Best Practices for Search Engine Marketing
Does In-house Search Engine Marketing Work?
A report by Jupiter Research suggests that there are some serious
problems facing in-house SEM teams in Corporate America, and the most
serious is that an amazingly large number of people conducting in-house
SEM work share these duties with other job functions!
These findings are a recipe for two really bad things. The first is
employee burnout. The more hats these people have to wear, the more
they're likely to be experiencing burnout, which can cause all kinds of
nasty things to afflict their companies, including loss of internal
expertise, high retraining expenses, and low morale. The second is
Search campaigns that under-perform because the people who run them
don't have the time, the focus, or the training to run them properly.
Unfortunately, the findings reveal that there's a deep disconnect
between the top-level executives in Corporate America (who know or
should know that having competency in Search marketing is becoming
essential to achieving strategic business goals) and the people further
down on the org chart who are managing the day-to-day operations of
these enterprises, hiring people and controlling HR budgets. These folks
appear to regard Search as a simple, perhaps even trivial task to be
added to an employees' daily schedule. Nothing can be farther from the
truth.
This is not to say that there aren't a few exceptional people out there
who can do all of their disparate duties equally well, or that you have
to have a full-time staff to do SEM competently. Small campaigns with
limited objectives can certainly be accomplished with one or more
talented full or part-time employees. Larger campaigns running hundreds
of thousands of keywords through multiple search engines will naturally
require a higher level of internal commitment, including an investment
in technology to help with the number-crunching. Without knowing more
about the size of the companies represented in the Jupiter study, it's
impossible to generalize precisely about how badly these internal SEM
teams are under-funded or under-resourced. But the findings do suggest,
very strongly, that Corporate America is being penny-wise and
pound-foolish when it comes to Search, which is in my view a serious
error which will come back to haunt the managers who let this situation
continue.
As Search becomes more widely accepted as a strategic, not a peripheral
driver of strategic business objectives, more senior managers will
realize that they are doing their stakeholders a disservice by
under-investing in Search Marketing. They will then do one of two
things: either invest properly in their in-house teams so that their
members can apply the kind of steady, specialized focus required to
deploy, test, and fine-tune smart PPC campaigns, or outsource this
process to an agency with the analytical skills and technologies
required to get the job done. While in-house teams will continue to
handle many SEM responsibilities in the near-term future, many industry
analysts believe that many forces point to increased outsourcing due to
the escalating complexities of the marketplace and the highly
competitive PPC bidding environments in the engines.