Yahoo Turns To Yelp To Beef Up Local Search

Yahoo Turns To Yelp To Beef Up Local Search


According to a report appearing today in the Wall Street Journal (WSJ), Yahoo will be incorporating local content and listings from Yelp into its main search results. As the article points out, Yelp has asimilar deal with Microsoft-Bing and, of course, with Apple (maps).
Yelp has an API that permits third parties to use a portion of its reviews and local listings content. The Bing deal, announced in June of last year, is a more elaborate version of that with a deeper integration. Below is a screenshot of how Yelp content is shown in Bing search results today:
Yelp Bing integration
Yahoo has recently started to introduce a new, more elaborate presentation of local business content into its search results. Like the Bing page above (and like Google), there will be a structured box on the right that offers a broad range of enhanced information.
It’s very likely that we’ll see Yelp reviews, photos and other content integrated into Yahoo search in a way very similar to the Bing example. However, Yahoo will probably go further if it considers Yelp’s content a potential differentiator.
New Yahoo Local results
Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer has been trying to upgrade Yahoo search in a number of ways and has expressed frustration with the Bing relationship. Continued content and UI improvements in Yahoo’s PC results may halt a further market-share slide, but they’re unlikely to do much to regain desktop search share for Yahoo.
It will be more interesting to see how Yahoo uses the Yelp content in mobile search results. That’s where I believe Yahoo has an opportunity to gain some ground.
Assuming the WSJ story is accurate, the market should reward Yelp for another high-profile deal. The local reviews site reported solid revenue and usage growth last week.

5 Tips To Kill The Competition In Local Search

5 Tips To Kill The Competition In Local Search


If your business has a local presence — anywhere — you must take advantage of Google+ Local. Creating and optimizing Google+ Local profiles is a critical marketing practice for local small businesses, multi-location enterprises, national franchises and companies with a single physical location. It will help you reach the 97% of consumers who search for local businesses online.
Google+ Local not only helps web searchers find and share local business information, it can also help your business get displayed near the top of Google SERPs. When a search is made with local intent, Google typically displays “blended results” that include Google+ Local listings at the top and organic results underneath — or, in some instances, the Google Local carousel will be shown at the top of the SERP.
What follows are five simple tips to help you dominate search results, own more “real estate” on the SERP, and beat your competition.

1. Complete Your Profile 100%

Yes, this may sound obvious, but it is unbelievable how many listings are only 50% complete. Google often gives preference to profiles that are 100% complete — providing them with as much information as possible allows them, in turn,  to provide the best user experience for searchers.
100-Complete
Google also takes into consideration hours of operation, i.e., whether your business is open during the time period in which a search is conducted. If your hours of operation are not completed in your Google+ Local profile, you could be left out of search results. Don’t forget about photos which can help showcase your business and help your listing stand out from the crowd.

2. Make Your NAP Consistent

This is true for all listings, not just Google+ Local. Make sure your Name/Address/Phone number (NAP) is accurate and identical everywhere online. For example,  if your address has a suite number, be consistent. Don’t write “Suite” on your website and “Ste.” on your local business listing. Don’t use a local phone number in your business listing and a toll-free number on your site.
NAP inconsistencies can trigger Google+ Local to auto-generate listings, which are not as effective as your self-provided profile information.
Lastly, I strongly suggest having your name, address and phone number in the footer of every page of your website using structured data such as Schema or an hCard, if possible.

3. Use All Relevant Categories

Make sure you take advantage of Google+ Local’s categories to add depth and interest to your listing. Make sure you check off all categories that directly relate to your business — for example, a pizza delivery franchise might select the categories Pizza Restaurant, Delivery Restaurant and Fast Food Restaurant.
Note: Google no longer allows custom categories.

