Google Trends Update: Faster, Smarter, More Customizable via @sejournal, @MattGSouthern

Google has updated its Trending Now tool in Google Trends, offering faster and more comprehensive search data.

The tool now detects more trends, covers more countries, and provides more visualization and filtering options.

These changes further enhance Google Trends’ value for marketers, researchers, and anyone seeking real-time insights into search behavior.

Updates To ‘Trending Now’ In Google Trends

Improved Trend Detection & Refresh Rate

Google says its new trend forecasting engine spots ten times more emerging trends than before.

It now updates every 10 minutes, providing real-time insights on rising search interests.

Expanded Global Coverage

The Trending Now tool is now available in 125 countries, 40 of which offer region-specific trend data.

This expansion allows for more localized trend analysis and comparison.

Enhanced Context & Visualization

You can now view a breakdown of each trend, including its emergence time, duration, and related news articles.

A graph displaying Search interest over time is also provided, along with the ability to compare multiple trends and export data for further analysis.

Customizable Filters

The redesigned filters tab lets you fine-tune trend results based on location, time frame, and trend status.

To concentrate on currently popular searches, you can select a time frame (4 hours, 24 hours, 48 hours, or 7 days) and filter out inactive trends.

Google Trends Tutorial Video

To complement the Trending Now update, Google has released a comprehensive video tutorial on its Google Search Central YouTube channel.

The video features Daniel Waisberg, a Google search Advocate, and Hadas Jacobi, a software engineer on the Google Trends team.

They demonstrate using Google Trends to compare search terms and topics across Google Search and YouTube.

The tutorial covers:

  • Navigating the Google Trends interface
  • Comparing up to five topics or search terms
  • Utilizing filters for location, time period, category, and Google property
  • Interpreting trend data and charts
  • Understanding related topics and queries

See the full video below.

Why This Matters

Google Trends remains a powerful tool for understanding public interest and search behavior.

As Waisberg states in the tutorial:

“Whether you’re a marketer, journalist or researcher, understanding Google Trends can help you uncover emerging trends and make informed decisions.”

As search patterns change, these updates will help you stay ahead with the latest insight into global and local search trends.


Featured Image: DANIEL CONSTANTE/Shutterstock

Anthropic Announces Prompt Caching with Claude via @sejournal, @martinibuster

Anthropic announced announced a new Prompt Caching with Claude feature that boosts Claude’s capabilities for repetitive tasks with large amounts of detailed contextual information. The new feature makes it faster, cheaper and more powerful, available today in Beta through the Anthropic API.

Prompt Caching

This new feature provides a powerful boosts for users that consistently use highly detailed instructions that use example responses and contain a large amount of background information in the prompt, enabling Claude to re-use the data with the cache. This improves the consistency of output, speeds up Claude responses by to 50% (lower latency), and it also makes it up to 90% cheaper to use.

Prompt Caching with Claude is especially useful for complex projects that rely on the same data and is useful for businesses of all sizes, not just enterprise level organizations. This feature is available in a public Beta via the Anthropic API for use with Claude 3.5 Sonnet and Claude 3 Haiku.

The announcement lists the following ways Prompt Caching improves performance:

  • “Conversational agents: Reduce cost and latency for extended conversations, especially those with long instructions or uploaded documents.
  • Large document processing: Incorporate complete long-form material in your prompt without increasing response latency.
  • Detailed instruction sets: Share extensive lists of instructions, procedures, and examples to fine-tune Claude’s responses without incurring repeated costs.
  • Coding assistants: Improve autocomplete and codebase Q&A by keeping a summarized version of the codebase in the prompt.
  • Agentic tool use: Enhance performance for scenarios involving multiple tool calls and iterative code changes, where each step typically requires a new API call.”

More information about the Anthropic API here:

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Featured Image by Shutterstock/gguy

How To Balance Performance And Brand Marketing via @sejournal, @MordyOberstein

Balancing brand and performance marketing has nothing to do with giving each side its amount of time in the limelight.

There’s no magic harmony you’re going to create that delivers some sort of marketing tactic equilibrium and equality.

This is the most controversial article I have ever written. A lot of people reading this will not be happy about what I have to say. For the record, there’s a bit of irony in this, considering I have said way more controversial things about marketing and SEO in the past.

Yet, here we are as I am about to tell you that the only way to balance brand and performance marketing is to give brand supremacy.

Let the fireworks begin.

Balance Brand & Performance Marketing? Why Is There Even A Problem?

In keeping with espousing heresy I will not start this post with “What is brand marketing?” and/or “What is performance marketing?” nor will I dive right into how to balance the two.

Instead, I’m going to challenge the very premise of the article so that you can better understand why this question is even worth your time.

While I see the problem as basically being self-evident, let’s flush it out a bit. The way I see it, there are two fundamental issues at play here (there are more, but this post is going to be long enough as it is):

1. Mindset

The mindset required for good brand marketing is, at times, lightyears away from the performance mindset.

I’m not saying that they intrinsically have to be this way. As I’ll get into later, I think the two ways of thinking complement each other.

However, at the risk of generalizing, there does tend to be a strong divergence between how the two types of marketers think. At least, this has been my experience over the past decade or so as someone who straddles both marketing disciplines.

I often find performance marketers very focused on the immediate. What’s bringing traffic right now, and how do we get more of it?

For the record, that’s not necessarily a bad thing. Nor is it unreasonable (I mean, it is, but it’s not).

