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Search & Internet Marketing Consultant BLOG

Elias Kai Google-Kai.com

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HealthVault.com and Health.Live.com from Microsoft

October 5th, 2007 by elias.kai

We had always our attention on the vertical health search market and mainly after Google wanted to release a EHR eHealth Record, Health Search.

The most interesting sentence on the site was:

This site does not provide medical or any other health care advice, diagnosis or treatment. See more information.
Three interesting point before moving to discuss the Health Vertical search by Microsoft:
1- Adam Bosworth Dr. Google Health Search: Adam left Google a month ago after some releases of the Google Health backoffice.
2- HON Health on The Net Foundation that has built a cooperation with Google Co-op led by the Eng. Celia Boyer, Executive Director for Health On the Net Foundation, Geneva, Switzerland.
3- Microsoft goes live with www.healthVault.com (Google.com has cached and indexed 9 pages) and Health.Live.com (where google has already cached and indexed 31 pages)

Health Search Market is interesting and can be implemented for both prevention and health marketing strategies:

sex search from healthvault health live
Personal Health
Sexual Partners
Condoms
Risk-Taking
Reproductive Health
Birth Control
Sex Education
Family Planning
Violence
Erectile Dysfunction Conditions
AIDS
Sexually Transmitted Diseases
Pregnancy
Sexual Dysfunctions
Impotence
Physiological Sexual Disorder
Depression
Immune Deficiency
Chlamydia Infection
Drug Abuse Procedures
Outpatient Care
Vaccination
Prostatectomy
HIV Test
Radical Prostatectomy
Psychotherapy
PAP Smear
Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy
Body Mass Index
Oral Contraceptives Drugs & Substances
Viagra
Gardasil
Edex
Levonorgestrel
Provera
Propecia
Estradiol

Online Health Regulation in European Union
eHealth applications, whatever their nature, will frequently involve the processing of information relating to an identified or identifiable patient. Such information is legally known as personal data and is subject to data protection legislation in the European Union.

Data protection is governed by a certain number of international legally binding texts.
• Directive 95/46/CE of the European Parliament and of the Council of 25 October 1995 on the protection of individuals with regards to the processing of personal data and on the free movement of such data
• Directive 2002/58/CE of the European Parliament and of the Council of 12 July 2002 concerning the processing of personal data and the protection of privacy in the electronic communications sector
• Directive 2006/24/CE of the European Parliament and of the Council of 15 March 2006 on the retention of data generated or processed in connection with the provision of publicly available electronic communications services or of public communications networks and amending Directive 2002/58/EC
• Regulation (EC) No 45/2001 on the protection of individuals with regard to the processing of personal data by the Community, institutions and bodies and on the free movement of such data
• Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights
• Articles 7 and 8 of the Charter of fundamental rights of the European Union
• The Convention n°108 of the Council of Europe for the Protection of Individuals with regard to Automatic Processing of Personal Data adopted on 28 January 1981
• Convention n°164 for the protection of Human Rights and dignity of the human being with regard to the application of biology and medicine: Convention on Human Rights and Biomedicine and its Additional Protocols
Some recommendations are also made to the countries that are not legally binding but are policy guidelines on specific fields of data protection:
• Recommendation (97) 5 of the Committee of Ministers to Member States on the protection of medical data, adopted on 13 Feb. 1997
• Recommendation (83) 10 of the Committee of Ministers on the protection of personal data used for scientific research and statistics, adopted on 23 September 1983Recommendation (97) 18 of the Committee of ministers of Members States concerning the protection of personal data collected and processed for statistical purposes, adopted on 30 September 1997
• Recommendation (99) 5 of the Committee of ministers of Members States for the protection of privacy on the Internet, adopted on 23 February 1999
• Communication 2004 (356) from the Commission to the Council, the European Parliament, the European economic and social committee and the committee of the regions “eHealth - making healthcare better for European citizens: an action plan for a European eHealth area�
• Some opinions or recommendations made by the Data Protection Working Party
• Opinion n° 13 (1999) of the European Group on Ethics in Science and New Technologies on Ethical issues of healthcare in the information society

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Dr. Google Health Search

August 14th, 2007 by elias.kai

Google Health
Dr. Google and the US Health Search Market:

* How systematic is health search behavior, and how loyal are online users to health sites?
* To what degree is the trustworthiness of health content more important to users than its relevance?
* How will health search behavior and adoption of health search engines likely evolve?
* How can advertisers, publishers, and search engines most effectively leverage health search behavior?

