. But Larry and Sergey wanted something better so they decided to use Boolean search. At the time it was heresy because everything was focused on recall. But the Google founders knew that things had to be super relevant so they developed an algorithm - the core algorithm. It was very simple and relied on Boolean search to determine relevancy.

Genomic Sequencing

In the mid 90's a large project - the Human Genome Project - was underway. The race was on to sequence the genome. Scientists decided to feed this out to a bunch of different people. They chopped up the genome for researchers everywhere and allowed it to replicate. The researchers mapped each chunk with genetic markers and computed a tiling path of tiny fragments.

Sequencing was very expensive, so the data was computed based on a minute number of chunks - very labor intensive. The sequencing took forever and reassembling was a long way off. But then a company came along that said they could do it faster. Sequencing becomes cheaper by automating the job using machines rather than individual people so this company used a clever computer algorithm to conduct the sequencing. This reduced the cost and the researchers were therefore able to reassemble more fragments and achieve a rough draft of the genome in 2000. This sequencing approach was the shotgun approach, where accuracy is lower, but the larger scale allowed the impossible to become possible.

Web Definitions

Google used to do a terrible job of defining terms. Craig noticed people were searching for "definition of...", or "what is a...." etc so he wanted the search engine to provide better results for these searches. He found lots of web pages that contained glossaries and definitions, so he hacked up a Perl script to get the glossary formats.

The first recall results were only 50 percent accurate. He wanted to improve this rate, so he did some experiments with the data. But he could never reach an accuracy level he was happy with. It was later he realized that most of the questions people actually needed answers to could be answered with his crappy little Perl script. He concluded that 100 percent accuracy is not important, that scale is much more important.

Now Google allows you to use the "definition:" query and the question format to get definitions from around the web. Type in "what is a blog?" and you'll get lots of results from Craig's original script.

Protein Sequencing

In biology, Craig says, you're constantly producing proteins. The proteins fold up with particular sequencing. Within computing, you can use this knowledge to do amazing things. You can conduct computations with this type of data but it's time consuming. Somebody at Stanford University noticed that proteins spend a lot of time moving about before folding into an alpha helix. So it was suggested they start the computations with lots of configurations. In this way you can parallelize the data by scale and one will be magically close to a folded protein. So they worked out a way to reduce the problem to a simple process based on mass scale. This is why Google uses maximum scale to conduct algorithmic computations.

Chess vs. Go

You can now compute the value of any potential move in chess. Based on that information, you can compute your projected probability of winning the game from any move. Chess grand masters put a lot of time into this knowledge. But the opposite is true for the game Go, because there is more randomness to the game play.

Recession-Proof Your Business by Building Links

By Sage Lewis, Search Engine Watch

Can you feel the nervousness in the business community? I sure can. SES Chairman Kevin Ryan recently wrote about it in "A Gloomy Searchonomic Forecast."

Even search -- the golden child of marketing -- has been getting pushed around by the market. People are starting to look extra hard at the bottom line, asking, "How much did this cost me for what I got in return?"

Today's economic turbulence reminds me of the 2001 recession in an evolved form. At the end of the dot-com bubble, investors -- and online advertisers -- asked for the first time, "What am I getting for the money I'm spending?"

Until then, companies were online because "they had to be." Everyone wanted to be a "first mover" and put down stakes in the hottest online real estate they could find.

There was no concern for making a return on investment. A dot-com funded with $100 million told me the money was literally endless.

Web 1.0 Wake-up Call Results in PPC World

One day, everyone woke up and realized it would all end. The revelation was a dunk in an ice bath. People sobered up real quick, went back to their Web developers, and asked some hard questions.

Looking back, it was clearly for the better. As much as you'd like to, you simply can't indefinitely exist in a drunken dream world. You need to wake up and stare reality in the face for a while.

For the last couple years, I've seen a strong dedication to paid search. Marketers love the control, tracking, and relative ease the PPC (define) world has offered them. I've heard more discomfort recently about the high cost of PPC than ever before.

I'm seeing a greater interest in CPA (define) models where the company only pays for the lead or sale generated. Companies look closely at how much a lead or sale costs and wonder if they can get it cheaper from somewhere else.

SEO and CPA

You simply won't find a lower CPA than through SEO (define). Of course, there are risks. There's no guarantee if, how, or when a search engine will rank your site for a particular key phrase.

