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B2B Marketers: Tune in to YouTube Channels!

When B2B business buyers are looking for resources to help guide their purchases, they’re not just looking on Google and informational websites. They’re also going to sites like YouTube, which is home to an increasing amount of B2B content. For instance, nearly one-third of IT managers visit YouTube each month according to a survey from MRI in 2007.

How do B2B marketers reach these potential customers while they’re looking for information?

Well, a good place to start is with a YouTube channel, which is a customizable place where users can access your videos, post comments, and engage with your brand and company.

According to eMarketer, More than one-half of the US population now watches online video, and eMarketer predicts there will be 190 million online video viewers in the US in 2012.

At that point nearly nine out of 10 Internet users will be watching online video!

Why all this growth? Videos capture users’ attention and make your message stick.
In fact, MarketingSherpa reported over 98% of business technology decision makers found viral videos more memorable than other forms of marketing.

Below are five ways to get started uploading videos that are relevant to your products or company, such as:

  • Recorded webinars
  • Product demos
  • Video case studies
  • TV or video ads
  • Company presence at industry events

To see examples of YouTube channels, visit the Google Business Channel and the Official Google Channel.

How To Plan Your ‘09 Online Marketing Budget

During these tough economic times, budgeting is becoming an even more critical aspect of the planning process.  It’s easy for many companies to immediately dismiss marketing as a disposable expense, however, research shows that companies which continue to market during an economic downturn are that much farther ahead of those that don’t.

We consult with many clients regarding their annual online marketing strategies and plans.  Here are some tips to consider to get your 2009 Online Marketing budget approved.

1. Outline expected results

Your goal is to link marketing initiatives and strategies to financial outcomes, therefore you need to make sure you can effectively show how investing in online marketing will result in specific goals and objectives.

For example, your marketing initiatives may include one or more of the following:

  • Drive incremental sales. Show how your online marketing plan will directly impact sales. Your outcomes are pretty straightforward if your marketing directly generates sales. Tactics may include Paid Search, search engine optimization, online media buying, and email marketing.
  • Drive leads into the sales pipeline. Show how you will engage your online audience and generate interest and demand that results in generating a lead.  Tactics may include Paid Search, search engine optimization, online media buying, and email marketing.
  • Engage and convert more visitors.Show how you will engage more visitors and get them to respond to your offer.  Small lift in conversion rates can easily multiply sales.  Tactics may include web effectiveness and multivariate testing.
  • Interact with your audience.Show how you will engage your audience where they spend time online today.  Buzz and referrals can be powerful and result in customer evaluation and adoption.   Tactics may include web analytics, multivariate testing, and social media.
  • Building your brand. Show how exposing your brand will result in greater recognition and adoption resulting in greater engagement and ultimately sales.  Granted, this is a longer term approach that requires more buy-in.  Tactics may include paid search, online media buying, and social media.

To project your expected outcomes, quantify the results you have achieved prior and make sound assumptions. This gives more weight to your strategy, shows sound thinking, and often creates a positive collaborative dialog.

2. Educate decision makers on the dynamics of the strategy.

The next step and one of the most critical is getting buy-in and approval from the powers that be.  Educating your executives on the core strategy to the point that they are nodding their heads in agreement is important.  Identifying any threats to the strategy and plan should be highlighted, but not magnified. It is important to reinforce with the decision makers the following:

  • Integrated plan with critical mass. Show how complementary tactics yield even better results.  For example, how search marketing and online media combined yields higher returns when integrated successfully.
  • Marketing needs to be supported through the entire funnel. If there are other dependencies to driving sales, ensure that those parts of the funnel are held accountable to their target conversion rates.
  • Budgeting for analytics is critical to measuring and delivering expected outcomes. Without a unified measurement tool, showing expected outcomes will be challenging.  Ensure you have an analytics platform that captures leading KPIs along with bottom-line conversions.  For example, your web analytics platform should be able to tell you how a opt-in email marketing campaign directly impacts sales on the website.
  • A testing budget that allows for new champions to surface. We recommend setting aside around 10% of your budget if possible to test new hypothesis and in some cases emerging tactics.

If asked how to reduce the overall budget, suggest that the decision makers take more budget and wipe out the integrated approach because it may not be effective enough to make a substantial impact.

3. Build executive confidence in your online strategy with clear financial expectations and outcomes.

With an integrated, well thought-through strategy, and the measurement of analytics to determine the financial outcomes, you will build confidence in your executives and gain support to approve and execute your online marketing plan.

I welcome your comments and feedback below:

Search Marketing Benchmark Guide for 2009

MarketingSherpa’s Search Marketing Benchmark Guide for 2009 has been released, which provides an interesting collection of data that can be used a reference when determining what role Search Marketing needs to play in an organization.

To organize the 300+ charts and survey results, The Guide covers 5 major areas outlined below:

  1. Budgeting and Search
  2. Tactics of Search
  3. Search Providers Explored
  4. Measuring and Testing
  5. Search Benchmarks

Useful takeaways from the guide:

  1. Budgeting for Search requires strategic planning
  2. Search Advertising affects Your Brand ( Favorably)
  3. More marketers have adopted analytics (Google Analytics leads the way

Survey Results to consider for 2009:

  1. Conversion and ROI rank as the top two most under-used metrics for Search Marketing
  2. Search is a medium that affects the perception of your Brand
  3. The majority of marketers “under-budget” for Search and fail to realize their goals

Read and download the full Executive Summary here

 

How to Select an Online Marketing Agency

How to Select an Online Marketing Agency

Jeannie Moran, eCommerce Marketing Director of AutoNation, shares how to select an online marketing agency at SES

Many marketers have struggled with this topic: How To Select an Online Marketing Agency.  I attended this session at the Search Engine Strategies conference a couple of weeks ago.  Veteran marketer Jeannie Moran, eCommerce Marketing Director, of AutoNation, shared her experience with fellow marketers.

From a marketer perspective here is what to look for when selecting an agency:

5 Fundamentals- Per Jeannie Moran, eCommerce Marketing Director, AutoNation, inc.

  1. Sign a MNDA
  2. Be aligned with vision and be able to introduce the agency to your boss
  3. Build trust and set reasonable expectations
  4. Be honest about working with multiple partners
  5. Make sure it’s worth everyone’s while

Must haves - Groundwork for Success

  1. Understand what you are buying - educate yourself
  2. Ask the right questions - be cautious about guarantees
  3. Always meet with the team that will be delivering
  4. Make sure to use compatible technology
  5. Get all promises in writing
  6. Negotiate a trial period - test pilot for 90 days minimum
  7. Uncover any hidden costs
  8. Ensure one common platform for tracking
  9. Determine if application supports foreign languages and currencies

SEO Vendor Considerations

  1. Strong keyword research strategy
  2. Strong copy writing and link building
  3. Optimization plan for organic pages
  4. Measure organic conversion and ROI
  5. Proven results

Paid Search Vendor Considerations

  1. PPC programs in Google, Yahoo and MSN
  2. Web traffic measurement tool to measure your precise return on investment
  3. A/B testing of PPC ads and landing pages to identify the most effective campaigns
  4. Account managers that are Google AdWords certified and are Yahoo Ambassadors

Social Media Vendor Considerations

  1. What channels are you currently active in for clients?
  2. Give examples of how channels might be used to bolster the overall SEM effort
  3. Proven results?

Key Takeaways

  1. Educate
  2. Invest
  3. Agree and document billing model
  4. Start small and scale
  5. Monitor, measure, optimize

There are key advantages of one vendor for both SEO and SEM

Using a holistic strategy and partner will allow you to:

  • Identify opportunities that can improve performance
  • Optimize across all search channels
  • Combine campaign metrics and reporting

Outcome:  Increased ROI and Cost Savings

At WebsiteBiz, we offer both Paid Search, SEO, and Social Media capabilities.  Our clients tell us the integrated approach yields higher returns along with cost savings and who wouldn’t want this? J

Multivariate Testing - Big Results from Small Changes

Multivariate testing can drive big results from small changes.  In a recent Google Blog post, examples of Google’s search experiments are shown and some are surprisingly small.  For example, take a look at the two pages below:

Multivariate Testing - Big Results from Small Changes

Multivariate Testing - Big Results from Small Changes

Can you tell the difference between the two?  I couldn’t.  Turns out, the difference lies in the amount of white space in the first search result, making the first result in the Picture 2 a bit more visible.  This test is designed to determine if these types of changes help you search faster and if it makes results more prominent.

Here’s another example of a recent Google experiment:

Multivariate Testing - Big Results from Small Changes

Multivariate Testing - Big Results from Small Changes

If you can spot the difference in these two pictures, you’re visually astute.  The difference is the the thickness of the plus box next to the stock quote.  It’s difficult to determine if one is “better”, because results of the tests have both positive and negative effects.  Searchers might click on the the thicker box, causing them to possible ignore other helpful results.

So, what?  Subtle differences can make a big impact on results.  Multivariate testing helps marketers to test even the most minute details to determine which has the greater impact.  Without the use of multivariate testing, the findings could take lots of time, man hours or just never be determined.

At WebsiteBiz, we use Omniture Test & Target as well as Google Optimizer.  We have expertise using these tools and are leveraging technology in our partnerships.