4 Maneras en las que la industria de las búsquedas podrían dominar el mundo.


Posted 17 November 2011 11:37am by Andrew Girdwood en el blog de econsultancy.
 
SEO has changed beyond recognition over the last ten years. At one point SEO was an obscure hobby for geeks chatting to one another over Usenet. Then it became a cottage industry. Then SEO became a career prospect.
Now it’s a huge industry that commands the attention of CMOs and CEOs of multi-national companies.
SEO could grow even larger. Here are four ways in which the SEO industry could rule the world. However, before we dive deep into SEO hubris, we should also highlight Four ways the SEO industry could kill itself.

1) SEO is your digital strategy

Modern SEO looks very different from the ancient SEO of six years ago. The industry has moved on from problems like “Can the search spider reach this page?” and to challenges like “Why would anyone talk about that product?”.
That’s a question that needs to be asked if any product page is to attract links, social mentions and the other quality signals search engines look at. Bing considers behavioural analysis to be their most important ranking factor and so the SEO engaged in this web build project will also be offering usability advice and conversion optimisation.
The same SEO strategy will be looking at the communities of interest around the brand, product or message and working out engagement and outreach strategies.
In essence once a brand has made the decision to have a website it is the SEO team who figures out what to do about it and who will care; pulling together all the reasons why the site will be significant (and visible in search) rather than an also-run (and lost in search). They will be the new strategy department. The creative and content production teams, the biddable media and performance teams, technology team and social CRM team are important elements in that plan.
At least, that’s how it could be, if SEO specialists can retain their traditional expertise while broadening their skill base enough to rise to the challenge.

2) HTML 5

There are plenty of sites compatible with HTML 5 already; some basic and function and some very impressive. HTML 5, however, is still waiting for its official release. It is still in development and it may change.
This means we are yet to see the launch day for HTML 5. That’s the same day that HTML 4 becomes dated. When that day happens millions of expensive, corporate, social, ecommerce and transactional web sites around the web will start to date. The pressure to launch a new, shiny and HTML 5 website will increase with every day.
All those millions of websites will need SEO. It may not be a flood of work for SEO expert but it will be a period of feasting. The last few years have banged home the lesson – when you build a website, you build it with your SEO experts and you never ever drop them in at the last minute.
We have already seen the ripples of work created by the early but significant HTML 5 announcements. Abode, for example, have ceded the debate and will no longer look to bring Flash to mobiles in favour of HTML 5.

3) Mobile Adoption

The growth in smartphones and tablets will also carry SEO upwards. As more people use more devices to engage with content then the competition for content discovery will intensify. This means more SEO.
Brands may go to a web build specialist for their web site and might go to a mobile build specialist for their mobile site. They might even go to a third agency for the app creation necessary to support a social media campaign. These brands are unlikely to appoint three different SEO agencies to promote the web site, the mobile site and the app.
This does not mean three times the work for SEO experts but it does mean more SEO work for agencies who can deliver it. Even if brands can find agencies who can build all those media assets (web, mobile, app) who can also deliver the SEO work it still means more SEO work to do.
It also means that SEO thought leadership is present at the development of the web site, the mobile site and the app. After all, Google includes apps in its web results and app marketplace optimisation is already booming.
Just as brands have learnt the importance of getting SEO expertise in on day #1 of a web build project we will see brands accepting the importance of getting SEO expertise in on day #1 of a mobile project.
What’s more; Google has already issued guidelines for optimising websites for TV. The connected world is a rosy world for the SEO.

4) Showing the value & Social CRM

SEO funds many projects. In particular, many social media projects are justified because they can positively impact search campaigns – even PPC campaigns thanks to the +1 button. This connection will grow as search success measurements become more social in nature. For example, the impact of earning citations below your search results is having on your average CTR.
As more customers take to social networks to discuss their brand experiences the importance of social CRM will also increase. It was last year that Google said being bad to your customers is bad for business. Your search results can be harmed by negative sentiment online.
Brands and agencies with joined up teams will be best placed to cope with this. These will be those teams that can use search and social monitoring to identify negative comments and then have the social CRM capabilities to address them. Success for the social CRM team looks turns an unhappy customer into a happy(ier) one. Success for the SEO team, or the blended team, looks like robust or improving search results.
With this in mind, SEO is positioned to be the budget gatekeeper on a range of business critical projects and that’s an enviable position to be in.

Autoridad de las páginas web y los dominios.

Marketing automation. Caso de éxito.

Google Doodles de acción de gracias. Recopilación.

Busqueda avanzada en Google. Novedades.

Google Quita Los Anuncios De La Derecha: La Opinión de Los Expertos

According to Google's blog post, moving the ads to the bottom means they 'fit better into the user's flow', and that this new placement improved average CTR.
I've been asking PPC professionals about what these changes mean...

