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  • New iPod Touch Commercial, Just In Time For The Holidays

    Just in time for the holiday shopping season, Apple has released a new television commercial for thier iPod Touch. The new commercial shows teenagers communicating with friends, playing games, and just having fun. It’s pretty fitting when you consider its entitled “Share The Fun“.

    Apple seems to be advertising the iPod Touch to parents of teenagers, as it’s an alternative to smartphones and doesn’t come with the overpriced data plans.

    Do you think this new advertisement will entice buyers? Tell us what you think in the comments.

  • Google+ Gets Its Own Television Commercial

    On Thanksgiving Day, during the Lions vs. Packers game, Google aired a commercial for their Google+ social network. The title of the commercial was “Google+: Sharing but like real life”.

    The advertisement plays up that it’s different from Facebook, allowing you to organize your family, friends, and random people you know into various Circles. You can check it out below.

    What did you think of the commercial? Tell us what you thought below.

    Personally, I thought it was a little dry compared to some of their other commercials, like the ones they did for Google Chrome.

  • Bing And Yahoo Advertisers Get New Tools

    Bing And Yahoo Advertisers Get New Tools

    Microsoft is talking about some new features it has for adCenter.

    “Over the last two weeks, adCenter has released its latest round of pre-holiday features, all delivering on advertisers’ wish lists of improving campaign performance, increasing volume, and simplifying processes to help save time,” a spokesperson tells WebProNews.

    Features include a redesigned web user interface, an upgrade to the adCenter Desktop, and the release of several performance reporting tools.

    Microsoft outlines each of these.

    The interface:

    • Simplified Campaign Set Up for creating campaigns and ad groups, and a sleek, new single-page view with real-time previews and keyword suggestion, enabling quicker campaign deployment.
    • Improvements to Navigation & Discovery to help advertisers manage across their entire account by viewing and editing keywords and ads across multiple campaigns and ad-groups at once.
    • Improvements to Campaign Reporting with new multi-metric trend charts, delivery status notification features and positional bid estimates.
    • Improvements to Editing with in-line editing, in-line bid editing, and best position estimations in the keywords grid.

    The desktop:

    • New Welcome Screen takes advertisers on an end-to-end tour of the Desktop tool to help them get set up and started quickly.
    • An expanded Import Campaigns feature to allow advertisers to easily and directly import their Google AdWords campaign data into the Desktop.
    • Clipboard support to enable basic copy and paste functionality so that advertisers can quickly and easily copy data and move it to, from, and within Desktop.
    • Bulk bid suggestions to offer more than 1,000 keywords and let advertisers easily apply changes in order to increase traffic.
    • Simplified Targeting with a default set to the advertisers’ account location, determined by the language listed in their Desktop settings.

    Tools:

    • New, improved Opportunities Tab that includes bid suggestions for exact/broad match and in-line editing. With this new feature advertisers can easily address underperforming bids to target more volume.
    • New Share of Voice feature that quantifies missed impressions in Account, Campaign, and Ad Group performance reports, and helps prioritize optimizations more effectively.
    • Improved historical and aggregated Quality Score data to allow advertisers to view aggregated quality score by summary or by time frame, including hour, day, week or month.
    • An upgrade to Change History reports so advertisers can view targeting changes and gain better insights into campaign performance related to those changes.

    For those of you who aren’t advertising with adCenter, remember that these things apply to Bing and Yahoo advertisers.

  • Mortgage Scammers From Google Ads Get Shut Down

    The Office of the Inspector General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program (SIGTARP) has shut down 85 online mortgage modification scams, and says it is cooperating with an ongoing criminal investigation regarding Google suspending ad relationships with 500 advertisers.

    “The first place many homeowners turn for help in lowering their mortgage is the Internet through
    online search engines, and that’s precisely where they are being taken advantage of and targeted,” said Christy Romero, Deputy Special Inspector General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program. “Web ads that offer a false sense of hope may not be legitimate and can end up costing homeowners their home. SIGTARP is diligently working on every level to stop these frauds, to protect homeowners from being victimized, and to hold accountable criminals who defraud homeowners in connection with HAMP and other TARP programs.”

    Consumer Watchdog, which calls out Google just about every chance it gets, and sometimes makes animated videos about related topics (remember Eric Schmidt as the evil ice cream man?), has put out a press release calling for Google to donate the “tainted revenue it received from deceptive ads preying on vulnerable homeowners to non-profit groups that help consumers with credit problems, including homeowners seeking to avoid foreclosure).”

    Here’s the Schmidt video in case you wanted to see it again. It’s not really related to this particular issue, but it gives you an idea of Consumer Watchdog’s mentality towards Google:

    Consumer Watchdog points to a report it released in February called “Liars and Loans: How Deceptive Advertisers Use Google”. They highlight five recommendations they made in the report:

    — Google should be more diligent in screening advertising in areas such as mortgage modification and credit repair where fraud is known to be a serious problem. If the company finds that screening ads is not feasible, it should ban all advertising in areas where regulatory agencies have shown that fraudulent advertising is endemic.

