After Recent Revenue Grabs, Won’t Google Be Right Back Where It Started?

It’s been a long while since anyone fully believed in the old, innocent “Don’t be evil” image of Google. The last 28 or so times I checked its quarterly financials, it appears to be running a business. And how!

Part of Google’s mission in “running a business” has been optimizing the PPC auction – and indeed, the entire search results experience – to maximize revenue. Doing that has often meant considering the user experience as well, to be sure. Google gets that far better than competitors ever did. But it’s also very good at squeezing this thing to extract maximum profit. Because that’s so obvious, no one is hesitant to call a spade a spade anymore: certain features of the AdWords platform are aptly deemed “revenue grabs.”

Lately, though, Google’s march to profitability is starting to look more like a square dance. Swing your partner aft and fore, make her cough up ten cents more! If she checks performance stats, she bids it down and that is that!

And don’t forget the do-si-do. Never forget the do-si-do.

What am I saying?

Google’s “partner,” of course, is the advertiser. In all of the engineering that’s gone into satisfying the user (searcher) experience while maximizing revenue, it’s the advertiser experience that has so often been taken for granted, at least as compared with the user experience.

Take Google’s complicated keyword Quality Score formula, which – given new and helpful levels of disclosure – turns out to be more complicated than one may have guessed. If my theory is correct, there is a far-reaching user experience theme being pursued as part of this mix. The relentless push for ad quality moves beyond modeling discrete, one-off user experiences. It also strives toward a model that seeks to impress on users “It’s OK – you’re safe here” (over here where we keep the ads, that is). If Google had engineered things in a more simplistic way, chances are the user would already have developed banner blindness. So: good for Google, and yes, in that regard, good for advertisers.

But financially speaking, Google has recently been faced with a problem of relatively simple origin. Google being Google, it figured it could engineer its way out of it. It’s not clear it can.

The problem stems from three basic causes. First, at some point click prices will reach their limits and advertiser budgets for certain keyword spaces will be maxed – period. Prices have to level off at some point.

Second, business confidence can create much less willingness to take chances – or put another way, a greater interest in revisiting assumptions about what are “fair” supplier prices, including what seems “normal” or “crazy” for a certain type of click. (Yes, advertisers can learn what is normal by watching performance stats, but in a dynamic environment where prices are falling, advertisers may develop a sense of “reverse confidence” – that if they drop their bid to return to more favorable ROI, weak hands in the auction may soon discover that they want to drop theirs, too.) We ran into a global business confidence crisis three-and-a-half years ago, and it’s been in the doldrums ever since.

Third, it’s precisely because more advertisers are measuring performance that Google will have more trouble fooling people with platform gimmicks. More and more advertisers doing a better job at measuring is largely good for Google, because it puts the price of a click on a solid foundation. If one advertiser decides clicks are too expensive, the market is smart enough to step in and buy the same click for roughly the same price. But has Google forgotten that more measurement leaves fewer stupid advertisers in the auction whose pockets you pick when you anticipate a weak quarter or two?

Starting around 2010, it appears that Google began unrealistically squeezing revenue in some areas, sometimes apparently in a hurry to reach short-term revenue objectives. Many advertisers absorbed and initially accepted Google’s claims for appropriate bid levels on channels like remarketing, for example. Then, it discovered the new level of the auction was 75 to 80 percent lower than it’d been led to believe, and went right back to trusting its own instincts and data on appropriate bid levels.

In addition, Google seems to have become vaguely alarmed by the general decline in click prices caused by the one-two-three punch of maxing budgets, declining business confidence, and more careful measurement. Picture a large graph on the screen, showing a typical average click price for a keyword of interest, falling half a percent a month for most of the past 18 months. Then picture fear and loathing at the Googleplex.

To head off the revenue hit that might result from the gradual but relentless freefall in overall CPCs, the natural Google response seems to have been to go to the product teams and ask them to “Engineer something!” to improve cash flow.

