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The Ministry of Truth in Advertising

By Guest Blogger Leave a Comment Mar 3 0

David RodnitzkyHey Everyone,
PPC Ian here. I’m honored today to share a guest post for you from my good friend David Rodnitzky, CEO of PPC Associates. What is PPC Associates? It’s Silicon Valley’s SEM Agency. David just spoke at SMX West 2012 and did an amazing job! Without further ado, let’s jump into today’s guest post…
All the best,
Ian

The hero in George Orwell’s 1984 has a simple job: rewriting history. He scours over old newspapers (at the direction of the ironically named “Ministry of Truth”) and changes stories to make it appear that the government is doing an incredible job. For example:

PPC Associates

As short a time ago as February, the Ministry of Plenty had issued a promise (a ‘categorical pledge’ were the official words) that there would be no reduction of the chocolate ration during 1984. Actually, as Winston was aware, the chocolate ration was to be reduced from thirty grammes to twenty at the end of the present week. All that was needed was to substitute for the original promise a warning that it would probably be necessary to reduce the ration at some time in April.

To the citizens of Oceana – whose only source of information is the government – this ongoing manipulation of the truth creates a sense of incredible progress:

The fabulous statistics continued to pour out of the telescreen. As compared with last year there was more food, more clothes, more houses, more furniture, more cooking-pots, more fuel, more ships, more helicopters, more books, more babies — more of everything except disease, crime, and insanity. Year by year and minute by minute, everybody and everything was whizzing rapidly upwards.

You might wonder, what does this have to do with search engine marketing? Well, a lot, actually, and the fact that you don’t immediately recognize it as such only further proves my point!

Consider the following changes to AdWords over the last few years and see if you notice any similarities:

  1. The addition of many-per-click conversions;
  2. The addition of view-through conversion tracking;
  3. The addition of multi-channel funnel reporting in Google Analytics;
  4. The addition of “top versus side” reporting;
  5. The addition of “impression share” reporting;
  6. The addition of “minimum first page bid” reporting.

To me, all of these reports serve one purpose: to convince you to spend more money with less regard for your actual ROI. Take view-through tracking, a metric that counts a conversion when a user sees – but does not click on – a display ad and later converts at your site. Do you have any proof that this user was influenced by the display ad? Generally, no – but Google wants you to think twice about disabling display ads with no actual conversions but plenty of “view through” conversions.

Top versus side reporting is another example. Mike Nelson wrote an awesome post outlining how to use top versus side reporting to improve your ROI, but I suspect that most AdWords users see too much “side” position as an affront to their manhood and spend more per click not to increase performance but to increase their own vanity.

It’s worth noting that tools like multi-channel funnel and view-throughs never existed in AdWords or Analytics until Google decided to snap up DoubleClick and YouTube. Suddenly, last-click data (i.e. paid search) needed to share the spotlight with first-click data (display, video, etc.). No doubt if Google+ takes off, we can expect to see a lot more integration of “social conversions” into AdWords and Analytics.

Google’s long-term plan is to create a single dashboard that integrates AdWords, YouTube, Analytics, Google Affiliate Network, DoubleClick Display, and Mobile in one place. Perhaps this will be given to advertisers for free (like Analytics and AdWords currently are), or perhaps this will have a nominal fee associated with it (like ad serving or campaign management through DoubleClick). Either way, the true benefit to Google will be the ability to control how advertisers determine success.

As long as Google controls the reporting and analytics, Google can heavily influence how advertisers measure success. As such, as new Google products and channels roll out, Google can increase advertiser adoption by creating new metrics that validate investment in these products.

Now, before I get an agitated call from one our fabulous AdWords reps (thanks for the cupcakes last week, Elizabeth!), I want to note that I don’t blame Google for trying to influence advertisers through their reporting tools. As noted, all of these tools can be incredibly useful for advertisers if applied properly, and it’s hard to argue with the price!

If anything, the point of this post is to caution advertisers to think carefully about how you define success, rather than blindly accepting what your vendors – Google or otherwise – tell you is a winning strategy. There are lies, damn lies, and statistics. At the end of the day, the one metric that never lies is profit. View-throughs, cost per engagement, virality coefficients, and other fancy stats are all interesting enough, but you can’t pay the bills with them. Focus on profit, and no ministry of truth can ever deceive you!

David Rodnitzky is the CEO and co-founder of PPC Associates, a digital-marketing firm with offices in the Bay Area and Chicago. He can be contacted at info@ppcassociates.com.

All images in this post © PPCAssociates.com

David Rodnitzky Interview, PPC Associates (2 of 2)

By PPC Ian Leave a Comment Feb 14 2

David RodnitzkyHey Everyone,
Today, I’m thrilled to share part 2 of my exclusive interview with David Rodnitzky, CEO of PPC Associates. PPC Associates is Silicon Valley’s SEM Agency. Before reading this post, I encourage you to first read Part 1 of my David Rodnitzky Interview. Part 1 of the interview is totally awesome and is not to be missed. Without further ado, let’s jump into part 2 of this amazing interview…

Is PPC Associates hiring? If yes, how can candidates get in touch with you?

