Friday, October 30, 2015

SearchCap: Bing Shopping Campaigns Updates, SEO For Local Businesses & Google’s Halloween Doodle

Below is what happened in search today, as reported on Search Engine Land and from other places across the web.

From Search Engine Land:

Recent Headlines From Marketing Land, Our Sister Site Dedicated To Internet Marketing:

Search News From Around The Web:

Industry

Local & Maps

Search Marketing

Searching

SEM / Paid Search

SEO

The post SearchCap: Bing Shopping Campaigns Updates, SEO For Local Businesses & Google’s Halloween Doodle appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Bing Shopping Campaigns Get Several Pre-Holiday Updates

bing ads shopping campaigns

Ahead of the major holiday sales push, Bing Ads has released several new features for Shopping Campaigns and product ads. Here’s what’s new:

Mobile Product Ad Inventory Now Available

Bing Product ads are now appearing for all existing Shopping Campaigns on iOS and Android mobile phones. Just like mobile text ads, product ad bid adjustments on mobile can range between -100 to +100.

To get reporting insights on mobile product ads, you can use existing Product targets or Product Partition reports: Reports > Product Partition Report / Product Dimension Report > Choose your Columns > Attributes > Device Type

Bing Ads says initially you may just see a small increase in mobile product ad volume, but coverage will expand over the coming months.

Promote Used & Refurbished Products

In addition to new products, Bing Shopping Campaigns now support new and refurbished items. In the screenshot example below, you’ll notice several product ads with “Refurbished” in the headline.

product ads for used refurbished items on bing ads

Refurbished and used items can no be included in Bing Shopping Campaigns.

You’ll add either “refurbished” or “used” in the Condition field in your product catalog feed. Then you can create specific Product Groups using Condition as the attribute to bid distinctly on new, used and refurbished products.

You can get performance reporting on these items using the Product Partition and Dimension reports.

Beta Reporting Metrics For Shopping Campaigns

Impression Share metrics are launching in beta for Shopping Campaigns to show you how often your products display in relation to the competition.

Three new impression share columns will be available in the Product Partition and Product Dimension Report in the reports tab: Impression Share (IS), Impression Share (IS) lost due to Rank, and Impression Share (IS) lost to to Budget.

Benchmark Bid and Benchmark CTR provide competitive insights for your product ads to see how your ads are performing relative to the marketplace average.

impression share reporting for bing ads shopping campaigns

New impression share and competitive benchmark columns in Product Partition Report

Shopping Campaigns Out Of Beta In UK and Australia

Businesses that sell products the UK and Australia can quickly start running product ad campaigns to Shopping campaigns. Existing US customers that sell in those markets can simply set the appropriate Location in Catalog setup and Country/region of sale to in Campaign Settings to start showing product ads in the UK and Australia.

New Shopping Campaigns advertisers in those markets can check out the earlier Bing Ads blog post to get started.

Lastly, Content API users can now get status reports for your catalogs that submitted via the API. We hope that this will make your job of managing the product inventory easier and help you maintain a healthy state of offers on Bing. The developer documentation on this new feature is here.

Earlier this month, Bing Ads announced retargeting capabilities for Search and Shopping campaigns.

The post Bing Shopping Campaigns Get Several Pre-Holiday Updates appeared first on Search Engine Land.

SEO For Shops: The 12 Tips Of Xmas

12 SEO tips to help shops over xmas

Christmas is coming. I said it. I hate myself for saying it. You likely hate me a little bit for saying it, too, but I am a big guy, and I can take that.

As it goes, I like Christmas. I really do. I have three kids, and it’s an amazing time to spend with them. I don’t, however, like the immediate post-Halloween gear shift into Christmas overdrive that means we have to live with the anticipation of one day for two months.

However, all “bah humbugs” aside, we marketers can’t just bury our heads in the snow — and failing to plan is planning to fail. We must be thinking and acting now to ensure our digital marketing is on point and that we prosper during the festive period.

Shopping: Online, Offline Or Both?

The digital and physical shopping worlds are colliding. Purchases may start online and end up in store. Or purchases may start in store and end up online.

Customers do digital research, visit stores, and even then buy online. Even in the mad Christmas rush which sees shopping malls packed to the rafters, these shoppers are all armed with an always-on digital assistant allowing for quick and easy research (the smartphone).

I am probably a great example. When it comes to gift shopping, I flounder, walking aimlessly around the shops looking for a gift for my wife. I give up, grab a coffee and turn to Google. I search for [christmas gift ideas for her] and review the results, looking for inspiration as much as an exact gift.

In my search, I find Debenhams has a whole section on “gifts for her.” I get some ideas. I Google “debenhams birmingham” and find the shop address. I click on the directions link, and Google Maps guides me in. It’s all so simple and so obvious.

Today’s customers are not simply stumbling around like zombies in a shopping mall — they are using smartphones, search engines and social media to make informed purchase decisions.

What, No SEO?

Many physical shops, bars, pubs and restaurants pay little attention to their digital presence. Even those that were forward-thinking enough to claim their Google My Business listings are unlikely to update their store hours to reflect early openings or late closings around Christmas.

What happens when someone finds you, yet Google reports that you are closed despite a late-night opening? You just lost a sale. And this is just the tip of the Christmas iceberg.

This article looks at 12 simple, actionable improvements you can make to ensure your shop, restaurant or bar turns on its digital tractor beam and draws real customers in from the baying hoards this holiday season.

1. Mobile-Friendly Site

Seriously. mobile has happened. It’s a thing. For those of you with potential clients roaming around in your vicinity, it is a really big thing.

Quite simply, if you want to increase footfall to your store from customers during the Christmas rush, then you need to make sure your site works well across all mobile devices. Mobile has generally overtaken desktop in search volumes, and whether we are targeting folks who are starting to research a gift purchase or actively out shopping, mobile is going to be a huge factor.

Responsive design has been around since 2012 and has become somewhat mature and easier than ever to implement. If you run WordPress, then there is no end of responsive themes and frameworks. Also, there are plugins like WP Touch that allow you to make your site mobile-friendly in moments.

2. SEO Nuts & Bolts

Your site is not as well-optimized as it could be. That’s a fact. I would even go so far as to say that your site is likely not well optimized at all from a user experience and search standpoint. Christmas is massive in retail, but you will only do the numbers if customers can find you and they like what you have to say.

