Tuesday, March 31, 2020

‘Everyone wants control’: Traffic soars, but programmatic ad prices drop

Online ad revenue has shriveled up amid the coronavirus pandemic, but there are early signs of recovery. 

Since the onset of the global pandemic, publishers have an abundance of supply with a clear spike in web traffic, up as high as 30%, according to the seven media execs interviewed for this article. The challenge for those publishers is that the content driving the uplift is on the coronavirus, which advertisers have chosen largely to avoid.

“Programmatic pricing is down an average of 10 to 20% globally, CPVs are declining week-over-week and performance campaigns are on the increase – today’s buyers are now more loyal to price than brand,” said Justin Taylor, md at ad tech vendor Teads U.K. 

For one publisher, pageviews are up 25 to 30% and yet advertisers have pulled media dollars. With so much traffic to monetize, the exec is sending out an “extreme” amount of ad requests to ad tech vendors to sell their inventory. The problem, however, is those ad requests are going out to advertisers who can afford to be picky about what ads they buy because there’s so much available. And there’s only so low a publisher can go with their ad prices to kickstart demand. The exec wants to stick to a minimum price for those ads bought in real-time auctions but is finding it hard to enforce when their rivals are lowering their own floor prices to attract demand. 

Even in markets where CPMs are tanking, there are still advertisers that are paying more for ads that are more likely to be seen. 

According to ad tech vendor Browsi analysis of CPMs across three news and sports publishers between 10. Feb and 10. Mar, those impressions that had a viewability score of 70% ore more had CPMs of more than 30% than those impressions that had a viewability score below 70%.



Source: Browsi

But quality impressions will only go some of the way to stabilizing a programmatic marketplace that’s in flux.

“Our viewability is between 60 to 80% on the majority of our placements so quality doesn’t even help in this case,” said the publishing exec.

In fact, demand for impressions is more likely to come from opportunistic advertisers who see ways to either grow their businesses or replace lost reach at a discount. 

“We’re seeing a lot of interest from e-commerce businesses as well as from the long tail,” said the commercial director at a Nordics-based publisher who was not authorized to speak to Digiday. “Big brands have stepped back from our ads, which has left more room for smaller companies so we halved our floor price. We have to get some revenue back in.”

Despite having to sell ads at cut prices, the exec remains hopeful it won’t be for long. So far, the company’s digital ad revenue is 25% down on the same period last year thanks to the pandemic. While the decline isn’t as steep as the exec anticipated, it’s emblematic of how little appetite there is for news among advertisers. Rates for the publisher’s ads in both private and marketplace have dipped over the last three months versus the same period last year as are programmatic guaranteed deals, said the exec. 

“We are seeing movement from advertisers that do want to connect with their audiences again, but we expect the downturn to last until May,” said the exec. Regardless of whether the pandemic has peaked, governments will have made moves by the summer to kickstart consumer spending, said the exec.

It’s a viewpoint shared by other media execs who see media dollars slowly but surely trickling back into programmatic, albeit in a more controlled way. Ads in private marketplace deals are seen as safer bets to those in the open marketplace among advertisers that want to lock down inventory and pricing during such a volatile time, for example.

“Everyone on the client side is looking for control now,” said Sam Fenton-Elstone, CEO of media agency Anything is Possible. “They’re pushing for more whitelists, PMPs and contextual controls.

GumGum’s commercial director in the U.K. Peter Wallace expanded on the point: “We’re starting to see briefs come back in again  The difference now is that advertisers are thinking more carefully about what content is suitable for them. “

For those advertisers running programmatic campaigns amid the pandemic, they’re increasingly using contextual targeting tools to spot any media that’s relevant to their ads while blocking those that are overtly negative.

After advertisers rushed to block all coronavirus-related content, they seem to be loosening restrictions over what content can and can’t feature ads to reflect this new reality. Indeed, a recent tech advertiser that helps businesses with remote working used contextual ad tech vendor GumGum to target coronavirus stories that were related to working from home. Furthermore, coronavirus-related content is being monetized by YouTube after it had initially blocked it from advertisers. 

“Advertisers are looking to us to offset sports investments in things like the NCAA March Madness tournament as they’re looking for video players with reach and quality content,” said Andrew Serby, svp of marketing at Zefr, a company that helps brands advertise on video platforms like YouTube and Facebook. “Only a few players have that scale, and being on YouTube and Facebook is a nice landing spot  as well as Hulu.”

While money is starting to flow back into the programmatic market, it may be a short-term reaction. 

“My concern is that what upticks there are in spend now could be the last bit of spend for the quarter being washed through the system,” said Bill Swanson, vp of EMEA at ad tech vendor Telaria. “Once we get to April, you may see buyers waiting to see how the pandemic plays out. It could be a slow start to the second quarter.” 

The post ‘Everyone wants control’: Traffic soars, but programmatic ad prices drop appeared first on Digiday.


