
Online search
marketing agencies and publishers need to step up and create full funnel attribution models that help advertisers combine online and offline media buys. That's the plea from Matt Van Dalsem, vice
president at Blackrock, during a fireside keynote discussion led by Chris Copeland, CEO at GroupM Search.
Search and display media only contribute 12% to the full funnel analysis, and
there are many other funnels that marketers need to analyze, Dalsem says. "You guys have a huge opportunity to break out and help offline media come of age," he said, addressing the MediaPost Search
Insider Summit audience in Park City, Utah, Friday. "That won't become a threat to digital media or search. It will all work better if we can make actual insights happen across the whole funnel, not
just search and display."
The ability for the right hand to know what the left is doing is an age-old sore spot for marketers. It's all about optimizing the funnel to determine the types of
media buy-display, search, mobile, video-that works best for each campaign.
The keynote conversation followed a presentation by David Zinman, vice president and general manager for display
advertising at Yahoo, who explained how search can integrate with display.
Calling it "full-funnel attribution," Zinman told the packed room of marketers, that advertisers must insist that
search and display teams collaborate and coordinate media buys to ensure that budgets are allocated correctly. The alternative risks creating a "cacophony" that costs the client money. It's no secret
that different disciplines of buying both media exist, so publishers like Yahoo and Google need to take responsibility too, and step up to double-check media plans and optimize budgets.
Search
marketers must know the basics of buying display; media buyers must know the basics of search. "The industry isn't there yet, but platforms are being built to offer these capabilities to manage the
free flow of dollars back and forth," Zinman says, suggesting that marketers that lack the knowledge on how search and display complement the other can fail. "Spending money better, drives better
results."
Supporting the theory that display provides a lift to search, Zinman points to an experiment, Yahoo ran with 60 clients in eight verticals where display drove a 155% lift in search
activity. Not too shabby. The tests suggest that display drives the beat for both brand and generic terms. It drives greater category search-term spikes more than brand terms. In a rebranding launch
for Quaker Oats, the results produced 70 million impressions across half-day events, and search volume increased on brand terms by 28% and 21% in two days, respectively.
Zinman described a
campaign where the advertiser began with baseline data and what it perceived as the revenue derived from the budget. The unnamed company tapped a full funnel attribution strategy to reduce the spend
they thought was not driving results. In the end, the company saw a 25% increase in revenue without spending more for the campaign. When the company spent 12% more from the baseline the following
year, it generated 75% more revenue, according to a study by C3 Metrics, which has been working with Yahoo. The results they generated came solely from online, but some advertisers want collaboration
with offline marketing and advertising channels, too.
Some of the companies helping support advertisers with full funnel attribution include Atlas, Coremetrics, Clearsaleing, Visual IQ,
Trueffect, X+1 and Theorem, according to Zinman, citing a 2009 Forrester briefing.