Internet Marketing in the Age of Google


Internet Marketing in the Age of Google

Copyright (c) 2008 Titus Hoskins

Forget the Computer Age or the Internet Age, centuries from now our current time will probably be referred to as the Google Age. This assumption is not exactly a great leap of faith; Google has quickly permeated into mainstream culture to become an underlying factor of everyday life, a tightly woven backdrop to our lives.

But never make the mistake of trying to define Google as just a search engine or you will miss the true calling of this little “Backrub”, which was the original name used by its founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin in 1996.

Google as we now know it debuted in 1998. The name Google is a twist on the word Googol, a number represented as 1 followed by 100 zeros. After everything is said and done, it will more than likely refer to Google’s net worth – monetary or otherwise.

But forget search engine, for regardless of the founders’ intentions or company’s objectives, Google is and has always been the ultimate marketing machine. A massive marketing machine that is just now gearing up and aiming for more and more lofty heights. These heights seem to increase each day as Google quietly rolls out program after program.

All noble ambitions aside, Google is the perfect marketing machine. Google has no equals, and it is very close to getting a stranglehold on the real power behind all marketing, which is information.

Marketing is information. Information is marketing.

Great marketing is supplying the right information at the right time. Google more than any other entity on the web or in the world, for that matter, fulfills this criterion at its very core. Google is re-writing the book on how products are marketed.

Google now has over 60% of the search traffic in the U.S., with a staggering 7.3 billion monthly searches. In some countries Google’s search share is 80% or more. (Source: comScore) Those webmasters who have number one keyword listings in all three of the major search engines will know Google is the only game worth playing because it delivers by far the most traffic.

While MSN and Yahoo! are still major players and are listed in the top 5 traffic sites on the web, what most people don’t realize is that (unlike the other two) almost all of Google’s traffic is search traffic. From a marketing perspective this is extremely important since search traffic can deliver the highest conversions (sales) mainly because it lets you capture the potential customer or client when they are in the right mindset to buy or to perform an action.

Obviously the key to successful marketing is finding the buyers and clients for your products and services. Google has forged itself as the ultimate “middleman” as more and more of the world’s business is performed in cyberspace. And as everyone knows the “middleman” can reap huge profits and hold enormous power.

Google, within its Adsense program, now offers CPA or Cost Per Action where marketers can now receive larger returns for displaying Google’s links on their webpages. As any professional marketer will tell you, you can get 10 times the revenue by promoting affiliate products rather than the Adsense code on your sites. But by adding CPA and other affiliate products within the Adsense program, Google has made it more attractive to serious online marketers.

Another step in that same direction is Google’s acquisition of DoubleClick, which includes the massive online affiliate marketing network Performics. This means Google can now bring any customer full-circle from initial search to checkout.

This may have dire consequences for large, lucrative third-party affiliate networks like Commission Junction and LinkShare. Online marketing and ecommerce is growing at a blistering rate, and the company that controls the majority of these transactions will wield enormous power. Will make the Medici look like paupers.

Those marketers who have managed to acquire number one listings for their targeted keywords in Google’s organic search are smiling all the way to the bank. Mainly because Google commands enormous trust with the surfing/buying public and this is demonstrated through higher conversion rates. Likewise, those who have mastered the Adsense and Adwords programs will know Google is an excellent source of online income.

Most of the complaints against Google stems from its PageRank system, which is supposed to be Google’s version of online democracy in action, a link is a vote for your page or content. The higher the number of links, the higher your page will be ranked in Google’s index or SERPs – Search Engine Results Pages.

So far Google has played fair, giving even the smallest webmaster the opportunity to capture top Google listings if they produce superior or popular content to the surfer. Some would even argue Google’s recent crackdown on sites offering paid-links can be seen as evening the playing field for the small webmaster or marketer who obviously doesn’t have the economic clout or resources to buy their way to the top of Google’s listings.

Keyword rankings may be the ultimate equalizer and determiner of online wealth. Those who can reach the top positions for their chosen profitable niche keywords will have companies and service providers lining up to do business with them. The fallout can prove extremely lucrative for both parties.

However, few marketers or webmasters forget who is really holding the cards; Google controls all steps along this marketing tunnel with its search listings, Adwords and Adsense programs. The only dark spot on the horizon could be monopoly issues, but Google probably has enough reservoirs of public goodwill and deep enough corporate pockets to squash any claims.

As Google’s dominance in the search market becomes greater, Google will have control of all segments of the online marketplace. Why should Google stop there, why not go into Radio, TV… as the Internet gradually mutates into a billion+ interactive TV channel universe (as many believe it will) who do you think will be at control central offering you a nice free remote?

