Offline Ads Are Heavy Drivers of Search
While many search marketers understand that there is a connection between online and offline marketing, some may not understand its full extent. According to a new study by Jupiter Research and search marketing agency iProspect, a surprising two-thirds of searchers are led to search on a given keyword as a result of offline marketing.
Specifically, 37 percent of respondents said that in the last six months, a television ad prompted them to conduct a search on a particular company, service or slogan, while 20 percent said a magazine or newspaper ad led them online. Twenty percent said a company's store drove them online, and 17 percent were influenced to search by a radio ad. A smaller number were influenced by outdoor ads.
Only 33 percent of respondents said they had not been influenced to search by any offline media in the past six months. For daily searchers, the influence of offline media was even more apparent, with only 28 percent of searchers saying they had not been prompted to search by any offline media in the past six months.
"Today, it's incumbent upon marketers to integrate search with their offline efforts," said Robert Murray, iProspect's president. "Quite simply, their offline messaging needs to be memorable and facilitate search, and their search efforts need to echo that messaging and integrate those keywords. The bottom line is that integration is no longer optional."
The most common keywords searched were company names, or names of products or services mentioned in an offline ad. In 44 percent of cases, the keyword was the company name. To take advantage of this, marketers should prominently feature company and product/service names in their offline advertising, and make sure their sites are organically optimized for those keywords, and they are showing up in search ads on those keywords as well.
If an offline ad features a tagline or slogan, search marketers should also
ensure they are showing up in either organic or paid results for that as well,
Besides driving traffic, offline media tends to drive qualitytraffic, according to
That 39 percent conversion rate is generally higher than the rate achieved
by either search or offline channels alone,
"Sure, offline channels can drive traffic, but at the end of the day,
it's pretty much meaningless if a purchase isn't made," said
While many marketers are aware of the relationship between online and
offline media, it can still be difficult in some organizations to coordinate
online and offline campaigns, due to the siloing still present in many
marketing departments, Murray said. Many offline marketers don't want to give
up any control to their online counterparts, but
"Search is no longer an add-on consideration for marketers," said
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