December 02, 2010

Top Searches for 2013

Here’s what we found:
Most Searched Person of the Year
  • Beyoncé continues her reign as the queen of pop— she’s the most-searched person on Bing in 2013! Beyoncé bumped Kim Kardashian off of the top spot this year, who came in as the second most searched person of the year.
  • Women ruled 2013, the top five most searched people of the year were all women, and only two men made it into the top ten- Justin Bieber (6th) and Barack Obama (10th)
Top 10 comparison for 2012 and 2013:
Rank20132012
1Beyoncé KnowlesKim Kardashian
2Kim KardashianJustin Bieber
3RihannaMiley Cyrus
4Taylor SwiftRihanna
5MadonnaLindsay Lohan
6Justin BieberKaty Perry
7Nicki MinajSelena Gomez
8Amanda BynesJennifer Aniston
9Miley CyrusNicki Minaj
10Barack ObamaTaylor Swift
  • Taylor Swift had a busy year in the public eye, which is evidenced by her jump from #10 in 2012 to #4 this year.
  • There are four newcomers to the top 10 this year, with Amanda Bynes coming in at #8, followed by and Madonna at #5 along with President Barack Obama at #10.
  • Falling out of the top 10 this year are Selena Gomez, Jennifer Anniston, Lindsay Lohan and Katy Perry.
  • The birth of the royal baby ensured Kate Middleton’s spot in the top 25, coming in at #22, but searchers seemed much less interested in her husband, as Prince William came in at #45. 
Most Searched Sports Stars
  • When it comes to the sports world, sometimes a little controversy goes further than actual on field excellence, as Tim Tebow was the most searched athlete for 2013. Tebow moved up from #3 in 2012 to take over the top spot.
  • Last year’s king Peyton Manning dropped quite a bit after a successful comeback season, coming in at #18 in 2013
  • No stranger to controversy himself, Tiger Woods and his quest to win another major came in as the 3rd most searched athlete for the year, down a spot from last year.
  • There are new queens in town for 2013, as Lindsey Vonn and Danica Patrick took over the reins from two-time winner Maria Sharapova as the most searched female athlete. Alpine ski racer Lindsey Vonn raced to the top as the 2nd most searched athlete and #1 female athlete. Sharapova came in as #3 for females and 10th overall.
  • Lebron James proved to be “King” of the hardwood finishing as the most searched NBA player, although Louisville star Kevin Ware finished ahead of James following his horrific injury during the NCAA tournament.
  • In baseball, Derek Jeter was the top searched player on the diamond for the third straight year, coming in at 9thoverall
  • The Miami Heat were the most searched NBA team, while the New York Yankees topped the baseball world.
1Tim Tebow
2Lindsey Vonn
3Tiger Woods
4Kevin Ware
5Ray Lewis
6Lebron James
7Danica Patrick
8Dwight Howard
9Derek Jeter
10Maria Sharapova
Most Searched Sports Teams
  • American football favorite, the Dallas Cowboys, is the most searched sports team of 2013. The Cowboys are the second highest valued sports franchise in US history (behind #3 most searched team the New York Yankees) with an estimated value of approximately $2.1 billion.
  • Runner up for most searched sports team of 2013 is defending NBA champions, the Miami Heat. The Heat’s Lebron James aka “King James” is the #6 most searched sports star of 2013, who is gunning for his 5th Most Valuable Player award and 3rd NBA championship title in a row.
  • One of the most successful franchises in professional sports history, the New York Yankees, come in as the #3 most search sports team of the year. The Yankees’ all-time career leader in hits, games played, stolen bases, and at bats, Derek Jeter, is the #9 most searched sports star of 2013.
1Dallas Cowboys
2Miami Heat
3New York Yankees
4New York Giants
5Chicago Bears
6Baltimore Ravens
7Detroit Tigers
8Miami Dolphins
9Atlanta Braves
10Green Bay Packers

Most Searched Musician
  • When it comes to music, most searched person of the year, Beyoncé is queen as the most searched musician of 2013.
  • Runner up for most searched musician of 2013, is power vocalist Rihanna coming in as #2, followed by America’s country sweetheart Taylor Swift at #3.
  • Though dethroned from his number one spot in 2012, Bieber fever continues to burn allowing him to come in as the fifth most searched musician of 2013.
  • From her VMA performance, new album, and constant relationship drama, Miley Cyrus drove searches throughout the year, propelling her to the #7 spot.
1Beyoncé
2Rihanna
3Taylor Swift
4Madonna
5Justin Bieber
6Nicki Minaj
7Miley Cyrus
8Britney Spears
9Katy Perry
10Selena Gomez
Most Searched Song
  • The money saving ways of rapper Macklemore stormed America, making Thrift Shop the most searched song of 2013.
1Macklemore & Ryan Lewis – Thrift Shop
2Robin Thicke- Blurred Lines
3Rihanna – Stay
4Imagine Dragons – Radioactive
5Jason Derulo- The Other Side
6Bruno Mars – When I Was Your Man
7Justin Timberlake – Mirrors
8Miley Cyrus – We Can’t Stop
9Pink – Just Give Me A Reason
10One Direction – Best Song Ever

Most Searched Social Media Sites
  • What’s on our mind, Facebook? Oh, just that our friends still “like” you the most. Facebook came in as the most searched social media platform for the second year in a row.
  • Pinterest is not only a new comer to the top ten list of social media, it rocketed to the number two spot! From wedding ideas, to recipes and more, people couldn’t seem to get enough of Pinterest in 2013.
1Facebook
2Pinterest
3Twitter
4LinkedIn
5Instagram
6tumblr
7Reddit
8Vimeo
9Vine
10Google+
Most Searched Streaming Sites
  • With new original series and more viewers than ever before, Netflix was the king of entertainment. Netflix came in at #1 among streaming technologies, beating out Hulu who came in at #2, and Project Free TV that came in at #5.
1Netflix
2Hulu
3iTunes
4YouTube
5Project Free TV
6Google Play
7Xbox Live
8HBO Go
9Crackle
10Roku
Most Searched Entertainment Electronics
  • With the upcoming launch of Xbox One, Xbox came in as the most searched entertainment electronic over iPhone #2 and Android #3.
1Xbox
2iPhone
3Android
4iPad
5Windows Phone
6Surface
7Playstation
8Nintendo
9Blackberry
10Kindle Fire
Most Searched Apps
  • It’s all fun and games when it comes to the top apps of the year, Candy Crush stole the #1 spot in top apps, beating out Angry Birds #2 and Bad Piggies #3.
1Candy Crush
2Angry Birds
3Bad Piggies
Most Searched TV Show
  • The Bing Bang Theory made a splash in 2013, knocking off American Idol for the place of #1 searched television show.
  • American Idol came in at the #2 spot, while Dancing with the Stars dropped to #6 after being #2 in 2012.
  • A staple of the morning show lineup, The Today Show made it to the top ten list this year, coming in as the #7 most searched television show.
  • The British drama Downtown Abbey may take place in the early 1900’s, but people can’t get enough of it in 2013, making it the #4 most searched television show.
1Big Bang Theory
2American Idol
3The Walking Dead
4Downtown Abbey
5Game of Thrones
6Dancing with the Stars
7The Today Show
8Big Brother
9The Bachelor/Bachelorette
10Honey Boo Boo

