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  • Is Google’s Core Business Actually In Trouble?

    Is Google’s Core Business Actually In Trouble?

    Google released its earnings report for the third quarter on Thursday, and while the company managed to post a revenue increase of 20% year-over-year, analysts are concerned by slowing growth in its core ad business, which is how it makes the bulk of its money.

    “We continue to be excited about the growth in our advertising and emerging businesses,” said CFO Patrick Pichette.

    Others aren’t so excited. Paid clicks were up 17% year-over-year, but only up 2% quarter-over-quarter, and the previous quarter saw 25% year-over-year growth, which makes that 17% look worse. On top of that, Google has seen twelve straight quarters of ad price decline.

    Does Google actually has call for concern here, or do you believe that this is not an indication of significant trouble for Google’s future? Share your thoughts in the comments.

    Google’s average cost-per-click decreased 2% year-over-year and remained consistent from the second quarter. As Tim Peterson at Ad Age notes, the big question heading into Google’s reports for a while now, is whether the company has gotten advertisers to pay more for ads, and “as of Thursday, the answer was: Still no.”

    “This continues a years-long trend driven by more people being exposed to Google’s ads on their smartphones and tablets and advertisers’ unwillingness to pay as much for those smaller-screen ads as they do for desktop ones,” he writes. “Google has tried to reverse this pattern, but been so far has been unable to.”

    Google doesn’t break out mobile ad numbers separately from desktop, which would obviously give people a better picture of what’s actually happening. The fact that they don’t do this would seem to suggest that mobile isn’t doing as well as the company would like, but Google tried to paint a more optimistic picture during its conference call.

    Pichette told analysts, ” I mean, look, it’s very clear that mobile is still a big part of our growth. And we’re very pleased about it. I mean, it’s — but when we talk about mobile, I think there’s a couple things. One is you have to continue to look at both the growth in volume and the growth in pricing. So these are long-term trends that we’re seeing. The CPCs and the clicks, they can fluctuate from quarter-to-quarter. It just happens that we’ve made some changes this quarter that improved the mobile pricing while impacting the lower quality clicks and that’s what you see a bit reflected in our numbers.”

    Interim Chief Business Officer and special advisor to the CEO, Omid Kordestani, later said, “The way we’re focusing this is that users really are using their screens interchangeably simultaneously throughout the day and that we really are not at this point doing this like-by-like comparisons or comment on it because we think it’s still early and we’re really focused on just again delivering the results. And it took many years, for example, for the desktop ecosystem to develop the right ad formats and really take advantage of the platform. So I think we just need to continue innovating here, experimenting here to get it right.”

    Seeking Alpha has a full transcript of the call here.

    The New York Times has a report out about Google’s woes suggesting that Google’s search business is “showing signs of age.”

    In response to that, Stephen Arnold, a tech and financial analyst with over 30 years of experience, writes, “The innovations are mostly wrapper code and tweaks that generate more money for Google. Keep in mind that the vaunted business model is pretty much what GoTo/Overture/Yahoo had and did not leverage. We have, therefore, a bit of Clever, some voting, and the PageRank method disclosed in a patent held by Stanford University. The innovation engine at Google has been to graft GoTo/Overture/Yahoo with a bit of Oingo (Applied Semantics) and ignite the race to be number one on a page of Google results. Ta da. A business model that works. Keep in mind that Google is, as Steve Ballmer said, before he bought a basketball team, a “one trick pony.” A monoculture of money with an aging DNA.”

    As his article implies, there’s also the distinct possibility that Google actually knows what it’s doing, and that analysts’ blabbings are basically noise from those that don’t really see the big picture.

    Interestingly, CEO Larry Page hasn’t had anything to say about any of this. He’s been staying away from the quarterly conference calls for a while now, but he didn’t even contribute a statement to the earnings report this time.

    What do you think? Is there real concern here? Is Google’s core business really in trouble? Share your thoughts in the comments.

    Image via YouTube

  • Facebook Updates Ad Campaign Structure

    Back in February, Facebook introduced a new ad campaign structure, which it said would make it easier for advertisers to organize, optimize, and measure their ads. It went from a two-level approach to a three-level one (campaigns, ad sets, and ads).

    The company just announced some updates to the structure. It’s still organized into the same three levels, but now audiences, bidding, and placement for campaigns are determined at the ad set level, as opposed to the ad level as it was in the past.