Examples

The examples I've seen so far of this new ad placement are for searches with a possible local intent, such as 'pizza', 'takeaway' and 'cinema':

The ads seem to be making way for maps on the right of the page, showing local business locations:

How will this move affect PPC strategies?

Elroy Condor, PPC Strategy Director at Stickyeyes:
It is likely that this move will force advertisers to increase CPCs to ensure they are consistently appearing in the top positions. Advertisers who have traditionally positioned keywords according to performance will suffer the biggest losses through this change.
Advertisers that have historically run a domination strategy will see CPCs increase as competitors raise bids in an effort to retain click volume from PPC traffic. This will result in budgets needing to be increased in order to maintain current market share.
Matt Whelan, PPC Director at Guava:
The main impact will be on the number of visible advertisers. Dropping all but three ads below the fold is going to lead to less “real” ad impressions (by which I mean impressions that are actually seen by the user, many users never get to ads below the fold). Not having the top three or four sidebar ad positions may well lead to a rush to secure the top ads and get some real visibility, which will of course increase CPCs.
That said the side ad positions had become increasingly unattractive to users. Google’s increasing number of changes to the top ad formats to make them look more like natural results (extended headlines, adding the domain after a pipe, removing display URL capitalisation, changing the colour of the ad box, etc) have only increased the difference in CTR between top and side (and Google gave us visibility of this within Adwords to emphasise it).
Therefore I don’t think there will be too much negative impact for those advertisers in positions four and five. However the big change will be for positions seven downwards, as I’m yet to see a top and bottom ad landscape with more than six ads, meaning that those advertisers who saw value in aiming for bottom-of-first-page positions will have to change their strategy, increase their bids to top six, and this will of course inflate the landscape cost as a whole.
Shaad Hamid, PPC Executive at SEOptimise:
I think the emphasis should always be on relevance over price. I think this would drive online marketers to improve their overall campaign quality since making sure you appear above the fold becomes extremely important.
I wouldn't imagine most marketers bumping up bids in order to stay above the fold initially, although, there is the fear that if inexperienced marketers do resort to this tactic (simply increasing bids), then we may see an increase in cost per clicks.
It certainly will be interesting to see if cost per clicks do increase in the coming days, but my initial instinct is to trim the fat in all campaigns so that the "user experience" is enhanced. Hopefully sticking to this mantra should keep online marketers in good stead.

Why is Google doing this?

Elroy Condor:
Whilst I am tempted go with the standard answer of increasing Google’s revenue I’m not so sure that this will be the end result. When this change is implemented Google stands to lose revenue from at least five advertisers (assuming three ads are displayed at both the top and bottom of the page) currently appearing down the side.
Google is, however, a huge fan of testing, and it is likely that it's trying to strike the best balance between usefulness for the consumer and most commercial return for themselves (as most businesses should).
Also, with the rise of Mobile & Tablet platforms it is likely that Google is standardising the interface to ensure the user experience is consistent across all platforms.
Matt Whelan:
Google has recently been placing other content in the side bar, maps for local results are the example most people will have seen. As they increasingly verticalise and personalise the search results page, Google will be looking to place additional content in the side, which covers their traditional ad placements. One recent example is the “sources” module. So Google needed to move the ads in order to showcase new content like this.
As to whether they monetise that content in the future, who knows, but it would be very easy to use this space for many of the comparison-based projects Google are working on (eg comparison ads, hotel finder, flight search, etc). If so Google is being very smart and making changes that will probably be perceived as positive by most users, whilst increasing the percentage of the page from which it is able to generate revenue.
Shaad Hamid:
Google claims that this would improve the "user experience" and also their experiments have shown that ads serving below the fold had a better click through rate than those served on the right hand side of the page.
However, I also think that Google may want to utilise the space on the right hand side to serve other features like "Google maps" or "sources" which is exciting. It's also interesting that this is introduced at a time when Bing, Yahoo! and AOL have formed an alliance, I don't think that this a coincidence.

Will PPC ads at the foot of the page perform better than right hand side ads?

Elroy Condor:
I severely doubt this. Between the top and the bottom of the SERP’s there are a wealth of organic search results all vying for (and in a better position to receive) the users clicks than the PPC ads at the bottom of the page.
This being the case I would be very surprised to see CTRs at the bottom of the page outperform those of the right hand side ads.
Matt Whelan:
I don’t think they’ll perform any worse. Its extremely difficult for us to test, as Google isn’t giving us side vs bottom data, but the fact of the matter is that Google wouldn’t make a change that will negatively impact its revenue. My personal opinion is that Google wouldn’t gamble on this.
Google tests new layouts and their impact on ad revenue before they are deployed, any long term impact from more aggressive bidding would have been untestable prior to the announcement, so there must have been good case for bottom ad performance at least matching side ad performance for them to warrant rolling it out.
Don’t forget Google has said that “on average [bottom ads] performed better than side ads in terms of CTR and i’m not entirely sure why so many people seem to think they would lie about this.
Shaad Hamid:
To be honest, I'd say yes. If someone has actually taken the time to scroll to the bottom of a page, chances are they haven't been convinced by any of the organic search results and haven't found what they are actually looking for.
In this instance, if ads are appealing and relevant chances are that users would click on it.

