"Google Has An Achiles Heal - Will Their Competitors Notice?"
Even though Google Revenues continue to soar, the hidden problem that may stifle
growth and may even allow Yahoo or MSN to overtake the paid search market in
the future lies in two critical phrases: Customer Support, and Customer Training
Approximately 40% of the small businesses we have surveyed have tried Adwords
in the past and failed, and some of them have tried multiple times. In some
markets the percentage is closer to 60%. Why? because the program was designed
by Google engineers, and heavily favors companies with the type of resources
that most small businesses do not have. Unlike MSN and Yahoo who have programs
that are much simpler in terms of use for small businesspeople, Google favors
a technology driven solution that relies less on customer support, and expects
users of their system to become more sophisticated.
The problem with this is that it is working quite well for professional internet
marketers and search engine marketing companies employed by big corporations,
but many small business people who are not web-savvy are by and large left out
of the mix. This is unfortunate because this is a huge segment of potential
income that is left "up for grabs" and may be scooped up by MSN and
Yahoo who are developing simpler, easier systems with better customer support.
All the major search engines recognize this problem, and getting those "offline"
advertisers online is a high priority for all of them, but so far there has
not been great success. It is a knowledge and training gap, and neither Yahoo,
MSN, or Google has so far been able to address it adequately.
Google's recent acquisition of urchin, a web analytics program illustrates
the problem Google is trying to solve. Big Companies getting involved in paid
search will still continue to drive big revenues, but the new internet is about
verticals and niches, and Google simply isn't making the grade in terms of training
their customers well enough.
Where do small business customers go after they "churn"? Many of
them go back to what they were doing successfully before; email marketing, direct
marketing, and call centers according to our study.
The next growth area will be hundreds of thousands of verticals, driven by
small businesses exploiting areas and needs that the fortune 500 companies can
not fill efficiently. The search engine company that gets the most advertisers
on its side will win market share, and winning will require the ability to service
everybody, not just the super sophisticated internet super geeks.
However, many private companies not sanctioned by Google, have sprung up in
order to try to bridge the gap between the Google Adwords program and the ability
to advertise efficiently on Google and achieve a high ROI. One such company
is http://adwordstraining.org that offers free video training and free frequently
updated information at http://marketingnewsblog.adwordstraining.org
Simple training videos are available on the site, as well as an advertiser
self study course to get non-technical people up to speed with Google Adwords
advertising.
Between Google's extensive training program of Google Professionals and private
training by private companies, this knowledge gap may be bridged, and in the
process a whole new industry of Google Adwords Marketing companies may be created,
to facilitate the knowledge gap between Google and the advertisers that want
to take advantage of the enormous advertising reach afforded by paid search.
But, this might not be enough for Google to keep its lead, as advertisers often
follow the path of least resistance in getting their messages out, and they
are the ones funding the growth of the search engine industry.
Where those advertisers ultimately go will determine the ultimate victor in
the ever growing search engine wars, and the winner is by no means secure at
this point.
About the Author:
Steve Blom is a founding partner of InTouch Media Group, a publicly traded company
specializing in the online marketing field. http://www.intouchmediagroup.com |