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HOME • MANAGE SUBSCRIPTIONS • MEDIA KIT
Putting The Consumer At The Center of Search
by Gerry Bavaro, Monday, June 9, 2008, 10:00 AM

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Over the past couple of weeks, I've had the opportunity to digest the thought-provoking, inspiring conversations that occurred at this year's Search Insider Summit. It's clear to me that we as an industry are beginning to view search more holistically.  Yes, we still call it "search marketing," but let's face it: search is a behavior among many behaviors and interaction points, ultimately leading down the path to the golden ticket: an action (conversion, page view, subscription, lead, etc.).  Here are some tough issues for us to wrestle with as the industry continues to evolve.

Silos: Who created them (and who should get rid of them)? Consumers don't see silo'd channels as they move through the awareness, interest, desire, and action stages of marketing.  But we as an industry have organized ourselves into a set of lenses so narrow that they often result in failure to see "the forest for the trees."

Don't get me wrong: the conferences and trade shows that define our industry, including Search Insider Summit, SMX, and SES, are important venues for imparting specialized, granular knowledge, but their very success reinforces a kind of "silo-think" that prevents us from advancing. Marketing is a fragmented, specialized world today, and one important insight from Search Insider Summit concerned the fact that search is most effective when you "get the right people in the room working together."
 
Will SEM morph into CRM? A vision of cross-channel, targeted marketing based on behaviors and interaction points is essentially what CRM is about, because the pillars of effective CRM strategies are technology and data warehousing/analysis.  After years and billions of dollars wasted on failed CRM implementation strategies, major corporations are just now realizing clear best practices for effective data-based marketing and customer relationship management.  SAP, Siebel, Oracle, are all software vendors providing platforms that store and tie various data points together with the purpose of acting on that data. 

But in search, most technologies have been focused primarily on bid management and campaign performance reporting (many tools don't even perform these limited functions very well). Add multiple customer interaction points that must be warehoused, analyzed, and used for the purpose of improving cross-channel campaign performance, and one has to ask the obvious question, "what are you doing right now in real time based on data that's being collected?"  Because search, display, social, mobile and website visits all happen in real time, like great CRM, let's not underestimate the power of technology to transform an evolved search vision into reality.

Web sites -- and other neglected things. Even while we in the industry watch the leading edge of this new world of marketing, we shouldn't forget that much of the commercial world lags behind. I'm continually amazed at how often companies (many large and quite capable) lack proper Web site reporting and analytics processes. Many lack the all-important usability and other testing processes to improve engagement and conversion rates, almost as if they were stuck in the late 1990s. Shame on those who disregard their landing page and overall Web site experiences and user paths in the hopes that an aggressive PPC search campaign will save the day. 

Search competency dilution. As agencies and in-house teams break down channel silos in an attempt to shift the focus toward true cross-channel media management, a phenomenon I call "search competency dilution" can negatively affect overall performance.  As the ways of search become a staple of other channels, integrated agencies and cross-functional in-house teams risk dilution of the ever-critical operational components of search.  These components, steeped in pushing and pulling various levers to influence changes in performance (optimization), will continue to be critical for the development of ROI-founded campaigns.  As it is likely that other channels such as display media and TV will soon require the same real-time technology platforms, analysis processes, and optimization approaches, a high level of search competence within agencies should be sought and valued by advertisers in the future.

Re-thinking creative. Creative messaging, from text-based ads in paid search to static display and rich-media format ads, must share consistent messaging that picks up where consumers leave off as they move through different channels.  Even more important will be the creative planning process that must move from a design focus to an "intended behavior" focus. Successful creative will not just look pretty and communicate, but aim to drive engagement, use, sharing, dialog, entertainment and other forms of interaction on a consumer's path to actions that hold the most business importance. 

For mobile and social media, this means that advertisers will need to break up and distribute valuable Web site functionality, videos, community content, and more in a way that represents brands and products effectively and achieves strategic intent (engagement, click-throughs, conversion, etc.).  Best-performing ads will include best-performing applications and communities that have been designed and developed through the clever planning of light, moderate, and heavy interaction points through the use of creative.

What does this all mean? Well, for one, get ready to cooperate with your peers. From tech teams to brand shops and media buying agencies, what matters most when truly living a cross-channel approach to marketing, is the consumer. Data will need to be shared, strategies will need to be collaborative, technologies will need to act in real time.  We've got our work cut out for us.

5 comments on "Putting The Consumer At The Center of Search"

  1. Justin Hitt from Hitt Publishing Direct
    commented on: June 17, 2008 at 3:15 PM
    You are on the right track. This information about how customers communicate, even if not real time, is useful for understanding where you can best reach your customers. I often write about connecting customer interaction points to marketing analytics across all communications channels. The core challenge is there aren't many back-end tools to track this easily.

  2. Gerry Bavaro from Didit
    commented on: June 12, 2008 at 12:56 PM
    Forrest...great points. Ironic in the vision of true cross-channel marketing and personalized search is that when it becomes real and ubiquitous, channels disappear and we will be experiencing a web 3.0 world where search is not a destination, but rather a utility always there (and everywhere). Marketing messages at that point will be valuable content based on preferences and 'good' targeting ('good' being 'it's truly valuable to ME the receiver of messages'). As my article states, we have our work cut out for us with disparity (platforms, monetization methods, tracking and attribution of actions/conversions, networks, etc.) being a major part of our ecosystem.

  3. Forrest Wright from Words & Pictures
    commented on: June 10, 2008 at 9:22 PM
    The hub and spoke model works when everyone accepts the fact that each person is at the center of search, as well as the web experience. For too long, there has been a competitive impasse between networks, websites, search engines and social networks. The result: lack of interoperability that would otherwise facility truly personalized search. And this, of course, is the holy grail of advertisers because it would point the way to intention and preference for individually-targeted, meaningful and accepted advertising.

  4. Jim Lefevere from Independent
    commented on: June 09, 2008 at 10:37 PM
    Interesting post and I think you've hit the nail on the head. The real heart of the matter is when you say, "For mobile and social media, this means that advertisers will need to break up and distribute valuable Web site functionality, videos, community content, and more in a way that represents brands and products effectively and achieves strategic intent (engagement, click-throughs, conversion, etc.)."

    That is the difficulty and what I would call a hub and spoke model. Marketers have to be able to provide an experience through multiple platforms and be adept at delivering in each to effectively reach consumers. That is not easy and increasingly complex.

    http://jlefevere.blogspot.com

  5. steve plunkett from M/C/C
    commented on: June 09, 2008 at 12:05 PM
    you should change title to "Putting The Consumer At The Center of PAID Search"

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Do you have strong opinions and inside knowledge about the topic of this article -- and do you want to share your insights, observations and points of view regularly with the readers of MediaPost? To be considered as a MediaPost contributing writer, please send pertinent info about your credentials, plus several column ideas and one example of your writing on the topic, to pfine@mediapost.com. Please see our editorial guidelines here first.

GERRY BAVARO
  • Gerry Bavaro is executive vice president at Didit, an agency for search engine marketing and auctioned media management based in New York. You can reach Gerry at gerry.bavaro@didit.com.


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