    — Where fraud is a known problem but legitimate firms also operate, Google should use its advertising techniques to post public service ads that counter deceptive ads. For example, if a loan modification ad refers to the federal government, a Google-sponsored disclosure statement should appear prominently alongside to warn consumers that they should be wary of mortgage lenders using such terms.

    – Google should initiate and help set industry-wide standards to prevent fraudulent advertising on the Internet.

    — Google should donate revenue it has received from questionable financial advertising to non-profit groups that help consumers with credit problems, including homeowners seeking to avoid foreclosure.

    — The Federal Trade Commission should begin using its legal authority under the Lanham Act to seek injunctions against search providers who accept large inventories of advertising from firms they have reason to believe are engaged in deceptive practices.

    The report can be found here in its entirety (pdf).

    “Google should never have published these ads, but its executives turned a blind eye to these fraudsters for far too long because of the substantial revenue such advertising generates,” said John M. Simpson, director of Consumer Watchdog’s Privacy Project. “The company cannot be allowed to benefit from these ill-gotten gains. Google must donate the money to aid homeowners who were victimized because of its callous quest for profits.”

    “Google’s willingness to accept such obviously deceptive advertising is the problem,” Simpson said. “The company must take a proactive role in preventing deceptive ads that prey on vulnerable consumers.”

    You may recall that earlier this year, the Justice Department announced that Google had agreed to forfeit $500 million for allowing Canadian pharmacies to place ads through AdWords, targeting consumers in the U.S. resulting in what was described as “unlawful importation of controlled and non-controlled prescription drugs into the U.S.”

    Google is not commenting on mortgage scam matter.

  • Google Search and Advertising News You Don’t Want to Miss

    There have been a lot of major points of discussion surrounding Google and the company’s impact on businesses, marketers and websites over the course of this past week, and that includes things on both the search side of things as well as the social side (though sometimes these are directly related).

    What should Google be doing to improve search and advertising? Comment here.

    The two major events that kicked off all of these topics were the launch (after months of waiting) of Google+ Pages for businesses, products and brands, and the PubCon event in Las Vegaas, where Google’s Matt Cutts and Amit Signhal spoke about search.

    If you’re looking for tips on effectively using your Google+ Page, read this. If you’re looking for how to just set one up, read this. This piece discusses setting the Page up with your AdWords campaigns.

    On the PubCon front, the most noteworthy piece of news was that Google is testing algorithms that determine how much content vs. ads are above the fold on a page. Expect this to be an increasingly significant factor in Google rankings. It raises a lot of questions though, and we discussed here.

    About that those raters…

    Also at PubCon, Cutts reportedly discussed that recently leaked raters handbook. WebmasterWorld user Tedster paraphrased :

    Webmasters tend to put a slightly skewed angle on this. The quality raters are actually rating a SERP (that is, a particular algo configuration) as a quality control measure for the algo team. Their ratings do not directly change rankings- but they hep the algo team see if the algo worked as planned or not.

    Also, note that this document is not for the spam team. They also have a training document and use human quality raters – but that document has never been leaked.

    Morris Rosenthal, who had sites impacted by the Panda update shared some inteteresting thoughts in relation to that.

    Page Speed

    Prior to PubCon, Cutts also tweeted out a video discussing how Google determines Page Speed:

    He says it really only affects the rankings in about one out of a hundred searches, and it’s really only a big issue for about one in a thousand sites. This is pretty interesting considering the emphasis Google has placed on this element over the past year or two.

    Transparency and Communication

    There were plenty of other takeaways from the Google PubCon Q&A that are worth noting. In a nutshell, Googlebot is getting smarter and better at determining what types of content reside on a page, and at the same time, Google (at least according to Google) is getting better at transparency and communication with webmasters.

    Specifically, they said they intend to be more transparent about algorithm updates and announce them as they go (as we’ve already seen them do with the Panda and Freshness updates).

    They also gave a few pieces of advice, such as suggesting you tell Google when you publish content using email alerts and seting up pubsubhubbub in Webmaster Tools to help them better see that you publish the content before scrapers scrape it. Also, they emphasized that doorway pages are a bad idea.

    Did you know…

    A couple of facts they shared: Google has spam fighters in 40 languages and keeps an excel sheet of 500 sties from a thread in the Google Webmaster Help Forum where webmasters report Panda issues (presumably the one discussed here).

    Freshness

    While the “Freshness” update may have taken hold the prior week, SearchMetrics released a list of the top winners and losers in terms of search visibility. While there was no clear pattern to the types of sites negatively impacted by it, there were quite a few news sites on the winners list. That’s not to say all winners were sites of this nature. The top winner was actually Last.fm.

    Advertising

    There were several Google ad-related developments over the week. For one, Google announced that in the coming weeks, AdMob developers will be able to make their in-app inventory available on Google’s Ad Exchange).