Even if your site is doing well now for a particular ranking, there's no guarantee high rankings will last. These are the major reasons people often forgo SEO in favor of paid search. If the lowest CPA is your goal, then SEO needs a serious review.

The secret to SEO is simple: Have more -- and better -- content and links than the people you're competing with for organic search listings. The links must follow the content. The content is the horse and the links are the cart of the metaphorical cart and horse.

Once you've developed a strategy of creating interesting, ongoing content, then you're off to get your links.

Think of Links as Referrals

If you're like many businesses, referrals are a major part of your new business funnel. New customers are referred to you by happy existing, or previous, customers.

Links work the same way. If you want to get links, you must build up online networks of friends and associates (Facebook, MySpace, Flickr, Twitter, YouTube, etc.). There are many discussion forums teeming with people who'd enjoy the content on your site.

Just as you go to your local chamber of commerce and other networking groups, you want to find online groups to become involved with. And as with your offline networking groups, you get your best results by being an active member over time. You'll want to pick a couple and commit some time.

The 3 Don'ts of Link Building

A word of warning: have you seen first-time visitors to networking groups asking as many people as they can possibly corner, "So, who does your payroll?"

You hate that person, right?

  1. Don't be that person online.

  2. Don't plow into an online community and start begging for links.

  3. Don't throw heavy-handed spammy links around the community.

Become a good member. Participate. Have fun. You'll know when the time comes to put a link out or to ask for some link love.

Just as offline networks will help you ride out rough financial times, online social networks will help you glide right through the choppy seas of the recession-ridden market place.

SEOs, Don't Just Do Something, Sit There!

By Sage Lewis, Search Engine Watch


For hardcore business knowledge there's only one source: The Harvard Business Review. You'll find the brightest minds discussing some of the most forward-thinking business strategy you'll find anywhere. HBR is probably the biggest influence on my business strategy.

The January edition featured the CEO of Lazard, Bruce Wasserstein, in "The HBR Interview: Bruce Wasserstein on Giving Great Advice." He's brokered more than a thousand merger and acquisition deals worth hundreds of billions of dollars. If there's a person who knows business inside out, it's Wasserstein.

At one point in the interview he was asked what CEOs need to know to understand their business landscape. Wasserstein said, "Remind the CEO that corporations have to change in order to prosper and that inaction isn't prudent -- it's radical."

"Inaction isn't prudent -- it's radical."

That's a profound statement. Is the best move no move at all? The conservative road is the safe road. What if being careful is a faster road to extinction than being bold and taking action?

I was reminded of Wasserstein's advice while reading "Link Building Case Study for Luxury Hotels" by my Link Love cohort, Justilien Gaspard. In the "Build Links by Fighting Conventional Wisdom" section, Justilien gave the example of a hotel creating a mapping or review tool other hotels could use on their sites. In effect, helping the competition.

At Search Engine Strategies Chicago, Seth Godin was asked how a small diving school could stand out from the competition. Seth suggested becoming a diving association -- offer package trips, news, advice, and so forth.

Yesterday's News, Google Kiosks, and the Demise of Google

The mantra for the 21st century: To prosper you must change. The newspaper industry, for example, needs to change. They need to throw away the word "paper." They're the news all right (yesterday's news).

Organizations formerly known as "newspapers" need to be online social centers for their communities. They should have informational kiosks at restaurants, gas stations, and malls. They should be the Twitter and the Facebook of their community. Now they can't be those things because Twitter and Facebook have done it for them.

Google filed a patent last year for an interactive kiosk designed for shopping malls. Billboards and kiosks would display audio, video, or graphical ads, matching the ads with inventory in local malls. Haven't seen any Google kiosks yet, have you?

Google's online advertising market share will continue to erode because the world is passing them by. Local search will kill Google.

iTunes Puts Music Biz in Wooden Kimono

The music industry needs to change. Suing moms and kids isn't a successful hearts and minds marketing initiative. Music is moving to free. If they want to survive they will figure out how to compete in marketplace. Otherwise, iTunes will do it for them.

Every time the words "that won't work" come out of your mouth, you need to think again.

We're living in a peer-to-peer, decentralized world. That's the model you must adopt. If you don't, someone else will. The marketplace will reward those who change and adapt. The marketplace will punish those who feel it's prudent to do nothing.

"So what does this must do with linking, Sage?" It has everything to do with linking. If you want links to your site, you must do and be something others simply are not. You need to give something worthwhile to the Internet community.