Publicidad en Google: 5 grandes ejemplos de cómo insertar buenos textos en una página web.

Five great examples of product page copywriting

Posted on econsultancy 10 November 2011 12:54pm by Graham Charlton 
While product page design has improved in the past few years, an often neglected area is sales copy. 
A common mistake is to simply place the manufacturer’s product descriptions on pages. While this approach is easier, a more personal touch and unique tone of voice can help your product pages stand out and really sell the benefits of products.
I'm going to explain why good sales copy is so important, and look at some examples where retailers are getting this spot on...

Why product page copy matters

SEO benefits
When many of your competitors are using the same manufacturer's product descriptions, there is a real opportunity to strand out in search results pages, since your description will be unique.
Customised product descriptions also allow you to provide more text and keywords for search engines to index.
Conversions
OK, if you're selling photocopier paper, this is tricky to do, but just the sense that a real human being is writing product descriptions can set them apart.

What are the ingredients of great product page copy? 

There is no hard and fast rule here and, as you will see from the examples, good sales copy can take many different forms.
Uniqueness
Product descriptions should be unique to that website. Customers will appreciate that the page has been written specifically for this product, while there are the SEO benefits mentioned earlier.
Convey knowledge of the product
If the customer reading the description can get the sense that the copywriter knows the product well and has used it, then this makes the copy more trustworthy.
Don't stuff it full of keywords
Of course, retailers want to make sure their target keywords are in product descriptions for the search engines, but if it becomes too obvious to the visitor, it's a real turn-off.
A good copywriter should be able to get the target keywords in without overdoing it.
Formatting
Product sales copy should be easily readable. Customers don't need huge swathes of text, as this makes information hard to scan and digest.
Use of short paragraphs, bold text, bullet points, images etc can help to make copy more visually appealing.
Some product pages have to convey a lot of technical information about products, such as tech specifications for laptops. By putting this information into a table, Comet makes it easier for customers:

Express key benefits of products
Good sales copy needs to be persuasive, and should convey the benefits of products, what it will do for them, how it will improve the customer's life, and so on.
The higher the price, the harder you have to work on the copy
If you're selling packs of pens or printer paper, then a basic description of the product should suffice, but if you're selling big-ticket items, then the copywriter will need to work harder.
If it's a luxury item, then the sales copy should reflect that. See the J Peterman example below.
Tone of voice
The examples below all show a friendly and natural tone of voice. According to Alice Little, Content and Community Editor at Lovehoney, this is all important:
We try to write in a friendly, natural way that gives first time customers the confidence to try our products and reassures our more experienced purchasers that we have the knowledge and expertise they're looking for.
We always aim to make it easy for the customer to see themselves using the product and feeling the benefit. We also give hints and tips in a product description to make the customer feel excited about using the product before it's even arrived.

Here are five of the best... 

Appliances Online
I've chosen this example, as it highlights how improving sales copy can immediately improve conversion rates.
The retailer uses creative copywriters to produce unique product descriptions, which sell the key benefits of products in a more human tone.

It has worked too. The new sales copy was introduced along with other product page improvements, which increased sales by 9.5%.
The J Peterman Company
The sales copy on this website is inspired, and totally unique.

Patagonia
Patagonia uses a friendly tone, but still conveys the benefits of its products, and uses bullet points to outline the key features.

Lovehoney
There aren't many examples that are SFW on the site, but here's one, an example of the natural tone that Alice referred to above.

Firebox

The product page copy on Firebox matches the brand perfectly, as well as really selling the benefits of products, in the case the Magic Wand TV remote.

Publicidad en Google. Mejoras en el editor de adwords.

Todas estupendas, pero a veces pienso que Google ha perdido el contacto con las necesidades de su Cliente y se ha metido en una espiral de añadir cosas que su cliente medio simplemente no entiende.

AdWords Editor Version 9.5 for Windows and Mac now available

Publicidad en Google: +1 botón

Jose M. Corbi (@130caracteres) ha compartido 1 tweet contigo: "google: Today, +1 buttons will start appearing on Google search pages globally: http://t.co/ArgD86G (cc: @googlewmc)" --http://www.twitter.com/google/status/85465857454645248

Publicidad en Google: mas sobre links.