Then there is also Google’s planned broadband 700 MHz bid; one can only speculate on Google’s intentions. But Google must find a way to transmit its information at no cost to its users. Could it mean free wireless Internet for everyone on free Google boxes or gadgets of some form, usable and accessible anywhere in the world? Anything is possible because the stakes are so astronomical and the marketing revenue so vast, Google must get its information seamlessly and instantly to the end user at all costs.

One can only guess at the enormity of the marketing power Google will yield in coming years as the Internet slips out of its teen years. But it won’t be just marketing, the influence of Google on all aspects of our lives will probably grow exponentially and that influence will be huge.

For the true power of Google is only just now beginning to be glimpsed; only as more and more of the Google pieces fall into place will we truly fathom what life will be like in the Google Age. Google’s power, reverence and respect will no doubt be so enormous it may lead some to make comparisons to a higher power that has guided most of the life on this planet so far. Which could also lead one to muse, at least they got the first two letters correct.

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  1. #1 by tell the truth on Net on July 5th, 2010

    that professor is an idiot. its for who want to expand their knowledge and get a degree, better life and job etc.

  2. #2 by Ajna Anahata Sahasarara on July 5th, 2010

    no way

  3. #3 by guzen on July 5th, 2010

    Powerful my ass

  4. #4 by nacao on July 5th, 2010

    I <3 Google!

  5. #5 by jpro on July 5th, 2010

    so google is going to rule the earth is it? yeahh….

  6. #6 by saraaa on July 5th, 2010

    ( ) Male (X ) Female
    Age __26__

    1. Highest Level of Education?
    ( ) High School
    ( ) 2-year college
    (X ) 4-year college
    ( ) Masters
    ( ) Ph. D
    ( ) other ________________

    2. Which college(s)/university(s) did you attend?
    - Penn State
    -

    3. College major? ___Marketing and Finance_________________

    4. Current job title? ___Media Buyer________________

    5. Do you think potential employers favor individuals with advanced college degrees or those with only an undergraduate degree and more work experience?
    (X ) Education
    ( ) Experience
    Why? ____In marketing, you can get the basics from the book but you learn even more by working_______________________

    6. Does your company and/or clients prefer the use of internet advertising over traditional media (i.e. newspapers, television, magazines)
    ( ) yes
    (X ) no
    ( ) does not apply
    If yes, why? ______________________

    7. Please select all of the following statements you agree with:
    ( ) The internet is the best thing that has happened to advertising.
    (X ) Products will still do best in traditional media outlets.
    ( ) Traditional media outlets are a thing of the past.
    ( ) Newspapers are dying and soon will be obsolete.
    (X ) Advertising and marketing still require talent and creativity.

    8. If your company and/or clients utilize internet advertising, which one or more of the following types is preferred?
    ( ) social networking sites (facebook, myspace)
    ( ) Google/search engine ads
    ( ) blogs
    ( ) commercials within internet TV sites (hulu.com, mtv.com etc.)
    (X ) banner ads
    ( ) pop-up advertisements
    ( ) other ______________

    10. What is the best part about your job? Why? I am a media buyer with an Advertising Agency. I buy radio and TV for clients. I like the creativity, travel, and working with marketing departments of big companies.

    11. What is one piece of advice you would give to someone looking to pursue this career? Learn all you can in college and be prepared to learn new things every day. It is ever changing.

  7. #7 by truth on July 5th, 2010

    #LOL

  8. #8 by urbantool on July 6th, 2010

    #LOL

  9. #9 by rails on July 6th, 2010

    who cares? google for life!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  10. #10 by corpo on July 6th, 2010

    I use bing so I’m ok :)

  11. #11 by Spiderman on July 6th, 2010

    cool, its our actions that will prove that not some magazine.

  12. #13 by saraaa on July 7th, 2010

    Female
    Age 24

    1. Highest Level of Education?
    4-year college

    2. Which college(s)/university(s) did you attend?
    - Monash Uni, Melbourne, Clayton Australia
    -

    3. College major? BA (Communications)

    4. Current job title? Creative Strategist

    5. Do you think potential employers favor individuals with advanced college degrees or those with only an undergraduate degree and more work experience?

    ( ) Experience
    Why? Bceause at the end of the day it's the "practical" part which matters. Everyone can learn the "theory" but when it comes to "application" it's when it truly matters.

    6. Does your company and/or clients prefer the use of internet advertising over traditional media (i.e. newspapers, television, magazines)
    yes
    If yes, why? It's more effective than conventional media and faster

    7. Please select all of the following statements you agree with:
    The internet is the best thing that has happened to advertising.
    Traditional media outlets are a thing of the past.
    Advertising and marketing still require talent and creativity.

