Archive

Archive for the ‘Search Engine Optimization’ Category

How Some of The Biggest Brands in America Are Still Missing The Boat on “Search”

April 28th, 2010 No comments

From Ad Age

YORK, Pa. (AdAge.com) — If a consumer types a brand name into the Google search box, a home-page link should — and likely will — appear as one of the top listings.

But does the same thing happen when typing in a generic keyword relevant to that business? Say, “home repair” for Home Depot or “gifts” for Harry & David? That depends on how well they’re optimized for Google. And in the case of those two examples, Home Depot and Harry & David website links don’t even make it to the first page of Google, according to a recent study by Covario that evaluated the search-engine optimization health of 100 branded websites.

There are many reasons why a brand might not appear high on Google search. It could be that too many companies are vying to optimize the same keyword, or that a competitor’s linking strategy is more robust, or that the brands simply aren’t buying keyword ads. Covario tested for what it determined were three key indicators of search health: content usage, link strategy and technical construction.

Read Rest of Article

Endeavour Marketing & Media – A Full-Service Advertising Agency in Murfreesboro, TN

Share and Enjoy:
  • Print this article!
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • LinkedIn
  • Reddit
  • Technorati
  • Twitter
Tags:

Expanding the :30 Super Bowl Spot

February 2nd, 2010 No comments

From Garrick Schmitt for Advertising Age -

The teams playing in this year’s Super Bowl have already been decided, but the Super Bowl shuffle for advertisers began in earnest last month when marketing mainstays like FedEx, General Motors and Pepsi made news by announcing they were opting out of this year’s ad extravaganza.

But for those looking to gauge the health of the ad industry, Super Bowl advertising is a bit of red herring. CBS is charging about $2.5 million for 30 seconds of commercial time — and rightly so. Rarely do you get so many Americans watching one event and actually enjoying the advertising. It’s a tremendous opportunity for most brand marketers and we’d be foolish to look at this year’s Super Bowl as proof of either the rejuvenation of the 30-second spot or the rejection of it.

That doesn’t mean some won’t try. After all, last year Hulu saw a 50% increase in site traffic after running ads during the Super Bowl and Denny’s traffic to its website soared nearly 1,700% as consumers sought information about its free breakfast promotion.

There certainly will be advertising winners (and losers) on Super Bowl Sunday but let’s hope that the Monday morning quarterback chatter doesn’t obscure the larger shift at hand for marketers this year. 2010 will be the year of the “platform” for advertisers. Read Rest of Article

Share and Enjoy:
  • Print this article!
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • LinkedIn
  • Reddit
  • Technorati
  • Twitter
Tags:

Using Video to Propel Your Site to the Top of Search Engine Rankings

January 6th, 2010 No comments

From Steve Strauss for the American Express OPEN Forum (original article)

Jan 05, 2010 -

Want Page 1 search engine result rankings? Of course you do; we all do. Well, what if I were to tell you of a little known way that profoundly increases your odds of getting a Page 1 search engine result – might that be of interest?

I thought so.

The answer is video. But not just any old video. It has to be search engine optimized video. Properly post that, and according to a recent study by Forrester Research, you stand a 53 times better chance of getting a Page 1 Google ranking.

Yes, I know, the holy grail.

By now I’m sure you know all about search engine optimization – keywords and key phrases and incoming links and all the rest. The problem is, so does everyone else. That means that getting Google to think that your page is more valuable, more deserving of a high ranking than other pages, is harder than ever, despite all of your fancy SEO work.

That is where SEO video comes in.

What I am not talking about is simply putting a video on your homepage or some other desirable page. And similarly, I am not talking about submitting a video to YouTube and then embedding a YouTube player on your site. Neither of those will generate great Google results for your site because

1.     They are not search engine optimized, and

2.     Videos using YouTube result in click-throughs results for YouTube, even though the videos are re-posted on your site

But what will work – the magic bullet if you will – is video SEO. Video SEO is the process of using SEO tools with your video and then submitting the SEO videos themselves (not just the pages where the videos reside) to the various search engines.

Here is why video SEO is such an incredible Page 1 generator: First, search engines like Google are increasingly using “blended” search results – articles, video, pictures, and other forms of content. So video inherently gets more play because there is less competition for video results. And that is the second, and more important, reason. Because there is so much less of it, and because only very little of all online video is properly submitted with SEO, there is a disproportionate bias towards properly submitted SEO video.

