Display advertising intrigues me - the best bits (like the Sony ad below) have the capacity to inspire, but measuring their success can be harder.
One of the best sessions I attended at SMX Advanced earlier this summer was the advanced analytics panel (thanks, Rand, for persuading me it was going to be worthwhile!). It covered some fantastic tips on advanced methodologies and metrics for search analytics. It was the inspiration for this post, which is going to cover some slightly different areas. Although we primarily deal with SEO and search advertising, we do a little online display advertising and have recently found ourselves thinking about measurement metrics for PR and offline advertising:
- Tracking the spread and effectiveness of viral, buzz or online PR campaigns
- Online metrics for measuring the effectiveness of offline and / or display advertising
- Measuring the mutual uplift between natural and paid search, online and offline display advertising and PR
So, I'm going to talk about some of the ways that we do these things (or that we are thinking about doing these things) but I'd also like to hear your thoughts and experiences....
Tracking the effectiveness of online PR
When I'm not writing here, I'm one of the directors at Distilled - and one of our products is Reputation Monitor, which is a tool for monitoring what is said about you, your company or your brand online. None of us do very much plugging of our stuff here on SEOmoz, so I hope you'll all excuse a self-promotional paragraph. We built it because it was impossible to build a workflow around Google Alerts and watching loads of different RSS feeds of different sources of data meant loads of overlap. We also wanted to be able to add more filtering based on how confident we were that a particular story was or wasn't about the target being monitored (you can see how this would be a problem for us - most mentions of "distilled" on the internet are not about us!). We are working on a bunch of enhancements at the moment, but in my sole self-promotional paragraph, I'm going to end with a call to action to try it out (there's a free trial).
With it in hand, we discovered that there were other applications to areas outside reputation monitoring (such as the link building tips Tom wrote about a while back and tracking the success of viral / buzz / online PR campaigns). The way it is set up makes it particularly good at following mentions of unique phrases in viral content or in tracking links to particular pages.
When running campaigns for traffic, you would obviously track the effectiveness via analytics - and when doing linkbait for SEO purposes, you would be mainly looking at the links gathered, but when you are doing it for branding / PR benefit, the spread of the idea can be positive even if they don't link (and therefore don't send you traffic / SEO benefit).
Obviously, knowing raw mentions is a pretty clumsy metric, so we are working on two enhancements to this figure:
- Visibility: how many people are likely to see / have seen that page
- Influence: essentially a measure of who is in the list of people that see the page
For the second, we have a much harder task - we are considering a variety of different metrics on a range from easy to automate to very hard to automate... Various inputs we have thought of include:
- Links (especially from powerful sites) to that page - note that this requires waiting a bit - nothing gets links immediately
- Links to the site generally from other influential places (to do this properly would require a kind of 'influenceRank' much like the trustrank in Linkscape)
- Regularly being at the root of spreading stories (i.e., temporal link analysis)
- Number of comments on the story in question and other pages on the site
- RSS subscribers (if data is available)
Online metrics for measuring the effectiveness of display advertising
I was recently impressed, confused, then saddened (in that order) to see the mobile phone operator ("cell network" for the North Americans) Orange running a massive advertising campaign in the UK (outdoor, display, newspaper / magazine, TV, transport network) with a call to action of Search Online for "I am". I was impressed that they would have something so measurable as a call to action, then confused that they didn't pick a phrase they ranked organically for (when you pick the phrase, surely SEO is easy?!) and saddened (for them) to see that it appears to have failed. For another example of a Google Trends fail, check out this comparison of hd-dvd and bluray.
With some advertising campaigns then, you can measure something specific like unique searches.
Other times, you might include a different kind of unique call to action (such as a unique URL or phone number). If you go down this route, don't forget to give people a reason to go to the URL you pick - if you use www.yourbrand.com/letmetrackyou, no one will do what you want them to. You either need to tell them there is a special offer available or (better) direct them via a dedicated URL (don't forget to 301 redirect though).