This hyperfocus on immediate performance metrics is quite logical since performance marketers are graded on immediate ROI. Is it thus any surprise they focus on the immediate? (So, performance marketers, it’s not you…it’s the system.)

Brand has an entirely different goal. With brand building, the focus is on exactly that: building. Building an identity, associations and sentiment, messaging, positioning, etc.

All of that takes time. You don’t immediately leave an imprint on someone. If you want to create an impression with an audience, it’s pretty obvious it’s going to take time.

This process is also far more compounded and less linear than performance marketing is often perceived. It’s not like getting a page to rank well and driving in traffic who will convert.

You’re creating a reputation for yourself that involves micro-moments and micro-activities compounding over an extended period (like how any association is formed).

(For what it’s worth, I would argue that performance-based activities, such as SEO, also compound over time. You’re not going to rank for that meaty keyword on day one).

Brand marketing naturally lends itself to a bit more of a holistic long-term mindset whereas performance-based marketing lends itself to focusing more on the immediate impact of a given activity.

These divergent mindsets make it entirely difficult to properly balance brand and performance. They’re almost at war with each other.

To sum it all up: Performance marketing (to its detriment) looks at the end result and often doesn’t care about context, environment, and ecosystems. Brand, on the other hand, is all about contextualization and understanding the environment and ecosystem the brand is operating within.

Now, you might be thinking, well a lot of brand marketers also seem to care less about context, environment, and ecosystems and generally operate in the here and now much like a performance marketer might.

Which brings me to my next point.

2. Misunderstanding What Brand Is

Part of what makes balancing brand and performance marketing almost an inherent difficulty is the lack of understanding of what “brand” actually is.

Too often, what we call “brand marketing” is really performance or product marketing disguised as brand marketing.

What happens is that a company will put emphasis on brand when in reality it’s just another form of performance marketing. The net result is a lack of balance but without even realizing it.

Imagine a TV commercial that doesn’t have a message or any positioning but rather simply tells you what the product is and what it does. Is this brand marketing? I say no. This is just product marketing. It’s pure product awareness.

The web is filled with the equivalent of this.

You talking about your product or service across the internet is not brand marketing; it’s product marketing.

Brand marketing is entirely about who you are in the context of who your audience is and how you want to then be perceived. It is fundamentally associative. If it’s not associative, it’s probably not genuine brand marketing. That is a hot take right there.

Branding is about putting yourself in a position to grow; it is not growth per se. If brand marketing were farming, it wouldn’t even be planting the seeds; it would be sowing the soil so that you could eventually plant the seeds.

Brand is concerned with perception and momentum, not adoption. I know that sounds crazy, and half of y’all out there on both the brand and performance side of marketing are shaking your heads, if not your fists, right now.

But it is the truth. Real brand marketing, the kind you see the Cokes and Lexuses of the world doing, is about perception that leads to momentum. It’s about putting you in a position to grow and to have opportunities that you can capitalize on.

How Do You Then Balance Brand And Performance?

Brand is the setup for performance. Brand creates the opportunity, and performance captures it.

It’s all one dance.

Allow me to explain.

Brand Is Primary, And Here’s Why

Balancing performance and brand marketing isn’t about some sort of give-and-take between the two approaches. If you’re thinking about balance in terms of scales, that’s not how this is going to work.

It’s about knowing where each discipline sits in the “marketing hierarchy” and how the two interact.

This is why I am telling you brand is primary – and it’s not even close.

There are two fundamental ways brand is primary to performance marketing (I was going to insert another, but I think for now these two are the most important):

The Ultimate Goal Is To Have People Come To You

Brand is primary in the very goal it sets out to achieve – to bring audiences to you (as opposed to you chasing your audience across social and search screaming “Pick me! Pick me!”).

It’s like the old line from the Cheers theme song, “You wanna go where everybody knows your name.” No one wrote a line in a sitcom theme song that said, “You wanna go chasing everyone around the block screaming like a mad person so that they will know your name.”

Consumers knowing who you are and seeking you out is self-evidently more advantageous than trying to chase after your consumer base and hoping to heaven you found them at the right moment in the buyer journey.

In case it’s not entirely self-evident (because I have heard performance marketers say the complete opposite), people coming to you creates more momentum and opens up new revenue possibilities than the inverse ever could.

Buzz is contagious. I’m not saying you need to go viral or anything like that, but creating momentum naturally leads to more momentum. The momentum your brand creates for itself leads to all sorts of new possibilities.

Being sought after on whatever level builds upon itself. If done with care and patience it can create real stable opportunity growth for you. This is really what any serious company wants: long-term stable growth. Nothing is more long-term and more stable than being sought after and enticing.

Serious connections with your audience are hard to create but they are hard to really break as well.

Unless you become a known quantity in your niche, no amount of performance marketing is going to help you achieve what you really want: self-sustained staying power.

Brand helps fulfill the ultimate goal any company has: to be a market leader.

Brand Is What Allows Performance To Perform

Can pure performance marketing perform (for lack of a better word)? Yes, obviously.

Can it reach its true potential without brand? No.

Brand marketing is what creates the willingness to invest and interact with your performance marketing.

Imagine you’re on a train, and some random goofball starts waving at you. Are you gonna wave back? And even if you do, are you really interested in interacting with this person?

Now imagine instead that some random whacko your friend sees you on the train and waves. Would you wave back? Wave? You might go on mosy over and have an actual conversation.

Performance without brand is randomly waving at people and hoping that they converse with you. Sometimes they might, but you’re fighting an uphill battle.

