Calculate Your First Campaign's Opportunity
It's interesting to find out how many searchers are being referred to your site with the keywords you have targeted, but you also need to know how many searchers do not come to your site. Those are the people that you want referred your waythey are your search marketing opportunity.search marketing because your changes affect every visitor to your site, regardless of how they landed there. To go beyond search marketing visit Jim Sterne's excellent Web site (www.targeting.com), which is loaded with ways to measure your Web site's success and to make improvements.Now you have learned enough to estimate the traffic increase a well-designed search marketing campaign can produce, and we do so through the next few pages.
Check Your Keyword Demand
The number of searches for any particular query is referred to as keyword demand. So, although search referrals tell you how many of those searchers clicked through to your site, keyword demand tells you how many searchers used that keyword in total. Keyword demand counts the people that chose a result from your site as well as all of those searchers for that keyword who chose to click someone else's site.Chapter 11, exploring several sources of keyword demand information, but we can give it a "once over" here. Chapter 11, but just take it on faith that multiplying the Yahoo! total by 2.2 yields a relatively accurate number of total worldwide searches in the major search engines.
Keyword Phrase | Yahoo! Searches | x 2.2 = | Keyword Demand |
---|---|---|---|
digital camera | 1,337,422 | 2,942,328 | |
snapshot digital camera | 4,879 | 10,734 | |
snap digital camera | 6,243 | 13,735 | |
digital camera reviews | 71,606 | 157,533 | |
compare digital cameras | 10,326 | 22,717 | |
best digital cameras | 17,865 | 39,303 | |
digital camera comparison | 11,863 | 26,099 | |
Totals | 1,460,204 | 3,212,449 |
Discover Your Missed Opportunities
Although it is helpful to see how many searches are performed on your targeted keywords, you must remember that you are already getting some search traffic to your site. How many searchers are you missing? To answer that question, we must develop a missed-opportunity matrix™.Because every searcher that uses your targeted keyword is an opportunity to bring a visitor to your site, merely subtracting your search referrals from the total number of searches yields the number of searches where no one came to your site. You can also calculate your share of the search traffic by dividing the number of your referrals by the keyword demand. Table 7-11 shows how simple it is to calculate missed opportunities for Snap Electronics.
Keyword Phrase | Keyword Demand | Actual Search Referrals | Share of Search Traffic | Missed Opportunities |
---|---|---|---|---|
digital camera | 2,942,328 | 1,412 | 0.05% | 2,940,916 |
snapshot digital camera | 10,734 | 4,044 | 38% | 6,690 |
snap digital camera | 13,735 | 5,278 | 38% | 8,457 |
digital camera reviews | 157,533 | 0% | 157,533 | |
compare digital cameras | 22,717 | 0% | 22,717 | |
best digital cameras | 39,303 | 0% | 39,303 | |
digital camera comparison | 26,099 | 0% | 26,099 | |
Totals | 3,212,449 | 10,734 | 0.33% | 3,201,715 |
Project Your Future Traffic
Now it is time to calculate what you really want to know: How many more search referrals can you reasonably obtain if you execute a strong first search marketing campaign? Although those searchers that failed to come to Snap's site are literally missed opportunities, it is not realistic to expect that any one site could collect all the clicks for any query. The question then becomes how to estimate the reasonable number of clicks that can be achieved after a successful first search marketing campaign.Chapter 4, "How Searchers Work," that 48 percent of searchers click a result on the first page of results and that 60 percent of those clicks are on organic results rather than paid. Multiplying those numbers together tells us that 29 percent of all searchers click an organic result on the first page.Although helpful, that statistic does not tell us nearly enough for us to calculate our real opportunity, because searchers frequently click more than one result from the same searchfirst clicking on #1, then #3, and finally #4 before going off to do something else. So, although 29 percent of searchers click an organic result on the first page, there are more pages clicked than 29 percent. What we need to know is how many clicks there are per search. And honestly, no one knows, except the folks running the search engines themselves, and they consider the information to be proprietary. Anecdotal evidence indicates that between 1.8 and 2.8 results are clicked for each searchif we take the more conservative 1.8 number and multiply it by 29 searchers, we get 52 clicks for every 100 searches.So we have estimated 52 clicks per 100 searches as the average, but not all searches are average. Some produce more than 52 clicks and others produce less. But even that isn't all, because those 52 clicks per 100 searches are not spread around evenly. Far more of them are clustered at the top of results page, where the highest-ranked pages are shown. The exact results that searchers click vary greatly from query to query. Table 7-12 shows four different distributions that all average 52 clicks, and there is no way to be sure what distribution any particular query yields.