    8. If your company and/or clients utilize internet advertising, which one or more of the following types is preferred?
    social networking sites (facebook, myspace)
    Google/search engine ads
    blogs

    10. What is the best part about your job? Why?
    Able to come out with "insights" that relate to consumers

    11. What is one piece of advice you would give to someone looking to pursue this career?
    Always be ready to adept with diff media outlets esp online. Get aquiented be it creting widgets, fb pages fro your groups or other means i.e.: twitter to promote your brand. the online platform is every-changing and you should start to learn more about it now.

  13. #14 by earthlink on July 7th, 2010

    google gave me aids!
    but they recomennded greats sites on how to treat aids!! :)

  14. #15 by saraaa on July 8th, 2010

    (X) Male ( ) Female
    Age 41__

    1. College major? Psychology___________
    2. Current job title? Creative Director______

    3. Highest Level of Education?
    ( ) High School
    ( ) 2-year college
    (X) 4-year college
    ( ) Masters
    ( ) Ph. D
    ( ) other ________________

    4. Which college(s)/university(s) did you attend?
    a. Fordham University
    b.
    c.

    5. In your opinion, do you think education or experience is valued more in this career field?
    ( ) Education (higher degree)
    (X) Experience (longer resume)
    Why? Two years out of school, your education doesn't matter at all. It might get you in the door, but restaurants are full of PhDs working as waiters, so what matters in advertising – especially creative – is the work you do every single day.

    6. Has the internet had an impact on the way your company sells and promotes its clients?
    (X) yes
    ( ) no
    ( ) does not apply
    If yes, how? Face it. The internet has changed how people travel, communicate, interact with the world, learn, explore, even find partners for love or just sex. How could it not change advertising?

    Time was an advertiser had a couple of choices – build or burnish their brand through television, print, outdoor (OOH) or radio advertising. If they wanted to actually put something in consumers hands, they would use direct mail to send out coupons, samples, etc. Consumers were always being marketed TO and had no relationship with the companies that were sending them crap.

    Now marketers as well as consumers have choices. They can interact with a company or brand. They can comment on it online. They can link to products and services they like. They can react and actually affect what a marketer is doing – as in the recent cases with Tropicana's redesigned package or the Twitter where a group of mothers squashed a Motrin ad campaign. So knowing that, advertisers not only have a new avenue to bring consumers into their brand, but a new responsibility to make sure it doesn't blow up in their faces. Smart marketers now seek out and employ opinion makers online to make them evangelists for their product or service, and influence others online into making real-world brand decisions. This is only scratching the surface and I could write ten thousand words on it, but this works for a start.

    7. More and more people are turning to the internet for news and TV shows, paying less attention to actual TV commercials. In your opinion, about how long will it take for the majority of advertisements to be shown online?
    ( ) 1 year
    ( ) 5 years
    ( ) 10 years
    ( ) 15 years
    ( ) 20 years
    ( ) 50+ years

    Can't answer this question because of the construction. When you say "the majority" of ads online do you mean video ads like television commercials on sites like hulu.com, or are you including flash banners running adjacent to tv programs running online or do you mean dollar amount of advertising online versus television. I think when you consider that NBC anf Fox created hulu and more and more programming is available online, it becomes clear to see the networks are conceding they've lost the battle to keep viewers in front of their TVs. Instead of giving up the ad revenue they cannot justify if people Tivo a show then skim past the ads, they're instead creating an alternate revenue stream for the same content – and the upside is, even if the same viewer goes back a hundred times and watches his or her favorite episode of "The Office," the advertiser still pays. Not so with Tivo or DVDs.

    8. Which online sites are most effective for advertising?
    ( ) social networking sites (facebook, myspace)
    ( ) google ads
    ( ) blogs
    ( ) online tv program commercials (hulu.com, mtv.com etc.)
    ( ) banner ads
    ( ) pop-up advertisements
    ( ) other ______________
    I don't think anyone can honestly answer this question in part because of how it's constructed. What do you mean by "most effective"? Do you mean banners that get the highest interaction rate? The highest click through rate? The best conversion rate? Or simply the most cost-effective? The answer to this question is, it depends entirely on what the advertiser was trying to achieve.

    9. What is the best part about your job? Why?
    Writing a great line that nobody expects.

    10. What is one piece of advice you would give to someone looking to break into this career?
    Do something else. It's no fun anymore. Advertisers don't want great, fun memorable ads or campaigns any more. They walk in the door saying they have no money, cut the budget before you even do any work, rewrite copy, and generally set out to screw up a good idea. If I had it to do over, I'd run far far away in the opposite direction.

  15. #16 by psychic on July 8th, 2010

    Google world domination cant wait

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