Justilien gave the idea for hotels to consider a mapping and review tool other hotels could use. Here are some more ideas:

  • Build a Web site that's the tourism center of your community. I assure you, you can do it better than what your community's already done.

  • Shoot video reviews of all the hotels in your area. Give them away.

  • Shoot free video reviews of all local restaurants.

Inaction isn't prudent -- it's radical. I'm here to tell you, business is nothing like it has been for the last 100 years. The Internet has changed everything for everyone. If you don't believe and act on that, you won't survive, plain and simple.

Who you are at the core of your business must reflect the changes of a decentralized marketplace. The customer is the controlling party who dictates how business should be run.

At the end of Justilien's column, he writes: "The question now: 'What user problems or issues can you solve for your particular industry?' Ask yourself: 'What are the linking opportunities? How can we capitalize on them?'"

When you change your business to reflect the new market, you can truly address the problems of your industry. Then you can develop a content strategy that goes to the heart of a well-run linking campaign.

5 Ways to Discover Link Building Ideas

By Justilien Gaspard, Search Engine Watch

Coming up with great link building ideas can be a challenge. It requires creativity, research, and thinking outside the box. Let's review some techniques to get your business started in the process.

One of the most direct methods to discover link building ideas is by solving customer problems. I illustrated this in link building case studies for B2B and the travel industry. By solving a customer problem, I discovered great link building ideas -- a.k.a. link bait (define).

Why is this simple method often overlooked and forgotten? Pretty simple: it isn't sexy enough for an industry that thrives on buzz and hype.

Here are five techniques to uncover customer problems you could turn into a great link building strategy.

Keyword Research

Use your favorite keyword research tool to find out what people are searching for. Look for phrases that indicate the person is looking for answers to a problem. These could include such words as "how to," "help," "tutorial," "fix," and "problem." Now you know specific problems that customers need to have solved. Use this information to create a great link building strategy -- and gain new customers at the same time.

Customers

You can discover link building ideas simply by talking to customers and uncovering their challenges. This includes conducting a survey, making phone calls, or asking customers in your brick-and-mortar locations.

B2B? Conduct a survey of clients to find out their challenges for the upcoming year. Make sure to ask open-ended questions. That's the best way to find the less obvious opportunities.

Staff

Talk to your account managers, customer service staff, and salespeople. They're the people in your organization who have the most contact with customers and the best understanding of their issues.

Tip: Have customer service representatives keep track of problems or questions customers have throughout the week.

Forums, Blogs and Social Media

Spend time reading forums, blogs, and social media sites in your industry to discover recurring problems people face. For blogs and social media, pay close attention to the comments people leave. Much is revealed in those comments.

If someone said something you want to explore in more detail, don't hesitate to contact them directly. Many will be willing to elaborate.

Consumer Review Sites

Spend time researching consumer review sites for your industry. Try to spot recurring issues. Review sites provide a wealth of invaluable customer data.

Use the information gathered about what customers are searching for and brainstorm link building ideas with your staff. Include people from different departments since you never know who'll come up with that incredible idea.

Be different: put a spin on the idea. It's easy to copy what another company has already done. It's just as easy to be ignored by the Web.

Dare to be different. As Sage Lewis pointed out in his link column last week, "If you want links to your site, you must do and be something others simply are not. You need to give something worthwhile to the Internet community."

Is your idea worthwhile? Is it different? What sets your strategy apart from the competition?

Good link building is just good marketing. It's about solving problems, being creative, doing research and thinking outside the box.

Use Directory Rating Websites to Find Top Directories

By Gobala Krishnan |

Paid directory submissions can be scary.

Unlike submitting to free directories, it’s way more stressful to send a Paypal payment to the owner of a directory and never really know if your site will ever be listed. Most web directories appear to be lifeless, and you don’t know if the webmasters that manage them are still actively accepting submissions.

So you fill-up their form, make a payment, and wait for a response. A week passes, then a month, and eventually you’ll forget about checking if your site is listed. Not to mention that by now you’ve already submitted to so many paid directories that you can’t keep track of them all. What a way to waste cash.

Isn’t there a better way to find directories worthy of your hard-earned money?

This is where directory rating sites play an important role. Simply put, these sites attempt to find, organize and rate the thousands of free and paid directories available on the Internet.

