Thursday, September 09, 2004

TradeDoubler sets the pace for online marketing and sales in Europe

STOCKHOLM, Sweden – September 8, 2004 – TradeDoubler, the leading provider of solutions for managing online marketing and sales activities, today reinforced its market position by announcing revenues of €27.1 million for the six months ended June 30th 2004.

The six month audited results demonstrate rapid growth which almost equals the total revenue for 2003 of €28 million. For the same period of 2003, the company generated revenues of €11.1 million, which means that year-on-year growth for the first half of 2003 to 2004 is 144 per cent.

Having tracked and generated sales revenues of €400 million in 2003 for its clients, this figure has increased to just under €100 million in August 2004 alone and the company expects this to rise to well in excess of 1 billion Euros for the full year.
e-consultancy

Pop-Up's successful- or Not

Myth: Since people go dyspeptic over ubiquitous, in-your-face marketing techniques like pop-up ads, they either tune them out or close them down without even seeing the product or service advertised.

Fact: Despite popular perception, pop-up ads are among the best performing of all online ads. Michael Bailey, interactive media supervisor at GSD&M Advertising of Austin, Texas, said, "'Pop-ups generate roughly 5 to 10 times the response rate of standard banner units" because "people are more apt to notice them."

This doesn't mean that most people like them. A study conducted by Dynamic Logic found that almost 70 percent of those surveyed had a "very negative" opinion of pop-under ads and almost 80 percent held similar views on pop-up ads that launch a smaller browser window. Wired

Spam successful- or Not?

Most experienced web surfers will tell you that the most annoying aspects of life on the internet are pop-up ads and spam. But in the online marketing game there are a number of popular misconceptions floating around:

Myth: Spam can't possibly work because no one is stupid enough to fall for come-ons for penile enhancements, lower mortgage rates and Nigerian scams.

Fact: If only that were true. "Spam does work, but in a relatively artless way," said David Schwartz, a director of sales at Claria, an online behavioral marketing firm. Since there is almost no cost associated with sending out millions of e-mails (unlike, say, with mail-order catalogs that require hefty postage), spammers require a miniscule click-through percentage. If a bulk e-mailer sends out 1 million messages for a product that he sells for $20, he only needs 0.1 percent to purchase it to earn $20,000. Wired

Wednesday, September 08, 2004

Rising Keyword Expenses Reducing Profitability

The cheap keyword prices found by search engine advertising's early adopters are disappearing, which is making the great early returns on investment harder to find. Profitability, in the eyes of one Internet expert, will now come only with a little creativity. Good returns on investment are apparently still there, but increasingly with second and third choice keywords and phrases. ecommercetrends

Tuesday, September 07, 2004

Overture Shifting To Default Broad Match

Within the next few weeks, Overture will make a major switch to matching terms on a broad basis, rather than the traditional exact match default it has followed since the company's launch. Finally, some might say, as Google has offered the service since the start. The change will make it easier for advertisers to gain more traffic, as they'll no longer have to think of each exact term they want to target. This makes tapping into the "tail" of search queries, the relatively low-volume searches that happen, easier to target.

The change will likely increase Overture's revenues, as well. Not only will advertisers probably to target more terms, but they'll also likely pay more as previously low cost terms get rolled into the same bid price as more expensive terms. SearchEngineWatch

Few companies use SEO effectively

A new analysis performed by Oneupweb indicates that the number of companies effectively using SEO is quite small — only nine of the 100 companies in the study. Oneupweb's criteria for effective use is based on the practice of both "ethical" and "unethical" SEO methods. "Ethical" methods include pertinent keywords in tags and relevant titles and body text, whereas "unethical" methods include invisible text and image links, keyword tags not related to the business sector and other methods used to trick search engines.

However, Oneupweb finds that search engine optimization can pay off. Companies with effective SEO often end up in the top 10 search results on Google for their respective keywords. eMarketer

Monday, September 06, 2004

SE Trademark Case Moves Forward

A federal judge has let insurer GEICO's lawsuit against the two biggest providers of search-based advertising move forward, setting the stage for closer examination of whether the burgeoning form of online ads breaks trademark laws.

The court decision is significant because it essentially states that GEICO's facts, when accepted as true, could prove trademark infringement. But the case is far from resolved, legal experts say. eWeek