SearchCap: The Day In Search, May 23, 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: Penguin 4, With Penguin 2.0 Generation Spam-Fighting, Is Now Live The fourth release of Google’s spam-fighting “Penguin Update” is now live….
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Mastering PPC: How to Integrate PPC with Web Analytics & CRM Systems
Congratulations: you’ve created an account, set up billing and avoided account alerts. Now it’s time to integrate your PPC activities with web analytics and customer relationship management (CRM) systems. If you’re not using web analytics or CRM systems already, I’d encourage you to do some research on them and see if you have the time, […]
Google Talks Back: Conversational Search Available on New Version of Chrome
Google conversational search rolled out on the new version of Chrome this week. While the “OK Google” search prompt we heard about at the I/O event is not yet available, Google is attempting to have relevant conversations with users.
Penguin 2.0 Losers: Porn Sites, Game Sites, & Big Brands Like Dish.com & The Salvation Army
Google’s fourth Penguin update — what the company is calling Penguin 2.0 — hit last night, and less than 24 hours later we’re already getting a first chance to look at what sites might be considered “losers” in terms of search visibility. In a nutshell, the list…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
“My Photos” — Google Now Lets Find Your Google+ Photos Within Search
Google now lets you search your private photos and the photos your friends on Google+ share with you. All you need to do is search on Google for keywords such as [my photos] or [my photos sunset] to bring up matching photos. You can even search for your friend’s photos such as [danny’s photos…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Yahoo Testing New Search Results Page
I’m not sure anyone would notice in all of the Google Penguin news and discussion, but Yahoo appears to be testing a new search results page. I’m able to see the new interface when logged in and using Firefox, but I still see the old/current interface when using Safari and logged in to…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Don’t miss out on learning from the pros. Attend an SMX Advanced workshop!
Sharpen your marketing skill set by attending one of six post-conference workshops at SMX Advanced, June 13th in Seattle. Choose from SEO, international search, social media community management, AdWords, local search or in-house SEO. Secure your spot – register now!
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Google’s Top Charts Offer Engaging Visuals for Popular Searches Over Time
Google has added a new visual feature in Google Trends that allows users to explore trending people, places, and things over time, back to 2004. Interactive charts are sharable, allowing users to highlights data that’s interesting to them.
SES Toronto Early Bird Rate Expires Tonight
The Early Bird rate for SES Toronto 2013, which kicks off June 12 and runs through June 14, ends tonight at 11:59 p.m. ET. If you haven’t registered yet for SES Toronto, today is your last chance to register at the lowest rate and save $300!
Bing News Adds Visual Carousel & Searches Years Back (Not Just Two Weeks)
Bing announced they have added a new visual way to consume news on Bing News. Now, for searches on notable people, Bing will return an image carousel at the top. Plus, you will also see on the right-hand side of the page related people to the person yo…
Google Penguin 2.0 Spam Report Form Now Available
It’s been less than 24 hours since Google Penguin 2.0 went live, but there are already several reports of big changes. There are also many reports that, despite Penguin, Google is still ranking spam sites. You can now report this directly to Google.
Seven core principles digital marketers forget
If you aren’t doing anything remarkable, don’t show up
Seth Godin wrote an entire book called Purple Cow on “being remarkable”. His point was simple: unless you aren’t doing something remarkable such as launching a product that solves a problem well or a service that serves a compelling need, in a way that’s never been done before, you aren’t getting traction at all.
Seth Godin’s little book pushes you away from “Mediocreville”.
Now, it’s not just the products and the services that can be remarkable; it could be about how you market your business, how you publish content, how you relate to your customers, how you serve customers, and even how you do business in general.
Create exciting copy even for boring products, as Sean D’Souza at CopyBlogger explains. Marc Bastow of Market Intelligence Center curated five examples of five companies with boring products but exciting returns. Further, Brent Csutoras at Search Engine Land helpfully points out some really boring products that rocked social media.
How remarkable are you?
It never was, never is, and never will be about you
Marcus Taylor once wrote on Six principles for great content marketing here on Econsultancy blog and with the success of his post 30 pieces of advice from 30 Music Industry Entrepreneurs, he drives a singular point home: digital marketing success is never about you; it’s almost always collaborative in nature.
Danny Iny runs and maintains the Firepole Marketing blog and wrote Engagement From Scratch, which immediately gained traction and catapulted him to fame as the Freddy Krueger of Blogging. His book was a collaborative effort from many known marketers and business owners such as Anita Campbell, Brian Clark, Guy Kawasaki, and many more.
As marketers, we tend to develop love affairs with our own products, services, and our opinions. While all of that has its place in marketing, linking to others, collaborating with experts, and doing more for others while not expecting anything in return is a timeless principle that most marketers forget.
Stop the media hustle. Stop serenading the web with self-centered content. Collaborate instead.
Get the big rocks in first
Stephen Covey once picked a jar at a seminar and puts big rocks to fill that jar up. He then asks the delegates, “Do you think you can put more stuff into this?”
The delegates wouldn’t think so. He drops gravel into the jar, which settles amidst the big rocks. He further pours sand into it and then some water – all of which fits into the jar.
He then asks the delegates:”What did you learn from this?”