One such recent move is the widely-denounced move to make it much harder to “rotate” ads to test them. A certain percentage of advertisers will be conned into automatically reverting to the Google-friendly “optimize for clicks” setting. We’ll leave that aside for now.

Little tricks like “first page bid” annotations and the new “close variants matching even on phrase and exact match” are quite likely to have the predictable short-term effect of any engineered “feature”: they’ll create artificially high prices for some advertisers and put more money in Google’s coffers.

“First page bid” has been an ominous notation to most of us for some time now. This notation shows up next to a keyword when you lower your bid below a certain point where Google predicts you won’t always show up on the first page of search results because your Quality Score multiplied by your current bid is below that level. You’re supposed to go “Whoops!” and bump your bid a bit higher. Congratulations: Google’s framing exercise has tricked you into bidding inaccurately. It’s taken years, but advertisers are now ignoring this warning and trusting their own metrics. The main takeaway is that the notation often appears to be inaccurate and misleading. Your click volume might not decrease as much as you expect if you drop below the artificially-labeled threshold.

The new violation of phrase and exact match conventions is another revenue grab. However minor it may be, it’s important to consider it to understand the dynamic of click pricing.

Currently, a healthy percentage of advertisers who do not understand matching options, and who (in Google’s humble opinion) are targeting too narrowly to achieve the reach they should be going after, should be accepting “close variants” like plurals, verb stems, and misspellings in phrase and exact match, not just broad match. Such advertisers will (Google hopes) remain opted in to the less precise versions of exact and phrase match.

But those advertisers will then be seeing their ROI numbers get a little worse, just like they do if you use broad match without understanding it. Google’s effective CPM certainly rises, at least until these advertisers’ overall satisfaction level with AdWords drops, or until they simply assess their keyword CPA numbers. If Google’s eCPM is rising in a push-pull relationship with advertisers who are simply measuring what they take to be the exact ROI numbers on each keyword, then bids on those keywords will come down. Advertisers like this will be using a blunt instrument to mitigate the impact of Google-friendly feature tweaks. More precise advertisers who use the search query report, negative matching, all match types, and who will opt out of this new matching feature will do the best.

Long term, then, Google won’t see much of an improvement in the average CPCs on the same queries. It’ll be right back where it started, because increasingly, advertisers do a lot more than just measure visits, CTRs, and CPCs.

The problem Google faces is that, at the end of the day, it’s running an auction. It’s an auction with rules that advertisers are free to follow if they like, including bidding lower. It’s not a perfect market – it’s rigged in some ways – but it’s enough of a market that if click prices want to fall, they’ll fall…as surely and steadily as gold has fallen right on the heels of predictions that it’s going to $5,000 an ounce. Markets are powerful, and they often run on momentum and expectations. Any advertiser who has enjoyed consistent volume and rising profit in the past year while 90 percent of their bid change directions have been down and only 10 percent of them are up is now deep in the thick of timeless market psychology. Google is fighting a strong trend with short-term measures to trick some advertisers into paying more.

Why bother? Even if a solid 25 percent of advertisers remain stupid enough to leave some of the unfavorable features running, the rest will adjust, and the typical price for a click will go right back to where it was. Smart advertisers might get even more bargains, because the confounding nature of the auction will so frustrate the non-optimizers that they will simply assume AdWords “doesn’t work for them,” and in the classic “all or nothing” mentality of less accomplished PPC advertisers, will exit the auction entirely, bumping prices lower, not higher.

Do-si-do.


Big brands, big solutions, big results: B2C search and social strategies. Sign up for free webcast May 17 at 1 pm ET / 10 am PT.

Article source: http://www.clickz.com/clickz/column/2175345/recent-revenue-grabs-wont-google-started

Linton & Associates, LLC Harnesses the Power of Google AdWords and Drives Increased Website Traffic

Linton Associates, LLC, an employee benefits specialist agency serving New Mexico and the surrounding states, announced that is already garnering increased Website traffic thanks to harnessing the power of Google AdWords. With Google’s claim that its AdWords program reaches at least 80% of the U.S. Internet audience, Linton Associates, LLC has been able to significantly increase its exposure to its target audience, including both businesses and individuals. This expanded social media marketing and Internet Marketing strategy is part of the company’s strategic plan to reach more New Mexico businesses with its comprehensive range of HR consulting, wellness programs, property and casualty, and insurance as well as health, dental, vision and life insurance solutions for individuals.