Creating a connection with your audience that exists beyond utility is what enables your performance marketing to perform the way you want it to.

To use an SEO analogy, trying to get your product or service to perform without brand is like trying to get a single page on a new website to rank for a highly competitive keyword without any other content history to support it.

Effectively establishing your brand is what enables you to make the pitch that can covert at the appropriate time.

That’s why I would say 99% of brand marketing is not about trying to build revenue. It’s about building the possibility of building revenue. It’s about building cadence and momentum so that the part of your marketing that asks folks to open their wallets works.

Brand puts you on the doorstep of performance. In effect, brand creates the lead, and performance signs the deal.

Like I said earlier, if marketing were a farm, then branding wouldn’t even be planting the seeds. It would be sowing the ground so that you could plant them. And like a field, if you don’t sow it first, you will not have a crop.

If you want revenue without fighting an uphill battle, you have to realize that brand is primary. It is what allows your other marketing activity to perform as you really want it to.

This goes back to what I was saying earlier about people not understanding what brand is.

As far-out as it sounds, brand is not about revenue, it’s about building the opportunities that will eventually lead to revenue. Understanding this one point puts you so far ahead of everyone else.

The Problems In Giving Performance Primacy In A Balanced Approach

Let’s take this from the other side of the coin. What would happen if you gave performance primacy, not brand?

If performance is the building block of the marketing strategy you’re setting yourself up for significant problems down the road.

There are more than a few reasons why this is true, here are some of the more notable ones:

Performance First Means Working With Your Hands Tied Behind Your Back

I don’t even know where to start with this one because a performance-first mindset limits you in so many ways.

Broadly speaking, performance being primary, as I mentioned earlier, means fighting an uphill battle. You’re constantly trying to find the right audience at the right time and then convincing them to funnel through.

Yes, you can get to a good place that way but it’s never really working on its own for you. You never really become a “thing” this way and can’t naturally build momentum upon your activities the same way.

Again, a) I spoke about this at length above b) I am sure you will find me a case where I am wrong – that’s not my point.

On top of that, performance generally tends to be siloed – an obvious inefficiency. Link builders do link building, PPC does paid, etc. – there’s a general lack of broader strategy and comms when performance takes the lead.

Each team has its own KPIs and does whatever it takes to meet them, resulting in obvious inefficiency.

Performance Will Pigeon-hole You Every Time

Because performance marketing is very here-and-now, it generally lacks the flexibility to build for the future.

Doing what’s best for the KPIs is too often doing what’s best in the immediate only.

That means a lack of flexibility in both structure and activity.

I’ll give you a great example of what I mean when I say performance limits a business structurally.

While this case may sound “far-fetched” today, SEOs who have been around a while will search their feelings for they know what I am about to say to be true.

Back in the day, if I had a site that sold DVDs, “the SEO play” would be to name the site “buydvds.com,” or whatever.

It’s generally not a good idea to name your brand after a specific tech asset as, well, tech assets change. In this case, DVDs are basically defunct.

Now the business here may have pivoted to streaming media but now has to deal with a whole rebrand (including a site migration) and all of the immense headaches that come with it. What they should have done at the onset was name the site something like “entertainmentmedia.com” or whatever.

Why didn’t they? Because the performance play became primary, and the brand play was discarded.

Performance, by its very nature, lacks breadth and as a result, will often limit the scope of how the business is able to function or structure itself.

The other way performance limits a business relates directly to the marketing activities performance signs off on and doesn’t sign off on.

Now, if you think I’ve been a bit salty thus far…hold my beer.

What performance-based marketing does to overall marketing activities is the equivalent of a marathon runner deciding to amputate their foot mid-race while maintaining the expectation to break a world record.

To see this in action, look no further than what happens when performance owns a content strategy.

What is the value of content in the context of performance? Impressions, clicks, traffic, conversions, etc.

You see this all the time in the SEO space. You can’t go a week without seeing someone somewhere ask, “If a keyword has 0 search volume should I bother writing content for it?”

Every time I see this question, a piece of me dies.

Not because it might not be true. There might not be a ton of search volume but because that’s a not reason not to write a piece of content.

Leave aside the fact that your current users may expect that content to be there on your site, it could signal the same expectation to new consumers hitting the site for the first time. Also, content is a corpus. You have to build it up to the point where you can write that post for that money keyword.

Performance marketing never asks, “What does writing this content allow me to do next?”

Instead, it’s always, “Why does this content do for me right now?”

Pigeon-holed.

Folks Might Use You, But They Also Might Hate You (And Is That What You Really Aim To Do?)

My sister recently told me how she’s so reliant on Amazon but hates using them at the same time due to how they allegedly treat their workers.

It’s entirely possible that folks may consume your offering but will not be fond of you when doing so. It’s also almost certain that your brand can’t get away with it the way Amazon can.

If all you’re thinking about is traffic KPIs and conversions, etc., you’re missing the most fundamental aspect of success – likability.

It doesn’t even have to be so extreme. Look at the oversaturation of content between Marvel and Star Wars (and even my personal favorite, HBO’s Hard Knocks NFL documentary series).

Sure, they get viewers, but it all comes with negative sentiment. While the end product of Hard Knock’s new preseason series was actually not bad, New York sports radio (the series featured a New York team) trounced HBO before its release.

For a week, every sports host was basically shaking their heads at the idea of having to watch a whole series about phone calls between General Managers making trades, etc. So HBO got the numbers but accumulated a lot of brand baggage to do it.

How smart is that as a long-term strategy?