4. Solicit Legitimate Customer Reviews

Google loves to see lots of reviews on your listing, and studies have shown that Google reviews strongly determine local carousel rankings. But reviews aren’t just good for search engines — users also use reviews to determine which local businesses they’re going to patronize. (According to one study, 85% of those surveyed said that they read online reviews for local businesses.)
Do not prompt your family and friends to write “fake” reviews. If you get dinged for suspected fake reviews, Google may suspend your listing or give you a penalty, hurting your rankings. Doask your customers to post a review and specify what service or product they purchased. (Google looks at reviews for “keywords” that are related to your listings products or services.)
For more info on how to do reviews right, check out 4 Go-Tos To Make Online Reviews Work For Your Business.

5. Add A Google Local Map

Add a Google Local Map to your website’s Contact Us page to help Google+ Local link your website and your Local Business Listing. Make sure to add your business’ Google Local Listing Map — not just a Google Map.
To do so, go to Google Maps, search for your business, click the “Link” button, and copy and paste the HTML to embed the map in your website, preferably on your Contact Us page.
Here is an example of how to add Google Local Listing Map:
SSM-Google-Local

Take Advantage of Google+ Local

Make sure your business is listed on Google+ Local. This is a critically important way to promote your company online. It enables people to easily find, share and recommend your business.  Google+ Local also helps you to monitor customer reviews and improve your customer service.

How Many Links Should you Build in 2014? All of Them

How Many Links Should you Build in 2014? All of Them

Link building isn’t dead. It’s still meaningful, it’s still valuable, and it still works. And it will continue to work until the web is replaced with direct digital downloading of all data directly to our brains, which I predict will happen just before the zombie apocalypse.
Over the years we’ve seen a lot of changes to how links can and should be built. While some links have lost all value, and some can even hurt you if you’re really, really bad at it (or were once really, really good at it, depending on your perspective), there are still quality links to be gained that can have an immense value in boosting your business in search engine rankings.
link building hard How Many Links Should you Build in 2014? All of Them

Link Building Still Matters

Link building is still meaningful, valuable, and still works. Google has finally been able to prevent crap links from being valued in the algorithm. This caused many SEOs to panic and declare link building dead, but really all Google did was what we’ve been wanting them to do for a long time: Stop valuing crappy links. That does the opposite of kill link building—it makes good link building more valuable.
Here’s a good way to test the quality of a link: If it’s easy to get, it’s crap.
The fact is, link building has always been hard (At least good link building). Ask any SEO worth their salt and they’ll tell you link building sucks. Why? Because it’s hard!

5 Things That Make a Good Link

The first question you should ask isn’t, “How do I build links?”, but rather, “What is a good link?” If you can answer that question, then you can go on to learn how to build good links. While we can argue about the merits of any individual link, on a global scale I can tell you the quality of a link by looking at five things.
A good link should be:
  1. On a site tangentially related to yours
  2. On a page with content relevant to the content being linked to
  3. Valuable to the reader
  4. Likely to be clicked by the reader
  5. Different from other link text to the same page (except for brand names)
It all comes down to relevance for the visitor. If it’s not relevant to them, then the search engines certainly don’t want to give you any points for the link. Keep your links relevant, on point, and look for opportunities to actually get targeted traffic from the link. After all, that’s the whole point of SEO.
One more thing I want to mention here. If Google could track every link that gets clicked (and they can track a lot), I guarantee they would not give value to a link that doesn’t get clicked. In fact, I suspect they will increase or decrease the value of a link based on how often it gets clicked (and by whom, but more on that later.)
If you’re still building links that you know won’t ever be clicked, you’re building into a failed system. Sooner or later, Google will add click-through data into their link algorithm and all those links you’ve been building since 2014 will be irrelevant. Don’t fall into the trap!

Social Links Matter, Too

Links are still an important part of the algorithm, and in my opinion, always will be. With that being said, links are becoming less relevant as other signals become more relevant. I’m specifically referring to social signals and shares. There is no doubt in my mind that socialization of content plays a very significant role in pushing sites up in the search engine rankings.
shutterstock 125119499 637x424 How Many Links Should you Build in 2014? All of Them

Image by Ivelin Radkov via Shutterstock
My best guess is that links are on-par with social signals in terms of overall weight in the algorithm. As time goes on, that might continue to push more towards social or it might stay roughly even. Either way, social signals play a critical role in achieving what used to be done traditionally by “link building”.
If you want your link building efforts to be successful, you must be working the social side. And guess what? That’s hard too!
Working the social sphere is all about relationship building and engagement. You can’t just push your content on people and expect them to care. You have to engage with them so that they will care. And, like any good relationship, the caring has to go both ways. Don’t just look for opportunities for a quick link. Look for relationships that will pay off for years.

