Tag Archives: marketing

Do You Participate in Pingback or Trackback?

PingbackAre you generally a user of the system or are you an active participator in the process? Using a pingback can have several benefits for you as the one who uses the link, but it also benefits the person or company you are linking to when Google comes around to index all the relevant pages.

What is a Pingback, Trackback, or Permalink?

For most of us that are not total code junkies I thought it might be good to a have a little background information first. All three of these terms are similar in nature and do similar tasks, with slight variations.

Pingback

What exactly is a pingback? A pingback is method of linking back to an article or post you read on another blog, from within the article you are writing. I will have more on this below. An example of this would be linking to article related to this article that someone else wrote, like this: Linking To Differing Opinion, by Andy Beard. The link I just posted is considered to Andy as a pingback to his original article.

From this blog, to Andy’s, which then comes back to this blog.

Trackback

A trackback is very similar but generally is used as a url location to link back to an article you have written, some times from an article you are writing back to another article of your own. An example of this might be a link to a previous article on my own blog. This is one I wrote last year on how to improve customer service, and the trackback would be here: Steps to Improve Customer Service by Answering Email

From this blog, to another article within this blog, which then links to this article.

Permalink

A permalink is the actual permanant url location of the article in question. For example, the permalink for the same article I wrote last year as mentioned above would have this permanent url http://scott.islandzephyr.com/2007/11/02/improve-customer-service-sales/ , usually a very long address that no one wants to post in full, but it works well using an anchor tag.

All of these terms can be used in conjunction with each other as one of three forms of linkbacks. All of which should be used in effectively marketing your blog or website, but be careful how you use them, they are also the tools of spammers when used incorrectly.

What Does a Pingback Actually Do?

A “ping” comes from when you would reach out to another IP address by sending a small bit of information, and in return, you would receive a small bit of information, then you would know that you actually reached the IP address in question. So, when you write an article or blog post and mention another article, and link to it, it will send out a small bit of information saying you did so, and give you a small bit in return.

It is generally quite acceptable to other bloggers or website owners to post back to an article that they have written. It is not generally acceptable to copy what they have written and just repost it on your site, even if you do give the author credit. Some of the reason for this is that they don’t get any benefit from you repeating their information, where a pingback to their site does.

Why Don’t I Just Mention the Other Article Instead?

When you post a link back to an article it will also benefit you (more than just scraping or copying their content) because many times it will automatically post a link in the comments section of their article for the article you wrote. This will bring a certain number of visitors back to your site as well.

Good for you, good for them, and it is usually quite appreciated by the other site. Scrapping content, whether done with good intentions or not, is not appreciated and serves of little benefit to either party.

Is It Better To Give or Receive a Pingback?

Well, in this case, it is probably better to receive the pingback (depending on the content of the site of course) than to give it, BUT, you probably have to give them to receive them. There are other things going on in the background with Google when you use a pingback, and most of the time, it will render the site receiving the pingback more relevant overall because the information was worthy of someone else writing about it.

This can have an opposite effect that may come into play when the site using the pingback is of questionable content, but like a political candidate, it is hard to control who recommends or endorses you and such is the case with pingbacks.

Conclusion

Overall the rule of thumb would be to pinback, not scrapeback. No one likes seeing their content scraped and used on another site and it gives no benefit to the site that created the original content, so use a pingback when you can.

Keep in mind that pingbacks are the tool of some spammers so use it for legitimate purposes when you want to quote another article that corresponds to your own and you will find that the other site will most likely appreciate the mention and link.

Is FetchBack Retarget Marketing Right for Your Company

Fetchback Retarget MarketingInternet business owners have many different options when it comes to online marketing, but what is the best method or methods to promote your store. Fetchback is a specific type of marketing that might not be for everyone, but it looks like it has the potential to get some of those customers lost in cyber space back to your specific eCommerce store, or even monetize your products or website in some way.

When I first started looking at Fetchback I was pretty excited about the prospects of getting those customers who left an online store without making a purchase or signing up for any newsletter or email, back. Their techniques are unique in that they, as far as I can tell, as one of the few companies that targets those visitors that left.

Who is Fetchback

CNN Money on Fetchback

Fetchback is a company out of Arizona that specializes in retarget marketing, founded by Chad Little. Little has past experience in the online marketing field and was also the founder of AdOn Network, a keyword target marketing company. The domain registration info shows that the name has been registered for about a year and is good through 2011, and it looks like Fetchback has been actively operating and adding new clients for about 6 months, launching its service on April 11th, 2007.

Their aim is to convert those “lost” customers into repeat buyers, called behavioral targeting, and they do this through a patent-pending application on your online store pages. I could not find a patent for the application in a patent search but patents can be pending for years and are not easy to search.

Fetchback is organized in a typical structure with their founder, Little, called their Chief Retriever, a four member board with a lot of online marketing experience collectively, and a small sales or targeting specialist group. Overall structure is quite small and although they don’t say how many employees they have, I would make an educated guess it is around 20.