Most Searched Movies
  • Anticipation and buzz around the final installment in the Iron Man trilogy propelled Iron Man III to the number one spot in 2013.
  • Two classics, The Great Gatsby and Oz: The Great and Powerful, both made the top ten list coming in at #7 and #8 respectfully.
  • Comic books turned movies continue to drive searches, making super hero movies Iron Man, The Wolverine, and Man of Steel all in the top ten.
  • There’s no slowing down the Fast and Furious series- the 6th Fast and Furious was the #2 most searched movie of the year.
1Iron Man 3
2Fast and Furious 6
3Despicable Me 2
4The Conjuring
5The Wolverine
62 Guns
7The Great Gatsby
8Oz: The Great and Powerful
9Snitch
10Man of Steel
Most Searched Fashion Designer
  • The fashion industry was as competitive as ever in 2013, but fashion icon and designer Victoria Beckham took the crown as most searched fashion designer of 2013.
  • Project Runway judge Michael Kors came out on top for the second year in a row, but fell to the #2 most searched designer of the year.
  • American favorite and best known for his polo clothing brand, Ralph Lauren took third for the most search designer of 2013.
  • Kimora Lee Simmons’ many ventures and strong brand made her the #5 most searched designer of 2013.
  • A staple of the fashion industry, both Chanel and Gucci remained strong in 2013 coming in at #4 and #6 respectfully.
  • First lady Michelle Obama was this year’s most searched fashion icon.
1Victoria Beckham
2Michael Kors
3Ralph Lauren
4Chanel
5Kimora Lee Simmons
6Gucci
7Tory Burch
8Kate Spade
9Steve Madden
10Louis Vuitton
Most Searched Reality TV Stars
  • The Kardashian sisters still reign as all made the top 10 list again in 2013 –Kim kept her #1 spot, while Khloe dropped to #5 and Kourtney #8.
  • The patriarch of the Kardashian family, Bruce Jenner came in as the #2 most searched reality star of 2013.
  • Snooki’s continued antics, both on screen and off, along with anticipation of her new show made her the #3 most searched reality star.
1Kim Kardashian
2Bruce Jenner
3Snooki
4Ryan Seacrest
5Khloe Kardashian
6Kris Jenner
7Honey Boo Boo
8Kourtney Kardashian
9Kendra Wilkinson
10Kate Gosselin
Most Searched Daytime Talk Shows
  • Ellen DeGeneres continues her reign for the most searched talk show on Bing this year, with Bethanny Frankel’s new show, Bethanny, skyrocketing to second place.
  • Longtime favorite Live with Kelly rounded out the top 10 day time talk shows.
1Ellen DeGeneres
2Bethanny
3Dr. Oz Show
4The Chew
5Wendy Williams
6The View
7Dr. Phil
8Rachael Ray
9The Talk
10Kelly and Michael/Live with Kelly
Most Searched Morning Shows
  • Good Morning America may have taken over the television ratings, but the Today Show is still king in most searched morning show, coming in at #1.
  • Top five was rounded out by Fox & Friends and then CBS This Morning
1The Today Show
2Good Morning America
3Morning Joe
4Fox & Friends
5CBS This Morning
Most Searched Food
  • Pizza Hut took home top honors for the second year in a row, followed by Dominos and Papa Johns in the battle for America’s favorite Pizza.
  • Burger King proved to be king amount its competitors, receiving more searches than McDonalds and Wendy’s.
1Pizza Hut
2Domino’s
3Papa John’s
4Subway
5Burger King
6McDonald’s
7Wendy’s
8Taco Bell
9Panera Bread
10Sonic
Most Searched Destination
  • Stealing the spotlight from mainland American, Hawaii captured the top spot this year as the most searched destination in the world.
  • London ruled the pack among European destinations, holding on to its #1 spot for the second year in a row.
The top searched destination in other regions of the world include:
  • Asia = Bali
  • Africa = Johannesburg, South Africa
  • Australia/New Zealand = Sydney, Australia
  • Caribbean = Bahamas
  • Europe = London, UK
  • Middle East = Istanbul, Turkey
  • South America = Salvador, Brazil
1Hawaii
2Bahamas
3London
4Istanbul
5Puerto Rico
6Costa Rica
7Rome
8Jamaica
9Seychelles
10Bali
Most Searched News Stories
  • Excitement and anticipation around the birth of the royal baby took the world by storm this summer, making this the most searched news story on Bing in 2013.
  • The world was shocked by the Boston Marathon Bombing in April, making it the second most searched news story of the year
  • The case of the Cleveland Kidnapper, along with the George Zimmerman trial captivated Americans this summer, making them the #4 and #5 most searched stories of the year
  • American politics continued to drive searches this year, with the Fiscal Cliff, the Supreme Court’s Gay Marriage Ruling, the IRS Scandal along with the legalization of Marijuana all coming in in the top 25.
1Royal Baby Born
2Boston Marathon Bombing
3Cleveland Kidnapping
4George Zimmerman Trial
5Gun Rights
6Tesla
7Syria
8Anthony Weiner
9Oil Prices
10Fiscal Cliff
Most Searched Economic Terms
  • With the government shutdown and budget cuts across federal programs, Fiscal Cliff was the most searched financial story of 2013.
1Fiscal Cliff
2Federal Reserve
3Detroit Goes Bankrupt
4Student Loans Interest Rates
5Toyota Outsells Chevy
Most Searched Charities
  • The YMCA remains the top most searched charitable organization for a third year in a row, with Habitat for Humanity, American Cancer Society, American Red Cross and Live Strong rounding out the top 5.
1YMCA
2Habitat for Humanity
3American Cancer Society
4American Red Cross
5Live Strong
Most Searched Memes
  • Let the beat drop, the Harlem Shake spread like wild fire becoming the most searched meme/viral video of 2013. In the height of its popularity, thousands of people across the nation were uploading their own viral video versions of the Harlem Shake, making it top Bing’s meme list this year.
  • Despite what she might tell you, it was a good year for Grumpy Cat! The feline’s scowling meme came in as runner up for the most searched meme/viral video of the year.
1Harlem Shake
2Grumpy Cat
3Chuck Norris
4Epic Fail
5Bad Luck Brian
6Sloths
7Cheez Burger
8Surprised Patrick
9U Mad Bro
10Ermahgerd
Most Searched Health & Wellness/Diets
  • Diets suggestions are popping up everywhere, but what are people most interested in this year? Weight Watchers came out on top again this year as the most searched diet for the third year in a row.
  • The CrossFit craze has reached an all-time high coming in as the most searched work out of 2013.
  • The 5-2 diet and Mediterranean Diet rounded out the most searched diets of 2013.
  • Top 5 most searched diets overall are:
1Weight Watchers
2Paleo
3Vegan
45-2 Diet
5Mediterranean Diet

October 29, 2010

Bill Gross on the paid-search Twitter model

Google Launches Cost-Per-Click Ad Service for Local Businesses

In an effort to deliver its marketing services to a broader range of clients, Google (News - Alert) on Monday launched Boost, a location-based ad product designed specifically for local businesses.

Before the introduction of Boost, placing and maintaining online ads with Google was a fairly complicated process for local business owners. Many customers became frustrated and overwhelmed with the intricate nature of AdWords, Google's hallmark advertising product.

