Posts Tagged ‘Search’

  • Share

eMarketer Webinar: Integrating Search and Display—
Tactics for More Effective Advertising

Posted By:

David Hallerman

To listen and watch playback of the webinar, Integrating Search and Display—Tactics for More Effective Advertising, click here. You can view the PowerPoint deck below.

View more presentations from eMarketer

Join us for:

  • Tips on optimizing your online ad spending through effective integration of search and display
  • Best practices to increase conversion
  • Techniques for creating an attribution model that enables you to build and measure holistic display and search campaigns
  • Why it’s important to analyze the combined effects of display and search through the traditional purchase funnel

About David Hallerman

David Hallerman is eMarketer’s expert in US online advertising and marketing, covering search and display advertising, internet ad targeting, email marketing, online video advertising and ad spending across media. He is frequently quoted in top business publications and broadcast programs.

Sponsored by Knotice.

Posted: May 20, 2011. Filed under: Advertising,Case Studies,Display,eMarketer,Search,Webinars  
  • Share

Stat of the Day: Bing Not Making a Dent in Google’s Share of Search Revenues

Posted By:

Despite rapid gains by Microsoft’s Bing, Google’s share of the $13.59 billion US search advertising market will continue to grow in 2011, according to data released today by eMarketer. The company’s share of overall US online search revenues increased to 71.4% last year, as Google’s search revenues reached $8.83 billion in the US.

Search advertising revenues at Microsoft grew 47.4% to $1.26 billion in 2010, eMarketer estimates. This year, growth rates for the company won’t be quite as high, though eMarketer does expect Microsoft’s US search ad revenues to expand by 16.4% to $1.47 billion by the end of the year — which will push its share of overall search revenues to 10.8%.

“The US paid search market is more and more a two-company game,” said eMarketer principal analyst David Hallerman. “And yet there’s no real competition. Even though Bing is gaining revenue, Google’s share is still rising as the combined revenues at Microsoft and Yahoo! continue to fall.”

eMarketer expects Yahoo!’s share of the US search ad market to decline to 8.1% in 2011, with search revenues reaching $1.1 billion—down 14% from $1.28 billion in 2010.

AOL is expected to earn just $252 million in search revenues in 2011, down 11.5% from $285 million in 2010, according to eMarketer. The company’s share of the overall market revenues is expected to drop to 1.5% this year, compared to 2.3% in 2010.

You can read the full release on search advertising revenues at Google, Yahoo, Microsoft and AOL here.

Posted: March 1, 2011. Filed under: Advertising,Search  
  • Share

Mixed Tidings for UK Ad Spending

Posted By:

Recent weeks have brought a raft of estimates and forecasts for UK advertising spending in 2010 and 2011. For digital media, the news is excellent; for traditional channels, more sobering.

Spending on internet ads grew 10% in the first half of 2010, the UK’s Internet Advertising Bureau (IAB) declared in October. As reported by MediaTel, online spending came to almost £1.97 billion ($3.09 billion), or 24.3% of all UK advertising during the period.

According to the IAB, online display returned to healthy growth in H1 2010, with spending of £381 million ($598 million)—a rise of 6.4% compared to the first half of 2009. Banner ads accounted for 72% of the display market, or £272 million ($427 million), while pre- and post-roll video ads shot up to £20.7 million ($32.5 million), and display placements on social media sites contributed around £41 million ($64 million).

Display ad impressions (excluding video) rose even more steeply than spending between Q3 2009 and one year later, to judge by figures from comScore Ad Metrix. This suggests that advertisers were getting much better value for their display budgets in 2010, which doubtless encouraged more committed spending.

UK Online Display Ad Impressions, Q3 2009 & Q3 2010 (billions and % change)

Classified ads also staged a comeback in 2010, the IAB reported, climbing 11.4% to £379 million ($595 million) during the first half of the year. Paid search marketing rose by 8.9%, to claim 59.9% of all online ad spending, or just over £1,180 million ($1,853 million).

