Friday, August 14, 2009

Outsourced: Observations from SES San Jose

The world of search is getting more mature and continues to have tremendous importance. Despite the economic downturn, people came out to share and learn more about how to advance their businesses through search.
Search Engine Watch
About | Blog | Forums | Search Marketing Topics | Ratings & Stats | View Online
SEW Experts   Outsourced
ClickZ - News and expert advice for the digital marketer ClickZ Events - Solutions for Interactive Marketers Search Engine Watch - Search Engine Marketing Tips & Search Engine News Search Engine Strategies - the Event for Search Engine Marketing & Optimization
Subscribe to Newsletters Subscribe to RSS Feeds Free Webcasts Members Area Forums How to Advertise


SES San Jose 2009


Top Jobs

Senior SEM Specialist
All Star Directories Seattle, United States

SEM Manager
QualitySmith Inc Walla Walla, United States

Senior Online Media Buyer
Los Angeles, United States

Sr., Account Executive
Marin Software San Francisco, United States

AKPD Message and Media - New Media positions
AKPD Message and Media Washington, United States

More Jobs More Jobs


White Papers




SEW Expert - Joshua Palau
Observations from SES San Jose
More SEW EXPERTS: OUTSOURCED SEW EXPERTS: OUTSOURCED

By Joshua Palau, Search Engine Watch, Aug 14, 2009
Columns  |  Contact Joshua  |  Biography

SEMs from around the world descended upon San Jose this week for the Search Engine Strategies 2009 Conference & Expo.

SES San Jose, in its 11th year, featured 70 sessions and boasted a whopping 150 speakers discussing topics including PPC, keyword research, SEO, social media, local search, mobile search, link building, and video optimization. Additionally, the expo hosted more than 100 companies, featuring the latest and greatest in search products and tools.

In all my years of attendance, some things about SES never change. You see a lot of familiar faces, which speaks to the allure and staying power of the industry. The booths always showcase a few sponsors with business models that make you wonder if they'll survive the next year -- a sign of both the ingenuity and mutability of the field.

But at its heart, SES is a place where you can gain an outside perspective on everyday search challenges and see how the other half is handling things. Here are a few observations.

The Economy Had An Impact...Sort Of

We've all heard that budgets are being cut, business travel is down, and people won't shell out money for a conference. However, I saw no evidence of this in San Jose. In fact, Incisive Media Marketing VP Matt McGowan tweeted that there are "over 5k delegates - more paid delegates than @SESNewYork." The exhibition hall was packed with more sponsors than I'd anticipated.

Missing from the event this year were the over-the-top giveaways. Also, the lavish parties that used to be synonymous with search conferences (no Google Dance this year) were few and far between.

The world of search is getting more mature and continues to have tremendous importance. Despite the economic downturn, people came out to share and learn more about how to advance their businesses through search.

When you think about the commitment involved in coming to SES, it's easy to pass on the event in the interest of saving time and money. If you don't meet with people in the industry, however, it's tough to evolve. You can read all the SEO blogs and Web sites you want, but there's no substitute for meeting the industry's movers and shakers face-to-face.

Social Is No Fad

A lot of sessions this year talked about the use of social media and its impact on search. Social has graduated from just a way to generate links. It has become a channel that complements search just as display does. The difference is that social is searchable, so there are more points of intersection to examine.

Mike Volpe, VP of Inbound Marketing for HubSpot, may have said it best: "Make sure your content is not just link-worthy, but share-worthy." People are finally looking at social media as a way to get their messages shared rather than just an outlet to trolling for links. When your message is tweeted and shared, it shows up in "secondary search engines" like Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube.

Semantic and Real-Time Search

Bing's advancements have spurred deeper search conversations. People are discussing how the engines can better pull in real-time data. And it may soon be time for semantic search to really step to the forefront.

The rumblings about taking semantic search more seriously have grown louder, which is interesting in and of itself. By and large, I don't believe that most people are dissatisfied with the current results. The semantic search proponents I spoke with, however, see this as a big miss and feel people don't realize how much better search could be.

Semantic search, and the drill down to user intent, is fascinating. In the world of real-time search, tweets may be integrated into results, but the tradeoff is quality of information.

Determining relevancy of real-time data, particularly social media posts, is at best incredibly tricky. A massive amount of work needs to be done in semantic categorization and trending before we see any meaningful shifts in the engines.

Analytics, Funnels, Attribution, and Performance Models

In "What Can the Recession Teach Us," I talked about not changing your business model. This advice was validated at SES San Jose by an entire track dedicated to analytics attribution.

The sessions focused on asking marketers to put serious effort into fixing their analytics. As a digital industry, we must figure out how to push past last-click attribution. While this is difficult, the first step is correctly configuring your analytics package so that you can at least get a better sense of what search is delivering.

Conclusion

If anything, the sessions and discussion at SES San Jose this year illustrated an industry that has finally achieved maturity. The early concepts of "gaming" search engines were almost entirely absent, and in their place were sound marketing strategies and plans for improving the online experience.

SEM has really come into its own this year, and it speaks volumes that, even in an economic downturn, the industry continues to thrive and innovate.

» Print this article   » E-mail a colleague   » Post a comment

Biography

Joshua Palau is the vice president of Search for Razorfish. In this role he is responsible for the global strategy, product development and operations of their paid, organic, and feeds offerings.

He helps clients to understand how search fits into the overall marketing plan and constantly researches the rapidly changing industry to help clients anticipate, and respond to, changes in the landscape.

Joshua is an active writer who has authored several Razorfish POVs on topics such as managing paid and organic search, reputation management, and social search optimization. In addition to writing his SEW column, he serves as the editor of Razorfish's weekly newsletter, Search Marketing Trends.

Joshua began his digital career in 1996 and has a diverse background working on the publisher, client, and agency side. Prior to joining Razorfish, he has worked for Hearst Magazines, About.com, and Johnson & Johnson.

Article Archives by Joshua Palau:
» Observations from SES San Jose - August 14, 2009
» What Can the Recession Teach Us? - July 31, 2009
» A Modest Proposal: Technology in Search - July 17, 2009
» Bing: The Agency Perspective - June 19, 2009
» Checking in on 2009 Search Shifts & Predictions - June 5, 2009
» Why Settle for Best Practices? Part 2 - May 11, 2009
» More Articles by Joshua Palau


Send us Feedback | Technical Questions or Bug Reports | Legal Notices, Licensing, Reprints & Permissions | Privacy Policy

Incisive Interactive Marketing LLC. 2009 All rights reserved.

To unsubscribe via postal mail, please contact us at:
Incisive Media Plc.
120 Broadway, 5th Floor, New York, NY 10271
Please include the e-mail address with which you have been contacted.

How to Advertise | Contact Us | Subscribe to Newsletters | ClickZ.com

Click here to update your profile or unsubscribe.
EmailLabs - High Performance Email Marketing
Get a Free Email Marketing Demo
All ClickZ newsletters are sent from the domain "newsletters.clickz.com".
When configuring e-mail or spam filter rules, please use this domain name rather than the sender address, which varies.

No comments: