How to Build an Analytics Package to Measure Off-Site Content Distribution
Whether it’s a publisher, social network, or curation platform, marketers have a hard time figuring out how to grade performance in a black hole of data. What to do? Use these tips as a framework to build your own analytics solution internally.
SMX East 2013 Day One Live Blog Recap
SMX East kicked off today in New York City. We had a nice diverse set of search related sessions from paid, organic, mobile, analytics and social covered today. Below are some of the live blog coverage of the day one sessions today from the industry. H…
Time For A Content Audit

“Content is king” is one of those “truthy” things some marketers preach. However, in most businesses the bottom line is king, attention is queen, and content can be used as a means to get both, but it depends.
The problem is that content is easy to produce. Machines can produce content. They can tirelessly churn out screeds of content every second. Even if they didn’t, billions of people on the internet are perfectly capable of adding to the monolithic content pile at similar rates.
Low barriers to content production and distribution mean the internet has turned a lot of content into near worthless commodity. Getting and maintaining attention is the tricky part, and once a business has that, then the benefits can flow through to the bottom line.
Some content is valuable, of course. Producing valuable content can earn attention. The content that gets the most attention is typically something for which an audience has a strong need, yet can’t easily get elsewhere, and is published in a place they’re likely to see. Or someone they know is likely to see. An article on title tags will likely get buried. An article on the secret code to cracking Google’s Hummingbird algorithms will likely crash your server.
Up until the point everyone else has worked out how to crack them, too, of course.
What Content Does The User Want?
Content can become King if the audience bestows favor upon it. Content producers need to figure out what content the audience wants. Perversely, Google have chosen to make this task even more difficult than it was before by withholding keyword data. Between Google’s supposed “privacy” drive, Hummingbird supposedly using semantic analysis, and Penguin/Panda supposedly using engagement metrics, page level and path level optimization are worth focusing upon going forward.
If you haven’t done one for a while, now is probably a good time to take stock and undertake a content audit.
You Have Valuable Historical Information
If you’ve got historical keyword data, archive it now. It will give you an advantage over those who follow you from this point on. Going forward, it will be much more expensive to acquire this data.
Run an audit on your existing content. What content works best? What type of content is it? Video? Text? What’s the content about? What keywords did people use to find it previously? Match content against your historical keyword data.
Here’s a useful list of site and content audit tools and resources.
If keywords can no longer suggest content demand, then how do we know what the visitor wants in terms of content? We must seek to understand the audience at a deeper level. Take a more fuzzy approach.
Watch Activity Signals
Analytics can get pretty addictive and many tools let you watch what visitors do in real time. Monitor engagement levels on your pages. What is a user doing on that page? Are they reading? Contributing? Clicking back and forward looking for something else?
Ensure pages with high engagement are featured prominently in your information architecture. Relegate or fix low-engagement pages. Segment out your content so you know which is the most popular, in terms of landings, and link that information back to ranking reports. This way, you can approximate keywords and stay focused on the content users find most relevant and engaging. Segment out your audience, too. Different visitors respond to different things. Do you know which group favours what? What do older people go for? What do younger people go for? Here are a few ideas on how to segment users.
User behavior is getting increasingly complex. It takes multiple visits to purchase, from multiple channels/influences. Hence the addition of user segmentation allows us to focus on people. (For these exact reasons multi-channel funnels analysis and attribution modeling are so important!)
At the moment in web analytics solutions, people are defined by the first party cookie stored on their browser. Less than ideal, but 100x better then what we had previously. Over-time as we all expand to Universal Analytics perhaps we will have more options to track the same person, after explicitly asking for permission, across browsers, channels and devices
In-Site Search
If Google won’t give you keywords, build your own keyword database. Think about ways you can encourage people to use your in-site search. Watch the content they search for and consume the most. Another way of looking at site search is to provide navigation links that emphasize different keywords terms. For example, you could place these high up on your page, with each offering a different option relating to related keyword terms. Take a note of which keyword terms visitors favour over others.
In the good old days, people dutifully used site navigation at the left, right, or top of a website. But, two websites have fundamentally altered how we navigate the web: Amazon, because the site is so big, sells so many things, and is so complicated that many of us go directly to the site search box on arrival. And Google, which has trained us to show up, type what we want, and hit the search button. Now when people show up at a website, many of them ignore our lovingly crafted navigational elements and jump to the site search box. The increased use of site search as a core navigation method makes it very important to understand the data that site search generates
Distribution
Where does attention flow from? Social media? A mention is great, but if no attention flows over that link to your content, then it might be a misleading metric. Are people sharing your content? What topics and content gets shared the most?
