Twitter Adds Custom Timelines, Enhances Mobile Ad Targeting
Notable updates via Twitter this week include custom timelines that let publishers leverage an API to create and share timelines around specific topics, and more granular mobile targeting for advertisers by device type and WiFi connection.
Google Claims Government Requests For User Information Have Increased Over 100% Since 2010
Google released an updated Transparency Report today, claiming government requests for user information have increased more than 100 percent since it began posting transparency reports in 2010. According to Google, this is the eighth update to its tran…
Google Quietly Rolls-Out “In-Market Buyers” Targeting To Reach Imminent Purchasers
Though it hasn’t been officially announced, Google has started rolling out a new targeting feature on the Google Display Network in AdWords called In-Market Buyers. Listed under Interest Categories, the new In-Market Buyers segments are designed to target visitors whose site visitation habits…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Flying in the face of ‘good’ grammar
With such an emphasis on great content these days, companies may be keen to tighten up their use of grammar. But before pledging allegiance to every grammatical rule going, it’s worth thinking about the ways in which you use language for a given effect.
Twitter analytics for free also they have opened the ad’s to SMBs
A new post from www.davidnaylor.co.uk. BAZINGA!
Why Obsessing Over One Keyword Could Sink Your Whole Site
If you focus all your SEO efforts on a single term with a “Page 1 or Bust” mentality, you’re putting your business and domain in jeopardy. Here’s why you should take a more diversified, comprehensive approach to keyword targeting and expansion.
Getting A Better Read On The Value Of Smartphone Paid Search
The increasing ubiquity of mobile devices has been a mixed blessing for paid search advertisers. On the one hand, most industry stats show smartphones and tablets driving nearly all Internet traffic growth, while volume from traditional desktop and lap…
Google AdWords Opportunities Section Improved
Google announced that after four years or so, they have upgraded the Opportunities tab or section within the AdWords interface
Keynote At SMX Israel: Google’s John Mueller
I am very excited to announce that John Mueller, a webmaster like you all, but now one of the most helpful Google webmaster representatives, will be the keynote speaker at SMX Israel this coming January 26th…
Google Now Adds News, Blogs, TV & More
Google quietly announced on the Android Google+ page an update to Google Now for Android users being pushed out now. The new features include news topics…
Dislike The Google AdWords Interface? Here Is How To Let Them Know.
Coco from the Google AdWords team posted in the Google AdWords Help forum that Google is looking for honest feedback on their Google AdWords interface.
Coco said…
Google’s Matt Cutts: Using Keyword Rich Words As Your Comment Name Can Be Spam
As someone who manages a content site with comments, there are things that bother me with some comments I get here. I dislike it when I see comments from people but they use their company name and/or keyword rich anchor text…
Google Now Adds TV, Movies, News Topics, Blog Posts, Waze Data, In Store Pick Up Reminders & More
Google announced improvements to Google Now for Android users. The new update brings more Google Now cards to Android users including: Website update card can bring you things like the latest post so you’ll never miss a story. News topic card brings you fresh articles from the web on topics you…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
3 Ways Competitive Analysis Can Help You Boost Rankings & Get Great Content Ideas
I’ve noticed that many digital marketers tend to keep their heads down, laser-focused on their own site’s position in the SERPs. Some do so more by necessity than by choice, because budgets and headcount are limited, and there is more than enough to do in moving their own websites up…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
4 Ways to Get Link Building Into Your Client’s DNA
Link building isn’t just some activity you do. It should be an integral part of all your activities, even outside regular marketing. Here’s how to get link building integrated into the DNA of your client’s daily activities for best SEO results.
Landing page review: are Apple and Amazon making the most of Christmas search traffic?
According to the data from Stickyeyes, it achieves twice the organic click share of second-placed Apple.
Technology review site TechRadar comes third with 7.87% of organic click share, which highlights the importance of online reviews for helping to guide consumer purchase decisions.

Amazon also dominates the paid search index with around 26% of click share, followed by Argos with 18%. Tesco, Apple and John Lewis complete the top five with around 10% click share each.
The aggregated results reveal the extent of Amazon’s search visibility for tablets and e-readers compared to its competitors.

To see how the top two retailers are taking advantage of this visibility, I took at a look at their organic and paid search landing pages when searching for tablets…
Amazon
Amazon appeared second in organic search for the keyword ‘tablet’ with a link to its category page. As one would expect from Amazon the page features a huge number of product recommendations based on bestselling items, accessories and ‘most wished for portable PCs’.
There are also filter options so shoppers can narrow the options by brand, price and ‘featured links’.
Amazon’s aggressive pricing is highlighted by the prominent banner for the ‘Christmas deals in electronics’ and the price reductions on all the products displayed on the page.
Overall there are definitely enough options to keep shoppers interested and edge them towards making a sale.

Looking at a PPC landing page, Amazon appears in the paid results on the right of the screen in a search for ‘iPad’.
The landing page features 16 of the most relevant iPad products, a range of filter options and suggestions for related searches.
Amazon also provides a summary of the most important details for each item, star ratings, options for new or used products, stock information and delivery details.

