DIGITAL ADVERTISING TERMS
21 Must-Know Digital Marketing Definitions
If you are new to digital marketing, understanding the complex jargon that dominates the industry can be complicated. With words such as conversion and acronyms like SEO thrown casually in conversations, you can feel left out. To catch up, here are 20 key definitions of phrases commonly used in the digital marketing industry.
1. CTR – Click-Through Rate
2. CPA – Cost per Acquisition
Cost per Acquisition is a pricing model where companies are charged by advertising platforms only when leads, sales, or conversions are generated. It’s been around for a while but has been generating much more traffic as a common pricing model in late 2013 and early 2013. The best part about CPA is you are only charged for the results that you want.
3. CPC – Cost per Click
Cost per Click is a pricing model where companies are charged by publishers for every click people make on a displayed/test ad which leads people to your company’s website (hopefully to a landing page!).
4. CPM – Cost per Thousand
Cost per Thousand is a pricing model where advertising impressions are purchased and companies are charged according to the number of times their ad appears per 1,000 impressions. It’s definitely a favorite form of selling ads by publishers because they get paid regardless by just displaying ads. The CPM model really only makes sense if you are trying to increase brand awareness.
5. Conversion
When a visitor takes the desired action while visiting your site, it is called a conversion. This can be a purchase, membership signup, download, or registration for a newsletter.
6. Impressions
This term is used to define the number of times a company’s ad will appear to its target audience. The impression could also be related to a website and the number of times the web page appears in total.
Example of how impressions work: 1 visitor could view 5 pages which would create 5 impressions. 2 visitors could view 5 pages which would generate 10 impressions.
7. Keyword
A keyword is a word or phrase that your audience uses to search for relevant topics on search engines. If you are a flower shop, a relevant keyword could be “Buy Red Roses” [short keyword] or “Looking to purchase roses from a flower shop” [long tail keyword]
8. Organic Traffic
This is traffic that is generated to your website which is generated by a Search Engine. This could be traffic from Google, Yahoo, or Bing. It’s also known as “Free” traffic. Organic traffic is the best type of traffic!
9. Paid Traffic
Paid search is when a company bids on keywords and makes advertisements around those keywords to be displayed on search engines. These results appear separately, either on the top, bottom or right side of a search results page. Paid traffic also encompasses any form of paid advertisement that directly points to your website.
10. SEO – Search Engine Optimization
Search Engine Optimization is a way a company optimizes its webpage allowing the website to rank higher on a search engine’s results page (SERP). The higher your ranking, typically more traffic is generated (if the keyword has traffic) and more targeted traffic.
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11. SEM – Search Engine Marketing
Search Engine Marketing is a way companies can get higher placement on search engines by bidding on search terms. Make sure to check out our article on How to Run a PPC audit.
12. SERP – Search Engine Results Page
Search Engine Results Page is the list of results provided by a search engine after a search query is made. Essentially, if you are looking for where your website ranks for “Best Digital Marketing Agency” a SERP report will let you know that your website is ranked #4. Meaning that your website is in the Fourth position (1st page).
13. Domain Authority
This is a scale from 1-100 that search engines use to determine how authoritative a company’s website is, 1 being the lowest rank and 100 being the highest. The higher your domain authority the more Search Engines trust you.
14. Keyword Stuffing
This is the practice of using too many keywords in content in hopes of making it more visible on search engines. You will be penalized by search engines if you resort to it. Never keyword stuff, just provide great and valuable content.
15. META Description
The META description is the few lines of text that appear on the search engine results page.
16. RSS – Really Simple Syndication
Really Simple Syndication is a technology that allows users to become subscribers of content and ultimately get automatic alerts if updates are made. They would need an RSS Reader which is where they receive all the updates. Here are a few popular RSS Readers:
17. Viral Marketing
This is a way of marketing where the audience is encouraged by companies to pass on their content to others for more exposure. Usually a successful viral marketing campaign has an easy share functionality. If you had to pay a lot to generate awareness, it wouldn’t be considered “Viral Marketing” (it would be considered paid traffic).
18. Subscriber
A subscriber is a person who allows a company to send him/her messages through email or other personal communication means. These subscribers are of high value to publishers and businesses alike. Subscribers keep coming back!
19. Social Networking
Social networking is the practice of using web-based platforms (or mobile) to build online communities where people share common interests or activities. The most common social networks are Facebook, Linkedin, Twitter, and Pinterest… just to name a few.
20. Landing Page
21. Interstitial Ads
Interstitial ads are full-screen ads that cover the interface of their host app. They're typically displayed at natural transition points in the flow of an app, such as between activities or during the pause between levels in a game. When an app shows an interstitial ad, the user has the choice to either tap on the ad and continue to its destination or close it and return to the app.