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This morning I complained that Google AdWords demographic bidding was announced to be available to all advertisers but yet truly not available to all advertisers. At 7pm (EST) tonight, Google emailed me back, telling me it is now really live. And they are finally right. Here are screen captures of how demographic bidding works in the AdWords console:

Go to a campaign and click “edit campaign settings.” Then at the bottom right of that screen you should be able to see this option:

Google AdWords Demographic Bidding

Click on “view and edit options” by the demographic bidding section and you will be taken to a page to select how you want to bid higher for certain genders or ages, or exclude certain genders or ages from showing you ads.

The top message reads:

This summary shows ad performance for the last seven days on sites which offer demographic information. Those sites provided 0.0% of this campaign’s total ad impressions during that time. For statistics on all ad impressions for this campaign, see your campaign summary page.

Click Edit in any row to adjust your bid for that demographic group, or to hide your ad from that group.

Following that, here are the two options:

Gender:
Google AdWords Demographic Bidding

Age:
Google AdWords Demographic Bidding

Clicking on the “Edit” buttons opens up this dialog menu:

Google AdWords Demographic Bidding

Enter in the bid adjustment or if you want to exclude that demographic and click “apply changes”. As you update each of the options, the box on the right will change to show your “Resulting Combos:”

Google AdWords Demographic Bidding

I will be tracking the forums and advertisers feedback over the course of the next few weeks and report back with any results.

Keep in mind, there is still the “demographic targeting” option as well as this new “demographic bidding” option. Demographic targeting seems to use comScore data and is only available for placement targeted ads, whereas this new demographic bidding uses data provided to Google from sites they trust and seems to be available both on the search and content networks.

Forum discussion continued at DigitalPoint Forums.

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Here is a recap of what happened in the search forums today, through the eyes of the Search Engine Roundtable and other search forums on the web.

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Below is what happened in search today, as reported on
Search Engine Land and from other
places across the web.

From Search Engine Land:


  • Is Microhoo a Done Deal?

    Lately, a merger between Yahoo! and Microsoft is looking more and more probable. Not only have reports been flying around that Yahoo! and Microsoft are in negotiations, but Yahoo!’s SEC filing last week (Tuesday March 18 2008) has added significantly more fuel to the merger fire….

  • I Go Buy With A Little Help From My Friends

    My family was recently in Boulder, CO—a place we had hitherto not been. Nice town, but where to go? We spent most of our time at The Spot rock climbing gym because our kids were competing in the bouldering national championships. After a day of intense heart-stopping competition, with…

  • Court: Use Of Trademark In AdWords Copy Is An Infringement

    Eric Goldman commented on a case between one advertiser using another advertiser’s trademark in Google AdWords. The court has made a decision (PDF), ruling for the plaintiff, Storus, who sued Aroa for using their trademark in the AdWords title text. Eric Goldman said this is one of the first times…

  • Google AdWords Officially Launches Demographic Bidding? Maybe Not

    On Friday, Google announced they launched demographic bidding to every advertiser in the AdWords program. In short, demographic bidding allows advertisers to show their ads to specific age groups and genders. They did a beta launch of this earlier this year, where they dropped using comScore data for their own….

  • Google News Makes Commenting More Visible

    The Google News Blog announced that they have made two changes to the commenting feature, in order to make it more visible to their users….

  • Online Marketers: Stop Funding Virtual Blight

    Urban blight is easy to recognize: seedy liquor stores and payday lenders on alternating corners, trash-strewn lots and front yards, graffitti-covered buildings, crumbling sidewalks, broken glass, and billboards everywhere you look. Websites afflicted with virtual blight are just as easy to spot: banners promising hot sexy singles and cheating spouses,…

  • Google Deemphasizes Search In Experimental Mobile Interface

    Spotted over the weekend by Garrett Rogers, Google has quietly introduced a new, experimental mobile interface called “LCB” that emphasizes browsing instead of search. Something of a radical approach for Google, which is synonymous with search, the site allows users to get to results in top “local search” categories such…