Boost was developed to offer local business owners an uncomplicated, automated outlet for targeted online advertising. After opening a Google Places account, all local business owners need to do is fill in some very basic information, including their company's name, address, URL, phone number, business categories and recent reviews. The software will ask for a monthly budget and then automatically set up an ad campaign. Boost will even recommend relevant keywords that will trigger the cost-per-click ads to pop-up.

Local ads will appear in the 'sponsored links' section of Google's search interface when the location and agreed-upon keywords are entered by a user.

Project Manager Kiley McEvoy noted in a recent blog post that no ongoing account management is needed after the initial set up of Google Boost.

"We hope Boost provides busy local business owners with a quick and easy way to share information about themselves with the people who look for them online," added McEvoy.


Unfortunately, the new service is still in beta testing, which means Google will not roll it out in every major city until it has cleaned out all the cobwebs. For now, the ad product is only available for select local businesses in San Francisco, Houston and Chicago. It is still unclear when the search engine giant will offer Boost on a nationwide basis.

Analysts expect that the program could become a major source of revenue for Google if and when it is released from beta.

Beecher Tuttle is a TMCnet contributor. He has extensive experience writing and editing for print publications and online news websites. He has specialized in a variety of industries, including health care technology, politics and education. To read more of his articles, please visit his columnist page.

Edited by Erin Monda

September 22, 2010

Criteo CPC platform includes display ad inventory

A new release from PPC retargeting firm Criteo may help brands better control their display ad spending. Called the Criteo Performance Optimization Platform, the new release allows marketers to use CPC bidding in the display ad space; brands can bid to the category level, giving them control over exactly where ads will be placed.

"There has been a fundamental shift across industries to self-service technologies. With the introduction of Google AdWords, advertisers experienced the benefits from having visibility and control of search campaigns but had not yet had this control in the display space," said Greg Coleman, President of the Huffington Post.

"Criteo's new platform marks an important development for display advertising, solving one of this tactic's biggest shortcomings - inflexibility. Criteo now provides advertisers complete control over all components of their retargeting display campaigns."

The new platform allows marketers to retarget display ads through cost per click bidding. Brands can create customized product categories so that their ads are hyper specific, at the same time optimizing cost-of-sales within product categories.

"For the first time, online display advertisers have access to the same level of flexibility, control and performance as they do in search," said JB Rudelle, CEO and co-founder of Criteo. "The Performance Optimization Platform was the next logical move for us after bringing CPC personalized retargeting to the market. Criteo's new self-service platform empowers our more than 700 clients to fully control their ROI down to the product level."

In the system, bids can be placed in real time and according to customized categories. Marketers can manage campaigns by defining and tweaking what categories include and then determine ads according to where the consumer is in the purchasing funnel. As the campaign proceeds, brands can monitor how things are going, tweak and adjust budgets or replenish the campaign as needed.

by Kristina Knight

August 07, 2010

Rising Search CPCs Cutting Out SMBs

Ultimate Guide to Google Ad Words, 2nd Edition: How To Access 100 Million People in 10 MinutesSearch engine marketing emerged as the inexpensive buy for small- to-medium-size companies with tight budgets that want to advertise online. Now the SMBs could get pushed out of the market, as the cost per click (CPC) for specific keyword terms continues to rise.

Big-box retail marketers getting smarter about online campaigns increase budgets for paid-search ads and organic listings to compete for the top space on search engine queries and mobile devices. Demand rose 43% in July 2010 among retailers for keyword terms, followed by a similar 44% increase in June, respectively, compared with the year-ago months, according to a PM Digital study released earlier this week.

Clicks and conversions also showed slight increases, but the average order size slipped 2%. It doesn't seem to bother big retailers as long as they dominate the first few pages of search query results for major apparel and general merchandise keyword terms, according to Suzy Sandberg, president at PM Digital.

Consumers need to go two or three pages deep past Zappos and Wal-Mart before getting to smaller merchants. Sandberg began to see lower rankings and higher CPCs for specific keywords in December. That's when big-box retailers took a firm position at the top of search query results for these terms. "Many retailers like Target and Wal-Mart Stores have conducted clicks-to-bricks studies and empirically know when $1 spent online equals a higher amount spent by consumers in the store," she says.

Maybe that's because big-box retailers have begun to see the benefits of online campaigns by linking them to in-store sales, increasing the amount they spend online and driving up CPCs.

Yahoo Advertising suggests that 72% of back-to-school shoppers indicate they will seek out offers and promos from their local retailers.

"The metrics are getting layered into budgets, which allows retailers to spend more," Sandberg says. "There's a lot of co-op dollars starting to flow, which they use to fund paid-search campaigns. The ones that don't get the co-op dollars are the direct-to-consumer retailers that can't compete at the same level."

Marketers might want to loosen metrics and become more creative in how they evaluate performance. Traditionally, it has been one-click equals a percentage of revenue, but now marketers need to attribute a certain amount to advertising, Sandberg says.

Some companies believe new customers are more valuable than those who have purchased goods or services from them in the past. It also might mean taking a portion of the budget, rolling it into the advertising spend without matching it with a return on investment (ROI).

How about a button to suppress seeing the big-box retailers in search results? suggested one source.

Google reported during the Q2 2010 earnings call that the cost-per-click for paid-search ads -- which includes clicks related to ads served on Google sites and the sites of our AdSense partners -- rose 4% in the quarter, compared with the year-ago quarter.

Clix Marketing Founder David Szetela confirms seeing retail CPCs rise steadily during the past five years, making it more difficult for smaller retailers to compete with deep-pocket advertisers and savvy agencies. "It's still possible for advertisers of any size to find niches and techniques that give them an edge, even in crowded, competitive fields," he says.

Most advertisers still don't adhere to best practices in their display advertising via Google AdWords and Microsoft adCenter, which Szetela covers in his first book, "Consumers Now," and a big chunk in his most recent book, "PPC SEM: An Hour a Day."

"Search engines roll out new features at a dizzying pace, and the small business who can quickly implement the new capabilities can often get the jump on bigger, slower competitors," Szetela says. "Google recently launched 'remarketing,' a variant of behavioral targeting. Small advertisers can use this to bump their largest competitors out of choice ad spots on big sites like The New York Times and Wall Street Journal."

Google Thursday launched the Google Small Business Blog, a place where small- and medium-sized businesses can gain information, tips and other news about Google products and initiatives that specifically interest them.

While the site will offer templates for creating video ads on Youtube, tips for employees using Gmail, and ways to respond to business reviews on Place Pages, it's not clear whether SMBs will find secrets and information about successfully placing bids for keywords in AdWords paid-search ads.

By Laurie Sullivan

July 23, 2010

Microsoft Advertising Connects The Screens

Multi-screen adoption of digital technology and devices has created a challenge for advertising to deliver relevant, targeted messages. The more connected the consumer, the greater expectation for bigger ideas. A study released Thursday by Microsoft Advertising gives advertisers insight into how a multi-screen strategy can build awareness, generate consideration and encourage purchases.

Younger multi-screen consumers and online gamers -- the most active segments -- are satisfied with today's connected experiences, but they expect substantial improvements in media, advertising and engagement in the future.