Landscape: Loyalty to Health Sites Relatively Low, with Relevance of Health Content More Important than Trustworthiness
Outlook: Health Search Engine Adoption Will Grow Among Power Health Users
Mandate: SEM Must Take Priority Among Health Advertisers and Publishers Through 2008

First Google HEALTH screenshots from Blogoscoped and our friend Philipp.

google healthGoogle HealthGoogle HealthGoogle Health 4Google Health 5Google Health 6Google Health 7Google Health 8Google Health 9Google Health 10

We know consumers looking for health information turn to search engines — but how do they decide what to click? Advertisers continue to try to understand how online users search and find health information. Jupiter Research’s new US Health Consumer Study 2007 takes us one step closer to understanding how consumers search for health information. The study’s overarching theme: relevance drives clicks. Four times as many consumers who used a search engine for health info clicked on a result because it was relevant, compared to others who click because the link was to a trusted source. And fully 65% of searchers clicked because the text was most relevant to their query. In addition, the study found that people seeking health information show no bias against sponsored results (versus natural results).

New York Times with Adam Bosworth
Adam Bosworth, the leader of Googleà¢ï¿½ï¿½s health care initiative

Based on this research, Jupiter recommends that advertisers leverage search engine optimization and paid search with a focus on content relevance. Advertisers should continue to optimize content for search engines.

It is too soon to know whether either Google or Microsoft will make real headway. Health care, experts note, is a field where policy, regulation and entrenched interests tend to slow the pace of change, and technology companies have a history of losing patience.

And for most people, typing an ailment into a Web search engine is very different from entrusting a corporate titan with personal information about their health.

Google and Microsoft recognize the obstacles, and they concede that changing health care will take time. But the companies see the potential in attracting a large audience for health-related advertising and services. And both companies bring formidable advantages to the consumer market for such technology.

Microsoft's software animates more than 90 percent of all personal computers, while Google is the default starting point for most health searches. And people are increasingly turning to their computers and the Web for health information and advice. A Harris poll, published last month, found that 52 percent of adults sometimes or frequently go to the Web for health information, up from 29 percent in 2001.

If the efforts of the two big companies gain momentum over time, that promises to accelerate a shift in power to consumers in health care, just as Internet technology has done in other industries.

Today, about 20 percent of the nation's patient population have computerized records — rather than paper ones — and the Bush administration has pushed the health care industry to speed up the switch to electronic formats. But these records still tend to be controlled by doctors, hospitals or insurers. A patient moves to another state, for example, but the record usually stays.

The Google and Microsoft initiatives would give much more control to individuals, a trend many health experts see as inevitable. “Patients will ultimately be the stewards of their own information,� said John D. Halamka, a doctor and the chief information officer of the Harvard Medical School.

Already the Web is allowing people to take a more activist approach to health. According to the Harris survey, 58 percent of people who look online for health information discussed what they found with their doctors in the last year.

It is common these days, Dr. Halamka said, for a patient to come in carrying a pile of Web page printouts. “The doctor is becoming a knowledge navigator,� he said. “In the future, health care will be a much more collaborative process between patients and doctors.�

Microsoft and Google are hoping this will lead people to seek more control over their own health records, using tools the companies will provide. Neither company will discuss their plans in detail. But Microsoft's consumer-oriented effort is scheduled to be announced this fall, while Google's has been delayed and will probably not be introduced until next year, according to people who have been briefed on the companies' plans.

A prototype of Google Health, which the company has shown to health professionals and advisers, makes the consumer focus clear. The welcome page reads, “At Google, we feel patients should be in charge of their health information, and they should be able to grant their health care providers, family members, or whomever they choose, access to this information. Google Health was developed to meet this need.�

A presentation of screen images from the prototype — which two people who received it showed to a reporter — then has 17 other Web pages including a “health profile� for medications, conditions and allergies; a personalized “health guide� for suggested treatments, drug interactions and diet and exercise regimens; pages for receiving reminder messages to get prescription refills or visit a doctor; and directories of nearby doctors.