Bringing It All Back Around

Regardless if you’re getting a link on a blog, getting socialized on twitter, or finding other clever ways to promote your business, it all comes back to building something worthy of being linked to. Getting links is tough business but unless you do something worthy of the link, you’re making it even tougher.
Again, if you’re looking for easy, you’re looking in the wrong place. But if you have the patience to engage in creating valuable content and building the relationships you need to develop links, then every link you earn will return value back to your site.

Facebook prompts admins to add tags to groups

Facebook prompts admins to add tags to groups


Groups were a major super star in Facebook’s Q4 earnings call, as CEO Mark Zuckerberg said that groupswill be a major part of the company in 2014. Changes are apparently starting already, as admins can add tags to a group. While it may not do much for closed/private groups, it’s a way for people to find new groups similar to or regarding similar topics for communities they’re already a part of.
Adam Rosenberg of Edelman Digital noticed that Facebook asked him to add tags to his group.
When a user clicks on the tag, they’re shown similar groups and communities their friends have joined.




Klout Acquired By Lithium Technologies For Roughly $100 Million

Klout Acquired By Lithium Technologies For Roughly $100 Million

Online publication Re/code has reported that Klout, the online social influence scoring platform, is set to be sold to social customer service company Lithium Technologies. The deal is reported to be in “the low nine figures,” including a combination of cash and Lithium private stock. While the numbers are unclear, it can be presumed that the deal was signed for at least $100 million.
The two companies are said to be a great fit in terms of topic focus, as Lithium Technologies provides enterprise social customer experience management software and Klout provides a platform for measuring social influence. This acquisition comes at a good time for Klout due to the fact they have tried a variety of monetization strategies while falling short of the success they hoped to achieve with them.
Most notably, Klout has relied heavily on a business model involving “Klout Perks,” where brands entice influential individuals with products and promotions in hopes to achieve some positive word of mouth marketing.
klout snapshots 637x137 Klout Acquired By Lithium Technologies For Roughly $100 Million
They have also pursued data licensing deals with Microsoft’s Bing and other companies. Most recently they have launched a new content recommendation and scheduling system that helps people share content tailored to their audience to help raise their Klout score.
While the deal is officially signed it has not yet been closed. It’s difficult to determine what this deal means for both companies as they have declined to provide a comment on the acquisition. I can only hope this leads to further innovation by Klout and more insight into the social web and its users.

Google Says (Some) Missing Features Will Be Added To New Google Maps

Google Says (Some) Missing Features Will Be Added To New Google Maps


Google took its new Maps site out of beta this week, but many users noticed that some of their favorite features from Classic Maps were missing.
Not to worry, Google says. It’s aware of that and plans to bring at least some of those missing over to the new Maps site in the near future.

The team will continue to work to improve the new Google Maps, so look out for better performance and additional features, like send to car, in the coming weeks.

That mention of the Send To Car feature is as specific as Google would get in its replies to our questions about the missing features we’ve noticed. That list includes:
1.) Send To Email and/or Car. When looking at a place or address in Classic Maps, there’s a “Send” option under the “More” tab that lets users email the place/address or send it to certain vehicle navigation systems.
send-to-car-google-maps
2.) Default location. There seems to be no easy way in new Maps for a user to set his/her default location.
3.) More Info link on business listings. In Classic Maps, every business listing popup includes a “More Info” link that gives searchers quick access to the business’ Google+ Local page. On the new Google Maps, the only way to get from the business listing to its Google+ Local page is to click the link that says how many reviews the business has.
more-info-link-google-maps
4.) Terrain maps disappear when looking at directions. You can see terrain maps in the new Google Maps, but the option goes away when looking at directions between two (or more) places.
5.) 3D Directions. In Classic Maps, there’s a 3D/2D toggle when looking at directions. The 3D version autoplays a moving drive-through of the route between your start and destination.
These are a sample of the features that we’ve found to either be missing altogether, or perhaps just very difficult to find in the new Google Maps. Google’s statement that at least some of these will be brought over from Classic Maps “in the coming weeks” is good to hear. Some more specifics on which ones would be even better.