 

Working with Flyline Search Marketing on its Google AdWords strategy, Linton Associates, LLC has a solid campaign, which offers the company way to control its online advertising expenditures and maximize the results from this online advertising investment whilst more effectively targeting the right type of customers. The pay-per-click (PPC), site-targeted advertising program consists of targeted and concise text and banner ads. The success in terms of ad reach and exposure relies on carefully selected keywords that have been proven and tested to reach the most appropriate New Mexico businesses that are either researching or looking for the types of services the company offers, including insurance, health and wellness, and human resources products.

 

In addition to the ability to target the audience, the Google AdWords program has provided Linton and Associates, LLC with a way to more effectively measure the results of their Internet Marketing efforts. The Google AdWords program includes a wide range of tools designed to track online advertising metrics to effectively adapt the text and banner ads and keywords for further enhanced targeting and greater success.

 

In conjunction with its ongoing successful Google AdWords campaigns, Linton Associates, LLC launched its new website to align with its search engine optimization strategy, which was developed by Flyline Search Marketing. The ongoing regular content additions to the website will provide another way to get the most traction from Google AdWords.

 

About Linton Associates, LLC

Headquartered in Albuquerque, New Mexico, Linton Associates, LLC serves over 160 employer groups and over 700 individual clients throughout New Mexico as well as the surrounding states. Established in 1988, the agency’s expert team is familiar with the real estate, construction, hospitality industry, legal firms and small employer groups, serving numerous clients in those fields in both small and large organizations with fully and self-insured plans, Section 125 plans, High Deductible Health Plans and Health Savings Accounts. Linton Associates, LLC has built a network of associations with all the national ancillary carriers in life insurance, short and long term disability, and retirement plans. For more information, please visit www.lintonandassociates.com.

Article source: http://www.transworldnews.com/1079400/c1/linton-associates-llc-harnesses-the-power-of-google-adwords-and-drives-increased-website-traffic

Google DoubleClick Search Adds Conversion, Cross-Channel Tools

Google has developed the next generation of DoubleClick Search, allowing users to optimize ads on platforms across AdWords and adCenter supporting campaigns across Google, Bing and Yahoo.

The company said DoubleClick Search V3 will get new features during the next few months, such as search funnel tools, to better understand a consumer’s path to conversion and integrate a client’s
own data sources to inform search decisions. The additions should tighten integration between DoubleClick Search and other ad properties for better cross-channel optimization.

The interface,
designed to sync with and look like AdWords, allows users to organize accounts in a variety of languages and currencies. It also integrates with DoubleClick for Advertisers to support display ads to
gain better insight into how display ads impact search campaigns.

Stats from all search campaigns in one place allow marketers to use labels to keep tabs on keywords. The tool’s Performance
Bidding Suite claims to maximize clicks, conversions, return on ad spend, or a combination of metrics. Google claims that 88% of clients saw a significant boost in campaign performance.

There
are 90 key metrics to customize the view of campaigns. Reports that may have previously taken hours to run and consolidate now take minutes. Event-level reporting gives detailed data for every click
and conversion that campaigns receive, such as keyword, query, time, and referral data.

Google said clients that receive better performance include Kohl’s, which increased bulk editing
efficiency by 44% and reduced troubleshooting by 20 hours a month, while Universal McCann implemented cost-per-action bid strategies for one of their automotive clients and saw conversion rates
increase by 32%.

Article source: http://www.mediapost.com/publications/article/174987/google-doubleclick-search-adds-conversion-cross-c.html

Google AdWords Travel Season Advertisers Inforgraphic

Google AdWords InforgraphicZee, a Google AdWords representative, posted in the Google AdWords Help forum an interactive infographic on the five stages of making a decision on your vacation/travel plans.