Retarget Marketing and How is it Used by Fetchback

Retarget marketing, or also called by Fetchback behavioral targeting, is a CPC (cost per click) marketing program that targets the customers that have left your eCommerce store without making a purchase. Commonly seen in the stats as the abandon carts, these customers are then shown a CPC banner or graphical ad on other high traffic websites that they frequent, and not necessarily pages that have anything to do with your own store.

Unlike other online marketing companies, they use a wide variety of ads including paid searches, TV, display ads, and even print ads in some cases. As a small business owner, the reach is far greater than you would be able to effectively hit on your own since they use a large network of ad campaigns on big name sites like ESPN, ABC, YouTube, most of which are out of reach for small eCommerce store shops.

It works by placing a single line of code (called a PDC) on your online store, sometimes on several different key pages, that places, according to Fetchback,

an anonymous cookie containing no personal or identifiable information and no spyware or adware whatsoever

The cookie is placed on the visitors computer which then triggers some type of banner or other ad when the customer goes to a site that is in the network used by Fetchback. The customer has the ability to opt out of receiving future cookies and can delete the cookie if they do not want the service, although I am guessing that most customers will not know or understand the concept of how a cookie works.

Their website does have more information about their company and you can read their official blog or Little’s blog (although it hasn’t been updated for a while) for more information.

Graphics and Banner Ads

For the banner ads themselves they offer four different size .gif ads from a rectangular to skyscraper and they suggest that you do not use the same banner ads as you do with other companies, but an ad that will target the customer to come back to the store site. It is interesting to note that two commonly used banner sizes, 468×60 and 125×125 are not two of the choices, so companies that use that size ad are probably not included in their “network”.

The banner sizes and the fact that it probably won’t be the same ads as you use on your other campaigns is something that needs to be kept in mind when budgeting for this campaign. If you are not a company that does their own graphics and banner ads, you might have need to high a graphics design company to place effective ads with the program.

How Much Does it Cost

The pricing information on their website isn’t really all that telling, they say between a penny and a million bucks. In actuality, it is pretty expensive for the small online store that has a limited marketing budget. They compare it to Google where you set the budget and pay the CPC,

but you can get in with Google for almost nothing, and pay literally what you want.

In order to see the actually dollars you are going to have to put out, you will need to create an account and request a proposal for your specific company. I do consulting for a few companies and one was seriously considering their offer but just couldn’t make it work into their marketing budget. The proposal was broken down to a CPC per lost customer, around $.25 each, but you had to commit to 3 months of service at $500 per month, a total of about $1,500 for the entire campaign.

It might be a hard sell to companies with revenues under $500,000 or less annually. For those companies in the range of $500,000 to $1,000,000 in annual revenues coming from their online eCommerce store, it might be a little easier to work it into the marketing budget.

Will it Work for Your Company

That is the big question of course. It is a new company, so there isn’t a lot of history to look at, and reports to review before you actually make the financial decision and take the plunge are not included with the proposal. Without any real information on its effectiveness I thought back to another company, BuySafe, that did a proposal for me and then did a 30 day test to prove to me the results were what they said they would be.

Fetchback Retarget Marketing

It was pretty compelling when you can look at actual data and see that the marketing campaign did do what it was intended to do for my specific company. I ended up buying their services for more than a year before I moved most of my business away from eBay. I was really hoping for something like that in this case but no such offer could be worked out.

The program looks great, but most of the online marketing companies today will let you do a test drive first to see how great it works, especially when the initial financial commitment is this high. Other options might be a discount for a trial time or anything to see how well the program works without having to spend the entire amount up front.

If an offer comes my way I will be sure to update the results here. I do know of one company that is doing a test (full price of course) and when the results are known I will try to do an updated post to the effectiveness of the campaign.

Other Points of View

While the concept is great, targeting a customer form another site may or may not be something that the customer actually wants to see. Of course online marketing is all about making sure the customer gets the information presented to them that we know they really do want to see if they knew all the options and sales that are available to them, right?

I asked an online “consumer” and their first reaction was a little negative because they perceived the campaign as a little sneaky, but that is what most people think about cookies. This isn’t really to much of an issue for the business owner since most customers will not really understand how the campaign works, and may not even notice or connect the dots from one site to the other.

It was summed up well in a post, What Will Affiliate Marketing Be Like In 5 Years?, where it was said:

Companies like FetchBack will become more mainstream but still may be out of the reach to most merchants.

There is no doubt that retargeting online ads in a more effective way is the way online marketing is headed. Fetchback is one company that has a head start through their specific application and should have a strong presence in the future of online marketing. Little’s post on his blog, We’re Changing Online Advertising, shows where the company is headed, going to the next level and having fun doing it. Shouldn’t we all.

