Simple Web Design
Filed under: New Marketing, Optimization, Web Site Advice
27
2008
I preach it. Clients ignore it (well, sometimes)
I am posting this so I can refer people to this post when they call me… and I get around 7-10 calls daily for sites from people who want every bell and whistle they can think of on the site. From the start. Without any budget or forethought.
So this was a refreshing read about website simplicity and landing pages. Well worth the read. In the article they call out these six methods for web design that can drive away clutter and improve user experience.
- Only what you need.
The biggest aspect of simple web design is only showing what’s needed to make the sale, and nothing more.- Reduce clicks. The less clicks it takes for a customer to buy a product, the higher returns.
- The “Grandma” rule. If your grandma (or any elderly person) can figure out how to buy a product for your site, odds are it’s put together pretty well.
- Reduce the number of columns. Each time you add a column to a page, the content is pushed into a smaller and smaller space.
- Give less options. There is an added stress put on web shoppers to make decisions.
- Keep it clean. A clean design keeps visitors happy.
Examples are given that any smart retailer or merchant could follow for success.
26
2008
If you’re looking for some good quality local SEO juice, Best of the Web is offering the local BOTW program for only $5/month until Aug 31, and just $9.95 after that. Just click on the Local Search setup and then use the promo BOTWLOCAL. Even after the sale is over, this is a great deal for highly relevant link juice on a well-run directory.
You get VIP listing placement, a full profile, and more. If you have a local audience and want to rank better for your regional searches, this is a no-brainer as BOTW has always provided good quality link juice (even if the page rank bar shows nothing yet.)
9 Ideas How Google Suggest Could Change Search Marketing
Filed under: Changes Online, New Marketing, Optimization
25
2008
The Google Suggest feature, long a part of Google labs has behavior that will feel familiar to most readers of my blog. But for the remaining millions of casual users, which Michael Jensen refers to as the “Grandma Factor“, we may see some changes in search behavior. Now, a rumor once again has emerged that we’ll soon see it on the default Google search page in the USA.
As PPC marketers we will want to remain aware of the phrases that are suggested for our “money terms” and bid accordingly. Phrase match and Exact Match will start to become more important in many cases as Suggest “structures” the queries.
According to onestat, the 10 most used numbers of word phrases compared to October 2007 in search engines on the web are here…
| #Words | I predict after Suggest | June 2008 | October 2007 |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | less | 15.52% | 15.22% |
| 2 | less | 33.65% | 31.91% |
| 3 | much more | 26.27% | 27.02% |
| 4 | much more | 13.81% | 14.75% |
| 5 | much more | 6.13% | 6.49% |
| 6 | more | 2.61% | 2.68% |
| 7 | more | 1.14% | 1.12% |
| 8 | more | 0.51% | 0.48% |
| 9 | more | 0.24% | 0.22% |
| 10 | more | 0.12% | 0.11% |
I think that Google Suggest will shift these numbers quite a bit, and with it, the need to react as search marketers.
A few other thoughts.
We May See More Traffic to Regional Sites. People regularly enter “cheap gas” and “best dentist” in search engines - without qualifying the searches at all. Organic results tend to send people to national portals, but suggest-driven search gets them closer to well optimized, regional sites. A search for “cheap gas” without search suggest offers gasbuddy.com at number one organic result, while a “suggested” search for “cheap gas houston” gives houstongasprices.com.- Google Suggest Drop Down a new micro “SERP”: Those who make their way into the suggest feature get a “better than #1″ position. For example, typing “ipod case” into Google with Suggest shows the first suggested feature as “ipod cases at Wal-Mart” - grabbing people and then offering up the organic page free from PPC ads that use “Wal-Mart” in their keywords.
- Google Suggest Results May Change Long-Tail Search Optimization. Those of us who believe in doing long-tail marketing may find an decrease down the tail from search, and a greater need to develop segments of our site to serve those long tail queries. Searches that used to come in with two word phrases may now have 3-4 words, which helps with medium-tail optimization, but longer phrases previously further down the tail may be “clipped.” This will concentrate search terms so that Adwords bids will rise and competition increases in a sort of “cluster” effect.
- Google Suggest SERPS offer More Impact for Trademark Blocking in PPC. If your tradename is offered in Google suggest results, and you’ve filed a trademark complaint form, the results page will be free from paid competition giving you a better shot at the traffic through organic or ppc links.
- Google Suggest Can Improve User/Searcher Skills Forever. With Google suggest constantly popping up when you go about your daily queries, many who never really thought of keyphrases will now start to think about them. It will be a constant reinforcement of our efforts to think about how consumers search. We may have to adjust our planning to meet these enhanced skills.