Take some time and get the basics dialed in:

  • Product descriptions
  • Product images
  • Product reviews
  • Page titles
  • Meta descriptions

These are all simple improvements that help your users and don’t require massive technical know-how. You can review up to 500 pages on your site with the free version of the Screaming Frog SEO spider, and this will allow you to quickly determine where you have title tag and meta description opportunities (and a whole lot more for the savvy site owners out there).

From a local SEO perspective, ensure you have great location pages, or add the address on every page if you have a single store. Think about what your customers need to find you, and optimize the connection between the digital and physical.

There are many reasons why your SEO may not be working as well as you would like, so take some time to review your current standing, understand areas that need improvement, and most importantly of all, get the basics dialed in.

3. Marketing Personas

Have you ever really stopped to consider who your customers are? In search, it is all too easy to rely on simple keyword search data to imply intent, but behind those keyboards are real people with real goals and problems.

By spending some time determining who your customers are and what they look like, you can be far more strategic in helping them and catering to their needs.

Marketing or buyer personas enrich all of your communications — content marketing, SEO, social media and paid search. This can be a relatively simple process, and most businesses will only need to create a couple of personas. I am a big fan of marketing personas from a practical and creative perspective.

Take a look at this beginner’s guide to marketing personas with simple templates to get you started.

4. Social Media

Whilst search provides the answers, the importance of social platforms in aiding shoppers is growing year on year. In particular, visual platforms like Pinterest provide users with a means to browse pictures for ideas.

Whether this is a man thing or just a me thing, I know I struggle knowing what to buy my wife each year — after all, just what do you get the lady with a search geek for a husband? Pinterest provides me with a way to search, browse and get ideas in a much more suggestive way than a simple Google search.

Potential customers will expect you to be visible on social networks, but you still must give them a reason to follow you. Special offers, coupons and support to assist consumers in the buying decision will help you build lists of potential customers. Just ensure you are active and can answer questions as they are asked.

Understand your customers. Provide helpful content that really assists them in reaching their goals, and be there to support them through the process.

Being active on social media is a great start, but these platforms also provide powerful advertising options. Facebook in particular provides an array of demographic and interest targeting options, allowing you to laser in on your key audience. Facebook provides a life event targeting option, allowing you to reach people who are in a new relationship, newly engaged or newlywed — powerful information if you are, say, a jewelery store.

This is where your marketing personas really come into play. By better understanding and relating to the customers you want, you can more accurately target them with ads on the social platforms.

Target your audience, give them a reason to follow you, and support them through the purchase process.

5. Paid Search Ads

If you search for anything with any kind of commercial intent, then you are going to see paid search advertisements. In fact, many searches on mobile now show only paid search ads above the fold, giving them a level of screen space that organic will never be able to deliver.

Many businesses have had their digital fingers burned with PPC, but there is a great opportunity here when this is done correctly. Google knows where users are when they search on their smartphones, and you can target search ads within a mile of your store. You can bid aggressively, as you know these users are close and are looking.

Google AdWords also provides a range of ad extensions to show local business information, such as your location and phone number. From this information, a user can quickly and easily get directions or give you a call.

By creating search ads that are shown within a tight geographic radius and only to users “on the go” on smartphones, you can quickly and easily raise awareness with potential customers as they are ready to buy. This allows you to help your potential customers achieve their goals and keeps the targeting laser-focused to ensure you keep the return on investment high.

6. Display Network Ads

Building on our search ads, we can also utilize image ads via the Google Display network. Again, you can utilize demographic and location targeting options. You can also build up lists of previous site visitors in remarketing lists to stay in front of users after an initial visit.

We find display network ads work well when they are part of a clearly defined sales funnel and the role is clearly defined — whether that is to educate potential customers about what you offer or to help convince them that this really is the right gift (or place to eat and drink).

Display ads are a simple, affordable way to expand your reach. Done well, they can be highly effective in expanding your audience, raising awareness and helping convince a potential customer that your shop or product is the right choice for them.

7. Click & Collect

Click and collect, in which users purchase or reserve an item online and then pick it up in person, has been a huge trend across Christmas 2013 and 2014. We can only imagine that this will continue to see growth this year as it is pushed by all the large retail players. In fact, major retailer John Lewis had more click and collect than home delivery orders over 2014. Click and collect provides convenience for time-challenged Christmas shoppers.

The sudden growth in click and collect has caused issues for the large players, with Tesco and Marks & Spencer failing to cope with demand. Everything from failed in-store deliveries to excessive wait times took some of the shine away from click and collect, so if you do it (and you should), do it well.

Argos and other players are all promoting and expecting big things from click and collect this year, so if you can implement this within your business, then you can ride the wave of customer awareness and put this to work for you.

Remember, we are trying to help our customers solve their problems, and the easier we can make it for them to do this, the more our online and offline marketing will work together.

8. Address & Directions

This should be obvious but often, the most obvious improvements are easily overlooked. If a customer searches for you, how easily can they find directions? How easily can they find your address? Do they need to visit your site? Is there a page on your site that is optimized such that this information can be gleaned from a search engine? Is your address on your social media profiles?

Make sure your address is correct on your website and Google Maps, and provide whatever information you can to aid your customers in getting to you. This can range from walking directions, public transit, driving directions and parking — ultimately, anything that will help your customers come and find you. Add your address to all social media platforms.

Consider embedding a Google map on your contact page, allowing customers to generate their own directions and customize to their own method of transport.

9. Holiday Opening Hours

Google has a great feature that tells search engine users whether you are open or closed. So, it naturally follows that you would like for it to get your opening hours correct. But, what happens when your opening hours change for a few weeks during the busiest period of the year?

If you are not careful, you may have your business returned in search results, only for Google to report it as closed. Google even has a simple drop-down allowing searchers to filter by opening hours — not that the majority will use this feature, but if your shop shows as closed, you could lose a potential sale. Likewise, if your competitors’ shops show as closed whilst yours is open, you have the chance to clinch an extra sale.

Ensure you claim your Google+ page and make any needed changes to the data. Also be sure to update any social media platforms with any changes to opening times. Don’t be scared to broadcast this information over your social channels.

10. Reviews & Reputation

In a 2014 consumer report by Bright Local, 88 percent of consumers reported that they consult and trust online reviews — yet most businesses still fail to have a proactive review process.