    “This is a subtle but important change that helps businesses follow best practices for advertising on Facebook,” the company says in a blog post. “Moving audiences, bidding and placement to the ad set level helps advertisers keep these settings consistent across all of the ads within an ad set. This makes it easier to test different ad creative (links, imagery, copy, video, etc.) against the same budget, audience and placement. That way advertisers can see which ad creative works best for each ad set they create, and make more informed decisions about the specific ads they use in their campaigns.”

    Facebook shares some best practices for using the current campaign structure here. In a nutshell, you’ll want to: create ad sets for each audience, so you can test different ones; create multiple ads to optimize creative; and use creative and content that people actually want to see.

    The changes will be rolling out worldwide over the course of the next several weeks.

    “Once the Ads Create tool, Ads Manager and Power Editor are updated, all newly created ad sets will define targeting, placement and bid settings at the ad set level,” the company says. “The delivery, spend and performance of ads in existing ad sets will not be affected. Existing ad sets can continue defining targeting, placement and bid settings at the ad level in the Ads Create tool, Ads Manager and Power Editor and will continue to run without interruption. Advertisers will not be required to migrate existing ad sets until after January 2015. For advertisers that want to migrate their existing ad sets to the new ad set settings now, we are providing migration help in Ads Manager and Power Editor.”

    There’s a campaign structure guide available here.

    Image via Facebook

  • Facebook Isn’t Going to Put Ads All Over WhatsApp, at Least Not Right Away

    Facebook’s $19 billion acquisition of WhatsApp is in the bag. After approvals from the U.S. Federal Trade Commission and the EU, Facebook filed the final paperwork earlier this week.

    Ok, so now Facebook has it and its 500 million+ user base. What are they going to do with it?

    Not a lot, for now, At least according to Mark Zuckerberg.

    Reuters reports that Facebook has no immediate plans to further monetize WhatsApp, according to a statement from Zuckerberg. No other details were given, as Zuckerberg made the remarks at a conference in India.

    I say “further” monetize WhatsApp because technically, the company does have a subscription structure. WhatsApp costs $0.99 a year, but only after the first year. It’s a simple structure that just begs to be messed with by the likes of a Facebook, but apparently Zuckerberg doesn’t have plans to do so.

    Yet.

    So for now, enjoy your ad-less WhatsApp.

    The Facebook/Instagram deal became official in September of 2012. In just over a year, in November of 2013, the very first ad debuted on Instagram. WhatsApp ins’t Instagram, of course. This is just some information that you can take or leave.

  • Hulu Plus Might Have Fewer Ads in the Future

    Hulu Plus Might Have Fewer Ads in the Future

    In that’s probably a good idea news, Hulu is considering chilling out a little bit when it comes to ads on Hulu Plus.

    Any subscriber (or former subscriber) of Hulu Plus knows the soul-crushing despair that comes with paying $7.99 a month for a service and still having to sit through ads. It’s a terrible pain in the ass. For those people, relief could be on the way – at least a little bit.

    The NY Post is reporting that Hulu CEO Mike Hopkins is concerned about the ad load on Hulu Plus and is seriously thinking about doing something about it. From the Post:

    CEO Mike Hopkins, who took the helm in May, is considering cutting back the number of ads that appear on Hulu Plus, the $7.99-a-month paid tier of the online streaming service, The Post has learned.

    While no decision has been made, an executive close to the company said Hulu and its media partners are “always looking at a variety of ways to create the best possible experience for our viewers and advertisers including reducing the ad load.”

    The Post also points out just how much Hulu Plus has gone overboard with the in-content advertising, noting a comScore report that showed Hulu showed users an average of 82.3 ads a month. By comparison, YouTube only showed users 32.3 on average. Sure, the content viewing habits associated with Hulu Plus and YouTube are different – mainly time on video – but that’s still a pretty staggering number considering how many ads are all over YouTube.

    So, with all the ads on Hulu Plus, why do people pay for it? The reality is that for a fan of network television, Hulu Plus is really the only streaming service that’s quick on the draw with new episodes. Hulu has film collections (notably a great selection of Criterion stuff), but it’s the hyper-current TV offerings that set Hulu apart from other services like Netflix and Amazon Prime Instant Video.

    But Hulu Plus is beginning to turn a corner – or is at least attempting to.

    Hulu is making originals – just like Netflix and Amazon. They haven’t received a ton of attention, but that could change pretty soon. Not only has Hulu picked up the fan-favorite but short-lived Party Down, but the company has also greenlit a new series based on Stephen King’s 11/22/63.