That’s, fundamentally, a testimony to the fact that brand can assess a move qualitatively while performance just can’t.

That’s not to say performance’s quantitative measurement isn’t vital. It’s a very important part of this brand balancing act.

If Brand Builds, Then Performance Course Corrects

I don’t want you to walk away thinking that performance marketing doesn’t hold value. This article isn’t about brand being better. It’s about the balance.

Brand needs performance to leverage its full power, just like performance needs brand. Again, brand can set you up, but performance closes the deal. Brand, for example, can set up a business to have the authority it needs to pull in organic traffic.

But you need a genuine SEO strategy that includes things like keyword targeting, etc. In this specific case, a performance-based mindset is what will take the brand from potentiality to actuality.

Very often, brand course corrections should be based on the data performance marketing provides.

If there’s a drop in whatever KPI whether it be sign-ups or traffic or whatever, it’s often a change in brand and business strategy that’s needed. That change can’t occur unless you have the data insights performance marketing provides.

Take Starbucks. At the time of this writing, they’ve seen a decline in business, and there are multiple reasons for it. What I found interesting was the user sentiment towards Starbucks’ “corporate identity.”

In an interview with CBS, one customer said, “Starbucks started really feeling like corporate America in a way it hadn’t before.”

If I were Starbucks, I would at least explore the idea of creating a sub brand that is more niche and local. Much the way the beer companies did when they saw craft beer sales surge (hence Coors created Blue Moon).

That sort of shift in brand strategy can’t possibly occur without the insights offered by performance marketing. You have to have sound performance marketing processes in place to effectively run your brand marketing.

So when I say brand is “primary,” I mean that in the sense of the stages of marketing thought and activity.

Not necessarily importance (I do think brand is fundamentally more important, but that’s, again, not what this post is about). You literally have to balance (maybe integrate is a better word) performance into your brand marketing in order to be effective.

Can’t Performance Build Up The Brand?

Doing this is like trying to pull a whale through a needle hole.

Yeah, I guess it might be technically possible, and someone out there did it – but it is not the norm. Upon considering this, I am sure no one has pulled a whale through a needle hole, but I think you get my point.

You are trying to build up a tidal wave one raindrop at a time. Yes, it is possible, but it goes against the very foundation of what you’re trying to actually do – gain momentum.

I’ve heard the argument that by ranking for this and that query and everything in between, you will become an established presence – a brand.

That can be possible. And yes, your content strategy (SEO and beyond) is a big part of your brand strategy. But thinking about something like Google Search as being the method to establish a brand reputation is a chaotic way to go about building a brand.

To start, Search isn’t a medium where your audience may even be interested in “hearing from you.” They may have a specific need at a specific moment that brings them to search. Once that need is met does the user really care to explore more about your product or service? It’s a toss-up at best.

It’s like trying to have a conversation with someone in the middle of a lecture – it’s just not conducive.

You want to have a conversation and make a connection in a place and time that is meant to have a conversation and connection (social media, YouTube, live events, etc.).

Using something like Search to establish a distinctly recognizable brand is just not what Search is.

SEO and search engines are a great way to supplement and reinforce the messaging and positioning you establish on more suitable platforms.

If a consumer sees you on social and interacts with you over time and then goes to search and keeps seeing your results pop up it can reinforce your positioning. It may even make it likely to get a conversation out of it.

What makes performance hard in terms of it being the method to establish a brand is that the assets usually associated with it (PPC, SEO, etc.) are secondary branding assets in the context of how users discover them.

They can supplement, accent, and reinforce, but they are not designed to be primarily effective at establishing a brand identity and audience connection.

Think of it like the difference between someone specifically coming to your blog after interacting with your brand for years on social versus someone who finds a single post on Google.

Yes, they both might read the same content but in the latter case, there is no identity contextualization. They don’t know who you are and how that post fits in with your overall identity and positioning. They get the information in the post but in terms of getting “you,” it’s not very direct.

The way the audience interacts with your brand via performance marketing activity is far too limited and narrow in scope for identity contextualization to easily take place.

So it can happen, and it does happen a bit each time that person interacts with your content (say via search), but it’s piecemeal and disjointed.

Better Balance Means Better Marketing

Balancing brand and performance means knowing the role and place of each marketing discipline. It means allowing the two areas to interact and influence each other at the right time and in the right way.

While it all starts with branding at the onset, the relationship between the two areas of marketing should grow to be reciprocal. Brand should open the doors for performance and performance should help the brand evolve.

For too long, the digital marketing space has siloed these two areas, with inefficiency (and more) being the net result.

The future of marketing is being able to unite these two concepts effectively. I think there is a lack of attention given to how brand impacts performance efficacy (and vice versa).

Uniting the two areas of marketing will better align with where the web and its user base are headed.

More resources: 


Featured Image: Jack_the_sparow/Shutterstock

9 Proven Ways To Improve Your PPC Campaign Performance via @sejournal, @andreaatzori

Pay-per-click (PPC) advertising remains a cornerstone of effective digital marketing strategies.

Often, when we begin work on a PPC account or campaign, it comes with some history.

Whether it’s because we inherited it or have been asked to conduct an audit, the goal is always the same: to look at it with fresh new eyes, making use of our expertise and hard-earned skills.

We need to make sense of it to fix issues and improve performance.

In my original post dated October 2021, I highlighted seven key areas to optimize in order to improve PPC campaign performance.

But as we move through 2024, the advent of AI tools and intelligence has significantly disrupted the landscape, necessitating continuous refinement and adaptation.