Overall it’s an excellent landing page and includes a range of features that will help to convince shoppers to make a purchase.
For more information on this topic, read our blog post on 14 ways to improve the UX of on-site search results.
Apple
Apple appears in first place in the organic results when you search for ‘iPad’, however I find its landing page to be quite underwhelming.
There isn’t an obvious call-to-action and it uses a carousel, which are proven to have little impact on sales and potentially damage the user experience.
There are options for each of Apple’s iPad products but it lacks the impact of Amazon’s tablet category page. Furthermore, there are three videos just beneath the carousel, the first of which is ‘Watch the keynote’.
Obviously Apple is eager to promote the fan culture around its products and create a sense of wonder and intrigue around its annual announcements, however I would suspect that the average shopper (e.g. my mum) wouldn’t have a clue what the keynote is about.

Apple’s iPad mini ad was the top PPC result in a search for ‘tablet’, edging a misguided ad for Tablet Hotels into second place. However it directs people to the same underwhelming landing page as the organic result for ‘iPad’.

It could be argued that Apple doesn’t need to put in as much effort to convert visitors as it has created the world’s most popular and iconic tech products that largely sell themselves.
However it’s still a bit disappointing to see Apple remain so aloof and disinterested when it comes to its ecommerce site, bearing in mind the amount of innovation that goes on within the company as a whole.
Top 9 Twitter PPC Opportunities and Challenges
Should PPC practitioners focus on Twitter as an emerging ad channel that can drive direct response metrics, or is its value largely brand in nature? Here are some major opportunities and challenges of leveraging Twitter as a scalable PPC ad channel.
Quick Wins With Google+
A new post from www.davidnaylor.co.uk. BAZINGA!
What will Google’s paid search ads look like in 2014?
The method
Dr Meyers launched “Project Algo Alert” last year, which would later become MozCast. The original intention was to measure fluctuations in keyword rankings, but this has evolved into various ‘weather’ stations.
One of those systems is Feature Alert, which detects when Google launches new search features. The Moz article explains this better than I could.
As Dr Meyers explains:
A side effect of the system is that, at large scale, it frequently catches Google in the act of testing new features and UI changes. Keep in mind that Google ran 7,018 “live traffic experiments” in 2012 – while we probably capture only a small number of them, these tests allow us to get a glimpse into what’s coming next.
While any given change may be rejected (Google launched just over 9% of the changes they tested last year), some changes appear repeatedly in testing and in different formats over time, strongly suggesting that Google is intent on launch.
Another area to look at is mobile. Google is anxious to repeat its desktop ad success on mobile, so it’s the focus for many UI experiments.
For example, the yellow text denoting paid ads was recently introduced on mobile, but Google looks to be bringing this to desktop search (see below).

How will Google change its ad formats?
Dr Meyers has provided us with a number of screenshots showing future ad formats.
Yellow ad labels
Here, the ads are marked more prominently with the yellow ‘ad’ text, something Dr Meyers believes is due to the EU settlement, rather than by choice.
However, while the ads are more clearly labelled, aside from that the ads look more like organic results, as if Google is trying to offset the effect of the label.

As on mobile, Google is also testing ads at the foot of the search results page:

Ads in slide deck
This is an interesting test, and could be a very big change. With Google’s Knowledge graph, we’re accustomed to seeing useful information related to searches here, such as this one for Newcastle Utd.

It seems that Google is now testing large paid placements in this area:

This is potentially a very big change, as these ads don’t really look like ads. In fact, Dr Meyers calls them ‘ads in sheep’s clothing’.
The product specifications make it look more informational than advertorial, and it could be that Google has been ‘training’ us to look for info on the right hand side to make it more likely that we’ll click there.
Insurance ads
Here’s another one, for insurance. While the ads have the familiar shading, the presentation is more informational than ad-like. This seems to have been tested and then rolled back:

Is Google attempting to make ads seem less like ads?
I have suspected that Google has tweaked the background of its paid ads now and then, seemingly to make the ad shading less visible, and therefore more like an organic result.
It has also been experimenting with banner ads for some brand searches, something which contradicted previous statements from Google.
Also, the ads for its insurance comparison have done away with the shading, making them a kind of hybrid paid/organic result.

Dr Meyers also predicts that Google may start to place ads within organic results, rather than sticking to the top and bottom of pages, as it aims to improve their effectiveness.
I asked him if Google is seeking to make ads less ‘ad-like’:
Conspiracies aside, the economic reality is that Google is a roughly $60bn company with over 80% of its revenue wrapped up in advertising, and the vast majority of that is click-based.
With consumer behavior on mobile evolving rapidly, there is tremendous pressure on Google to drive more ad clicks. At the same time, it’s under increasing scrutiny from US and EU regulators, so is fighting a difficult war right now. If Google has to give into the EU and label ads, then it’s going to be working hard to offset that with new tactics.
What do you think? Are these changes likely to happen? How will they affect paid search marketing?
USA Search Awards Results 2013
Due to all the recent jet-setting, this post is a little later than planned but we thought in honour of the UK Search Awards this evening, today is as good a day as any to update you with the USA results, wish a belated congratulations and wish tonight’s contestants GOOD LUCK! Huge thanks to Nicky […]
Post from Jackie Hole on State of Digital
USA Search Awards Results 2013