ad:tech San Francisco: Master Class Workshop: Kick-Ass Creative—Left Coast Style
Wednesday
May 6, 2009
Session Description: Leading Left Coast creative directors showcase a cross section of innovative digital and integrated work for multiple clients including the strategy behind each campaign and the related pieces that supported the work. Learn from these master class creative directors about how to inspire and harness the big idea in an increasingly digital world dominated by fragmenting media and attention spans. What customer insights and trends spark new ideas and how do leading creative directors factor in evolving trends such as on-demand media and user-generated content when developing campaigns? This is the place to be to see the latest examples of strategic and tactical creative thinking and execution.
This session took place Wednesday, April 22, 2009. The speakers:
- Conor Brady, Chief Creative Officer, Organic (Moderator)
- Niels Aillaud, Senior Manager Digital Marketing, LG Electronics
- Scott Briskman, VP, Executive Creative Director, Agency.com San Francisco
- Jared Cluff, VP, User Acquisition, Ask.com
- John Rabasa, Executive VP, Managing Director, Publicis Modem West
Unfortunately this sessions was really a long brag session from LG and Ask.com. While the television media they showed was funny and entertaining, I expected this “master class workshop” to actually teach me a few things. Maybe some tips on creating engaging creative? Nope. So I was pretty let down and I only have a few notes for you.
Bullet Point Review! LG Electronics:
- Markets may be conversations, but make sure you are invited.
- Social media is about two things: context and people.
- Participation is good but creative participation is better.
- A good campaign is organic and will want to keep going.
- If your brand is befriended (e.g. on Facebook or Twitter), be a friend back.
Ask.com:
- Positioned Ask.com as an answer engine.
- Video ads delivered an 80% reduction in CPC.
- Crawls were 4 times better – higher traffic than traditional 15 second spots.
- They were surprised by the top performing question they asked – Who is Kim Kardashian?
- The agency is not bringing ideas that are exciting to them just because they’re exciting – they’re bringing them because they make sense for their business.
SMX @ ad:tech: Paid Search Fundamentals
Tuesday
May 5, 2009
Session Description: Paid search lets you generate traffic from search engines by purchasing ads, usually on a cost-per-click (CPC) or pay-per-click (PPC) basis. This session covers the basics and current best practices of how to purchase placement from the major search engines, including the best ways to succeed with your ads, how to successfully measure performance and how to optimize your complete paid-search marketing strategies. Come join Danny Sullivan and several paid search experts in what promises to be an in-depth review of the paid search marketplace.
This session took place Wednesday, April 22, 2009. The speakers:
- Danny Sullivan, Editor-in-Chief, SearchEngineLand.com (Moderator)
- Mona Elesseily, Director of Marketing Strategy, Page Zero Media
- Chris Zaharias, VP, Search Sales, Omniture
- Nick Sheth, Director of Business Development, Gap Inc. Direct
Unfortunately the presenters talked really quickly, so I tried to get down as much as I could!
Bullet Point Review! Mona Elesseily:
- Get campaign architecture straight from the beginning.
- Think about keywords.
- Tap external sources.
- Proper tracking should be in place from the beginning.
- Is your company equipped to track?
- Define your PPC objectives.
- Tie the objectives to solid metrics.
- Tracking online conversion.
- Online order and pickup offline.
- Store location page.
- PPC local
- Focus on ad copy.
- Brainstorm.
- Product and Service descriptions.
- Calls to action.
- Offers.
- Features/Benefits.
- String things together after brainstorming.
- Brainstorm.
- Think “buying cycle”.
- Testing yields results!
- Get rid of extra information if it doesn’t impact conversions, doesn’t belong.
Nick Sheth:
- Know Your Trademarks.
- Register your marks with Google (including misspellings).
- Ensure you have clear, well communicated policy usage of marks by partners (affiliates, shopping engines, partners, etc.)
- Monitor your marks with a service
- Suggestions: AdGooroo, The Search Monitor, BrandVerity (I can personally vouch that this one is awesome), or Mark Monitor.