    The company announced that mobile site optimization is now a factor in mobile ads quality, as it rolls out to all advertisers. On the Google Mobile Ads Blog, product manager David Nachum wrote, “Ads that have mobile optimized landing pages will tend to perform better in AdWords — they will generally drive more mobile traffic at a lower cost.”

    Then of course there is the ability to tie your AdWords campaigns to your Google+ page.

    Is Google headed in the right direction? Do you consider these developments to be good things? Tell us what you think.

  • Currys PC World’s Magnificent Star Wars Commercials

    Currys PC World’s Magnificent Star Wars Commercials

    Take a look at your calendar. Notice how quickly the 2011 Holiday Season is approaching? That means it’s time for the Christmas marketing blitz where we, as consumers, will be inundated with all kinds of commercials and ads telling us that special someone in our lives won’t be complete without whatever the hot gadget of the moment is.

    I’m guessing the Apple 4s will be the big winner there, but nothing has been decided yet. In fact, some of us would rather enjoy Thanksgiving before transitioning to Christmas, but that hasn’t stopped the big box stores from rolling out their various Holiday Season ad campaigns.

    Aside: for those of you who want your holidays to go in order, this is for you:

    Wait Your Turn

    In regards to the holiday season commercials, one such big box company, Currys PC World, has that whole “make awesome commercials” down to a science, if the latest offerings are anything to go by. Of course, it could be the geek in me that approves of *most* things Star Wars, or it could be that these commercials are actually pretty awesome. Perhaps it’s the lack of being beaten over the head with Christmas-related themes in these ads.

    Whatever the case, Currys nailed these offerings, so much so, in fact, that if they were Currys PC World stores in United States, I’d consider shopping there before going to Best Buy. Take a look for yourself:


    There’s even a “making of” video for the Darth Vader commercial, which is perfect demonstration on how to further leverage the kick-ass content you create:


    In other news, this isn’t the first time Currys has been allowed to use George Lucas’ Star Wars intellectual property. It was also used to promote the Blu-Ray release of the Star Wars movies box set:


    Apparently, Lucas is a big fan of their stores.

  • How To Connect Your Google+ Page To Your AdWords Campaigns

    As you may know, Google lets you tie the +1’s of your Google+ Page to your site, your search results, and your AdWords ads. The company announced a new AdWords feature called Social Extensions, which is how you include your AdWords campaigns.

    “Currently (and for campaigns that don’t have Social Extensions enabled) your AdWords ads only show +1’s from people who have +1’d that ad’s landing page,” explains Dan Friedman of Google’s Inside AdWords Crew. “This limits the likelihood that someone who sees your ad will have a friend or contact who’s recommended it. By enabling Social Extensions on your ad campaigns you’re able to leverage all the +1’s your brand has received, whether it be on a search result, on your Google+ Page, your website or on your ads, making it more likely that someone who sees your ad will have a friend or contact who has recommended it.”

    “We believe that this has the potential to improve your overall ad performance,” he adds. “In fact, 71% of shoppers say that recommendations from friends and family impact their purchasing decisions. These additional recommendations may result in more conversions and deeper engagement with your business overall.”

    That stat comes from a Harris Interactive poll from last year. There’s a good chance that the number is even greater now, with social penetrating search more and more.

    There is also a new reporting segment for AdWords, which Google says will help advertisers better understand the impact of social annotations on their campaigns. Advertisers can now segment campaigns by ad groups, keywords or by +1 annotations.

    +1 annotations will let you view metrics for impressions where the viewer had a friend or contact that +1’d your brand, impressions that included an anonymous count of people who +1’d your brand, and impressions without any social annotations. The segment works with all campaigns, regardless of whether or not you enabled Social Extensions.

    You can enable Social Extensions by clicking “Ad Extensions” in your AdWords account and finding the option in the rop down menu. Choose new extension. Google will ask you to add your verified Google+ Page URL.

    Social Extensions

    Google talks about how to get your Profile or Page verified here. “If we think you or your page might benefit from a badge, we’ll reach out to manually verify you,” the company says. “If you believe a profile or page is impersonating you or your business, report the profile or page and select the ‘Impersonation’ option.

    If you have a verified profile or page and change your name, even by a single character, your verification status will be reset and you’ll need to be re-verified.”

    If you change the Page associated with your AdWords campaign, the campaign will begin adding +1’s on your ad to the Page’s total.

    Social extensions are available in all countries. Advertisers will be charged for standard clicks on text ads when users click the ad text, but not when a user +1’s the ad.

    Social extensions can appear in an ad when it’s shown on Google.com as well as throughout the Google Display Network. That applies to both desktop and mobile. The feature is compatible with all AdWords targeting options.

    The feature is not “yet” accessible via AdWords Editor or the AdWords API. Given that Google made a point of saying “yet,” I assume that will change in the future.

  • Google TV Commercials The Most Effective Website Ads on TV: Report

    Historically, Google hasn’t done a whole lot of television advertising, but that has changed recently, and from the looks of things, it’s working out pretty well for the company.

    Ace Metrix put out lists of the most effective TV ads for websites, as well as the least effective, and Google accounts for five of the top ten most effective for the year.

    “Google, who two years ago never advertised on television, has truly emerged as a major brand marketer this year, introducing high-impact spots delivered at low frequency that last longer than the average 30-second ad,” said Ace Metrix CEO Peter Daboll.

    The good news for Google’s main search competitor is that Bing also had three in the top ten. The other two on the list came from Disney.com, and The Daily.

    most effective ads

    The least effective list is pretty interesting too. It includes Go Daddy, which is famous for its controversial commercials, and Groupon’ s controversial Super Bowl commercial with Timothy Hutton.

    Bing also had a couple on this list. Google did not .

    least effective ads

    ““The main differences between the dot.com ads that performed well and those that performed poorly is (1) testing—Google tests their ads on YouTube fairly extensively before buying TV air time, and (2) storytelling: Google creates ads that, first, tell a compelling story and, second, sell,” says Daboll. “Consumers respond to this.”

    “The poor Super Bowl appearances by dot.coms show just how little testing is done, as well as a general lack of understanding of the impact of a poor spot,” he adds. “Go Daddy has perennially performed poorly with highly polarizing ads, and Groupon and Living Social also had major whiffs with viewers. The biggest mistake these companies make is in not testing the ads before they run during such a massively expensive and important media event.”

    Ace Metrix measures the ads using its “Ace Score,” which it describes as being based on viewer reaction to national TV ads. Respondents are randomly selected and representative of the U.S. TV viewing audience, the firm says. Relevance, persuasion, watchability, information, and attention are among the attributes scored.

    Related: Google’s Johnny Cash Project

  • Microsoft, Yahoo & AOL Formally Announce Their Ad Partnership

    Back in September, Microsoft, Yahoo and AOL held a meeting to discuss a potential advertising partnership, which would see the companies banding together to compete with Google. It appears that we’re about to see the fruits of that partnership.

    Today, the three Internet giants announced a partnership officially, which it says will benefit advertisers, agencies, and publishers by providing “more efficient access to premium online ad inventory.”

    The agreements among the companies will enable ad networks operated by each to offer one another’s premium non-reserved online display inventory to their respective ad customers.

    The companies say that while advertisers can continue to partner across the Yahoo Network Plus, AOL’s Advertising.com and the Microsoft Media Network, each is differentiated by its capabilities around data, optimization, packaging and inventory. The partnership, they say, will enhance demand for and value of each party’s display ad offerings and provide better yield for publishers and advertisers.

    “We’re thrilled to partner with Microsoft and AOL and bring to market what we believe will be a more efficient, effective and more effortless way to access true premium inventory and formats,” said Ross Levinsohn, Yahoo EVP of the Americas. “There has a been a significant shift in how inventory is bought and sold, and we’re now 100% focused on controlling our own destiny, working directly with marketers and agencies and driving better returns for our advertising partners. “

    “Enhancing choice and scale in today’s display advertising market is a rising tide that lifts all boats,” said Rik van der Kooi, Corporate Vice President of the Microsoft Advertising Business Group. “This partnership will create an opportunity where advertisers and publishers alike can benefit from easier access to – and demand for — high quality inventory. The fact that we’re joining together to offer this kind of access to quality – yet each with our own differentiated ad offerings — is something that will benefit the market as a whole.”

    “We are excited to be part of this partnership,” said AOL Chief Revenue Officer Ned Brody. “Today’s announcement sets in motion the opportunity for advertisers to achieve scaled solutions across premium publishers. This should reduce friction in the marketplace which will benefit both advertisers and publishers. And this partnership will take our existing Advertising.com partnerships with both Microsoft and Yahoo! to a new level.”

    The companies will continue to compete for ad spend and publisher partners. Early 2012 is the target for integrating one another’s real-time bidding technologies for non-reserved inventory.

  • Google Brings AdMob and DoubleClick Ad Exchange Together

    Google Brings AdMob and DoubleClick Ad Exchange Together

    Google announced that in the coming weeks, AdMob developers will be able to make their in-app inventory available on Google’s DoubleClick Ad Exchange.

    Google is only letting a small number of pre-qualified buyers compete for the inventory at first, but it would be rolled out more broadly over time.

    “Ultimately, this will give app developers and publishers access to a wider pool of buyers like demand-side platforms and agency trading desks, improving their potential returns, and helping grow the overall mobile web economy,” says DoubleClick Ad Exchange Director Chip Hall. “And marketers on our Exchange will be able to buy, in real time, ads that run inside people’s favorite mobile games, news apps and more. With this important addition, the DoubleClick Ad Exchange will be truly cross-format…and will become the first exchange to support this full range of ad formats.”

    “A cross-format exchange is just one of the ways we’re looking to simplify the process of buying and selling display advertising, but one we think will create tremendous value for advertisers and publishers,” says Hall. “We will continue to work with our partners to help them get the most out of what the evolving display market has to offer — today, tomorrow, and in the years ahead.”

    Clearly developing for mobile is becoming increasingly important between smartphone usage growth and the flooding of tablets into the market. This should be a good move to help developers better monetize their efforts. Of course, it’s going to still come down to creating quality apps that people want to use.

  • Yahoo Announces Intent to Acquire Interclick for $270 Million

    Just because there’s been a lot of talk about other parties looking to acquire Yahoo, and the company doesn’t have a permanent CEO yet, doesn’t mean Yahoo can’t pursue acquisitions of its own.

    Today, the company announced that it has agreed to acquire ad technology firm interclick at a tender offer of about $270 million.

    “This investment underscores our focus on enhancing the performance of both our guaranteed and non-guaranteed display business across Yahoo and our partner sites and, combined with Yahoo!’s reach and advertising leadership, will deliver a powerful solution for marketers,” said Ross Levinsohn, EVP, Americas region. “interclick’s innovative platform will allow Yahoo! to expand its targeting and data capabilities to deliver campaigns with stronger performance metrics.”

    “Having worked closely with Yahoo! for the past few years, we have a deep appreciation of the quality of the inventory that Yahoo! brings to market. The combination of Yahoo!’s premium data and inventory with our platforms will create tremendous value for clients,” said interclick founder and CEO Michael Katz. “I would personally like to thank our team, our clients and our Board who helped to make interclick the success it has become.”

    “We believe that this is a great outcome for our shareholders,” said Michael Brauser, interclick Co-Chairman of the Board. “Michael Katz and his team have done a tremendous job over the past few years and I’m proud to have helped make this outcome a reality.”

    The deal is expected to close by early 2012.

  • Google: Here’s How to Block Advertisers

    Google: Here’s How to Block Advertisers

    Google is letting users of Google Search and Gmail block ads.

    The company announced that it is placing a “Why these ads?” link on Google search results and Gmail, and when the link is clicked, you get an explanation about why you’re seeing specific ads. Users can also access the ads preferences manager for search and Gmail.

    “Here, the user can choose to block ads from specific advertisers or opt out of personalized ads,” explains Group Product Manager Ginsu Yoon. “Because we can show fewer, more relevant ads when users have opted-in to see personalized ads, we describe these benefits with text and video to help them make an informed choice.”

    Here’s that video:

    “As an advertiser, you might wonder how these changes could impact your AdWords performance,” says Yoon. “When a user opts out of personalized ads on search and Gmail, your ads can still reach them but the targeting might be a bit less precise. If users block your ads, they won’t see your ads in the future. The number of blocks you’ve accumulated does not directly affect calculations of your Quality Score and Ad Rank.”

    That’s not the only targeting change Google has unleashed on advertisers this week. They also announced changes to location targeting, and the termination of polygon targeting altogether.

    Google’s announcement in relation to Gmail comes at a particularly interesting time, as Google is getting ready to (finally) launch a Gmail app for the iPhone. Why is this interesting? Because iCloud comes with ad-free email. If you followed its announcement earlier this year, you may recall Steve Jobs making a big deal about this.

    “”No ads,” he said. “We build products that we want for ourselves, too, and we just don’t want ads.”

    Perhaps realizing that a lot of iPhone users might feel the same way, Google makes this announcement. Or maybe it’s just coincidence.

  • Auditude Acquired by Adobe

    Auditude Acquired by Adobe

    Adobe announced that it has acquired video ad company Auditude. Terms haven’t been officially disclosed, but reports have the transaction pegged at about $100 million.

    Adobe’s description for Auditude says: “Auditude helps maximize the value of video content through advanced ad technology and monetization services so content owners and distributors can effectively monetize their content wherever users choose to view it. Auditude’s flagship product is the Connect platform, an ad serving and decisioning technology targeted at premium video content owners and distributors that enables the insertion, trafficking, delivery, rights management, and analysis of online video ads.”

    “Premium video publishers want to capitalize on the foundational shift to digital by providing viewers with great media experiences and maximizing the value of their content on every IP device,” said David Wadhwani, SVP and general manager, Adobe’s Digital Media Business Unit. “With this acquisition, Adobe can now offer an unparalleled platform for authoring, distributing, analyzing and monetizing digital video experiences everywhere – simplifying workflows, increasing consumer engagement, delivering insights and driving increased revenue for content publishers.”

    “By joining Adobe we are accelerating our vision of helping top media companies and publishers maximize the value of their video content,” said Auditude CEO Jeremy Helfand. “Adobe has deep roots in video and bringing our capabilities together will provide great incremental benefits for our customers. As part of Adobe we are excited to bring publishers and media companies a platform offering that has never been possible before, driving unprecedented monetization opportunities for them.”

    Auditude already provides services to Major League Baseball, FoxNews, Starz, Lionsgate, and other brands of note.

    Adobe says it will be tightly integrated with SiteCatalyst and Test&Target.

  • Google Launches TrueView Ads for Video Publishers

    Google announced the launch of a new video ad format called TrueView for its network of video publishers.

    “TrueView ads, pioneered on YouTube, differ from traditional video ads in two main ways,” says lead product manager Payam Shodjai. “First, they give viewers choice – for example, the ad may be skippable or present a choice of ads to watch. Second, TrueView ads are sold through a Cost Per View (CPV) basis. You may be familiar with Cost Per Click (CPC) where the advertiser pays when someone clicks on their ad; similarly with CPV ads, advertisers are charged when a viewer chooses to watch the ad.”

    “For example, say you’re about to watch an interview with the makers of a new movie on The Hollywood Reporter,” says Shodjai. “A TrueView in-stream video ad will start to play and a counter will appear giving you the option, after five seconds, to skip the ad and continue watching the video.”

    TrueView ads

    Here’s an overview of the format:

    Google says TrueView is a win for users, publishers and advertisers, since users have more control over the ads they see, publishers see higher returns, and advertisers get better engagement. Google says that with the small group of publishers that have been running the ads, RPMs have been equal to or better than standard pre-rolls.

    There’s a form here, for those who wish to start using the format.

  • Google Makes Some Changes To AdWords Location Targeting

    Google announced that it has connected location targeting in AdWords to Google Maps to provide more info about locations, make relevant location suggestions and improve accuracy in targeting.

    Along with this, they’ve refreshed the location targeting interface in AdWords. “Let’s say that you want to target your latest AdWords campaign to New York City, explains Smita Hashim, Group Product Manager on Google’s Local Ads Quality team. “On your Campaign Settings tab, as you type ‘New York’ into the search box in the location targeting section, you’ll instantly see helpful search suggestions. The suggestions include (1) matches like the city of New York, (2) locations that enclose New York (such as the state of New York), and (3) related locations that may be near the location that you’ve entered, have a similar name, or enclose a location that has a similar name. You can then pick the options that make the most sense for your business and quickly make the appropriate selection.”

    “You can also view your locations via a map, which shows more detailed location outlines,” adds Hashim. “The new tool also allows you to view the boundaries of multiple locations that you’ve selected simultaneously, so you can see how much area the city of New York (smaller area shaded in blue) covers in relation to the entire New York metro area (larger area shaded in gray). Once you choose a location, you can easily add, exclude, or view nearby locations by clicking the appropriate links.”

    Location Targeting

    Location Targeting

    Google is also providing more detail on locations, including reach numbers to help the advertiser estimate the audience within the selected target. Google says it will use the “limited reach” label to indicate locations where it isn’t able to associate users with a selected location based on IP. Google says it will primarily use user intent data for targeting in these instances.

    When an advertiser targets a radius, it’ll show “locations within this target”.

    Google has increased the location target limit from 300 to 10,000.

    Finally, Google is getting rid of polygon targeting. It will be supported only through the end of the year. Google recommends using the “Target a Radius” feature instead.

  • SEO, Swayze & More Future Awesomeness

    In yesterday’s video round-up we looked at future awesomeness, and today we’re highlighting another future concept video from Microsoft along the same lines. There’s plenty of Google stuff too. Plus a pair of sweet throwback commercials.

    View more video round-ups here.

    The future?

    Hitler reacts to Google’s Panda Update:

    SEOs on Google encrypted search:

    New Google TV Video:

    Not sure if this is the most efficient way to tell time, but it’s still pretty cool:

    This gem is all over the place today:

    A cool animatronic sculpture:

    A PSA from Rob McElhenney of It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia:

    Anthony Bourdain goes to Google:

    The Birds of Anger:

  • SEOs Not Buying Google’s Privacy Motive for Encrypting Search

    Google caused quite a ruckus in the search marketing community after it announced some changes to search. Last week, the search giant said that it would begin encrypting logged-in searches that users do by default, when they are logged into Google.com. This further integration of a Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) will prevent search marketers from receiving referral data from the websites consumers click on from Google search results.

    What do you think of Google’s move to encrypt searches? We’d love to know.

    While this change is only supposed to affect a single digit percentage of referral data, many SEOs are not happy with the move and believe that Google has gone too far. Eric Enge, the Founder and President of Stone Temple Consulting, told us that he was completely “baffled” when he saw the news. Rebecca Lieb, the Digital Advertising and Media Analyst at the Altimeter Group, was also surprised by the move and called it “evil.”

    “I hate to say this about Google because they’re a company that I admire and like and respect, but I think this is evil,” she said.

    “Google is taking something away that is a very, very valuable tool for anybody practicing SEO,” Lieb added.

    Amanda Watlington, the Owner of Searching for Profit, also shared with us that she would not be able to give her clients as much value as she has in the past.

    “I have learned more from the referral data that comes into the that lets me benefit the user – I won’t have that data to mine, “ she said. “Personally, it will make it harder for me to (a) understand what the performance of my pages are and (b) to learn from my pages.”

    Google has said that it did this in order to make search more secure, but the SEO community doesn’t agree. Enge told us that he didn’t recall any outcry from privacy organizations in regards to search term data and, therefore, is not convinced that security was Google’s real motive. If this were the case, he thinks that Bing and Yahoo would have had to make changes as well.

    Others, including Amanda Watlington, think that Google did this for financial purposes. She told us that it was “all about the Benjamins.” Matt Van Wagner of Find Me Faster also said that he could see the search giant thinking this move would make its search engine look more attractive to shareholders since it could potentially push more people to use paid search – its primary revenue model.

    Lieb takes a slightly different approach and said that Google could have done this to appease regulators. What’s bad though, as she points out, is that most regulators don’t understand referral data and other aspects of Internet marketing.

    “I think Google may (It’s a theory – I can’t prove it) be throwing a bone to somebody on Capitol Hill with this move,” she said.

    Is Google making moves to try to improve its reputation with regulators? What do you think?

    Todd Friesen, the Director of SEO at Performics, agrees that Google made this move as part of a greater effort. He told us that Google frequently makes small moves and waits to see how everyone reacts before it pushes out its bigger plan.

    “Google doesn’t do anything on a whim,” he said. “They’re definitely thinking 5 and 10 years out.”

    “There’s definitely a bigger plan behind it, and it’s probably big and scary with teeth and claws,” he added.

    A big part of the reason why SEOs aren’t buying into the privacy theory is because the changes do not impact advertisers. This is ironic since consumers don’t typically complain about organic search data, but they are usually concerned about targeted advertising. It seems as though Google is saying that consumer information is important for advertisers to make money, but it turns into a consumer privacy issue when it relates to organic search results.

    “The fact that they’re keeping all this referrer data alive for advertisers is strongly, if not irrefutably, indicative that the money is not where the mouth is,” said Lieb.

    Friesen also said that it’s a “hypocritical standpoint” on Google’s part. If the motive is really about privacy, he doesn’t think that Google should be passing referrer to advertisers, or anyone for that matter.

    Another point that Lieb raised was that paid search could eventually take a hit from this move. If small businesses that are investing in organic search through Google are not able to get the data they need, she doesn’t think that they would want to pursue a paid search campaign with it either.

    “It’s certainly something that would make me, as an advertiser, almost inclined to go to Bing or Yahoo just because… just because this isn’t right,” added Lieb.

    Google maintains that this change is very small and that it will only impact a small percentage of searches. Matt Cutts also pushed this message on Twitter:

    @Sam_Robson I believe it will affect things based on the referrer, but only for a small percentage of searches (signed in on .com). 9 days ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    @Rhea And we’ll be rolling out slowly(weeks). We ran some tests before launch, and I don’t think anyone even noticed the change. @blafrance 9 days ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    The SEOs, however, are not convinced. There are so many unanswered questions that this move raises that one can’t help but wonder about the future of SEO. Watlington, for instance, told us that she could see Google monetizing the data going forward and that this move is the first step.

    “To me, the move to give it to an advertiser is a monetization of the data,” she said. “What additional monetization will be, I’m waiting to see.”

    Van Wagner told us that, since he primarily does paid search, he is glad that Google didn’t include advertisers at this point. But, this move could result in more competition in paid search, which is not something is in favor of either.

    The biggest concern is the fact that no one knows what is next. Lieb told us that if Google does decide to roll this out further, SEO could really be in danger.

    “People have a right to be upset about this because, even if it’s only 10 percent now, or only 15 percent now, it could get more dire,” she said.

    Watlington believes that search marketers may have to rethink what they do moving forward. She even said that they might have to “look away from search” and focus more on traditional marketing. At this point, Google is the primary search player and everything it does directly impacts search marketers, which, according to Watlington, does not indicate a promising future for search marketing.

    “We have one very large player, a monopolistically-sized player… holding enough of the cards,” she said. “That’s not exactly what I call a real long-term strategy because whatever that player does, it impacts us.”

    Friesen, on the other hand, doesn’t really think that this impacts what SEOs do. He thinks that the process of how they track and report on it changes but said that the job of an SEO doesn’t actually change.

    “What, unfortunately, it does is drives us back to rank checking as a more important metric,” he explained.

    He does admit that the SEO industry could be more heavily impacted if Google makes a further move in this area.

    “At this point, it’s less than 5 percent… but if it starts to climb, then we get into a reporting issue,” said Friesen. “We get back to the ‘SEO is black magic voodoo stuff.’”

    Incidentally, a petition called Keyword Transparency has been created that hopes to get Google to reverse this action. The “About” section on the site says:

    This petition has been created to show Google the level of dissatisfaction over their recent changes to keyword referral information, and will be presented to the search quality and analytics teams at Google.

    The argument that this has been done for privacy reasons sadly holds little weight, and the move essentially turns the clock back in terms of data transparency.

