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Thursday, January 27, 2005

Can Internet Searchers Tell the Difference?

A new study from Pew Internet and American Life Project reveals that online searchers may not differentiate between organic and paid search results.

The study also showed that searchers tend to find one engine they like and stick with it (useful info for advertising if you know what engine the majority of your market uses). The study sample tended to use one engine to get search results and then compared their findings within those results, rather than switching from engine to engine.

Some 44% of searchers surveyed regularly use just one engine, and another 48% use just two or three. Nearly half of searchers use a search engines no more than a few times a week, and two-thirds say they could walk away from search engines without upsetting their lives very much.

The most disturbing information comes from the fact that most of those surveyed said that they trust their favorite search engines, but few said they are aware of the financial incentives that affect how search engines perform and how they present their search results.

Only 38% of users are aware of the distinction between paid or sponsored results and unpaid results. And only one in six say they can always tell which results are paid or sponsored and which are not.

This finding is ironic, since nearly half of all users say they would stop using search engines if they thought engines were not being clear about how they presented paid results. "

From these results, marketers may want to take another look at which engines are generating most traffic for their campaigns, and the demographics associated with those search engines. For the longest while, the wisdom was that searchers trusted organic results more than paid or sponsored results, but if it turn out that the searchers really can't tell the difference, than all bets are off...

You can download the full report here

Friday, January 14, 2005

Blogging: Marketing with Words

A big buzz in marketing these days is "inter-activity", and blogs are one of the easiest ways to involve your audience. Marketing is so often a "push" affair, but blogs allow the reader to provide public feedback at the push of a button. It involves your audience in a most immediate way. Blogging fosters the building of a mutually responsive relationship - one that is essential for trust-building. As the level of confidence grows between a blog and its readers, so does the potential for lucrative, new business activity.

Most readers of blogs prefer to hear the author's "real" voice, so blog writers can relax a little about syntax, grammar and spelling. This makes a blog a wonderfully low-pressure way to supplement your brand image. And low-cost too.

Do you have a blog in your marketing arsenal?

Friday, January 07, 2005

Consumers Respond Favorably to E-Mail Marketing

Consumers actually prefer e-mail marketing compared to TV advertising.

In a recent study by IPT, when asked to pick the most effective marketing communication channel, 32% of consumers say e-mail, not far behind the 39% that choose television.

And what makes them click? Discounts or money-off offers drew the greatest response (27%) but was closely followed by "General interest in the product".

This is good news for those marketers who take the time and the trouble to establish a targeted e-mail list. And once again proves that it's not the medium; it's the message!

Full story here