    As Hulu Plus looks to bat in the big leagues, the concern, apart from monetization, must be user acquisition and retention. It’s hard to sit through 82 ads a month, pay $7.99, and feel like something isn’t a little messed up.

  • Snapchat Is About to Get Ads

    Snapchat Is About to Get Ads

    Snapchat, the ephemeral messaging app that your teenager is absolutely obsessed with, is apparently worth $10 billion. At least that’s the valuation connected to the latest rumored round of funding – which could include money from the likes of Yahoo.

    $10 billion may sound like a lot (and it is a lot), and you wouldn’t be alone in your scoffing, but big names in the social arena seem to think it’s not that crazy of an idea. A couple of months ago, for instance, Twitter CEO Dick Costolo tweeted that Snapchat’s sky-high valuation was not absurd.

    “Snapchat at $10b not absurd. Crazy growth, clear monetization path, & one of the best social product thinkers out there,” he said.

    Now, it appears, the first step on that monetization path has been taken. According to Snapchat CEO Evan Spiegel, ads are a comin’.

    The Wall Street Journal reports Spiegel’s admission at a recent conference, where he said the company would debut advertising “soon”.

    “We’re cutting through a lot of the new technology stuff around ads to sort of the core of it, which I think has always been telling a story that leaves people with a new feeling,” Spiegel said. “They’re not fancy. You just look at it if you want to look at it, and you don’t if you don’t,” he said.

    So, the ads will be skippable. The “sponsored messages” will pop up inside Snapchat Stories – the app’s longer-form stream of messaging. More specifically, the “Our Story” element of Snapchat Stories where multiples users posts photos to streams surrounding events. Apparently, the ads won’t interfere basic snaps sent between two users. Yet.

    “Soon” is the only time frame Spiegel hinted – so be on the lookout. We knew this was coming, as Snapchat’s been discussing the concept with advertisers for a while now. Plus, at some point, Snapchat had to do something to earn that valuation, right?

    Image via Snapchat, Twitter

  • Twitter Adds Location Controls For Native Ads On MoPub

    Twitter announced some new location control features for creating and managing native ads with its MoPub. This is the result of an integration with technology from Namo Media.

    “MoPub’s new location control features are the first tools that lets you find the perfect mix of content and ads for your app simply and quickly,” says Twitter’s Kevin Weil . “You can now choose the position of your ads and how often an ad appears in your content stream directly in the MoPub UI. This means you can experiment with ads in new and different parts of your app and see the results on your revenue immediately, without any engineering work or waiting for user app updates. We believe this gives publishers a better opportunity to balance content with ads tailored for their app – without compromising on revenue or the user experience.”

    “We have also simplified the integration to a couple lines of code, making setting up native ads almost as simple as any standard ad format,” says Twitter’s Gabor Cselle on the MoPub blog. “Our lightweight SDK ensures that your ads are displayed in the right location and at the right time powerful caching capabilities.”

    The features are part of MoPub’s full stack platform for native ads, which lets developers work directly with advertisers and connect with them programmatically. They work with multiple native ad networks.

    MoPub opened up its native advertising offering in April. More on that here.

    Images via Twitter

  • Facebook Announces Local Awareness Ads

    Facebook Announces Local Awareness Ads

    Facebook announced a new ad product for local businesses called Local Awareness ads. These let businesses find new customers by showing ads to groups of people who are near that business’s neighborhood.

    “Local awareness ads are built to be more cost-effective than traditional advertising channels like newspaper while offering more precise targeting and greater reach,” the company explains. “We think they’re the best way for local businesses to reach people near them, and the best way for people who use Facebook to discover more useful things in their area.”

    “After creating an ad, a Page owner can simply enter their business’s address and the radius around which they’d like to reach, and Facebook will use that information in order to create an audience comprised of people who live in that area, or were recently near the business,” a spokesperson for Facebook explains in an email. “For more precise targeting, marketers can also choose the age and gender of their audience. And with convenient call-to-action options such as ‘Get Directions’ or ‘Like Page,’ business owners are able to easily prompt ad engagement.

    Local Awareness ads will begin rolling out via the Ads Create tool and API over the coming weeks. They’ll only be available in the U.S. at first, but Facebook says a global launch will come within months.

