Web/Tech

March 20, 2008

SES New York 2008 Conference Highlights

Seslogo The Search Engine Strategies (SES) New York Conference & Expo got under way this week at the Hilton New York, officially kicking off on Mon. March 17th and ending today, Thurs, March 20th. According to Forrester's Five Year US Interactive Marketing Forecast, search marketing is extremely important today and is expected to triple in the next 5 years to over 25 billion.  So, I decided to head down to NYC for this once-a-year event and was fortunate to be able to attend for two days. They included me as press since Adotas is the official online publication that I'm covering the conference for as well

SES New York is the largest show in the SES global series and is a must attend event for marketers looking to gain insights and knowledge from experts in the Internet and search industry. A total of over 60 sessions were offered across a wide variety of topics and experience levels that started with search fundamentals and then also included specialized tracks such as social search, local, advertising, multimedia and contextual ads. Some of these topics were on the agenda last year and it was noted that there will most likely be new ones next year that aren’t on our radar yet. The Expo Hall officially opened on Tuesday morning which included over 135 sponsors and exhibitors that we could chat with as well.

Bigswitchcover2thumb I choose Tues. and Wed. as the days to attend and tried to absorb as much as I could from all the experts there. I'm sorry to say that I missed the SES/St. Patty's Day PUB CRAWL on Monday evening that took folks bar hoping to seven different pubs. I flew into JFK on Tues. morning and actually made it to the Hilton before the 9am conference welcome and opening keynote from Nick Carr, author of The Big Switch: Rewiring the World from Edison to Google. Kevin Ryan, our host from SES for the event, introduced Nick and informed us that his book had just made #5 of the New York Times Best Seller list. Nick is also the former executive editor of the Harvard Business Review and writes and speaks on technology, business, and culture.

Nick started off saying that he thought it was hard to be the first slot in the morning after the biggest alcoholic holiday of the year. Kevin had previously commented about consuming a bit of alcohol the previous night. Nonetheless, all seemed awake and very interested in Nick’s topic. Nick stated that we’re at a major turning point in the history of computing and how we use computers. Economics, not technology, actually determines the way companies behave and what we do. Nick gave us a history lesson going back to the late 1800’s when the first water wheel was created to generate power. He continued on with explaining how the utility companies came along shortly after that and during the course of a 20 year span ended up supplying 80% of our power. 

The change we are now experiencing today is in deploying computing centrally, similar to how the utility companies did with power. This “cloud utility computing” model is not a new topic, but suddenly something that is seen as very possible as well as inevitable. After hearing Nick’s comparison to power generation I had a much better understanding of this topic including the term "virtualization" which is basically turning physical computing into software. Today the computer grid that can distribute over a network is now finally at the point that it’s catching up with computers.

So, a computer revolution is at our doorsteps. The major benefit to companies will be economies of scale in which they will no longer have to run and manage their own IT systems. However, it also means these companies will need to employ less people. The other growing trend today is user-generated content that companies can also tap into instead of developing their own content. On top of the fact that we are getting accustomed to having more and more highly personalized content served up to us which is based on our past behaviors. So, Nick asks, will this lead to the polarization of society? And of course there is the entire privacy issue that we’ve now been dealing with based on all the information that we have at hand, and will just continue to have more and more of. Nick ended his discussion by asking the question, which side are you on – the controlling or the liberating?

Orion_panel After lunch on Tuesday there was the “Orion Panel” on Universal Search that discussed how search, marketing and information seeking is changing the industry which included new research data from comScore. The panel consisted of:

Google Universal Search not only searches the Internet for text, but also videos, images, news, maps, weather and more. The data presented by comScore showed that of the 1.2 billion total search queries from a week in January within the U.S., 220 million contained a Universal Search result. This equated to 58% of the 87 million people searching seeing a Universal Search result. Of those searches, video and news had the highest share. The panel discussed the fact that Universal Search is turning Google search result pages more into media destinations. They concluded that organic search is becoming more and more important and paid search is going to become even more competitive.

The afternoon included sponsored sessions from some of the big companies such as Google, Microsoft, Omniture, HitWise and Medio. I choose Google’s session which was on their Analytics and Web Optimizer products. Analytics appeared to be one of the most popular session topics this year which I found out by making the mistake of entering this session late and being left with standing room only. So, I didn’t get a very good overview since I could hardly see the screen. I’m hoping to get a copy of the presentation and then spending more time using both of these products to help raise my own organic search rankings. 

Day 3 on Wednesday morning got underway with the keynote: Search Has Changed Everything... And So Can You by Gordon McLeod, President of The Wall Street Journal Digital Network. Gordon discussed how the WSJ slowly, but surely, changed how they do business. They now have increased their organic search results by 33% which is more than double since Oct. ’06. Part of this has been by expanding their free online content which has consisted of mostly lifestyle and sports articles. As Gordon stated, the WSJ is basically a content company, not a technology company, but they are learning how to use technology better. Currently they have 1.1 million subscribers and 14.7 million monthly visitors which Gordon wants to see both areas grow. Part of their strategy to obtain this is to have ongoing SEO training throughout the company…"It’s not a project anymore”.

The session tracks on Day 3 include Fundamentals, Stats & Research, Social Search, Vertical & Retail and The Click Z Track. I followed the Social Search Track and the first session was a great one titled Social Media Marketing - What is it and What is it Good For? It featured five panelists including Jory Des Jardins, Cofounder & President of Strategic Alliances of BlogHer - which happens to be the next event in NYC that I'd like to attend in a couple of weeks. I could write an entire post just on this session alone, which I probably will do. There were some great case studies shared on brands that have integrated social media into their marketing mix and have received success. The overarching teaching that all the panelists tried to pass on to the audience is that social media is not about just throwing out a message to an audience but instead it’s all about relationships and the conversation. You need to invest the time to do it right.

Wednesday’s afternoon keynote was with Jason Calacanis, founder and CEO of Mahalo.com, which is a human-powered search engine focused on the top English-language vertical search terms such as travel, products, news, entertainment, sports, food, and health. Jason was also the CEO and cofounder of Weblogs, Inc., a network of blogs that he sold to AOL in Nov. ’05 and then was appointed SVP. Jason has an especially open communication style and speaks to people very much on Twitter, which at one time he became the most followed person in the world. He even shared with us his cell phone number, which I won’t divulge here since he said he’s had some “stalking” issues.

I had to head out during the middle of the next Social Search session which was all about social media research…a great application. Unfortunately Jet Blue had called and left a message on my cell phone that my flight was canceled. I was planning on taking a late, last one out flight that evening. So I called them and they got me on an earlier flight. The weather was a problem for everyone traveling and my “earlier” flight actually got me home just about 10 minutes before my “late” flight was originally scheduled to. I was trying to explain to the Jet Blue agent that the message they left me was to call 1-800-Jet-Blue, but I couldn't easily do that because letters on smart phones don't all match up to a number. So, the letter "J" isn't the number 5 on my phone as it is on her phone, instead I have a $ with the caps on. It took her awhile to get it. I don't know if she'll pass the word to the Jet Blue marketing folks as I asked her to do. They certainly aren't the only brand that hasn't figured this out yet. And I'm sure I'm not the only traveler that's had this problem either.

Overall I’d say the conference was very successful. I did not get actual attendance numbers, but it appears to be the same as last year, around 8,000 people. They tried some new formats this year and they did do a good job of staying on schedule and leaving some time for Q&A’s at the end of the sessions. However, there never seems to be enough time for these and when they end you always have the race up to the front of the room if you want to talk with any of the speakers. I do have to say though that the majority of speakers appeared to be very accessible. It’s definitely an event I would recommend and after all, it is New York. Check out more about the conference on the SES Blog as well.