Here are two of them:

Directory Rate

directory-rate

DirectoryRate.com allows you to rate the top directories, so you can read other people’s ratings and experience before you decide to submit. It’s also easy to see which directories are active, and the overall SEO power of each. The site assigned it’s own rating system, and the active directories will display this rating on their sites.

Directory Critic

directory-critic

DirectoryCritic.com works the same way. When a directory gets listed high here, it’s providing social proof that they have an active submission process, and you can even get testimonials of how much traffic to expect from your submissions. It’s a win-win situation for the directory owners and for you.

If you submit your blog to a directory via these services and get good service, make sure you go back to the sites and submit your own rating or review. This would help other webmasters find good directories. You can also share your list via StumbleUpon or other social bookmarking sites.

If you own a directory, consider listing your site in these sites and instantly improve your reputation and daily submissions.

Your blog can be featured for free...

Hi Farhan,

When you browse the Internet looking for a list of blogs,
you might have noticed you are often drawn to a particular
blog because they stand out from the rest. Often webmasters
and blog owners pay a lot of money to have their listing
featured so that they attract a higher click through rate.

While watching those blog listings, you might have wished
that your blog could be in that place instead of theirs.

But unfortunately, you can't compete with them because you
don't have that kind of budget to make your blog listing
featured.

But now... It's actually possible. You can use a simple
and free tool called Favicon to make your blog stand out
amongst thousands of others. It's like having your blog
featured in lots of places for free.

Visit below to learn more about favicon and how it can
dramatically impact in your blog recognition:
http://www.maxblogpress.com/plugins/mfi/

Normally adding a favicon to you blog will require you to
pay a designer to create a matching icon for your blog and
then having to edit some files in WordPress. For non
technical bloggers this is hard and will only serve to
confuse them.

That's not the problem anymore as we have released our new
plugin called "MaxBlogPress Favicon":
http://www.maxblogpress.com/plugins/mfi/

By using this plugin you can install your very own favicon
in less than 10 minutes without ever touching any code to
display a catchy favicon on your blog.

Download it for free from here:
http://www.maxblogpress.com/plugins/mfi/

If you have any comments and suggestions for this plugin
then please post them here:
http://www.maxblogpress.com/plugins/mfi/mfi-comments/

Best Regards,

Pawan Agrawal
http://www.MaxBlogPress.com

Keyword Basics Part 5: Using Keywords in Linking Text

Mike @ Wordtracker to me

Hi farhan,

Keyword Basics Part 5: Using Keywords in Linking Text

Using keywords in both internal and external linking text is a must-do for any optimization campaign - and it's not as difficult as you might think. We'll show you how in your final Keyword Basics lesson:
http://www.wordtracker.com/keywordbasics/keyword-basics-lesson-five-gh.pdf (pdf)

Great January discount!

Get maximum value from this course by using the full version of Wordtracker.

You can get great offers on one week, one month and one year subscriptions.

There's never been a better time to find out what your customers are really looking for online. Just follow this link today:
http://www.wordtracker.com/offers/keyword-basics.html

And remember, it's entirely risk free - if you're not satisfied for any reason, we'll refund your money in full with no questions asked.

Wishing you every success online,

Andy Mindel & Mike Mindel
Co-founders, Wordtracker

Rivergold Associates Ltd
Unit 11, Apollo Studios
London
NW5 2SB
United Kingdom


P.S. If you missed any of the past lessons, follow these links:

Part 1: How search engines work
http://www.wordtracker.com/keywordbasics/keyword-basics-lesson-one.pdf

Part 2: Discovering the keyword matrix
http://www.wordtracker.com/keywordbasics/keyword-basics-lesson-two-ak.pdf

Part 3: Choosing your best keywords
http://www.wordtracker.com/keywordbasics/keyword-basics-lesson-three-yz.pdf

Part 4: Using keywords in website copywriting
http://www.wordtracker.com/keywordbasics/keyword-basics-lesson-four-ss.pdf

Keyword Basics Part 4: Using Keywords in Website Copywriting

Mike @ Wordtracker to me

Hi farhan,

Keyword Basics Part 4: Using Keywords in Website Copywriting

Now that you've got your best keywords, how do you use them effectively in your website copy? We'll show you how in today's lesson. Just follow the link:
http://www.wordtracker.com/keywordbasics/keyword-basics-lesson-four-ss.pdf (pdf)

Coming up: Keyword Basics Part 5: Using Keywords in Linking Text

Using keywords in both internal and external linking text is a must-do for any optimization campaign - and it's not as difficult as you might think. We'll show you how in your final Keyword Basics lesson tomorrow.