    Image via Facebook

  • Facebook Launches Audience Network

    Facebook Launches Audience Network

    Facebook introduced the Audience Network at its f8 developer conference in April. This is its new mobile ad network, which lets mobile apps monetize through Facebook’s 1.5 million active advertisers.

    The network is now “open for business,” as the company puts it.

    “Over the past few months, we’ve optimized our network to improve performance, and today we’re formally launching and extending the service to more developers and publishers across the globe,” says Facebook’s Tanya Chen.

    “The Audience Network shows people the right ads by extending Facebook’s targeting to third-party apps,” she says. “This means the ads match the interests of people, just as they do on Facebook. It also means people are more likely to engage with the ads.”

    Existing advertisers can extend their Facebook campaigns to the Audience Network with a click.

    There are native, banner, and interstitial formats on the Audience Network.

    Deezer, Le Monde, Wooga, Zynga, Outfit7, Cheetahmobile, Vinted, Merriam-Webster, Shazam, Glu, MyFitnessPal, and IGN are among existing partners.

    Image via Facebook

  • Google Makes Dynamic Remarketing Available For All Verticals

    Google Makes Dynamic Remarketing Available For All Verticals

    Google announced that it is rolling out dynamic remarketing to advertisers in all verticals, including hotels, flights, real estate, classifieds, jobs, auto, finance and education. The company launched the offering for retailers last year.

    “Dynamic remarketing shows site visitors tailored ads that feature the products they viewed on your website, and related products they might be interested in,” says Jyoti Vaidee, Product Manager Dynamic Display Ads at Google. “Let’s say you sell cars and offer hundreds of makes and models in multiple cities. With dynamic remarketing, you can build one ad that will dynamically show tailored messaging to your site visitors, like the cars they engaged with on your site, and similar cars in that city and price range. Beta clients across multiple verticals reported a 2x increase in conversion rates and 60% reduction in CPA, on average, when they added dynamic ads to their remarketing campaigns.”

    “When advertisers add mobile targeting to their remarketing campaigns, we’ve seen conversion volume increase by 15% on average at the same price,” adds Vaidee. “That’s why all our dynamic remarketing templates are mobile-optimized to deliver ads seamlessly across screens. Dynamic remarketing with automated bidding can boost performance by calculating optimal bids for each impression in real-time. This means if you sell an $800 camera and a $20 flashlight, AdWords will automatically prioritize winning more of the $800 conversions than the $20 conversions. This helps to maximize the total value of your conversions, not just the number of conversions.”

    Google has a Hangout on Air scheduled for October 9th, which you can sign up for here. In other Google Ad news, the company also launched estimated cross-device conversions for display ads and automatic item updates for product listing ads.

    Image via YouTube

  • Marin Software Partners With Facebook’s Atlas

    As you’ve probably heard by now, Facebook announced the launch of the new Atlas, its ad platform that enables other sites to use its “people-based marketing” capabilities.

    The company bought Atlas from Microsoft last year, and has since rebuilt it from the ground up using a completely new code base.

    Upon announcement, Facebook said it had Omnicom on board with an agency-wide ad serving and measurement partnership. Marin Software has since announced its own partnership with Atlas.

    With Marin, marketers will be able to use Atlas in conjunction with their search marketing campaigns with new insights for optimization.

    “By partnering with Atlas, our advertisers are able to determine the true ROI of their paid search campaigns, giving them the ability to better optimize their sales funnel,” said Matt Ackley, SVP Product and CMO at Marin Software. “This is an extremely valuable integration for all our digital marketers.”

    “Integrating these two platforms provides marketers with accurate and comprehensive reporting on paid search,” said Erik Johnson, head of Atlas. “We are pleased to expand our relationship with Marin Software.”

    Kenshoo also announced a partnership with Atlas, which will provide marketers with reporting and optimization for search campaigns as well.

    You can check out the new Atlas here.

    Image via Marin Software

  • Kenshoo Partners With Atlas For Search Marketing Reporting

    Kenshoo Partners With Atlas For Search Marketing Reporting

    With Advertising Week here there is a lot of ad news coming out, but the biggest piece is that Facebook announced the launch of the new Atlas.

    In its announcement, Facebook named Omnicom as an agency-wide ad serving and measurement partner. Kenshoo just announced a partnership with Atlas as well. It will provide marketers with reporting and optimization for search campaigns by combining Atlas’ tracking with its own campaign management tools. Deduped campaign performance data from Atlas will be automatically imported into Kenshoo Search.

