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8 posts from May 2009

May 26, 2009

Google Changes Terms of Service for Product Search

Google actually announced two things, but the first one is critical in the short term:

  1. The Google Base terms of service have changed. All merchants must log in and accept these new terms in the next 30 days, before June 26, or product listings may become inactive. I didn't see anything substantially different from the old terms, but I'm not a lawyer so you'll probably want to actually read them just to be sure. 
  2. Google has added fields for general business information such as address, phone number and customer service contact info.  There is no telling how they may use this information but it is probably in every merchant's interest to complete this. If displayed, this information may help consumers feel more confident in transacting with your company. More importantly, it seems likely that Google would somehow penalize/reward merchants based on the absence/presence of this information.

May 22, 2009

Nielsen Data on CSE Unique Visitors

An article at SeekingAlpha sites both search and comparison shopping data from Nielsen for April of this year. In the search world, you may be surprised to hear that Google still owns the majority of searches. On the CSE side, there are some surprising and some not-so-surprising tidbits:

Not Surprising:

  • MSN Live/Cashback is up over 600% versus last year. Apparently, giving away money makes you more popular.
  • Many engines saw a decine in visits. Fewer shoppers in a bad economy, plus Google changes have hurt traffic for some engines.
  • Google down year over year. That's what happens when you move the shopping link into the drop down. I noticed this week it is back in plain view on all SERPs.

Surprising:

  • Shopping.com and PriceGrabber both nowhere to be found in this data. We see much more traffic and revenue from those sites than we do from Pronto, Smarter or Become, but those sites do get a lot of traffic from their affiliate networks so maybe this could go under not surprising.
  • Bizrate and Shopzilla are listed separately despite being the same company using the same product data. When combined, they are second only to NexTag, which I assume was listed separately from Calibex.
  • Become.com saw a decrease of 43% year over year. Since they increased their CPC rates earlier this year, it seems they would have more money to acquire more traffic, unless they lost a large number of merchants due to the increased rates. Also, we've seen an increase in traffic coming from Become.com recently, so even if their uniques have drops, perhaps their CTR has increased.

Nielsen-cse-april09

May 21, 2009

Huge Year of Change for Comparison Shopping Engines in 09.

There's more changing in the world of Comparison Shopping Engines (CSEs for short) this year than I can remember since back to the 99/00 timeframe.


The short-list:
  • Amazon Product Ads are doing really well and have come out of nowhere to be a top CSE for many of our retailers.  We have more details over at sister-site Amazon Strategies.
  • Biztrate (shopzilla's sister site) - has an entire new UI (details at siter-site CSE Strategies) that highlights coupons.
  • Shopping.com has announced tons of new things - tiered pricing, a new feed specification and more. I bet coupons are coming (in the feed spec).
  •  Microsoft/MSN/Live - MSFT has no fewer than 3-4 CSEs now and they seem to be combining them into one platform.
  • PriceGrabber - Coupons and some AOL changes coming 
  • AOL - Rolling out their own (used to be Pricegrabber partnership) CSE
  • NextTag - lots of changes similar to above 
  • Become.com - actually increasing rates (!?) 
  • Smarter - feature store and logo opportunities  
  
We have a large team of business folks and engineers at ChannelAdvisor staying on top of these changes from a product perspective and they also have put the details into a white paper that you can download for free here.

May 20, 2009

BizRate US and UK Get Refreshed

Shopzilla's BizRate US and BizRate UK just got a makeover. The new design is much cleaner, with better navigation, including a tag cloud of popular searches. Though the two sites maintain a similar look and feel, there are some functional differences in that the UK homepage has no display advertising and a box focused on product brands. The US site, which still maintains a few spaces for display ads, also includes a geography based promo area that shows top categories in some major metro regions.

Despite Shopzilla being established as the network brand several years ago, the Bizrate sites continue to attract more visitors in both the US and UK than the Shopzilla sites themselves, so it will be interesting to see how these updates impact traffic and conversion.



May 14, 2009

Welcome a new blog to the ChannelAdvisor family...Amazon Strategies!

Hey everyone - Scot Wingo here.  I'm excited to announce CSE Strategies readers know that we've added a new sister blog to our family - Amazon Strategies.  We'll be covering selling on Amazon, which we think of as a marketplace @ CA, in detail.