The delegates respond by saying, “You could do more in a day”.
Mr. Covey says, “No. The lesson is that you’ve to put your big rocks in first”
Applying that to sales and marketing, the lesson is that we have to get the clients first. Get clients, customers, and the incoming cash flow before you head out to do “more” marketing, take to “paid advertising methods”, and spend cash on needless things in business.
Listen before you communicate
Customers “tune out” if all you had to do was to speak, publish, write, send emails, and serenade them with more content. This doesn’t mean that you don’t use content marketing.
To “Listen” online is to sleep over your content before publishing it. Listening online would require you to eavesdrop into online conversations, create content in response to these conversations, develop content based on inputs received through your social media platforms, phone, email, or in person.
Digital marketers have a tendency to “rush to publish”. Instead, hold your horses. Release content as if it’s a response to your customers’ collective question. Comment, respond, ask, and interact to show that you care. Customers don’t need more content; all that they need is answers to their questions and solutions to their problems.
Marketing happens during the wait for customers to buy
Customers have their own factors that lead to the “buy decision”. It’s a complicated process leading to the decision though.
According to Paco Underhill in his book Why We Buy:
The Science of shopping is a hybrid discipline. It’s part physical science, part social science, and only part science at all, for it is also an art.
Too many elements go into that single decision. With all those elements to click into place, customers will take time while working on each of those individual elements.
Meanwhile, what should businesses and marketers do? Publish content, engage with customers, lead them using collective expertise, influence them with the right information, build their trust, earn their confidence, and develop a relationship for life. That’s what.
For marketers, here’s a crucial point to note: the buying didn’t happen because of your marketing campaigns; it happened because all those “buy decision” trigger elements for that customer clicked together at a point in time while your campaigns influence, persuade, convince, and reassure customers of their buy.
Testing keeps you alive
Before and after you make a website, and for the rest of your life, your success depends on how you market your business. Too many marketers ignore testing.
When you test your offers, products, services, the voice you use to sell, the copy you deploy, price points, and even gory details such as website navigation, checkout process, interactive points on the website, content, email signups, email subject lines, email copy, images, graphics, and every other element of your business online.
Testing – whether you use split testing, A/B testing, incremental testing – will determine where you stand and how well you are performing. While you can’t control a customer’s final buying decision, you can influence it (and that’s what marketing is all about).
You cannot influence customers if you don’t know what needs to be changed. Marketing is an iterative endeavor. There’s no iteration without change points all along the way.
Leave no stone unturned
For digital marketers, there are no favorites; there’s no one single online marketing method that can do everything for you.
Email marketing caters to your subscribers only, so what about the rest of the world that didn’t sign up yet?
Pay Per Click and SEO bring in customers who’ve used search engines to find you, but what happens to customers who lounge on social media platforms all day?
If you just focus on social media, there’s a whole demographic that’s active on other areas of the web.
Videos go on sites like YouTube and Vimeo but there are scores of people who’d prefer to listen to podcasts while driving or while waiting.
Some people like to watch, others like to read and/or listen.
That leaves the task cut out for marketers: spray at every inch on the wall. Leave no gaps. Cover all sides. Go for everything. Customers are all over the web.
How far reaching is your marketing though?
Video Ad Views Reach Another All-Time High: 13.2 Billion in April
The comScore Video Metrix service has just released data that shows 181.9 million Americans watched 38.8 billion online content videos in April 2013, while the number of video ad views reached an all-time high of 13.2 billion.
Still Seeing Post-Penguin Web Spam In Google Results? Let Google Know.
Google’s next generation Penguin update is now live and webmasters and SEOs are carefully assessing how this update has impacted their web sites. Google is assessing things as well, how this has impacted the search results, search quality and searcher satisfaction. Google’s head of…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Google Doodle Salutes North West Mounted Police on 140 Years
While Google in the U.S. is celebrating today with one of its Doodle 4 Google competition winners, Canadian Google users are instead seeing a Google Doodle celebrating the 140th anniversary of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.
Google Knowledge Graph Nudity Removed Quickly
A Google Web Search Help thread had a solo post from a user upset to see a nude topless image show up in the knowledge graph box for a search for [kierston wareing]…
Google Site Command Temporary Issue Due To Domain Clustering
As I reported yesterday at Search Engine Land, the site command may be a bit buggy for you right now and may not be resolved for about a week.
In short…
Google Pushed Out The Major Penguin Update (v2.0 #4)
As I reported last night at Search Engine Land, Penguin 2.0 / 4 is now live – this is the next generation Penguin update. As Google’s Matt Cutts added, this impacts 2.3% of English queries and also impacts other languages but the percentage depends on …
The Importance of Site Structure Maintenance
An important tip by Kate Morris: Every 6 months, recrawl your site and fix broken links and internal redirects. She explains why in this article.
Post from Kate Morris on State of Search
The Importance of Site Structure Maintenance
Website Lost Rankings in Google? Say Hello to Penguin 2.
We started rolling out the next generation of the Penguin webspam algorithm this afternoon (May 22, 2013), and the rollout is now complete. About 2.3% of English-US queries are affected to the degree that a regular user might notice. The change has also finished rolling out for other languages world-wide. The scope of Penguin varies by language, […]