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All Hands on Deck! Search Marketing is Crossing the Chasm
October 19, 2006 |
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Last week, I gathered in New York with 12 other search marketers for
SEMPO’s bi-annual planning retreat. To kick off, we did a bit of
brainstorming about the current state of the search marketing industry.
Observations included the current build or buy search marketing
capabilities dilemma faced by the big agencies, the red hot demand for
anyone with search marketing experience, the sudden development of
search marketing in house groups in large organizations and the current
push for industry wide certification of SEM practitioners. Also, more
than a few at the table mentioned that we’ve noticed a significant
change in the prospects we’re talking to and the contact points within
those companies. Today, our sales leads are more often Fortune 1000’s
than the latest online start-up. With increasing frequency, we’re
starting to get C-level interest at the table when talk turns to Search.
“My God!” I thought to myself as we jotted our observations down on a
flip chart, “Search is crossing the chasm!”
Chasm Dead Ahead
Geoffrey Moore’s book, Crossing the Chasm, belongs on that small and
select shelf of “Must Reads” in technology marketing. It explores the
fundamental break between early adopter and mainstream markets, and why
so many companies founder in trying to make the transition. For the ones
that do, the reward is a sudden firestorm of demand. Exactly 3 years ago
now, I wrote a column examining if search marketing had indeed crossed
the chasm yet. My conclusion, (reinforced by a note of endorsement from
Mr. Moore) was that search marketing had yet to do this. Until recently,
I still thought we were squarely in the early adopter camp. Either it
was practiced by aggressive, early adopter companies or by individuals
in larger organizations that fit the early adopter profile. Budgets
allocated to search by most “mainstream” organizations made it clear
that it was an interesting experiment of limited scope, nothing more.
Calling All Pragmatists
But it seems that the climate is changing. One thing to remember about
mainstream markets is that when they move, they tend to do so en masse.
Search marketing is starting to show the early signs of a marketing
channel that’s ready to make the leap from early adopters to mainstream
markets.
What does this mean for search? First of all, search is too limiting a
definition. There is a built-in inventory bottleneck with search that
will keep it from meeting the demand that will be generated when large
advertisers move large budgets into the arena. People only search so
much. The relatively tame growth curve of search usage will soon be
outstripped by the steep incline of advertiser demand.
So we look to two additional markets that will move across the chasm in
lock step with search. I’ll call them by more generic, all inclusive
labels. First of all, there’s “Consumer Initiated Marketing”. Search is
the literal embodiment of this, but the search publishers will be
finding other ways to enable consumers to reach out and connect with
advertisers on the consumer’s timeline, not the advertisers. Secondly,
there’s “Targeted Accountable Marketing”. These are the channels that
allow advertising messages to be more precisely targeted through
behaviors, geography, demographics or areas of contextual interest,
provided unprecedented accountability to the advertiser. Every single
search publisher is heavily invested in this area, and this will
continue.
The Local Search Wildcard
Another huge flood gate of new advertising inventory that will begin to
crack in 2007, and will turn into a flood in 2008, is local search.
According to InfoUSA and the Kelsey Group, there are about 350,000 web
based businesses in the US, and 4,000,000 businesses with a
brochure-ware site. That leaves almost 10,000,000 businesses without a
website at all. That’s a total of almost 15,000,000 businesses. There
are no hard numbers for Google’s advertiser base, but an educated guess
would put it somewhat north of 300,000. So, even with businesses with a
website, that means Google only has 6.9% market penetration currently.
If it seems like search marketing is old hat and everybody’s doing it,
it’s probably because you’re an early adopter and so are the people you
hang out with. Add the businesses without websites, most of which are
only interested in local markets, and that penetration drops to an
infinitesimal 2.3%. That’s a ton of upside potential and it all sits in
the local market, which is currently throwing their money at other
channels, such as the yellow pages, newspaper and radio.
And You Thought Google had too much Money Now?
Let’s do a little more math. Based on Google’s reported revenue of
approximately $6 billion, that averages out to about $20,000 per
advertiser. That may sound impressive until you remember that a
substantial portion of Google’s advertisers are large, multi million
dollar companies. Let’s assume that over the next 3 years search
marketing does cross the chasm and that Google manages to capture 50% of
businesses with a website. Also, let’s assume that budgets loosen up
substantially as search moves into the mainstream and more advertising
options are open, increasing that average spend up to $50,000. Neither
of these predictions is overly optimistic, given a Chasm Crossing
scenario. And that doesn’t even touch the 10,000,000 web-less businesses
that are likely prospects of local search, or the global market. That
puts Google’s potential revenue at 208 billion dollars. Currently, that
would put Google at number 3 on the Fortune 500, right behind Exxon and
Wal-Mart, and ahead of GM and Ford. Even if I’m wildly optimistic, those
are numbers to pay attention to.
A Chasm Retrospective
My original column was written 3 years ago. In rereading it in light of
my New York revelation, I was surprised at how little had changed. In
the past 3 years, search marketing has solidified its grip on the early
adopter market, growing both in terms of number of advertisers and
revenue by over 200%, but the total product solution that’s required to
attract a low trust pragmatist market is still being assembled (Yahoo’s
announcement of the much delayed Panama Platform hit my inbox as I was
writing this). One thing that has changed, somewhat, is my guess as to
who will be the dominant player in search marketing. This is the one who
will gain the lion’s share of the market as it hits overdrive. My
prediction 3 years ago was that Microsoft would kick start search as it
moved in and dominated. As we’ve seen, Microsoft’s Big Hairy Audacious
Goal of dominating search has not quite matched up with their execution,
which has been tentative at best. Google still rules the roost, so they
have the all important pole position going into the tornado. The trick
will be to see if they can hold onto it. Remember, pragmatists love
turnkey solutions. Is Google’s assembling of auction based media buying
opportunities the solution they’re looking for?
I was quoted in a recent interview as being bullish on the future of
search. What I realized in last week’s SEMPO meeting did nothing to
change my mind. In fact, I just bumped up my expectations.
Hang on..we ain’t seen nothin’ yet! |
Gord Hotchkiss
President and CEO
Enquiro Full Service Search Engine Marketing
Search Engine Positioning by Searchengineposition
Blog: www.outofmygord.com
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