SEO Steps For a Better ChannelAdvisor Store

ChannelAdvisor CompleteThere are several good steps you can and should take to improve the seo for your ChannelAdvisor store pages and categories. This is part two of a two part article where I first outlined some steps you can’t take from within the store administration pages that are items you probably would like to implement in good seo practice, but really can’t for one reason or another, What SEO Steps You Can’t Take With ChannelAdvisor. I will now take a look at what you can do to keep your store’s SERP as high up as possible (titled: SEO Steps For a Better ChannelAdvisor Stores).

I realized that some may not be that familiar with using a ChannelAdvisor Store itself, even when using the products that put in place for eBay. Most of ChannelAdvisor’s business is in the auction management software area, so if you haven’t tried their store services as well it might be worth a look. It is another channel opportunity for those who don’t want to be so dependent on eBay for all their sales. For many online retailers, this is the key, finding alternative channels to selling on eBay so if an eBay crash comes your business isn’t dead. Infopia is another company looking at these types of alternative channels to eBay, embracing multi channel - cross channel selling companies (I will review their services in full in a later article) to go beyond eBay.

For many PowerSellers, eBay is just the beginning. With Infopia’s Marketplace Manager, you can drastically increase your sales by pushing your products out to more online marketplaces and create a multi-channel, online selling strategy.

ChannelAdvisor also has several other very useful products but this is in specific reference to the storefront. So, assuming you have opened a ChannelAdvisor Store, there are some needed steps to get the most out of your eCommerce storefront.

Customize Store Name and Logo

This would be the first stop. Log into your administration panel and click on the menu at the top for “store”, then go to “store name & logo” and you will see several fields explained below. This is usually completed during the setup of the store, but double check, you may have only put in your url store name. You will see several different boxes, store name and url, logo, and html page information. Make sure all these fields are filled in, this is where all the meta data is taken from when your index page is shown.

Customize Store Name and Logo

Store Name

If you are choosing your the store name, keep is short. Use your company name but don’t use something like “my store and all my products where you will love to shop store”. It will be used in many different places on your store, so think about it like a good domain name. If you have a company name just place it here. Think about dashes or underlines ahead of time, changing this after the fact is not going to be an easy move, especially when your customers have bookmarked where to find you.

Store URL and Domain Forward

Store url is what domain name you are going to have, so follow the above rules and all that you know about good domain names, keep it short, easy on dashes, try not to use mis-spelled words if possible, in general, use your company name or a version thereof. If you have an existing domain name you can use the same thing here since it will render the url from within the servers from ChannelAdvisor.

There is also a link where you can make any existing domain name url’s forward to the ChannelAdvisor url you just created. You will have to change the name servers on your hosting company so proceed with a little caution. It is not difficult but it does require a little more than just filling out a keyword. Using their forward will render your own domain name on the storefront and is certainly a good option if you can do that.

Store Title, Meta Description, and Meta Keywords

This is probably the most important set of fields, and probably the most commonly left blank. These fields will be visible to customers, show in the search engine results, and help in your rankings. Your competition is probably using these fields and if you are not they will have an unneeded advantage over your store.

Store Title

This is what shows on the top of each page viewed by your customers. Not only that, it is what will show as the first line in the search engine results when someone does a search on Google or Yahoo. It should usually include your store name and a few details about the products you sell or your slogan or tag line. Make it descriptive but not too long. When someone clicks through to a category page it will show all the information on the categories and also the store title. Using ChannelAdvisor as an example their title reads: ChannelAdvisor - The Leader in Online Channel Management Solutions and Services.

Meta Description and Meta Keywords

The meta description is the most important field on this screen to complete in my opinion. The meta description is what will show as the first line or two of the search engine results and are often given more search engine relevance then the keywords themselves. Keeping with the ChannelAdvisor example, look at the screen shot below. The first few lines are the description of their services. Use full short sentences with good keywords, but don’t use just keywords only. Notice the quote below, it has some good keywords but is not just keywords separated by commas.

ChannelAdvisor combines best practices, innovative software and integrated technology to help retailers maximize their profits across multiple e-commerce…

Google Results for ChannelAdvisor

The keywords are just what they say, a set of keywords that best describes your store products or services. Pick these carefully and do not use the same word more than once. Use 10 keywords at the most, more and it starts to make the other words a little less relevant.

Manage Categories

This would be the next big thing to complete in the store administration pages. This will be a little more time consuming if it has not be completed before and if you have already established categories. Go to your admin console and click on the menu for “store” then “manage categories” and it will take you to the category pages.

Category Names

If you have already created your categories (and sub-categories) you will see a list of the categories on this page. If you haven’t created them yet, use short one or two word category names, these will be used in the url in your store and should be something keyword friendly. Keep the caps in mind too. Either will work but what ever you use will be a permalink from that point on. If you create a category with a blank space in the name it will render on the url in ChannelAdvisor as “%20″ which is not something all that great for the search engine bots.