  • A New Scourge For Yahoo: Affiliate Mapspam

    I’ve been writing about Mapspam appearing in both Google and Yahoo search results for some time now. Mapspam is where black hat SEOs spam local search and map listings, and like all black hat techniques, it seems to get more sophisticated as the search engines find ways to combat the…

Search News From Around The Web:

Applications & Portal Features

Business Issues

Local, Maps & Mobile

Link Building

Paid Search & Contextual

Searching

SEM Industry

SEO & SEM

Social Media

Video, Music & Image Search

Web Analytics

Other Items

Recent Hot Items From Sphinn, Our Social News Sharing Site:

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Paid Search - A Column From Search Engine Land

Lately, a merger between Yahoo! and Microsoft is looking more and more probable. Not only have reports been flying around that Yahoo! and Microsoft are in negotiations, but Yahoo!’s SEC filing last week (Tuesday March 18 2008) has added significantly more fuel to the merger fire.

Click to continue reading…

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by David Wallace

The

Dallas Business Journal
recently ran a story on one of our clients,
Wasp Barcode Technologies, describing
how they went from spending enormous amounts of money on PPC to focusing more on
traditional SEO and link building. The strategy paid off — Wasp spent less and
got better results. These are the kind of results every small to medium sized
business would like to enjoy.
 
Wasp cut its external spending by 13% and reinvested the funds into in-house
personnel, who “re-architected” the site so users would find it easier to use
and more relevant. Those steps meant optimizing the site for specific key words
such as “asset tracking” and “inventory control” and continuing to add richer
online content, including slide show presentations, Webinars and YouTube demos.
This strategy also including increasing the link popularity of the site by both
natural and aggressive means.
 
The efforts are paying off in a multitude of ways. In 2007, the company’s Web
hits grew by 60%, topping 600,000 visits. “The added visibility makes the
company appear large and established, and bodes well with resellers such as
Fry’s and Staples who rely on brand awareness to sell Wasp’s products,” Wasp
President Steve Coffman said. “It also helps Wasp reach small businesses, which
often turn to the Web for technology guidance.”
 
While a PPC campaign can deliver traffic with relative ease, it can be very
costly and has no real longevity — once you stop shelling out the cash, the
traffic goes away. SEO and link building require a lot more creative effort but
can have more sustainable results. It also allows a business to target a larger
base of users as most studies reveal that 75 - 80% of searchers click on organic
listings as opposed to paid listings.
 
Wasp learned this after spending considerable funds on Google AdWords and other
PPC programs. That is not to say that they did not learn from the PPC
experience. They most likely were able to gather intelligence on specific terms
searchers were looking for related to their products. They also very likely
learned how to improve conversions for each keyword search they attracted.
 
So the lesson to learn here is to lay your foundation with SEO, link building
and maybe even some social media marketing. If you have additional budget,
incorporate the PPC as well. However, don’t overlook the potential that a
strategic SEO and link building campaign has to offer in your web marketing
efforts.

Learn something from this post?
Come and experience Search Engine Guide style teaching in person! Join us for our first ever Small Business Marketing Unleashed Conference in Houston, Texas on April 21st and 22nd.

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by David Wallace

The

Dallas Business Journal
recently ran a story on one of our clients,
Wasp Barcode Technologies, describing
how they went from spending enormous amounts of money on PPC to focusing more on
traditional SEO and link building. The strategy paid off — Wasp spent less and
got better results. These are the kind of results every small to medium sized
business would like to enjoy.
 
Wasp cut its external spending by 13% and reinvested the funds into in-house
personnel, who “re-architected” the site so users would find it easier to use
and more relevant. Those steps meant optimizing the site for specific key words
such as “asset tracking” and “inventory control” and continuing to add richer
online content, including slide show presentations, Webinars and YouTube demos.
This strategy also including increasing the link popularity of the site by both
natural and aggressive means.
 