Jose M. Corbi (@130caracteres) ha compartido 1 tweet contigo: "Szetela: RT @lisabuyer: ABCs Of How To Maximize Your Backlink Strategy http://tribr.it/pyis2 via @NebSEO" --http://www.twitter.com/Szetela/status/85535506141687808

Equipos con mujeres, equipos mejores!

Publicidad en Google: what do you love?

Jose M. Corbi (@130caracteres) ha compartido 1 tweet contigo: "TechCrunch: Google Quietly Rolls Out WDYL.com: A Range Of Google Product Results On One Page http://tcrn.ch/liyq2m by @parislemon" --http://www.twitter.com/TechCrunch/status/85575515603353601

Publicidad en Google: Como saber quien ha "linkeado" tu web y algunos consejos más sobre calidad de los links.

Resumen de las principales cuestiones que afectan a la calidad de los links de una página web:

1) TEXTO DE ANCLA (ANCHOR TEXT): Lo mejor es poner los links sobre textos que se correspondan con los términos sobre los que nos queremos posicionar, por ejemplo, sobre el nombre de un producto y además que el propio link o enlace incorpore esos términos en lo que se llama el "texto de ancla". Incluso se puede añadir y un título (así se consigue un "turbolink") si se hace cuando se ha utilizado esta función, se verá muy bien en Internet Explorer, porque al poner el cursor encima del link o enlace aparece el término que hemos puesto como título. Ejemplo de enlace de calidad: en nuestro caso, que somos una agencia de publicidad en Internet especializada en sistemas de pago por clic, nos interesa que nuestros enlaces se encuentren en una palabra importante, por ejemplo, "Agencia de publicidad especializada en Google Adwords" y que además el enlace que se ponga sobre esa palabra, incorpore también una palabra clave, como por ejemplo "anuncios en google", el enlace sería así: a href="http://www.130caracteres.com">anuncios en google


2) TEXTO QUE RODEA AL ENLACE: Si el texto que rodea a un enlace es relevante, entonces, aporta valor. Si el enlace se contiene, por ejemplo, en el nombre de la empresa, el texto que rodea a ese enlace es relevante para identificar a esa empresa.

3) POPULARIDAD DEL SITIO WEB: ¿Como se mide? Pues bien, entre otros factores, por el número de enlaces entrantes que tiene una determinada web. ¿Cómo se sabe esto? Existen dos formas principales y accesorias, aunque no coincidentes, pues Google tiene en cuentra sólo una parte de los enlaces a una página web y no todos, según el valor relativo que Google les da.

Dos fuentes para ver la cantidad de enlaces entrantes:

a) En Google: poner en la casilla de búsqueda: link: www.dominio.com Otra alternativa es la siguiente: buscar: www.dominio.com -site:www.dominio.com , la ventaja de esta forma de buscar es que también aparecerán aquellos sitios web que continen una mención a nuestro dominio aunque no sea en forma de enlace. 

b) En http://siteexplorer.search.yahoo.com donde se podrá ver muy el número de enlaces a un sitio web.

El indicador de popularidad más importante hoy en día es el Page Rank de Google. Para saber qué Page Rank tiene una página web lo mejor es utilizar la barra de herramientas de Google, o bien ir a servicios web como "SearchStatus" y comprobarlo.

Un sitio web con un Page Rank 4 en su página de inicio tiene un gran valor.

4) POPULARIDAD DEL ENLACE O PAGE RANK DE LA PÁGINA DONDE SE ENCUENTRA EL ENLACE: Por mucho que la página de inicio de un sitio web tenga un Page Rank alto, si luego el enlace se encuentra en una página de ese sitio web que tiene cero Page Rank o que no está indexada ese link tendrá muy poco valor. Lo preferible es que la página en la que se encuentra el enlace tenga un Page Rank como mínimo de 1 y cuanto más elevado, por supuesto, mejor.

Para saber si una página está indexada o no hay que usar la siguiente sintaxis de búsqueda: site: 

Reiteramos la utilidad de la barra de Google para comprobar el Page Rank de una página.

5) CONTEXTO DE LA PÁGINA:  si la página web donde se encuentra el enlace está relacionada con la temática que se quiere promocionar, y además los enlaces que se encuentran alrededor también enlazan a páginas con similar temática, esto es un gran signo de relevancia que ayudará mucho a Google a determinar ese enlace como un link con alto valor.

6) NÚMERO DE PÁGINAS QUE CONTIENEN EL ENLACE: si puedes obtener un enlace de los que se llaman "run-of-site" links, es decir, que se encuentran presentes a lo largo de todo el sitio web, es mucho más valioso pues proporciona muchos enlaces.

Busca que te enlacen desde un footer, o desde una barra de contenido lateral. Estos enlaces son los mejores.

7) LUGAR DONDE SE ENCUENTRE EL DOMINO QUE CONTIENE EL ENLACE: por ejemplo, un enlace para una página en España es mucho más valioso si proviene de otra página que también está en España.

