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MartinGarcia

posts: 13

Jan 05, 2007 2:14 AM ET    Quote
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Keyword inflation, low conversion rates sending merchants elsewhere

By Ben Charny, MarketWatch
Last Update: 10:58 PM ET Jan 3, 2007

SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) -- A growing number of online advertisers are bidding a partial goodbye to Google Inc.

Frustrated by the soaring price of Internet-search advertising and diminishing returns from the ads they buy, mid-sized advertisers say they plan to reduce how much business they do with Google this year -- in some cases, significantly.

Last year, for example, eBags.com co-founder Peter Cobb spent between $5 million and $8 million to peddle suitcases, handbags and other carrying cases online. Google got 75% of that amount.

But this year it will get "significantly less," Cobb said. "The Google percentage has got to go down," he said.

In many cases, the cost of an eBags.com ad placed on either Google`s own Web site or one of its affiliates now equals 45% of the price of the product it promotes. That`s crimping the company`s own profit margins and forcing it to look elsewhere to market its bags.

"We`re testing print ads right now," said Cobb, whose company will spend up to $8 million on ads in 2007.

Cobb was among a half-dozen Google customers -- all of whom spent between $4 million and $10 million on search ads in 2006 -- who told MarketWatch they plan to spend less this year to have their ads placed alongside Google`s search results.

While losing a few million here or there may not be enough to impact Google`s business -- which generated more than $7 billion in sales last year -- those interviewed for this story say their sentiment is not unusual among Google advertisers of their size.

If enough of those companies curtail their Google spending, it could begin to depress the company`s annual revenue growth rate, which is already expected to slow to 47% this year from 80% in 2006.

That growth rate is one of the primary reasons that Wall Street analysts cite to justify their price targets on Google shares.

Google is aware that advertisers are closely measuring the return on investment and "adjusting their budget and pending patterns according," Google spokesman Michael Mayzel said in an e-mail.

"As with any advertising medium, some advertisers are going to perform better than others," he added. "The majority of our customers continue to see strong return and value in our ad program."

New bidders driving up prices

To a large degree, the dissatisfaction with Google`s advertising is due to the phenomenal success the company has had in persuading other firms to advertise their products and services using Internet search keywords.

In search advertising, companies bid on the right to have their text-based ads placed next to search results generated by specific words and phrases, such as "ski boots" or "diamond earrings," that Internet users type into Google`s search engine.

The low cost of keyword search advertising relative to older media like television, radio or even local yellow pages has lured many traditional retailers into advertising online. That`s created more competitive bidding for popular Internet search terms, inflating their cost.

While that`s helped Google post phenomenal profit growth -- analysts expect that its net income rose 80% in 2006 -- it`s made things tougher on many of its advertisers.

Keyword search prices on many terms rose between 40% and 60% last year, according to advertisers like Dan Sackrowitz, chief executive of Bare Necessities, which sells lingerie online. He saw his Google ad budget soar 50% last year.

Jack Keifer, chief executive of baby goods provider Babyage.com, said his search ad costs more than doubled in 2006. As a result, he`s refining his online advertising strategy, spending less on Google and more on comparison shopping engines or niche search engines that focus on his product categories.

The experience of Sackrowitz and Keifer has come to the attention of Wall Street analysts, even those who are bullish on Google.

"What has been good for Google has not been good for the companies that buy advertising from them," said Mark Mahaney, Internet analyst at Citigroup who rates Google shares as a buy. "Going forward, we see no convincing reason why online advertising costs shouldn`t continue to rise."

Trouble turning shoppers into buyers

Meanwhile, there`s also growing dissatisfaction with the return on investment provided by Google ads.

Advertisers pay Google every time someone clicks on their online ad, yet they benefit only if a consumer buys something after being transferred to their Web site.

Most online advertisers are happy if their so-called conversion rate is about 5%.

Yet Shmuel Gniwisch, founder of online jeweler Ice.com, got a conversion rate of less than half a percent for the $750,000 worth of ads he placed through Google during November and December, a key selling season for retailers.

