Skip to main content

SEO and Social Media Marketing Gaining Share


As American marketers choose to invest more of their budget in social media marketing and search engine optimization activities, a new eMarketer report highlights the accelerating downside for traditional advertising.

Is 2011 set to be the year of Facebook, even among search marketers? Based on what U.S. advertisers told search marketing agency Covario, it's definitely the year that social media and social networking is adopted by everyone -- including the prior market laggards.

Traditional advertisers that are also savvy about unpaid search results have discovered how social media marketing can help build their search engine optimization efforts.

Respondents to the Covario survey said their top priority for SEO next year was integration with social media programs.

Social media will also play an important part in paid search efforts next year. Search ad campaigns on sites like Facebook and LinkedIn were top of mind for nearly half of advertisers surveyed -- far ahead of priorities like local search or dealing with recent changes to major search engines.

The report noted that major spending increases on Facebook search advertising are planned for 2011. Covario estimated advertisers would be spending 10 to 20 percent of their pay-per-click budgets on Facebook next year, giving the social networking site a bigger share of that market.

The report also indicated that rather than pulling dollars away from other paid search spending areas, these would be additions to the search budget -- essentially taken from other parts of the budget instead.

The anticipated outcome: traditional advertising share of budget will decline further, as a result of the continued shift in budget priorities and greater emphasis on improving marketing's return on investment.

Popular posts from this blog

Banking as a Service Gains New Momentum

The BaaS model has been adopted across a wide range of industries due to its ability to streamline financial processes for non-banks and foster innovation. BaaS has several industry-specific use cases, where it creates new revenue streams. Banking as a Service (BaaS) is rapidly emerging as a growth market, allowing non-bank businesses to integrate banking services into their core products and online platforms. As defined by Juniper Research, BaaS is "the delivery and integration of digital banking services by licensed banks, directly into the products of non-banking businesses, commonly through the use of APIs." BaaS Market Development The core idea is that licensed banks can rent out their regulated financial infrastructure through Application Programming Interfaces (APIs) to third-party Fintechs and other interested companies. This enables those organizations to offer banking capabilities like payment processing, account management, and debit or credit card issuance without