A category name called Non Fiction will show up on the url address line as /mystorename/Non%20Fiction/ and the category name called Non-Fiction will show as /mystorename/Non-Fiction/ and it works the same for all the sub-categories down the line. Use three or four letter words with spaces all the way down the line and it will not look so great. A screen shot example from ChannelAdvisor’s case studies on their website shows a url with categories that have spaces used in the names along with the subcategories. You can see the results below.

ChannelAdvisor Categories

Images, Keywords, and Descriptions

Next will be a short description and long description, basically meta keywords and meta description, sort of. Use the same rules as listed above for these two items, keeping in mind the self imposed 10 keyword limit and perhaps show a few less on the categories. When you enter this information it will show up on the title page just after the main page title, so if you use a big list of keywords the title will look a little strange.

It may take a little time to put all this information into each category but it will improve the quality of each category listing and should improve search engine results.

The steps listed here are some very basic seo steps for your ChannelAdvisor store, but they are needed. If your competition is not using them you will have a little ahead, but they probably are and you don’t want to be a little behind. These steps can also be applied across several different sales channels, including eBay and Amazon. eBay in particular allows their store users to adjust the keywords of each category, but not quite to the extent that ChannelAdvisor allows.

Reasons to Look at Alternatives to Google Adsense

In my last post, Reasons to Keep Running Google Adsense Ads, I looked at some good reasons to keep running Google Adsense ads, or to consider using them on your blog or eCommerce website. Here I will take a look at some of the other marketing options available, examine some of the less desirable effects of the Adsense program, and make some conclusions about the points made from these two articles.

This is not a bash Adsense article, obviously I use them myself, but what all business owners should do, look at as many options as they can and decided which one fits the best according to their business needs. On a side note, I have an upcoming set of articles that examines both sides of Google Adwords too, so stay tuned.

Marketing is Not One Size Fits All

All you have to do it run a search for Adsense and you will see so many different responses for and against using these type of ads, and it might be hard to tell what really works. I think the real answer to that questions is what works for you may not work for me and vice-versa. Each site is so different, has different goals and objectives, but sooner or later, if your store or site keeps growing you will need to look at some online marketing, either to buy some ads (which would be Google Adwords) or to sell them (Adsense), but the growing opportunities available with smaller companies continues to grow each day.

More and more businesses are becoming very specialized. It is important for these niche markets businesses to look at different options that will benefit your company, not just right now, but options that will enhance what will be your long term marketing plan. In the same manner that eCommerce shopping companies have become a collection of niche markets, so are the options available in the online marketing field itself. Look for companies that specialize in your niche market or are at least familiar with your companies specific needs.

Adsense is a great one size fits all ad program, and you can even get very specific with their affiliate ads but there are so many other good online marketing companies today that it is only prudent to not limit your business to one particular company or ad program.

You are Advertising for Your Competition

I generally write from the perspective of the company or store site selling a product, so talking about Adsense is really the opposite of what companies should look at when they are trying to sell a product, right? After all, you are selling your products, not someone else’s, so looking at selling ads on your site might be counterproductive. For this example I think Blog About Crafts put it best on a recent post called, Adsense Kills Business, where she talks about the difference between running a business and a hobby. Treat your business like a hobby and that is what it is, treat your hobby like a business and chances are, you are in business. You do generally have to act and look like a professional to be a professional.

There is a big difference from a personal site like Blog About Crafts and a professional services or product selling site

Look at the screen shot below. I grabbed the header from the online store page that sells crystals and beads. At the top, the ad shown will take people away from the store you are looking at and at bare minimum will show other options to your own store or site. The Adsense links at the top are taken right off the content of the store selling the same products. Now sometimes this is what you want to do. You might be networking between several different companies and some reciprocal links may be called for, but Adsense is not a reciprocal link program.

Google Adsense

Does it Add Value to Your Company

Marketing should not only add value to the company you are advertising for, but it should also add value to your company. This may sound strange but there has to be an exchange of value for it to be worth doing. This is the whole concept of business and what you are doing by selling your products or services. Someone else finds a value in what you are selling and gives you something of value in exchange.

This is going to be different depending on what your company goals ultimately are for your business. Usually the value added to your company is going to be money paid to you for advertising. If your main market is to sell advertising to pay for the production and maintenance of your site (much like Google itself), then it may very well add value to your site, but you still need to look at how much value it adds.

Adsense may pay, eventually (see previous article), but I haven’t found returns that would be considered great by any means, at least not something that could be called “revenue” to me. The value exchange should be as close to equal as possible. I.e. a highly valued area of your site should produce an expected return, so be sure that you have some way to measure if you are giving a whole lot more to your advertiser than you are receiving in return. This doesn’t have to be exact, but it shouldn’t be totally unequal. Many times I think the Adsense program has been so successful for Google because they get so much coverage on so many sites with very little payment in return.

One key to this is testing. There is a good article on Blogging Experiment, How to Find AdSense Alternatives for Your Site, lists several alternative companies and options, but also makes a good point when he says testing is a very important part of finding good alternatives. Many companies offer a 30 day trial if it is a paid monthly service, others will give you some kind of credit that should give you an idea of how well it will work. One problem with this is it might not be a long enough period of time to see an actual return if you ran it continuously.