8) DESTINO DEL ENLACE (página de destino): lo ideal es que consigamos enlaces para cuantas más páginas de nuestro sitio web mejor. Está claro que la página de inicio o "página home" es la más importante, pero también es muy positivo conseguir enlaces para otras páginas estratégicas de nuestro sitio web. Normalmente este tipo de enlaces a páginas de segundo o tercer nivel de navegación tienen mucho valor porque suelen venir acompañados de loq ue decíamos en el punto 5, es decir, de contexto.

9) AUTORIDAD DEL SITIO WEB: Es otro gran componente del valor de un enlace. Existen ciertas páginas en Internet, para todas las temáticas, que se consideran páginas de referencia en su sector. Si conseguimos que una de estas páginas de referencia en un sector nos enlace (si pertenecemos a ese sector, claro), este enlace, tendrá un gran valor. Además ese sitio web de referencia, con toda seguridad, tendrá un buen posicionamiento para términos clave. Normalmente, conseguir este tipo de enlaces no es fácil, ya que muchos de los sitios web de referencia en un sector suelen pertenecer a la competencia. Casi siempre, la forma de poder superar estas barreras es que nuestro contenido sea sobresaliente, en ese caso, incluso la competencia, muchas veces, por seriedad y por utilidad incluso para sus propios clientes, nos enlazará.

10) NÚMERO DE ENLACES EN UNA PÁGINA: Si una página web tiene cien enlaces, normalmente esos enlaces tienen muy poco valor para Google. La página que nos enlace no debe contener excesivos enlaces salientes si queremos que ese enlace tenga la calidad suficiente para que nos ayude a mejorar nuestro posicionamiente en Google.

Salir en Google /// Anuncios en Google /// Publicidad en Google /// Anunciarse en Google

Publicidad en Google: anuncios de texto con ofertas incluidas!

Qué maravilla, te imaginas esto geolocalizado en tu móvil? Menuda herramienta para el comercio tradicional. Sin duda la última tendencia se afianza: lo digital conquista lo físico.

New Google Ads Expand Offers Arsenal

Publicidad en Google: aprende a limitar quien ve tus anuncios y vencerás!!!


No puedo estar más de acuerdo con el gran Brad.


Paid Search is Not Keyword Advertising–It's Restrictive Advertising

9:00 am in PPC Marketing Blog by brad gedes

Paid search (publicidad de pago por clic en Google Adwords)  is no longer just the realm of keyword advertising. Often keywords are closely associated with paid search. However, considering you can target consumers with placements, audiences, and categories without ever using a keyword; paid search is no longer just keyword advertising.

Another way to think of paid search is by the restrictions you place on your targeting.

Consider this scenario. Google gets 88 billion searches per month across all of its properties per month. That is too many searches for anyone to advertise upon. Therefore, you decide to just target users in only the United States, that brings the possible searches to roughly 19 billion.

Therefore, you add another restriction, you decide to just advertise on Google. That narrows down your audience to 12 billion searches

In this case, we will go ahead and choose a keyword. We could skip this stage in many instances if we are targeting only the display network. To further constrain your ad serving you choose a keyword, for this example we'll choose the DVD category: That narrowed down the queries to 16.6 million searches per month. That number is still to large for most budgets.

Therefore, we do not just choose DVD,  we refine the keyword to make it 'portable DVD player' and we're down to 260,000 searches per month.

Never forget your match types. To continue to restrict your targeting, change the match type to exact, that brings us to 33,100 searches per month.

When you examine the retail sector, retail sales spike over the lunch hour during the week days, after 6pm on the weekdays, and on the weekends. Therefore,  we eliminate searches between midnight and 8am. That brings our searches per month to roughly 24,800 per month.

However, if you were an actual store, you might not advertise to the entire United States. If your store were only in Chicago, you would then only want your ad displayed when the user is in Chicago. The location targeting of your ad brings the searches to 776 well qualified searches per month.

If we only wanted to reach users who were on their mobile device, you could only have your ad displayed on phones and that would bring the total searches to 137 per month.

You can also restrict advertising by:

  • Website
  • Audience
  • Keyword
  • Time of day
  • Day of the week
  • Match type
  • Language
  • Mobile device
  • Mobile carrier
  • Mobile device type
  • Desktop / Laptop
  • Location
  • Audience
  • Category
  • Search
  • Display
  • Search Partners

It is possible to only show your ad to someone:

  • Who is on the New York Times Website
  • When the user is in the business section
  • And the article is about stock brokers
  • The user is in Minneapolis
  • It is a Monday
  • Between 8am and 10am
  • The user is on an iPad

Rarely will you want to use every restriction possible as that does narrow down your audience tremendously. However, using a few restrictions can help you find the balance between reach and conversions. The larger your reach – the worse your conversion rate. The smaller your reach, the higher your conversion rate. Using a few restrictions is vital to showing your ad to the correct consumer.