This is dangerous. While you may have a backbone of happy, contented customers, it is unlikely they are leaving reviews unless you ask them to. Without reviews, you are at risk of having no reputation signals, or worse — that one customer whom you tried and tried to accommodate but could not keep happy could leave you your only (scathing) review. This is all too common and does not represent the real situation for most businesses.

Fortunately, putting this right is relatively simple: you just have to ask your happy customers for reviews. This can be a numbers game and may need a customized approach, but your can boost your credibility and stand out amongst your competitors by seeding reviews out to all relevant platforms.

The statistics from a user, SEO and click-through perspective are clear: reviews help you rank, help you win clicks and help you win customers.

11. Live Support

There have been several live chat studies conducted over the last few years, with respondents claiming that live chat is the preferred customer support channel and that they are more likely to make a purchase after using a live chat. Live chat can also prevent any last-minute jitters during a checkout process — so from customer support to sales, live chat is an important piece of your marketing toolkit.

Adding live chat is a really simple way to create soft conversions and start a conversation with site visitors. We don’t have time for email and mailing lists when we are looking to pull real people through the door, so live chat can be the first stage in building a rapport with future customers.

Better yet, systems like Olark make integration easy and usually require no more than dropping some JavaScript into your website. Simple. Easy. Improves interaction with site visitors. Integrates with content management systems, CRMs and Help Desks.

12. Technical

You are prepared for the Christmas rush, but is your site? Do you know how well your site can cope with additional visitors? Is the site fast enough to keep mobile users happy? Does the site slow down under heavy loads?

Now is a good time to look at your website and ensure it will not only be easy to find but that when people do find it, the performance is lightning-fast and handles heavier than usual visitor numbers. This is crucial, and all of your other efforts will add up to a big fat zero if your site or hosting can’t handle the pressure.

Review your site from a technical perspective by using a tool such as Google PageSpeed Insights and implementing any suggestions. I would also recommend testing your hosting to ensure it can cope. You can simply have several people crawl your site with the free version of Screaming Frog for a simple stress test, or there are commercial services out there to do this properly. I am also a big fan of pingdom.com, which can actively monitor your site at all times so you know about potential issues before they become problems.

The 12 SEO Tips Of Christmas

Here are the basic tips summarized to help you maximize the digital visibility of your store and drive more customers your way over the festive period:

  • Ensure you have a mobile-friendly website.
  • Get the SEO basics correct (content, page titles, meta descriptions).
  • Develop simple buyer personas to understand your audience.
  • Be active on social media and utilize the powerful demographic targeting for ads.
  • Target hyper-local smartphone users with paid search ads.
  • Utilize display network ads for awareness and remarketing.
  • If suitable, provide and promote a “click and collect” service.
  • Make sure your address and directions are correct across your search and social channels.
  • Holiday opening hours: Update your opening hours across your search and social channels.
  • Ensure you have honest, positive reviews visible across the search and social networks.
  • Improve visitor engagement by integrating a live chat platform.
  • Ensure your site is fast and stable enough to cope with increased demand.

This just about wraps up 12 relatively straightforward and certainly important tips you can put in place to ensure you use the digital landscape to promote your local business this holiday season.

Implement all of these and you will bring home the Christmas goose!

The post SEO For Shops: The 12 Tips Of Xmas appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Halloween Doodle Turns Google Logo Into “Global Candy Cup” Video Game

Google halloween doodle game 2015

Google has posted its Halloween Doodle a day early, giving everyone something to do as their workweek comes to an end.

The logo doubles as the “Global Candy Cup” video game where players select the witch they want to be and maneuver through the Halloween night sky on their broom, collecting as much candy as they can while avoiding bats and floating ghosts.

Welcome to the Global Candy Cup, a fierce competition where four extraordinary witches race to collect the most candy before the end of Halloween.

To start the game, you must first choose between four witches: Blue, Red, Yellow or Green, all of which have personal profiles listed on the Google Doodle Blog.

Google halloween doodle meet green 2015

Using your space bar, you can move your witch up and down, evading bats and ghosts while picking candy-suckers and chocolate bars.

However many points you score are tallied in the “Global Candy Cup” at the end of the game for the witch you selected. The final screen lets you email or share the game on your social networks, search for “Halloween,” or recruit more players to be a specific witch, helping grow her total global points.

“Only one team will go home with the Cup — will it be yours?” asks the Google Doodler team, hinting that there may be a follow up Doodle featuring the winning witch.

The post Halloween Doodle Turns Google Logo Into “Global Candy Cup” Video Game appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Search In Pics: Google Human & Dog Skeletons, StreetViews In Van & Google Janga

In this week’s Search In Pictures, here are the latest images culled from the Web, showing what people eat at the search engine companies, how they play, who they meet, where they speak, what toys they have and more.

Google UK Cubicle Booth:

Google UK Cubicle Booth
Source: Google+

Google StreetView Pictures Inside StreetView Van:

inside-google-van2-550x379
Source: streetviewfun.com

Human & Dog Skeletons At Google:

Human & Dog Skeletons At Google
Source: Google+

Now at Jonathan Rosenberg’s office:

return
Source: Google+

Google Jenga Game:

Google Jenga Game
Source: Google+

The post Search In Pics: Google Human & Dog Skeletons, StreetViews In Van & Google Janga appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Thursday, October 29, 2015

Last Chance to Enter the SocialPro Biggest Social Geek Contest

Enter the second annual SocialPro Biggest Social Geek Contest, sponsored by Marin Software. The contestant who can answer the most questions in the shortest amount of time will win the grand prize – a flight and hotel accommodations for two to Marketing Land’s SocialPro conference in Las Vegas, Nevada on November 18-19, 2015. The winner will also receive their choice of an Apple iPad Mini, Sony PlayStation 4, or an Xbox One.

The 2015 contest is open to contestants in the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, France, Germany and Australia and ends on October 30, 2015 at 11:59 p.m. Pacific Time.

Time is running out! Play now and prove you’re the geek to beat:
http://ift.tt/1y6KO77

The post Last Chance to Enter the SocialPro Biggest Social Geek Contest appeared first on Search Engine Land.

SearchCap: Google Penguin, Mobile Redirects & SEO Visualized

Below is what happened in search today, as reported on Search Engine Land and from other places across the web.

From Search Engine Land:

  • Google: Next Penguin Update Should Happen By End Of 2015
    Oct 29, 2015 by Barry Schwartz

    Google’s new real-time Penguin algorithm, version 4.0, will likely be released by the end of this year.