March 12, 2008

I'll Be At Search Engine Strategies New York

Seslogo The report from Forrester on the Five Year US Interactive Marketing Forecast that I just wrote about really stressed the fact that Search Marketing is extremely important today and will just continue to grow in its significance. So, on that note, I'm off to attend the Search Engine Strategies Conference & Expo in New York next week. It's being held at the New York Hilton starting on Mon., March 17th till Thurs, March 19th. SES is part of Incisive Interactive Marketing, the marketing services division of Incisive Media that also includes Search Engine Watch and the ClickZ Network .

I'm planning on spending two days there, Tues. & Wed., to learn as much as I can from the experts. So, I'm sorry to say that I'll be missing the SES/St. Patty's Day PUB CRAWL on Monday evening that will take folks on a bar hoping event to visit seven different pubs. It's been a long time since I've been in New York on St. Patty's day, but I still remember how crazy it gets.

Bigswitchcover2thumb_2 The conference welcome and opening keynote on Tues. morning is from Nick Carr, author of The Big Switch: Rewiring the World from Edison to Google. I guess it's natural that Google's name be in the opening keynote for a conference focused on SEM.

Nick is a former executive editor of the Harvard Business Review and writes and speaks on technology, business, and culture. His bio states that his book examines the future of computing and its implications for business and society. Since 2005, he has published the popular blog Rough Type. He recently wrote in it that he was pleasantly surprised to see The Big Switch listed in the Wall Street Journal business bestseller list, at Number 5 - just behind Good to Great and just ahead of Who Moved My Cheese? - another book to add to our reading list. In 2005, Optimize magazine named him one of the leading thinkers on information technology, and in 2007 eWeek named him one of the 100 most influential people in IT. So, I'm looking forward to hearing Nick speak. I hope my plane is on time since I'm coming in that morning from JFK.

After Nick's talk the Expo Hall officially opens which has over 135 sponsors and exhibitors to chat with. Then starting at 11 am they offer the first of five different sessions that each follow a different track that you can follow for the day. They are: Fundamentals; Conversion; Local; Advertising; and Contextual Ads. I'm not sure yet where I'll start.

After lunch there's a panel session on universal search that will discuss how search, marketing and information seeking is changing the industry that follows the search and will include research data available only at SES. Panelists gurus for this include:

Day 2 ends with a networking reception back in the Expo Hall.

Day 3 on Wednesday morning gets underway with the keynote: Search Has Changed Everything... And So Can You by Gordon McLeod, President of The Wall Street Journal Digital Network. Gordon will discuss how the WSJ changed how they do business in a search driven world and the session promises us a better understanding of how making the right moves can help make the most of this dynamic universe. Basically it will hopefully explain how we all need to combine the best of the old with the new marketing of today.

The names of the session tracks on Day 3 include Fundamentals, Stats & Research, Social Search, Vertical & Retail and The Click Z Track. I'm very interested in the Social Search Track which includes a session titled Social Media Marketing - What is it and What is it Good For? that features Jory Des Jardins, Cofounder & President of Strategic Alliances of BlogHer - which happens to be the next event that I'm planning on attending in a couple of weeks.  

The afternoon keynote that day is from Jason Calacanis, founder and CEO of Mahalo.com, a human-powered search engine focused on the top English-language search terms which include verticals such as travel, products, news, entertainment, sports, food, and health. Prior to this Jason cofounded and was the CEO of Weblogs, Inc., a network of popular weblogs that was sold to AOL in November 2005. Upon joining AOL, he was appointed SVP. In addition, he was named general manager of AOL's Netscape and was responsible for the July 2006 relaunch of the browser as a social bookmarking news site.

I'm going to head back home on Wednesday night, so I'll miss Thursday's keynote speaker which is Andrew Tomkins, Chief Scientist at Yahoo! Research. Andrew's research over the last eight years has focused on measurement, modeling, and analysis of content, communities, and users on the World Wide Web. I'm sure it will be very informative, but my head would probably have enough information to absorb by that time anyhow. Anyone sitting in on this feel free to send me some comments.

