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5 Reasons why a Pay Per Click Recession Looms, according to Steve Rubel

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Vision

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I agree with Steve Rubel's assertions.

Moreover, corporations' increasing focus on SEO and direct navigation will also contribute to the pay per click downturn.

Ultimately, better SEO strategy yielding quality organic results coupled with direct navigation attract traffic via a meaningful cost-effective method.

Michael

Here is the article link:
http://www.micropersuasion.com/2007/10/five-reasons-wh.html#trackback

Here is the text:

Monday, October 15, 2007
Five Reasons Why a Pay Per Click Recession Looms

For the last several years, search engine marketing has been on a tear. While the big advertisers sat on the sidelines in the beginning, they have lately been ramping up their spend on pay-per-click advertising, primarily on search engines but also affiliate sites like those that run Google Adsense.

However, I am calling a top to this market now. Here are five reasons why a pay-per-click advertising recession looms. (If you depend on Adsense for the bulk of your revenue, this applies to you as well.)

1) Clutter

Have you shopped for a car lately? I have. And I did a lot of Google searches in the process but largely ignored the ads. The reason - clutter. Take a look at this search. Ads are stacked on top of each other. There are 10 ads in my browser. Advertising clutter is a known deterrent to advertising effectiveness. TV advertising suffers from clutter and there's no reason why search engines are immune. The New York Times touched on this today.

2) Declining Relevance of Traffic/Transition to Cost Per Action

OK, you have heard this from me twice in a week now so I won't spend a lot of time here. Traffic is becoming irrelevant unless it results in action. There will be some pain as search engine marketing moves to a cost per action model, rather than one based on sometimes irrelevant clicks. This will contribute to a search engine marketing slowdown.

3) Rising Costs

According to a five-year Forrester interactive marketing forecast published last week, costs per keyword rose an average 33% each month in Q1 2007 compared with the same period in 2006. As a result, some marketers are buying lots more Long Tail terms. Further, Forrester says that "many still spend with abandon." The reason is that search outperforms other advertising - but for how long? And again, how do you define perform (see point #2)? The madness will end as soon as the economy tightens.

4) Marketers Spread the Ball Around

Move over search, you're not the only game in town. Marketers are increasingly investing in behavioral targeting, webisodes as well as more social channels like blogs and soc nets studies say. These formats are becoming more targeted and effective too.

5) Search Ads Are Viewed as Untrustworthy

If there's anything that Enron, Bill Bellichick, Marion Jones, Worldcom and Barry Bonds taught us, it's this - trust is king. Google CEO Eric Schmidt knows this - note his comments this week to AdAge. However, according to a study published by Nielsen last week, search engine advertising suffers from low trust.

Now, before all the search consultants flame this post with comments, I believe strongly in the marketing firepower of search engines. It's a terrific venue and one that I regularly advise our clients to invest in.

However, it's impossible to deny that pain is coming. As SEM matures it will move to a new model just as spending on digital marketing overall rises and diversifies. This means the market will recede before it expands. In the long run, that's good for everyone. Just be prepared for what's coming.


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Monday, October 15, 2007 at 08:29 PM in Advertising, Marketing, Search | Permalink

Technorati Tags: interactive marketing, PPC, search engine marketing, SEM
 

Shaggy

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This is coming from a web savy user who can determine what is an ad and what isn't. There are millions of non web savy users out there the will always click the first link that relates to their search. No matter if its an ad our a normal link.
 

socalboy

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If I understand the logic of his argument, this should disproportionately affect high profile keyword pages. However, niche sites that have a steady flow of low volume traffic should weather the storm and even prosper.
 

Poker

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The people that click on ads on a parked domain page are not using an SE for that search, that's why they landed on your domain. I agree, most of the people clicking on parked domain ads are not that web savy so it does'nt matter if more co's become more adept @ SEO. Plus the more people get into SEO, the more competition they are going to have against eachother.
 

socalboy

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The people that click on ads on a parked domain page are not using an SE for that search

I'm not sure about that. At SedoPro I can see how the uniques arrived at the page, and a fair amount of traffic does come from various search engines. However, I cannot tell whether they are the people clicking or not. I believe there are other parking programs which also offer a similar analysis.
 

Theo

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1. Clutter

Parked pages look more and more like real minisites. Even savvy domainers can be fooled. Of course, only fool domainers bite the hand that feeds them ;)

2. Declining Relevance of Traffic/Transition to Cost Per Action

As long as it's not junk, relevant traffic always converts. The CPA model will simply spawn alternative advertising venues that will love to take on the current big players, Yahoo and Google. The silent giant, Microsoft, is gearing up.

3. Rising Costs

Economy is doing fine, the stock market is at record highs. Consumers are spending more than ever. China is growing at a rate four times that of the US. The only rising cost is that of the salaries of executives at the 2 big players. Perhaps they will start issuing paycuts soon :D

4. Marketers Spread the Ball Around

And that in return feeds revenue back to the PPC industry. There are no segregated markets, the next big thing will be the unification of all different venues into one. Facebook already has proven the model works.

5. Search Ads Are Viewed as Untrustworthy

Acknowledging a potential problem is the first step towards addressing it. And for a multi-billion corporation such as Google, the resources to strike out a new, working method of ensuring that the PPC powerhorse still delivers, are unlimited.
 

Biggie

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ads on many parked pages, actually have products or info that the consumer wants.

same as an individual niche site but each parked page is it's own portal.

i think many visitors like the "set-up" of the parked page....that's gotta be why they keep coming back! :)

either that or every visitor, everyday, is a new visitor


:rolleyes:
 

dcristo

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ads on many parked pages, actually have products or info that the consumer wants.

same as an individual niche site but each parked page is it's own portal.

i think many visitors like the "set-up" of the parked page....that's gotta be why they keep coming back! :)

either that or every visitor, everyday, is a new visitor


:rolleyes:

Yeah, parked pages provide a great user experience :yes:
 
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