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SEM’s Seven Year Itch, Part Three
January 25, 2007 |
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The 2004 acquisition of SEM firm iProspect by the advertising network
Isobar marked a turning point in the search marketing industry. Various
reports pegged the total value of the deal at about 50 million dollars,
including potential earn outs. iProspect founder Fredrick Marckini stood
to be a very wealthy man.
The iProspect deal wasn’t the first or last acquisition to happen. But
the valuation of the deal (together with an earlier Performics/DoubleClick
deal) set a new high water mark for the expectations of the owners of
other search shops. Suddenly, it looked like there was a very lucrative
exit possible. After years of struggling in the search space, we found
that we might just be holding the winning lottery ticket. Up to this
point, there was a bit of a taboo about talking of acquisition in SEM
circles. We all routinely professed our love for search and how we just
couldn’t see ourselves doing anything else. But hey, a $50 million
dollar check can change your thinking somewhat. Suddenly, the SEM
community indulged in a little day dreaming and started frequenting the
Jaguar website and checking out property prices in the Hamptons.
But the flood of acquisitions that was predicted never happened. It was
more of a trickle, and when we were privy to details about valuations,
they were significantly under the iProspect deal. There are a number of
reasons for that (perhaps the topic of a future column). But the fact
is, the owners of search shops have had their appetites whetted and the
window may have passed by. Here’s why.
Tactically, We’re Awesome
Search marketers are brilliant tacticians, whether they work on the paid
or organic side. It’s what we excel at. The biggest show in the SEM
industry, ironically titled Search Engine Strategies, is really 3 or 4
days jammed packed with tactics, not strategies. We myopically focus on
page position, always shooting higher. It’s all about rank. It’s all
about being number one. What we’re not particularly good at is stepping
back and looking at the big picture. The how’s and why’s of search, and
most importantly, the who’s. While this is true across the search space,
it’s most apparent with the organic optimizers. Virtually no one in the
SEO world has given a hoot about messaging, user experience or intent.
It’s all about crawling your way to top spot. In the last year, I’ve
seen a few SEO’s starting to change their thinking, but the vast
majority is still obsessed with blowing holes in the ranking algorithms.
Rank Becomes Irrelevant
However, we’re rapidly approaching the day when being number one ceases
to have any meaning. That’s a view that is tied to the concept of a
universal results page. A user searching for “bass” in Seattle sees
pretty much the same results page as someone searching in Salisbury or
Saskatoon. In this context, rank not only has meaning, it’s the magic
bullet.
Currently, the engines are rolling out personalization of results in a
number of flavors. Soon geo-targeting, demographics and personal
histories will be bigger determiners of the results and the order you
see them in than the skill of a search optimizer. An aspiring musician
in Seattle searching for "bass" may see the biggest selection of bass
guitars in the Pacific Northwest in the number one spot. An angler in
Saskatoon will probably see the top bass fishing spots in Western
Canada. And the person using their laptop and wireless connection to
search for “bass” in a Salisbury pub could well see the official site
for Bass Pale Ale.
A New Rulebook
On the organic side, this dramatically changes the rules of search. The
hyper-developed technical skill set of SEO’s suddenly need to be rounded
out with a deep understanding of the target user. The optimization
tactics we felt were going to guarantee us an early retirement, while
still valuable, will take a back seat to the ability to segment and
understand our target prospects. More importantly, we have to understand
the online paths they’re likely to take, and help our clients intercept
them with effective messaging and successful interactive experiences.
These are the skills that will be in high demand in the future. There
will always be a place for a talented organic optimizer, but it will be
as a rather well paid employee, not a multi-million dollar acquisition.
Where do these new skills exist? Well, they’re more evident on the
sponsored side, as new platform enhancements have allowed the best paid
search practitioners to start to segment demographically and
geographically. It’s forcing us to do our homework on who our prospects
are. And unfortunately, our potential acquirers, the large agencies,
believe they have deep bench strength when it comes to segmenting and
profiling prospects, certainly deeper than the average SEM shop. I still
don’t believe they’re done a particularly good job of porting
traditional market research skills to the new consumer empowered online
reality, but I suspect I’d have a hard time convincing them of that.
You know who’s really honing these skills? The behavioral targeting
practitioners. Search marketer should start paying a lot more attention
to what’s happening in the BT camps.
A Chronic Itch
So where does that leave the average SEM agency? Is a profitable exit
still an option as our 7 Year Itch demands to be scratched? I your
valuation depends largely on tactics that gain higher rankings and
concentrates on the “where” (on both the organic and sponsored side)
rather than the “who” and “why”, your window has passed. But if you’re
up for the change and not only embrace the inevitable reality of
personalized and integrated search but pioneer the understanding of it,
a new market will emerge. That’s the good news. The bad news is that
there’s a lot more hard work and learning that has to happen to position
yourself in that market, and this time we’re not the front runners. The
truly passionate will persevere and adapt. The rest will find themselves
with some pretty good job opportunities, but the summer house in the
Hamptons and the Jag XKR convertible are long shots. |
Gord Hotchkiss
President and CEO
Enquiro Full Service Search Engine Marketing
Search Engine Positioning by Searchengineposition
Blog: www.outofmygord.com
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