The point is for advertisers to be able to reach these travelers at the stages that are most applicable to their service offering.

Zee explained “with the Internet as the leading source for travel planning, the AdWords advertising is one of the tools used by travel businesses to reach their potential clients during their buying cycle.”

Here is the info graphic:

Forum discussion at Google AdWords Help.

Article source: http://www.seroundtable.com/google-travel-season-stages-15156.html

Google AdWords Travel Season Advertisers Inforgraphic

Google AdWords InforgraphicZee, a Google AdWords representative, posted in the Google AdWords Help forum an interactive infographic on the five stages of making a decision on your vacation/travel plans.

The point is for advertisers to be able to reach these travelers at the stages that are most applicable to their service offering.

Zee explained “with the Internet as the leading source for travel planning, the AdWords advertising is one of the tools used by travel businesses to reach their potential clients during their buying cycle.”

Here is the info graphic:

Forum discussion at Google AdWords Help.

Article source: http://www.seroundtable.com/google-travel-season-stages-15156.html

Google to Make Changes to “Rotate” Setting in AdWords

According to a series of recent Google announcements, Google has altered the “rotate” setting in AdWords. Under the new setting, ad campaigns opted into “rotate” will only rotate for a period of 30 days; after that time, ad rotation will stop and ad groups will automatically be opted into optimize for clicks.

Currently Google offers three settings in AdWords for campaign managers to manipulate manually. 1) Optimize for clicks (default): By using this option, your ad group will likely receive more impressions and clicks overall, since higher-quality ads attain better positions and attract more user attention. 2) Optimize for conversions: Although this option may result in your ad group receiving fewer clicks than the previous option, it will likely receive more conversions, which can result in an improved ROI. 3) Rotate evenly: This option, which will experience the change, currently rotates ads evenly, even if one ad has a lower clickthrough rate or conversion.

Greg Finn, in an April 30th post on Search Engine Land, states, “The ‘rotate evenly’ setting has been the preferred type for achieving apples-to-apples testing as ads were evenly disbursed at all times. The change will now require users who are using ads to test landing pages or copy-based conversions to be limited to 30 days per trial. Each time creative is enabled or edited the 30-day window will restart over again.”

Pay Per Click marketers should be aware of these changes when using the rotate feature on AdWords, as it is no longer a truly “set it and forget it” option for ad campaigns.

istockphoto.com/Ingvar Bjork

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Article source: http://www.komarketingassociates.com/industry-news/google-to-make-changes-to-rotate-setting-in-adwords-932/

How to Improve Productivity When Working with AdWords

Are you an online marketing expert and thinking about launching an AdWords account? Currently using AdWords but find that it just takes up too much of your time throughout the day? Any experienced AdWords user will know that when setting up and optimising an account, there are fast ways to do things, slow ways to do things and then very slow ways to do things. The mistake that many business owners and marketing specialists make when attempting to manage an AdWords account is that they do not take the time to learn about all of the tools features available that can help to cut a task that may have previously taken you hours, into a ten minute job.

Below are some tips to help you improve your productivity when working on your AdWords campaign:

1). Using Excel to plan campaign structures.

The biggest mistake that AdWords newbies make when setting up their account structure is using the AdWords interface to layout their structure upload all new campaigns, AdGroups, adverts and keywords. Even for a relatively small account, this can be extremely time consuming, especially when you do not have a specific plan in place. Before uploading anything into AdWords, my recommendation would be to open up a new excel file, and create a list of all campaigns and AdGroups you want within your account, along with a list of keywords adverts to go with each of your AdGroups. For example, your advert list should look something like this:

2). AdWords Editor.