Again, this comes back to understanding the audience, both what they’re talking about and what actions they take as a result. In “Digital Marketing Analytics: Making Sense Of Consumer Data”the authors recommend creating a “learning agenda”. Rather than just looking for mentions and volume of mentions, focus on specific brand or service attributes. Think about the specific questions you want answered by visitors as if they those visitors were sitting in front of you.
For example, how are consumers reacting to prices in your niche? What are their complaints? What do they wish would happen? Are people talking negatively about something? Are they talking positively about something? Who are the new competitors in this space?
Those are pretty rich signals. We can then link this back to content by addressing those issues within our content.
Hot Tactics For Geo-Targeted Ads On Google & Bing
At SMX East this morning, I sat in on the Improving Your Geographic Targeting Tactics On Google & Bing session, in large part because I’m far more familiar with SEO than with paid search, so I like to stretch myself and learn more about the advertising side of the local search equation….
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
The Future of Search: 2013 Search Engine Ranking Factors Released
Posted by Cyrus-Shepard
Every two years, Moz surveys over 100 top industry professionals to compile our biennial Search Engine Ranking Factors. For 2013, we’ve supplemented the survey with real-world correlation data from a sci…
The Future of Search: 2013 Search Engine Ranking Factors Now Live
Posted by Cyrus-Shepard
Every two years, Moz surveys over 100 top industry professionals to compile our biennial Search Engine Ranking Factors. For 2013, we’ve supplemented the survey with real-world correlation data from a sci…
Google Web Designer Beta Launches for Advertisers
Google has announced the launch of the Google Web Designer, which was released as a public beta. The free tool enables advertisers to create HTML 5 advertisements and comes with default layouts for DoubleClick rich media ads and AdMob mobile ads.
SearchCap: The Day In Search, October 1, 2013
Below is what happened in search today, as reported on Search Engine Land and from other places across the Web. From Search Engine Land: Maps Roundup: Google Avoids Waze Antitrust Fight, Scout Social Mapping, deCarta Route Patent Google spent just over…
Google Fixes Webmaster Tools Bug, Missing Search Query Data to Return
Webmasters can breathe a sigh of relief. The missing keyword data in Google Webmaster Tools was simply a bug, Google has confirmed. Expect reporting on search queries to return to normal in the coming days. Data through Sept. 25 is now available.
Maps Roundup: Google Avoids Waze Antitrust Fight, Scout Social Mapping, deCarta Route Patent
Google spent just over $1 billion to take Waze away from Facebook, Apple or Nokia and Microsoft. It equally sought the real-time driver feedback that Waze crowd-sourcing provides. Given the size of the transaction the US FTC got immediately involved to…
Black Hat Is Dead, White Hat Is On The Run.
Yelp on Fake Reviews: We Filter 25% of Reviews for Being Suspicious
Yelp says that up to a quarter of the reviews the company receives may be fake, and that its automated review filter suppresses about 25 percent of reviews it deems as being suspicious. However, Yelp admits that the system isn’t completely accurate.
Yelp on Fake Reviews: We Filter 25% of Suspicious Reviews
Yelp says that up to a quarter of the reviews the company receives may be fake, and that its automated review filter suppresses about 25 percent of reviews it deems as being suspicious. However, Yelp admits that the system isn’t completely accurate.
Yelp: About 25% of Our Reviews are Fake
Yelp says that up to a quarter of the reviews the company receives are fake, and that its automated review filter suppresses about 25 percent of reviews it deems as being suspicious. However, Yelp admits that the system isn’t completely accurate.
Rules of the Road – CEO Swap with “Fish” Rand Fishkin
So, just like that TV show WifeSwap, I figured I should write my “rules” for SEER and give you an idea of what you should expect when you arrive at SEER HQ. It’s just a guide, as we like to have as few rules as possible… Rule #1 – Take out the garbage. You want […]
Google: Webmaster Tools Reporting To Return To Normal Within In Coming Days
Google’s Webmaster Tools search query reports are very delayed right now, but Google tells us that they “expect reporting to return to normal in the coming days.” This is a “bug” in how Google shows webmasters search queries that drive traffic a site. The reporting…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Google Analytics Summit 2013: 14 Big Announcements
The Google Analytics Summit is going on right now in Mountain View. For anyone whose twitter streams haven’t been completely blown up with the updates, Google announced that there have been a whopping 70 updates to Google Analytics so far this year, and another 14 are being shared today. Expect more information from the SEER […]
InboundWriter Promises More Insight into How Content Will Perform Prior to Publishing
The company’s latest feature gives more data to users of its application about the competition for the topics that content creators want to write about, promising better decisions about the performance of the content before it’s even written.
InboundWriter Promises More Insight into How Content Will Perform Prior to Publish
The company’s latest feature gives more data to users of its application about the competition for the topics that content creators want to write about, promising better decisions about the performance of the content before it’s even written.