The IAB saw the double-digit rise in online ad spending as part of a more general recovery; by its calculations, total UK ad spending reached £8.1 million ($12.7 million) in H1 2010, 6.3% higher than spending in the first half of 2009.

The Bellwether report, issued by the Institute of Practitioners in Advertising (IPA) and accountancy firm BDO LLP, was less upbeat, noting that the ad budgets of UK marketers rose by an average 0.5% in Q3 2010—a marginal gain, though a welcome contrast to the 4.6% fall registered in Q2.

Like the IAB, the IPA found that the internet delivered the outstanding success stories, with spending on search up 9.9% in Q3 2010, and display spending up 13.3% compared with the previous quarter.

The IPA did point out that most of the 300 or so firms polled for the report were less optimistic about the financial prospects for their industries than in Q2. Moreover, the report’s author ventured that the strong economic performance in Q2 “likely marked the peak of the recovery cycle.”

Looking ahead to 2011, the latest Consensus Forecast from the World Advertising Research Centre (WARC) projected that worldwide ad spending will rise by 4.5%, following a gain of 4.4% in 2010.

Most of that growth will be driven by emerging markets, such as Brazil (where ad spending is predicted to leap 11.4% in 2011), China (13%), India (14%) and Russia (16.3%)

The UK and most other major European countries can expect minor gains by comparison. UK ad spending will rise 2.7% in 2011, said WARC, or just over half the 5% growth anticipated for 2010.

France and Germany will see 2% growth in total ad spending, while Spain will register a gain of 2.2%, after a decline of roughly 1% in 2010.

Globally, WARC foresaw average 2011 increases in Internet ad revenues (13%) far outpacing growth rates in traditional media (5.2% in TV, for example).

The UK, long a leader in internet advertising, will show the lowest growth rates, according to WARC. But even then, online ad spending will be an estimated 6.2% higher in 2011 than in 2010.

Most recently, key companies in the WPP Group, including agencies Ogilvy & Mather and Mindshare, raised their overall forecasts for revenue growth in 2011. According to CEO Sir Martin Sorrell, the revisions were based in part on WPP’s own 4.5% growth between January and October 2010. Group companies had earlier suggested that they anticipated expansion of between 3% and 4% in 2011.

Where does this leave UK ad spending, and online ad spending in particular? Some key aspects to keep in mind:

1. The economic situation remains volatile. In the past week alone, the UK has been buffeted first by news of another national financial bail-out in Ireland (the UK’s number one trading partner) and then by claims that the economy grew by 0.8% in the third quarter, and that spending cuts by the Conservative/ Liberal Democrat coalition government will not have as drastic an effect on public sector jobs as previously feared. The arrival of good and bad economic news in quick succession has been a hallmark of 2010, and looks set to continue as 2011 approaches. This uncertainty will weigh on advertisers, but most have little choice but to maintain spending at or above current levels. After the declines of 2009, further trimming might affect their market shares.

2. For the moment, the consumer mood is largely positive, buoyed by the prospect of Christmas. Many high street retailers—and several online players, including Amazon—are already offering mark-downs, and sales are healthy in many sectors. In the week ending November 13, the John Lewis group recorded sales of £76.93 million ($120.78 million), up 11.5% on the previous week, and 6.8% higher than the corresponding week of 2009. January may bring a less happy mood, however, as the holiday spirit recedes, some jobs are in jeopardy and value-added tax on most purchases goes up to 20%.

3. While growth in total ad spending may languish in the low single digits, there is little doubt that digital will again outpace traditional media, as in 2009 and 2010. Industry observers are unanimous in predicting that display (driven by sharply higher spending on video ads and social media placements) will gain further momentum, while paid search also thrives and mobile marketing moves up a gear.

Posted: November 30, 2010. Filed under: Advertising,Search,The Economy,UK,Worldwide  
  • Share

Online Ad Spending Buoyant in France and Spain

Posted By:

France and Spain saw robust growth in online ad spending during the first half of 2010, according to PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) and national Internet Advertising Bureau (IAB) organizations in the two countries.