AdWords editor is a Google tool that allows users to log in to their AdWords account, make changes in an offline-setting and then once all of changes are made, upload the new version of the account into AdWords. This saves you time in a number of ways:

  1. Fast account navigation. You can quickly navigate around your account without having to wait for the loading times experienced in the AdWords interface – this is particularly helpful with large accounts.
  2. Changes can be made in bulk with Editor’s “Select all” function. For example if you need to change the destination URL for all adverts within your account, all you need to do is open AdWords Editor, select all adverts and then enter your new landing page URL in the “Destination URL” box and then upload your changes. This is much faster than manually changing each advert URL within the AdWords interface.
  3. You can import data from Excel. If you’re using the technique outlined in the first point in this article and laying out your account structure in excel, then once you’re done it’s simply a matter of copy pasting your data into AdWords editor. This means that rather than spending hours to upload account changes, the task will literally only take you a few minutes.

You can download the AdWords Editor tool here – http://www.google.com/intl/en/adwordseditor/

Screenshot of the AdWords Editor tool in action:

3). Excel’s “Concatenate” function.

Another benefit of using Excel to plan out your account structure, is that you’re able to take advantage of some of the time-saving functions. One of my favourite functions within Excel is “Concatenate”. Concatenate allows you combine the contents of a specified cell with set text, other specified cells or both! This becomes particularly useful with AdWords campaigns in the following ways:

  • Location-specific keyword creation. If you have a keyword that you’d like matched with a large number of locations, say for example “find a plumber”, then all you’d need to do is create a column containing all of the locations you want matched with the keyword. From there, all you need to do is create a formula in the column next to your locations that looks something like this – “=concatenate(“Find a plumber “,A1)”. You now have a list of location-specific keywords.

Your spread sheet should look something like this:

And once you’ve completed the formula and dragged it down to all columns:

  • Location-targetted ad text. In a similar way to the location-targetted keywords, you can use the concatenate function to match up locations with other key terms so that your ad headings description lines are as relevant to a user’s search as possible. This will help to improve your ad CTRs (‘Click-Through-Rates’) and therefore boost traffic and account quality scores.

4).  Using Automated Rules.

‘Automated Rules’ are one of the newest features added to the AdWords platform, and allow for certain account changes to be made automatically once a user-specified action has taken place. For example, you can ask AdWords to pause any advert within a campaign if they generate a CTR of less than 1%. You could also ask the system to increase bids by 20% for any keyword that falls below position 3 on Google. This automated optimisation helps to do some of the day-to-day account maintenance that can sometimes eat up all of your time.

The below screenshot shows you where to find ‘Automated Rules’:

Hopefully this information helps to save you some time when working on your AdWords account in the future! As you work with these tools you should be able to evolve and improve your workflow to find yourself getting better performing campaigns in shorter periods of time. This goes a long way in keeping both managers and customers happy

In this article I have avoided mentioning any paid third party tools that you can as these generally only become worth the fees when you’re working with extremely large traffic volume – something that would require a media spend that is out of the range of your average Google Adwords user, however these can also be a good option for larger agencies and accounts to assist with productivity.

Feel free to share your time-saving techniques by leaving a comment below!

Article source: http://www.searchenginejournal.com/how-to-improve-productivity-when-working-with-adwords/43556/

4 Alternatives You Need To Consider Beyond AdWords

While there’s no arguing with the fact that Google’s Adwords program is the dominant player in the PPC industry, it’s by no means the only option when it comes to paying for website traffic.

In fact, the size of the Google Adwords program creates a number of challenges for “small-time” webmasters. The service’s immense popularity has resulted in extreme competition, driving up keyword bid prices and lowering ad placements for sites running on smaller budgets.

If you’ve been struggling to gain traction on this highly competitive network, take a look at the following PPC alternatives for generating paid traffic.

Alternative #1 – Facebook Paid Ads

Advertising on Facebook’s Paid Ads platform (whose “Sponsored Stories” typically appear in user profile sidebars) can be a mixed bag.

On the one hand, Facebook’s Paid Ads program provides much better targeting features than Google Adwords, enabling merchants to target users according to a number of different criteria, including age, gender, hobbies, geographic areas and more.

However, user engagement on the site is notoriously low. While some marketers speculate that the limited number of characters granted to advertisers account for these limitations, a much more likely explanation for the universally low clickthrough rates seen on the site is ad burnout.

Because Facebook users have been trained to gloss over advertisement sections on the site, your message must be truly captivating in order to draw clicks. Take a look at my article 3 Steps To Combat Image Fatigue In Facebook for more information on this.

If you do decide to pursue advertising opportunities on this site, remember that it’s nearly all about the image you position alongside your ad text. To stand out from the blur of other features on the site, select the most eye-catching graphic possible – even if it isn’t entirely related to your ad text.

For more information on this, take a look at my article called 3 Types of Image Ads That Work. In addition, choose your targeting options carefully to ensure that your promotions are seen only by the audience members to whom they’re most relevant.

Alternative #2 – LinkedIn DirectAds

Overall, LinkedIn’s DirectAds platform functions more like Facebook’s Paid Ads than Google’s Adwords, in that this PPC alternative also allows you to target the specific users who will see your advertisements within the LinkedIn website, based on their stated criteria.

Unfortunately, LinkedIn’s advertising program isn’t for the faint of heart – or the small of budget. Clicks through DirectAds promotions cost a minimum of $2/click, and although advertisers can set minimum daily budgets of $10/day, language contained in the site’s Terms of Service allows LinkedIn to exceed set limits by as much as 20%, depending on ad performance. Left unchecked, these overages could easily total thousands of dollars a month.

Given these financial ramifications, use caution when enrolling in the LinkedIn DirectAds program. Take the time to analyze LinkedIn’s core demographics to determine whether the site’s users are a good match for your ads.

In addition, because the DirectAds program provides very little information on how or when your promotions are displayed, you may also find it necessary to invest in a third-party bid measurement program to maintain a positive ROI in relation to the site’s high bid prices.

Alternative #3 – Kontera

In general, Kontera is best known for its in-text advertisements, which appear as linked content within Internet articles, blog posts and more. But besides these contextual link ads, the company also offers social media promotion services, editorial advertisements and mobile solutions, though few objective reviews are available on the efficacy of these newer service offerings.

When considering this PPC alternative, be aware that many users seriously dislike the way in-text Kontera ads display on their favorite websites. In fact, a Google search for the company’s brand name turns up as many results asking, “How do I get rid of Kontera ads?” as it does news articles praising the company’s traffic-generation services.

In addition, reviews of Kontera’s in-text ad service by industry figures aren’t that promising when it comes to ad relevancy. Consider the following ad placement that prominent Internet marketing blogger Chris Guthrie received while testing Kontera on one of his sites:

As an advertiser, it’s imperative that you know your promotions are being displayed to the best possible candidates. But for now, my verdict is to stay away from Kontera. Despite the site’s wide reach and generally low click charges, the quality of its placements simply isn’t high enough to justify its savings over other PPC alternatives.

Alternative #4 – StumbleUpon Paid Discovery

One final alternative PPC program that deserves mention is StumbleUpon’s Paid Discovery program, which is unique from the other options discussed here in that it does not require users to click on an advertisement in order to participate.

To understand Paid Discovery, we must first understand how StumbleUpon’s traditional service works. Essentially, users who are interested in discovering new Web content install the StumbleUpon browser toolbar, which randomly serves up pages designed to match their stated interests and past preferences. Paid Discovery allows advertisers to “cut in line,” introducing their content into the StumbleUpon stream ahead of other recommended pages.

But is it worth it? In many cases, no. StumbleUpon traffic performance is often quite poor when it comes to conversions; because users are simply being served pages instead of actively clicking chosen ads, their motivation to engage further with an advertiser’s site is often limited.

On the other hand, the service does have some interesting potential when it comes to link building, brand awareness expansion and social media marketing.

If you have established metrics in these areas through which you can measure the impact of StumbleUpon’s Paid Discovery service on your website’s success, the program could be worth a try.

Of course, these are only a few of the different PPC alternative sites available today. If you’ve had particular success with another option, share your results in the comment section below.

Opinions expressed in the article are those of the guest author and not necessarily Search Engine Land.

