SEM
In 2015, North American advertisers spent US$60 billion on search engine marketing. The largest SEM (search engine marketing) vendors are Google AdWords, Yahoo! Search Marketing , Bing Microsoft adCenter and Facebook search.
SEM was growing much faster than traditional advertising and even other channels of online marketing. Because of the complex technology, a secondary "search marketing agency" market has evolved. Many marketers have difficulty understanding search engine marketing and they rely on third party agencies to manage their search marketing.
Google also began to offer advertisements on search results pages in 2000 through the Google AdWords program. By 2007, pay-per-click programs proved to be primary money-makers for search engines.
Search engine optimization consultants expanded their offerings to help businesses learn about and use the advertising opportunities offered by search engines, and new agencies focusing primarily upon marketing and advertising through search engines emerged. The term "Search Engine Marketing" was proposed by Danny Sullivan in 2001 to cover the spectrum of activities involved in performing SEO (search engine optimization), managing paid listings at the search engines, submitting sites to directories, and developing online marketing strategies for businesses, organizations, and individuals.
Some of the latest theoretical advances include Search Engine Marketing Management SEM relates to activities including SEO but focuses on return on investment (ROI) management instead of relevant traffic building (as is the case of mainstream SEO).
Search Engine Marketing is paid search advertising in two ways, PPC (pay per click) and PPI (pay per impression). Another part, SEO is a technique of work scoop that organic search results generated algorithmically.
SEM also integrates organic SEO and Pay Per Click . For example some of the attention is placed on the web page layout design and how content and information is displayed to the website visitor. Ethical questions
Paid search advertising has not been without controversy, and the issue of how search engines present advertising on their search result pages has been the target of a series of studies and reports by Consumer Reports WebWatch.
Vested interests appear to use the expression SEM to mean exclusively Pay per click advertising to the extent that the wider advertising and marketing community have accepted this narrow definition. Such usage excludes the wider search marketing community that is engaged in other forms of SEM such as Search Engine Optimization and Search Retargeting.
Search advertising Enterprise Search Marketing List of search engines Search engine image protection Search Engine Optimization
Search Marketing World Search engines with SEM programs
Google - global Yahoo! - global Bing - global Ask.com - China Yandex -
Because of the complex technology, a secondary "search marketing agency" market has evolved.
Many marketers have difficulty understanding the intricacies of search engine marketing and choose to rely on third party agencies to manage their search marketing.
Please contact us for media buy services management. Thank so I Need a Paid Search Ad If I Rank Well Organically?
A common misconception small business owners have is that if they rank well organically in the search engine results, they do not need to allocate additional budget to a paid ad strategy. This may seem logical on the surface, but let’s face it, organic traffic is not free—you have to dedicate resources to ensuring that your website content is strong and organized, you have to invest in an effective backlink strategy, you have to do extensive keyword research, and you have to monitor and analyze your results and make continual changes. For many small businesses, this means hiring a firm specializing in search engine optimization (SEO). Not free!
Even if you have a successful organic strategy—and before assuming that SEO is all you need to promote your website—here are five quick questions to ask yourself when assessing the use of paid ads:
What keywords do you have top ranking for?
When we ask clients this question, they typically respond with their business name. Most businesses with quality websites rank well for their business name, but what about other keywords? Although you may rank #1 for “Alam’s family dentist ,” how do you rank for keywords that would drive new customers to your business who have never heard of you? It’s important that you not only rank well for “Alam’s dentist,” but that you also rank for purchase-ready buyer terms such as “best dentist ,” “emergency dentist,” and “compare dentist .” Depending on the competitiveness of those terms, it may take months to rank well . . . or you may never achieve adequate ranking. With the right budget and bidding strategy, supplementing your organic strategy with paid ads can produce immediate placement and results. What would you do with 20% more traffic to your website?
You may be asking yourself, “Why should I pay for clicks if I am already appearing for free?” A frequent budgetary concern is that paid ads cannibalize organic clicks. Not so! According to Google, websites appearing in both the organic and paid sections of the Search Engine Results Page (SERP) achieve 20% more traffic. The goal here is to displace your competitors by taking up as much real estate on the SERP as you can.
Where do your customers click on the Search Engine Results Page?
As a well-known adage reminds us, the most important thing in real estate is “location, location, location.” The same holds true for search engines. While most users focus on the left-hand side of the page (80%+ of us), almost 90% never make it to page two of the SERP. If you’re relying on organic ranking but aren’t on page one, you’re missing out on almost all of the traffic! Your paid search ad will allow you to compete for keywords that you rank low for organically.
Do you run seasonal offers or special promotions?
Let’s say you already rank well for your most desired keywords. How do you fare, though, when you create a new landing page to promote a special offer or seasonal discount or launch a new product line? Depending on your time frame, you will likely not gain organic placement quickly enough to promote your offer—in fact, you may not gain good placement until well after your promotion has ended. In these cases, the fastest way to drive traffic to your promotion is through a paid ad.
Are you happy with the content in your organic results?
Organic results automatically show content from your website. Chances are, the search engines don’t pull the exact text that you would if you had control. With paid ads, however, you control the content of the ad as well as determine the specific landing page to drive the ad to. Since you write the text, your paid ad allows you to focus on purchase-ready buyers by:
Focusing on specific products and services: “July Savings on Water Heaters”
Including call-to-action text: “Save 15% Online” or “Call for Free Estimate”
Focusing on your geographical client base: “Serving the Tri-State Area”
In sum, an organic strategy is necessary, but paid ads enhance your ability to attract the right customers at the right time. While you’re building your organic rankings.