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Perhaps the online community
today is not so different from Don Quixote chasing after
windmills, mistaking them for giants. Excessive web
browsing might yield more or less similar symptoms of
lunacy as those displayed in Quixote's mad adventures.
If the web were to appoint
godfathers, Michael Saavedra Cervantes, Don Quixote's
inventor, would be a very appropriate candidate. Already
the founding father of European literature, his one and
only book's structure is not too dissimilar to the myriad
of modern cyber texts.
For starters, you often
don't know where Quixote and his squire Sancho end one
adventure or where they begin another. Also, Don Quixote
offers an abundance of contradiction, imagination beyond
what is ordinary, subplots here there and everywhere. And
this is not where the comparison ends. There's even
interaction between the author and the characters without
it seeming to be a violation of the characters or of the
story itself.
It's a bit ironic that
despite high technology and the 500 years or so that have
gone by since the book was published haven't made us
invent a clearer concept of interactivity. Today, people
interacting with their search engines are having a hard
time actually finding efficiently what they are looking
for. At the same time, companies run huge financial risk
if their websites fail to secure high rankings in search
engines. Where's the interactivity that actually connects
efficiently all the time?
To stand out from the crowd
in cyber space, you need a well-thought out concept. But
where to begin? Researching the status quo of internet
marketing is a good starting point because the marketing
guys are there to bridge the gap between companies and
customers.
The main theme of marketing
studies at the moment is customer research. A lot more
money gets spent on consumer behavior than before the
deflation of the dotcom sector. The trend is driven by
companies turning to quantitative analysts to find hard
and decisive numbers about their actual consumer markets.
Here goes, the more you can
fragment a market, the better one's chances (of controling
it). Nothing new. What is new is the way marketers are
devouring the data, dissecting it like biologists would
owl droppings. Hopefully, interpretations of the findings
are not exactly stomach turning but contributing to better
interactive patterns.
So this is where we are -
at the beginning of an understanding-based approach of
customers. The trend has been termed 'new marketing' or
'behavioral marketing'. Wonder how companies are dealing
with this? If you may believe the experts, companies are
aiming to gradually reach higher click/sales conversion
rates from their marketing campaigns, rather than going
for quick sales. Apparently, the focus is more long term
and on an increased understanding of what brings buyers to
their decision.
Marketers say it's back to
the drawing board throughout the bank. The very beginnings
of the buying funnel are now researched in greater depth.
This is good to keep in mind when you are getting to grips
with cyber culture. Search behavior is the focus of a lot
of market research, if only because so much information
that comes out of this has yet to be capitalised on.
But marketers have a hard
nut to crack here. Our search behavior is very difficult
to describe in words, let alone pour data on it in models
and derive a sensible meaning from it. "Searching has
become such an intuitive function, we tend not to give the
actual search process much thought", writes Gord
Hotchkiss from Enquiro, a US firm that specialises in
people's search behaviour.
The company's research into
the way people browse for stuff is so simple you would
think most of the findings would have been included in
assumptions some five years ago. Yet many marketers were
reported to be astonished at the findings. It appeared
that it is very unlikely that two people perform identical
searches even if they are looking for the same thing.
Other firms confirm Enquiro's experiment. iProspect
conducted a survey that pointed out that search engine
click through behavior can only be categorised by a few,
very vague, denominators; gender, education, employment
status. The study also underlines that frequency of
internet use and internet experience are factors here.
It makes the frantic hype
around getting the search engine top rankings on a handful
of keywords look a bit expensive. Yet, half the competion
battle is won by being somewhere first. So companies, even
though they don't know exactly where they are, will
monopolise all those keywords they deem useful. Huge
portions of marketing budgets are spent on the purchase of
search keywords.
The result is the
commercialisation of search engines. This is going on with
rapid speed, and they are increasingly seizing significant
portions of companies' marketing budgets.
Pay Per Click-only engines
are starting to attract large numbers of listings. The
main risk is failure of conversion of the increased
traffic into sales.
Not everyone is convinced
of the merits of Pay Per Click campaigns. Garrick Saito
who is one of many small business owners on the web says
his company Respree.com,
selling reprints of art works, largely abandoned his
campaign. "I still use Pay Per Click today for a very
limited purpose, bidding on terms that I will only pay
$.01 per click on. Of course, the traffic is not nearly as
great as if you were to bid $.25 or $.50 per click, but
then again, the advertising dollars don't add up nearly as
fast either", he says.
Saito is one of many small
business owners that are looking to optimise free organic
listings by changing search keywords. It is his experience
here that enables him to do that somewhat effectively and
without the help of an outsider. "I am trying to
optimise my pages so my products, categories and artists
rank well", he says. Saito is not sure if his own
company is representative of his branch. "I can see
competitors with deeper financial resources spending money
(perhaps a lot of money) on PPC campaigns and other
placements. However, [...] the larger players are more the
exception than the rule," he says.
So the commercialisation of
search engines might not necessarily be succeeding in
attracting small to medium size businesses, the vast bulk
of the internet population. But the free lunch is probably
over very soon come what may. Search Engine Trends reports
that demand for free listings has recently risen in
relation to what the engines offer; demand for free
listings is 80% and what is offered is 75%.
Companies wanting
reasonable visibility might soon have to fork out. Further
evidence to this point is this; 44% of search engines
offers paid listings, whereas demand is merely 4%. Pay Per
Click advertising is a similar story with 33% of the
engines offering this and demand at 4%. This looks meagre,
but if you think of it as a new trend, the 4% is quite
convincing.
Meanwhile, one wonders what
good the newly emerging order is to customers. How are we
going to see the forest amid the trees? A recent study
into the various kinds of searches people type into their
browsers are indicating consumers still are somewhat
overwhelmed by what they are offered, despite some five
years or so of experience with the medium.
Apparently, the more
questions you type into your browser, the more autonomous
a user you are, according to the sponsors of one such
study, ComScore Media Metrix. So called 'sophisticated'
markets include (in descending order) the UK, Canada, the
US, France and Germany. But even in these countries,
people are not overfacing their browsers with innumerable
questions. In the UK, people entered on average 40 queries
per month. And this is the highest scoring country of the
list.
Perhaps everyone wonders
where to start. Or maybe we've taken the web for what it
offers with most of our information sources safely
bookmarked and ready for use independently from the search
engines.
It's another question
whether companies are actually ready for intensified
relations with their customers. JupiterResearch found that
only one out of five companies that have access to
statistics on consumer behavior actually also optimise
their targeting.
Perhaps Don Quixote was not
so totally outlandish, trying to slay windmills - at least
he spotted them, went after them and changed his approach
rather than gave up when he discovered he was totally
mistaken!
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