Google will display more ads for commercial-related keywords in its paid search results than in its non-commercial results, Google said last week, DM News reports (via MarketingVOX). More ads will be displayed for keywords that are more commercial in nature, such as “running shoes,” than for noncommercial, educational-type queries.
“Over the coming weeks, we’ll be implementing an ads quality change designed to show fewer ads on queries for which our users might prefer not to see them and more ads on queries for which ads are useful. The impact of this change will vary from advertiser to advertiser, so we wanted to give you a heads-up and suggest that you keep an eye on your keyword performance over the next few weeks,” Nick Fox, product manager for ads quality at Google, wrote on Google’s “Inside AdWords” blog.
Comcast is hoping to enlighten media buyers on the ways of young men ages 18-34 with its new “field guide,” titled Hunting with Lightsabers, that has been in the works for a year and is now available.
The guide provides…
The Atlantic magazine is launching a campaign with ads in unexpected places - on muffin displays in corner stores, on restaurant menu boards and on the shampoo shelves at drugstores - in an effort to reach media buyers in New…
Kraft and General Mills have launched word-of-mouth networks in the hopes of harnessing the positive force of chatter during a time when food prices are soaring and consumers are tightening their hold on purse strings.
General Mills has launched an…
The New York Attorney General said on Friday that he would file suit against Arbitron to halt the commercialization of its new measurement system; Arbitron was given five days to respond.
Arbitron’s response came almost immediately: the company moved its…
Companies are struggling with how to adapt to serve a new wave of consumers from the Millennial Generation (or Gen Y) - born between 1982 and 2001 - according to a global survey by the Economist Intelligence Unit and Alcatel-Lucent company Genesys, reports Retailer…
More than one in three holiday shoppers - or 62.3 million adult consumers - report they begin holiday shopping before Thanksgiving, according to (pdf) new data from Mediamark Research & Intelligence (MRI), reports Retailer Daily.
Just under 36 percent of holiday shoppers say…