Don’t Keep All Your Marketing Eggs in One Basket

This is a simple point but one worth mentioning. You can continue to develop your site or store, increase your traffic, sales, subscriptions, and use just one marketing company but if something ever happens you have to just start over again. If you build up high enough revenues (a good thing, yes), but with only one company, if and when that revenue is ever lost your company will suffer much more so than if you spread the marketing revenue around to a few different sources.

You can do a quick search and find many examples of people that have been banned from using Google’s Adsense program for one reason or another. From my experience on eBay, it seems to work the same way with Google, once you are gone, you are gone, no questions or appeal needed, and it doesn’t always seem to be that hard to do.

SEO Refugee wrote a rather nerve racking article, Get ANY Adsense Account Banned, which explained in some detail how easy it is to get an account banned. After reading that you really hope the competition people who might not care all that much for your company doesn’t get a hold of that information. Granted it does require the other party to really do some work, but some don’t care how the get rid of the competition, just that they do. This unethical practice is terrible to say the very least, but I have to assume it exists and Google should have something in place to prevent this type of fraud from happening.

Complexity and Unknowns

This is not referring to the complexity of implementing the program, I actually stated the opposite on my previous post, but the complexity that is Google and the unknown that goes along with their programs and services. As with any company of Google’s size it is very hard to know what their internal checks and balances are and how they effect their own customers. Google, for good reason, keeps their proprietary data and development information very secret so it is hard to know what might effect your marketing campaign and what might not.

One issue that has come up recently is the paid link topic and how or if Google will penalize a site for using paid links. Google has actually provided some good information about this topic lately, see my article, Matt Cutts Updates Google’s nofollow Use, and it has been very helpful, but it has taken a while to get to that point of knowing what to do and what not to do. From Google’s perspective it is about stopping spam, not necessarily paid links, but if use paid links as part of your marketing campaign you should know what effect it might have on your Google indexing and your marketing campaign.

It isn’t really what you know, but what you don’t. The issues that Google faces are not going to be the same as your company, and they are going to do what is in the best interest of their company, just like everyone in business. Google is in business to make a profit, not to make sure your company has enough ad revenue. Once identified, those interests may be contrary to your business efforts. They may not be, but the point is you don’t know. Good business practice says to minimizing the risks as much as possible, and that is very fluid, sometimes you don’t know what those will be from one moment to the other.

Affiliates Can Offer a Good Value

Google Adsense is one of these, yes, but there are many different affiliate companies (Commission Junction being of the biggest) and there are some very good programs to look at, even with smaller company’s websites. Many companies now offer their own affiliate program where you can earn a return or you can pay others to be affiliates for you to send traffic to your site. This post won’t be detailed enough to get into all the different platforms that affiliates offer but they are very extensive.

A new project I found this weekend looks to be very promising, called the Rubicon Project, it allows you to control all your different affiliate programs in one place. They are just in Beta testing right now but the feedback so far has been very positive, according to one of the founders of the project. I will post a full review of their company in an upcoming post and go into more detail about affiliate programs in that article.

Conclusion

Marketing your products or services takes a lot of work, research, testing, and perseverance. There are many online options available for just about any niche market company or blog, look around, do your homework, see what else might fit your business needs in addition to Google Adsense (or Adwords for that matter). Remember that results won’t happen overnight, but using alternative ad companies will minimize your risk and should continue to add value to your company.

Try to use a balanced and well planned out approach. Re-read your marketing plans and goals and see if what you are doing will meet those goals. Online marketing, no matter who you use or what method you employ, should offer at least an equal return for your exchange of time, money, or space on your website. If not, you might want to look for another option. If you want to keep running the same ads for no return, that is fine too, just let me know, I would love to place an ad on your site for free… any takers?

Reasons to Keep Running Google Adsense Ads on Your Blog

Google AdsenseWhen considering an advertising company for your blog or website Google is probably going to be high on the list, but shouldn’t be the only one. I opened a Google Adsense account on April of 2004. The screen shot shown here was take a few days ago that shows we have now reached the payout amount minimum of $100 for Google Adsense.

Obviously we were not publishing ads on big PR7 sites, we just used it here and there on a few different store pages, but, for those counting, 3 1/2 years is a long time. Comparing different revenue rates for different people is impossible because of all the variables involved, but that isn’t really the point here, so instead I will just give you my $.02, don’t spend it all in one place.

Sometimes Time Spent is a Little Money Earned

It may be a cliche, but does that make it any less true? Once we opened this account we threw it up on a few different sites and quickly forgot about it. It wasn’t until I started trying to add a few Google ads recently that I realized what ads I had run and on what websites. It was really nice to log on and see a balance of around $80 when I had forgotten about it, but at the same time, it was only $80, after 3 years and a few months. That comes to approximately $1.90 per month for the time period stated, not a great return, but you have to look at the time that was spent to receive that as well, and it was probably about an hour.

