Tag Archive for 'newsletter'

Click Fraud: Are Your Campaigns Safe?

Since the advent of paid search engine marketing, click fraud has been a growing area of concern for search engine marketers. Estimates of the scope of click fraud vary from 10% to 35% of all click activity. If not detected, click fraud can rob your company of both your marketing dollars and your sales. Are your campaigns safe? This article provides some tips on how to detect click fraud in your campaigns and some guidance on what to do if you find it.

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Online Video for Healthcare Companies

Since the DTC advertising took-off ten years ago, pharmaceutical companies have been aware of the persuasive power of video. TV commercials have brought an unprecedented degree of awareness to mass audiences, and have brought depth and dimension to products that would otherwise be difficult to explain. Now that opportunity is expanding to include online video. Online video resembles television in many ways:

  • It is currently dominated by entertainment content.
  • Thanks to the widespread adoption of broadband, viewership can often be measured in millions (although there’s no “broadcast” - so that viewership builds-up over time.)
  • Word of mouth (and its e-mail/IM equivalents) can launch a video into the spotlight.

Healthcare companies can use these similarities to reach out to online audiences by purchasing pre-roll commercials at popular portal sites. These are displayed at the start of a video clip, and often accommodate a standard 15-second format.

However, this is just the tip of the iceberg. Greater gains can be had by leveraging the non-TV attributes of online video: Continue reading ‘Online Video for Healthcare Companies’

Paid Search: Are you getting your money’s worth?

The Search Engine Marketing Professional Organization (SEMPO) recently released its annual industry survey and it includes some truly remarkable findings. One such finding is that spending on paid search marketing was approximately $8 Billion (U.S.) in 2006 and that number is expected to double over the next five years. This is obviously a testament to the value that paid search marketing can provide, but it also begs some key questions. Am I getting my moneys worth from my paid search campaign? Is my campaign producing a positive ROI? Should I spend more, or less?

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What is Social Media Optimization?

Social Media Optimization is a concept that is making its way into mainstream marketing publications. Social Media Optimization or SMO is a concept coined by Rohit Bhargava of Ogilvy Public Relations Worldwide. In his 5 Rules of Social Media Optimization, Rohit explains that:
“The concept behind SMO is simple: implement changes to optimize a site so that it is more easily linked to, more highly visible in social media searches on custom search engines (such as Technorati), and more frequently included in relevant posts on blogs, podcasts and vlogs.”
Social Media Demographics
A common misconception about popular social network sites like MySpace, is that they are the domains of the teens and preteens. A recent comScore study found that as MySpace and the social networks grow and become more mainstream, the demographics change as their reach extends into a greater part of the population.

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Reaching the US Hispanic Market with Healthcare Search Marketing

Many healthcare companies recognize the US Hispanic market as a growing part of their business and online strategy, and their websites are slowly beginning to reflect this. Although this is considered a major step toward successful marketing to the US Hispanic audience, providing a Spanish sub-section of a website or dedicating a few pages of content to this population may not be enough to translate into impressive results.
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What is Google Co-op - Health?

Google Co-op was released in Beta this early May to introduce its users to a new concept of community and social tagging of websites that may influence the way we see search engine results in the future. Google claims that it “is a platform which enables you to use your expertise to help other users find information.” This means that if a person considers him or herself an expert on a particular subject, he or she may develop their own specialized search for the topic and can “label” web pages and websites believed to be the most authoritative on that topic. This also allows experts the ability to “suggest appropriate query refinements” which suggests to us that it will also allow them to alter the order and positioning that we see websites appearing in these filtered search engine results.
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What is Personalized Search?

Put most simply, personalized search is the delivery of search engine results that are uniquely tailored to both keyphrases and individual searchers. For example, in the early days of search, everyone searching for the phrase “AMD” would get the same results, whether they were interested in silicone chips or semiconductors, or age-related macular degeneration. With personalized search, the search engines are beginning to gauge a user’s intent and differentiate between those users looking to invest in AMD, the searchers looking to buy AMD chips, and those looking to care for their eyes.How are search engines such as Google, Yahoo!, MSN, and Ask able to provide these customized search results? By tracking their users’ behavior online. Search engines have access to a wide range of user data, including search history, bookmarked pages, and more, that allows them to gauge a searcher’s “intent”.

