Loyal readers know I’ll go to great lengths to find inspiration for my Search Insider columns, culling SEM lessons from fictional characters, Middle Eastern countries, Major League Baseball general managers, immortal CEOs, and even random sports.
Today, my muse is the Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival, held this past weekend in Manchester, Tennessee. Ten years ago, at the very first Bonnaroo, my buddies, Matt, Lance, Bryan, and I
made a pact to return for our ten-year reunion in 2012. Sure enough, we stayed true to our Word.
Here are five takeaways from Bonnaroo that can be applied to
SEM:
1. A lot can happen in ten years. At the first Bonnaroo, we were four young dudes looking to catch some jams and the festival organizers were not ready for the onslaught
of 70,000 attendees. Ten years later, we were four old men leaving behind six kids to relive some glory days and the festival is a well-oiled (albeit totally commercial) machine. Over the weekend, we
started way too many stories with lines like, “Back in 2002, we waited in line for 36 hours to get in!” and “At the first Bonnaroo, we had to walk to the stages through the mud,
uphill, both ways!”
As it relates to SEM, Eric Schmidt said it best, “The mistake we always make is we assume the
success in the next 10 years will be the same as the success in the last 10 years. The dominant players always get it wrong.” In the summer of 2002, Bing didn’t exist, Yahoo had not yet
acquired Inktomi, and Google was still a private company. There’s Siri-ously no way to know who
or how we’ll be searching in another ten years.
2. It’s all about mobile. I have no idea how we survived in 2002 on BlackbBerries and flip phones. This year, we
didn’t have to pack any CDs, maps, or cameras. Our smartphones did it all. We didn’t have to rely on shoddy cell service and sheer luck to find each other around the festival grounds. We
could send instant messages or check in at various stages on Facebook. We also never had to use our festival guide, as each of us had preprogrammed the bands we wanted to see into the Bonnaroo mobile
app. The app also had GPS location tracking overlaid onto the festival site map so we could figure out where to go -- especially helpful for those late night ‘Roo sessions.
Now, we all
know mobile matters when it comes to search. Personal computers, cameras,
navigation systems, and other point electronics are quickly becoming obsolete -- as are the marketing opportunities they afforded -- with integrated mobile devices taking their place. However, mobile search performs very differently in terms of clicks and conversions, so
it’s imperative to create a mobile optimized website and set up separate desktop, mobile, and tablet campaigns.
3. The laws of supply and demand are immutable. The
official Bonnaroo “general store” carried $5 bottles of water, $16 packs of cigarettes, and $6 cans of bug spray. With the nearest Walmart miles away and no one leaving the campgrounds to
buy a pack of smokes, the price gouging was in full effect. Thankfully, a third-party ecosystem cropped up with a marketplace to fill any void you could imagine.
In SEM, we have one dominant
player with the ability to control pricing if it wanted to -- but, fortunately, instead (for the most part) allowing an open marketplace to flourish. We are starting to see more instances of advertisers getting squeezed, though. Thankfully, we have a second major player building momentum, and a vibrant third-party ecosystem adding value
to the entire supply and demand chain.
4. Sometimes you just have to improvise. Phish. North Mississippi All Stars. Umphrey’s McGee. These are some of the bands in
the Bonnaroo 2012 lineup that have helped define the jam band genre. These artists are notorious for never playing a song the same way twice and letting the energy of the moment dictate their musical
output.
In SEM, we can have all the best-laid plans for campaign creation and optimization -- but we often encounter situations that we’ve simply never faced before and, therefore, carry
no proven best practices. In these cases, the best practice is simply to wing it. But just like every Phish ticket comes with a code to download a free recording of
the show to review and relive the moment, it’s critical that every improvisational move you make with your search campaign gets recorded and reported for future review. And, if you want to
relive your next paycheck, you’ll be sure to course-correct when your jam falls flat.
5. Every now and then you need to check out. As we landed in Nashville and prepared
to make the trek to Manchester, I tried to remember the last time I intentionally did not check email after a flight. I couldn’t. Needless to say, part of getting in the right mindset for
Bonnaroo was leaving the day (and night) job behind.
In this always-on digital age, sometimes you just need to put away your devices -- unless, of course, it’s the Bluetooth
headphones for the Silent Disco -- and tune in to the world around you. When it comes to overconsumption (digital or otherwise), perhaps Kenny Rogers put it best during his brief on-stage
appearance with Phish during the Bonnaroo finale: “You got to know when to hold ‘em, know when to fold ‘em, know when to walk away, and know when to run.” And, seeing as how
SEM is often the most profitable marketing channel, it’s also good advice to “never count your money when you’re sittin’ at the table, there’ll be time enough for
counting, when the dealin’s done.”
See you at Bonnaroo 2022!