Click stars to vote (left is low, right is high)
A recent article by MediaPost detailed how estimate for online advertising spending should exceed $60 billion dollars by 2010. This was up from a previous estimate of $54 billion in projected advertising for 2010 last year. In 2006, revenues were estimated at $30 billion.
The article also says “search will account for nearly half of all ad dollars spent online.”
Other bullet points of the article and covered report:
- Search advertising was almost $14 billion in 2006
- Keyword search advertising is the most popular online ad format, accounting for 40% of revenues, followed by display advertising (21%); classifieds (20%); referrals/lead generation (7%); rich media (6%); sponsorship (4%); and e-mail (2%).
A good point for Social Media Systems,
“Cost-per-click and CPMs have flattened in the last year due to CPCs on popular keywords reaching levels that make it challenging for merchants to hit their ROI targets, and the increasing emphasis on non-paid algorithmic search and on multiple-word queries that tend to be less expensive since there are fewer advertisers bidding on them.”
So when one of our clients needs a specific phrase or keyword and we get them top results, it really does save them money. Its hard to argue with a good search engine marketing strategy when the major media players are shifting gears and following our example.
Here is another qoute that I love:
“The launch of Yahoo’s Panama system in early February appears to have revved up keyword bidding on Yahoo as advertisers and search engine marketers jockey for position. For example, an advertiser that might lose a top position–since the algorithm goes from ranking advertisers on bid price only to bid price popularity–may decide to experiment with the new platform and drastically raise the bid price in order to keep a top-tier position.”
So let me get this straight… Google has been throwing fuel on the fire to encourage advertisers to bid up their own advertising for years, and now Yahoo has finally got on board with encouraging pay-per-click prices to sky-rocket and the whole market suffers? It is encouraging to know that the two largest search engines are promoting clients to fight against one-another. I love the fact that Yahoo and Google have done such as excellent marketing and public relations campaign that they have actually convinced a market to aggressively bid against one another and give them more money.
It may take a while, but eventually all those advertisers will realize that a competitive advertising marketplace is an extremely costly one and that most of them are creating a false “ad bubble” within each industry. Some of those industry bubbles have already popped and I expect to see many more explode in 2007.
The Author:
About:
This entry was posted by , on Saturday, March 3rd, 2007 at 2:40 pm and is filed under Featured, Internet Advertising. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response below.
One Response to “Online Advertising $60 Billion in 2010.”
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment. PLEASE register now and you'll be able to fill out a profile, upload an avatar or picture of yourself and get a FREE link to your website. After commenting you can use the same login to join in our forum discussions. If you haven't done so already subscribe to this site. We're always adding new information and we would love to have you participate.
Join the Discussion in Our Social Media Marketing Forums
Discussion Forum
| Topic | Posts | Last Poster |
|---|---|---|
| Costs of a social marketing campaign | 2 | LSteinberg |
| Forum Posting Guidelines | 1 | Solomon Rothman |
| Social Media Rocks Any Business Plan | 3 | Pokergirl |
| Good and bad navigation examples: | 9 | |
| Interested in other people's suggestions for a good feature... | 1 | Stephmie |
| Internet based tools: | 12 | |
| Trouble writing articles? | 1 | aurorabrown |
| A little wordpress tip about uploading docs. | 1 | markwalker |
| Computers versus Common Sense (CYC Video) | 2 | aurorabrown |
| Different uses of Social Media | 3 | aurorabrown |






(4 votes, average: 4.75 out of 5)

May 4th, 2007 at 12:56 am
The lucrative results of Internet marketing today will continue into the years to come. TV advertising is becoming a mainstream investment for Google, Microsoft, AT&T, MSNBC, and especially profitable Myspace. Full motion TV couldn’t be comprehended 10 years ago when 56k modems were state of the art. Marketing via USPS, local radios, newspapers, and billboards do not produce the results e-commerce sites such as Ebay and Amazon produce daily. Technological advancements now allow us to make more money with advertising and marketing than ever before.
The trick is to network with the leaders in your industry, think outside the box, and be assertive the ever-changing business world around us. The Content Coalition focuses on the two greatest factors that contribute to high rankings in the Search Engines: Content and Links. I realized that when you focus on only one specialty and network with the best in the industry that you will be successful too. This vision has produced incredible results and applies the greatest marketing leverage known to the Internet.