So, I'll be reporting back next week when I return on how the conference was and some of the highlights and take-aways. I'll also be writing an article for Adotas to feature since I'll be covering the conference for them as well. If you're planning on being there on Tues. & Wed. please drop me a note so that we could perhaps meet or just look for me there and say hello. I'm really looking forward to this conference and I'm sure I'll walk away with a ton of new knowledge.

December 28, 2007

OfficeMax's Elf Yourself Site Hopes to Reach 100M

This pretty much wraps up my posts regarding 2007 interactive holiday promotions. The most popular post I wrote appears to be the post on the OfficeMax Elf Yourself Holiday Promotion which has gotten quite a bit of traffic just on my blog. After I wrote the post I was contacted by Beth at EVB, the San Francisco based digital content marketing agency behind Elf Yourself and Scrooge Yourself, who collaborated with partner agency Toy NY.

Beth informed me that Elf Yourself has now become the most viral campaign on record. It's been spreading rapidly since it was launched on November 20th and the numbers continue to climb.They're hoping it will reach 100M before they take the site down. Here are some statistics Beth shared with me that cover a three week period, up to Dec. 13th:

Elf Yourself 2007 Statistics (three weeks-11/20/07 to 12/13/07)
- Over 74 million people have visited site
- Over 50 million people have created "elves"
- 40 elves are being created per second
- Users have spent a combined 950 years on website
- Top 10 "Movers & Shakers" site on Alexa rankings
- Featured on CNN American Morning & ABC World News

Compare this year's promotion to last year when it first launched:

Elf Yourself 2006 Statistics (five weeks - 12/1/06 to 1/7/07)
- Over 36 million visits to site
- Over 11 million elves created (41,000 per hour at its peak)
- Over 79,000 MySpace hits
- Users spent a combined equivalent of 600 years on the site
- Fastest mover on the Alexa rankings, reaching 267 most visited site
- #2 on Entertainment Weekly "Must List"
- Over 100 User created videos on YouTube
- Over 2 million Google search results

So if you're one of the very few who haven't "Elfed Themselves" or haven't seen someone who has, you better get over to the site now before it's gone for another year. Those that I've shared my elf with thought it was hilarious and either elfed themselves or passed it on. So the question now is, what will they do to top this next year?

December 26, 2007

Absolut, Beam Pair Up to Help Spread Holiday Cheer

Well I hope everyone had a nice, relaxing Christmas day. It was a very enjoyable day around our house which consisted of playing video games (my daughters got Guitar Hero 3 from Santa) watching a movie on DVD, partaking in some old-fashioned family conversation and of course consuming some good food and wine.

'Tis the season to share some holiday cheer together, so as we start to wind down 2007 andUntitled2 finalize our plans to celebrate the New Year there's probably a party or two next on our schedule. My overview of holiday promotions wouldn't be complete without including something from our alcohol beverage marketers. So, here's an interactive holiday season online campaign that's designed to help party hosts "Make it Memorable" as well as guide guests on what to bring to the party.

Beam Global Spirits & Wine and The Absolut Spirits Co. have partnered to create www.4Cocktails.com that offers both holiday entertainment tips and gift ideas. Cathyriva_2 It features Cathy Riva, host of the “Party Girl” program on cable’s Discovery Home Network, who shares entertaining tips that will "wow" guests and bring "joy to the world" – or at least to the party! Tips are included on a web page they've titled "Cocktailtainment", which reminds me a little of the word "Retailtainment" Wal-Mart coined a few years back.

Riva is also featured in periodic online chat segments to help solve such consumer party problems like what to do when a host runs out of food or drinks. Visitors can also engage in live online chats with other cocktail experts who share their expertise such as Jacques Bezuidenhout, a bartender from the San Francisco area with more than 16 years of experience from around the world. Plus at the peak holiday times (like now) visitors can get live help by calling a special phone line, 1-877-4Cocktails.