Additionally, the proliferation of privacy regulations has profoundly impacted data collection and insights gathering.

In this updated guide, we now explore nine proven ways to enhance your PPC campaign performance, considering these new dynamics.

By leveraging the latest tools and insights, you can ensure your campaigns are optimized for maximum impact and return on investment.

Nine Key Areas For Improving PPC Campaign Performance

1. Performance By Location

One often overlooked but obvious way to segment the performance by audience is to look at where your existing and prospecting customers are located.

Google Ads campaign perfromance segmentation by locationScreenshot from Google Ads, July 2024

You will likely see patterns for different states, regions, and even postal codes.

This seems to be quite obvious if we consider that demographics can be entirely different from place to place.

By segmenting your audience based on geographical data, you can tailor your campaigns to target specific areas more effectively. For instance, higher transaction values in affluent suburbs may justify increased spending to acquire those customers.

Ensure your campaign settings reflect these nuances to optimize performance.

2. Performance By Device

It’s a given. Despite the increasing convergence between experiences on different platforms and devices, user behavior can vary significantly across different devices.

While mobile continues to dominate traffic, desktop often leads in conversions for many industries.

It’s not just a matter of screen size and resolution, but also about context and the reasons why we use a device instead of another.

It’s crucial to regularly review device performance data to better understand your audience and the context in which they operate. This understanding allows you to align your messaging and user experience accordingly.

Furthermore, aligning this data with other marketing channels can enhance the overall effectiveness of your campaigns.

3. Performance By Network (Search Vs. Search Partners Vs. Display)

Targeting the right network can significantly impact your campaign’s success.

We could argue at length about the quality of impressions and clicks from partners’ websites. But most of the time, these generate such a small amount of traffic that in the wider context of an account, the spend can be negligible.

Google Ads campaign perfromance segmentation by networkScreenshot from Google Ads, July 2024

And considering that there is no way to target Search Partners alone, whether we keep the Search Partners on or off is a different matter.

However, that cannot be said for the Display Network — you should always split Search and Display campaigns.

While Search Network delivers high-intent traffic, Display Network excels in brand awareness, and while the end of third-party cookies and a cookieless future are upon us mean that personalized and targeted ads will be more limited, we are likely to see a revival of contextual advertising.

But even when highly targeted, display ads are a form of disruption of the user experience, and therefore we must always acknowledge that in our creative and messaging.

Additionally, we should likely use the two networks to target customers and prospects at different stages of their user journey and have different strategies, KPIs, and targets aligned to that.

4. Audience Performance

Often, we see search driving a significant amount of traffic from existing customers who use the engines to quickly “navigate” to a website to access their account.

If appropriate measures are not in place, these navigational clicks can be quite costly when they come from PPC ads.

Add suppression lists to avoid (where possible) incurring any extra costs that won’t drive additional conversions.

Per my previous point, the third-party cookie ban will limit your ability to target specific audience members and personalized ads, including retargeting.

So other logical uses of audience targeting include the segmentation of the user base (first-party data) into cohorts based on a shared attribute or identifier, and therefore defined by behavior (i.e., page visitors), and/or engagement (high consumption of content).

With the growing importance of first-party data due to privacy regulations, nurturing customer lists is crucial.

Google Ads campaign perfromance segmentation by audienceScreenshot from Google Ads, July 2024

But audiences can also be used for observation rather than targeting, as in the above example.

Since these won’t affect the campaigns’ performance, it is strongly suggested that as many relevant audiences as possible be added.

Once the data is collected, it will provide valuable insights into which segments are most valuable and which audiences are underperforming. This will enable you to make the right adjustments.

5. Negatives And Negative Lists

Keywords are still the strongest signal. But due to the complexity of natural language and the different (often unique) ways people search, even with the most sophisticated machine learning, machines can still struggle to fully understand the intent.

Therefore, it’s as important as ever to narrow down the chances that keywords might match unwanted search queries. You must continually review and mine the search query data available.

Even with the current limitations, search query reports can really help you understand what Google thinks a website or a page is about.

At a time when Google is encouraging advertisers to move to using more broad match and keyword themes, this can help reduce costs for unwanted, less relevant searches and exclude terms that don’t align with your campaign goals.

This ongoing process also helps improve your quality score and overall campaign efficiency.

6. Features Available (And Applicable To The Account/Campaign) In The Platform

Continuing from the point above, one of the reasons to use additional features like the ad extensions is the benefit these can have on the quality score.

It goes without saying that QS alone should be a compelling enough reason.

Additionally, considering that ad listings on search engines can be quite expensive, wouldn’t it make sense to try to always maximize the on-page real estate?

If we are paying a large amount of money to be there, we want to ensure it’s worth it. Besides, the more space we can take, the less will be available for competitors and other advertisers!

Additional features also include less-used options, such as the capability to upload offline conversions (more on that in a moment) or run experiments and A/B testing.

With the push for automation by platform owners, manual adjustments are becoming more limited.

Leveraging machine learning and AI for actionable insights and optimization options is now more critical than ever.

7. Conversion Tracking

Accurate conversion tracking is the bedrock of effective PPC campaigns – and this is one of my favorites – and it’s essential that we are tracking the right goals.

In digital marketing, everything should be measurable, and marketers should be accountable for the performance of their advertising campaigns. Conversion tracking should always be at the cornerstone of planning and executing media buying.

However, we often see examples of PPC accounts and campaigns that are either missing conversion tracking altogether or are tracking the wrong endpoints.