To some degree, we are always hiring, though it depends on the level of experience. For candidates with 3+ years of SEM experience, good quantitative skills, and a client-focused attitude, we hire 365 days a year. Moreover, for the right candidate, we offer 100% telecommuting and to date have hired senior folks in Portland, North Carolina, San Diego, and Ottawa.

In general, we’ve grown pretty fast so regardless of your experience, it’s probably worthwhile to submit a resume, because if we aren’t hiring today, there’s a good chance we’ll be hiring in 30 to 60 days. I think the best way to submit a resume is to send it to careers@ppcassociates.com.

Any advice for entrepreneurs starting their own business?

PPC Associates Ad

Well, to some degree I don’t consider myself a true entrepreneur, so I have to tread carefully here. I tell people in Silicon Valley you either mine for gold or sell Levis to the miners, and I’m the latter!

For a service business, I think the two pieces of advice I have are to 1) remember it’s a small world and 2) pay for the right people. Regarding the first point, the vast majority of our new business comes from existing or former customers. So by treating clients right and trying to build lifetime relationships instead of short-term profit, you have a greater chance of succeeding long-term.

Regarding the second point, I’ve learned the hard way that you get what you pay for when it comes to building a team. Initially, we tried to build our business with recent college grads and overseas remote employees, but the amount we saved in salaries was offset by the extra management we had to apply to these team members. We probably didn’t overwhelm our clients with amazing service and results either, which is simply unacceptable.
So we now live by Malcom Gladwell’s notion that you need 10,000 hours of experience to be a true expert. To hammer this point home to potential clients, I always ask them to imagine that they’ve been accused of a horrendous crime that they did not commit (yes, I know, I scare potential clients). In such a circumstance, would they hire a recent law school grad for $25/hr or a criminal attorney with 10 years of experience at $250/hr? They then understand why we are so picky about who we hire, and how we can get the results we can get for clients!

Any campaign management tips for PPC professionals?

Test, test, test. Oh, and keywords are a fictional concept invented by Google (or maybe GoTo). Queries are what you need to optimize against, not keywords. We’ve written a lot of great whitepapers on our Web site that are all free – check these out and you can learn a lot about my philosophy around campaign management.

How do you see the SEM industry evolving?

I believe that traditional SEM is dead. Buying keywords and creating text ads is just one part of what SEM is today. Today you need to have expertise in search, social PPC, YouTube, mobile, display, landing page optimization, analytics, and attribution, to name just a few. To be great at SEM today, you have to understand the entire conversion funnel and touch every part of that funnel.

The SEM industry is evolving in the same way that many other professional fields have evolved historically – specialization and sub-specialization. In 1860, if you had a headache, you’d go to your local doctor and he’d try to diagnose your problem. Today, you might go to your general practitioner, who would refer you to a neurologist, who might send you to a movement disorders specialist, who might further refer you to a Parkinson’s Disease expert. The same thing is happening in SEM. We have Facebook PPC experts, YouTube pros, GDN gurus – it’s impossible to expect one person to be an expert at all facets of SEM anymore.

Any closing thoughts for PPC Ian readers?

Keep absorbing everything you can about SEM – the deeper you dig into it, the more you realize how much more you have to learn. I’ve been doing this for 12 years now and I feel like I learn something new every day!

Thank You, David!

David, on behalf of all PPC Ian readers, I want to sincerely thank you for the amazing interview. I’m certainly inspired and truly enjoyed the interview. PPC Ian readers, make sure to check out Part 1 of My David Rodnitzky Interview (if you have not already) and also don’t forget to stop by PPC Associates, Silicon Valley’s SEM Agency.

Images in this article © PPC Associates.

David Rodnitzky Interview, PPC Associates (1 of 2)

By PPC Ian Leave a Comment Feb 13 14

David RodnitzkyInterviews here on PPC Ian have been incredibly popular. I’ve been so fortunate to have secured interviews with top industry leaders. Today, I could not be more thrilled and honored, I have secured an exclusive interview with David Rodnitzky, founder and CEO of PPC Associates. PPC Associates is Silicon Valley’s SEM Agency. Just check out their billboards in Palo Alto and see for yourself. I’m a huge fan of David and his agency. They have grown quickly and have an amazing reputation because they deliver results and know their stuff (you may wish to check out their 7 Habits eBook). Without further ado, let’s jump into today’s interview! Today I’ll post the first half of this great interview and tomorrow the second half!

How did you get started in the SEM industry?

PPC Associates

I graduated from law school in 1999 and all I knew was that I didn’t want to be a lawyer. So I moved to San Francisco from Iowa because I wanted to live on the West Coast. Initially I took whatever job I could find, from helping QA a Barbie videogame, to doing legal research for a law firm, to consulting to the financial industry.

After about six months, I got an offer to work for a startup called Rentals.com as a "manager of strategy," whatever that means. About six months into that job, the Director of Marketing quit and there was no one in the company managing the marketing budget. So I just volunteered to do it, even though I knew nothing about marketing, and the company agreed to let me take a stab at it.