In Spain, online spending reached an estimated €377.4 million ($525.7 million) in H1 2010. This was 20.3% higher than online ad spending in the first six months of 2009, and represented 13% of ad spending in all media. The IAB/PwC figure is almost exactly half the full-year estimate for 2010 produced by eMarketer, suggesting that our view of the market’s potential this year will be borne out.

 Comparative Estimates: Online Ad Spending in Spain, 2009-2014 (millions of €)

In France, digital channels are expected to claim 16% of all ad spending in 2010, but that will rise to 21% of total spending in 2014, IAB and PwC predicted. Online ad spending in the first half of 2010 passed €1 billion ($1.4 billion), according to several sources.

Display is enjoying a new lease of life in both France and Spain, according to IAB and PwC.

In Spain, for example, search commanded 52% of online spending in H1 2010, and total outlay on search rose 13.8% compared with H1 2009. But display was found to be growing more rapidly than search, for the first time ever, with spending up more than 28% year-on-year.

Cash-strapped Spanish advertisers typically opted for less expensive display options in early 2010. Embedded formats, including banners and skyscrapers, accounted for 51.3% of online display spending, while just 5.6% of expenditure went to expanding and floating formats.

Video advertising is crucial to rising display budgets throughout Europe, though spending levels and growth rates vary from one country to another. IAB and PwC forecast that rich media and video ads will double their share of French online revenues by 2014. In Spain, spending on video ads was up 100% in a single year. But the video ad market is inevitably much smaller than its counterpart in France, and constituted just 2.7% of online display ad spending in Spain during H1 2010.

New formats such as video encourage new measures of viewer engagement; these, in turn, are prompting marketers to rethink ad payment models. This revision is long overdue, according to PwC analysts. They found that 62.3% of display campaigns in Spain were booked on a CPM basis, while 15.3% used cost-per-acquisition or cost-per-action. Just under 13% ran for a fixed period of time and 7.3% were paid for cost-per-click. These approaches no longer reflect the reality of consumer interaction with digital media, said PwC.

For more information on recent trends in European online ad spending, read the eMarketer report, Western Europe Online Ad Spending: Leading the Recovery (October 2010).

Posted: October 26, 2010. Filed under: Advertising,eMarketer,market research,Search  
  • Share

Why Search Precedes Purchase Decisions for Canadian Moms

Posted By:

Online search is a fairly standard tool for finding anything from directions to a restaurant to conducting price and feature comparisons on a new refrigerator. So it’s no real surprise that Canadian moms head online to conduct research about potential purchases large and small. And in particular, they go online to learn more about consumer packaged goods (CPG) brands—ingredients, recipes and other stuff—prior to buying.

Research conducted by Google Canada and OTX in March and published in June indicates that 81% of Canadian moms are searching for information before they head to the store. Search is their No. 1 online source, followed by email, maps, retailer websites and social networking sites.

The study “Canadian Moms Click for CPG” surveyed 4,896 women ages 18 to 75 in Canada including 3,806 moms to find that 76% indicated that search engines helped them learn more about consumer packaged goods (CPG). Those items include food items (grocery and fast-food), baby and childcare products, household and personal care brands, appliances and more.

The data for Canadian moms vs. US moms reveals similar patterns, according to Chantal Rossi, industry manager for retail, Google Canada. For example, in the US, 50% of moms expect popular CPG brands to be at the top of the search results page vs. 51% in Canada and new moms tend to be online more frequently. Other similarities include moms preference for hopping online early in the morning and late at night: “Moms are digital snackers, they come online whenever they get a few minutes,” Ross says.

The bottom line? Rossi says the overwhelming majority of Canadian moms are researching online to influence an in-store purchase. “Consumers recognize that CPG brands and retail websites have information online and before they go into the store, they can gather important information.” The research, she says, verifies that moms’ purchase decisions are influenced by information they obtain online before they get into the store. “The shelf might be the first moment of truth, but online is the zero moment of truth,” Ross adds.

Posted: August 13, 2010. Filed under: Brands,Consumers & E-Commerce,CPG,Search  
Advertisement
Advertisement