Marketers and agencies that attempt to improve this experience will need to find ways to integrate data and track attribution, according to Alison Engel, senior marketing director, Microsoft Advertising. "People may start their day on one device and end it on another," she says. "The computer and the smartphone offer the one-two punch. And as smartphone functions improve, you'll see more convergence in the future."

Sixty-nine percent of consumers who use multiple screens believe being able to access similar media and advertising across screens makes it more useful, and the media experience more relevant and informative. The research study suggests that the computer remains the primary vehicle for learning about brands, products, and services at 88%; followed by TV at 32%; smartphones, 36%; and gaming consoles, 11%. Sixty-five percent of consumers rely on smartphones to make buying decisions when away from home. They use the handset to make decisions about restaurants, theaters, and entertainment.

Multi-screen consumers think more favorably of content providers that deliver similar content across multiple media devices, and 62% of these consumers and nearly 75% of younger consumers admit that a consistent experience generates positive feelings about the provider.

Compared with 35- to-64-year-olds, 18- to-34-year-olds are more likely to find ads fun to watch -- like ads on their computer, smartphone, and gaming console -- and believe ads are more meaningful and relevant across all screens.

In fact, younger age groups find ads fun to watch on a computer, at 36% vs. 22%; smartphone, at 32% vs. 16%; and gaming consoles, at 36% vs. 14%, respectively. This age group also likes ads on their computer -- 33% vs. 19%; smartphone, 29% vs. 13%; and gaming console, 32% vs. 11%, respectively -- and believes ads are more meaningful and relevant across all screens: computer, 40% vs. 25%; TV, 52% vs. 40%; smartphone, 30% vs. 14%; and gaming console, 34% vs. 12%, respectively.

Microsoft Advertising conducted research to understand how consumers use multiple platforms and their attitudes toward devices and capabilities that drive media and advertising. The study, conducted in partnership with Wunderman (a WPP company), aims to teach advertisers about the opportunities to engage audiences with the correct tone and message in the perfect environment. It surveyed 1,200 people ages 18-64 across the U.S. in the spring of 2010 who consume media through TVs, computers, smartphones, and video game consoles.

July 22, 2010

Paid-Search Advertising Becoming Ticket For Small Business

Small businesses in jewelry, loans, mortgages and recruitment services significantly increased spending for search engine marketing and advertising in Q2 2010.

Loan companies spent 25% more sequentially in the second quarter, followed by mortgage companies at 23.9%; jobs and recruitment, 14%; and travel, 8%, according to the State of Small Business Online Advertising Q2 2010 report released this week.

The average small business supported by Irvine, Calif.-based WebVisible spent on average $2,231 -- up 160% compared with the year-ago quarter, but just 1% sequentially.

Another sign that the medium continues to build momentum: 43% of all clicks resulted in a Web conversion in the second quarter of 2010, up 39% from the year-ago quarter, and 22% sequentially. This tells WebVisible that consumers want information about local businesses, says WebVisible CEO Kirstin Mangers.

Mangers doesn't see the uptick as an indicator that small businesses believe they must advertise online, but rather a signal that the economy slowly continues to turn around as more jobs become available and consumer confidence levels start to rise.

Click-through rates (CTR) in the second quarter of 2010 on all engines improved year-on-year, but Google and Bing declined sequentially. Google CTRs rose 28%; Yahoo 46%, and Bing 15% in the quarter, compared with the prior year. Google and Bing declined slightly, sequentially, from the first quarter of 2010, with Google's CTR declining to 4.4%; and Bing 6.6%. Yahoo's CTR improved by 35%, compared with the prior quarter.

The average keyword count per advertiser also continued to increase for WebVisible's small business advertisers in the first quarter of 2010. Keyword inventories consisted of an average of 75 root keywords, compared with individual bids with geographic modifiers in Q2 2010 -- a 39% increase over Q2 2009, according to the report.

Paid-search share shifted toward Yahoo in Q2, as WebVisible's platform looks for the best-quality traffic at the lowest price. "This would suggest we're getting higher conversion rates and lower CPCs to buy traffic more effectively," Mangers says. "The same thing is applicable in the U.K. Yahoo's less noisy than Google for local companies. It's easy to be seen and easier to compete at a lower rate, so it's converting higher."

Market share shifted a bit in the second quarter of 2010. Advertisers spent 15% more on Yahoo in the second quarter compared with the prior quarter, gaining 4.1 percentage points in share -- and 23.5%, gaining 5.7 percentage points in share, compared with Q2 in the prior year.

Google lost 2 percentage points in share in the second quarter of 2010 sequentially, to 3.4% share, but year-on-year declined 5 percentage points to 6.8%. Bing's share of spending dropped 5% from Q1 2010, and 6.8% from Q2 2009, according to the report.

By Laurie Sullivan

June 25, 2010

10 Tips for Advertising on Facebook

By PPC Here.

Every day, about 200 million people log onto Facebook, spending an average of 14 minutes on the site—adding up to about seven hours per month!
This high number of engaged users represents a huge potential advertising audience for your business. If you choose to tap into this audience, consider following these 10 tips for advertising on Facebook:
1.     Familiarize yourself with Facebook’s advertising guidelines. Facebook has very strict requirements for the types of ads you can place on its site. For example, ads can’t contain audio that plays automatically; they can’t contain excessive repetition; and they can’t promote “get rich quick” opportunities. Make sure you adhere to these rules or your ad will be rejected.
2.     Make sure your ad text isn’t annoying. Facebook has a feature that neither Google nor Bing has: You can close ads you don’t like. Just click on the gray box at the top right corner of the ad. Facebook will ask you why didn’t like the ad, and you can offer your feedback. If enough people close the ad it won’t be shown anymore. So if you actually want your ad to last beyond a few days or even a few hours, make sure it’s not too pushy.
3.     Find a relevant and attractive image for your ad. While ads on the major search engines can’t contain images, Facebook ads allow for one image. When I signed into my Facebook account today, for example, I came across an ad for Caribbean real estate containing a beautiful image of an island surrounded by clear, turquoise water.  Be sure to pick an enticing image that highly relates to your product or service. Then you’ll get more qualified clicks.
4.     Familiarize yourself with the different ways you can target users. With Facebook, you can target people based on many different factors. You can show your ads to people of a certain age, people in a certain city or country, or people who had a certain college major. You can target single people, Republicans, or employees of a specific company. You can also target people based upon their interests, whether it be snake charming, fly fishing, or cross stitching. Determine your target audience, and then advertise to these people alone.
5.     Determine the main purpose of your advertising campaign. Decide whether your main aim is to have users become familiar with your brand, or to generate leads or sales. If it’s the former, then cost per impression advertising is probably the better option. If it’s the latter, then cost per click advertising is likely your better option.
6.     If you don’t have a lot of money, don’t spend a lot. You can be a thrifty advertiser with Facebook. According to Facebook’s Help Center, the minimum required daily budget is $1 for both cost per click and cost per impression advertising. The minimum cost per click is 1 cent and the minimum cost per impression is 2 cents. Just keep in mind that if you have a lower budget your ad will be shown less frequently.
7.     Use Facebook’s bid estimator to help you set your bid. If you really have no idea what bid amount will get your ad a good amount of exposure, take advantage of this tool. While creating your ad, enter your targeting criteria, and then go through to step 4. The bid estimator will show you the range of bids that are winning auctions among ads like yours.
8.     Make the most of the advertising space you’re allotted. Facebook allows 25 characters for the ad’s title, and 135 characters for the ad’s body. While Google also allows 25 characters for its ads’ titles, it only allows 105 characters for the ad’s body (70 for the ad’s text and 35 for the display URL). So take advantage of Facebook’s extra space by including all the information you think will prompt qualified clicks.
9.     Monitor your ads’ performance with Facebook’s Ads Manager and Facebook reports. These resources will tell you how many people saw your ads, how many people clicked on them, and your click-through rates. They will also tell you how much you’ve spent, the types of users who have seen your ads, and the types of users who have clicked on your ads. This information shows you which of your ads are successful, and which need improvement. Modify your ad campaign based on this information.
Check out this Facebook advertising blog for more tips on good Facebook advertising techniques. It contains common Facebook advertising mistakes, information about new Facebook advertising features, and detailed tutorials for advertising on Facebook. This video, for example, takes you through

