Speed check: Visit us at Shop.org to test your e-commerce site

Posted on September 24th, 2010 in Enterprise Search, Events, Industry Resources, Pay-Per-Click | No Comments »

Did you know that a user spends an average of just eight seconds on a website before deciding whether to stick around (Marketing Sherpa)? If you’re an e-commerce site, this means you have to be faster than Usain Bolt - the world record-holder for the 100m dash. Next week, find out how Google can help you capitalize on those eight seconds and improve your online shopping experience. Visit the Google Commerce Search team at Shop.org’s Annual Summit , held in Dallas, Texas from September 27 - 29. If your organization plans to attend the show, be sure to visit Google in Booth #120 and attend the Big Ideas session Wednesday at 12:45 PM featuring Nitin Mangtani of Google Enterprise, who will be speaking about search insights for today’s e-commerce technology. The Google Commerce Search team will be joined by Product Search, AdWords, and the Google Affiliate Network. We can’t wait to show you the many different ways we can help your business. Posted by Guillaume De Zwirek, Google Commerce Search team

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Speed check: Visit us at Shop.org to test your e-commerce site

Agency perspectives – "Run As Fast As You Can Until You Hit A Wall"

Posted on July 12th, 2010 in Creative/Production, Events, Industry Resources, Pay-Per-Click | No Comments »

Editor's Note: This spring Google hosted ThinkAgency, an event for senior leaders from creative, media and digital agencies to come together and hear about opportunities offered by Google's existing and emerging platforms. Ben Malbon, Executive Director of Innovation, BBH New York attended the event, and shared with us his key takeaways. In part one, he reflects on what he learned from a panel discussion with three Google engineers, including the similarities between engineers and creatives, how product teams are able to stay nimble and function like start-ups, the importance of failure and the risks of planning too far ahead. Here's what Ben had to say. It was a very good day, and I wanted to share how and why. Specifically, I want to pick out a number of themes: around how the Google engineers work and are empowered, around Google?s iterative approach to creativity, and around YouTube and where we – in agencies – might take YouTube next (the latter theme will be in my next post). The Panel Benjamin Palmer, CEO and Founder of the Barbarian Group moderated a panel of three Google engineers: Dan Sturman, an Engineering Director focused on keeping Google's data centers and back-end servers running smoothly; Fuzzy Khosrowshahi, a Staff Software Engineer who, with his partner, created the product that eventually became Google Spreadsheets (his team now handles cloud computing products such as Docs, Spreadsheets, Sites); and Tim Dierks, a Software Engineer who helped create Google spreadsheets, worked on the Print Ads product, and now focused on Google TV Ads. At Google the engineers are the equivalent of our creatives – the most valuable and important people in the business. For many of us it was one of the first opportunities we'd had to see, hear – and question – the people who create Google?s products. Benjamin led the questioning but there was plenty of interaction from the floor, much around the theme of wanting more access for agency creatives to people like Fuzzy, Dan & Tim. In fact, I think putting engineers together with agency creatives and producers would be a highly fruitful exercise as far as driving new and more innovative use of platforms such as video and mobile is concerned. How to remain small when you're big I had imagined finding the panel most interesting from a technology angle – learning from the hallowed "creatives" at Google about emerging developments in mobile and search. But in fact it was the insights into how Google remains small, nimble, and like a start-up in approach (despite its size) that resonated most for me. The engineers characterized the role of senior managers within Google as "getting out of the way" as quickly as possible to loosen, not tighten control over their teams. Equally revealing was that it is OK for mid-level managers to respond to questions from their seniors about what was going on with "I don?t know, I?ll go and find out." If you try and know about everything, all the time, on every project, you?d harm the company?s ability to move quickly. You?d introduce friction. It's ok to fail...if you learn from it I was equally surprised at how open the Google engineers were about failure. I find it has become somewhat of a cliché for agencies to talk up failure; ?fail fast?, ?fail early?, ?learn to fail?, and so on. Easy things to put on Powerpoint charts (especially during a recession), rarely have I seen them executed in practice. So we heard the engineers talk not so much overtly about ?failure? as about the iterative approach they adopt to develop products. The mantra is launch then iterate. ?Failure? becomes ?learning.' They described how they?d launch something, gauge the reaction, try again, gauge the reaction, and so on. Surprisingly, for a business that seems to have so much on its plate, there was a warning around the dangers of long-term planning. One can?t plan a year ahead; technology changes, culture changes, and sometimes the planning of it can take longer than the doing – that?s the biggest danger, you end up doing nothing because you?re always ?planning.? Again, more fuel on the ?iterate and learn? fire. Hitting the wall The overall message within this section was around the folly of trying to second guess reactions once new products were in market. It?s just too much for the human brain to compute. Much better to react swiftly once reactions are known, once the data is in. Related to this was Managing Director Torrence Boone?s observation around the prevailing attitude towards product development: "run as fast as you can until you hit a wall, get over it, and then start running again." There?s certainly a pace and a conviction about how Google seems to approach creativity that I think many agencies demonstrate when at their best, but all too frequently we let the walls slow us down too much. We?re scared of hitting them too hard, maybe. Stay tuned for the next post, in which Ben shares his thoughts on YouTube. To hear additional perspectives from agencies and others on innovation, experimentation and the direction of marketing, visit the Fast.Forward. channel on YouTube. Posted by Agency Ad Solutions Blog Team

