Landing Pages Serving

by Gilad Hellerman August 25 , 2010 07:41

Everyone agrees that banner ads should be optimized. When a client pays for advertising, it’s a given that sophisticated ad servers will be matching ads with user profiles to optimize this element of a campaign. So why are we not doing the same thing for landing pages? Having a pool of multiple landing pages for a sophisticated landing page serving technology to choose from, is a whole area of campaign optimization that has been ignored by most advertising technology companies. There is no reason that every element of an ad campaign should not be optimized.

This is the focus of my article Landing PagesServing, which appeared on the marketing measurement site Online Behavior .

The article is based on real optimization results from Traffiliate, DMG’s new landing page and optimization funnel technology.

Readmore: http://online-behavior.com/testing/landing-pages-serving-654

 

Gilad Hellerman, CTO

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a/b testing

Landing Clients With Landing Pages

by Efrat Varga August 23 , 2010 09:58

Of all the elements that raise the cost of an advertising campaign, landing pages are often the toughest things for clients to rap their heads around. There are a few reasons for this trend. First off, the client often sees landing pages as superfluous, especially when they were always taught in sales to keep the layers between contact-to-close to a minimum. Landing pages just feel like an extra layer, not to mention an expensive one at that. The client has already went through a similar headache with a designer when trying to frame their message exactly the way they wanted to see it , and now that message“feel” is about to be changed again.

 

Aside from the obvious answers that landing pages are a more targeted creative for specific campaigns than are websites, and therefore more likely to produce conversions; and the fact that a landing page is not redefining a clients brand but rather defining a specific initiative of the brand – There are some additional bonus features of landing pages that are sure to enlighten a client’s perspective on what a powerful tool they can be.

 

Just as a client recognizes the value of banner placement to attract specific consumer demographics, with a new landing page optimization technologies, they should see the value in even further refined, post click targeting. Optimization technologies allows for targeted landing pages to match various user profiles. DMG took this approach one step further with their Traffiliate, by creating a technology that intelligently alternates between multiple landing pages for even further optimized results. For those of you unfamiliar with what I’m talking about, post click optimization technology, allows for the millisecond profiling of a click through consumer, followed by smart decisionsto serve a specific landing page that has been statistically proven to bestmatch that consumer’s profile group. After the client is presented with the landing page, their conversion behavior is monitored to further the statistical refinement of profiles, which increases the likelihood of future conversions down the road. This requires a premade set of landing pages meant to match aset of profiles, but the extra initial setup effort is well worth the results.

 

Once a client realizes the conversion numbers that lie behind an optimized landing page program (they can range from anywhere between 30 – 200% increases), closing them on the deal should be a no-brainer, and there’s no need to optimize specific pitches for specific clients. All clients think alike in this respect; as we said earlier, numbers bring smiles to clients’ faces.         

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a/b testing | Integrated Result-based approach | Value Chain

Social Profile Advertising: The Uncharted Frontier

by Efrat Varga August 12 , 2010 11:27
It’s certainly an exciting time these days for advertising. With new technologies being rolled out like fast food, advertising might be in line for a new golden age, where demand and venue options actually exceed supply. This skewed balance of supply and demand is not due to a lack of ad agencies, believe me, there are plenty – but rather because new technologies and ad mediums are popping up ever so quickly. This creates two major challenges for the ad industry:

First- Technologies are diversifying in so many different directions, and so quickly, one advertiser might specialize in post click optimization for mobile, while another might specialize in social gamming. Both industries are too new and are growing too fast for one company to have been able to specialize in both at this early stage.   

Second- There are no industry standards yet as to best practices for many of these mediums. It’s like the Wild West out there, with new methods and approaches being attempted all the time, and in many cases, advertisers are still learning as they go.

One such example of advertising’s many new mediums is social media. Social media is only a few years old but has exploded in popularity with hundreds of millions of users world-wide, and that number is growing exponentially. What throws most advertisers off is that there are really two sides to social media advertising. One side deals with the classic form of advertising, i.e. banners, visuals and copy. The thumbnail sized ad pictures on Facebook and the 140 character limit on Twitter are nothing new for advertisers. Creative minds have always been plagued with the challenge of reigning in their imaginations to fit the dimensions of paid for real-estate, chromatic boilerplates and character limitations. But then there’s the other side of social media advertising which many brands are still not aware that they are even involved in.  

Social media users of today are not the old media sponges that sat passively by as they absorbed a carefully crafted message built from weeks of collaborative efforts from creative professionals. These media targets are interactive, participating in a dialogue not only with the brand itself, but also with their own network about the brand, playing an active role, if not the main role, in painting a brand’s image in the eyes of the market. Many brands have made the mistake of ignoring the buzz that reverberates across the walls of the socialscape, not realizing how much it affects them until it is too late. 

