Archive: October, 2008

Economic Driven Search Market Clarifications to Begin

Friday, October 31, 2008
Posted by Jim Hedger @ 1:08 pm

For the past ten years the Internet has consistently presented new advertising opportunities to businesses of all sizes. For search marketers, the rapid development of so many unique online communication products has offered a virtually unending number of venues of opportunity. From the earliest days of the banner and general search results to today’s cornucopia of marketing channels, search and internet marketers have been able to get messages spread using an ever growing variety of interlinked venues.

The only notable slow-down in tech came in the period of 2000 – 2003 after the dot-com meltdown in March 2000 followed by the shock of the multiple terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001. Innovation in the form of paid search advertising (and bid-by-auction) pulled tech out of the hole and in the process propelled Google on its current trajectory. Since then, the search and Internet advertising market has enjoyed five years of solid prosperity, growth and extraordinary innovation.

That’s about to change.

This economic downturn will force a lot of change to the search and social media advertising landscape. This is a sobering time and the high-flying days of buying eyeballs before knowing how to monetize the traffic are over. Valuations are again more important than innovations. The free-ride gravy-train of investor or VC capitalization come to a rapid halt, in some cases thousands of miles away from its passengers’ destinations.

Search Marketing is a Marathon, Not a Sprint

Posted by Jim Hedger @ 12:02 pm

Have you ever watched a marathon runner prepare for a very long distance run? Months of preparation precedes a four to five hour foot race as the athlete gets his or her body ready for the physical punishment of personal achievement. In the four to five hours it takes to run 26-miles however, the athlete will experience extreme highs and lows most of us can only esoterically understand. During the race, many report a sense that there is no completion, just an endless effort of putting one foot in front of the other step after step after step. At the eventual end of the race, the athlete gets the reward of achievement and the opportunity to get ready to run another as they start the training process again.

The process of search engine marketing is very much like running a marathon. It is hard work that can reap huge rewards but the actual preparation is often unseen and under-appreciated by observers. Most high-performance athletes have personal trainers. Think of a search marketing professional as a personal (or business) trainer. It’s the job of the trainer to get the athlete ready to compete and then to guide them through the process of competition.