The efforts are paying off in a multitude of ways. In 2007, the company’s Web
hits grew by 60%, topping 600,000 visits. “The added visibility makes the
company appear large and established, and bodes well with resellers such as
Fry’s and Staples who rely on brand awareness to sell Wasp’s products,” Wasp
President Steve Coffman said. “It also helps Wasp reach small businesses, which
often turn to the Web for technology guidance.”
 
While a PPC campaign can deliver traffic with relative ease, it can be very
costly and has no real longevity — once you stop shelling out the cash, the
traffic goes away. SEO and link building require a lot more creative effort but
can have more sustainable results. It also allows a business to target a larger
base of users as most studies reveal that 75 - 80% of searchers click on organic
listings as opposed to paid listings.
 
Wasp learned this after spending considerable funds on Google AdWords and other
PPC programs. That is not to say that they did not learn from the PPC
experience. They most likely were able to gather intelligence on specific terms
searchers were looking for related to their products. They also very likely
learned how to improve conversions for each keyword search they attracted.
 
So the lesson to learn here is to lay your foundation with SEO, link building
and maybe even some social media marketing. If you have additional budget,
incorporate the PPC as well. However, don’t overlook the potential that a
strategic SEO and link building campaign has to offer in your web marketing
efforts.

Learn something from this post?
Come and experience Search Engine Guide style teaching in person! Join us for our first ever Small Business Marketing Unleashed Conference in Houston, Texas on April 21st and 22nd.

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The reports of Ask.com’s death have been exaggerated. The company remains committed to its search technology, and is not throwing in the towel, as many believe.

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by Mack Collier

Want more traffic to your blog?  Of course you do.  But how do you get
it?  It’s a question that many bloggers struggle with, but thankfully
there are several fairly easy ways you can start today to grow your
blog’s traffic.

Here’s ten quick and easy ways you can start boosting your blog’s traffic today:

1 - Develop a regular posting pattern, and stick to it.  This is an easy step that simply requires you altering your existing behavior.  Do some research into your blog’s traffic patterns.  If your blog is like most, you will probably find that you get the most traffic during the week, especially from Tues-Thurs.  So make a point to post on these days first.  If you can crank out more posts, then add in the next days based on traffic.  But you want to make sure that you have new content appearing on the days when your traffic is highest.  And once you start posting on those days, do your best to have new posts up EVERY week on those days.  If you want to have new posts up on Tuesday Wednesday and Thursday, that’s fine but make sure they are up every week so your readers are ‘trained’ to know when new content is coming.

2 - Create a series.  Let’s say you are a florist and you have a blog to help promote your business.  Every Wednesday (for example), you could have a new post on how to care and extend the life of your flowers once you get them home.  This way you know that you will have at least one post topic set for every week, and you can also run it on your best day for traffic.   
3- When it comes to links, be a giver.  Here’s a nice little exercise, go back over the last week, and count the number of blogs that have linked to yours.  Now go back to your blog and count the number of blogs that YOU have linked to over the same time-frame.   Are more bloggers linking to you, or are you linking more to others?  Get in the habit of looking for outstanding content that you can bring to the attention of your readers via links.   This not only means you will be creating better content on your blog, but you will be bringing your blog to the attention of other bloggers.  Which means they will be more likely to link to you rblog in the future.  Which of course means more traffic for you!  What you could also do is incorporate the ‘Create a series’ idea from tip #2 above, and say every Thursday have a post with links to other blog posts that you found interesting over the last week.

4 - Encourage comments and highlight your best ones.  Let’s be honest, when reading a blog post, many of us will scan to see how many comments it has received.  If a post has 8 comments, the odds are you will want to read the post, if for no other reason than to read the comments.  If your post has more comments, that means your readers are making its content more valuable, which means it has a better chance of being linked to.  Also if a reader leaves a really great comment that sparks more comments, add that comment to the end of your post, with a link to the reader’s blog (if they have one).

5 - Share your knowledge.  If you are exceptional good at something, anything, share your knowledge with your readers on your blog.  It can be anything from social media marketing to model-making to basket-weaving.  Even the most common-sense tips can work if just one reader can find value in your ideas.  Think of ways you can share your knowledge to help others.