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Can Blogging Drive Traffic to a Pharma Site?

So, what is a Blog?
A blog is nothing more than a web page; but it is a special kind of web page. A typical blog is a website with regularly published “articles” that are displayed “newest first”.� Blogs have certain attributes that distinguish them from standard web pages; namely, ease of web publication and mass syndication.� Most blogging software includes content management tools which enables the author to easily create, categorize and post content on the web in a matter in minutes.� This software also automatically publishes this content, much like a news story, to other sites (called feed aggregators) which then syndicates the content to whomever is waiting to find fresh content on the topic.� The ability to reach such a huge audience immediately is the core power of the blog.

How can Pharma use Blogging?
First, let’s dispel an important myth.� Blogs do not have to be set up as two-way communications vehicles.� Regulatory issues, notwithstanding, we would almost never recommend establishing a two-way blog for our industry because of the random and/or negative messaging that could be generated.� Therefore, all the information below is assuming you have established a blog where unmoderated reader feedback is not allowed.

Back to the question�Can our industry take advantage of this new marketing channel?

Like most things in life, it depends.� The first questions is - are you trying to blog about a corporate topic or a product topic?

A corporate blog is a much easier undertaking for the pharmaceutical/biotech industry and can be effective in driving traffic to your main corporate site.� Everything from press releases, to corporate/brand news, to customized “personal CxO” communications are ideal for publishing using this blog format.� For successful examples, you can look to bloggers, like Bill Gates, Mark Cuban and Donald Trump; all of whom have “personal” blogs that link from their corporate sites. And of course your blog would be rich with optimized text links back to your main corporate webpages as well, making it easier for the searcher to get more information as well as increasing your overall backlinks.

A product blog is much more difficult.� Since all product information needs to go through legal and regulatory approval, the speed at which new pages could be approved would be infeasible to the quick-posting nature of a blog. So, unless you have stored away scores of pre-approved pages that you can release on a frequent basis, you need to consider “3rd party” blogging.� One example is sponsoring a physician to write a blog about your condition/product and its success with their patients.� Another type is to encourage a patient to tell their story about your product or target disease/condition.� These patient testimonials can be very powerful and are tailor-made for blogging.� However, in both of the above examples, caution must be used in selecting your advocates.

Another option is to engage a trusted 3rd party to aggregate existing web page content, news and information about the condition and/or your product.� This is becoming very popular because the power of the syndication not only drives direct traffic to your site, but it also influences the search engines’ “opinion” about which web pages are the most important.� For example, creating optimized incoming links (using targeted condition/product keyphrases) from your blog to your product site will increase the perceived “authority” of your site in the eyes of the search engine

Conclusion
As with any advertising or PR channel, the return on a blogging initiative will depend largely on what your corporate/brand goals are and how you structure your campaign. Generally speaking however, by leveraging the huge audience and instant content syndication, pharmaceutical/biotech sites can boost their search engine rankings and drive well-targeted web traffic for their keyphrases.

For more information email us at info@CatalystSearchMarketing.com�

How does video search benefit health-related websites?

Apple’s successful launch of video to its popular iTunes service has generated a lot of media buzz about the growing search demand for videos.

For both Google and Yahoo, video search appears to be all about content distribution and maximizing additional revenue streams. Health related websites that offer education videos and video testimonials on your website will enhance the user experience, and with the infancy of video-search, you will have the opportunity to grab “market share” of the online video search space. However, because video search is so new, Catalyst on-line believes that video search will not be a significant driver of traffic to a health-related website in the foreseeable future.

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Can Your Potential Patients Find You?

Location, location, location is as important on the Internet as it is in real estate. Why spend time, resources, and money to develop a website that your audience can�t find?

All too often businesses invest a significant amount of time, money, and resources building impressive websites and then do little to promote them to drive the traffic. They just assume if they build it, visitors will come. Nothing could be further from the truth as competition for eyeballs increases daily across the Internet. For example, a Google search on the disease multiple sclerosis yields more than 16 million results and that number is increasing constantly. So anyone launching a new site on multiple sclerosis, or any subject area for that matter, instantly has a mountain of competition for attracting visitors. Fortunately there are ways to leap frog the competition and attract visitors quickly. How? The answer is to be in the right location.

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