Google to Show Search Volume – Another Blow to Agencies

  • July 15th, 2008 | Written By: Jay Baer
  • | View Comments

In a LOOOOONG overdue move that provides some much-needed transparency to the PPC business, Google has added search volume data to their keyword research tool

This means that when you use Google to research potential search terms for your clients’ pay-per-click campaign, Google will actually give you an idea of how many people actually search for that term each month. Useful data when you determine that only 2 people per month search for “heirloom cucumbers kansas” so perhaps that phrase shouldn’t be the cornerstone of your search marketing efforts.

If you’re not involved with PPC on a daily basis, you may be thinking “well of course they would tell you how many people search for each phrase, how else could you even figure out which phrases to bid on?” Welcome to Planet Google, where information is doled out in maddeningly small and disconnected doses like plot points on Lost.  Google to Show Search Volume   Another Blow to Agencies

It is of course ridiculous that this data was not provided historically, especially since GoTo/Overture/Yahoo showed search volume from the beginning, and they pioneered PPC, not Google. But, Google’s moxy to hide a critical piece of marketing information has been a boon for search agencies and consultants, who use third party tools like WordTracker (a nice little company that is probably stocking smelling salts in the cafeteria after this announcement) to find this data for clients. 

While this announcement may seem out of left field, I see it as another move in a series designed to disintermediate agencies and move small and medium sized advertisers into the hands of Google directly. Google Analytics makes having a Web analytics consultant less necessary for some. Google’s Ad Planner makes an online media consultant less necessary for some. Google’s TV Ads and Radio Ads services make a traditional media consultant less necessary for some. 

Trouble for Agencies, but an Opportunity

Ultimately, it appears Google’s desired end game is for all small and medium sized advertisers to conduct all marketing transactions directly with Google, leaving agencies to deal with the big clients. For advertising agencies, this is both troubling, and an opportunity. If Google makes the marketing and advertising business as transparent as travel planning and stock purchases, the only agencies that will be able to survive are those that can add real value in messaging, creative, and integrating data into actionable tactics.

The transactional components of the advertising agency model like media placement, and the other services like Web analytics that are based on access to data will evaporate. Agencies must commit to being thinkers, rather than doers to succeed in this environment. Setting up a PPC campaign won’t cut it much longer. Managing a PPC campaign with rigorous testing that incorporates insights from offline tactics will be the level of expertise required for an agency to charge for search marketing – and that day will be here quickly.

 

View Comments to “Google to Show Search Volume – Another Blow to Agencies”

  1. Great analysis. This is a reality that is coming for a lot of industries, including mine. I am hoping to position myself for the change.

  2. jaybaer says:

    Tyson how do you see intermediation happening in photography? Availability of pro-sumer tools?

  3. Google Shared: Google to Show Search Volume – Another Blow to Agencies: In a LOOOOONG over.. http://tinyurl.com/5nbrqm

  4. Andrew Bruce Smith says:

    Google Shared: Google to Show Search Volume – Another Blow to Agencies: In a LOOOOONG over.. http://tinyurl.com/5nbrqm

  5. [...] Jason Baer makes a good point that this means digital agencies and online marketing consultants can’t rely solely on their “secret toolbelt” in order to charge clients for their services.  That means we now have to *gasp* provide valuable services to clients in order to help grow their business. [...]

  6. Great point at the end with regards to turning a possible loss of competitive advantage into an opportunity. I’m a firm believer in transparency at all costs…even the loss of a client. If a client thinks they can do what we do in addition to running their business then let them try…chances are they’ll quickly realize exactly what they were paying for.

    That’s why it’s important to be transparent up front…possibly even tout the fact that they can now see what we see and perhaps aid in the keyword research/discovery process since they may know terms we would never think of for their industry. Then you become a partner as opposed to a vendor.

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