  • Google Warns Webmasters Again: Do Not Use Sneaky, Mobile-Based Redirects
    Oct 29, 2015 by Barry Schwartz

    After warning webmasters in early 2014 about sneaky mobile redirects, Google now says it will issue manual actions, but also offers advice on how to clean up the unwanted redirects.

  • The Most Important Thing SEOs Overlook: Internal Links
    Oct 29, 2015 by Patrick Stox

    Most search engine optimization practitioners are familiar with the benefits of internal linking, but columnist Patrick Stox insists that we should be working a little harder to maximize their value.

  • Visualizing SEO: Why Visualizing SEO Data Matters
    Oct 29, 2015 by Janet Driscoll Miller

    Columnist Janet Driscoll Miller discusses the importance of data visualization and shows some of her favorite tools for the job.

  • How RankBrain Changes Entity Search
    Oct 29, 2015 by Kristine Schachinger

    Columnist Kristine Schachinger provides a handy primer on entity search, explaining how it works and how Google is using its RankBrain machine learning system to make it better.

  • Social PR Psychographic Segmentation: The NEW Facebook Influencer Marketing
    Oct 29, 2015 by Sponsored Content: aimClear

    For hundreds of years, PR pros whipped out little black books for person-to-person content pitching. It’s true. Relationships matter more than ever. However, these days, radical psychographic influencer targeting makes easy work of placing precious PR content in front of influencers’ eyeballs via social feeds. After all, media players, bloggers and other important distribution targets […]

  • Enterprise Call Analytics Platforms — New Marketing Intelligence Report
    Oct 28, 2015 by Digital Marketing Depot

    Marketing Land and Digital Marketing Depot have recently published a new Market Intelligence Report, “Enterprise Call Analytics Platforms 2015,” that examines the market for call analytics platforms. The flood of mobile calls to US businesses continues unabated, changing the way brands view the telephone as an inbound marketing channel. As consumers increasingly use their smartphones […]

Recent Headlines From Marketing Land, Our Sister Site Dedicated To Internet Marketing:

Search News From Around The Web:

Industry

Local & Maps

Link Building

Searching

SEO

SEM / Paid Search

The post SearchCap: Google Penguin, Mobile Redirects & SEO Visualized appeared first on Search Engine Land.

The Most Important Thing SEOs Overlook: Internal Links

internal links for SEO

The best way to define an internal link is that it is a link from one page on a website to another page on the same website. If I could impart just one piece of wisdom to the current crop of SEOs, it would be this: Add internal links to related content where it makes sense.

I can imagine every reader just rolled their eyes or sighed because the last statement made too much sense, and, of course, you’re all already following best practices.

Think for a second, though — you may be frequently producing new pieces of content in which you add internal links, but are you remembering to go back to your older pieces of content and link to your new and related content?

One piece of content on a subject is good, ten pieces of content on the subject is great, and by the time you reach a hundred pieces of content on that subject, you’re likely viewed as the expert by most people and the search engines, as well.

The problem is that if you don’t add links between these pieces of content, none will be as strong or rank as well as they could. By adding internal links, you are directing the flow of your website authority to the best content, which in turn signals to search engines which pages you consider the most important.

Internal Links And Your Site Architecture

While a logical site architecture (and the reason everything should not be a blog post) is a topic for another day, it’s an important subject when considering your internal linking strategy.

Siloing content around topics is far better for internal linking than having your important pages on one part of a site and then writing about those topics in a blog on a completely different part of the site. It doesn’t make sense, but this is what most SEOs do.

Instead, try to plan your site architecture in a way that will group topics together and allow for a tighter group of related internal pages to link to each other.

Improving your relevancy and authority on a topic is what every SEO hopes for, so stop overlooking internal link opportunities. Links on your site are a lot easier to get than links from other sites, and they can be just as effective.

You are given the opportunity to identify and link to relevant content and pass value to that content, so take advantage of this opportunity and add internal links.

But Wait, There’s More!

What if I told you that you shouldn’t focus on internal links just on your website. In SEO, it’s the little things that matter, and everything adds up to the whole. Internal links on every other website can make your profiles on those sites and links back to your site stronger.

You’ve probably heard advice along the lines of, “You should be active and participate in different networks.” On top of building all-important connections, being active and involved in various communities helps to build internal links to your profile and content on those websites.

It depends on the network, but in general, people you follow, people following you, comments, lists, subscriptions, groups, shares and more (pretty much any activity) can create internal links back to your profile — thus strengthening it and potentially any links to your website or content. There is a reason being active on different social platforms and networks is effective, and it’s not just because of relationship building.

Internal linking on these networks can have a direct impact on your rankings. To use Google+ as an example, I would say the strength of your Google+ profile plays a role in the position of your local and organic rankings.

Your strength can be increased through internal links from people who have you in circles, people you have in circles, communities you have joined, posts you have made in these communities, posts you have made on your profile, reviews and more.

Nearly every network has these internal linking opportunities, and each helps to paint a bigger picture in the world of SEO. Every little bit matters, and adding these internal links on other websites will make the links back to your website stronger.

Summary Of Internal Linking

Internal linking on your site where it makes sense is important to establish relevance and topical authority. You can’t forget internal links on websites and social profiles that link back to you, either. These links come with being active on a website and help to establish your relevance and authority.

The post The Most Important Thing SEOs Overlook: Internal Links appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Visualizing SEO: Why Visualizing SEO Data Matters

analytics-marketing-data-technology-ss-1920

A few weeks ago, I was at SMX East, and during the Advanced Technical SEO session, Ian Lurie of Portent Interactive gave a fantastic presentation about data visualization.

That got me thinking further about why data visualization for SEO is so important. As SEOs, we have loads of data available to us, but data means nothing if it cannot help us make convincing arguments or reveal important trends and insights.

Why is it important to help others visualize data? At a presentation I attended recently, Tamsen Webster of Oratium illustrated this well with a simple example. If I share a number — such as 888,246 — does that number have meaning to you? That number represents all of the British soldiers who died in World War I. But the number itself, while it has some level of meaning, still may be difficult for our brains to process in context without visualization.

Now, contrast that number with this image:

poppies-london-witness

Image from The Guardian. Photograph: Massimo Crisafi/GuardianWitness

The image, in which each ceramic poppy represents a British life lost, helps convey the full message to your brain, and it is likely much more impactful to you than simply reading the number 888,246. Visual representation helps us tell the full story in a meaningful, impactful way.