- Google Suggest Can Be an Ad-Hoc Negative Keyword Tool. There are other ways to be more comprehensive, but Google suggest can help to identify negative keywords you may want to enter in your campaigns. And I saw some negative phrases with higher index numbers that never showed up in Google keyword tools.
- Dramatically Reduced Spelling Error Opportunity. While many of us set up adgroups to capture spelling errors, this will have a decreasing impact as people start to use the suggest feature as a live auto-correction. Typo-campaigns may get less traffic.
- Hijacking Google Suggest May Become a SEO Technique. It may become possible to hijack Google suggest so that competitive phrases are strategically flashed to the user. For example.. if you sell “abc widget” then a suggest of “abc widget fails miserably” could be used to divert traffic.
- Better Searches Offer Improved Analytics Information. With the user making clear choices among those available, we’ll have better information about what is enticing and engaging to the users. Vague, high volume two-word searches are always confusing when we’re looking to make decisions, and this might just help us plan better.
I think that this will have a measurable impact on how people search - possibly forever.
Woodsongs’ Social Networking Equation: (Talent - Greed + Passion) = Success.
Filed under: Just for Fun, Lexington KY News, New Marketing
14
2008
I created the Woodsongs.com website years ago, and have worked with Michael Jonathon and many volunteers to help with the web traffic for the show. All of this hard work, but specially the insanely good talent from the musicians, has made it one of the most important media exports from the state of Kentucky.
And now we turn around and find that they are almost to their 500th broadcast. If you want an example of TRUE social networking, authentic media, and what can happen when you remove greed, paranoia, and selfishness from art, check them out (and follow them on Twitter.)
The SEO Content Production Rift
Filed under: New Marketing, Optimization, RANT!
7
2008
Lee Odden hit a nerve with his last post.
“The [seo] challenge comes from a combination of:
- The need to create new content that travels and that others are motivated to link to
- Convincing web site owners that they need to create and promote content on an ongoing basis outside of their brochureware corporate site or online product catalog
…. “Long term, promotion of content that attracts relevant links from those empowered to publish will win. The act of linking is performed, unsolicited, by individual publishers.”
One undercurrent effect here is that there is a shift in responsibility for the success of a site from the SEO (with his bag of tricks, magic levers and dials) to the site owner (producing relevant, domain specific content worthy of links.) It also may spell a major shift in the role of SEO to content producer for some companies, and not a lot of SEOs will be able to deliver on this.
I’ve seen, time and time again, that getting a company to assign (talented) resources to the production of content is very difficult. Either because of laziness or lack of long-term mindset, there is a rift that develops between the consulting SEO’s recommendations and the company’s willingness or ability.
So, the clients nod at the ‘you’ll need to produce quality content‘ task discussion, when time comes, nothing gets done. Either they will avoid the task altogether or they’ll assign “an intern” or someone that’s already doing 3 jobs to the work… and the output hardly counts as link worthy.
That rift causes huge levels of stress and can be interpreted as a lack of ability on the SEO’s part. Saying “but you’re producing crap content” hardly mends the issue. It will be the responsibility of the skilled SEO to not only identify and recommend the content production, but also in educating clients on the value of this activity.
Image: Mikel Ortega
Failing Franchises To Be Easier to Spot?
Filed under: Franchises
28
2008
In the WSJ today, I saw where the FTC had set up new disclosure rules for the $1.5 Trillion franchise industry that will take away many of the previous hiding spots for trouble. Litigation and turnover are now going to be more out in the open, as are territory exclusivity. Franchises can also receive applications without an in-person meeting, such as via a secure website, streamlining the sales process of a new franchise. (I’m not so sure that’s a good idea.)
Running a franchise is a unique business endeavor. After all, franchisees aren’t quite entrepreneurs — they have to run their businesses according to their parent company’s rules — and aren’t employees, either, because they’ve invested their own money in the store or service they’re running. Inc Magazine.
Even if these new rules hadn’t happened, franchises that hid lots of dirty laundry from potential franchisees were being found out anyhow. Social media and forums was already stripping away some of the barriers to knowledge.
The franchise success depends on competence and compliance as well as the competence of the franchisee. While the franchise offers training and often grand-opening assistance, there is no way for them to know if the business is going to succeed. Franchises are not a magic bullet, and many customers simply aren’t doing their homework. So what you have after a while is a bell curve of success. On one end, savvy owners making a lot of money and living a great lifestyle - while the “fail” end of the bell curve is full of very loudly upset people - often losing a life savings as they go down.
With consumer-generated-media, the franchises are faced with a really hairy reputation monitoring problem where the brand is only as strong as the weakest location. Unlike company-owned stores, business model franchises have pretty minimal control over their brand name once a franchise is launched.
Franchise brands are like the dancer with big feet, or the boxer with a big head - it’s just such a big target!
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