Google executives would not comment on the prototype, other than to say the company plans to experiment and see what people want. “We'll make mistakes and it will be a long-range march,� said Adam Bosworth, a vice president of engineering and leader of the health team. “But it's also true that some of what we're doing is expensive, and for Google it's not.�

At Microsoft, the long-term goal is similarly ambitious. “It will take grand scale to solve these problems like the data storage, software and networking needed to handle vast amounts of personal health and medical information,� said Steve Shihadeh, general manager of Microsoft's health solutions group. “So there are not many companies that can do this.�

This year, Microsoft bought a start-up, Medstory, whose search software is tailored for health information, and last year bought a company that makes software for retrieving and displaying patient information in hospitals. Microsoft software is already used in hospitals, clinical laboratories and doctors' offices, and, Mr. Shihadeh noted, the three most popular health record systems in doctors' offices are built with Microsoft software and programming tools.

Microsoft will not disclose its product plans, but according to people working with the company the consumer effort will include online offerings as well as software to find, retrieve and store personal health information on personal computers, cellphones and other kinds of digital devices — perhaps even a wristwatch with wireless Internet links some day.

Mr. Shihadeh declined to discuss specifics, but said, “We're building a broad consumer health platform, and we view this challenge as far bigger than a personal health record, which is just scratching the surface.�

Yet personal health records promise to be a thorny challenge for practical and privacy reasons. To be most useful, a consumer-controlled record would include medical and treatment records from doctors, hospitals, insurers and laboratories. Under federal law, people can request and receive their personal health data within 90 days. But the process is complicated, and the replies typically come on paper, as photocopies or faxes.

The efficient way would be for that data to be sent over the Internet into a person's digital health record. But that would require partnerships and trust between health care providers and insurers and the digital record-keepers.

Privacy concerns are another big obstacle, as both companies acknowledge. Most likely, they say, trust will build slowly, and the online records will include as much or as little personal information as users are comfortable divulging.

A person might start, for example, by typing in age, gender and a condition, like diabetes, as a way to find more personalized health information. If a person creates a personal health record and later has second thoughts, a simple mouse click should erase it. The promise, the companies say, will be complete consumer control.

There are plenty of competitors these days in online health records and information from start-ups like Revolution Health, headed by AOL's founder, Stephen M. Case, and thriving profit-makers led by WebMD.

Potential rivals are not underestimating the two technology giants. But the smaller companies have the advantage of being focused entirely on health, and some have been around for years. WebMD, for example, traces its lineage to Healtheon, a fallen star of the dot-com era, founded by the Netscape billionaire Jim Clark.

Google and Microsoft are great companies, said Wayne T. Gattinella, WebMD's chief executive, but “that doesn't mean they will be expert in a specific area like health.�

Specialized health search engines — notably Healthline — are gaining ground and adding partners. AOL recently began using Healthline for searches on its health pages, even though Google is a close partner.

Still, 58 percent of people seeking health information online begin with a general search engine, according to a recent Jupiter Research report, and Google dominates the field. “Google is the entry point for most health search, and that is a huge advantage,� said Monique Levy, a Jupiter analyst.

Indeed, it is the market reach and deep pockets that Google and Microsoft can bring to consumer health information that intrigues medical experts, and has lured recruits. Dr. Roni Zeiger, a graduate of Stanford's School of Medicine, a medical informatics researcher and a former primary care doctor, joined Google last year. The 36-year-old, who still sees patients some evenings and weekends at a nearby clinic, said, “At Google, I can use my expertise and knowledge to potentially help millions of people each day.�

Archives Posts

Search engine marketing specialist

February 25th, 2007 by elias.kai

There are many search engine marketing specialists who claims to master the know how and deploy the best techniques in the search engine optimization, positioning, marketing industry or call it whatever you like.

But there are few who are into some tough and free keyword suggestion tool and competitive intelligence that knows how to transform the resources any company has and turn it into actionable intelligence and get the best ROI out of their efforts.

SEO and SEM is all about PR, trust, brilliant ideas combined with delivered marketing ways.

Any Search engine marketing specialist or SEO Consultant must step out from all seo beginners, intermediate and advanced levels or any search engine marketing generalist and show how he can turn a competitive keyword into higher CTR and lower all cost per acquisition. He can play all search trends and empower the search marketing game.

Search engine marketing specialists are normal people like you and me who kept their daily training and showed great actionable intelligence from:

Smart keyword research
Smart trust builders
Smart Social Networking
Smart link building
Smart SEO Services
Smart content distribution
Smart sit & do with PR and journalist to understand both catchy viral marketing and press releases works.
Smart usability analysis
Smart conversion & tracking with an in line simulation to the whole industry from competitors to allies
Smart thinking out of the box

Search engine marketing include organic search engine optimization, pay per click keywords advertising and cannot exclude at any given point the viral and pr marketing aspect.