Last year’s infamous incident of United Airlines ignoring the complaints of a disgruntled passenger who had his guitar broken by luggage handlers, made headlines and caused a whole lot of headache for the airlines corporate arm. It wasn’t the headlines though that caused all the trouble, but rather the passenger’s use of social media. The passenger, Dave Carroll, also happened to be a country singer, and he informed the intransigent customer service rep that he was going to make a YouTube music video highlighting his customer service, and that’s exactly what he did. What even Carroll didn’t expect was for the video to go viral overnight and actually cause United’s stock to drop dramatically costing United shareholders upwards of $180 million dollars. The company backtracked fairly quickly after that, offering to pay for all the damage, although the damage to United’s reputation and dollar value had already been done. Pretty powerful for one man with nothing but a video camera and a social profile at his disposal.   

And it’s not just the unknown power of social media that brands and advertisers have to be aware of, but the still forming social language and etiquette that can make the difference between a diehard fan base and a vengeful one. For example, advertisers and brands have to get used to the unwritten rule that brands should not be promoting themselves directly through their social profiles. If every other tweet by a given brand is about how great they are, not only do people not listen, they begin to resent the brand and label it as a spammer (one of the gravest insults one can be given in social media land). Instead, brands have to accustom themselves to providing their network with worthwhile media, either as information or entertainment, which does not necessarily have to have anything to do with the actual brand itself. In fact, it often shouldn’t. By not self promoting, brands come off as more genuine and can manage to convince their network that they are a viable social network friend. The thing about friends is that they trust each other, and help each other out. So the next time a prospective customer is looking for accurate news, why not choose the network they feel personally friendly with.

We can see from here that social media advertising is somewhat counter intuitive and its rules are still being ironed out. This post was not meant to offer solutions as much as it was to highlight the dynamic times and challenges that modern day advertising is facing, and to get advertisers to begin to think differently about how they plan on reaching their target market. The important thing for advertisers r to do right now, is to keep their finger on the pulse of the industry, and try to anticipate a trend shift where they can be a first mover in specializing in that area. The shifts should be plenty and not hard to find. Catching them before they happen as opposed to after, now that’s the hard part. Welcome to the frontier.        

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Integrated Result-based approach

The Comeback Kid of Digital Advertising

by Efrat Varga August 4 , 2010 11:23
In the early days of the internet, it was thought that a revolution had taken place in the advertising world, and banner ads and click through campaigns were all the hype of the day. There is no question that a revolution had taken place however, with the popping of the internet bubble in the mid 2000’s, all things internet related took a major hit, and investors became rigorously analytical with every penny invested in digital business ventures. In hindsight, the microscopic scrutiny of the post bubble era may have been taken too far given that anyone using the internet at the time could have told you digital display ads, like banners and pop-ups, were uninteresting, often intrusive and rarely relevant to consumer habits. Reacting to the negative feedback of the first banner wave, media buyers gave display ads a back seat while they fell back on traditional advertising models and searched for new methods of exploiting the potential that online held for the next generation of advertising campaigns. Their search efforts eventually paid off in the form of… well, Search. Today, search based advertising comprises the majority of dollars earmarked for ad budgets with an estimated 11 billion dollars having been invested in 2009 alone.

Although we are singling out banner ads as an online industry whose initial primitive business structure caused it to absorb punishment from the backlash of the bubble burst, the truth is, every element of the internet was experiencing growing pains at the time as they learned that a web address was simply no replacement for sound business strategy. Remember how for months after the bubble burst, internet pundits claimed that online businesses were not viable entities on their own, and had to be paired with brick & mortar elements if they wished to have a chance at making their business model work. Well, when was the last time you heard the term “Brick & Mortar”, and today, everyone agrees that strictly online businesses have found their market and worked out the kinks of online business strategy.

The same can be said for banner ads. Lately, digital advertisers have been turning to technology to find solutions for turning display advertising into a targeted and statistically based science, increasing returns at a decreased cost, i.e. the original vision of the display ad industry. It seems that technology has finally caught up with vision, and advertisers are beginning to relinquish their outdated hesitation toward display ads as the efficiency and cost effectiveness of their results become increasingly more difficult to ignore. According to recent research estimates, display advertising can now be expected to grow by 17% per year!

Does this mean that display advertising will replace search? Probably not, as search has proven to be an effective advertising tool as well. What is does mean is that digital advertising campaigns will begin to become more multi pronged, in a similar fashion to their old media predecessors. Where old media would use television, radio and print to disseminate a consistent message across multiple channels, digital media will begin to follow a similar path, using search, display ads and things like digital email brochures, each vertical offering a separate advantage over the other. 

Search will always have the advantage that a prospective customer is currently searching for a solution, be it product, service or information oriented, and if an ad can be positioned to meet that solution, in part or in whole- that is a strong attractive advantage to offer advertisers. Display advertising has a separate advantage by way of creativity. First impressions given off by search ads are textual based and highly limited in their word count. Display ads are rich in the copy and in the visual department, allowing them far more creative freedom with which to capture the attention of a prospective client, while providing the potential means with which to take a campaign viral. 

Given the creative advantage that display ads offer, and combining it with the latest technology which allows for as targeted a campaign as search can offer, if not more so; display advertising is not only making a comeback as a viable ad venue choice next to search, we soon might be seeing display advertising overtaking search as the core element of multifaceted digital campaigns.           

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