Is Video Search the New PR Frontier?

Los Angeles, CA. (07/09/2009)…PR firms are continually finding new ways to exploit the potential of search engines to spotlight their clients and get the word out about the products and services they have to offer.  Search engine optimization and purchasing ad keywords help to get clients’ websites ranked high in search engine results.  For years the top dogs in the search engine arena have been Yahoo! and Google.  But according to the latest figures from comScore, Yahoo! has now been eclipsed by an unlikely competitor—YouTube.
NOTE: THIS ARTICLE WAS WRITTEN LAST YEAR, SO SOME FACTS ARE INCORRECT, I KNOW THIS, BUT I NEED TO GET CONTENT UP HERE, REGARDLESS – so pretent it’s early 2009 as you read this post.

YouTube is unique as a search engine, because every search performed there is for a video.  And once it became clear that video searches were generating massive amounts of traffic to YouTube’s site, it was only a matter of time before marketers saw the potential for using that interest to their advantage.

A couple years ago YouTube instituted a program called “Sponsored Videos,” which is similar to the Google AdWords keyword-purchase program.  Video owners can purchase keywords to promote certain individual videos, in the same way that website owners purchase keywords from Google AdWords to promote their sites.  The program is still in the early stages of development, and YouTube personnel are keeping mum about the numbers of keywords available, pricing, and how extensive the program will eventually be.

But the idea is intriguing and filled with possibilities.  A recent survey by BurstMedia showed that nearly 70% of the respondents actively view videos on the Internet on a regular basis, and people aged 35 to 54 are just as likely to view video content as people aged 18-24.  An eMarketer study found that more than 120 million Americans view videos online at least once a month, and 76% of them tell someone about a video they have watched.  Of the video viewers who have watched ads with online videos, 44% of them have taken action upon what they saw in the ads.

With all of this interest in watching videos online, it doesn’t take much of a leap to realize the huge PR potential offered by video searches; hence the development of sponsored videos.  Spending money to encourage viewers to watch a video is not a direct approach to e-commerce, but it is a new concept that savvy marketers are learning how to use. For example, if a person searches YouTube for a video about iPhones, the sponsored video links at the top of the search results may include videos from manufacturers about peripheral products that work with iPhones.  The person searching for videos about iPhones may see links to those advertising videos and be enticed into clicking them to learn more.

Video search engine optimization using purchased keywords is opening the door for PR firms to tap into the massive amounts of traffic flowing through video search engines such as YouTube, AOL Video, Google Video, and Yahoo! Video.  As long as those millions of Internet visitors keep watching user-posted videos, they are a captive audience for sponsored videos as well.

About Geoff Simon

Geoff Simon has been working in the direct, database and Internet marketing field since 1998. With a breadth of experience including direct marketing for Bank of America with Grey Direct West to Social Media Marketing for companies like National Geographic and Red Bull USA Events, Geoff is uniquely qualified to consult and implement a wide range of campaign strategies to meet company goals. Geoff graduated Cum Laude from California State Polytechnic University in the mid 1990's and immediately found work in the direct marketing field. Geoff quickly moved to Internet marketing work with a small firm in Woodland Hills, CA and found a niche in working with clients and providing superior reporting/analysis as a search analyst and subsequently Account Manager. Currently Geoff handles marketing duties for several clients throughout the country and now operates as Simon Search Marketing.
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2 Responses to Is Video Search the New PR Frontier?

  1. discovering Unknown Unknown activated Unknown Unknown
    Disqus/1.0:42250848

    i like, simply directs the user to that site to watch the video in its entirety. Frontier claims to have access to more

  2. discovering Unknown Unknown activated Unknown Unknown
    Disqus/1.0:42250848

    i like, simply directs the user to that site to watch the video in its entirety. Frontier claims to have access to more

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