Google Glass Augmented Reality and Magic Leap Virtual Reality Team Up?

Hat tip to Barbara Starr (follow her on Google+ for interesting news on Semantic Search and new technology developments), who asked the question that is the title to this post (using slighly different words.) The Verge reported this morning that Google leads $542 million funding of mysterious augmented reality firm Magic Leap You really need […]

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SPONSOR MESSAGE: Get 5 Free Hours of Link Building Services – Our Gift to You

Page One Power, the world’s finest link building firm, is offering you 5 FREE HOURS per unit of link building service when you either begin a new campaign or add to your existing service package. Our highly-educated, in-house writers, researchers and outreach specialists are the best in the…

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How Panda 4.1 Should Change Your Content Strategy

Contributor Jim Yu shares proprietary data that will help you determine how the latest Panda update might affect your site — and how you should adjust.

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Bing Teams Up With CNN To Let Viewers Give “Real-Time” Feedback On 2014 Election Coverage

Bing is upping its political game, announcing today a partnership with CNN where users can give “real-time feedback” on CNN’s political coverage via Bing Pulse. According to the announcement, viewers will be able to vote on CNN broadcasts during the 2014 US elections, and all the…

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Google Penguin 3.0: Worldwide Rollout Still In Process, Impacting 1% Of English Queries

Google updated their Penguin algorithm with version Penguin 3.0 late Friday night. The Penguin algorithm primarily looks at a site’s backlink profile and may demote a site that appears to have a poor backlink profile. The Penguin 3.0 release was communicated very poorly by Google. With Google…

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Seasonal pages and SEO strategy: what works best?

The following chart, supplied by PI Datametrics, shows how different brands are ranking for ‘christmas decorations’ over the last 12 months. 

While three of the retailers here are ranking consistently on page one of Google, the other two (Selfridges and Wilko) are all over the place. 

So what’s the difference? 

(Click image for a larger version)

For obvious reasons, this is a seasonal term, with big spikes in the run up to Christmas and little or no interest in between, as this Google Trends chart shows. 

John Lewis has a dedicated page for Christmas decorations which it doesn’t change too much. It also has no other pages competing for the term. 

NotOnTheHighStreet.com has a similar strategy, which produces the same results. 

In contrast, Selfridges doesn’t seem to have a strategy for this particular term, and has been publishing a number of pages which compete against each other for the term.

As I mentioned in a previous post, more content doesn’t always help, and in this case the competing pages are harming the overall rankings for the term. 

We see the same pattern from Wilko, with five pages ranking for the term at various times of the year. 

This means that Wilko’s search ranking has fluctuated between 11 and 82 over the course of 12 months. 

We see similar patterns in searches for ‘Christmas Toys’. Amazon has barely touched this page, and therefore ranks steadlily throughout the year. 

Argos, since just before last Christmas, has ranked steadily, but seems to have muddied the waters by adding more pages lately. 

We can see this in the rankings for the past few months: 

John Lewis had the right strategy for decorations, but is cannibalising its own search rankings on this term with five competing pages. 

Toys R Us has no stability at all, with 11 pages ranking for this term at various times of the year.

This means that, when the Christmas traffic spike arrives, it has no control over which page will rank for the term and where it will sit on Google.

So what’s the best strategy for seasonal pages? 

There are a number of factors: 

  • Publish well in advance of the target event. Longevity is a factor here, and those brands, like Amazon, that have published the pages more than 12 months ago are still ranking highly. 
  • Don’t mess with the pages. Come January, these pages may no longer be relevant or attract any traffic but that doesn’t mean they should be unpublished. Just leave them be. 
  • Decide which page you want to rank. Set a landing page for your target term and make sure all other pages on the topic link to it.

    This sends a clear signal to Google of which page is more important, and can prevent unneccesary competition between pages on the same site. 

  • More content isn’t always the answer. Just publishing more pages on the topic won’t help you rank unless the underlying strategy is there.