Provided we have our conversions firing and recording correctly, some expert tips are to:

  • Use the segmentation option from within Google Ads to easily and quickly see a breakdown of the conversion types by campaign (see example below). In fact, the segmentation view is an extremely useful, yet massively underrated, tool!
Google Ads campaign perfromance segmentation by conversion actionScreenshot from Google Ads, July 2024
  • Set the right conversion goal(s) for each campaign when using Target cost per action (CPA) or Target return on ad spend (ROAS) bid strategies.
  • Set up and make use of custom columns to add the different conversion points and/or performance metrics such as CPA, return on investment (ROI) or ROAS.

Besides, the importance of conversion data has increased exponentially as it informs machine-driven optimization, so importing offline conversions and using enhanced conversions are now essential practices.

8. The Role Of Automation And AI

The role of the marketer has evolved significantly with the advent of AI and automation.

It’s now crucial to maximize the effectiveness of these technologies.

Automated systems can mine and provide actionable insights from vast amounts of data, which manual methods cannot match; only understanding and leveraging these capabilities will help marketers stay ahead.

9. First-Party Data and Privacy Regulations

We probably cannot stress enough about this; with increasing privacy regulations, third-party data is becoming less reliable, so nurturing first-party data has never been more important.

Building and maintaining comprehensive customer lists in full transparency allows for targeting with greater accuracy and personalization while ensuring compliance with privacy laws and campaign effectiveness.

Conclusion

In the dynamic world of PPC advertising, continuous improvement is key.

By regularly updating and refining your strategies across (some of) these nine areas, you can achieve sustained success and drive better results for your campaigns.

Back in 2021, my recommendation was to embrace the Pareto Principle and focus on where you can make a difference right away:

“Look for those campaigns and terms that are responsible for the majority of the ad spend.

It is likely that 20% of those are accountable for 80% of your outgoing costs.

If those campaigns or keywords are hitting your targets, improving their performance might really help you to take things to the next level and become the company CFO’s best friend.”

Now I still think your job is to focus on the 20%, but the grunt work, the 80% is likely to be best left to the machines.

The advent of AI tools and the push for automation have transformed the role of marketers, making it essential to leverage these technologies effectively, while privacy regulations underscore the importance of first-party data.

Like never before, it is important to stay informed about the latest tools and trends and not hesitate to adapt the approach to meet the evolving needs of your audience.

Key Takeaways for 2024:

  • Prioritize data-driven decisions by leveraging the latest performance insights.
  • Regularly update and refine your strategies to stay ahead of the competition.
  • Utilize the full range of available features and tools to maximize campaign effectiveness.
  • Adapt to the evolving role of automation and AI in PPC advertising.
  • Focus on first-party data to navigate the challenges posed by privacy regulations.

More resources: 


Featured Image: BestForBest/Shutterstock

How the auto industry could steer the world toward green steel

Steel scaffolds our world, undergirding buildings and machines. It also presents a major challenge for climate change, since steel production largely relies on polluting fossil fuels. The automotive industry could be a key player in turning things around.

Steel production is currently responsible for about 7% of global greenhouse gas emissions. There’s a growing array of technologies that can produce steel with dramatically lower emissions—though some are still in development, and they often come with a higher price tag. The auto industry could be a fertile early market for these technologies, both because it’s a major player in the industry and because switching to more expensive materials would only bump costs up for new vehicles by less than 1%, according to a new report

Finding economical ways to produce the materials we rely on while also cutting emissions is a major challenge for the industrial sector. Vehicle manufacturers embracing greener steel could provide a blueprint for how to bring more climate-friendly materials to the market without driving customers away.

Since automakers use a lot of steel, they have an opportunity to lead the charge to decarbonize the industry, says Peter Slowik, an analyst leading research on passenger vehicles in the US for the International Council on Clean Transportation.

About 12% of global steel production goes to the auto industry, and in some regions, the percentage is significantly higher—about 60% of all primary (non-recycled) steel produced in the US goes to vehicle manufacturing. That non-recycled steel comes with higher emissions than the recycled version, so making a swap to greener steel in the automotive industry, which mostly uses non-recycled material, would have an outsized impact. 

Making steel today generally requires steelmakers to heat raw materials to high temperatures, using fossil fuels like coal to drive the chemical reactions that transform iron ore into steel. But there’s a growing array of ways to make steel with lower emissions, including efforts to add carbon capture technology to new and existing plants and implement new technologies that rely on electricity instead of fossil fuels.

One leading contender for producing low-emissions steel is a process called direct reduction, where chemical reactions can be powered by hydrogen fuel instead of coal. If that hydrogen is produced with renewable or other low-carbon energy sources, it could allow steel production with up to 95% lower emissions.

Steel is responsible for a major chunk of the climate impacts of manufacturing a vehicle—so swapping in green steel could cut the emissions associated with building a car by 27%, according to the ICCT report.

And the materials wouldn’t dramatically inflate costs, either. “Generally, we’re finding that it wouldn’t add too much to the cost of the vehicle,” Slowik says.

H2 Green Steel is currently building what could become the world’s largest low-emissions steel factory, with a capacity of 2.5 million metric tons of steel by 2026. The company has said its product will cost 20% to 30% more than conventional steel. That would add roughly $100 to $200 more to a vehicle’s cost of materials, totaling less than 1% of the average vehicle.