    “Kenshoo’s industry-leading software was designed to deliver infinite optimization by leveraging insights from each channel to inform the next,” said Will Martin-Gill, SVP of Product for Kenshoo. “Partnering with Atlas to provide clients access to highly accurate, deduplicated data saves them time and improves the efficiency of their campaign optimization within Kenshoo.”

    “Forecasting, budgeting, portfolio optimization, and campaign automation are hallmarks of Kenshoo’s best-in-class predictive marketing software; combining these with Atlas delivers the industry’s most accurate cross-channel reporting and optimization solution by relying on one source of truth that accounts for how consumers move across channels,” he added.

    Kenshoo is a Facebook Preferred Marketing Developer (PMD), and put out a study a few months ago about the effects of Facebook Ads on paid search performance.

    At Atlas product tour is available here. Here’s more on Kenshoo’s integration.

    Image via Facebook

  • AOL Extends Publicis Partnership Into Programmatic Video, Linear TV

    AOL Extends Publicis Partnership Into Programmatic Video, Linear TV

    At Advertising Week in New York City, AOL and Publicis Groupe announced an expansion of their six-year partnership into programmatic video and linear TV advertising.

    As a result, VivaKi and all agencies inside of Publicis Groupe will gain access to AOL Platforms’ premium reserved (including marketplaces) and non-reserved video environments.

    AOL CEO Tim Armstrong said, “Video is fundamentally changing the Internet into sight, sound, and motion and the Publicis Groupe / AOL partnership is the start of enabling global video advertising to scale to global consumers – offline or online. AOL is transforming as a company and as a partner into a programmatic advertising platform, and today’s announcement is another big step in our strategy. Publicis is a global leader in digital advertising and we are excited to advance our global partnership into video and linear TV on the ONE by AOL platform.”

    Publicis Groupe CEO Maurice Lévy added, “We have developed a very strong partnership with AOL under the leadership of Tim Armstrong and are extremely pleased with the outcomes for our clients. This new step will further enhance our ability to better serve our clients in the very important growth area of video. Our clients will benefit first hand from the innovations created by AOL.”

    Armstrong and Lévy will share the stage at Advertising Week on Thursday to further discuss the partnership’s future.

    Image via Twitter

  • Google’s New Mobile Ad Formats, Flash-to-HTML5 Tools

    Recognizing that display ads don’t always translate well from the desktop to mobile devices, Google announced on Monday that it will be launching several new mobile display formats and tools across the Google Display Network, the AdMob Network, and DoubleClick over the coming months.

    New formats include: mobile lightbox engagement ads, TrueView video ads for the AdMob network, an anchor ad format, and a magazine-style text ad format.

    “Mobile lightbox Engagement Ads use your existing brand assets to automatically create engaging rich media ads in HTML5 that run seamlessly across devices and screens,” explains Jonathan Alferness, Director of Product Management for Mobile Display Ads at Google. “The ads will dynamically resize to fit any ad size, making them quick-to-create, and you only pay when users engage. We built a demo of this new format for Kate Spade’s upcoming holiday campaign. These will soon be available in the AdWords Ad Gallery.”

    google new mobile engagement ads

    The TrueView ads were already available for gaming apps in the AdMob network, but Google is expanding them to more apps.

    TrueView video ad for mobile

    The anchor ads are mobile web ads that sit at the bottom of the screen on a mobile device. They stay anchored there as the user scrolls, but can be dismissed.

    The magazine-style text ad was already available for mobile websites, but Google is extending it as an interstitial in-app format for the AdMob network.

    mobile magazine style text ads

    “These next generation mobile formats will make it easier for advertisers to build beautiful and engaging mobile ads that work across screens, but we also wanted to make it easier to do more with your existing ads designed for desktop,” says Alferness. “We’ve developed three new tools, that will be available in the coming months, to convert your existing ads into versions that will work across screens and devices.”

    There’s an auto-resizing tool for the Google Display Network, which automatically creates new sizes of image ads including mobile-specific ad sizes.

    There are Flash-to-HTML5 conversion tools for the Google Display Network and DoubleClick Campaign Manager, as well as 29 HTML5 in-app formats in DoubleClick Studio Layouts.

    On interactive HTML5 backups when Flash isn’t supported, Google says, “The Flash-to-HTML5 conversion tools for the Google Display Network and DoubleClick Campaign Manager will automatically create an HTML5 version of your Flash ads. When these ads are served on a device or browser that doesn’t support Flash, the system can show the interactive HTML5 ad instead of a static image backup.”

