Monday, July 16, 2012

Nine ways to either tiptoe into mobile or take the plunge

Robin Neifield | ClickZ | June 11, 2012

You probably don't need convincing that a mobile strategy is necessary, but many digital marketers have been reluctant to jump in the water, waiting for all the ripples of devices, markets, and approaches to settle. They won't. In this very fractured digital media environment, mobile plays a unique and increasingly critical role, providing a wealth of personal, immediate, and location-smart ways to interact with specific audiences.

The U.S. mobile environment is turbulent but full of growth and promise. The majority of mobile phones are now smartphones, many with larger screens and more sophisticated user options. Apps, tablets, and converging devices as well as the growing availability of good, useful, and functional mobile experiences have given consumers the opportunity to increasingly choose mobile over other digital connections. This ease of use and the attending dramatic adoption rates are largely responsible for the growth in mobile ads, mobile email, mobile websites, and mobile apps that follow and feed the consumer trends. The impact is felt across channels and verticals but it need not be an all or nothing commitment for you. Only you can assess how important mobile viewing and interactions are to your business, and the "right" strategy will be dependent on many variables including your audience demo and smartphone or tablet adoption, your competitive environment, available budget, and digital goals.

Your minimum requirements may range from a tiptoe approach that cautiously tests your mobile opportunity to a full-out plunge into the mobile waters. But what may be a small test for a large or mobile-critical organization may seem like a plunge to a smaller business or one less reliant on mobile marketing, viewing, or interactions. Keeping that in mind - here are some ways to either tiptoe into mobile or advance to take the plunge.

Mobile Tiptoes
  • Prepare for any mobile recommendations or budget requests by checking your site stats on a regular and recurring basis. What percentage of your audience is coming from a smartphone or tablet? Distinguish between the two. Set up your analytics to assess the behavioral characteristics of these groups. How did they find you? Are they new customers for you? Are they good customers?
  • Make sure your site experience on the most popular mobile devices is a good one. You'll have to do some rigorous quality assurance (QA) across devices and platforms. Mobile-friendly sites need not mimic every function or include all the content on your website, but they should satisfy the mobile user's needs and provide a positive, integrated experience that allows for more interaction, if desired.
  • If you are running a paid search program create a new ad group for mobile searchers that recognizes the different frame of mind of the on-the-go consumers. Their potentially timely and location-based needs may vary sharply from other searchers and that should impact your copy, bidding, and testing strategies. It also helps with budget management to have them in their own ad group. Make sure you have the mobile-friendly landing pages to send users.
  • Ensure that your email is readable and actionable from mobile devices and test segmenting mobile readers for a different messaging strategy and cadence.
  • Make good use of social options with mobile viewers. Users are an easy click away from sharing, rating, reviewing, commenting, etc…and you don't want to lose that opportunity.
Mobile Plunges
  • Build mobile-specific destinations and experiences. A mobile site or an app can be a new point of entry that provides a unique experience for your viewers and may also bring new users to your brand family.
  • Expand your concept of push marketing beyond email to include opt-in text advertising. While the great majority of emails are never seen by their intended target, the vast majority of SMS messages are opened and seen within minutes of sending.
  • Incorporate mobile ads, including video ads, into your media plan to reach your audience where they spend an increasing portion of their time online. Take them through a mobile funnel to mobile conversions and track that separately.
  • Make mobile commerce easy or integrate with other e-commerce opportunities to start or finish the sale in mobile.
What's next for the very mobile inclined? Follow retail leaders as they wrestle with how to make their brick-and-mortar stores more online shopping-friendly or conversely work to guard against mobile price shopping comparisons. We can expect more offer pushes via text including indoor exact location positioning. Augmented reality could breathe new life into QR codes or replace them completely, and Articulated Naturality Web (coming) is augmented reality and then some: imagine pointing your smartphone to a restaurant and getting a coupon for a competing restaurant across the street; pointing your phone to the sky and getting a weather forecast.

Whether you are in tiptoe mode or plunge mode, remember that the mobile experiences and opportunities that you provide do not stand alone. Your mobile consumer may and probably does touch you in multiple ways, so strive for consistency and use each channel in the most impactful way possible.

Original Article...

Monday, July 9, 2012

Every Email Version Is Your 'Mobile Version'

Mike Hotz | ClickZ | June 27, 2012

What a difference a year makes.

Return Path reported last month that mobile device email opens increased 82 percent over March 2011. At the same time, email read on the iPad increased 54 percent. Marketers are seeing an average of 30 percent of emails opened on mobile devices, with this rate expected to climb to over 50 percent by the end of 2012.

Some other telling results: 63 percent of U.S. smartphone users say they would delete an email not optimized for their mobile device. Only 2.4 percent of smartphone users said they would open an email on both their mobile devices and computers.

In May 2011, I recommended that you start optimizing your email creative for viewing on mobile devices ("Optimize Your Email for Mobile").

This new research indicates that the time to prepare is behind us. You can no longer think you've done your job if you simply link to a "mobile version" in your preheader.

Every version of your email is now a mobile version with almost nine of every 10 email readers checking messages via mobile devices every day.

It is now imperative to make your email creative easy to view on a mobile device. Your creative needs to adapt whether your subscriber is reading it on a desktop, a tablet, or a mobile device.

Design With Mobile in Mind
As more subscribers use their smartphones to view your email, it becomes even harder to get the subscriber's attention in the mobile inbox. The mobile inbox takes up a third of the viewing space, leaving you only 200px to get your message across.

As a result, the subject line counts as your headline. Mobile users are relying heavily on subject lines to signal messages they should open immediately, so yours needs to be compelling and make an impact.

Consider these tips:
  • Keep subject lines to 25 characters.
  • Decrease number of navigation items to three.
  • Continue to use HTML text. Most mobile email clients default to disabled images.
You also must keep the following creative considerations in mind when you are designing your creative for mobile devices:
  • Increase font size. Many designers recommend a minimum of 14 pixels for body text and a minimum of 22 pixels for headlines. Apple will automatically increase small fonts to a minimum of 13 pixels. On Android devices, 16 to 18 scale-independent pixels are considered medium and large text sizes.
  • Add contrast. Many factors make reading on a mobile phone challenging: smaller screen, lighting conditions, distractions, etc.
  • Add padding between sections. A typical adult finger covers 45 pixels when pressed against a mobile screen. Make sure that your calls-to-action are padded at least 10 to 15 pixels to avoid frustrating tap errors.
  • Use distinctive colors for links.
  • Create larger buttons and links. Avoid clustering links in lists to make tapping more accurate.
  • Design whole sections to be clickable.
Test a Responsive Layout
The ultimate in mobile-friendly emails is created using a responsive layout. Responsive-layout email creative relies on the same HTML code for all versions and uses media queries to style the HTML based on screen size.

Subscribers viewing the creative on larger screens (desktop, tablet) see the full design, while subscribers using native email apps see the smaller mobile version.

REI is an excellent example of a marketer that has gotten this concept right. Its navigation condenses down from four items on the desktop version to two across on the mobile view.

The primary imagery and content in the creative can scale to drop extra space when viewed on a smartphone. Tertiary messages are designed so that the image can be hidden while the overall message stays intact.

mega-deals-email
Desktop/Tablet versionSmartphone version

The Last Word
If you have been on the fence about getting your email creative in shape for mobile devices, now is the time.

Your subscribers' move toward mobile is not showing any signs of slowing down. You can no longer assume that mobile users are returning to their desktops to get the full email experience.

Don't try to fit everything in your desktop version of an email message into your mobile version. The secret is to plan to streamline content and ensure that your subscribers get your message and take action no matter which device they use to view your content.

Research shows that 63 percent of U.S. consumers who have made a purchase via their smartphone did so in response to a marketing message delivered via mobile email.

If you ensure a good experience across devices, you can bank on a continuing increase in opens, clicks, and conversions.

Original Article...

Google Claims Nearly 80% of U.S. Search Advertising Spend in Q2 2012

By Jason Hahn | DM Confidential | July 4, 2012

IgnitionOne recently released its “Online Advertising Report: Q2 2012.” Among the findings was that search spend in the second quarter of 2012 slowed down from the growth observed in the first quarter of the year. Also, Google claimed for nearly $8 out of every $10 spent on U.S. search advertising in the second quarter.

In the second quarter, paid search spending grew 15.5 percent year-over-year, slower than the 30.3 percent growth seen in the first quarter and the 22.4 percent growth in the fourth quarter of 2011.

According to IgnitionOne, clicks were up 13.2 percent year-over-year in the second quarter, also slower than the 29.1 percent increase seen in the previous quarter.

Total cost-per-click (CPC) was up 2.1 percent year-over-year, with Google’s CPC down 3.1 percent. “This continued decrease can be blamed on increasing reliance on mobile, which has cheaper CPCs as well as increasing use of new ad formats which are generally lower PPC clicks,” according to the report.

Bing/Yahoo, on the other hand, saw its CPC surge 24.3 percent, about the same as its increase in the previous quarter. IgnitionOne attributes this to the alliance’s promotion of best practices, “which led to greater competition in auctions through the increased use of broad match keywords as a stepping stone for exposure across other match types.”

In the second quarter, Google held 79.1 percent of U.S. search engine ad spend, while Bing/Yahoo claimed 20.9 percent. Google grew its share of search ad spend by 11.4 percent year-over-year, while Bing/Yahoo increased its spend by 32.9 percent year-over-year.

Spending on mobile search ads is up 333 percent year-over-year, according to IgnitionOne. Impressions are up 130 percent and clicks are up 325 percent.

According to the report, mobile search claimed 14 percent of total search advertising spend in the second quarter, a 12.3 percent increase from the previous quarter. Tablets accounted for 60 percent of mobile search advertising spend in the second quarter, while mobile phones accounted for the other 40 percent.

IgnitionOne pointed out that travel search advertising spend grew 37.8 percent year-over-year, compared to its 22.8 percent growth in the first quarter. Impressions grew 61.9 percent year-over-year, a notable rise from the 34.3 percent growth in the previous quarter.

The report also shared an estimate that Facebook’s real-time bidding advertising platform will drive an incremental 12-15 percent in retargeting budgets and drive overall display spend higher.

Monday, July 2, 2012

SEO Results in Less than One Month

Brian Starzec | HVAC Business Solutions | July 2, 2012

On June 12, 2012 we launched two websites for one of our customers - Air Clinic - and then proceeded with SEO.  Roughly two weeks later, on June 27, we ran our initial progress report and were delighted that both websites went from only ranking on their name to ranking on the first page of Google for several air conditioning specific keywords for service and repair (see the images below).

Normally we wouldn't see this type of result so quickly, but it does show that it is possible to achieve results with the right set of circumstances - take an existing website, update the code properly, then apply search-engine approved SEO techniques with a very specific local target and it is possible to get achieve results sooner than expected. 

If you are interested in improving your website's rankings this summer, please contact us immediately - 713-270-6400.  We only work with one company for a given targeted area and we provide a guarantee on our services. 

Primary Website After Two Weeks of SEO


Second Website After Two Weeks of SEO

Please note that in the rankings report above, the number listed in the search engine column reflects the overall rank for the keyword.