{"id":28514,"date":"2021-03-27T11:05:10","date_gmt":"2021-03-27T18:05:10","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.bruceclay.com\/blog\/?p=28514"},"modified":"2023-08-21T14:52:49","modified_gmt":"2023-08-21T21:52:49","slug":"what-is-sem","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.bruceclay.com\/blog\/what-is-sem\/","title":{"rendered":"What Does Search Engine Marketing (SEM) Mean?"},"content":{"rendered":"
Search Engine Marketing (SEM)<\/strong> is a digital marketing strategy that utilizes paid advertisements to increase a business’s visibility in search engine results pages (SERPs). Advertisers bid on keywords related to their products or services, allowing their ads to appear alongside search results for those keywords. SEM is a highly effective way to improve a website’s ranking on search engines and attract qualified traffic to a business’s website, ultimately leading to increased brand awareness and sales.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n When you give a search engine money to appear on their search engine results page, you\u2019re doing SEM.<\/p>\n Common SEM concerns are cost per click<\/em> and cost per acquisition<\/em> (CPC and CPA). These indicate how much money is being spent on search advertising and whether the return is worth it. As you begin to implement advertisements across search engines, consider how dynamic ads can supercharge your SEM campaigns<\/a>.<\/p>\n Some other important terms used in the world of SEM include:<\/p>\n Another part of defining SEM is understanding why SEM is important to search engines \u2014 it’s how search engines make most of their money.<\/p>\n As a result, they’re continually modifying\/improving their advertising platforms. Paid search advertising takes precision so that your ad dollars aren\u2019t wasted. That makes SEM a marketing specialty of rapid change, one of the more exciting frontiers in search.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n The short answer is no. SEM and SEO are now two different roles.<\/p>\n The longer answer is: \u201cNot anymore, but it\u2019s complicated.\u201d<\/p>\n When Danny Sullivan spoke about SEM back in 2001, he used it as a catch-all to describe all efforts that encouraged website traffic from search engine results pages \u2014 including paid and organic search initiatives. According to Danny then, both SEO and PPC folks worked in search engine marketing. Simple. Clear. This definition was accepted by the industry at the time.<\/p>\n Yet, in the 18 years since, the common understanding of the term SEM has shifted.<\/p>\n What caused this change?<\/em><\/strong> A few possible causes include Wikipedia\u2019s page on SEM being entirely skewed toward paid efforts; Yahoo\u2019s push of their PPC solution, and the general alphabet soup of confusing marketing acronyms. (For a detailed history of the term SEM, see Danny’s recap from 2010<\/a>.)<\/p>\n Whatever the reason, the answer to the question \u201cwhat is SEM\u201d has definitively changed. SEM now means paid.<\/p>\n Today when you head to Search Engine Land, you’ll find SEM defined<\/a> this way:<\/p>\n \u201cSEM (Search Engine Marketing) is the process of gaining website traffic by purchasing ads on search engines.\u201d<\/p><\/blockquote>\n That clearly includes pay-per-click, local search ads, product listing ads, and all advertising efforts with regard to search engines.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n In place of SEM as an umbrella term, the industry coined the phrase \u201csearch marketing\u201d (without “engine”).<\/p>\n Again looking at SEL<\/a>, the definition of search marketing is:<\/p>\n \u201cSearch marketing is the process of gaining traffic and visibility from search engines through both paid and unpaid efforts.\u201d<\/p><\/blockquote>\n You may recognize that definition as Danny\u2019s original meaning for SEM.<\/p>\n Raise your hand if you think \u201cSEM\u201d is done evolving. Anyone?<\/p>\n I see signs that SEM will expand<\/em> in meaning in the future.<\/p>\n In 2019, search marketing conferences are including more than just search engine advertising within the track called \u201cSEM.\u201d<\/p>\n Exhibit A: SMX West<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n The last in-person SMX West conference divided the tracks into SEO (organic) and SEM (paid). So that division is clear. You can expect to learn about organic ranking in the SEO track. In the SEM track, sessions focus on PPC topics like improving a Google Ads campaign.<\/p>\n What’s striking is the addition of advertising platforms besides Google and Bing. Sessions in the SEM track also talk about:<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n Exhibit B: Pubcon Las Vegas<\/em><\/strong> It turns out that Pubcon\u2019s “SEM” theme also covers more than just traditional search engines. Facebook advertising makes the cut. And there could be others that just aren\u2019t mentioned in the summary description.<\/p>\n\n
<\/a>You know you\u2019re doing SEM if\u2026<\/em><\/h2>\n
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<\/a>Does \u201cSearch Engine Marketing\u201d Include SEO?<\/h2>\n
<\/a>What about \u201cSearch Marketing\u201d?<\/h2>\n
<\/a>Defining SEM for the Future<\/h2>\n
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\nI wondered if SMX was just an exception here. So I looked at another big marketing event, Pubcon.<\/p>\n