June 01, 2010

Google, Yahoo Take On Twitter, Facebook

by Kaila Colbin

From the rational, strategic perspective, we all know companies either evolve or die. Corporate graveyards are littered with organizations that grew fat and complacent, certain that no new technology, business model or social evolution would undermine their position at the top of the heap.


Smart companies protect themselves against inertia, creating systems that force instability and, one would hope, vitality. Design agency Space150, for example, rebrands itself, top to bottom, every 150 days. These efforts require the people there to continually question what they are about and how they position themselves.

But even without such a radically unsettling environment for ourselves, most of us have a built-in characteristic that keeps us on our toes. Call it the "Grass Is Greener" syndrome, a.k.a. "Ooh, What's That They're Playing With?"

Bear in mind that there's not a huge difference between these two motivations. It would be foolish for a large incumbent to ignore the fact that everyone is now playing with the greener grass. If newspapers, for example, had had a bit more of that new-toy envy, they might have recognized the threat posed by the Internet early enough to do something about it. So I'm not here to decry reactions to shifts in behavior.

But I do wonder why, if Google Buzz is "not intended as a challenge to Facebook or Twitter," the company is launching its Buzz API "as answer to Facebook Connect" and its Reshare feature "just like on Twitter."

It'll be interesting to see if Buzz's evolution gives Google any market momentum. I'm betting it won't. After all, feature-chasing has rarely proven an effective tactic for stealing market share. If you're going after a competitor based on that competitor's strengths, why should anyone switch to you?

Which is why I think Facebook currently has more to worry about from Yahoo than from Buzz. Despite Carol Bartz not having a good answer to the strategy question in her testy interview with Michael Arrington, Yahoo has done something pretty important in the social media space: formed a partnership with Zynga.

Here's why I think it's important: everybody is mad at Facebook right now. The press is mad. Its users are mad (although, admittedly, only those that pay attention to FB policy changes). And, even with a new five-year agreement in place, it's a pretty safe bet that Zynga is mad about unilaterally having to give up 30% of its revenue, thankyouverymuch.

And yet Facebook still doesn't seem to care. Perhaps it's banking on the idea that everyone will stay because everyone is there, that nobody wants to go and be "social" by themselves on a new network. But here's the thing: on Yahoo, you're not by yourself; you're with 600 million other people. If Yahoo and Zynga get Facebookers to shift the platform on which they play Farmville and Mafia Wars, that alone could create a tipping point of user behavior -- and imagine if you combine it with Flickr and Yahoo Mail (which, incidentally, is bigger than Gmail).

Of course, there's only one problem: Yahoo doesn't have a social network; its Yahoo 360°, launched in 2005, never gained traction. And, in that same interview, Carol Bartz implied that Yahoo is only looking to do stuff in its "sweet spot."

If Yahoo was going to enter the social space, though, now's the time. Buzz has fallen flat. The tide is turning against Facebook. Yahoo has the user numbers, and it's not feature-chasing.

Over to you, Carol. And you, dear reader, for comment, here or via @kcolbin.

May 28, 2010

Top 100 Websites Ranked by Google

Rank Site Category Unique Visitors (users) Reach Page Views Has Advertising




1 facebook.com Social Networks 540,000,000 35.2% 570,000,000,000 Yes

2 yahoo.com Web Portals 490,000,000 31.8% 70,000,000,000 Yes

3 live.com Search Engines 370,000,000 24.1% 39,000,000,000 Yes

4 wikipedia.org Dictionaries & Encyclopedias 310,000,000 20% 7,900,000,000 No

5 msn.com Web Portals 280,000,000 18.1% 11,000,000,000 Yes

6 microsoft.com Software 230,000,000 14.8% 3,300,000,000 Yes

7 blogspot.com Blogging Resources & Services 230,000,000 14.7% 4,400,000,000 Yes

8 baidu.com Web Portals 230,000,000 15% 27,000,000,000 Yes

9 qq.com Email & Messaging 170,000,000 11.1% 25,000,000,000 Yes

10 mozilla.com Internet Clients & Browsers 140,000,000 9.2% 2,100,000,000 No

11 sina.com.cn Web Portals 130,000,000 8.4% 3,600,000,000 Yes

12 wordpress.com Blogging Resources & Services 120,000,000 7.7% 1,200,000,000 Yes

13 bing.com Search Engines 110,000,000 7% 2,700,000,000 Yes

14 adobe.com Programming 110,000,000 6.9% 1,000,000,000 Yes

15 163.com Web Portals 98,000,000 6.3% 2,700,000,000 Yes

16 taobao.com Shopping 98,000,000 6.3% 10,000,000,000 No

17 soso.com Entertainment 97,000,000 6.3% 1,400,000,000 No

18 twitter.com Email & Messaging 96,000,000 6.2% 5,400,000,000 No

19 youku.com Video Clips & Movie Downloads 89,000,000 5.8% 1,700,000,000 Yes

20 ask.com Search Engines 88,000,000 5.7% 1,700,000,000 Yes

21 sohu.com Web Portals 82,000,000 5.3% 1,900,000,000 Yes

22 amazon.com Shopping 74,000,000 4.8% 3,300,000,000 Yes

23 windows.com Windows 74,000,000 4.8% 490,000,000 No

24 ebay.com Auctions 74,000,000 4.8% 9,400,000,000 Yes

25 yahoo.co.jp Web Portals 72,000,000 4.7% 27,000,000,000 Yes

26 myspace.com Social Networks 72,000,000 4.7% 27,000,000,000 Yes

27 apple.com Mac 72,000,000 4.7% 960,000,000 Yes

28 tudou.com Photo & Video Sharing 66,000,000 4.3% 1,100,000,000 No

29 conduit.com Advertising & Marketing 60,000,000 3.9% 2,000,000,000 No

30 hotmail.com Email & Messaging 60,000,000 3.9% 1,100,000,000 Yes

31 flickr.com Photo & Video Sharing 55,000,000 3.6% 1,800,000,000 Yes

32 photobucket.com Photo & Video Sharing 55,000,000 3.6% 1,100,000,000 Yes

33 tianya.cn Online Communities 55,000,000 3.6% 590,000,000 Yes

34 about.com How-To & Expert Content 55,000,000 3.6% 710,000,000 Yes

35 cnet.com Technology News 55,000,000 3.6% 490,000,000 Yes

36 hao123.com Online Directories 50,000,000 3.3% 1,400,000,000 No

37 iefxz.com 50,000,000 3.2% 270,000,000 No

38 xunlei.com TV Programs 50,000,000 3.2% 870,000,000 No

39 paypal.com Merchant Services & Payment Systems 49,000,000 3.2% 1,900,000,000 Yes