The King Of Data Visualization

To fully embrace data visualization and its impacts, I highly recommend starting with the lessons from data visualization pioneer Edward Tufte. For years, Tufte has been a statistics professor at Yale. His vision on data and images boils down to a simple philosophy: visually demonstrate data so that it tells a story, and don’t use graphics gratuitously. Graphics should convey information.

One of Tufte’s principles centers around combining multiple data types into a visual display. One of the earliest displays of this principle is evident in this map by 19th century French civil engineer Charles Minard, featuring Napoleon’s Russian Campaign of 1812, which Tufte features in his first book.

What is most notable about this map is that it is not just a map of the campaign but also represents the dwindling numbers in Napoleon’s ranks as the campaign progressed.

1200px-Minard

By Charles Minard (1781-1870) (see upload log) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

What makes this chart so extraordinary is that it displays six types of data in two dimensions: the number of Napoleon’s troops; the distance traveled; temperature; latitude and longitude; direction of travel; and location relative to specific dates. It graphically depicts the story of what transpired in Napoleon’s Russian Campaign.

As SEOs, we’re often faced with a similar task: How do we include relative data into a visual that can tell the story of what is happening?

Tools

Surprisingly, there are many good visualization tools out there that are completely free. Here are a few of my favorites:

Microsoft Excel

It probably goes without saying that Microsoft Excel is a prominent tool in the SEO toolbox for analyzing data. Excel has all of the basic charts you’d expect, like lines, bars, pies and more. But one chart that isn’t commonly found in other charting tools is the bubble chart.

The bubble chart is definitely handy when you have lots of data points and lots to communicate about each one, similar to the Russian Campaign chart above. For example, let’s say I want to download search query data from Google Search Console:

Excel

While this is very interesting data, it’s difficult to really show trends with a table. Using a bubble graph, we can see some distinct trends:

bubble chart

[click to enlarge]

In this chart, I contrasted position vs. impressions, and the size of the bubble is the clicks. You can easily see which terms, even among those with fewer impressions, receive the most clicks overall to the site.

Another helpful feature available in many charting tools is the trend line. Consider creating line charts with trend lines to demonstrate trends over time, such as overall organic traffic growth. This can be helpful to see longer-term trends versus short outliers, such as seasonality, that could muddy the overall picture of SEO growth.

trendline

Google Fusion Tables

This is my latest data visualization love. Google Fusion Tables, an experimental app available through Google Drive, allow you to essentially fuse two types of data into one to create a visualization. Another awesome feature of Google Fusion Tables is the ability to merge with other data that are already online.

You can publish your data visualizations on web pages, but there’s no way to save visualizations as an image format. Instead, I’ll often take a screenshot of the area and save it. Alternatively, you can also use Datawrapper (see below), which allows you to export images if you set up a free account.

Here’s an example I ran for organic search traffic by state using an “intensity” map. Which is more appealing — the data in a basic table, or the intensity map?

Map Table

Intensity Map

Note: You must add the Google Fusion Tables app to your Google Drive — it’s not there by default.

Google Charts

Google Charts provides a free and easy way to create charts quickly to add to a web page. This is especially helpful if you have a dashboard or client access area of your website where clients can view their data online.

It’s also helpful if you have an internal system you want to hook to various APIs and create your own monitoring dashboards internally. Google Charts are highly customizable and are perfect for dynamic data sets. Especially nice for dashboards is the gauge chart, which is helpful for measuring status of certain metrics:

gauge

Datawrapper

I recently began using Datawrapper for some of my graphing, as well. It offers a myriad of charting options, and all you have to do is upload your CSV to get started. One of the best aspects of Datawrapper is that it uses a wizard-like interface to walk you through graph creation. You can save your graphs as images for a fee, but it’s only 12 Euros per month.

Here’s that same data set from above, but this time created and exported using Datawrapper:

datawrapper

What I specifically like about Datawrapper over Google Fusion Charts is that a) Datawrapper is highly customizable, and b) there are more chart options, including donut charts, which really jazz up the boring old pie chart.

Gephi

Ian Lurie featured Gephi in his SMX presentation. Gephi is great for creating visualizations around pages, links, and their relationships, like this graphic from Ian’s presentation illustrating a pagination tunnel (really several) on a website:

paginationtunnel

Want More?

Now that I’ve shown you the exciting possibilities of data visualization, I also recommend that you consider following Annie Cushing’s Annielytics page on Facebook and her personal account on Twitter, where she publishes helpful visualization tips and tricks.

The post Visualizing SEO: Why Visualizing SEO Data Matters appeared first on Search Engine Land.

How RankBrain Changes Entity Search

Google’s Next Penguin Update Should Be Within The Next Two Months

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We are all expecting the next Penguin update to happen soon, but now we know it will most likely be released within the next two months.

Gary Illyes, a Google Webmaster Trends Analyst, has posted on Twitter that he expects the release to be within 2015. Since there is only November and December left in 2015, we have to assume this release will happen within the next two months.

We can also expect the next release to be the real-time version. That means that the algorithm will update in real-time, continuously. There won’t be specific release dates for the Penguin updates after Penguin 4.0 (which is the upcoming release), instead, as Google detects spammy links on a site, it may be impacted by Penguin. At the same time, when those spammy links are removed and Google’s indexer picks up on that, the sites will no longer be impacted by Penguin.

As news comes out on Google’s Penguin update, we will let you know.

The post Google’s Next Penguin Update Should Be Within The Next Two Months appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Google Warns Webmasters Again, Do Not Use Sneaky Mobile-Based Redirects

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Google announced this morning that they will take action on web sites that intentionally or unintentionally have sneaky mobile redirects in place.

Back in April 2014 Google clarified their stance on sneaky mobile redirects but now they are giving webmasters a deeper look into these cases. One has to suspect that Google is seeing more and more cases of unwanted and deceptive redirects impacting mobile users.

Vincent Courson & Badr Salmi El Idrissi from the Google Search Quality team said, “Redirecting mobile users to improve their mobile experience (like redirecting mobile users from example.com/url1 to m.example.com/url1) is often beneficial to them. But redirecting mobile users sneakily to a different content is bad for user experience and is against Google’s webmaster guidelines.”