You end up being a big fish in a very small pond.

So here is what you do:

1. Create some great video for your site. Note: Research indicates that if you have video on your homepage, up to 80% of your visitors will click that first, so it better be good!

2. Post it prominently throughout your site.

3. SEO it and submit it. Here’s the trick, and it is two-fold. First, you must optimize the video for search engines. That means key words and phrases must be used in the file name, in the captions, etc. Second, once posted on your site, you must then submit the video itself using XML tools to Google and the other search engines.

I know that last part may sound a little intimidating, but it need not be. There are some great online services that will submit the videos for you. For example, one I like a lot is Fliqz.com. Fliqz will, easily and affordably, index your pages and video, and properly submit them to the various search engines.

The upshot is that your videos and video pages should end up at or near the top of any default search results, the “Web” results, and not just the video results.

In fact, according to Fliqz, by using their “SearchSuccess” tools, “more than two-thirds of all videos submitted produce a first-page Google search result, and up to 25 percent have resulted in a number one Google ranking.”

Well, what are you waiting for?

Endeavour Marketing and Media, A Murfreesboro, TN Advertising Agency

Share and Enjoy:
  • Print this article!
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • LinkedIn
  • Reddit
  • Technorati
  • Twitter
Tags:

Ramifications of Google’s New Real-Time Search

December 10th, 2009 No comments

By Laurie Sullivan for SearchBlog

Google rattled a few cages Monday when it began rolling out what it calls the real-time Web and personalized search queries. While it’s clear how this will influence people searching for information on Google’s engine and how live updates from Facebook, Twitter and MySpace will appear in search query result, it’s less clear how the changes will affect marketers’ SEO and PPC campaigns.

AimClear CEO Marty Weintraub calls real-time search and Web personalization “huge,” an “inevitable evolution” he saw coming for years. The roll-out of the latest feature creates a “seismic explosion with far reaching implications to exacerbate an already difficult reality.”

Describing that reality in his dramatic rock-star style, he says that personalization confuses the average users, including some fairly sophisticated marketing pros that already have no idea what they’re looking at in query rankings. “Personalized search candy-coats what users like and hate — polarizing SERPs to the user’s predilections,” he says.

There’s no way for the uninformed to tell what’s what, and this rollout makes things messier. Clicking on the competition’s results in Google will return more of that competitor’s results in the search query until the history of that click lapses.

For those who conduct vanity searches, typing their own name into the search query returns their very own personalized SERPs skewed toward their own site, he says. “Searching unpersonalized [log out of Google services, include the pws=0 variable, opt out of Web history] only tells the story before Google scrambles SERPs for individual people,”  Weintraub says. “We’re pretty much screwed.”

Measuring traffic and site conversions that marketers control and analyze will become the best method to evaluate the prominence of organic listings, according to Weintraub. “If organic traffic increases on a page for a specific keyword, then it’s reasonable to assume that page’s ranking in the ‘average’ Google result has improved,” he says, adding that the opposite is true if traffic decreases. In either case, marketers need to consider mitigating factors.

Search marketers also must learn how to communicate to search novices such factors as seasonality, increased search interest and economic conditions. Weintraub calls it a daunting task because it’s rare to find a marketer who can quickly grasp these concepts. Most have no idea how to interpret the data they look at and feel emotional about what they perceive as rankings, he says.

Reliable SEO Founder David Harry says Google has been using behavioral data in AdWords and AdSense products long before it was introduced to the regular search index. This move will likely see more demographic options for advertisers, as well as weaker organic listings moving to the second page. Some of these findings were discussed in a white paper, “A Study of Google Ranking Flux and Personalized Search,” on real-time search he published earlier this year.

Harry sees real-time search as a bigger problem for social sites because it could motivate spammers to hit sites harder. “It crosses over more to the social media marketers than SEOs,” he says. “They are totally spamable. We played around yesterday spamming the stream and it was quite easy to do. I’d say, shockingly, OneRiot did a better job of filtering out the noise.”

Next week, Harry plans to test real-time search with Bing, Google, FriendFeed and OneRiot by running some queries to see how the quality of results stacks up between them.

Real-time streams will likely not influence PPC campaigns because most people don’t trust random Twitter posts from people they don’t know, Harry says. For the most part, users must trust the listing to click on the paid search ad in the right rail. Anonymous social recommendations don’t typically convince people.