    More here.

    Images via Google

  • IAB Announces New Ad Tech Lab For R&D

    The Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB) announced that it has formed a new nonprofit research and development consortium called IAB Technical Laboratories. The Bureau is currently hosting the IAB Mixx conference.

    The consortium, the IAB says, will create “scalable, innovative industry standards and solutions for the global digital media and marketing industries.”

    President and CEO Randall Rothenberg said, “The entire digital marketing and media world will benefit from better and more informed dialogue between business leadership and technical leadership. The IAB Tech Lab will guide the conversation and cooperation necessary for the emergence, implementation, adaptation, and interoperability of global standards in our collective industry. In addition, we recognize the buy-side’s major stake in the evolution and operations of the digital media and advertising supply chain, and welcome their partnership in this initiative.”

    The Bureau says the goal of the Tech Lab is to reduce the costs associated with the digital advertising and marketing supply chain as well as for individual companies’ businesses.

    The lab will create a code library aimed at assisting the implementation of ad standards. It will also offer a test platform for companies to evaluate the compatibility of their solutions with IAB standards.

    Finally, the lab will seek to drive standards in video, mobile, the “Internet of Things,” and other emerging areas.

    Image via Twitter

  • Facebook Gives Its Marketing Capabilities To The Rest Of The Web With Atlas

    Facebook Gives Its Marketing Capabilities To The Rest Of The Web With Atlas

    As expected, Facebook announced the launch of the new Atlas at Advertising Week on Monday. The company bought the ad platform from Microsoft early last year, and rumors have been circulating in recent weeks that the company was preparing for an all-out “assault” on Google’s DoubleClick with a brand new Atlas. The day has finally come.

    Atlas has been completely rebuilt on a new code base, and utilizes Facebook’s “people-based marketing” capabilities to offer them to the rest of the Internet.

    “In an era where people spend more time on multiple mobile devices than ever before and where cookies are flawed as standalone measurement tools, Atlas enables marketers to reach real people across devices, platforms and publishers,” a spokesperson for Facebook tells us in an email. “Atlas advertisers can now take advantage of Facebook’s people-based targeting and measurement capabilities (based on real people vs. cookies) off of Facebook. It will also help to make the ads people see on other sites and in other apps more interesting and relevant to them.”

    Even Facebook’s Instagram is enabled with Atlas to measure and verify ad impressions.

    “If an advertiser runs campaigns across Facebook, Instagram and Atlas, the reporting will show results from all three platforms,” the spokesperson says.

    Omnicom has already signed an agency-wide ad serving and measurement partnership with Atlas, which will mean more automated capabilities for its clients.

    Facebook certainly has some incredible targeting capabilities based on all the data it knows about its users, and that should make this a very powerful platform. Google still has the all powerful search data, however, and search is still the typical action taken by consumers looking to buy.

    There’s an Atlas product tour available here. Facebook’s Head of Atlas Erik Johnson discusses the offering in a blog post.

    Image via Facebook

  • Optimizing Google Shopping Campaigns For Christmas

    Optimizing Google Shopping Campaigns For Christmas

    You’re right. It’s not even October yet, but the holiday shopping season is pretty much here. It’s time to start thinking about preparing for it.

    Google recently hosted a Hangout on Air to give advertisers tips on optimizing their Shopping Campaigns for the holiday season.

    Google says, “This session will walk through key consumer trends and how to use the newly available tools and metrics in Shopping campaigns to capture shoppers this Christmas. We’ll cover optimization tips and tricks to prepare your data feeds too.”

    It also goes through some Q&A.

    Image via Google

  • Bing Ads Lets You Share Negative Keyword Lists Among Campaigns

    Microsoft announced that you can now share negative keyword lists between campaigns in Bing Ads. You can do this with the Bing Ads Editor, the web interface, or the API.

    “Gone are the days of manually copying negative keywords between campaigns,” says Microsoft’s Anar Alimov. “With this release, you can create lists of negative keywords and apply them simultaneously to as many campaigns as you want. You can add up to 5,000 negative keywords per list, and create up to 20 lists per account.”

    “Associating a negative keyword list does not subtract from that campaign or ad group’s own limit of 10,000 negative keywords (see the table below),” says Alimov. “For example, you can have 10 negative keyword lists with 1,000 negative keywords each, and associate all of those lists with one campaign. The campaign itself can still have an additional 10,000 negative keywords of its own.”