Related Topics: Paid Search

Article source: http://searchengineland.com/4-alternatives-you-need-to-consider-beyond-adwords-120942

DEUTSCHE TELEKOM AG : Google’s AdWords for small and medium sized enterprises – 4

  • Deutsche Telekom becomes the first multi-national telecom
    operator to offer Google AdWords across multiple
    countries
  • Agreement broadens Deutsche Telekom’s portfolio for small
    and medium-sized businesses

Deutsche Telekom announced today that it has extended its
strategic partnership with Google to offer Google’s AdWords
advertising platform to small and medium sized enterprises.
The agreement is the first Google has entered into with a
multi-national telecom operator offering Google AdWords
across multiple countries and applies to Deutsche Telekom’s
entire European footprint.

Currently, search advertising represents one of the fastest
growing segments of the total on-line advertising spending,
expected to grow by 12,7 % on average by 20151. With Google
AdWords, Deutsche Telekom provides small and medium-sized
enterprises with a complete turnkey solution. It allows
them to focus on their business and meanwhile boost their
sales, when potential customers are searching for their
products or services via Google.

With this co-operation, Deutsche Telekom enriches its
comprehensive portfolio of services for small and
medium-sized enterprises. It is also in line with Deutsche
Telekom’s strategy to invest in new businesses and pockets
of growth.

“Our partnership with Google builds on Deutsche
Telekom’s existing relationships with small and
medium-sized businesses and encourages them to use online
advertising to find and target new customers, whether they
are just around the corner or across the globe. By adding
Google AdWords to our comprehensive portfolio, we further
improve our customer value proposition across our
footprint,” says Dr. Gunnar Pahnke, Vice President
Strategy Execution Europe at Deutsche Telekom.

“We’re excited to be entering this new phase in
our strategic alliance with Deutsche Telekom. The Premier
SMB Partner programme was created to help small and medium
sized businesses that don’t have the time or resources to
manage their online advertising campaigns. Deutsche Telekom
will be able to offer AdWords advice, expertise and
experience to businesses wishing to reach new customers
online”, says Carlo D’Asaro Biondo, Vice President of
Southern Eastern Europe, Middle East and Africa Operations
at Google.

1 IDATE “World Internet Services Market”, 2011
Edition

About Deutsche Telekom
Deutsche Telekom is one of the world’s leading integrated
telecommunications companies with over 129 million mobile
customers, almost 34 million fixed-network lines and 17
million broadband lines (as of March 31, 2012). The Group
provides products and services for the fixed network,
mobile communications, the Internet and IPTV for consumers,
and ICT solutions for business customers and corporate
customers. Deutsche Telekom is present in around 50
countries and has over 235,000 employees worldwide. The
Group generated revenues of EUR 58.7 billion in the 2011
financial year – more than half of it outside Germany (as
of December 31, 2011).

About Google
Google AdWords Premier SMB Partner Program
The Google AdWords Premier SMB Partner Program connects
experienced AdWords partners with businesses that want
expert help in creating, managing and optimizing their
online advertising campaigns. Google works with a limited
number of Premier Partners in each market, who show proven
ability to help bring Google’s advertising solutions to
small and medium sized businesses. Premier SMB Partners
benefit from direct access to Google and support of all
kinds – executive, technical, sales, marketing, account and
partner management.
More information about the program is available through
following link:

http://www.google.com/intl/en/ads/premiersmbpartner/index.html

Google AdWords
AdWords is a cost effective, efficient way for businesses
of all sizes to advertise their products and services at
exactly the time their customers are looking for them.
Using the cost-per-click (CPC) model, businesses can select
and bid on keywords related to what they are selling and
pay only when an interested user clicks on their ad.
Advanced targeting options, customizable ads, and detailed
reporting enable advertisers to evaluate the benefits and
performance of their cost-per-click advertising efforts.
More information is available at www.adwords.google.com.

