Here’s an easy way to determine what your customers want–and how to best meet their needs.

First it was keyword stuffing. Then link building. Then cloaking and alt tags and text links in footers. And now videos and infographics…

It’s no wonder that most small-business owners are skeptical of the latest and greatest SEO and SEM strategies.

Here’s another in my series in which I pick a topic and connect with someone a lot smarter than me. (There’s a list of previous installments at the end of the article.)

This time, I talked about search engine optimization and marketing with Wil Reynolds, founder of SEER Interactive, an SEO, SEM, and analytics consulting firm.

The topic: What Reynolds calls real company sh*t.

Let’s start at the beginning. What does real company sh*t mean?
Here’s what happens with SEO and SEM. Most firms think about what SEO does instead of thinking about what the small-business owner needs and what marketing can do to meet those needs.

Potential customers are out there searching. I need to be found by those customers.

But more important, I have to determine how to best connect with my target audience. I can either play games with links and keywords and fancy “strategies” or I can think like an effective marketer: I can engage, I can stand for something, I can share my expertise and my data. In other words, I can do real company sh*t.

But all that takes time. It’s tempting to go for the “we can get you on Page One in a matter of days” pitch when I’m desperate for sales.
I prefer to think of it this way: The real goal is to achieve the searcher’s mission.

But most people only focus on how they rank. That’s how 90% of the SEO world thinks. Most SEO firms say, “Hey, we’ll get you the eyeballs, but it’s your job to convert them.”

From the time I started my company, we tracked leads all the way to conversions. Smart companies realize they don’t pay their bills with rankings. You can’t pay the rent by ranking No. 3 for the keyword lighting.

You aren’t doing your job unless the traffic you generate, either for your clients or for yourself, leads to a purchase.

That’s not what a business that worked hard to hit the first page of Google wants to hear.
Look, many people took major shortcuts. Say I sell furniture. My SEO firm may have hired someone to write a lot of low-quality content so my business could “rank” well for living room furniture.

That ranking then drove people to a crappy website. When you look at the page, there’s only one photo, and it’s not even of a living room. If I’m looking for a living room, I might have landed there, but if the content doesn’t connect, who will actually use it, much less share it?

No one. It’s useless.

But a ranking is easy to understand, which makes it a popular measurement tool.
And maybe that’s why for the past 10 to 15 years, SEO firms have gotten away with delivering high rankings instead of results. With recent Google updates, some firms are going out of business because their “performance” was built on a house of cards.

I look at them and think, How long did you think you would be smarter than the hundreds of Ph.D.’s Google can throw at this? Why would you base your livelihood on the premise that you would be able to outsmart the very smartest people in the industry?

Full Article Here

First it was keyword stuffing. Then link building. Then cloaking and alt tags and text links in footers. And now videos and infographics…

It’s no wonder that most small-business owners are skeptical of the latest and greatest SEO and SEM strategies.

Here’s another in my series in which I pick a topic and connect with someone a lot smarter than me. (There’s a list of previous installments at the end of the article.)

This time, I talked about search engine optimization and marketing with Wil Reynolds, founder of SEER Interactive, an SEO, SEM, and analytics consulting firm.

The topic: What Reynolds calls real company sh*t.

Let’s start at the beginning. What does real company sh*t mean?
Here’s what happens with SEO and SEM. Most firms think about what SEO does instead of thinking about what the small-business owner needs and what marketing can do to meet those needs.

Potential customers are out there searching. I need to be found by those customers.

But more important, I have to determine how to best connect with my target audience. I can either play games with links and keywords and fancy “strategies” or I can think like an effective marketer: I can engage, I can stand for something, I can share my expertise and my data. In other words, I can do real company sh*t.

But all that takes time. It’s tempting to go for the “we can get you on Page One in a matter of days” pitch when I’m desperate for sales.
I prefer to think of it this way: The real goal is to achieve the searcher’s mission.

But most people only focus on how they rank. That’s how 90% of the SEO world thinks. Most SEO firms say, “Hey, we’ll get you the eyeballs, but it’s your job to convert them.”

From the time I started my company, we tracked leads all the way to conversions. Smart companies realize they don’t pay their bills with rankings. You can’t pay the rent by ranking No. 3 for the keyword lighting.

You aren’t doing your job unless the traffic you generate, either for your clients or for yourself, leads to a purchase.

That’s not what a business that worked hard to hit the first page of Google wants to hear.
Look, many people took major shortcuts. Say I sell furniture. My SEO firm may have hired someone to write a lot of low-quality content so my business could “rank” well for living room furniture.

That ranking then drove people to a crappy website. When you look at the page, there’s only one photo, and it’s not even of a living room. If I’m looking for a living room, I might have landed there, but if the content doesn’t connect, who will actually use it, much less share it?

No one. It’s useless.

But a ranking is easy to understand, which makes it a popular measurement tool.
And maybe that’s why for the past 10 to 15 years, SEO firms have gotten away with delivering high rankings instead of results. With recent Google updates, some firms are going out of business because their “performance” was built on a house of cards.

I look at them and think, How long did you think you would be smarter than the hundreds of Ph.D.’s Google can throw at this? Why would you base your livelihood on the premise that you would be able to outsmart the very smartest people in the industry?

OK. So where do I start?
First, don’t try to change customer behavior.

When I was 22, I sat across from the VP of marketing for Mercedes. Tons of people were searching for used luxury convertibles. He said, “I’m not going to use that term on my site. I’m going to use the term pre-owned, and I’ll spend millions to change that behavior.”

And Mercedes did. Nobody searched for pre-owned back then. Now they do.

Most small businesses don’t have the budget or the patience to change search behavior. Start by finding out what people are searching for, and write content and develop assets for those terms.

That means spending quality time with the keyword tool.
There’s a much easier way.

Just stop hitting Enter when you search on Google and let autocomplete show you what people search for. That lets you think in terms of how customers seek answers to their problems–not how you want to present what you do.

For example, type hardwood flooring and don’t hit Enter. You’ll find that people search for types, installation, cost, prices, options, nailer, tools–that’s a quick guide to developing the content people want.

You’ll be surprised by what you learn. Say I type our brand name; I see people are looking for job postings, for reviews. So why wouldn’t I put those out there?

Go where cows are already grazing. Why create content people don’t want to read or consume?

I tried that with a couple of keywords, and sometimes the results look odd.
The autocomplete results should appear in the order of search volume. But there are caveats. If I type running shoes, the fourth result is running shoes Philadelphia.

I know there aren’t more people searching in Philadelphia than in, say, New York. Google throws in local results from time to time, so use some common sense.

Also, your previous searches can sometimes show up at the top, so be careful that what appears is not just what you’ve typed before.

And here’s a little trick: Usually Google only shows four results, but it will show up to 10 if you turn off Google Instant in your Preferences.

 

0 Comments

Leave a reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

Copyright © 2024 xcluesiv.com All rights reserved

Log in with your credentials

Forgot your details?