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Archive for the "Online Advertising" Category



Serious win IPA Effectiveness Award

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

We were ecstatic last night receiving an IPA Effectiveness Award for our online marketing campaign using the perpetual marketing model we developed for London Business School. It was a great evening at the Hurlingham Club with everyone in high spirits for the awards, all the work on show was highly deserving with the entrants proving some of the most effective this year despite a tough climate. We were up against serious competition including JWT, TBWA, Grey London and Publicis with Serious being the only agency nominated outside of London and Manchester. Mediaedage: cia were the worthy winners of the coveted  grand prix prize with their ‘Getting your hands dirty with Morrisons’ campaign.

Serious generated a return of £14 for every £1 spent.

To view the full award winning case study click here

Press release available here!

IPA Effectivness Award 2009

Our IPA Effectiveness Award 2009

Update: Now on video too!

Figaro Digital features Perpetual Marketing Model

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

Our marketing strategy the Perpetual Marketing Model has been featured in issue 2 of Figaro Digital magazine!

Serious featured in Figaro Digital Magazine

Serious featured in Figaro Digital Magazine

Perpetual Marketing for London Business School

Perpetual Marketing for London Business School

Google Agency Day

Monday, September 7th, 2009

Serious were pleased to be invited to Google’s Agency Day on Thursday at their London offices. With talks from their Industry Head of Local Markets and the New Business Development Team we had a tour of how we can better offer our services to improve our clients search and advertising campaigns.

Alongside this we now have access to a broad range of new tools and services Google offer to further strengthen our media planning and campaign preparation.

An interesting point we picked out from the talk was 10% of internet traffic is generated through Youtube, considering Youtube as a search engine the volume of searches would place it as the 2nd most popular just behind Google.

Advertising in a large content network like this can be daunting but with careful planning and management of your targeted ads you can make your budget work for you and reach a truly massive audience.

For a limited time too we can offer to double your daily spend on an ad campaign up to £1000*.

Unfortunately with everything going on I forgot to take some photos….next time!

*Until December 2009.

SERIOUS Shortlisted for IPA Effectiveness Award

Thursday, September 3rd, 2009

At last the shortlist is out for the IPA Effectiveness Awards and guess what? SERIOUS are on it!!

Check it out here: http://www.ipaeffectivenessawards.co.uk/Home

We entered our case study for London Business School which used our Perpetual Marketing Model – you can read more about this case study and our Perpetual Marketing Model by going to:

Case Study:
http://www.seriousdigitalideas.com/case-studies/london-business-school-pre-masters/

Perpetual Marketing Model:
http://www.seriousdigitalideas.com/perpetual-marketing

Happy times!!

Still keeping fingers crossed.

Twitter goes local

Friday, August 21st, 2009

We are all aware of the global phenomenon of Twitter but we can now use Twiiter locally with their new opt-in geolocation feature.

Eh? English please!

OK, so what does that mean. Basically Twitter are putting the finishing touches to a new feature which allows you to add Latitude and Longitude information to your tweets – and I’m sure very soon GPS enabled handheld/mobile devices will allow you to do this automatically. This means that you will have the ability to not only read tweets from people you are following but you could also read tweets from people in your local area – that means your community, city, the conference you are attending, the bar you at and so on.

This takes local marketing to a whole new level – imagine if you could send mini marketing messages randomly out into your local community and only people in your area (or who are following you) will pick it up – oooh I feel the possibilities beginning to emerge!!

You can read more info about it here: http://blog.twitter.com/2009/08/location-location-location.html

Oh – one thing you ought to remember is that you should not enable this feature if you are tweeting in an area where you should not be – say no more!!

How to build great landing pages

Thursday, August 20th, 2009

We are constantly being asked by our clients “what makes a good landing page and why” – so much so that we thought it may be worth while sharing our thoughts on the subject with you. So here it is.

Firstly it is important to remember the process of how and where the visitors will be coming from and what prompted them to navigate to your page. Bearing this in mind you need to immediately deliver on the same message which prompted the click through – no time wasting, nothing getting in the way – just hit them with it. Essentially you have promised them something by dangling a carrot on the SERPs or via PPC etc and now you have to fulfil your promise. Get straight to the point and big up the benefits!