I mention this on the CSE strategies blog because we will be covering something we're getting pretty excited about at Amazon that is really more a CSE than a marketplace - ProductAds.  We'll be sure to cross-post those topics here so you don't miss them in the first 30 days, but after that you're on your own, so be sure to subscribe to that feed if you are interested in all things Amazon.

So to recap the various areas you can read ChannelAdvisor's thoughts on ecommerce channels:
  • eBay Strategies - News, analysis and strategies for optimizing your sales on eBay.
  • Amazon Strategies - Our newest blog, focused on advanced amazon strategies for ProMerchant, ProductAds, FBA, CBA, etc.
  • CSE Strategies - Everything related to Comparison Shopping Engines.  There's more coming in 2009 for CSEs than any time I've seen in the last year - stay tuned here.
  • SearchMarketing.com - We have a team of paid-search geniuses at ChannelAdvisor that spend day and night optimizing search marketing campaigns for hundreds of top retailers.
  • Blog.channeladvisor.com - Product-related thoughts from some of our top engineers, product managers and services folks at ChannelAdvisor.
  • Strategy and Support Center  - For our customers, we provide even more in-depth strategy and channel details in the SSC (new beta is out check it out!)   

Oh yeah - almost forgot - we're kicking off Amazon Strategies with a post that is intented to answer the FAQ we keep getting: How big is Amazon Prime?   You can go direct to that post here.


May 10, 2009

Shopping.com Introduces Tiered CPC Pricing and Variable Logo Rates

Making good on their February promises, Shopping.com announced via email this evening price changes that will take effect this Friday, May 15. The announcement consists of three parts:

1. Tiered CPC Rates

  • What is it?  Shopping.com has broken down every category into at least two product price tiers (a handful will have three). For example, the clothing category has three tiers/rates: Products priced under $25 ($0.10 CPC), $25 - under $50 ($0.20 CPC), and $50+ ($0.35 CPC).
  • What does it mean?  Merchants with lower priced products who either decided against Shopping.com in the past or are currently filtering those products from their Shopping.com feed need to take another look. Lower CPCs equate to less risk. For a $20 clothing item, if your break even at the current $0.20 rate is at a 2% conversion rate, you can now tolerate a lower conversion rate of 1%, meaning you can incur twice as many clicks before an order is placed. This is a potential game changer for merchants who operate at the lower end of the price range.  The opposite is true for clothing sellers with an average order value all/most products priced above $50. Your rates just went up. The ultimate impact to those merchants will depend on their existing efficiency on Shopping.com (which in recent months has been at the high end of the efficiency scale). It will be interesting to see if this tiered approach creates a "selection vacuum" at the low end of each tier. If a $52 clothing item was successful at$0.20 CPC, it may very well not be at $0.35 (a 75% increase in CPC), so it's possible that products at the lower end of each tier will disappear quickly, especially in the highest tier of the three tiered categories. This reminds me a lot of what happens at the price break points in the eBay world. Since eBay (Shopping.com's parent company) tiers auction insertion fees by starting price, many merchants find it beneficial to drop the price of their items by a few dollars to get under the price break. Similarly, depending on other metrics associated with the item, it might make sense to drop the price of a $50 item to $49.99 on one's website to get the 15 cent lower CPC, even though effects all sales and not just those originating at Shopping.com.


2. Variable Logo Rates:

  • What is it?  Many engines charge a flat rate for merchant logos to appear. This simply changes that pricing structure, allowing the current CPC rate on the item to determine the logo charge. So if you are selling a $20 clothing item (CPC of $0.10), the logo charge is 2 cents per click, but for the $30 item (CPC of $0.20) the logo charge is 5 cents per click.
  • What does it mean?  Again, this favors those selling lower priced items, but there is no bad news for anyone. Since the CPC rate is now based not just on product type (category), but also on product price, the increased efficiency needed to justify the logo cost just got much more realistic at the low end. When considering displaying a CSE logo or any other add-on feature, the simplest way to understand the risk is to compare the cost of the add-on to your current CPC and understand that your conversion rate needs to increase by that same amount for you to break even, assuming your average order value does not change. So if your CPC is $0.30 and the add-on is $0.10 (a 33% increase in cost), your conversion rate needs to increase by 33% as well. Depending on the strength of your brand, this may or may not be realistic (it is possible the AOV could change as well but over time, this tends to stay fairly flat).  It's clear that the folks at Shopping.com thought this through and are trying to make the logo more attractive to merchants of lower CPC products/categories by significantly decreasing the ratio of logo cost to current CPC.