The situation can be bad for the user. For example, when the same URL is displayed in the search results pages on desktop and on mobile but when a user clicks on this result on their desktop computer, the URL opens normally but when the user clicks on the same result on a smartphone, a redirect occurs sending the user to unrelated URL and web page. This is a frustrating and sometimes unhealthy situation.

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Google undertand that sometimes, these redirects are happening without intent of the webmaster. Typically these things can happen due to bad ads or being hacked:

(1) Advertising schemes that redirect mobile users specifically: A script/element installed to display ads and monetize content might be redirecting mobile users to a completely different site without the webmaster being aware of it.

(2) Mobile redirect as a result of the site being a target of hacking: In other cases, if your website has been hacked, a potential result can be redirects to spammy domains for mobile users only.

So Google has given webmasters three ways to detect when this happens, because often, it goes unnoticed for a while.

(1) Check if you are redirected when you navigate to your site on your smartphone several times per week.

(2) See if your web users are complaining about your site.

(3) Monitor your users in your site’s analytics data for unusual behavior or changes.

Here is Google’s ending advice on this topic:

It’s a violation of the Google Webmaster Guidelines to redirect a user to a page with the intent of displaying content other than what was made available to the search engine crawler (more information on sneaky redirects). To ensure quality search results for our users, the Google Search Quality team can take action on such sites, including removal of URLs from our index. When we take manual action, we send a message to the site owner via Search Console. Therefore, make sure you’ve set up a Search Console account.

Be sure to choose advertisers who are transparent on how they handle user traffic, to avoid unknowingly redirecting your own users. If you are interested in trust-building in the online advertising space, you may check out industry-wide best practices when participating in ad networks. For example, the Trustworthy Accountability Group’s (Interactive Advertising Bureau) Inventory Quality Guidelines are a good place to start. There are many ways to monetize your content with mobile solutions that provide a high quality user experience, be sure to use them.

The post Google Warns Webmasters Again, Do Not Use Sneaky Mobile-Based Redirects appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Social PR Psychographic Segmentation: The NEW Facebook Influencer Marketing

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For hundreds of years, PR pros whipped out little black books for person-to-person content pitching.  It’s true. Relationships matter more than ever.  However, these days, radical psychographic influencer targeting makes easy work of placing precious PR content in front of influencers’ eyeballs via social feeds. After all, media players, bloggers and other important distribution targets use social media too! In this edition of aimClear’s Psychographic Targeting Hot House, founder Marty Weintraub, details how to effectively target PR pros on Facebook for content distribution to earn links, social signals, news placements, SEO and (yes!) even conversion.

Distributing content to influencers by way of social feed can be an important augmentation to personal relationships, pitching, etc.  It’s common for bloggers, columnists, news editors, morning show hosts and universe of influencer-roles to self-discover content. Distributing programmatically to social PR psychographic segments often results in links, social signals, mentions, news placements, interviews, reviews, shares, SEO and conversion.

There are several targeting methods to identify and target influencers.  Today we’ll discuss Facebook Job Titles targeting via the More Demographics > Work targeting attribute.  Have a look.

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Let’s start by “Rooting” the persona. Rooting personas means choosing a psychographic base, a starting point from which other filtered versions will be derived.  Facebook has a ton of data about users’ job titles.  Think, “Influencers.” Here are some examples.

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Here’s a screen shot of the full-on persona Root, about 810K Facebook users, geo-targeted to America and major European countries.  Yep, 810K influencers are too many to target in the focused public relations content distribution campaign we are planning. As a persona “Root,” we expect the audience to begin large. In a minute, we’ll dial in additional segmentation for some radical PR segment targeting.

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OK, after starting with the Root, let’s incorporate additional psychographic filters. Since we used Job Titles as our Root, we have Interest targeting available for intense segmentation.  Filter influencer job titles by “Sports writer,” “Sports journalism” or “Sports writing.” Filter additionally by income, so we’re dealing with influencers who are likely professionals of some sort.  It’s a fair bet that this segment targets sportswriters. Yes!

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Here’s another filtering scenario. Say you’re Travelocity, marketing a snarky infographic, seeking shares, links, embeds etc.


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Start with our Job Title Roots. Filter by concentrated travel interests from the Behaviors targeting attribute. OK, we’ve got influencers who travel heavily.  Now we’ll dial in the snarky part. Filter additionally by humorous interests. People who like Cracked.com, The Oatmeal and Reddit may be more likely to share socially. #WINNING.

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The possibilities are endless.  Here’s a social PR psychographic segment for foodie product marketers. There are so many FB users who are into trafficking humorous material that the “Funny” interest bucket could be considered another Root, making this segment a dual root psychographic target.


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There are various methods to pinpoint and target influencers.  Consider rooting social PR psychographic segments in Facebook Job Titles targeting via the More Demographics > Work targeting attribute.  

Get Psychographic Marketing for your business that (actually) CONVERTS via omni-platform tactics: aimClear Blog.

Happy PR targeting!

The post Social PR Psychographic Segmentation: The NEW Facebook Influencer Marketing appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Wednesday, October 28, 2015

Enterprise Call Analytics Platforms – New Marketing Intelligence Report

Marketing Land and Digital Marketing Depot have recently published a new Market Intelligence Report, “Enterprise Call Analytics Platforms 2015,” that examines the market for call analytics platforms.

The flood of mobile calls to U.S. businesses continues unabated, changing the way brands view the telephone as an inbound marketing channel. As consumers increasingly use their smartphones to research, browse, and connect with businesses, brands are developing a new found respect for the inbound call as an integral part of the conversion path.

This report examines the current market for enterprise call analytics platforms and the considerations involved in implementing this technology. If you are considering licensing an enterprise call analytics platform, this report will help you decide whether or not you need to. It provides relevant statistics on market growth, developing market trends, recommended steps for making an informed purchase decision, and profiles of leading enterprise call analytics vendors.

Click here to get your copy.

The post Enterprise Call Analytics Platforms – New Marketing Intelligence Report appeared first on Search Engine Land.

SearchCap: AdWords Turns 15, Internet Archive Grant & SEMPO Report

Below is what happened in search today, as reported on Search Engine Land and from other places across the Web.

From Search Engine Land:

Recent Headlines From Marketing Land, Our Sister Site Dedicated To Internet Marketing:

Search News From Around The Web:

Industry

Local & Maps

Link Building

Searching

SEO

SEM / Paid Search

Search Marketing

The post SearchCap: AdWords Turns 15, Internet Archive Grant & SEMPO Report appeared first on Search Engine Land.

