The Myth of Rankings - Beyond Search Engine Optimization
What
follows is a condensed version of a conversation that happens all too
frequently when I am approached by a prospect interested in search
engine optimization (SEO):
Prospect: We need our website optimized, because we aren’t showing up for any searches.
Me: What searches have you tried?
Prospect: We don’t show up for ANYTHING.
Me: Why do you want to show up in searches?
Prospect: Well, it seems like we should. Our competitors do, and our website is WAY better than theirs.
Me: But, really, what would you stand to gain from showing up prominently in search engine results?
Prospect: Well, we could get more people who are looking for our products or services to find out about us.
Me: So, what you are saying is that increasing your search engine results could help you to increase sales and awareness?
Prospect: Yes.
Me:
Now we’re on the right track. Since your goals are to increase sales
and awareness, have you thought about not only improving your search
engine rankings, but also getting more people to take an action on your
site that leads to a sale, getting more people to read your press
releases or whitepapers so that they can consistently associate your
company with your offering, or sending your prospects a regular
newsletter to reinforce your name and expertise?
Prospect: Didn’t you hear me? Our website is great. We just don’t show up for searches.
And so it goes.
A consistent problem with the “ranking-centric” mindset demonstrated
above is that it doesn’t reflect a powerful rationale for getting
involved in SEO. Where is the true business case? What tangible results
are desired? In general, if a prospect can’t explain what he or she
hopes to achieve beyond “higher rankings” or “more traffic,” we’ll
first try to educate, and, if that person can’t move beyond these base
subjects, we’ll kindly refer them elsewhere.
More and more frequently, people are getting into SEO for the wrong
reasons (and sometimes for no real reason at all). Achieving high
rankings for targeted keyphrases, while an admirable and worthwhile
goal, is really only a small piece of the entire online marketing
puzzle. In this article, we’ll discuss a few additional, but equally
vital, pieces.
Website Conversion
Website conversion is the art and science of getting more of the
people who come to your website to take the action that you want them
to take – fill out your contact form, read your whitepapers, sign up
for your newsletter, or (in the case of e-commerce) buy something. For
a company that is trying to build offline business, this action is
typically something that gets prospects into the sales pipeline through
some form of online registration. For a company or organization that is
trying to build awareness, this action can be a number of things –
getting visitors to a certain page of the site, getting them to stay
longer at the site, or getting them to tell a friend about the site.
The critical point that is commonly overlooked in a ranking-centric
mindset is that no number of high search engine positions will address
the real problem if your website is not serving as an effective
marketing and sales tool. And, as I have said many times before, the
overall net effect of raising your conversion rate from one to two
percent is the same net effect as doubling your traffic, and it is
almost always easier. Increasing the number of visitors to a site that
does not convert them effectively is like pumping high performance
gasoline into a car with engine trouble – it might help the car to run
a little bit better, but if you’d done repairs before adding the
premium fuel, it really would have hummed.
Online PR
Your website is only one potential online destination where people
can find out about your company, and a typical user will regard your
site as an advertisement since you have complete control over the
content. With optimized press releases and expert articles, however,
you can have your company name mentioned on popular news sites and
industry portals, where credibility is more inherent.
Optimized Press Releases
Press releases that are optimized to appear when certain terms are
typed into news search engines are an excellent way to build name
recognition and credibility. If someone is taking the time to look for
news related to your industry, he or she is probably either in your
business, learning about your market, or writing a piece about your
industry. The last category is especially significant since a recent
study* indicates that 98% of journalists go online daily, 92% use the
Internet for article research, and 73% use it to find press releases.
Whatever motivation a person has when he or she searches for news
related to your industry, you want your company represented in the
results.
Expert Articles
Another great way to promote your expertise and business is to write
expert articles and submit them to the leading online publications in
your field. At least one person in your company is almost certainly an
expert in your field – why not let everyone know that? A person that
reads an expert article published on an industry portal, and who
subsequently clicks through to the website (from the link in the
expert’s bio) is extremely targeted and already has a favorable
impression of your company. Moreover, the same study cited above found
that 76% of journalists go online to seek news sources or experts. When
your company has demonstrated that you have experts on staff by
publishing articles in credible, non-biased forums, the phone
invariably starts to ring. Your experts will be asked to provide their
opinions, quotes, or experiences for feature articles, often in
prestigious industry publications. The benefits of this, of course, do
not need explanation. A side benefit to both of the strategies above is
thatthey increase the number of inbound links to your website and,
therefore, can help greatly enhance your search engine rankings – which
might be the primary reason you looked into SEO in the first place.
Newsletters
Direct mail was once considered a marketer’s dream – but email
newsletters can be much more effective. Imagine a direct mail list with
a low delivery cost, where every single person on the list has shown an
interest in receiving such mailings. Such is the nature of opt-in email
newsletters. People have shown enough interest in your company, or, at
least, in what your company has to say, to invite you to communicate
with them on a regular basis. They are essentially giving you
permission to keep yourself “first in mind” whenever they are
considering your products or services. Such opportunities are rare in
the marketing world. By combining the conversion principles you have
applied to your website to your email newsletters, you can also get
people to take an action that puts them into your sales pipeline
without worrying about getting them to your website itself.
Conclusion
These are only a few of the additional ways to expand an online
initiative beyond a misdirected ranking-centric approach. Weblogs (or
blogs) are often considered another new frontier in online marketing,
and we haven’t even touched on paid media opportunities such as banner
ads or pay-per-click marketing. However, the three components mentioned
above are important elements of a complete and successful online
marketing initiative. An SEO campaign launched without considering them
is like driving a four-cylinder car with only one cylinder firing – it
will move, but you’d definitely reach your destination more quickly –
and more smoothly – with all four.