- Remember your domains (offensive and defensive).
- Suggestions: Alias Encore (which, again, I can personally vouch for), CitizenHawk.
- Hold domains that are even remotely related.
- Know Your Promotions & Offline Marketing Calendar.
- Calendar your promotions and share them with your agency and all digital marketing teams.
- Leverage offline marketing (buy terms, watch trends, use content ads).
- Finely tune search copy; don’t use blunt force – promotions should be relevant to your ad group.
- Work closely with marketing within your organization on all levels. Building trust is paramount to gaining the autonomy needed to execute quickly.
- Know Your Site.
- Landing page relevancy – right page for right copy and keyword.
- Product availability and assortment – consider using data feeds to automate.
- Dead pages – seems like common sense but there are a lot of ads out there that point to dead pages. Make sure you have internal tools and/or an agency to monitor pages.
- Know More About Your Site.
- Use on-site search to drive SEM & SEO.
- Use paid search to get ideas for SEO.
- Use SEO for paid search keyword ideas.
- Have a human review – don’t leave it all up to automation.
- Know What Works.
- Develop a culture of testing, including landing pages, copy, and promotions.
- Build a test budget into your annual P & L.
- Statistical significance is key.
- Maintain a testing plan that always has tasks and is consistent.
- Know Your Business.
- Understand your goals.
- Understand how you are moving the needle.
- Ensure you’re thinking about your portfolio optimization.
- Question branded search and answer: is it incremental?
- Look at everything holistically.
Chris Zaharias:
- Start -> key business requirements -> keyword research -> campaigns & ad groups -> syndicated strategy -> ad copy -> bid optimization -> analyze & conversions
- Business goals -> KPIs -> Optimization
- Use pre-defined metrics.
- Clicks, Impressions, Click-Through Rate
- Return on ad spend.
- Cost per Acquisition.
- Define and value customer metrics.
- Cart abandonment rate.
- Average Order Value.
- KPIs to measure branding.
- Multi-KPI Optimization.
- Search reacts to TV advertising.
- Measure across channels.
- There’s a myth that the long tail keeps growing – this isn’t true.
- The long tail is now in reverse.
- People are using search as navigation – i.e. they already know what they’re looking for but they go to a search engine to find it easily instead of typing in the URL directly.
- Assumptions:
- The long tail keeps growing.
- There’s 1001 things to do in search.
- PPC = Traffic Management.
- Listen to your search engine.
- Reality:
- Win the head, win the battle.
- Return on efficient, defined work flow.
- Pre & post-click are equally important.
- Search engine advise is often a contrary indicator.
I don’t have any notes from a question period, and I definitely don’t remember there being time for questions. Overall this was a completely useful session for me, given that I’m not an old hat at PPC marketing. It was presented very well and clearly thought out. I appreciated the slide presentations that all three presenters used and I only wish they’d shared them online somehow!
Affiliate Marketing Fanatics #6: ad:tech, Cafepress, and Hootsuite
Monday
May 4, 2009
Affiliate Marketing Fanatics – A Publisher (Mike Buechele) and an Affiliate Manager (Trisha Lyn Fawver) talk about all things Affiliate Marketing. From blogging to branding, social media to search, video and more!
We’re back after two weeks away. Here’s a rundown of what we ramble about this time around. In in this episode we discuss:
- Trisha is the newest member of Paulson Management Group.
- TweetDeck, Seesmic Desktop, Digsby, and Hootsuite.
- ad:tech San Francisco Recap.
- The enormity of the Affiliate Summit Beer Garden.
- Cafepress changing pricing structure to standardize pricing.
- CA tax development.
- Shout outs: Shawn Collins, Lisa Picarille, Todd Farmer, Angie Seaman, Brian Caldwell, Teresa Caldwell
So please, go check it out and comment and let us know what you think!
Affiliate Marketing Fanatics #6: ad:tech, Cafepress, and Hootsuite.







