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What is the number one thing that
keeps the sales teams at Yahoo, Google and MSN up at night? It’s not
click fraud, it’s not capping of bid prices, and it’s not counting their
stock options. This is another “C” word. I call it the C Level Ceiling.
No Keys to the Executive Washroom for SEM In corporate America, there’s a vast distance between the front line and
the top management in most Fortune 500’s. The C Level sees rolled up
dashboards, while front line practitioners are up to their earlobes in
masses of detail. Both bring their own kind of blindness. At the C
Level, aggregation of metrics means senior management might not see the
small emerging factors that could make a big difference if applied more
broadly. And practitioners get swept away in minutiae, sometimes not
getting the luxury of seeing their contributions as part of the bigger
picture. Somewhere between these two extremes, Search is caught in the
land of the “trial” budget. Search just hasn’t broken into the spotlight at the top of the corporate
ladder. Senior execs don’t get search, they don’t want to get search and
they certainly don’t want to move significant budget to search. As you
move down the corporate ladder, the love affair with search gets more
ardent. At the front line practitioner level, it’s a full blown romantic
obsession, because the front line sees in gritty detail how well search
can perform. But as you move away from the front line, the search story
gets lost in a maze of numbers, being rolled up into one category after
another, until it all but disappears at the highest level of reporting. Search is a blip in the total marketing picture, a rounding error in
most budget allocations. Despite the best efforts of the big search
engines, the industry has been unsuccessful in getting the C Level to
buy into search. So why is that? I’m Too Sexy for This Channel First, even if you don’t “get” something, you can still be interested in
it. Everybody at the C level loves to get involved in the new corporate
TV ads, because that’s sexy. If you’re launching a sponsorship of a
NASCAR race, or the Olympics, or the World Cup, or a Rolling Stones
Concert Tour, that’s sexy (with room for differing opinions on the
sexiness of the Rolling Stones). If you’re doing product placement on
Survivor or American Idol, that’s sexy. Search just isn’t sexy. Never
was and never will be. The CEO or CMO is just not going to give up a
weekend yacht trip to approve the latest search ads. So, the first thing against Search is there’s no sex appeal to draw in
corporate execs, whether or not they “get” it (and most times, they
don’t). Use Me, But Please Respect Me It’s estimated that there are about 630,000 C Level executives in the
US. If you asked them where the most effective place to reach them with
an advertising message would be, they would tell you the Wall Street
Journal print edition. And,
according to a new study by Ipsos, there’s some validity in that.
The Journal reaches 46% of the market. This is the place C Levels turn
to get detailed information and opinion. They respect the Journal. But an even more effective intersection would be search. The most
dominant medium they use to stay in touch is the Internet. 55% use it at
work, and 34% use it at home. Now, unless C Levels use the Internet in a
totally different way than every other human, that means they’ll be
using search a lot. So the very same executives that continue to
allocate huge budgets to TV and print, and teeny tiny budgets to search,
use search, a lot! Way more than they watch TV. Why is that?
The Generation Gap A generation gap exists between the C Level and the front line
practitioners, and the executives at the top just haven’t accepted the
fact that the world has changed right under their very feet. At the C
level, despite tons of evidence that confirms the world is turning
online, they’re still stuck very much in an offline world when it comes
to budget allocation. And it’s not that they aren’t aware of the quantum
shift in our society. It’s a comfort level issue. They know the
customers are wired, but they’re not exactly sure how online marketing
works. The rules are still being written. At least with television or
print, there’s the comfort of knowing they’ve been doing it for years.
There are budget line items that are rubber stamped each year, media
buyers and agencies that are more than happy to take the money, and
media outlets that are hanging on tenaciously to the budgets. For the
executives allowing the status quo to continue, the question they
reassure themselves with is, “How could the world change so radically
that the things we’ve done for the past 3 decades no longer be valid?” We saw an example of this recently. A travel company that that targets
young adults (18 – 30) continues to spend millions each year to produce
huge, glossy brochures. At the practitioner level, this company has
initiated research that shows that the vast majority of their target
market does their research online. Yet the entire online budget is a
tiny fraction of the print budget for the brochures that nobody reads
anymore. Everyone who works at the front lines of this company knows
they are seriously out of step with their market, but no one has been
able to convince the executives to cut the budget on print and swing it
into online. The word hasn’t been able to get past the C Level ceiling.
Search has been Delegated down the Ladder With the meager budgets going to search, we can count on the
responsibility for these campaigns being passed far down the line.
Executives spend their time looking at the things that have the greatest
impact financially on the company. If search is 2% of the entire
advertising budget, but television accounts for 45%, the CMO is going to
be spending a lot more time with television. That just stands to reason.
So the future of search lies lost in the middle management layer, cut
off from the budget allocations that can make a real difference.
Hammering the Message Home
So, what will shake up the status quo? Well, the shift has already
begun. Calls for more accountability in advertising are great news for
search. Someday in the not too distant future, the CMO will be looking
at the detailed report on the search campaign, scratch their head and
ask the fateful question, “Why can’t we get these kind of metrics for
all our channels?” And there, in that one sentence, the battle will be
won. It won’t be a quick win, but it will be tremendously satisfying. |