The Wayback Machine Gets Grant To Rebuild & Add Keyword Search

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The Internet Archive announced they received a substantial grant from Laura and John Arnold Foundation to completely rebuild the code-base for the Wayback Machine. With that, the Wayback Machine will add basic keyword search so you don’t have to enter the URL of the site, but rather keywords to find a relevant site.

The Wayback Machine lets you go back in time and see how sites have changed. It launched on January 24, 1996, about 19 years ago and needs an update. They say they have currently 439+ billion Web captures over the 19 years.

Part of this includes “rewriting the Wayback Machine code,” says Wendy Hanamura, Director of Partnerships at The Internet Archive. Adding, “this will enable us to improve reliability and functionality.”

They will also, for the first time, let users search by keyword to find sites. Hanamura wrote, “while indexing all of the pages in the Wayback Machine is beyond what we can do, we will index homepages of websites so that patrons won’t have to enter specific URLs to dive into the Wayback Machine.”

They will also optimize how deep they crawl and the quality of pages they crawl. Currently they capture about 1 billion pages per week but they should be able to do way more than that with the new code base. They will also improve how they see and index playback of media-rich and interactive websites, while continuing to support the old formats.

This doesn’t come with a facelift, aimed at making the user interface easier.

For more details, see the blog post at the Internet Archive blog.

The post The Wayback Machine Gets Grant To Rebuild & Add Keyword Search appeared first on Search Engine Land.

SEMPO State Of The Industry Report 2015 Results

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SEMPO has released their State of the Search Marketing Industry for 2015 study, where they surveyed over 500 respondents from the industry. This is the 10th time they have released the survey, which helps the industry better understand the dynamics year-over-year.

Here are some of the key search-related highlights from the survey:

  • SEO & Paid Search Ads lead in the services performed by agencies, consultants and clients within the survey, this is over social ads, display, email and more.
  • SEMs say that while Google is growing in importance when it comes to paid ads, Yahoo is irrelevant in 2015.
  • Only 20% of the respondents said they have 5 to 7 people responsible for SEO, while only 10% are responsible for paid search in their company.
  • The biggest challenges for SEOs are measuring ROI, getting budget and staying on top of changes.
  • The biggest challenges for Paid Search consultants are getting budget from clients, deciding to go in-house vs outsource and optimization of their ads.
  • Many use tools for SEO work over paid search work

Here are some highlighted slides:

The breakdown on who uses tools in our industry:

tools

Which are the most popular SEO tools used:

which-tools

On October 27th, the SEMPO Education Committee conducted a Google+ Hangout discussing these results. Here is that video:

You can join SEMPO to download the full study and watch and partake in a members-only webinar featuring panelists from both agency-side and client-side to compliment the results.

The post SEMPO State Of The Industry Report 2015 Results appeared first on Search Engine Land.

FTC Talks Staying Safe With Social Media Endorsements At SocialPro. Just 3 Weeks Away!

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Native advertising. Influencer marketing. Paid endorsements. Nothing is wrong with these tactics on social media and in other marketing channels, as long as you’re staying within the rules of disclosure. Are you? Or are you unclear on those rules?

Good news for the confused and uncertain! The US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) is speaking at Marketing Land’s SocialPro in 3 weeks to clear things up.

The FTC is charged with ensuring that ad and marketing campaigns have required disclosures to consumers, and earlier this year released revised guidelines about disclosure. Mary Engle, associate director for advertising practices with the FTC, is instrumental in drafting and interpreting the disclosure rules, and will dive deep into the new rules in her keynote presentation.

The keynote is part of two full days of tactics, strategies, and networking designed to help you become a successful social media marketing professional. Check out the full agenda here.

Secure Your Spot Today
Register today and pay just $1595 for your All Access pass. Team rates of up to 20% also available.

Need a crash course in social media, or in-depth training in advanced AdWords, social PPC or millennial marketing? Top off your conference experience by signing up for Social Media Boot Camp or a pre-conference workshop.

SocialPro is just 3 weeks away…register today!

Additional information can be found below:

The post FTC Talks Staying Safe With Social Media Endorsements At SocialPro. Just 3 Weeks Away! appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Google AdWords Turns 15: A Look Back At The Origins Of A $60 Billion Business

google-adwords-yellow2-1920AdWords turns 15 this month. The official birthday is October 23, but Google is celebrating the milestone today. Google’s not much of a stickler for exact birthdays, though; the company marked AdWords’ 10th birthday on November 8, 2010.

AdWords indisputably changed the trajectory of online advertising with its self-serve keyword bidding system and propelled Google to become the multi-billion dollar business that is now the cornerstone of the holding company Alphabet. In 2014, Google reported ad revenues totaling over $62 billion.

The Launch of AdWords

AdWords came out of a roughly month-long beta with about 350 advertisers in October 2000. With the launch, Larry Page, Google’s co-founder and CEO said of the new ad product, “AdWords offers the most technologically advanced features available, enabling any advertiser to quickly design a flexible program that best fits its online marketing goals and budget.”

AdWords was actually Google’s second advertising program. The first, called Premium Sponsorships, launched just months before in August 2000. A direct sales team sold the premium sponsorship ads on a CPM basis. The premium ads appeared in the top spot in the search results while the AdWords ads ran in the right rail. In a matter of a few years, the AdWords self-serve system subsumed the premium program.

The Simple Days Of 20 Million Searches

Not only did AdWords come to be in a time when desktop reigned, Google was a significantly smaller engine then. In 2000, Google said users were conducting more than 20 million searches per day on google.com. Fifteen years later, the search engine handles over three billion searches per day. More than half of those searches now come from mobile devices.

And of course now, advertisers can run campaigns on YouTube, the Google Display Network and Google’s mobile app network AdMob all through the AdWords interface. Google reported $16.8 billion in ad revenues across its platforms in Q3 2015, up 13 percent from the previous year. Google doesn’t break out how much of that ad revenue comes from search, but it’s a significant majority.

The Current Search Landscape: Yahoo-Google?

Overall, search advertising accounts for half of all internet ad spend in the US, which topped $27.5 billion in the first half of 2015, according to the IAB. That includes search ad spend on Bing and Yahoo, but Google maintains nearly 64 percent of search share on desktop and almost 90 percent of mobile in the US.

