| Organic
Search Vs Paid Placement According to
a report by Search Engine Marketing Professional
Organization (SEMPO) advertisers in 2004 have
spent 4 Billion dollars on search engine marketing.
Website marketers cited Search engine positioning
was the top method to drive traffïc to their
sites (66%), followed by email marketing (54%).
Source: Direct Marketing Association. Accordingly,
the most cost effective way to market your web
site online is to obtain several top 10-search
engine rankings in the major search engines for
your keywords.
According to a recent Jupiter Research Survey,
searching on the search engines is one of the
main uses of the Internet among 79% of users.
Source: September 2002 Jupiter Research Survey.
So that being the case, whatever your promoting
you'll want to make sure it can be found on the
first page of the search engines results page.
The reason is numerically simple. An Iprospect
Survey in 2002 reported that 78% of web users
abandon their search if the first 3 pages don't
provide an answer to their question, and 28% don't
scroll past the 2nd page of results. Source: Media
Post article reporting results of Spring 2002
IProspect survey.
Combine those facts with the Internet's explosive
growth rate of 1.8 Million people worldwide going
online every week for the very first time, Source:
Official Guide To Internet Promotion and you can
soon appreciate what a top 10 ranking can mean
to you.
Google receives approximately 39.4% of all search
engine traffïc. Yahoo receives approximately
30.4%. They're simply the largest search engines
being utilized online today.
Bringing up the rear is MSN at 29.6%, and AOL
15.5% then Ask Jeeves with 8.5%. Source: Nielsen//NetRatings
January 2004
How much traffïc is that? Well, Google and
its partner sites were reporting a whopping 250
million searches a day in February 2003.
Overture and its partners were reporting over
167 million searches per day. Inktomi reported
80 million followed by LookSmart with 45 million
per day.
FindWhat reported 33 million while Ask Jeeves
reported 20 million, Alta Vista reported 18 million
and finally Fast reported 12 Million searches
per day. Source: Searchenginewatch.com
2004.
With all said, you can easily see how your search
engine rankingsare directly proportional to the
traffïc your web site receives, and your
site traffïc is directly related to your
potential to profit online.
Oh, and in case your wondering how much monëy
is spent online; a recent Forrester Research Report
indicated that online spending reached $95,700,000,000
million in 2003! That's a cool 95.7 billion dollars.
Projected online spending is estimated to grow
to $229 billion in 2008! A whopping 139% increase
in online spending! Source: Forrester Research
Now with these facts in mind I'm confident you
can clearly see what a top 10-search engine ranking
can mean for your bottom line. Although it does
leave a question unanswered in my mind, what has
a higher ROI... organic search engine optimization
or paid search?
According to SEMPO's key analysis, the U.S. &
Canadian SEM Industry Size Estimate by tactic
in 2004, organic SEO accounted for 12% of the
market share or $492,057,200 while Paid Placement
accounted for $3,341,878,176 or 81.8%.
Interestingly, 9 out of 10 respondents are actively
engaged in organic SEM marketing programs accounting
for 89% of the respondent advertisers. This trend
can be contributed to the average cost of popular
keywords continuing to escalate.
If the escalation continues to rise it could
make paid search engine advertising exponentially
cost prohibitive for all but the largest advertisers...
the 900lb gorillas!
Simply put, ROI is outpacing inflation: SEMPO's
key analysis indicates advertisers could afford
to pay on average 33% more for their keywords
and remain profitable, while they say prices have
gone up 26% on average in the last 12 months.
That leaves a 7% advertising margin to maintain
current profïts for 2005!
SEMPO's data also noted that advertisers will
get smarter about managing their paid placement
programs before they cut back on spending.
This is also consistent with a report released
by Nielsen/ NetRatings indicating that the growing
demand for search engine advertising is outstripping
the supply of currently available advertising
space.
These findings seem to indicate the inventory
of keywords is approaching a critical demand problem
however; most advertisers felt they still have
some degree of price flexibility in their paid
placement programs before they reach the threshold
of diminishing returns.
Is there any wonder why organic search engine
positioning has gained popularity for online marketers
in 2004? Could it be higher (ROI) return on investments?
SEMPO also cites that 43% of advertiser respondents
have shifted their budgets away from other marketing
programs for Organic SEO.
So what does it all mean? Let the numbers speak
for themselves.
Organic SEO is undeniably gaining favor over
the lower ROI paid advertising. This is evidenced
by virtue of the fact that paid advertising is
becoming less profitable.
Although paid advertising will continue to hold
a large portion of the market share, as paid advertising
returns diminish and keyword costs soar, my early
2005 forecast is for the materialization of a
progressive organic SEO market trend to facilitate
the need for advertising space.
Reference : www.sitepronews.com
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