AdWords Top Movers Report Update: Now With Conversion Stats, Device-Level Segmentation

AdWords Top Movers Report Update: Now With Conversion Stats, Device-Level Segmentation

The Top Movers report debuted in AdWords last June to help advertisers quickly see performance changes in their accounts. It was helpful, but somewhat rudimentary with reporting on just clicks and cost changes. Today, Google announced that conversion data will begin appearing in the Top Movers report as well as device-specific insights.
Note that the report shown on the Home screen still includes just Cost and Clicks data, you’ll need to click on the “see full report” link or navigate to the Dimensions tab on the Campaigns screen to see the conversion data.
Google AdWrods Top Movers Report With Conversion Data
The Top Mover detail below is now sorted by Top Increases for Conversions and Top Decreases for Conversions. This performance data is segmented by device/network level, including by Search Partners, as shown in the example above. However, unlike the example below, the live examples I’ve looked at so far have included only one device-level segment per ad group, which is much more helpful. This type of segmentation will help advertisers quickly see if there are troubled areas at the device-level even if conversion stats overall look stable.
The conversion data will be a big help for managing performance campaigns. However, the ability to see changes in conversion rate and cost per conversion data would be especially helpful for understanding the impact on ROI.
The change has rolled out globally, so if you’re tracking conversions you should see this update in your account now.

Google Steps Up Ad Fraud Fight With Spider.io Acquisition

Google Steps Up Ad Fraud Fight With Spider.io Acquisition


Ad fraud has been a black cloud looming over the industry, with perpetrators finding myriad ways to hijack the display advertising ecosystem. To bolster its resources in the fight against internet advertising fraud, Google announced today it has acquired the well-regarded web traffic analytics firm spider.io.
Google has made significant investments in fighting ad fraud. The company says it blocked over 350 million bad ads from more than 270 thousand bad advertisers in 2013. While the number of bad ads that were blocked was up 59 percent from the prior year, the number of bad advertisers fell significantly from 850 thousand. Mike Hochberg, Director, Ads Engineering said of the decline at the time, “In part, we attribute this decline to scammers — counterfeiters, for example — being thwarted by our safety screens and searching for less-secure targets.”
“Our immediate priority is to include their fraud detection technology in our video and display ads products, where they will complement our existing efforts,” wrote Neal Mohan, VP of Display Advertising at Google wrote of the acquisition “Over the long term, our goal is to improve the metrics that advertisers and publishers use to determine the value of digital media and give all parties a clearer, cleaner picture of what campaigns and media are truly delivering strong results. Also, by including spider.io’s fraud fighting expertise in our products, we can scale our efforts to weed out bad actors and improve the entire digital ecosystem.”
Google’s viewable impression measurement tool, Active View, received Media Rating Council (MRC) accreditation in April 2013. Spider.io recieived MRC accredition for its own viewable impression measurement tool in May of last year. The spider.io tool is unique in that it can measure the viewability of individual display ad impressions in any iFrame environment and regardless of iFrame nesting across all major desktop browsers. This is likely one of the areas where spider.io’s technology will help Google improve ad metrics and further its move toward making viewable impressions the standard.
The IAB’s Traffic of Good Intent task force was established to take on ad fraud at the industry level. In September 2013, then head of spider.io Douglas de Jager offered up his own feedbackon the IAB’s efforts to address the “systemic failures” afflicting the of display advertising industry. Now as an employee of Google, the dominant player in display advertising, he stands to have a bigger impact on shaping the way the industry as a whole fights fraudulent ad traffic.