40 rapidshare.com File Sharing & Hosting 46,000,000 3% 800,000,000 No

41 go.com Web Portals 46,000,000 3% 3,000,000,000 Yes

42 fc2.com Blogging Resources & Services 45,000,000 2.9% 2,400,000,000 Yes

43 bbc.co.uk News & Current Events 45,000,000 2.9% 2,500,000,000 Yes

44 imdb.com Movies 45,000,000 2.9% 1,400,000,000 Yes

45 orkut.com Social Networks 45,000,000 2.9% 5,300,000,000 Yes

46 sogou.com Web Portals 45,000,000 2.9% 540,000,000 No

47 56.com Multimedia Content 42,000,000 2.7% 450,000,000 No

48 aol.com Web Portals 42,000,000 2.7% 4,400,000,000 Yes

49 craigslist.org Classifieds 42,000,000 2.7% 14,000,000,000 No

50 rakuten.co.jp Shopping Portals & Search Engines 41,000,000 2.6% 4,000,000,000 Yes

51 imageshack.us File Sharing & Hosting 41,000,000 2.7% 310,000,000 Yes

52 ku6.com Multimedia Content 41,000,000 2.7% 410,000,000 Yes

53 blogger.com Blogging Resources & Services 41,000,000 2.7% 1,700,000,000 Yes

54 goo.ne.jp Web Services 41,000,000 2.6% 810,000,000 Yes

55 ifeng.com News & Current Events 41,000,000 2.7% 860,000,000 Yes

56 linkedin.com Social Networks 38,000,000 2.5% 1,700,000,000 Yes

57 yandex.ru Search Engines 38,000,000 2.4% 7,000,000,000 Yes

58 mail.ru Email & Messaging 37,000,000 2.4% 10,000,000,000 Yes

59 partypoker.com Cards & Casino Games 35,000,000 2.2% 280,000,000 No

60 megaupload.com File Sharing & Hosting 34,000,000 2.2% 880,000,000 No

61 answers.com Dictionaries & Encyclopedias 34,000,000 2.2% 250,000,000 No

62 alibaba.com Management & Corporate Operations 34,000,000 2.2% 800,000,000 Yes

63 hi5.com Social Networks 34,000,000 2.2% 9,500,000,000 Yes

64 cnn.com News & Current Events 34,000,000 2.2% 1,300,000,000 Yes

65 amazon.co.jp Shopping Portals & Search Engines 34,000,000 2.2% 1,100,000,000 No

66 4shared.com File Sharing & Hosting 31,000,000 2% 1,600,000,000 Yes

67 ameblo.jp Blogging Resources & Services 31,000,000 2% 1,300,000,000 Yes

68 gougou.com Web Services 31,000,000 2% 410,000,000 Yes

69 skype.com VOIP & Internet Telephony 31,000,000 2% 370,000,000 No

70 renren.com Social Networks 31,000,000 2% 2,000,000,000 Yes

71 dailymotion.com Video Clips & Movie Downloads 31,000,000 2% 540,000,000 Yes

72 naver.com Search Engines 31,000,000 2% 5,400,000,000 No

73 weather.com Weather 31,000,000 2% 890,000,000 Yes

74 mozilla.org Internet Clients & Browsers 29,000,000 1.9% 210,000,000 No

75 mediafire.com File Sharing & Hosting 29,000,000 1.9% 370,000,000 Yes

76 bit.ly File Sharing & Hosting 28,000,000 1.8% 330,000,000 No

77 hp.com Educational Resources 28,000,000 1.8% 650,000,000 No

78 livedoor.jp Blogging Resources & Services 28,000,000 1.8% 490,000,000 Yes

79 ehow.com How-To & Expert Content 28,000,000 1.8% 190,000,000 Yes

80 nifty.com ISPs 28,000,000 1.8% 660,000,000 Yes

81 vkontakte.ru Social Networks 26,000,000 1.7% 30,000,000,000 No

82 alipay.com Banking & Personal Finance 26,000,000 1.7% 660,000,000 Yes

83 nytimes.com Newspapers 26,000,000 1.7% 600,000,000 Yes

84 overture.com Search Engines 26,000,000 1.7% 230,000,000 No

85 sourceforge.net Open Source 26,000,000 1.7% 230,000,000 Yes

86 fbcdn.net Language Study & Translation 25,000,000 1.6% 170,000,000 No

87 xtendmedia.com Web Design & Development 25,000,000 1.6% 160,000,000 No

88 xinhuanet.com News & Current Events 25,000,000 1.7% 190,000,000 Yes

89 wikimedia.org Dictionaries & Encyclopedias 25,000,000 1.6% 140,000,000 No

90 pconline.com.cn Mobile Phones 25,000,000 1.6% 250,000,000 Yes

91 daum.net Online Communities 25,000,000 1.7% 2,500,000,000 Yes

92 4399.com Online Games 24,000,000 1.5% 800,000,000 Yes

93 bankofamerica.com Banking & Personal Finance 24,000,000 1.5% 2,300,000,000 No

94 ebay.de Auctions 23,000,000 1.5% 5,800,000,000 Yes

95 uol.com.br Web Portals 23,000,000 1.5% 4,000,000,000 Yes

96 filestube.com File Sharing & Hosting 23,000,000 1.5% 250,000,000 No

97 zol.com.cn Hardware 23,000,000 1.5% 310,000,000 Yes

98 mop.com Roleplaying Games 23,000,000 1.5% 250,000,000 No

99 alexa.com Search Engine Optimization & Marketing 23,000,000 1.5% 960,000,000 No

100 biglobe.ne.jp Web Portals 22,000,000 1.4% 370,000,000 Yes

May 27, 2010

Small Business To Increase Traditional and Online Marketing

According to the FedEx Office third annual Signs of the Times national small business survey, small business owners are eager to lead the charge out of the country's protracted recession, with 72% saying they will be the driving force behind the U.S. economic recovery in 2010. 51% of the small business owners polled say their businesses have already, or will fully, recover by the end of this year.

This optimism is a marked improvement over the survey's findings last year, when 54% of respondents indicated they were very concerned about the economy's impact on their business. 18% of small businesses are considering an increased budget for staffing and HR activities in 2010, up from just 9% last year.

This study also found that 42% of those polled are considering increasing spending on marketing and advertising initiatives in 2010, and 30% say they may increase spending on sales initiatives. Both actions are specifically aimed at boosting customer traffic and revenues.

