Two separate
occurrences in the last little while have leant credence to a
behavioral occurrence we’ve seen in many of our studies.
First, I was sitting in on a meeting where an agency (not ours)
was reporting on the performance of their sponsored search
campaigns and was ecstatic with the performance of their branded
term phrases, which were outperforming every other keyword
bucket both in terms of click-throughs and conversions. While
giddy with delight, they were at a bit of a loss to explain why.
On a similar track, a search marketing firm has recently
released some results that looked at cannibalization of search
campaigns when you are buying terms where you also hold top
organic position. Again, they found this is most likely to
happen when you’re buying branded terms.
While neither of these examples should be surprising to a
seasoned search marketer, we’re all interested to know the
reasons behind this interplay between organic and sponsored
happens, particularly on branded terms. The answer, as it so
often does, lies in looking more closely at what the search user
is doing
Pre-Mapping: A Theory
After looking at thousands of search sessions in detail, one
thing is becoming clear. Searchers are incredibly adept at
focusing in on just the portion of the results page that
interests them. The time required to relocate to the prime real
estate is literally a fraction of a second. Yet that real estate
isn’t always the same spot. It varies depending on query and
intent. It also varies by user, but even the same user will
navigate the real estate of the listings in very different ways,
depending on what they’re looking for.
Pre-Mapping supposes that we’ve interacted with search results
pages enough to know the sections of real estate we typically
deal with. We know where the top sponsored ads are and what they
are. We know about where the top organic listings start. And in
our minds, we already have a good idea of the type of site we’re
looking for and approximately where we expect it to appear.
Before the page ever loads, we’ve already mapped out the
sections that would appear to hold the greatest promise to
deliver on our intent. As the page loads, we do a split second
scan to get our bearings (orient in the top left corner, see how
many top ads there are, see where organic starts) and then we go
to the part of the map we’ve predetermined to be our best
starting point.
Theory in Practice
Let’s run through a few examples. Imagine you’re looking for the
possible side effects of a medication. The types of sites you
would be looking for would be authoritative information sites,
either the official site for the medication, a recognized health
portal or possibly a government information site. In this case,
you may be leaning more towards objective sites, rather than the
pharmaceutical company’s own site. After launching the search
(the name of the drug) you’ll quickly filter out, or thin slice,
any commercially oriented sites. In this type of interaction,
you’ve determined through pre-mapping that your area of greatest
promise is not likely to be in the sponsored ads. You also
expect the official site to rank number one organically, so your
area of greatest promise is probably in the number 2 to 5
organic rankings, where you expect the types of sites you’re
looking for to sit. In a split second, you’ve narrowed the real
estate where you’ll start your active scanning to about 10% of
the total real estate.
Now, let’s say you’re looking to renew your auto insurance.
You’ve already checked out a few quotes online, but before you
commit to any, you want to see how your current carrier
compares. You’ve also pre-mapped the page in this case. Here,
you expect your company to be bidding for the term ( “Brand Name
auto insurance”) and because it’s a commercially oriented query,
you assume that the sponsored listing would take you to a page
where you could get a quote. Your area of greatest promise is
the top sponsored ads. Again, you do your orientation scan to
find your bearings in the upper left, but in this case, you
would start right at the top sponsored link and work your way
down the page until you find a link to the carrier in question
that offers the promise of giving you a quote.
Theory Applied
With these two examples of behavior presented, you can easily
see what was happening in the two examples I started off with.
Brand terms will convert like gangbusters in the top sponsored
location, because when a brand term is used, it’s very likely
that the user has pre-mapped and is expecting to find that site
in those top sponsored spots.
Similarly, you will find significant cannibalization because
when they have pre-mapped, they start at the top and work down.
They’ll hit the sponsored result before they hit any organic
result that might appear. They’re looking for the quickest
route, and in this case, the sponsored listing is giving it to
them.
The likelihood to pre-map, and what this means for interaction
for the page, lies is that deep dark place where all the answers
to search engine success lie, the mind of your target prospect.
Spend some time exploring it.