For every 300 people who clicked on an Ice.com ad, only one actually purchased something, Gniwisch said.

"You couldn`t get a worse performance," he said.

As a result, he`s planning to cut his Google ad spending by 40% or more.

The low yield is a reminder of how many clicks are not legitimate but rather the result of so-called click fraud. While Google officials have inferred that the fraud rate is in the low-to-mid single digits, some critics say it can be as high as 50% for some online ad campaigns.

Still, many Google advertisers say they`ve accepted click fraud as part of the cost of online advertising. See previous story on Google`s click fraud problem.

Changing tactics

Likewise, not all Google advertisers who`ve seen their costs surge are cutting spending.
Google`s expansive advertising network and its No. 1 Internet search engine still make it a necessary part of any online campaign. Saying goodbye to Google and its huge audience is a risky move for advertisers.

Yet even those who will spend at least as much money on Google this year as they did in 2006 say their decision has more to do with improvements they`ve made on their own, rather than any increased satisfaction with Google`s ad service.

Sackrowitz of Bare Necessities said he won`t cut Google spending, but only because his company has developed expertise in converting clicks into sales.

"We`re getting healthy enough returns, but it`s a testament to how we`ve done a better job of converting shoppers to buyers than our competition," he said. "We`ll stay the course, but I wish (keyword) prices were lower." End of Story

Ben Charny is a MarketWatch reporter based in San Francisco.

Source: http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/google-advertisers-cut ting-spending-keyword/story.aspx?guid=%7BE9B9CEA8%2DEA47%2D4 8C6%2DA91F%2D69F53F018AE2%7D
MartinGarcia2007-1-5 2:14:54


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Martin Garcia
PinpointPages.com
local websites
Jason5yuan

posts: 42

Jan 05, 2007 3:31 AM ET    Quote
Points: 0   Vote
Totally agree with the article.  The google keywords are getting too expensive.  I think I am going with Blog advertising and product giveaway contest in 2007.  

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Quality Creations by Hand: Artisan Jewelry, Wooden Mask, Handmade Sculpture, Antique Reproduction, Chinese Scroll Paintings and More

http://www.GalleriaPangea.com
CraigL

posts: 9051

Jan 05, 2007 4:48 AM ET    Quote
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What I get from this is a big reminder of a major message coming out about 4-5 years ago. "How do we make money online?"

It`s been a discussion point for all these years, and still here on SuN: Is Internet marketing and sales (e-commerce) fundamentally different from all previous forms of business?

I think it is. I can`t find anywhere in history, a replica of this type of shopping, advertising, selling, buying, information exchance, etc.. Doesn`t it seem like the above article is speaking about it, when they`re highlighting how to convert "viewers" to buyers?

Here`s an example I wonder about. Suppose we were in 1950 and you just bought an encyclopedia for your family. How would you feel about having banner ads every third or fourth page? Would you pay any attention to the big, full-page ads sprinkled in among the articles? I doubt it. Yet, isn`t that sort of what`s going on here?

Don`t most people use the Web first to research and investigate, THEN to shop and buy? If so, aren`t the Google Ads just another "search result," that may or may not be a higher priority than the first 20 results listings?

I can only speak for myself, but when I see Google Ads, I mostly ignore them. I got burned too many times searching for "Item," and clicking on "Find `Item` at Target!" Then I`d click and end up at the home page, where I`d have to search all over again for my item. You`d think the ad would`ve taken me directly to my item! Same with eBay and other nonsense. So I never click a Google Ad anymore.


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Craig Landes
---
Defining the undefinable. "There are 10 kinds of people in the world---those who understand binary numbers and those who don`t." - Unknown

International Society of Curmudgeons
ScrapBizKim

posts: 369

Jan 05, 2007 10:23 AM ET    Quote
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I`m moving away from Google due to it being "all click and no action".  I pay way too much for the actual number of new members I get.

I`m about to launch an affiliate program that will pay for actual sales. I signed up with Affiliateshop.com. 

~Kim

egumball

posts: 26

Jul 11, 2009 1:39 PM ET    Quote
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