Randy Scarborough, vice president of marketing for FedEx Office, says "Small businesses are... identifying and investing in the tools that will help them bounce back... print ads, direct mail campaigns, online marketing programs, and a social media presence... maximize their budgets... connecting effectively with new and existing customers... "

Underscoring small business owners' firm belief in the value of traditional and online marketing and advertising:

• In 2008, before the recession was fully felt throughout the marketplace, 41% of those polled were considering increasing spending on marketing and advertising initiatives

• In 2009, with the recession in full-swing, 44% of small business owners reported considering a budget increase in that same area

• This survey shows that 34% made cuts to their marketing and advertising spend last year and 31% say that decision had a negative/extremely negative impact on their business results

87% of respondents report that printed marketing/advertising tools are somewhat to very effective at driving customers to businesses, and 61% believe traditional marketing/advertising methods are more effective than Web-based counterparts at bringing in customers

44% of small business owners plan to grow business in 2010 by increasing communication with existing and potential customers via printed materials like newsletters and direct mailings. These entrepreneurs are also actively leveraging other traditional marketing/advertising tools such as:

• Brochures (43%)
• Yellow Pages listings (39%)
• Flyers and signs/banners/posters (37% each)
• Newspaper advertisements (32%)

The small business owners putting the most emphasis in this area may be older than most would expect. 18-34 year-old small business owners are greater proponents of signs, banners and/or posters (51% for 18-34 vs. 36% for 55+) and flyers/brochures (57% for 18-34 vs. 47% for 55+) as cost effective marketing/advertising tools than older owners.

46% of respondents have plans to grow business in 2010 by improving their company's online presence, while another 36% plan to utilize social media/networking websites to build business.

With many small businesses planning to enhance their marketing and advertising efforts across the board this year:

64% say their marketing and advertising materials are, at best, only somewhat consistent in terms of brand, messaging and overall design

23% of small business owners can't invest in improving these materials due to budget restraints

13% find that they spend more than they should because they don't have the time or resources to find cost-saving deals

May 11, 2010

Twitter has confirmed the soft-launch of a "Business Center," which consists of various features, including the ability for businesses to accept direct messages on the service -- even from people they don't technically "follow."

"This is huge for businesses that perform customer service via Twitter," notes Mashable. "They can get feedback and deal with private customer issues without having to follow the person back first."

"The Business Center Toolkit will let companies using the micro-blogging site for marketing purposes turn on and off different options and functionality," Venture Beat writes.

"This is Twitter's move to offer specific business services that will enhance Twitter's abilities to serve the business community," notes Marketing Pilgrim. "Eventually this will be another one of those things that will maybe even help Twitter, ummmmm, make money ... How about that?"

Presently, only a small group of business users have received emails from the Twitter team, inviting them to test a so-called "Twitter Toolkit," according to Mashable.

According to Twitter: "Only a handful of accounts have these features presently," while it expects to roll out the features gradually. Twitter is asking participating businesses to "fill out some information which will help us verify your business or organization."

Once a business activates its account, it is automatically verified, which leads Mashable to believe that Twitter has finally decided to expand its Verified Accounts program to brands and organizations.

"Business accounts can also add multiple users so different employees can use the same account," notes Fast Company, adding: "The biggest change is in direct messaging ... Normally, direct messages can only be sent and received by two accounts that are following each other, in order to cut down on spam ... But business accounts allow the receiving of messages from users that account is not following -- this could be useful for customer service, since a business wouldn't have to mess around following every single user who also likes Peet's Coffee or whatever."

Mashable et al

May 01, 2010

CPC Tips - For April 2010

Tips for lowering your cost per click - April 2010

Ann Taylor Investigation Shows FTC Keeping Close Eye on Blogging

Commission's Scrutiny of Retailer for Rewarding Posts About Collection Is a Warning to Marketers

By Natalie Zmuda
Published: April 28, 2010

NEW YORK (AdAge.com) -- The Federal Trade Commission has made public its first investigation into a company's relationship with bloggers, and while the federal agency took no action, the decision provides some insight into how it is viewing marketers' relationships with online communities

The FTC informed Ann Taylor that, following an investigation, it has decided not to take action against the women's retailer over an event held earlier this year. The retailer had invited bloggers to preview the Loft division's summer 2010 collection, offering a "special gift," and promising that those posting coverage from the event would be entered into a "mystery gift-card drawing," where they could win between $50 and $500.

The invite explained that bloggers must submit posts to the company within 24 hours in order to find out the value of their gift card.

The event and the unusual request for posts to be submitted for a prize received media scrutiny and caught the eye of the FTC. "We were concerned that bloggers who attended a preview on January 26, 2010 failed to disclose that they received gifts for posting blog content about that event," Mary Engle, the FTC's associate director-advertising practices, wrote in a letter dated April 20 to Ann Taylor's legal representation.

Although the agency decided not to take action against Ann Taylor, the case serves to let marketers know that the FTC is keeping a close eye on their interactions with bloggers.

Getting the message out
"This tells me that [the FTC] is looking, and that's important to know," said Douglas Wood, an attorney and head of Reed Smith's Media and Entertainment Industry Group. "They're probably throwing a little fire-starter into it, sending some messages out. The message this time is somewhere between $50 and $500 requires a disclosure."

Last year the agency began cracking down on bloggers, issuing new guidelines requiring bloggers to clearly disclose any "material connection" to an advertiser, including payments for an endorsement or free product.

The FTC said it decided not to take action against Ann Taylor, because, according to the company, the January preview was the first and, to date, only such event. Also, only a small number of bloggers posted content about the preview and several of those disclosed the gifts. A sign posted at the event directed bloggers to disclose the gifts, though the FTC says it's not clear how many bloggers saw the sign. Finally, Ann Taylor's Loft division adopted a written policy regarding its interaction with bloggers in February.

According to a spokeswoman for the FTC, the retailer was cooperative during the process. Ann Taylor declined to comment.

Industry watchers have widely expected the FTC to make an example of a company, in its quest to give the new guidelines teeth. The FTC declined to comment on any additional investigations that may be underway.

"I'm speculating, but what the FTC is doing is not being aggressive intentionally, so they can set up a standard they think is appropriate. Maybe they'll do this a few more times," said Mr. Wood. "It's not an unusual way to begin the educational process. In a way, it's always good to be the first one looked at. The second one might not fare so well."

April 29, 2010

Top 10 paid apps for March 2010 based on buy attempts:

Top 10 paid apps for March 2010 based on buy attempts:


  1. Assassin’s Creed 2: Multiplayer: $2.99
  2. All-in-1 Gamebox: $0.99
  3. Sniper Strike: $0.99
  4. Angry Birds: $0.99
  5. Secrets of Success: $0.99
  6. Final Fantasy: $6.99
  7. Flaboo!: $0.99
  8. Rudolph’s Kick n Fly: $0.99
  9. Nukeball: $0.99
  10.  Daily Fail: $0.99

Top 10 most recommended apps among Chorus community March 2010:

  1. FastMalls: Free
  2. LoKast: Free
  3. Skee-Ball: $0.99
  4. 5-0 Overload: Free
  5. Twit: Free
  6. Evil Overlord: Free
  7. Angry Birds: $0.99
  8. Pic2shop: Free
  9. Pocket God: $0.99
  10. NBA Live by EA Sports: $6.99

April 28, 2010

March 2010 Search Rankings Change Little from February

Americans’ usage preference for online search engines changed little between February and March 2010, according to The Nielsen Company.


Google Search Maintains Dominance

Google Search maintained its comfortable lead in search engine usage during March 2010, with 6.39 billion searches, or 65.7% of 9.72 billion total searches. Yahoo Search came in a distant second with 1.3 billion searches, or 13.4% of the total. MSN/Windows Live/Bing Search followed with 1.2 billion searches, or 12.2% of the total.