What about measuring the less direct elements, however? There are a lot of advertising campaigns that have huge branding goals. Here are our thoughts on measuring this:
- Branded search spike (either for the company, product or ad strapline)
- Tracking social network mentions (e.g., Twitter, Facebook Lexicon)
- General discussion (on blogs etc. - see tracking online PR / buzz above)
Mutual uplift between natural and paid search, online and offline display advertising, and PR
At ad:tech in London last month, I attended a session where Ogilvy were talking about their 'real women' campaign for Unilever-owned Dove (I love this ad, despite not being in the target market). P&G were there and mentioned that they have complex econometric models for decoupling the effect of large numbers of inputs to estimate the mutual uplift from the interplay of their various ad channels. If that last sentence is gobbledegook to you, it is to me too...
I asked them if they could clarify, but sadly they declined.
So I'm left wondering how we should go about doing this kind of thing. How can we measure the effect on our PPC advertising of display (online display is hard enough, but what about offline display)?
This is where I would love to hear your thoughts and experiences in the comments... Any of you who work at more integrated online and offline agencies care to comment on best practices?
I feel that those of us with deep online and search experience should be able to add something to this process, but there is no point reinventing the wheel - it's far better to know what's out there before we start.
One idea I had, but never saw the client implement, was to create a landing page that displayed applicable copy plus an easy-to-print rating or note card for comparison shopping. Bring the card in with applicable comparisons or online research and you get a % discount. It's a little more involved than just printing a coupon, but really plays to the Research Online, Buy Offline angle.
Yep similar thing here, for conversion tracking a coupon code works well. Or for offline something like mention "RedRabbits" to receive 10% off.
You can even seperate sources by using "RedRabits" code on abc magazine or website, and "GreenRabits" on xyz. You can also use historical data, an average of Mondays sales, traffic, referrals etc over the last 6 month in comparison with this Mondays campaign.
Wow that got me thinking! If you have a unique URL for your offline media, and can track first and last touch of a sale (and each of the touches in between) would that be enough to determine the impact of external marketing on PPC and search campaigns?
See now this is one of the most thought provoking posts I've seen in a while, and could solve a lot of the issues I have been having for some time (if for instance you have different pages ranking for different terms in the search engines, and each "buy now" link has a unique identifier, it would be so easy to track the impacts between SEO & PPC, or see if certain terms result in more traffic) We can't get the info we need from traditional tracking tools, and this has given me a different way of thinking about it.
Thank you!
A note on the topic is that some tools now argue they are able to track a "view" of a display add with a later conversion, no matter what the source of entry to the page was, before the actual conversion.
Have you ever heard of anything like this?
I found this very hard to believe since it would mean tracking of things I thought was "untrackable" like scrolling on a page and so forth.
I'll figure out the name of the tool and drop it in the coments, if it does work it could potentially "solve" parts of the challenge you are discussing.
Just found a pretty good case study via the IAB re cross media integration:
https://www.iabuk.net/en/1/crossmediaintegration.html
They say
"One of the key findings was that when Sky’s media campaign included both online and offline advertising (from September to November 2005) the strongest result was achieved online. Searches for the Sky brand increased 20% and searches for the Sky URL more than doubled. To underline the difference made by an integrated campaign, when an offline campaign ran without the integration of an online campaign in March and April 2005, the same lift in searches did not occur."
Hope this helps :)
How did I miss this? I'm so sorry to be so late to the party :)
I really *love* stuff like this - it's traditional marketing - which is the sector I used to inhabit - so it feels a bit like coming home.
It's all a bit 'soft' when it comes to metrics, but back when I worked in betting and gaming we used to measure both prompted and unprompted brand awareness amongst our target market.
Perhaps unsurprisingly we found a direct correlation between advertising spend and brand awareness.
I don't think it's a great leap to suggest that brand awareness is likely to lead to increased branded searches.
I think it's also widely accepted that branded searches tend to convert at a significantly higher rate than your typical search query.
In terms of how do you measure it? Perhaps run PPC and online display; PPC, online display & offline display; & online & offline display only and compare the figures. However this would obviously only work if your product / service wasn't seasonal in nature.
In a world where 90% of SEOs barely ever "really" look at Google analytics itself (forget marketing analytics) it is refreshing to see more permanent marketing related articles from you. Keep up the good work Will.
Thank you. It's only just occurred to me that Rand's post from last night covered PPC and now here's me talking about display advertising... Sorry for the interruption to your regularly scheduled SEO content....