In another recent report examining steel in vehicle manufacturing in Europe, experts put the additional cost at just €105, or about $115, for a vehicle made entirely with steel produced using a hydrogen-powered process in 2030. And even that slight cost bump could disappear in the future as production volumes increase and costs come down.

“The relatively high value of cars, especially of premium brands, also means they can absorb the short-term green premium of greener steel,”  Alex Keynes, cars policy manager at the European Federation for Transport and Environment, said in an email.

The same principle might hold for some other common products made with steel. One estimate from Hannah Ritchie, a data scientist and deputy editor at Our World In Data, put the added cost for using green steel in a house at less than 1% of its purchase price. 

There’s a complicated web of actors in construction though, from architects to builders to contractors, which could make purchasing more expensive materials that come with a climate benefit a more complex proposition. And bigger projects that require more steel could face much larger price increases that make green steel unaffordable in those contexts, at least for now. 

Automakers committing to purchasing green steel from steelmakers could help ensure they’re able to grow quickly, and some companies have already secured such commitments. As of January 2024, H2 Green Steel had binding agreements in place for more than 40% of its steel production in the initial years of its new plant.

However, there are still challenges facing the industry, including questions about the future cost and availability of green hydrogen, Keynes says. Policy measures, from subsidies to encourage the fuel’s production to regulations, could be crucial to getting greener steel into our vehicles and beyond.

The Download: greener steel, and join us for EmTech 2024

This is today’s edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what’s going on in the world of technology.

How the auto industry could steer the world toward green steel

Steel scaffolds our world, undergirding buildings and machines. It also presents a major challenge for climate change, as steel production is currently responsible for about 7% of global greenhouse gas emissions. 

There’s a growing array of technologies that can produce steel with dramatically lower emissions—though some are still in development, and they often come with a higher price tag. 

Finding economical ways to produce the materials we rely on while also cutting emissions is a major challenge for the industrial sector. But since automakers use a lot of steel, they have an opportunity to lead the charge to decarbonize the industry. Here’s how they could do it.

—Casey Crownhart

EmTech 2024 is coming

Want to learn more about the technologies that are shaping our lives? Join us for our flagship conference EmTech, held on the MIT Campus from September 30th to October 1st this fall. Take a sneak peek at our jam-packed agenda, which includes:

+ Ray Kurzweil, principal researcher at Google and AI visionary, discussing his latest predictions on artificial general intelligence, singularity, and the infinite possibilities of an AI-integrated world.

+ Riki Banerjee, CTO of brain-computer interface company Synchron, will give us an  inside look at the future of minimally invasive brain-computer interfaces that enable humans to use their thoughts to control digital devices. 

+ Pete Shadbolt, the cofounder and chief scientific officer of PsiQuantum, which is working to build the biggest US-based quantum computing facility, will explain the rewards and challenges facing quantum tech.

+ Yasmin Green, CEO of Jigsaw, a global security unit within Google, will dive into the secret digital behaviors of Gen Z.

The best part is, Download readers get 30% off with the following code: DOWNLOADM24. So what are you waiting for? Get your ticket today.

The must-reads

I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology.

1 Elon Musk and Donald Trump’s chat on X was marred by glitches 
Their conversation started more than 40 minutes late as a result. (WP $)
+ X staffers have contradicted Musk’s claims a DDoS attack was to blame.  (The Verge)
+ The discussion was rambling, to say the least. (FT $)

2 A scientific journal has retracted three MDMA papers
Psychopharmacology cited concerns over missing data and unethical conduct. (Ars Technica)
+ The retraction comes just days after the FDA rejected MDMA as a PTSD treatment. (NYT $)
+ What’s next for MDMA. (MIT Technology Review)

3 Huawei is working on an Nvidia-rivaling chip
And unlike Nvidia’s, Huawei’s can go on sale in China. (WSJ $)
+ Smuggling Nvidia’s chips into forbidden territories is big business. (The Information $)
+ This unassuming Czech town is on its way to becoming a chip hub. (Bloomberg $)
+ What’s next in chips. (MIT Technology Review)

4 How a plan to revitalize Puerto Rico’s economy with crypto soured
The ‘Puertopia’ tech hub dream is dead. (NYT $)
+ Crypto millionaires are pouring money into Central America to build their own cities. (MIT Technology Review)

5 Wastewater could prove a sustainable source of fuel
The process to break it down is more environmentally-friendly and less energy-intensive than other ammonia production methods. (New Scientist $)
+ How ammonia could help clean up global shipping. (MIT Technology Review)

6 The long, lonely journey to the moon’s south pole
Companies are locked in competition to make NASA’s lunar vehicle. (Wired $)

7 Recruiters are being inundated with AI-generated CVs
Jobseekers are failing to conceal generative tools’ tell-tale signs. (FT $)

8 What TikTok is teaching tweens about beauty
Modern girlhood is peppered with $80 serums for skin issues they’re yet to develop. (New Yorker $)

9 AI could help us to track animals from their footprints 🐾
It’s an unobtrusive way of keeping track of elusive species. (Hakai Magazine)
+ How tracking animal movement may save the planet. (MIT Technology Review)

10 Would you stare into a stranger’s eyes online? 👀
If the notion doesn’t fill you with horror, Eyechat is the site for you. (404 Media)
+ A dating app for people with good credit scores has sadly closed down. (TechCrunch)

Quote of the day

“The vehicle for sowing fear and doubt about the system itself has changed — it’s just this perpetual moving target.”

—Justin F. Roebuck, the county clerk for Ottawa County in Michigan, describes the immense challenges election officials face in countering false political narratives to the New York Times.