Great January discount!

Get maximum value from this course by using the full version of Wordtracker.

You can get great offers on one week, one month and one year subscriptions.

There's never been a better time to find out what your customers are really looking for online. Just follow this link today:
http://www.wordtracker.com/offers/keyword-basics.html

And remember, it's entirely risk free - if you're not satisfied for any reason, we'll refund your money in full with no questions asked.

Wishing you every success online,

Andy Mindel & Mike Mindel
Co-founders, Wordtracker

Rivergold Associates Ltd
Unit 11, Apollo Studios
London
NW5 2SB
United Kingdom


P.S. If you missed any of the past lessons, follow these links:

Part 1: How search engines work
http://www.wordtracker.com/keywordbasics/keyword-basics-lesson-one.pdf

Part 2: Discovering the keyword matrix
http://www.wordtracker.com/keywordbasics/keyword-basics-lesson-two-ak.pdf

Part 3: Choosing your best keywords
http://www.wordtracker.com/keywordbasics/keyword-basics-lesson-three-yz.pdf

Keyword Basics Part 3: Choosing Your Best Keywords

Email from wordtracker


Hi farhan,

Keyword Basics Part 3: Choosing Your Best Keywords

Today, you'll learn how to cherry pick the very best keywords from the thousands you can generate using Wordtracker. Just follow the link:
http://www.wordtracker.com/keywordbasics/keyword-basics-lesson-three-yz.pdf (pdf)

Coming up: Keyword Basics Part 4: Using Keywords in Website Copywriting

Now that you've learned how to choose your very best keywords, you'll need to know how to use them in your website copywriting. That's what you'll learn in tomorrow's lesson.

Great January discount!

Get maximum value from this course by using the full version of Wordtracker.

You can get great offers on one week, one month and one year subscriptions.

There's never been a better time to find out what your customers are really looking for online. Just follow this link today:
http://www.wordtracker.com/offers/keyword-basics.html

And remember, it's entirely risk free - if you're not satisfied for any reason, we'll refund your money in full with no questions asked.

Wishing you every success online,

Andy Mindel & Mike Mindel
Co-founders, Wordtracker

Rivergold Associates Ltd
Unit 11, Apollo Studios
London
NW5 2SB
United Kingdom


P.S. If you missed any of the past lessons, follow these links:

Part 1: How search engines work
http://www.wordtracker.com/keywordbasics/keyword-basics-lesson-one.pdf

Part 2: Discovering the keyword matrix
http://www.wordtracker.com/keywordbasics/keyword-basics-lesson-two-ak.pdf

Farhan, Is Adsense Your "Game"?

Email from maxblogpress

Hi Farhan,

It's Pawan Agarwal from MaxBlogPress.com

If Google Adsense is your "cup of tea", I strongly recommend
you check out the Wordpress Adsense System:

http://www.maxblogpress.com/r/WordPressAdsense.html

The Wordpress Adsense System is a complete guide for blogging
or even marketing newbies that want to use Wordpress to build
Adsense sites.

Here's the cool thing about Adsense:

1 - It requires very little work to start earning fast

2 - It's almost 100% maintenance-free since it's just clicks
you're after and you don't have to provide support

3 - Done the right way, it displays sites related to your
content and actually helps improve the overall value

4 - It can blend in with your site, and never annoys your
blog readers.

5 - Almost any blogger from any country can have an Adsense
account and receive a check to their home address.
(with some eceptions)

Almost every blog I've come across have Adsense ads in them
one way or another, simply because it's the easiest way to
make money blogging.

I strongly recommend you invest in this superb guide:

http://www.maxblogpress.com/r/WordPressAdsense.html

Best Regards,

Pawan Agrawal
http://www.MaxBlogPress.com

Farhan, 5 Components of A Money-Making Blog

Email from maxblogpress

Hi Farhan,

It's Pawan Agarwal from MaxBlogPress.com

A blog that is set-up for making money on the Internet works
differently than blog that are set-up for fun.

One thing for sure is that when profit is the word, you need
to do these 5 things differently:

1- Keyword Research
------------------------------------------------------------

If you just want to blog for fun you can write about anything
you want.

But if you're blogging for profit, you need to research a list
of keywords and build a list of it that you want to target for
the search engines.