No other search engine had a search total in the billions or double-digit market share. AOL Search, the fourth-most-popular search engine for the month, accounted for 245.8 million searches, 2.5% of the total. Total searches increased 5.8% from 9.18 billion in February 2010, which is likely at least partly due to the additional three days in March.

February 2010 Numbers Were Similar

Google Search led all search providers in February 2010 with a 65.2% search share, or about 5.98 billion searches, according to previous Nielsen rankings. Yahoo Search came in second with a 14.1% search share, or about 1.29 billion searches. MSN/WindowsLive/Bing followed with 12.5% search share, or 1.14 billion searches. AOL Search, the fourth-most-popular provider last month, had a 2.3% share, or about 207 million searches.
MSN/WindowsLive/Bing experienced approximately 15% growth in its share of US searches in February 2010, increasing from a 10.9% share and 1.12 billion searches. March 2010 figures indicate this growth has at least temporarily stalled.
comScore Results also Similar

comScore’s core search rankings use different metrics than Nielsen’s search rankings, but produced similar results in March 2010. There was little change in comScore’s market share statistics of the five leading US online search providers between February and March 2010. Google Sites led the core search market with 65.1% market share, down from 65.5%. Yahoo Sites slightly rose from 16.8% to 16.9% market share. Microsoft Sites also grew slightly from 11.5% to 11.7% market share. Ask Network and AOL LLC Network’s market share rankings remained virtually unchanged in the low single digits.

April 16, 2010

What Google's Earnings Jump And CPC Sequential Revenue Slide Tell Advertising Industry

Google reported Thursday that revenue rose 23% to $6.77 billion for the quarter ended March 31, 2010, compared to the first quarter of 2009. And while earnings continue to improve, profits fell short of analysts' expectations, and sequential cost per clicks had a rocky ride.

Net income rose 37% to $1.96 billion -- or $6.06 a share -- from $1.42 billion, or $4.49 a share, in the year-ago quarter. JP Morgan Analyst Imran Khan had estimated net revenue growth of 2.4% versus Google's 2.2% sequentially.

Aggregate paid clicks, which include clicks related to ads served on Google sites and the sites of AdSense partners, rose 15% in the first quarter of 2010 compared with the year-ago quarter, and 5%, sequentially.

For the most part, advertising held strong, but revenue generated from cost per clicks took a bit of a roller coaster ride sequentially. Average CPC -- which includes clicks related to ads served on Google sites and the sites of AdSense partners -- increased approximately 7% in the first quarter, compared with the year-ago quarter, but declined 4% sequentially.

Google reminded those on a conference call with investors that the company has been releasing tools that help advertisers find long-tail keywords, which might make CPCs vary. In time the tech tools should drive higher revenue from CPCs.

Traffic acquisition costs -- the portion of revenue shared with Google's partners -- rose to $1.71 billion in the first quarter of 2010, compared with $1.44 billion in the year-ago quarter. TAC as a percentage of advertising revenue came in at 26% in the first quarter of 2010, compared with 27% in the first quarter of 2009. TAC relates to amounts ultimately paid to Google's AdSense partners, which totaled $1.45 billion in the first quarter of 2010.

Patrick Pichette, senior vice president and chief financial officer at Google, attributed any declined to seasonal swings, and the company plans to move forward with hiring new people, as well as making investments in search, display and mobile.

Large advertisers have come back in force, Pichette says, which might explain some findings from the Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB) for 2009, as the industry moved into 2010.

Gian Fulgoni, comScore chairman and co-founder, points to the recent 2009 data from the IAB to provide perspective on industry trends that began to emerge in the first quarter of 2010. "In the fourth quarter search only grew 4% from a year ago, while display grew 15%," he says. "Spending on display ads, for some reason, grew four times faster than search, which raises interesting questions on the types of advertisers that are spending money."

Search revenue rose 4% to $2.9 billion in the fourth quarter of 2009, according to IAB. The industry group reported that display-related advertising -- banner, rich media, video and sponsorship -- accounted for $2.3 billion or 37% of total revenue during the quarter of 2009, up nearly 15% from the $2 billion -- or 33% -- reported in the year-ago quarter.

The advertising industry went through the recession toward the end of 2008 and through 2009. Ad spending slowed. During this time display and search ads were basically flat, Fulgoni says. "Then companies started spending more on advertising as the economy began to improve, but we came out on the other side of the downturn to see display outsell search," he says. "It struck me as odd because search had been growing faster."

Fulgoni says that perhaps the search industry has begun to reach maturity, pricing has become an issue for advertisers, or they realize clicks on ads don't produce relevant metric, so more advertisers have begun to sink money into display.

Another hypothesis points to the fact that smaller companies typically rely on search marketing. But if small companies are not doing well financially, they're likely not buying ads.

April 08, 2010

French Ad Retargeting Co. Brings CPC And Privacy Model To U.S.

The U.S. officially gains another retargeting company Thursday. Criteo has moved its headquarters from Paris, France to Palo Alto, Calif., bringing with it a performance-based cost-per-click (CPC) advertising model and advanced European privacy features.

JB Rudelle -- chief executive officer, who cofounded the company in 2005, along with two ex-Microsoft "technical geniuses" -- supports more than 400 customers worldwide, including several hundred ecommerce brands. The company, which just began supporting companies in the U.S. like AllPosters.com, boasts serving up about 4 billion retargeted ad impressions per month. In Europe, Criteo retargets ads for Expedia and Dell, and U.K. retailer Marks & Spencer.

Experience gained in Europe puts Criteo ahead of the U.S. market in terms of protecting consumer privacy, Rudelle says. "We have been working in countries like Germany, which is probably the most demanding country in the world when it comes to privacy," he says. "We put a direct opt-out link on all retargeting display banners in Europe, and hope to bring this feature into the U.S. market."

More than 95% of consumers leave ecommerce Web sites without making a purchase, taking an average of five visits before becoming a spending customer, according to data from Criteo.

Not having an ability to integrate even 1% of leads from incoming traffic through retargeting kept many of the older retargeting platforms in mothballs. As expected, U.S. online ad spending dipped last year for the first time since the 2001-2002 recession -- dropping 3.4% from $23.5 billion in 2008 to $22.7 billion in 2009, according to year-end data released Wednesday by the Interactive Advertising Bureau and PricewaterhouseCoopers. After running flat for most of last year, ad spending in the fourth quarter saw a seasonal lift, increasing 14% from $5.5 billion in the third quarter to $6.3 billion -- the most in any quarter to date.

Criteo's technology can scale quickly, and integrates with Google's ad-server technology, either Doublick for Advertisers, or Doubleclick for Publishers. Rudelle says Criteo's technology drops a cookie in the Web browser to find them when they return. Advertisers only get charged if someone clicks on the banner that brings them back to the company's Web site. It takes about half a day to integrate the technology for a client, he says.

Rudelle says the industry offers three different types of retargeting models, pointing to Google's retargeting platform as a simple "plug-and-play" solution that could augment Criteo's offering. Google recently announced a retargeting offering.

Driving the company's U.S. expansion plans, Karen Dayan comes to Criteo as vice president of marketing from Microsoft. She has 14 years of international experience in data-driven product marketing and program development. Jeff Mills assumes the role of vice president of strategic partnerships, bringing more than 13 years of marketing, sales and leadership experience at leading internet companies, including Yahoo and SideStep.

Ron Burgundy at Yahoo