Many new advertisers think about reaching everyone. Reaching everyone is rarely a great business strategy. The goal should be to reach the correct audience. This can be accomplished through the use of restrictions.

Next time you're thinking about advertising, don't think about the world of possibilities – think about how to narrow down who sees your ad so your ad is displayed in front of the audience most likely to convert.




Jose María Corbí
Director 

Teléfonos: 960118929; 911298795; 902021130
Correo-e: jmc@130Caracteres.com
Skype: josemariacorbi
Facebook Page: http://www.facebook.com/130Caracteres ¡nuevo! haciendo clic en "me gusta" nos ayudas a llegar a muchas más personas y empresas. ¡Muchas gracias!

ATENCIÓN: El contenido de este correo electrónico puede ser confidencial o privilegiado. Si ha recibido este mensaje por error, por favor, no lo reenvíe a nadie. Le rogamos que borre todas las copias y mensajes adjuntos y por favor comuníquenos que lo ha recibido la persona equivocada. Muchas gracias

¡Calidad y Eficiencia Para Su Publicidad En Internet!




Gran actualización de Google Adwords Editor

Today we released AdWords Editor Version 9.0 with a number of new features designed to help you make changes across accounts more efficiently, as well as to manage new ad features, such as Ad Sitelinks and high-end mobile targeting, at scale. We've highlighted key changes below. More details are available in the AdWords Editor Version 9.0 release notes.

AdWords Editor Version 9.0 highlights:
Scalably manage Ad Sitelinks - Version 9.0 provides full support for Ad Sitelinks, including downloading and uploading to your account, making edits, checking changes, and importing and exporting Sitelinks.
Improved Add/Update Multiple and Import CSV tools - When entering new data using the Add/Update Multiple tool, you can now enter your data with the columns in any order, assign the appropriate headers to each column, select the option to remember the order of your columns for your next import, and approve or cancel the changes in the account in one click. In addition, Import CSV now includes the option to Paste Text as well as to import From File.
Set high-end mobile targeting options - AdWords Editor now supports the ability to set campaigns to target high-end mobile devices, (including Android, iPhone, iPad and Palm) and carriers in Campaign Settings.
Better manage multiple accounts and MCCs - To help you better manage multiple accounts, AdWords Editor now offers sort and search for accounts, select and remove multiple accounts, and a new dropdown menu above the Account tree in AdWords Editor that displays recently accessed accounts, so that you can quickly switch to any one of them.

In addition, when adding an MCC account to in the Add New AdWords Account dialog, you can search within the list of available child accounts, display extra columns, and move up to a different level in the MCC account hierarchy.
More easily find and make bulk changes to negative keywords, placements, or audiences - To more easily locate and manage negative keywords, placements, or audiences in your account, we've changed the way we display Negatives in AdWords Editor. The Negatives tab has been removed, and you can instead toggle between displaying negative or positive keywords, placements, or audiences by clicking the Positives or Negatives switch on each item's respective tab.

The Select Duplicates button is now available for negative keywords when in the Duplicate keywords view mode.
The next time you log into your AdWords Editor account, you will be prompted to upgrade. You may also download Version 9.0 from the AdWords Editor website. After you install the new version of AdWords Editor, your accounts will need to be downloaded again. To preserve your comments and unposted changes, select the Backup then Upgrade option in the automatic upgrade prompt and save the backup file to your computer. Then, re-download your account and import the backup file to AdWords Editor.

For more information, check out the release notes and visit the AdWords Editor Help Center.

Google Adwords: Más y Mejor control para la orientación geográfica de las campañas.


Tuesday, March 22, 2011 | 10:09 AM

Many of you use location targeting to show your ads in specific geographic locations such as countries, regions, and cities to more precisely reach your potential customers.

We've heard your requests to have more choice over how to reach your potential customers. Beginning today, you can choose to target or exclude your ads based on the user's physical location or the location of interest (for example, the location-specific terms in their search queries). By physical location, we mean the place where the user is actually located, such as "New York City," instead of the location that's included in the search query, such as "restaurants in New York". In addition, we've modified the default setting for locations that you don't want to reach and made it more in line with your requests.

Because the use of advanced location options will limit your ad exposure, we recommend that you use these location targeting settings only when your advertising goals specifically call for more granular controls.

Here are a couple scenarios to illustrate the new targeting and exclusion methods:
  • Targeting method: Target using physical location
    Let's say you run a furniture store in Chicago and you want to advertise only to people located near your store. With the existing location targeting in AdWords, you can only specify the location you wish to target, Chicago. However, your ad might be shown not only to people in Chicago, but also to people elsewhere in the US whose searches include one of your keywords along with the word "Chicago".