Secondly do not confuse the matter by giving them loads of choices or other things to look at. Yes, you should always provide access to auxiliary information but you don’t want to send the visitor off on a tangent and potentially lose the conversion. Give them a clear and strong call to action.

Along the same lines as before you need to reduce clutter so that the page is engaging and easy to follow. All you really need are benefits/features, call to action, links to supporting content if necessary and a lovely clear and stimulating design which promotes your brand identity & values. No waffle, no hardcore sales pushes, no gimmicks – just good clean content.

Now, we all know that most people have a natural resistance to being sold to and even if what you are offering is not necessarily being “sold” it is still worth bearing in mind the kind of objections or barriers people may have to conversion. Your landing page should do its upmost to calm and overcome these barriers; reducing anxiety and making your visitors feel safer. Such things could be logos of trade or industry affiliation/accreditation, money back guarantees or even certain insured payment methods like PayPal etc. Make sure your page addresses these issues.

Finally, it is always good to get some kind of gravitas for your product/service and increase the visitor’s affinity to your offering. The best way to do this is by showing accreditations, real-world usage examples, reviews, testimonials or even other places they may hear about you (i.e. “As seen on TV”). This instinctively builds trust levels in the visitor.

So there it is – 5 very simple ways of maximising the impact of your landing pages.

Image search marketing

Friday, July 3rd, 2009

It’s probably fair to say that most of us know about image searching on SEs like Google, Yahoo, Bing and Ask but we keep noticing that many people totally ignore the potential of this search type to market their websites. Not to put too fine a point on it but you can often achieve very good results by using image search optimisation – you just have to think a little about your offerings and the related image keywords you would expect people to search for. For example if you are a travel agent then you may want to optimise your images for the keywords “Air Travel” or “Aeroplane” – or if they are destination based then name them after the destination name.

For a list of image keywords which are popular you could try looking at sites like iStockPhoto or Flickr

In order to optimise your images for image search make sure you pay close attention to the use of the actual image file name and the image “title” attribute as well as the standard “alt” attribute. Try to keep names and attributes under 5 words. And if possible make them relevant to your overall page for further on-page SEO.

Once you’ve got your image SEO in place you can use Google Analytics to track visitors coming from image searches – although to track the keywords used you would need to slightly modify your GA JavaScript code to add images.google.co.uk and others as the referring search engine – see here if you need more details on achieving this: http://www.google.com/support/googleanalytics/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=57046

Are microsites a good idea?

Thursday, July 2nd, 2009

Ok this post may open a can of worms but I thought it worth discussing. We get loads of our customers wanting microsites for various reasons – usually to push a specific product but sometimes to drive more traffic to their main site. This is all fine in principle but it is worth mentioning that it is often the case that a microsite is not the best way to go.

A microsite which has unique content on and is specifically optimised for a single set of keywords will often do well – mainly because it is so easy to optimise and the content is always relevant. Yes this sounds like a dream opportunity to get all your preferred keywords linking through to different site that you own, however, you would need to think of the consequences your main site would face. If you externalise all that good, relevant content onto microsites all with different domain names then you essentially turn away potentially thousands of backlinks from your main site to this microsite. Now if the microsite is the site that will bring in the money and your main site is just a brochure about your company then you may be happy with this – but I would say you need to think long term.

Google (and the other SEs) love old and well established domains which have a proven track record of delivering valuable content over the years. If you externalise all your valuable content then your main site will not build that trust relationship with Google and it will be consistently harder to market over the years rather than getting easier.

So what’s the solution? Well it is really quite simple – do what Microsoft, Apple, Google, the BBC etc do and have your microsites part of your main site – consider these URLs:

www.google.com/adwords

www.microsoft.com/windows

www.apple.com/quicktime

www.bbc.co.uk/news

All of these URLs are microsites running with their own dedicated content and their own design theme. Each has its own niche and promotes a different section of the overarching company, however all of them are part of the main domain structure and each of them pass their weight back up the chain to the main site. These microsites are true assets to the company and are not unruly children who need reigning in.

For more on microsites and how they do not pass on link popularity see: http://www.seomoz.org/blog/whiteboard-friday-the-microsite-mistake

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