3. International Click Filtering:

  • What is it?  Shopping.com will no longer charge US based merchants for clicks coming from outside the US or Canada.
  • What does it mean? This one is great news for all merchants. Since many US merchants won't ship products to the places where these clicks originate, they represent nothing but bad traffic. Eliminating these clicks/cost from merchant invoices can only help. I'm sure some merchants who want to attract international buyers may question this, but note that this does not prevent international shoppers from clicking, it just stops you from having to pay for those clicks.

Overall, this is very exciting news from Shopping.com. It will likely increase the breadth of their product catalog, mostly at the lower end of the price spectrum, and will probably increase adoption of the logo feature. More than that, this significant change is a further indication that the often stagnant comparison shopping industry is progressing. 

Full announcement below:

Shopping.com is excited to announce 2 new pricing programs, beginning May 15th, that will enable you to add low priced inventory and advertise your brand to millions. This is another step to sustain your cost of sales and profitability.
1.    Introducing Tiered CPC Pricing

We are introducing a tiered pricing model where the CPC rates will be based on the product price in all categories.

This innovative pricing model enables you to advertise low priced items and match consumer demand, while maintaining profit. We recognize some tiers will see an increase nevertheless the methodology we used to develop the tiered pricing model is based on meeting a sustainable cost of sale.
 



Click here to view the new rate card.

2.    Launching Tiered Logo Pricing

Shopping.com is making brand advertising more affordable by changing the logo rate from a flat $0.10 CPC to a tiered cost structure based on the item price. The new rates allow you to economically advertise your brand in front of millions of consumers. These new rates should not exceed 25% of your overall spend.

CPC Rate

New Tiered Logo Rates

<$0.19

$0.02

$0.20-$0.39

$0.05

>$0.40

$0.10


Additionally, we recently completed the full roll-out of our international click filtering program. You will continue to receive international traffic but Shopping.com will not charge you for these clicks, ultimately improving your campaign's conversion to sale.

Learn more on how to take advantage of these new prices and features.

Thank you for your continued business,

Tomer Shoval
Managing Director, Shopping.com US




May 07, 2009

What matters most to consumers: free shipping, low prices, or coupons?

David Spitz, ChannelAdvisor's COO, has a post over on eBay strategies about the popularity of free shipping, coupon/promo codes vs. value pricing.  We thought his use of Google Trends and insights would be of value to CSEStrategies readers as well.  You can read it here.

May 01, 2009

Dialing Down MSN Shopping

MSN recently started communicating to active merchants that as of May 2, 2009, all featured store placements and display advertisement inventory on MSN Shopping will be retired. Upon further prodding, we've also been told that no gift guides are planned after Mother's Day. The lack of these elements will certainly lead to a decline in traffic from this long standing engine. However, this is not completely surprising since MSN has clearly been giving much more attention to their Cashback program, which was recently merged with the Live Product Submit program at search.live.com/products.

MSN will likely continue to accept MSN Shopping feeds, at least for now, since there is revenue associated with them. This feed data is already integrated with the Live Product/Cashback area. I would expect the Live Product/Cashback engine to fully replace the existing MSN Shopping system eventually, but if, when and how this would be executed is still unclear.

This integration/consolidation is a natural step and should eventually make things easier for merchants and consumers alike. One has to wonder what share of clicks the non-Cashback listings are getting on pages with "mixed" offers. It seems pretty clear, though, that the MSN folks have some kinks to work out, as reflected in the dueling Home Depot listings below. Showing both listings is a little questionable to begin with since the Cashback listing seems significantly more likely to get clicked, but the inconsistent "free shipping" details (the Yes vs. No in the second column) are pretty confusing as well. That second listing comes from the PriceGrabber network via MSN Shopping. MSN Shopping also gets product data from Shopping.com, so the consolidation effort involves more than just the multiple MSN sources, but external sources as well.

Best of luck to the MSN team on getting this sorted out. I have yet to see any Ciao listings in the mix so it will be interesting to see if they choose to do so, leave Ciao US as-is, or maybe shut it down in the US so they can refocus on Europe.

MSN