AdRoll Launches Mobile Retargeting Solution For Cross-Device Campaigns

AdRoll Launches Mobile Retargeting Solution For Cross-Device Campaigns

Today, AdRoll announced a private beta launch of a new mobile retargeting offering that enables marketers to retarget users across devices.
The mobile retargeting solution allows marketers to identify high-intent desktop users and target them across mobile devices to promote app installs and conversions on mobile optimized sites. AdRoll, currently the only ad tech that integrates with both Facebook and Twitter, enables advertisers to retarget desktop site visitors as they visit Facebook and Twitter on their smartphones and tablets. Marketers can also retarget mobile web visitors when they browse other mobile sites, leading them back to mobile optimized landing pages.
adroll moble retargeting
“AdRoll is committed to providing marketers with the tools and insights to create campaigns that drive high ROI and solve for their real world advertising objectives,” said Adam Berke, AdRoll president. “We’ve built deep expertise in retargeting, and we’re now excited to extend our platform to address our customers’ need to reach people across a range of devices.”
Current beta customer Udemy is testing the platform by identifying desktop audiences on both Facebook and Twitter and retargeting them on mobile devices to drive app installs of its online class app.
The move gives AdRoll a head start on other FBX vendors, in particular, which have not been able to offer mobile retargeting. The ability to manage retargeting campaigns on Facebook, Twitter and other mobile websites through one interface will also likely hold appeal for advertisers.

How To Use Relative Standing For Online Analytics

How To Use Relative Standing For Online Analytics


I was recently taking a fresh look at some old statistics school books of mine, and I realized how useful many of those basic statistical concepts can be when applied to online marketing analytics.
In this post, I’ll share a couple of ways you can delve into your data in a simple way by using relative standing — that is, how individual data values compare to the rest of the group, as opposed to straight absolute values, which are typically hard to put into perspective.

Getting Started: Mean Vs. Median

First off, if you are not familiar with statistics at all, let me briefly clarify the difference between the mean and the median; these statistics are two different ways to measure the center of the data:
  • The mean is simply the average value, so if we are looking into the revenue by keyword in paid search, that would be the total amount of revenue divided by the total number of keywords.
  • The median is the middle value in a data set after ordering the numbers from smallest to largest — or, if you have an even number of numbers in the data, the average of the two numbers in the middle of the data.
The median is often used because it gets less affected by outliers — those extremely low or high numbers in the data. Lots of statisticians argue that the median better reflects what the center of the data is.
Applied to online marketing, and more specifically to paid search, a single keyword with a super high CPA (cost-per-acquisition) could totally bias your mean CPA, while it would not bias your median CPA. Although the mean CPA is what you potentially mostly care about at the end of the day, the median CPA might be a better indicator of what your paid search CPA is for most keywords.
In my view, both the mean and median are relevant to some extent, and a more actionable way to go about it is to compare the mean CPA with the median CPA. If they are significantly different, it means that there are some outliers in your data which you might want to address as priorities, whether they are too high and you want the cost down, or too low and you might be able to get more volume.

Standard Deviation, Or The Measurement Of Variability

The standard deviation is a measurement used for the amount of variability (or spread) in a data set. Essentially, it is the average distance from the mean, and it can be calculated as follows, although a simpler formula in Excel does the trick, too!
Standard Deviation Formula
In this formula, x is the metric you are observing,  is the mean; and n is the sample size. In Excel, you can use =STDEV(x values).
Applied to online marketing analytics, I can think of a couple of cases where you’d want to minimize the amount of spread as much as possible so you maximize overall performance:
  • Across multiple channels, if these x values are your CPAs per channel, you’d rather have all CPAs converge toward the mean, as opposed to having a wide range of CPAs across different channels. That is, you do not want to pay a CPA of, say, $25 through video ads while you can get a CPA of $15 in paid search — it just doesn’t make sense in terms of budget allocation and overall marketing mix optimization. Why not get more revenue volume from more efficient channels?
  • Within each individual channel, and for a similar reason, you do not want to pay a CPA of, say, $40 for some emailing campaigns targeting prospective clients while you could get a CPA of $20 targeting existing clients.You wouldn’t do that unless you are seeing long-term returns from those prospective clients’ campaigns (which is very likely but still needs to be measured), and/or there is no more room for growth for existing clients’ emailing campaigns. Another (perhaps more intuitive) example would be in paid search, where you’d want to lower the CPA for those costly keywords (mostly through quality score and bid optimization), and get more volume from those keywords with a low CPA (mostly through expanding your keyword list and increasing your visibility on less competitive or more efficient keywords).
In situations where you just observe and record the data (such as the ad spend per channel, or ad spend per keyword in paid search), a large standard deviation is not necessarily a bad thing; however, a small standard deviation is generally a good thing when it comes to your CPAs across or within channels in order to make sure you are getting a good amount of cheap conversions and a low amount of costly conversions.
In other terms, keeping an eye on the standard deviation is a good way to determine whether there is still a lot to optimize in your marketing program. More generally, you can calculate the standard deviation for your key performance indicators (KPI) and ask yourself whether the spread matters or not, and if it does, how you can address it and monitor it over time.