    With the new settings, you can now target Chicago "using physical location" only. As a result, the ad will only be shown to users based in Chicago who search for keywords that are part of the campaign. Someone in, say, Milwaukee who searches for "chicago furniture stores" will not see your ad. Similarly, someone who's in Chicago whose search indicated they're interested in a different region will not see your ad. For example, a Chicago-based user searching for "pennsylvania amish furniture" will not see your ad. This is the case even if your campaign includes that exact keyword.


  • Exclusion method: Exclude by physical location and search intent
    This time, let's assume that you run a vacation rental company and are advertising properties in California, and you don't want to advertise to people who are based in Florida or interested in Florida properties. You can opt for a more restrictive exclusion method by choosing "exclude by physical location and search intent," as shown below. As a result, your ads won't be shown to people based in Florida or to those who include a Florida location in their search queries.


And, here's how the new default behavior of excluded locations will work:
  • If you happen to own a restaurant in New York City, you may want to advertise special deals only to people planning a visit to the city but not to those who live there. Previously, if you excluded New York City from location targeting in AdWords, your ads wouldn't be shown to people in the city nor to those searching for places in New York. With the new default settings, your ads won't be shown to people who are in the city, but people outside the city can see these ads if they specify "New York City" in their search queries.


With these changes, we're excited to provide you with more control over how you reach your potential customers. If you'd like to learn more about the new location targeting features, please visit the Help Center.



Jose María Corbí
Director 

Teléfonos: 960118929; 911298795; 902021130
Correo-e: jmc@130Caracteres.com
Skype: josemariacorbi
Facebook Page: http://www.facebook.com/130Caracteres ¡nuevo! haciendo clic en "me gusta" nos ayudas a llegar a muchas más personas y empresas. ¡Muchas gracias!

ATENCIÓN: El contenido de este correo electrónico puede ser confidencial o privilegiado. Si ha recibido este mensaje por error, por favor, no lo reenvíe a nadie. Le rogamos que borre todas las copias y mensajes adjuntos y por favor comuníquenos que lo ha recibido la persona equivocada. Muchas gracias

¡Calidad y Eficiencia Para Su Publicidad En Internet!




GWOM: Google Word of Mouth...

publicidad en google /// salir en google /// anuncios en google /// publicidad en facebook 

... o tratando de sacar partido al "mapa social online" de cada uno... 

Como podéis ver a continuación Google introduce la vertiente social en sus anuncios. ¿Buena idea? ¡Estupenda! Sin duda es la forma de ejecutar el "boca a oreja" en el planeta Google. ¿Tendrá éxito? Lo vemos difícil pues así como el "mapa de search" de Google es único, no lo es tanto su "social reach", por lo que, a menos que éste aumente, en una economía de redes como en la que estamos, no tendrá un gran éxito, sin significar que esto no sea una excelente idea... algo que, por otra parte, y en forma parecida, ya viene haciendo Facebook hace tiempo, aunque con un "social reach" muchísimo mayor que Google, pero claro con "mapa de search" mucho menor. Lo ideal sería combinar todo el poder social de Facebook con todo el poder de search de Google, ahí sí que estaríamos en presencia de "algo realmente grande"... 

Os dejo con la noticia tal y como la postean en el Blog de Google:

Word of mouth is powerful. When you have a choice to make, it's common to turn to the people you trust. But what about word of click? How can getting a suggestion from a friend or co-worker when you need it be as simple as having a hallway conversation -- or even simpler?

We want to make it easy for Google users to get recommendations from the people they trust right when they're searching. That's why we're introducing the +1 button. With a single click, the +1 button lets signed-in Google users recommend the content they like on the web to their friends and contacts right when it's most useful -- on Google search.



+1 is a simple idea. Let's use a hypothetical Brian as an example. When Brian signs into his Google account and sees one of your ads or organic search results on Google, he can +1 it and recommend your page to the world.


The next time Brian's friend Mary is signed in and searching on Google and your page appears, she might see a personalized annotation letting her know that Brian +1'd it. So Brian's +1 helps Mary decide that your site is worth checking out.
We expect that personalized annotations will help users know when your ads and organic search results are relevant to them, increasing the chances that they'll end up on your site. You don't have to make adjustments to your advertising strategy based on +1 buttons, and the way we calculate Quality Score isn't changing (though +1s will be one of many signals we use to calculate organic search ranking). Think of +1 buttons as an enhancement that can help already successful search campaigns perform even better.

At first the +1 button will appear for English searches only on Google.com, but we're working to add more languages in the future. You don't have to make any changes to your campaigns for +1s to help you -- over the coming weeks, we'll add +1 buttons to ads and search results on Google.com.