Convert data into value

I will list some Specifications if you are trying to recruit good search engine marketing specialists:

Individual serves as the Marketing Coordinator. Responsible for coordinating department wide development and the implementation of a comprehensive marketing plan and marketing budget.

Management Responsibilities

Coordinate department, program, and facility advertising with all appropriate media for all daily activities and special events. Create and implement a comprehensive marketing campaign for departments and programs. Conduct market research in the form of surveys, focus groups, and market meetings for the development of marketing strategies, new service programs and customer service evaluation. Coordinates the design, layout, printing, and distribution of season program brochures.

Search Marketing Specialists

JOB DESCRIPTION:

General Description:

Do you have pay for performance (P4P) Search experience and want to be part of the next revolution in online advertising? Do you want to help grow a high-performance organization by using cutting-edge technology and help customers get the most out of their advertising efforts? If so, then MSN's Client Service Organization may have the perfect opportunity for you.

We are looking for a highly motivated Search Marketing Specialist to provide world-class service to our advertisers and partners. In this role, you would be able to leverage your internet and customer service experience by working closely with Sales and Clients to develop, execute, and optimize search campaigns. You will be joining a team that is focused on results, works together to solve problems, and is committed to developing people.

Core Responsibilities:

Work with Sales, Clients, and other MSN employees (Search Marketing Analysts) to provide search campaign management. This would include:

Setting up accounts and campaigns
Building and managing keyword lists
Coordinating creative upload and editorial review
Establishing targeting parameters
Forecasting budgets

Deliver on industry-leading SLA's for campaign management activities.
Help Sales, Clients and Search Marketing Analysts optimize keywords, manage bids, and improve creative.

Use proprietary tools and internal resources to highlight significant trends.
Provide strategic insight through regular reports.
Support Sales team produce response to proposals for new business.
Ensure fiscal responsibility by proactively monitoring budgets and QA'ing contracts and invoices.
Gather industry research for search engine strategy development and positioning.

Education and experience:

Bachelor's degree or equivalent work experience required
3+ years online advertising experience preferred
2+ years of experience working with Google, Overture and/or other relevant search engine toolsets on pay-for-performance search products preferred
Paid inclusion and/or natural search experience is a plus, but not directly relevant
* Proven ability to understand customer needs, build ongoing relationships, and create solutions
* Must haves:

o Strong quantitative and analytical experience
o Data entry and data manipulation skills
o Experience w/MS Excel & other MS Office products
Excellent written and verbal communication skills, including negotiation abilities or experience
Experience developing and presenting PowerPoint slides

Core Dimensions of Position:

Essentially, the role of the Search Marketing Specialist is to manage the relationship with the premium client (post sale), from account creation to helping increase ROI to expanding accounts for revenue growth. This includes:

Manage the sales to online process:

* Creating clients/accounts/campaigns using out Moonshot tool
* Checking and uploading client approved keyword lists (to ensure correct format and no glaring errors)
* Manage client expectations in terms of potential keyword rejections
* Ensure that sales to online process is as efficient as possible and within SLA

Once account is running:

* Ensure all accounts and campaigns are running to budget – contact client to increase/renew budget
* Proactively identify potential for account expansion (through increasing number of keywords, suggesting new campaigns, etc.)
* Proactively identify under performing listings (in terms of CTR and peer ranking) and work with SA to improve listing quality
* Ensure client requests are dealt with efficiently and within SLA
* Establish and foster long term client relationships through providing excellent industry leading service.

This organization wants to create a world class premium account agency – they need the talent to do this.

* SMS is the client facing, Account Manager of Client's search campaign
* B2B Agency experience is a big plus
* Managing Premium Accounts (pay for performance or paid search in bid model)
* Front end to the client
* Manages and troubleshoots client relationships
* Handles clients daily in an agency setting or for a SEM company
* Provides strategic insight, value added for client
* Uploads keyword list
* Understands client marketing objectives and how to maximize it with paid search.
* Determines costs and manages bid process budget for client, assuring budget stays on pace for expectations (may be quarterly or monthly)
* Works with the Account Executive (sales) and the SA to develop, execute and optimize search campaign.

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