You'll be able to use the free keyword research tools here:
http://freekeywords.wordtracker.com/
http://www.keyworddiscovery.com/search.html

2- On-Site Search Engine Optimization
------------------------------------------------------------

SEO is definitely important for getting more traffic from
Google and other search engines.

The good news is that with Wordpress, all you need to do to
drastically improve your SEO is to download the right plugins
and do minor tweaks with them.

Each post your wirte must focus on getting ranked for the
keywords, while maintaining a good, read-able article.

3- Off-Site Search Engine Optimization
------------------------------------------------------------

You must get as many links as possible to your blog.

But links alone are not enough. The links themselves must
use an "anchor text" based on your list of keywords and
you'll need to get a variety of links:

a) Reciprocal link exchange (least effective)
b) 3-Way Link Exchange (more effective)
c) Pure one-way links (most effective)

Of the three, getting one-way links are the most difficult
but you can do that by submitting articles to this site:
http://www.ezinearticles.com

4- Mini-Blogs Vs Large Blogs
------------------------------------------------------------

You don't need a huge blog like TechCrunch.com to be able
to make profits.

In fact, most people build "mini" Wordpress blogs. What
this means is that instead of blogging continuously for
the rest of their lives, they create a blog that focuses
on a very, very small niche topic.

Then, they determine the number of posts or articles they
need to write. They then write those articles, and convert
their Wordpress blog into a "site" using the "static front
page" option in Wordpress.

Now instead of a blog that you need to stick with daily,
you can move on to a different niche market and create a
blog there.

All that's left with the first blog is to continuously
build more links to it and get more traffic.

Maybe one day you can come back and add more articles
to the first blog, but one thing's for sure this tactic
works.

Wordpress is a blog platform, but it can also work like
a normal site if you know how to do it.

5- Having an Exit Strategy
------------------------------------------------------------

Ok so you built your blog, you got 1000 RSS subscribers
but now you're sick of it.

The worst thing you can do is to continue blogging after
you've lost interest in the topic.

So you need an exist strategy. You can either:

a) Convert the blog into a static site and enjoy the
residual income but stop writing new posts

b) Demolish the blog and redirect all traffic to your
other site using a 403 redirect.

c) Sell the blog on popular marketplaces like at:
http://www.sitepoint.com/marketplace
http://marketplace.easywordpress.com
http://market.mashable.com/

Wow...

Is that enough information overload for today?

As much as I try to cover all aspects of blogging for profit
it's near impossible to do it via emails.

What I can do is give you a really good recommendation,
especially if you're interested in building Wordpress blogs
and making money from Google Adsense:

http://www.maxblogpress.com/r/WordPressAdsense.html

The guide, called "Wordpress Adsense System" by my friend
Gobala Krishnan has been one of the best-sellers in it's
category since 2006, and still going strong.

In fact, he even gives you the "before and after" facts of
blogs belonging to his early customers. These are really
powerful testimonials indeed!

This guide covers most of what I just said in this email,
so go here and check it out:

http://www.maxblogpress.com/r/WordPressAdsense.html

Best Regards,

Pawan Agrawal
http://www.MaxBlogPress.com

Farhan, Get Blog Traffic Fast...

Email from maxblogpress


Hi Farhan,

It's Pawan Agarwal from MaxBlogPress.com

Traffic is the holy grail of blogging - everyonebody wants it
but it's more of a myths sometimes than actualy fact.

Read a couple of blogs on the Internet now and you'll know
what I mean - everyone has their own theory but for the most
part it's just a theory.

So before you go "grail hunting", wouldn't it be better to
start getting traffic NOW instead of waiting?

Here are a few ways to get traffic to your blog FAST:

1 - Join My BlogLog
-----------------------------------------------------------------------

That's right, go to http://www.mybloglog.com and create your
account. List your blog as a "community" for free and you've
already exposed yourself to bloggers from all over the world.

Next, add the MyBlogLog widget to your blog and watch real
people (with pictures) as they discover your blog. Add them
as a friend and grow your MBL profile.

Soon bloggers will be flocking to your new blog.

2 - Update Your Forum Signatures
-----------------------------------------------------------------------

If you've been online for any amount of time, you may have
posted on a handful of online forums that allow you to out
your own signature and link to your website.

In the past you may have put an affiliate link or just your
name in the signature colum - it's time to change that!