Search Ranking | Number of Clicks | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Weak Informational Results | Strong Informational Results | Brand Informational Results | Navigational Results | |
#1 | 8 | 15 | 20 | 50 |
#2 | 5 | 12 | 9 | 5 |
#3 | 5 | 10 | 6 | 5 |
#4 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 4 |
#5 | 4 | 3 | 4 | 3 |
#6 | 3 | 2 | 3 | 2 |
#7 | 1.5 | 2 | 2 | 1 |
#8 | 0.5 | 1.5 | 1 | 1 |
#9 | 0.5 | 1 | 0.5 | 0.5 |
#10 | 0.5 | 0.5 | 0.5 | 0.5 |
Totals | 32 | 52 | 52 | 72 |
Figure 7-5. Little differences add up. The tail distribution shown in Table 7-12 varies a lot from query to query even though the numbers seem small.

Keyword Phrase | Monthly Demand Keyword | Estimated Monthly Search Referrals | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
25% | 0.25% | 1% | 5% | 10% | ||
digital camera | 2,942,328 | 7,356 | 29,423 | 147,116 | 294,233 | 735,582 |
snapshot digital camera | 10,734 | 27 | 107 | 537 | 1,073 | 2,683 |
snap digital camera | 13,735 | 34 | 137 | 687 | 1,373 | 3,434 |
digital camera reviews | 157,533 | 394 | 1,575 | 7,877 | 15,753 | 39,383 |
compare digital cameras | 22,717 | 57 | 227 | 1,136 | 2,272 | 5,679 |
digital camera comparison | 26,099 | 65 | 261 | 1,305 | 2,610 | 6,525 |
best digital cameras | 39,303 | 98 | 393 | 1,965 | 3,930 | 9,826 |
Totals | 3,212,449 | 8,031 | 32,124 | 160,622 | 321,245 | 803,112 |
Keyword Phrase | Current Rankings | Projected Rankings Snap | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Kodak | Canon | Snap | ||
digital camera | 12 | 15 | 45 | 10 |
snap digital camera | _3 | 1 | ||
snapshot digital camera | 3 | 1 | ||
digital camera reviews | 10 | 15 | ||
best digital cameras | 30 | |||
compare digital cameras | 12 | 15 | 8 | |
digital camera comparison | 8 | 17 | 10 |
Keyword Phrase | Monthly Keyword Demand | Current Monthly Visits | Current Rank | Projected Rank | Projected Monthly Search Referrals | Added Search Referrals | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
digital camera | 2,942,328 | 1,412 | 0.05% | 45 | 10 | 0.50% | 14,711 | 13,299 |
snapshot digital camera | 10,734 | 4,044 | 38% | 3 | 1 | 50% | 5,367 | 1,323 |
snap digital camera | 13,735 | 5,278 | 38% | 3 | 1 | 50% | 6,867 | 1,589 |
digital camera reviews | 157,533 | 0.00% | 15 | 0.25% | 394 | 394 | ||
best digital cameras | 22,717 | 0.00% | 30 | 0.10% | 23 | 23 | ||
compare digital cameras | 39,303 | 0.00% | 8 | 1.50% | 590 | 590 | ||
digital camera comparison | 26,099 | 0.00% | 10 | 0.50% | 130 | 130 | ||
Total | 3,212,449 | 10,734 | 0.33% | 0.87% | 28,082 | 17,348 |
Project Your Future Conversions
Regardless of what your Web site's goals are, you saw in Chapter 5 that you can choose certain visitor events as your conversions. Obviously, if you are selling your product online, it is easy for you to translate your conversions into revenue, but you saw in Chapter 6 that that you can translate most conversions into some kind of business value.Continuing our fictitious scenario for Snap Electronics, we can project our digital camera search marketing campaign's conversions and its incremental revenue. Snap needs to know a few numbers to do so:Projected added search referrals.
As we calculated earlier, the estimate for the extra traffic to Snap's site due to successful search marketing consists of referrals from both organic and paid search. Snap's total comes to 30,722 more visits.Conversion rate.
What percentage of visits results in sales? If Snap knows the conversion rate for digital cameras (the percentage of visitors to the digital camera pages that buy digital cameras), that would be the best conversion rate to use. But many companies, especially large companies, have trouble isolating individual product metrics. In Snap's case, isolating digital camera conversion rate is not possible, but they do know that their overall conversion rate is 2 percent. They can use that 2 percent conversion rate as a conservative estimate, because they expect that the digital camera conversion rate is higher than average.Average transaction price.
What is the typical price paid for a digital camera? Snap should be able to monitor all digital camera sales and divide the total sales by the number of transactions to find out the average transaction price. In some cases, you need to use the average transaction price across all products, rather than the product you are targeting, but Snap happens to know that its average digital camera price is $348.
After you have compiled the necessary numbers, you can put them together to project the incremental revenue from search marketing for digital cameras, as shown in Chapter 8, "Define Your Search Marketing Strategy," you decide how broad your overall search marketing program should be, and in Chapter 9, "Sell Your Search Marketing Proposal," you will see how large the profit could be.