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Agency perspectives - "Run As Fast As You Can Until You Hit A Wall"

The Next Big Thing: Social Media Advertising – San Jose Mercury News

Posted on June 30th, 2010 in Pay-Per-Click | No Comments »

France24 The Next Big Thing: Social Media Advertising San Jose Mercury News But what about advertising on these sites? Back in 2004, Google revolutionized the Internet by selling ads next to their search results. ... Interesting facts about Facebook you may not know Helium 25+ Upcoming Social Media & Tech Events Mashable (blog) all 172 news articles??

6 The Next Big Thing: Social Media Advertising   San Jose Mercury News

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The Next Big Thing: Social Media Advertising - San Jose Mercury News

Discount code available for ad:tech San Francisco

Posted on April 16th, 2010 in Analytics, Events, Pay-Per-Click, Search Specialist | No Comments »

ad:tech San Francisco is next week, from April 19th to April 22nd, and we'll be there. Our product experts will be on hand at the Google booth Tuesday and Wednesday to answer questions and provide updates on AdWords, Analytics, DoubleClick, YouTube, AdSense and the Google Content Network. In addition, we're holding the workshops "Insights Lickety Split in AdWords Search Funnels and Google Analytics" and "Google Ad Innovations @ ad:tech," as well as speaking at the session "Marketing Masters - The Bleeding Edge of Advertising Innovation." Still not sure whether to head to ad:tech San Francisco? It's not too late to register, and Google is pleased to offer a 20% discount on conference passes with the code GGLESPON . Posted by Amanda Matuk, Events Team

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Discount code available for ad:tech San Francisco

SES Takes Manhattan

Posted on March 18th, 2010 in Events, Pay-Per-Click, Search Specialist | No Comments »

The Search Engine Strategies conference will come to Manhattan later this month, from March 22-26, 2010, and Google will be there. We'll be on panels and will be delivering trainings on topics ranging from AdWords and Analytics to Online Video, B2B search marketing and innovations in search. In addition, Analytics Evangelist Avinash Kaushik will be the keynote speaker, on March 24th, presenting new approaches to search analytics. Our booth will be staffed with experts on products including Google AdWords and Analytics, DoubleClick and Webmaster Tools. We'll also be delivering a mobile ads presentation at the Expo Hall theater, which is free for all SES attendees. Still need to buy a pass? Use 20GOOG and save 20%. See you in the Big Apple! Posted by Amanda Matuk, Events Team

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SES Takes Manhattan