6 - Contribute on other blogs.  Notice I said ‘contribute’ and not comment.  All comments are not created equally, and if you go to every A-list blogger in your industry and leave the same ‘Hey great post, thanks for sharing!’ comment, the blogger and that blog’s readers will all see right through you.  Instead, look for a way to actually contribute a meaningful point to an existing discussion.  This way you can actually learn something, and you will be helping to create valuable content for the blogger, which makes them FAR more likely to start commenting and linking to your blog. 

7 - Add your blog’s URL to your email sig and any profiles you have on other social sites.  This seems like common sense, but so many of us forget this simple step.  But it’s important because if you become a ‘power user’ on another social site, such as Twitter, then you are probably talking to a completely different community of people than those that read your blog.  So it only makes since to add a link to your blog so that these people that find you so interesting on Twitter, can follow your posts on your blog as well!

8 - Make it easy to bookmark and Digg/Stumble-Upon your posts.  Many bloggers have links at the end of every blog post that let you quickly and easily submit those posts to social-aggregator/bookmark sites such as Digg and Del.icio.us.  If you want to boost your traffic this is a great way to get your content in front of new eyeballs. 

9 - Blog about breaking news first.  Set up custom Google news searches for topics associated with your industry, so that you know about news as it breaks.  If you can get that hot news story on your blog first, you greatly increase your chances of boosting your traffic, and of also having that story become popular on aggregators such as Digg, Megite and TechMeme.  And sometimes it helps to just know the right people and contacts.  Remember what news source broke the YouTube acquisition by Google?  It wasn’t the Wall-Street Journal or CNBC, it was the blog TechCrunch.

10 - Let your reader have a say in the content you create.  Who better understands what content appeals to readers, than the readers themselves?  So what tips do YOU use to boost your blog’s traffic?  This list is hardly comprehensive, there’s bound to be dozens of tips and tricks that I didn’t mention that you smart people are already using with great success on your blogs.  What did I miss? 

Learn something from this post?
Come and experience Search Engine Guide style teaching in person! Join us for our first ever Small Business Marketing Unleashed Conference in Houston, Texas on April 21st and 22nd.

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Locals Only - A Column From Search Engine Land

My family was recently in Boulder, CO—a place we had hitherto not been. Nice town, but where to go?

We spent most of our time at The Spot rock climbing gym because our kids were competing in the bouldering national championships. After a day of intense heart-stopping competition, with thrills and spills set against a techno soundtrack and a backdrop of camaraderie and raucous cheering, we were ready for a fine dining experience in a relaxing restaurant.

Click to continue reading…

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According to Aaron Wall, since Mahalo adds no value (if you remove the links which point to other pages on the Internet), it violates Google’s spam guidelines.

While many people, particularly SEOs (who have been frustrated with Jason’s commentary in the past — though to me, he redeemed himself during the keynote at SESNY last week), lauded Aaron’s statements, I have to disagree with Aaron’s statement. Personally, do you think that this post on how to convert from a PC to Mac lacks any substance? I think it’s a great piece.

Jason responds in the Sphinn thread:

Over time I think you’ll see our pages grow to be over 50% original content, 20% links, and 20% UGC (i.e. reviews, votes, comments). Most pages in the system are 50-70% complete…. over the next two to three years they will reach 80-90% complete thanks to the help of the community and they will be worthy of a top 30-50 ranking in 20-30% of the cases is my guess.

Furthermore, all pages with less than 400 unique words will be nofollowed.

Personally, I think that’s a great step. And I have to continue to disagree with individuals who think it’s appropriate to continue bashing Jason when he clearly rectified the situation last week — since, well, I was there.

As one member puts it, “if an actual human being combs through that data to provide us a garbage free page, then it should not be considered scraping or spam.”

Agreed on all fronts.

Forum discussion continues at Sphinn.

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A WebmasterWorld member asks how to find local directories for link building purposes.

One member suggests that you search with “directory + [your local area]” on Google or Yahoo to find some really targeted local directories.

