Browsing the archives for the Yahoo tag.

Common Misspelled Searches, A Keyword Marketing Strategy

Pay Per Click

As a search marketing professional, misspelled search terms are not surprising to us, but our readers may find it comical that a large percentage of searches performed are misspelled. For example take a look at Yahoo’s list of some of the more common misspelled searches.

Recent Misspelled Yahoo Searches

  • Swan Flu (for Swine Flu)
  • Susan Boil (for “Britain’s Got Talent” contender Susan Boyle)
  • Brack Obama (for U.S. President Barack Obama)
  • Sonia Sotomeyer (for Supreme Court justice nominee Sonia Sotomayor)
  • Rachel Ray (for Food Network host Rachael Ray)
  • Paperview boxing (for cable programming pay-per-view boxing)
  • Amtrack (for train system Amtrak)
  • Wallmart (for retailer Wal-Mart)
  • Farrah Faucet (for actress Farrah Fawcett)
  • Rod Steward (for singer Rod Stewart)
  • Arlene Specter (for Senator Arlen Specter)
  • “Dancing With the Starts” (for ABC reality competition Dancing With the Stars)
  • Bea Author” (for the late comedian Bea Arthur)
  • Brittany Spears (for singer Britney Spears)
  • Chris Allen (for “American Idol” winner Kris Allen)
  • Configure worm (for computer virus Conficker worm)
  • Mysapce (for MySpace)

While it is entertaining to think that people are searching for “paperview boxing”, targeting commonly misspelled keywords in your search campaign is key to successful search engine marketing. The majority of your clicks will be from the correct spelling, but for the few people that misspell a keyword you, as an advertiser, will be able to show them a relevant ad while the other competitors’ ads will not show because they are only advertising on the correct spelling.

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The Real Search Engine Test, Blind Search

Social Media

salesovernight-search.jpg

This is an interesting way to give a non-bias opinion on the best search engine. Use Blind Search to search for a phrase and then choose which column provides the best search results for that query. The choices are Bing, Yahoo, or Google. The columns are randomized with every query.

Due to some hacker tampering with the results page we can’t see what most people are choosing as their preferred search result. :(

TIP: Don’t test it using a search phrase that you are familiar with. Instead, try something you’ve never looked up, like “who was the 23rd president?” or “weather in Helena, Montana”.

blindsearch.jpg

Try Blind Search

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