Google Adsense PaymentOnce I actually started working with the ad program again, started putting some time into placing the ads on pages with higher traffic rankings and most of the normal things you would do to increase your ad revenue, it started moving a little faster. It took 3+ years to go from $0 to $80, and only a few weeks for it to move from $80 to $100 with just a few changes to where the ads ran and on what sites.

No matter if you are running an eCommerce site, a blog, or an informational static pages, the more quality time you spend placing ads in the proper locations, producing well written content, creating a good design, and proper SEO, among other things, the more your traffic will increase, and the better your ad revenue will be. This is not something special with the Adsense program, it works with just about everything.

It is not always at the return rate you would like though. Sometimes we can spend a lot of time for a lot of revenue and other times we can spend a lot of time without much return at all. The key is of course to try to minimize our risks and to look for places that will provide a good return verses our time spent. That was the question I asked myself when I started looking more closely at my Adsense account.

There are some good reasons to keep running Adsense ads on your blog or website. You can do a quick search and find people that love it and hate it, but lets look at some solid reasons for keeping at least some Adsense ads running, and some reasons we should look elsewhere. In this post we will look at some Reasons to Keep Running Google Adsense Ads and in the next post we will look at Reasons to Look at Options Other Than Google Adsense Ads.

Reasons To Keep Running Google Adsense Ads

Listed below are some positive points for starting, or continuing to use the Adsense program. This is not a pros and cons look at the program, that I will save for another article so keep that in mind when looking over the below items.

Google is Google

Google’s complete presence on the Internet is unmatched. Sure there are countless good companies on the Internet, but few have permeated and infiltrated companies and personal pages from the biggest to the smallest little site out there like Google. Biggest doesn’t always mean the best, but it does have its advantages. Google is Google may not be a great reason but… it’s Google. Everyone knows who they are and users know the ads most likely won’t contain any malicious links.

Ease of Use

There are so many different options within Adsense it takes some time just to explore all the opportunities available. You can do everything from link ads to affiliate ads and everything in between. You can customize the layout, integrate colors that match your website, choose from many different sizes and shapes that will fit just about any ad block, and choose from a list of affiliate ads so large that it would be hard not to find something that goes well with your site and matches your target audience.

Information Availability

Google has so much information about the Adsense program available on the Internet that if you can’t find what you are looking for from Google chances are you will find it somewhere. Google has a blog devoted to Adsense and updates it frequently. This goes right in line with number 5 but is a little different. You don’t just want to see the polished view that a company gives out, you want to know what the real issues are. These can be both positive and negative items, but with some newer companies it isn’t as easy to find out the real information you are looking for, and with Google there is just tons of it.

Coming up soon I will be reviewing several different marketing options for your eCommerce store site, and a few of these companies are brand new. One of the newest companies I am looking at is only about 30 days old and they are charging quite a bit for their services, but when you go to look for information outside of the company you can find very little other than what the company has put out for us to see.

Continued Advancements

Google continues to add to the program and probably will always do so. The most recent highlight for the Adsense program would be the addition of Google Ads for video units. This is something that has been rumored about for a while and has now been implemented. Right now it is only available in the United States but it is sure to be added to the U.K. soon.

There is a lot of information posted about this new advancement and it looks to be very promising. Search Engine Roundtable posted an article on how to setup video units (see article), and there are bound to be new advances in how and where the ad program will be used in the future. After all, Google is all about ad revenue, that is what built this company so it will continue to focus on this for some time to come.

Another recent topic has been that Google added new payment options for people in Malaysia where they can get paid through Western Union. In a recent article from Adesblog, How to withdraw your AdSense earnings through WesternUnion, he takes a good look at how this new option functions, and although I basically run from payments via Western Union I am sure it is something those in other parts of the world are glad it has been added as an option.

Support Network

The sheer number of people that must work on, and with, the Adsense program must be huge, so it should count for something. The network of support pages and content to help new users is extensive and most of it very helpful. In a recent article on their blog, Getting more quality inventory for publishers, Google talks about improving the validity of their links and several other important issues facing its users.

Our goal with this change is to ensure the long-term effectiveness of the referrals program for both publishers and advertisers. By increasing the value and quality of the referral network, we believe we’ll attract more advertisers and provide more opportunities for you to earn.

Like most things Google, they also have an extensive Google Adsense Group that helps with current issues and questions you might have, and with so many people using the Adsense program you are sure to find some good help in this particular group.

Availability To Have Your Ad Seen Worldwide

Availability is something that not all ad programs can offer. Google will run your ads worldwide and not even Yahoo’s ad program is as easy to use when you want a worldwide marketing program put in place. It is as easy as choosing that option and they continue to add the program to new areas of the world all the time. Google recently announced (see announcement) the Adsense program would start in Vietnam and Indonesia and it isn’t likely to stop there.