    Shared lists are only able to be created at the account level and applied to the campaign level. You can use the feature by signing in, clicking the Campaigns tab, and selecting “Shared Library”.

    Microsoft has a step-by-step guide on how to use the feature here.

    Image via Microsoft

  • Google Expands Local Inventory Ads

    Google announced the expansion of its local inventory ads to additional countries and formats. The ads are now available in the UK, France, Germany, Japan, and Australia.

    “More and more people turn to search to plan their local shopping trips,” says product manager Christina Ilvento. “In fact, 83% of shoppers would be more likely to visit a store if they could check the availability of an item online beforehand. Since we launched local inventory ads in the US last fall, many savvy retailers have taken advantage of the opportunity to promote their store items to nearby shoppers on Google.”

    “We have also expanded support for store-only products and campaigns to desktop devices, enabling retailers to promote stores to the right customers at the right time,” Ilvento says. “For example, you can prioritize showing local products to get shoppers in your doors during the weeks and days leading up to the holidays. As items go out of stock online and last-minute shipping costs increase, retailers who can provide cost-effective, quick in-store purchase options stand out in the crowd.”

    Google has a participation overview for local inventory ads available here. This discusses eligibility, how they work.

    There’s also a form you can fill out here if you’re interested in signing up to use the ads.

  • Apple Is Really Proud of How ‘Huge’ the New iPhone Is

    In 2010, Steve Jobs famously said that nobody wants to buy a huge phone.

    Well, in so many words. Here’s what he actually said, via Engadget:

    In response to a question at its press conference today about whether Apple could’ve done anything to avoid its antenna issues with the iPhone 4, Steve took the opportunity to rip on bigger rivals, saying that making a phone so big “you can’t get your hand around it” helps, but that “no one’s going to buy that.”

    So, pretty much. Plus, we have anecdotes about Jobs’ reluctance to make an iPhone with a display larger than 3.5 inches – even though the competition was moving in that direction.

    Oh how things have changed…

    That’s the latest Apple ad, aptly titled “Huge”.

    The difference between Apple’s current crop of new iPhones and the thoughts of its late co-founder are not lost on its rivals.

    The funny things is – Steve Jobs was wrong. Really, really wrong.

    Image via Apple, YouTube screenshot

  • Groupon Enhances Deal Builder Tool

    Groupon Enhances Deal Builder Tool

    Earlier this year, Groupon launched Deal Builder, a self-serve platform for merchants to build their own deals. The company announced on Tuesday that it has added some new enhancements, and that the tool has passed the 25,000 deals milestone.

    “Deal Builder has been very popular with merchants and has been used to build more than 25,000 deals across all 50 states and Canada,” a spokesperson for the company tells WebProNews. “In addition, more than 95 percent of the merchants who built deals are new to Groupon.”

    “We’ve also made some new enhancements to Deal Builder such as expanding the platform to restaurants and giving merchants more control over the appearance and structure of their Groupon deal,” they said. “Businesses can now construct a promotion that best meets the needs of their business…”

    Businesses can now choose a deal image from over 5,000 category-specific stock photos, and write a summary to tell potential customers the key things they need to know about the business.

    It also includes the ability to conduct an interview.

    “Fill out a brief question and answer interview that gets added to the live Groupon deal page, highlighting the unique aspects of the business and adding a personal touch to the promotion,” the spokesperson explains.

    The company’s local commerce marketplace had over 240,000 active deals globally and over 105,000 in North America at the end of Q2.

    Image via BusinessWire

  • iPhone 6 Is So Awesome Joan Rivers Is Shilling It from the Grave

    If you want to know just how incredible the new iPhone 6 is, just ask Joan Rivers.

    The celebrity comedian and fashion critic is raving about the new device on her Facebook and Instagram accounts, calling it “beautiful” and a “great achievement in design”.

    Of course. You’re right. Joan Rivers died two weeks ago. Still…

    The posts have since been deleted, but as you already know, nothing that ever sees the light of day online (no matter how fleeting), ever really disappears.

    It’s pretty clear what happened here – an obvious advertising deal and a scheduled post that someone forgot about.

    Still, it serves as yet another example of how social media, while it seems more personal than a TV ad, is still an advertising medium.

    Image via Wikimedia Commons