“With more than two-thirds of adults 21 and older attending up to five parties during the holiday season, it is no surprise that there is some anxiety associated with the holiday,” Beam U.S. Marketing Vice President Victor Rutstein said in a statement. “4Cocktails is a smart approach to educating consumers about holiday entertaining.”

Eggnog The Web site also offers a searchable directory of drinks recipes highlighting brands owned by Beam and Absolut such as Jim Beam Bourbon, Absolut Vodka, Cruzan Rum, Plymouth Gin, Starbucks Liqueurs and DeKuyper Cordials. Currently the seasonal holiday drink featured is Maker's Mark Holiday Egg Nog. There is also an online drink calculator that helps to estimate the liquor needs for the size party a host is planning.

So cheers, salute, salud, slainte. Happy New Year and as they all say, remember to be safe and drink responsibility. 

April 16, 2007

PMA Conference Update - Howard Draft on how the Draft FCB Agency Model is Changing

Well we arrived back home over the weekend after our family trip to Myrtle Beach to be blessed by the arrival of a Nor'easter pounding the coast. It's brought us very wet and icy snow to Western New York this morning. Gotta love Spring Time. Well, at least we arrived home safely before the bad weather hit. Can't say the same for many people stranded in airports today.

I've been catching up on my reading since back and there is quite a bit of chatter going on regarding Google's announcement on Friday to acquire Double/Click. An article on MediaPost by Laurie Peterson quotes Jordan Rohan, Internet analyst and managing director at RBC Capital Markets: "Search and display on the Internet are converging. The evidence is everywhere. The lines between search and display are faint today and will be gone tomorrow." I thought this was a great lead in to the post I started to write on the way home in the car in which I pulled from notes I had taken at the PMA's Annual Conference that I attended a few weeks ago in Chicago.

Drafthoward Howard Draft, Chairman and CEO of Draft FCB, started the second day of the conference with a discussion entitled "How Integrated Agency Structure is Changing Everything". Howard started off saying "we must kill the word integration as well as all the lines in today's agencies". Tom O'Keefe, Chief Creative Officer for Draft FCB Chicago Office joined Howard on stage and added that "the answer" is focusing on what you have to say and who to say it to. The more focused and precise we are, the better the creative."

As with many of Double Click's clients who will be very apprehensive about Google taking over, so were many of Draft's clients when they merged with FCB. They had taken a direct marketing agency and merged it with a traditional agency. Howard said he had to personally visit the top 25 accounts of both agencies and assure them that they will now have an agency that's best for their business, not an agency that specializes in one function or another. Clients are not organized by the specialty model, so why should they work with agencies this way.

So Draft FCB has been working on changing the model. They bring in the right creative people at the right time and have team members that have specialties. They're building rooms in their office were the five people on the team will work on the account, not just the account person. They have brought the media planning function back into the agency.

Howard continued to say "the world of marketing going forward has no lines and agencies have to have no lines. The world changes too quickly, it's now global, it's flat, so we have to destroy the lines and not create silo's. The Draft FCB University is working on creating holistic people who now need to know all categories and also work with specialists".

Google's CEO Eric Schmidt said when announcing the deal on Friday with Double Click "Users will benefit by seeing more targeted and relevant ads; online publishers will get access to more advertisers to monetize inventory; and agencies and advertisers will get a new way to manage search and display ads in one place, with a common set of metrics."

So, it's really coming together quicker than even Howard Draft probably thought when he made his comments at the conference. But as he summed it up "we have to get it right, or else what's the value that we bring to our client's business. We have to constantly change our business model in order to keep up. It all comes back to the work...change to make it better." I'm sure the teams at Draft FCB we'll be discussing this week how they need to now change it even more to keep up with Google.

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