Robert Brady, founder of Righteous Marketing, presented at HeroConf this year on what he’s calling the the Golden Age of competitive research.
The competitive research discussion focused on four main things:
— The process of using Google Scripts to pull Auction Insights
— How to tap into the Bing competitive lab
— How to monitor and leverage competitor Facebook ads
— And, how to tap into your competitors’ funnels
Regarding Google scripts, we should focus on trends instead of exact numbers, see some detail on Google Scripts here.
Are your competitors paying attention?
By reviewing trends you can note not only when new competitors come into the space (whether temporarily or for the long haul) as well as which of your competitors are essentially asleep at the wheel. One of the largest opportunities we have as PPC marketers is to seize the moment when competitors have just stopped paying attention. If you notice sudden changes, you can analyze what the potential reasoning is behind the change and capitalize on it. Monitoring things like average position and top of page rate can be a great way to identify this.
Microsoft Advertising competition tab (basically auction insights)
A few things to take note of here. On competitive action items, are your competitors behaving differently here? Are they less active? This can make it much easier to exploit and deploy conquest campaigns. Who are the new competitors in the space? If they have smaller budgets or are generic, it will be easy to “flex the muscle,” after they’ve exhausted their daily budget, according to Brady.
Facebook Ad Snooping
Did you know you can see all of your competitor ads that are running right now?
You can see not only what they’re running, but you can start to find out how targeting is happening by reviewing the “why am I seeing this ad” option. Types of information you can see include behaviors, and also clicking on other ads or liking pages.
The Facebook ads library
The completely searchable library for anything that is potentially relatable to our campaign. This data can include spend by advertiser, and detailed data about the ads that are running, including where the ad is being shown and allocation of spend by ad.
The new Facebook transparency gives us a lot of powerful information for:
Competitive budget comparisons
Messaging reach efficiency
Guidance for keyword A/B testing
Also, by clicking on “See Details,” we can see if a competitive ad campaign is:
Active or inactive
Approved or disapproved
Number (range) of impressions received
Amount spent
Demographic information
Locations where the ad was viewed
Some additional action items:
If you like their targeting, you can add to your campaigns, or you can exclude the ones you don’t
Creative review – try opposing colors and themes to stand out
Getting into the competitive funnel: The catfishing of competitive research
Become your competition’s ideal customer (and yours right!). Here’s how you can go incognito…
Always use a VPN with incognito mode of Chrome; set to impersonate a user in Dallas, TX (or wherever you need it to be)
Create new Google accounts; use age & gender as selected for personas; leave all data collection settings in default configuration (be the customer)
Visit “clean” sites (dallasnews.com, wfaa.com/local, fox4news.com, msn.com) to check on what ads we’re seeing
Check “clean” sites to see how ads change
Check google.com/ads/preferences to see how Google is bucketing the persona
Fill out your competitors contact forms, download their white papers… see what happens next :)
With the vast amount of information available through smart data mining, there is just no excuse for employing a strategy that does not thoroughly exploit competitor intelligence. It’s there for the taking. You just have to know where to look and what to do with it when you find it!
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