Google introduces slate of features for newspapers, Print Ad users
By Marcelo Duran
Associate Editor
Google is ready to ramp up the
digital offerings it’s designed to help reinforce the value of newsprint.
Google's Print Ads project now has 750
newspapers participating, giving
marketers an ever-growing number of places to bid on available ad space,
according to Smita Hashim, Print Ads' group product manager. The Print Ads
service, launched 18 months ago, lets newspapers offer both premium and unsold
inventory spots available to advertisers.
Because the service is intended to encourage newspapers and advertisers to
actively negotiate final prices, rejection rates can vary widely, up to 60
percent at certain newspapers, said Stephanie Davis, Print Ads' head of
publisher business development.
"A low rejection rate is not necessarily a goal of ours and is not reflective of
the program's success because we purposely built a feedback loop into our system
through which advertisers and publishers are intended to negotiate back and
forth," a Google spokesman added.
Still, Hashim said Google is examining ways to broaden Print Ads and make it a
more compelling alternative to advertisers.
"We are working with other
publications including college papers, Spanish-language papers and alternative
weeklies, and we are beginning to find advertisers interested in theses niches,"
she said.
Google also plans to launch
new services to bolster Print Ads, including an analytics tool to help
newspapers judge how effective they are at reaching their local market, and a
tagging method that helps advertisers measure consumer reaction to specific ad
campaigns.
The analytics software, to be
released later in 2008, will provide a foundation that will enable both
newspapers and advertisers to determine an ad’s impact, Hashim said.
“Measurement is paramount to
advertisers and publishers; everyone wants to know how an ad did and whether it
was worth their while,” she said.
A key part of the analytics
app is to enable advertisers to track the effectiveness of their ads, Hashim
said.
“For each campaign they will
be able to go and look at the newspaper at the DMA level and be able to see how
many visits the newspaper Web site receives on specific ads,” she said.
Advertisers already have an
option to track ad effectiveness by adding a Google call-tracking code overlaid
on contact phone numbers used in an ad. Google records the number of calls and
origin area codes that are made by consumers responding to the ads.
Google tested the tagging
method with Blue Nile, the online jewelry and diamond retailer. The tags, which
include a Web address, SmartCode logo and Google Search phone number, enabled
Google to track consumer response, Hashim said.
“We put the tag on and omitted
it in several different markets and the response was overwhelmingly higher in
the markets with the tag,” Hashim said. “We are going to be pushing on that a
little bit more and try to see what other ads are connecting better with the
reader because if readers have a good response then advertisers see a positive
response and that results in more monetization for the newspapers.”
The new services come on the
heels of other steps Google has taken to bolster Print Ads.
Last fall, for example, Google
introduced a newspaper ad creation tool that allows its AdWords advertisers to
generate display ads. All the advertiser has to do is enter the information,
upload an image or logo and choose the size of the ad. After the material is
entered, users can then choose from several layouts.
Google added support for color
ads in February, Hashim said.
“Newspapers are telling us
which sections can support color, and at this point we have more than 100
newspapers offering color ads through the system,” Hashim said.
Additionally, Google rolled
out AdPacks, an ad promotion that lets advertisers buy a specific number of ads
in a specific section, all for a single quoted price.
Print and online symbiosis
Hashim said the new Google
services should further help newspapers promote the notion that advertisers use
both print and online products to reach their audiences.
“We believe in mixed-media
allocations and believe newspapers represent a good opportunity for our
advertisers to expand their consumer base,” she said. “One of the things we like
to do is make their campaigns more targeted for the advertisers and we have been
running a series of promotions within the AdWords front-end.”
Google also touts newspapers
to advertisers that are focusing on a region in which a newspaper partner
operates, Hashim said, by showcasing Print Ads as an option.
“Using a tool like Print Ads
gives advertisers a better starting point so hopefully they are making offers to
newspapers that are more palatable,” Hashim said.