The big story

Quantum computing is taking on its biggest challenge: noise

January 2024

In the past 20 years, hundreds of companies have staked a claim in the rush to establish quantum computing. Investors have put in well over $5 billion so far. All this effort has just one purpose: creating the world’s next big thing.

But ultimately, assessing our progress in building useful quantum computers comes down to one central factor: whether we can handle the noise. The delicate nature of their systems makes them extremely vulnerable to the slightest disturbance, which can generate errors or even stop a quantum computation in its tracks.

In the last couple of years, a series of breakthroughs have led researchers to declare that the problem of noise might finally be on the ropes. Read the full story.

—Michael Brooks

We can still have nice things

A place for comfort, fun and distraction to brighten up your day. (Got any ideas? Drop me a line or tweet ’em at me.)

+ The story behind Moby’s seminal single Go—featuring Laura Palmer’s Theme from Twin Peaks.
+ These photos of the Perseid meteor shower over the UK this week are really beautiful.
+ This TikTok account recreating House of the Dragon in The Sims is too good.
+ Stumped by the financial jargon they use in Industry? You’re not alone.

Is Personalized Shopping Private?

Personalization at scale seems contradictory. It’s like having a party with several million friends. Yet at its best, ecommerce personalization drives conversions anonymously.

How can merchants balance customer personalization and privacy? I asked that question to payment and security pros.

Female holding a credit card in front of a laptop.

Personalizing ecommerce shopping drives sales. Maintaining privacy is the challenge.

Balancing Act

Robin Anderson, vice president of acquiring products at Tribe Payments, an open banking facilitator, has seen ecommerce personalization evolve from simple tracking and recommendation systems to sophisticated, artificial-intelligence-driven experiences. He believes all commerce channels, from online to in-person, will become more personalized.

“Hyper-personalization is on trend in payments and the flipside, which is privacy,” he said. “It’s not only about the data you capture and leverage to drive engagement; it’s also about the mechanisms to allow consumers to call back that data later. It’s a real balancing act, and I don’t think anyone has quite cracked it yet, but certainly there has been a lot of rapid innovation.”

Compliance

Keeping up with privacy regulations, which vary by region, is critical for ecommerce merchants, stated Sandra Tobler, co-founder and chief customer officer of Futurae, an authentication platform.

“Privacy guidelines such as Europe’s GDPR and PSD2 have a profound impact on ecommerce merchants, requiring them to handle customer data with greater care and transparency,” she said. “Compliance with these regulations is crucial to avoid hefty fines and to build customer trust.”

Tobler recommended using advanced authentication to verify legitimate customers. Multifactor authentication, biometrics, and behavioral analytics can help protect customers’ accounts, build trust, and decrease churn rates. Advanced solutions use data collected during authentication to tailor security measures for each user. A key aspect of this approach, continuous authentication, assesses a user’s behavior and context throughout the shopping journey.

“If users are shopping from a familiar location and device, the system can allow them to proceed with minimal friction. However, if the system detects an unusual location or device, it might prompt for an additional authentication step to ensure security. Recognizing returning customers and allowing them to move through the shopping journey without repeated prompts contributes to a smoother experience, increasing customer satisfaction and loyalty.”

It is also important to separate nonsensitive data, such as behavior patterns, geolocation, and devices, from sensitive, such as credit card numbers and other personally identifiable information.

“Decoupling sensitive data aligns with privacy regulations by minimizing the amount of personal information processed during authentication,” she said. “The end-to-end encryption of sensitive data, such as credit card numbers and personal identification information, protects the original, even if intercepted.”

Sensitive Data

Jason Howard, CEO at Caf, an identity authentication provider, agreed that collecting only required information for specific transactions is foundational to regulatory compliance.

“Many jurisdictions around the globe have created consumer data privacy laws, and running afoul of these regulatory statutes can be costly. That’s why we recommend incrementally collecting information from users only as needed. Such an approach creates a better customer experience, thus leading to less abandonment and quicker time to revenue.”

Howard additionally noted that decentralized identity solutions enable secure and transparent transactions without relying on intermediaries or data storage. These solutions also simplify the authentication process and eliminate the need for repeated verifications when customers access different platforms.

“With robust biometrics, merchants can be assured that users are who they claim. Biometrics help protect against stolen identities, impersonation, and account takeover attacks.”

Embedded commerce — selling products on external channels — has created new revenue channels and opportunities for attackers, Howard added. Fraudsters exploit the refund process within embedded payment systems in various ways, such as requesting refunds for products or services they never purchased or falsely claiming that the goods they received were defective.

Ecommerce companies need technology to detect that behavior. Behavioral analytics can identify suspicious patterns and fraud. AI models can uncover patterns in large datasets that may previously have gone undetected. AI can also detect manipulated images or documents.

Checkouts

Peter Karpas, CEO of Bold Commerce, a customized checkout provider, observed that personalization has thus far stopped short of the checkout experience.

“Personalization in ecommerce is less about who one specific customer is and more about the experience,” he said. “For example, a shopper that lives 20 miles from a store should be offered a checkout with options for pickup and delivery, whereas a shopper farther away should just see shipping.”

Rather than creating millions of unique customer experiences, Karpas suggested that brands tailor shopper journeys and segments. Checkout, for example, could be two or three versions, depending on the segment.

“Retailers realize personalizing checkout isn’t the same as everything else,” he said. “They’re finding it disproportionately impacts conversions, average order value, and customer lifetime value.”