Standard Scores, Or How To Make The Data Relative

The standard score represents the number of standard deviations above or below the mean, without caring what the actual standard deviation or mean actually are. It is a slick way to put results in perspective without providing lots of details, which can get pretty handy when attempting to make sense of large data sets. Applied to online marketing analytics, standard scores can help evaluate performance for each individual value in the data.
The formula is as follows, where x is the metric you are observing, μ is the mean, and σ is the standard deviation.
Standard Score Formula
For example, you could use standard scores to quickly evaluate the cost for each individual keyword in paid search by comparison with all other keywords – while a cost of $60 might be hard to put in perspective, knowing that a keyword has a standard score of +2 tells you much more. This way, one can identify those keywords which need to be looked into first. In paid search, you could also use standard scores for those AdWords and Bing quality scores in order to compare the individual keywords’ relevance to the rest of the program.
Obviously, standard scores can be used in lots of different ways — those just mentioned are very basic. More advanced ways to leverage standard scores could include analyzing the relative performance by day-of-the-week (for instance, a Monday could be a +1 revenue-wise across all channels, that is, 1 standard deviation above the average daily revenue volume), or the relative performance by channel (such as paid search is a +2 efficiency-wise), and much more…
Also, in order to calculate those standard scores, just subtract each X value by the average X, then divide by the standard deviation. You could then end up with the below table for you keywords in paid search:
Standard Score Sample Table

Percentiles, Or How To Bucket The Data

Another cool way to go about categorizing the data is to use percentiles, in other words buckets of data values with similar statistics, such as similar efficiency levels, similar revenue volume, similar quality score, etc..
More specifically, percentiles indicate relative standing as they help understand how individual data values are situated in your overall data set. Provided that the median is the center of the data, and by definition the 50th percentile, if you found that a paid search keyword belonged to the 90th percentile revenue-wise, it means that 90% of all other keywords generated less revenue.
Like standard scores, percentiles get very handy when bucketing your program by efficiency level and/or revenue volume, or prioritizing what needs to be optimized first, or just observing what is happening in your program in a more insightful way.
Unlike standard scores, there is no single definitive formula for calculating percentiles. Instead, you have to calculate each percentile separately. For example, if you want to find the 20th percentile, start by multiplying 20% by n (that is, the sample size) and then order your x values from smaller to larger. In this example, as there are 7,500 keywords in a report, we are bucketing those keywords in 10 buckets of 750 keywords, from smaller to larger CPA, and the 20th percentile would be those 20%*7,500=1,500 first keywords in the report.
Percentile Sample Table
  • Across multiple channels, you could bucket all sorts of online marketing campaigns using percentiles based of each campaign’s efficiency.
  • Within each individual channel, you could identify top and/or poor performing campaigns/audiences/keywords based on any statistic that makes sense to you.

Conclusion

Hopefully, this post will bring light into new ways to analyze large amounts of online data. The key is to move away from presenting hundreds of numbers when attempting to analyze online marketing performance, as it can easily get overwhelming. Instead, relative standing statistics can make it quicker for analysts to put together, and easier for executives to comprehend and use for making decisions.