Reporting, Tracking, and User Interface

I put this in there because when I compare it to other ad opportunities, most do not compare to the reporting and tracking functionality that Google Adsense presents to its users. You can track your ad programs by many different options like adding new channels for specific pages or sites you want to track. It shows you where your ads are most effective and where you should improve or move ads if they are not getting the proper visibility. The reporting functions are pretty standard but the detail you can get goes back years if you have that much data and you can customize reports to meet the needs of your company.

As I mentioned at the top of this article, coming up, I will post an article about the many other options that companies can choose when looking at their online marketing strategies. To me, these are probably more interesting since everyone knows about Google, but may not know about many of the other opportunities available to all of us. Google is certainly a viable option for those wishing to advertise on their website in an easy to use manner, results may vary.

Constant Contact IPO Announced

Constant Contact LogoConstant Contact just announced that they will be making their Initial Public Offering under the (NASDAQ:GM) symbol CTCT. The IPO will have almost 7 million shares and the press release is shown below.

The information received by our company was in a newsletter form and shown below in the form it was received. This is very interesting news and will certainly give Constant Contact some available capital to further enhance their services.

I have used Constant Contact for many years off and on and they always seem to be the leading company in online marketing, a market which is harder and harder to break into as the spamming rules and laws get tougher and tougher. On of the companies I work with has been in business quite a while and although they have all legitimate business practices and good customer base, being seen as a spammer these days can be your worst enemy. Constant Contact is very zealous in this area and is probably a good reason for their success.

Constant Contact Prices Initial Public Offering

WALTHAM, MA – October 2, 2007Constant Contact®, Inc (NasdaqGM: CTCT) today announced the pricing of its initial public offering of 6,700,000 shares of its common stock at $16.00 per share (before underwriting discounts and commissions).

The 6,700,000 shares consist of 5,829,839 being sold by the Company and 870,161 being sold by certain stockholders of the Company. The shares are scheduled to begin trading on the NASDAQ Global Market on October 3, 2007 under the trading symbol “CTCT.” The Company will not receive any of the proceeds from the sale of common stock held by the selling stockholders. The Company and the selling stockholders have granted the underwriters a 30-day option to purchase up to an additional 1,005,000 shares at the initial public offering price to cover over-allotments, if any.

CIBC World Markets and Thomas Weisel Partners acted as joint book-runners for the offering, and William Blair & Company, Cowen and Company, and Needham & Company were co-managers.

A copy of the final prospectus related to this offering may be obtained from CIBC World Markets Corp., Attn: USE Prospectus Department, 425 Lexington Ave, 5th floor, New York, New York 10017, (866) 895-5637, useprospectus@us.cibc.com or from Thomas Weisel Partners LLC, Attn: Prospectus Department, One Montgomery Street, Suite 3700, San Francisco, California 94104, (415) 364-2720.

A registration statement relating to these securities was declared effective by the Securities and Exchange Commission on October 2, 2007. This press release shall not constitute an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy, nor shall there be any sale of these securities, in any state or jurisdiction in which such offer, solicitation or sale would be unlawful prior to registration or qualification under the securities laws of any such state or jurisdiction.

About Constant Contact, Inc.

Constant Contact is the leading provider of on-demand email marketing solutions for small businesses, nonprofits, and associations.

Constant Contact is a registered trademark and the Constant Contact Logo is a trademark of Constant Contact, Inc. All other company names may be trademarks or service marks of their respective owners

Media Contact:

Kevin Mullins

kmullins@constantcontact.com

Investor Contact:

Garo Toomajanian

ir@constantcontact.com

This is the direct mailing from Constant Contact themselves:

We have some exciting news to share with you. Yesterday, October 2, Constant Contact® became a public company, and we expect our shares to begin trading today on the NASDAQ Global Market under the symbol “CTCT”.

Please view the press release we issued.

This is an important milestone for Constant Contact, and we owe all of our success to you, our customers. Having grown from zero to 130,000 customers, and from only a few employees to more than 300, the past nine years have been an incredible journey for all of us. During this time, you’ve taught us what it takes to truly serve small businesses and organizations, and we look forward to continuing our partnership and helping you succeed.

As always, we’ll be there to support you as you have supported us, every step of the way. That’s our commitment to you.

Thank you for being a Constant Contact customer.

All the best,

Gail Goodman, CEO

I will post some more information here as soon as I find it. If if haven’t tried Constant Contact yet for your internet marketing it is worth a try and coming up soon I will post more information on the usefulness of their services.

ChannelAdvisor Acquisition of Marketworks Update

Marketworks a Channel Advisor CompanyThis is an update to the acquisition of Marketworks by ChannelAdvisor that I posted earlier. I have posted what I have found to be some bullet points of information on the Marketworks acquisition. These were various sources written about the acquisition that I have compiled and some other thoughts about the merger.