    The argument that this only affects <10% of users is also concerning as this is likely to increase over time, even up to a point where it affects the majority of users being referred from search.

    At this point, there are over 1,000 signatures on the petition.

    Is Google’s move to encrypt searches just the first of many? And if so, is the future of SEO in question? Let us know your thoughts in the comments.

  • AdSense Text Ads Get Title Highlighting

    Google announced that it has updated all text AdSense ads to allow for the title color of ads to be changed when the user moves their mouse over a link.

    The company says after a period of testing, it found that this actually results in higher earnings for publishers, while also “increasing user and advertising value.”

    “As you can imagine, there are numerous combinations of link and background color across the ad units on all publisher pages,” says Stephen Yuan with Google’s AdSense engineering team. “After extensive testing, we have found that the color of the change itself can make a big difference: the wrong shade can even be detrimental to clickthrough rate (CTR). To determine the color that the title link will change to when a user places their mouse cursor over it, we’ll take your chosen title color and find a nearly complementary color on the color wheel. For example, a blue title would change to red. These colors outperformed all the others we tested.”

    “We’ll continue to keep studying the effects of color on CTR and ad performance to bring you more enhancements in the future,” adds Yuan.

    Update to all text ads: the title color now changes when a user moves their mouse over the title link. http://t.co/52YV1Hj1 20 minutes ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    This week, Google also announced that publishers have access to a new report that allow them to view earnings by ad network.

    Ad Networks View

    With the report, you can see a breakdown of impressions, clicks and earnings by Google-certified ad network.

  • Google Offers Continues Expansion Into More Cities

    Google announced today that it is launching Google Offers in four new cities: Baltimore, Minneapolis, San Diego and San Jose.

    Just last week, the product launched in Pittsburgh and Philadelphia, with 25 more cities promised in the near future. I guess that leaves 21 more to be on the look out for soon, though it’s highly doubtful they’ll stop there.

    The first offer for Baltimore is for the Blue Hill Tavern, which is called one of the city’s “most impressive dining spaces.” For Minneapolis, it’s the Minneapolis Institute of Arts. In San Diego, customs can get an offer from Crazee Burger, and in San Jose, it’s Sonoma Chicken Coop.

    While some of the daily deals providers have seemingly backed off a little (namely Facebook and Yelp), it’s clear that Google is far from backing off of the space.

    Last week, Google also introduced a new feature for Google Wallet called “Featured Offers,” which gives Google Wallet users more exclusive offers from businesses.

  • AdWords Advertisers Get Bid-Per-Call

    Google is rolling out bid-per-call in AdWords to US and UK advertisers over the next few weeks. This means advertisers have the ability to bid for phone calls, as well as for clicks, when they run search ads on computers and tablets.

    “Let’s say your business sees phone calls as a valuable lead source,” says product manager Surojit Chatterjee. “You’re willing to pay up to $5 for a phone call and up to $1 for a click from a prospective customer who searched for ‘caribbean cruise’ on Google search.”

    Bid Per Call

    “Today, a combination of your ad’s Quality Score and max cost-per-click (CPC) bid determine your Ad Rank, which influences your ad’s position,” Chatterjee adds. “But with bid-per-call, your bid for phone calls and phone call Quality Score can directly factor into your Ad Rank, too. Higher ranked ads are more likely to be seen and can therefore generate more phone calls (and clicks, too).”

    Advertisers will find an option to use a Google forwarding number when they set up call extensions, so Google can measure when a call to their business actually happens.

    Advertisers who use bid-per-call will get summaries of completed calls, phone-through rate (PTR), and phone call cost, via the Ad Group and Campaign tabs. They’ll also get details for each call (name, duration, area code, and ad group that drove the call) via the Dimensions tab.

    More info on bid-to-call is available here.

  • Google Reportedly Gets Involved in Yahoo Sale Talks

    It appears that Google is interested in putting some money down for a Yahoo purchase. Of course it is highly unlikely that regulators would allow a straight up Yahoo acquisition by Google, but could Google throw some money into the pot to keep it out of certain competitors’ hands?

    That’s not to say it wouldn’t still draw regulatory scrutiny, but the Wall Street Journal is reporting that Google has talked to a couple of private equity firms about helping them finance a deal to buy Yahoo’s core business. The source cited is a “person familiar with the matter”.

    There is some speculation going around that Google just wants to drive the price up for arch rival Microsoft, who has been reported as helping bankroll a joint bid for Yahoo with its partners.

    According to that WSJ report, Google is interested in selling ads across Yahoo sites. It would be pretty surprising if this were to come to fruition, especially given a pending deal among Microsoft, Yahoo and AOL designed to compete with Google in advertising, though whether or not this even happens is apparently still up in the air.

    As you may recall, regulators wouldn’t even let Google and Yahoo form a search advertising partnership, which they did end up letting Yahoo and Microsoft orchestrate.

    Of course there are other interested parties in the Yahoo auction. Alibaba has been repeatedly named in the conversation. Yahoo has also said that a sale may not even happen.