Article source: http://www.4-traders.com/DEUTSCHE-TELEKOM-AG-444661/news/Deutsche-Telekom-AG-Google-s-AdWords-for-small-and-medium-sized-enterprises-14329018/

Deutsche Telekom AG : Google’s AdWords for small and medium sized enterprises – 4

  • Deutsche Telekom becomes the first multi-national telecom
    operator to offer Google AdWords across multiple
    countries
  • Agreement broadens Deutsche Telekom’s portfolio for small
    and medium-sized businesses

Deutsche Telekom announced today that it has extended its
strategic partnership with Google to offer Google’s AdWords
advertising platform to small and medium sized enterprises.
The agreement is the first Google has entered into with a
multi-national telecom operator offering Google AdWords
across multiple countries and applies to Deutsche Telekom’s
entire European footprint.

Currently, search advertising represents one of the fastest
growing segments of the total on-line advertising spending,
expected to grow by 12,7 % on average by 20151. With Google
AdWords, Deutsche Telekom provides small and medium-sized
enterprises with a complete turnkey solution. It allows
them to focus on their business and meanwhile boost their
sales, when potential customers are searching for their
products or services via Google.

With this co-operation, Deutsche Telekom enriches its
comprehensive portfolio of services for small and
medium-sized enterprises. It is also in line with Deutsche
Telekom’s strategy to invest in new businesses and pockets
of growth.

“Our partnership with Google builds on Deutsche
Telekom’s existing relationships with small and
medium-sized businesses and encourages them to use online
advertising to find and target new customers, whether they
are just around the corner or across the globe. By adding
Google AdWords to our comprehensive portfolio, we further
improve our customer value proposition across our
footprint,” says Dr. Gunnar Pahnke, Vice President
Strategy Execution Europe at Deutsche Telekom.

“We’re excited to be entering this new phase in
our strategic alliance with Deutsche Telekom. The Premier
SMB Partner programme was created to help small and medium
sized businesses that don’t have the time or resources to
manage their online advertising campaigns. Deutsche Telekom
will be able to offer AdWords advice, expertise and
experience to businesses wishing to reach new customers
online”, says Carlo D’Asaro Biondo, Vice President of
Southern Eastern Europe, Middle East and Africa Operations
at Google.

1 IDATE “World Internet Services Market”, 2011
Edition

About Deutsche Telekom
Deutsche Telekom is one of the world’s leading integrated
telecommunications companies with over 129 million mobile
customers, almost 34 million fixed-network lines and 17
million broadband lines (as of March 31, 2012). The Group
provides products and services for the fixed network,
mobile communications, the Internet and IPTV for consumers,
and ICT solutions for business customers and corporate
customers. Deutsche Telekom is present in around 50
countries and has over 235,000 employees worldwide. The
Group generated revenues of EUR 58.7 billion in the 2011
financial year – more than half of it outside Germany (as
of December 31, 2011).

About Google
Google AdWords Premier SMB Partner Program
The Google AdWords Premier SMB Partner Program connects
experienced AdWords partners with businesses that want
expert help in creating, managing and optimizing their
online advertising campaigns. Google works with a limited
number of Premier Partners in each market, who show proven
ability to help bring Google’s advertising solutions to
small and medium sized businesses. Premier SMB Partners
benefit from direct access to Google and support of all
kinds – executive, technical, sales, marketing, account and
partner management.
More information about the program is available through
following link:

http://www.google.com/intl/en/ads/premiersmbpartner/index.html

Google AdWords
AdWords is a cost effective, efficient way for businesses
of all sizes to advertise their products and services at
exactly the time their customers are looking for them.
Using the cost-per-click (CPC) model, businesses can select
and bid on keywords related to what they are selling and
pay only when an interested user clicks on their ad.
Advanced targeting options, customizable ads, and detailed
reporting enable advertisers to evaluate the benefits and
performance of their cost-per-click advertising efforts.
More information is available at www.adwords.google.com.

Article source: http://www.4-traders.com/DEUTSCHE-TELEKOM-AG-444661/news/Deutsche-Telekom-AG-Google-s-AdWords-for-small-and-medium-sized-enterprises-14329018/