  • ChannelAdvisor will cut Marketworks staff by about 50%
  • Most all changes seems to be geared at the Marketworks customers, nothing I could find on existing Channel Advisor’s customers having to change anything
  • Not many details known about future implications, most everyone online is quoting the original press release
  • Sounds like ChannelAdvisor will keep both channels functioning independently for a time, then move everyone over to the Channel Advisor side
  • There are implications about this happening because of a slow down on ebay, and that Marketworks was not a well run company
  • Found MANY posts that were totally unhappy with Marketworks product line and features
  • Infopia and Zoovy may have to change tactics because of this move

The quotes below are just little plugs I thought some might find of interest on the subject. I have put most of the feeds from various sources of the news on my rss feed reader to stay on top of any changes that might be coming

  1. It will allow customers to move from one platform to the other. ChannelAdvisor CEO Scot Wingo said of Marketworks, “They have some large customers that have been interested in moving to ChannelAdvisor over the years, but there hasn’t been a great way, an automated way, of getting them over. So we’re going to create bridges both ways.” http://www.auctionbytes.com/cab/abn/y07/m09/i12/s02
  2. “We may choose to rebrand to make it clear. But (Marketworks) will be a product offering of ChannelAdvisor rather than a separate company.”
  3. ChannelAdvisor will continue to support and invest in Marketworks’ customers and products. http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/070912/20070912005384.html?.v=1
  4. What is clear; this will be a blow to Salt Lake City based Infopia as ChannelAdvisor gets stronger. Look for a possible marriage between Zoovy and Infopia in the near future.
  5. One last point, that may have been overlooked. This acquisition and possible further consolidation in the space are definitive signals that eBay is slowing down . Marketworks, may have seen their growth hit the ceiling and decided this approach was one of a few options. I certainly don’t think it is a sign that the eBay Marketplace is healthy. A few years ago eBay could support many large service providers and sellers; not anymore. http://rksmythe.blogspot.com/2007/09/channel-advisor-aquires-marketworks.html
  6. The biggest downside of both companies is the buying experience on eBay. Both companies have a customized eBay checkout enabling them to cross sell additional products from their own website. Buyers in general are not comfortable with a non-standard eBay checkout and some buyers avoid sellers using either solution simply for that one reason. If ChannelAdvisor want to attract more eBay sellers they need to implement a option without a custom checkout which still updates the sellers inventory. http://www.tamebay.com/2007/09/channeladvisor-vs-marketworks-war-is-over.html
  7. I doubt CA is going to want to support the Marketworks system long-term, and I doubt they are going to want to put resources into making it better

I will continue to update the information on this topic as it becomes available.

ChannelAdvisor to Acquire Rival Marketworks

Marketworks a Channel Advisor CompanyChannelAdvisor announced today that they will acquire Marketworks for some undisclosed amount (right now), see the press release below. As this develops further we will discuss what the implications might be for those using both MW’s and CA’s integration systems. Just off the top of my head, I would say the Marketworks people should see an increase in customer service and products offered by Channel Advisor (just from dealing with both companies), but it does say a little about the industry as a whole, especially how it might effect eBay in the long run.

One reason both of these companies exist is to provide support for larger sellers on the eBay platform. Does this indicate a kink in the eBay armour or perhaps a trend that says some larger sellers are trying to move off of eBay’s platform and survive on their own? It could be that the market is just not big enough to support two companies doing basically the same thing.

Some have said, thank goodness the acquisition was ChannelAdvisor buying Marketworks and not the other way around, I know several very nervous Channel Advisor customers that don’t know what is in store for them down the road. We will see soon enough I guess.

ChannelAdvisor Acquires Marketworks
Combination cements ChannelAdvisor as top e-commerce channel management solution provider

Research Triangle Park, NC – September 12, 2007 - ChannelAdvisor, the leading provider of e-commerce channel management solutions, announced today that it has acquired Marketworks, a leader in marketplace management software and services.

“Acquiring Marketworks solidifies our leadership position and reinforces our commitment to the marketplace segment,” says Scot Wingo, Chief Executive Officer of ChannelAdvisor. “We will continue to evaluate other opportunities in this and other e-commerce channel segments as they arise.”

“Marketworks is excited to join forces with ChannelAdvisor,” says Doug Hadaway, Chief Executive Officer of Marketworks. “This partnership will lead to great things for both company’s customers and partners.”

Following this acquisition ChannelAdvisor will have:

  • 5,500 customers on a global basis
  • $2,500,000,000 in annualized GMV (Gross Merchandise Value)
  • Operating offices in
    • Research Triangle Park, North Carolina
    • Seattle, Washington
    • Atlanta, Georgia
    • Bacharach and Berlin, Germany
    • London, England
    • Melbourne, Australia

ChannelAdvisor will continue to support and invest in Marketworks’ customers and products.

I am putting together some bullet points for some quick observations and will post them soon. Most of the information I have located at this point just reposts the press release (as seen above) and offers no further information, we will try to dig some up and post it here.