Bing achieved profitability last quarter, according to Microsoft, thanks in large part to Windows 10, but the search engine has very low market share on mobile. That’s where Yahoo hopes to make its mark with Gemini, though Yahoo is also now looking to Google (again) to supplement monetization on both mobile and desktop queries if regulators play along.

Challenging Display Environment

While Google has managed to remain dominant in search, the company has faced mounting competition on the display side, in particular, with the shift to mobile and rise of both social app usage and investment in native display advertising. Facebook has overtaken Google in display revenue share, according to eMarketer. Facebook is expected to hold 25 percent share of display ad revenues in the US compared to Google’s 13 percent share in 2015.

Transformative Changes: Google Shopping & Enhanced Campaigns

The two biggest changes to AdWords in recent years were the transition of product search to the paid version of Google Shopping in 2012 and the transition to Enhanced Campaigns in 2013, which effectively made mobile a must-do for advertisers. Product listing ads now make up a significant portion of retailers’ search spend on Google, and Goldman Sachs estimates roughly 20 percent of Google’s ad revenue now comes from mobile. (If you think I’ve overlooked a significant update, let me know on Twitter.)

In fifteen years, Google has grown its AdWords advertiser base from the 350 that came along for the beta to more than 1 million. For more fun facts (the troubling manscaping stat notwithstanding), check out the infographic Google put together to commemorate AdWords’ fifteenth birthday. Happy slightly belated birthday, AdWords.

The post Google AdWords Turns 15: A Look Back At The Origins Of A $60 Billion Business appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Keyword Research Beyond The Numbers

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You may have recently read Rand Fishkin’s article, “Why Good Unique Content Needs to Die.” In it, he basically says that good, unique content is no longer enough; instead, marketers need to create content that is 10 times better than the top results in SERPs in order to really do well.

This got me thinking — not only do we need to create content that is 10 times better than our competition, but we need to step up our game in all aspects of SEO, starting with research.

Keyword research that starts and finishes with Google Keyword Planner, or whatever your tool of choice is, needs to end. If you want to see results, you must do more than simply putting in a few keywords and putting a bullseye on a few targets to go after. Instead, increase the likelihood of success with the keywords you ultimately decide to go after by digging deeper during keyword research.

A Step Beyond Keyword Research

Start keyword research by going to Google Keyword Planner to get some ideas, identifying ones that are relevant and have decent search volume. I suspect this is what most people do.

I remember when this would be the end for me. Sometimes, I would gauge competition by looking at the number of exact “intitle” matches, but nothing more. Today, I take it further to really improve the likelihood of success by answering the following questions.

What Is The User Intent And How Is Google Answering?

Check keyword intent by performing a search of each phrase to review what content is returned. Google has a preference for certain content types for each query and has a data-driven understanding of what content users are looking for based on the keywords.

I’ll give you an example using queries related to acoustic guitars that allows you to see the differences in content type and results. A product-related search like “Fender FA 100” results in product pages on e-commerce sites, most of the pages featuring product reviews and additional article and video reviews.

A broader search related to acoustic guitars produces “best beginner guitar” results in long-form articles with descriptions of recommended beginner guitars, as well as a few category pages. More informational queries, such as, “how to play bar chords” or “how to tune an acoustic guitar” receive answers in the form of Google Quick Answers, long-form articles by sites of many sizes, shorter articles from more authoritative sites, videos and forum conversations.

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Also, take a moment to review the articles to see what other information is being provided, beyond what is being asked in the query. This can help you find other keywords to target and also make sure you are covering the necessities to rank.

How Did These Pages Get Links?

Now that you have an idea of what content is ranking, review how they gained links. Review the competitive metrics including Page Authority, Domain Authority, number of links and linking root domains to get a better idea of what it will take to rank (the Moz Chrome extension makes this easy).

Review links going to other pages to see patterns. With a quick look at some of the queries mentioned above, I noticed a few sites on the first page only had links created through comment spam.

Others had only a few links from guitar-related blogs or educational sites. It’s likely you will find publishers that have linked to more than one competitor. These are great targets for outreach. Review these sites you are considering reaching out to with your content ideas to start a relationship that can be helpful during content planning through publishing and promotion.

What Will You Create?

At this point, you have a strong grasp of the competitive outlook for the keywords you want to rank and what content types typically rank. Listen to Rand Fishkin, and think, what can I create that is 10 times better than anything I have just seen?

Just as good, unique content isn’t enough any more, quick keyword research isn’t going to cut it, either. Doing keyword research this way will take longer, but it is sure to improve your results.

Not only will it help with individual keywords and campaigns, but you also will start to notice patterns in SERPs that you would not have seen otherwise. You will also find the insights you need before you start creating content, instead of having to change course during or after some work has already been done.

The post Keyword Research Beyond The Numbers appeared first on Search Engine Land.

How To Get Personal With Your Prospective And Current Customers

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The most important component to powerful marketing has always been understanding the wants and needs of your audience – then delivering on them. We’re in an era that’s providing businesses with unprecedented access to information about their customers’ behavior, and it’s also becoming increasingly easy to automate interaction.

A key thing to remember is that at the end of the day, purchasing decisions are made by people – this holds true even if you’re a B2B marketer. Providing customized, relevant content that appeals to the individual is crucial to grabbing and keeping a customer’s attention. The continued ability to offer meaningful, personalized experiences is directly related to nurturing loyal customer relationships.

But how do you consistently make those personalized connections throughout the customer journey with limited resources? Enter, the web content management system. Streamline your efforts, give customers what they’re looking for, and witness the dramatic effect on your ROI.

Find out more about the power and qualities to look for in an effective web content management solution in this helpful infographic.

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You can also download a copy of the infographic here.

The post How To Get Personal With Your Prospective And Current Customers appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Tuesday, October 27, 2015

SearchCap: Bing Halloween, Amazon Echo, AdWords Cross-Device & RankBrain

Below is what happened in search today, as reported on Search Engine Land and from other places across the Web.

From Search Engine Land:

Recent Headlines From Marketing Land, Our Sister Site Dedicated To Internet Marketing:

Search News From Around The Web:

Industry

Local & Maps

Link Building

Searching

SEO

SEM / Paid Search

The post SearchCap: Bing Halloween, Amazon Echo, AdWords Cross-Device & RankBrain appeared first on Search Engine Land.