There are also some great paid directories including Best of the Web’s regional directory and Yahoo’s regional directory, both of which are subscription-based models.

How do you find quality link directories?

Forum discussion continues at WebmasterWorld.

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So you can’t travel the globe for every conference, but finally you discover that there’s a conference in your area. Now you need to justify the expenses. Is it worth $1500+ for just a few PowerPoint presentations, or is there more to it?

The session in question is actually one of the SMX series, so Danny Sullivan chimed into the thread and provided some insights about the cost vs. value. The cost really does justify the content and other conferences aren’t much different in this respect. For SMX in particular, Danny notes that there are lower cost networking passes if you already consider yourself a pro.

In the end, one of the bigger questions drills down to the number of people you can potentially make business deals with. At an SES conference, for instance, there are a lot more people you can partner with. On the other hand, SMX is much smaller and business opportunities aren’t as abundant.

But Danny admits that attending the conference is not just to gather “tidbits” of information and instead says that it’s full of value. I can’t agree more. In fact, someone who already attended an SMX event vouches for it:

For experienced SEMs, SMX Advanced is definitely worth the money. I can personally vouch for that!

If cost is a question on a regular basis, though, don’t attend every conference; just attend those specific to your area of expertise (whether it be advanced tactics, social media, or a general conference like SMX West/East).

Forum discussion continues at Search Engine Watch Forums.

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So you can’t travel the globe for every conference, but finally you discover that there’s a conference in your area. Now you need to justify the expenses. Is it worth $1500+ for just a few PowerPoint presentations, or is there more to it?

The session in question is actually one of the SMX series, so Danny Sullivan chimed into the thread and provided some insights about the cost vs. value. The cost really does justify the content and other conferences aren’t much different in this respect. For SMX in particular, Danny notes that there are lower cost networking passes if you already consider yourself a pro.

In the end, one of the bigger questions drills down to the number of people you can potentially make business deals with. At an SES conference, for instance, there are a lot more people you can partner with. On the other hand, SMX is much smaller and business opportunities aren’t as abundant.

But Danny admits that attending the conference is not just to gather “tidbits” of information and instead says that it’s full of value. I can’t agree more. In fact, someone who already attended an SMX event vouches for it:

For experienced SEMs, SMX Advanced is definitely worth the money. I can personally vouch for that!

If cost is a question on a regular basis, though, don’t attend every conference; just attend those specific to your area of expertise (whether it be advanced tactics, social media, or a general conference like SMX West/East).

Forum discussion continues at Search Engine Watch Forums.

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Eric Goldman commented on a case between one advertiser using another advertiser’s trademark in Google AdWords. The court has made a decision (PDF), ruling for the plaintiff, Storus, who sued Aroa for using their trademark in the AdWords title text. Eric Goldman said this is one of the first times we have seen the plaintiff win in a case between advertisers over trademarks in search ads.

Click to continue reading…

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Eric Goldman commented on a case between one advertiser using another advertiser’s trademark in Google AdWords. The court has made a decision (PDF), ruling for the plaintiff, Storus, who sued Aroa for using their trademark in the AdWords title text. Eric Goldman said this is one of the first times we have seen the plaintiff win in a case between advertisers over trademarks in search ads.

Click to continue reading…

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On Friday, Google announced they launched demographic bidding to every advertiser in the AdWords program. In short, demographic bidding allows advertisers to show their ads to specific age groups and genders. They did a beta launch of this earlier this year, where they dropped using comScore data for their own.

The problem is, I, as an AdWords advertiser, cannot trigger the “modify bids” for the “demographics” section under the “advanced options” of the “edit campaign” screen. Yes, I tried multiple campaigns and followed the step by step instructions exactly. I am, however, still able to use the comScore demographic targeting feature, which is different from the demographic bidding feature.

Click to continue reading…

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The Google News Blog announced that they have made two changes to the commenting feature, in order to make it more visible to their users.

Click to continue reading…

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Urban blight is easy to recognize: seedy liquor stores and payday lenders on alternating corners,