But the +1 button isn't just for search pages. We're working on a +1 button that you can put on your pages too, making it easy for people to recommend your content on Google search without leaving your site. If you want to be notified when the +1 button is available for your website, you can sign up for email updates at our +1 webmaster site.

The +1 button is the next step in our effort to find relevance through relationships on the web. We're excited about using +1s to make search, and your search campaigns, more personal, relevant and compelling. And we hope you're excited too!

To learn more about the +1 button and how it affects your search ads, visit the AdWords Help Center.

Cross-Posted by Dan Friedman, Inside AdWords Blog 


Jose María Corbí
Director 

Teléfonos: 960118929; 911298795; 902021130
Correo-e: jmc@130Caracteres.com
Skype: josemariacorbi
Facebook Page: http://www.facebook.com/130Caracteres ¡nuevo! haciendo clic en "me gusta" nos ayudas a llegar a muchas más personas y empresas. ¡Muchas gracias!

ATENCIÓN: El contenido de este correo electrónico puede ser confidencial o privilegiado. Si ha recibido este mensaje por error, por favor, no lo reenvíe a nadie. Le rogamos que borre todas las copias y mensajes adjuntos y por favor comuníquenos que lo ha recibido la persona equivocada. Muchas gracias

¡Calidad y Eficiencia Para Su Publicidad En Internet!




10 innovaciones de Adwords para relanzar tus campañas


10 of our favorite AdWords innovations from 2010

Tuesday, December 21, 2010 | 11:51 AM

As 2010 comes to a close, we've been reflecting on the ways that AdWords and online advertising as a whole have evolved over the past year. From the launch of new search ad formats on Google.com to Search Funnel reports that illustrate search behavior leading up to a sale, 2010 saw a number of new developments that we hope have made AdWords an even more powerful and effective way to reach your customers.

Here are 10 of our favorite new ad innovations from 2010:

1.     AdWords Campaign Experiments: Experiment with bid, keyword, ad group and placement changes, then measure how they impact your campaign performance.

2.     Search Funnels: Understand the Google.com search ad click and impression behavior leading up to a conversion.

3.     Product Ads: Highlight your most relevant products with pictures and prices directly on the search results page withProduct Listing Ads and Product Extensions.

http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_X6aeJvBBv4o/TNwwKnhQCoI/AAAAAAAAAKM/9RSLNLg5UF0/s400/pla.jpg
Product Listing Ads

http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_X6aeJvBBv4o/TNwv3zasLsI/AAAAAAAAAKE/tb3JTuKa964/s400/textadwpext.jpg
Product Extensions

4.     AdWords Call Metrics: Include a Google Voice phone number in ads that appear on Google.com, and measure the number of phone calls generated by your AdWords campaigns.

http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_DdlLYNVPsNY/TNHh6VJR4-I/AAAAAAAAABc/-37mDAxhkj0/s1600/RBTop11.3.png
Call Metrics

5.     Click-to-call Phone Extensions: Make it easier for potential customers to reach you by including a clickable phone number in ads that appear on mobile phones with full Internet browsers.

http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_sUJmU75lHUI/S2m_v5QaRvI/AAAAAAAAABE/3Swpd03uW0A/s400/fake+ad-blog.png
Click-to-call phone extensions

6.     Display Campaign Optimizer: Save time and increase conversions on the Google Display Network with this new automatic bidding and targeting tool.

7.     Enhanced CPC: A bidding option that automatically adjusts the Max CPC bids that you've set based on the likelihood that your ad will convert, leading to more conversions and higher profit.

8.     Broad Match Modifier: A keyword match type giving you more potential traffic than phrase match with comparable ROI.

9.     AdWords Automated Rules: Save time by scheduling automatic changes to your AdWords account based on criteria that you specify.

10.   Remarketing: Show your ads to users who've previously visited your website as they browse sites across the Google Display Network.

You'll always find the latest features at Google Ad Innovations, a place to explore new Google advertising technologies, watch short video demos, and try out select new tools. We have even more in store for 2011 and look forward to sharing these innovations with you soon!

 



Jose María Corbí
Director 

Teléfonos: 960118929; 911298795; 902021130
Correo-e: jmc@130Caracteres.com
Skype: josemariacorbi
Facebook Page: http://www.facebook.com/130Caracteres ¡nuevo! haciendo clic en "me gusta" nos ayudas a llegar a muchas más personas y empresas. ¡Muchas gracias!

ATENCIÓN: El contenido de este correo electrónico puede ser confidencial o privilegiado. Si ha recibido este mensaje por error, por favor, no lo reenvíe a nadie. Le rogamos que borre todas las copias y mensajes adjuntos y por favor comuníquenos que lo ha recibido la persona equivocada. Muchas gracias

¡Calidad y Eficiencia Para Su Publicidad En Internet!




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