Initially I was working with an ad agency and a PR agency and paying each of them a retainer of $30,000/month (I did not negotiate these contracts!). Then one day I heard about a company called GoTo.com where you could buy advertising for a penny per click. I tried it out and I was shocked at the volume and quality of traffic I was getting. I fired the two agencies and shifted as much of our budget as possible to GoTo as I could. GoTo turned into Overture, which then turned into Yahoo Search Marketing, which was of course copied by Google AdWords. I was lucky to stumble into this stuff when it was all very new.

How did you decide to start your own agency?

In 2007 I was working for an etailer and managing a remote team in Bangalore, India. About once a quarter, I was making the 30-hour trip over to India to coordinate with my team. Toward the end of the year, my wife got pregnant with our first son, and traveling overseas suddenly seemed like a very bad idea. Plus, I had been working for startups for more than seven years at that point, and I was just burnt out. So I quit without any plan other than to spend time with my wife and new son.

For the first few months of 2008, I hung out at a coffee shop playing online poker and dabbling in affiliate marketing. Slowly, however, I started to get calls from friends in the industry asking me if I could help them with their SEM campaigns. The call volume kept increasing to the point that I stopped the poker and affiliate marketing (neither of which were making me particularly rich) and I focused full-time on the consulting.
From there, I eventually brought on a partner (Will Lin) to handle additional work, and we eventually started to hire staff, rent offices, build process and technology – and, as they say, the rest is history. Today we have 35+ team members, two offices, almost 60 clients, and we manage somewhere north of $60 million in online marketing spending.

What’s it like running an SEM agency?

It’s a lot of fun. We work with a lot of entrepreneur-driven companies, and it’s really exciting to be a part of taking a company from an idea to a successful business. I’m not the kind of person who can come up with a great startup idea and actually execute against it, so I enjoy living vicariously through our clients!
Of course, there is also a lot of stress running an SEM agency. We have to constantly stay on top of the latest trends in SEM, and more and more we are being asked by clients to manage their Facebook, display, mobile, YouTube, and LinkedIn campaigns. So we are constantly distilling new information and applying this to clients’ accounts. It can make your brain hurt, but I’d much prefer to be at a job where I come home mentally exhausted than numb from boredom.

What sets PPC Associates ahead of the competition? What makes you guys unique?

There are a few things we do differently from other agencies. First, we invented the concept of the two-day contract. We want clients to work with us because they are overjoyed by the results and service they are getting, not because they are locked into a long-term contract. So every client has the right to fire us at any time with just two days’ notice if we aren’t exceeding expectations. Fortunately, most don’t!

We also provide our clients with free landing page and banner ad design – this is also a concept that we’ve pioneered in the industry. We’re huge believers in conversion-rate optimization, and we’ve put our money where our mouth is by hiring a full-time designer to support our clients. A lot of clients don’t have internal resources for design, so this is a huge value-add for them.

Third, we have a pretty unique internal process for optimizing campaigns. We call it the Alpha-Beta process, and you can understand the foundations of it by downloading the whitepaper available on our home page. Alpha-Beta is a very granular process that creates incredibly targeted ad groups, each based on a specific query in exact match. We basically make it impossible for Google or any other search engine to match our clients on bad-performing queries.

And last but not least, we are obsessed (in a good way) with service. We run a Net Promoter Survey ® every quarter to make sure we are absolutely delighting our clients, and we make process and personnel changes continuously to improve our results. Our last survey yielded a 91% Net Promoter score, which is about as good as you can get, but we are always trying to get better.

What are some of the greatest challenges you face?

The biggest challenge I see is keeping up with the pace of online marketing. It’s hard enough to keep track of all of the AdWords betas and improvements coming out, but when you combine that with changes to Facebook’s ad platform, the rapid pace of innovation in the display media buying world, and everything else we touch, it’s a lot of information to absorb. Our solution – which has worked so far – is to hire channel-specific experts to be the internal "gurus" for our clients.

What are some of the greatest rewards of running PPC Associates?

The biggest reward for me is helping others to be successful and getting paid to do it. I love seeing our clients gain market share and get accolades from the press. I also love that we’re now employing more than 35 people in a tough economy. Happy clients and happy team members are about all I can ask for.

Stay Tuned – Part 2 of The Interview Comes Out Tomorrow

David, thank you so much! What an amazing interview. I’m totally glued to this one, and am so impressed. I can’t wait to post part 2 of the interview tomorrow. PPC Ian readers, make sure to check out PPC Associates today.

Images in this post © PPC Associates

About PPC Ian

Ian Lopuch (PPC Ian)Hi, I'm Ian Lopuch, also known as PPC Ian. I'm an Idaho-based real estate developer and investor, with an incredible passion for dividend stocks (and investments that provide true passive income for the long-term). In fact, I have built a portfolio of 37 positions that will one day pay for all of my living expenses. I enjoy blogging here about my passion for cash flow investing, while also sharing some other business and digital marketing insights from time-to-time.

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