Just log in and update it to include a link to your blog.
As you're doing this, checkout the hottest or latest topics
on that forum and leave a reply or comment.

3- Leave a Comment on Other Blogs
-----------------------------------------------------------------------

Go to http://blogsearch.google.com and build yourself a list
of blogs tightly related to yours.

Then, participate in the hottest discussions on the blog.
Remember, you have to sincerely contribute to the blog post
itself, not just leave a half-baked spammy comment.

When people read your comment, they will click through to
your blog to check it out. If they like what they see, they
will subscribe to your RSS feeds and come back for more later.

4- Submit Your Posts to Blog Aggregators
-----------------------------------------------------------------------

A "blog aggregator" displays the latest posts from other
blogs, and most of them are free to submit your posts to:

http://www.plugim.com (Internet marketing blogs only)
http://www.bloggingzoom.com

If your posts are interesting enough, others will vote for
them and if you make it to the front page you'll be getting
a lot of traffic.

5- Do A Review Exchange
-----------------------------------------------------------------------

Remember the list of sites you comment on?

Approach the owner and ask for a "review exchange" where they
write a post reviewing your blog, and in return you write one
for them.

Well actually if you're just starting out, you may have to write
the review first and let them know about it.

Even if they don't write a full review like you did, they will
find a place to plug-in a link to your blog or your individual
blog posts.

Most bloggers are kind (really!) and they would love the extra
exposure of course.

That's it, the "5 Fastest Ways of Getting Traffic to Your Blog"

I said "fastest", not "best". There are other ways I'm sure, but
hey if you can't even do this then you truly are a "grail hunter".

And guess what, no one has found the grail yet, Farhan :)


Best Regards,

Pawan Agrawal
http://www.MaxBlogPress.com

Farhan, Why Are You Blogging Anyway?

Email from maxblogpress

Hi Farhan,

It's Pawan Agarwal from MaxBlogPress.com

There are literally millions of blog out there in all shapes
and sizes.

But everyone only visits a handful of them. Ever wondered why?
Only a handful of them ever become successful. Ever wondered why?

Let me tell you it has nothing to do with these 2 theories:

------------------------------------------------------------
Theory A: Early Birds Win
------------------------------------------------------------

In this so-called theory, many people try to convince you
that unless you're the first to do something, you'll always
live in the shadow of the early birds.

Yet history has revealed that the "early birds" or the
pioneers are the ones lying by the roadside with arrows in
their backs.

Imagine starting a blog before Wordpress existed. Before
you can just download plugins or themes instead of having
to create them yourself. Before people even knew what a
"blog" was..

Could you have been successful if you started back then?
Was Bill Gates the first to invent an operating system?
Was Facebook the first social networking site?
Was YouTube the first online video sharing site?

The answer is a BIG "NO".

No, you don't have to be the first to be successful.

------------------------------------------------------------
Theory B: Saturation
------------------------------------------------------------

In this so-called theory, the naysayers convince you that
you're "too late". "It's over dude, it's too saturated.."

This is the number ONE excuse most people in any industry
give when they fail to measure up to the competition.

It's an easy way out - now you can put the blame on the
market instead of yourself...

But "saturation" goes hand in hand with "profitability"
All profitable markets will have other competitors in
them. The same goes with blogging.

In fact, if I found 600 blogs on the topic of "Outsourcing"
I wouldn't say it's "saturated" - I'd say "Here's where the
money is!"

Of course you can seek out markets with no blogs in them
and try to build one - but that would make you the "early
bird" in that market and the most likely to fail before
the market even takes off.

So what make great blogs great?

Let me tell you the secret - "Purpose"

They all have a specific purpose in mind. A specific goal.
Gone are the days when you can blog about everything and
expect people to be interested.

Today, your blog has to have a specific *niche* purpose.

a) Are you blogging to build awareness on a topic and
not looking for profits?

b) Are you blogging to help improve the image and brand
of your company or product?

c) Are you blogging just to make some money from Adsense
ad not really care about fame and glory?

d) Are you blogging to be recognized as an expert in
a specific topic or market?

It really doesn't matter what your purpose is, as long as
you have one, and don't lose sight of it in your entire
blogging journey.

At MaxBlogPress, we'll help you find that purpose. We'll
then help you get more traffic to your blog, and help you
realize that purpose.

Stay tuned for my next email...

Best Regards,

Pawan Agrawal
http://www.MaxBlogPress.com