Gone are the days where SEOs can, to a certain degree, ignore social media strategies and focus merely on traditional SEO techniques, according to Peter Young, SEO guru at Holistic Search in the United Kingdom. Real-time search could potentially take the SERP ranking position from sites focused on news and information, he says.

Social media has become an integral part of the SEO remit and will directly impact what potential customers see near the brand listing.

Young plans to keep a close eye on the scale of the MySpace integration, and where Google goes from there. Companies vying for the No. 1 ranking in search engine result queries could experience challenges in the ranking of real-time Twitter, MySpace and Facebook feeds and updates.

Pointing to a page streaming Twitter tweets about Tiger Woods as an example, Young says that while Woods isn’t a traditional brand, the real-time results from Twitter sits in the middle of the page among the organic search results. If the news trends higher, it could potentially become a problem as results rise to the top, he says.

“I certainly think this will have a more profound impact on results sitting below the Twitter feed and those above,” he says. “The scramble for the top positions will become fiercer. That may mean more people invest in PPC to gain more control of their presence.”

Endeavour Marketing and Media, A Murfreesboro, TN Advertising Agency

Share and Enjoy:
  • Print this article!
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • LinkedIn
  • Reddit
  • Technorati
  • Twitter
Tags:

Leveraging Your $3 Million Super Bowl Spot

December 7th, 2009 No comments

From AdAge

NEW YORK (AdAge.com) — Consider that $3 million you just dropped on a 30-second Super Bowl spot a waste of money — unless you’ve got a smart, calculated search-and-social-media strategy behind it.

Last year, the ads from the big game racked up 99.5 million collective online views, according to Visible Measures, which tallies viral-video data; 98.7 million people watched the game on TV, per Nielsen. It’s further proof that while Super Bowl is still valuable because it’s one of the last high-profile, mass-media TV events, it’s maximized with an ongoing online effort.

“Social media provides a longer shelf life for people’s campaigns,” said Anthony Iaffaldano, senior director-strategy and innovation at Reprise Media. “It’s about who’s got a plan in place to take the equity they’re building through all this activity and activate it after the game. Social media becomes more valuable as you continue to engage.”

Read Rest of Article

Endeavour Marketing and Media, A Mufreesboro, TN Advertising Agency

Share and Enjoy:
  • Print this article!
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • LinkedIn
  • Reddit
  • Technorati
  • Twitter
Tags:

Google and Bing Unveil New Search Options

September 17th, 2009 No comments

Bing has launched a visual search function where you can review photo catelogues instead of text (kind of like, I know what it looks like but I don’t know the name.  Very cool, because as Humans anytime you engage one of our senses (sight) it’s more effective than anything we have to read!

http://www.bing.com/visualsearch

Google has launched FastFlip which provides “News” results in a magazine format.  Hey, they’re keeping it fresh with new formats but what about “real-time” search Google.  Twitter is eating your lunch here!

http://fastflip.googlelabs.com/

Team Endeavour – Follow Us on Twitter

Share and Enjoy:
  • Print this article!
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • LinkedIn
  • Reddit
  • Technorati
  • Twitter
Tags:

A New Blog About Murfreesboro TN Marketing

September 9th, 2009 No comments

Check out one of our new blogs:

MurfreesboroMarketing.com – click here to visit

Share and Enjoy:
  • Print this article!
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • LinkedIn
  • Reddit
  • Technorati
  • Twitter
Tags:

New Murfreesboro TN Advertising Blog

September 9th, 2009 No comments

Check out one of our new blogs:

MurfreesboroAdvertising.com – click here to visit

Share and Enjoy:
  • Print this article!
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • LinkedIn
  • Reddit
  • Technorati
  • Twitter
Tags:

Great Article on Innovation in a Recession

March 5th, 2009 No comments

From Josh Bernoff for Advertising Age

Will Online Volunteers Transform Our Economic Recovery?

Share and Enjoy:
  • Print this article!
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • LinkedIn
  • Reddit
  • Technorati
  • Twitter
Tags:

Google vs. Twitter – The Past vs. The Now

March 4th, 2009 4 comments

Great article from Michael Learmonth in Advertising Age.  Good stuff on the future of search and how players like Twitter can evolve past the traditional model.

Read Article

Share and Enjoy:
  • Print this article!
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • LinkedIn
  • Reddit
  • Technorati
  • Twitter
Tags: