Wednesday, February 8th, 2012

Where does search marketing stand today?

Published on July 7, 2010 by Last Click News   ·   6 Comments

Brands need to realize the potential of search engine marketing, according to a recent survey from Marketing Magazine.

The survey questioned 140 senior marketers from over 90 top advertising firms.

The results indicated that more than half of the marketers expect search engine optimization (SEO) to grow through the next year. More than 40 percent of the respondents also anticipate increases in pay per click budgets.

The marketers mentioned that their colleagues, who work in traditional media, do not appreciate search marketing.

A glaring 99 percent of the survey participants say that search marketing is not integrated into their overall mixed marketing strategy. However, over 90 percent of the brands found it easy to switch budgets from traditional media to search.

The internet is the next biggest thing in advertising. The sooner brands realize this, the more advantage they will have over their competitors.

Source: VerticalLeap

Readers Comments (6)

  1. [...] an Online …American MachinistSmall Business Marketing: SEO ToolsSmall Business ComputingLast Click News -PR Web (press release)all 76 news [...]

  2. [...] an Online …American MachinistSmall Business Marketing: SEO ToolsSmall Business ComputingWhere does search marketing stand today?Last Click NewsPR Web (press release)all 72 news [...]

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Email Updates

Attribution White Paper

The Hushed Hidden Gaps of Online Media Tracking

1. Are you counting the 'full funnel' or just the 'last click'?

2. How are you attributing multiple media sources?

3. How are you attributing 'view-throughs'?

News

Popular Google search terms for the Super Bowl; future reference for SEO

Super Bowl Sunday is a big event for marketing. And search engine optimization is no exception. According to reports ...

Bing adds new Webmaster Tool

Bing has added a new component to its Webmaster Tools, which will allow online businesses to ensure that ...

Less for Google Chrome, more for Internet Explorer

Google Chrome lost market share last January, according to NetApplications. The browser surged throughout 2011, but dipped by some ...