By: Seb Joseph
Title: ‘Everyone wants control’: Traffic soars, but programmatic ad prices drop
Sourced From: digiday.com/marketing/everyone-wants-control-traffic-soars-but-programmatic-ad-prices-drop/
Published Date: Fri, 27 Mar 2020 04:00:00 +0000


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40% of marketers and retailers expect layoffs due to the coronavirus

The coronavirus pandemic is causing tectonic shifts for businesses. As physical stores close, consumer demand is also dropping. For most marketers, this means costs need to be cut. And for many, people are the place to start. 

A new Digiday survey about the early effects of the coronavirus on brands and retailers found that 40% of top execs expect to have layoffs due to the crisis. 

For a whopping 83% of respondents, the coronavirus will also cause them to miss their forecasts for the year. A total of 130 execs at brands and retailers took the survey.



The massive economic impact of the coronavirus is already being felt across the country. With physical retail largely shut down for many companies, the commerce department has found that sales declined 0.5% in February, the biggest drop in the past year. The expectation from marketers now is that March, and April, there will be even larger drops. Plus, as supply chains and distribution gets disrupted as people stay home and more people get sick, that’s going to have an impact on operations.

Last week, a staggering 3.3 million U.S. workers applied for unemployment

According to Forrester, 40% of consumers expect personal economic situations to get worse over the next month. And while online buying is increasing, it’s not across the board: About 38% of Digiday respondents said they’re seeing an increase in online sales, while 54% said they’ve seen a decrease in physical sales already. 

The issue is about the same in media: Digiday Research found that 88% of publishing executives surveyed expect to miss their business goals this year due to the outbreak.

The post 40% of marketers and retailers expect layoffs due to the coronavirus appeared first on Digiday.


By: Shareen Pathak
Title: 40% of marketers and retailers expect layoffs due to the coronavirus
Sourced From: digiday.com/marketing/40-of-marketers-and-retailers-expect-layoffs-due-to-the-coronavirus/
Published Date: Mon, 30 Mar 2020 04:00:00 +0000


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What’s Trending: Adapting to a New Normal


Adapting to a New Normal in Marketing
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Congratulations, you’ve made it through another week of exploring uncharted territory. It’s likely in the first week or two, you were simply trying to keep balance while dealing with feelings of grief, loss and anxiety. 

These emotions are not only natural, they’re necessary. We have to feel them to move past them and into some semblance of normal.

If you haven’t started creating new routines yet, I recommend it. Find ways to establish a feeling of normalcy and stability. You may not wake up, exercise, or take a lunch break at the same time as you did at the office. But it’s worth figuring out what works for you right now.

That doesn’t mean you will never go back to the old normal, of course; it just means you are better equipping yourself for what’s happening now. 

This week’s roundup collects good advice on helping your customers find a new normal, too. You’ll find some deep thoughts on content marketing, a guide to providing accurate and timely content, and even some industry analysis.

1. Content Marketing in the Age of Coronavirus

In our last roundup, we talked about the existential question: “Should we continue marketing during this crisis?” The consensus is that yes, we can and should keep communicating with people in a helpful, trustworthy manner.

Dennis Belogorsky puts it even more strongly:

“YOUR CUSTOMERS NEED YOU,” he emphasizes. “With so many people today hungry for guidance and leadership from industry leaders, now is the perfect time to elevate your organization above business as usual, and double down on your expertise, thought leadership, and mission.”

Dennis offers a four-point plan for making sure your content stays useful and relevant during the crisis. The most crucial step for me was number four: Plan way ahead. He recommends using this relatively slow time to build a solid framework for content marketing during the crisis and well beyond it. Says Dennis, “Start by laying down the foundations while things are in a relative downturn. Because once the tide turns there’ll be other urgent needs that will prioritize your time and resources.”

2. Content Marketing and They Ask, You Answer in the Coronavirus (COVID-19) Crisis

Marcus Sheridan is a legend in the content marketing world, and for good reason. Way back in 2008, in the middle of a financial crisis, his content turned a struggling business into a powerhouse. The simple framework that he developed helped define what content marketing should be. 

Marcus’s big idea was, “they ask, you answer.” In other words, address your audience’s burning questions about your business. This strategy led him to talk about things his competitors didn’t — like providing pricing information without capturing leads for a quote. He found that letting his customers set the terms of engagement led to more traffic and more sales than a hard sales pitch ever would.

In this interview with John Becker, Marcus talks about how “they ask, you answer” was crucial for the 2008 crisis and for our current one. He encourages companies to engage with their customers’ questions about the crisis, rather than attempt to ignore it. 

“Everyone is focused on what’s happening in the world, and concerned about their health and wellness,” he says. “I think it’s important to consider all of the possible ramifications for your industry, and then address those openly and specifically on your website — and do so as soon as possible.”

3. Get an A for Accuracy With This Fact-Checking Content Checklist

Getting the facts straight is one crucial aspect of providing valuable content in a crisis. Misinformation is an all-too-common part of online discourse in general, and it’s worse in a crisis. Brands that attempt to grab attention with misleading headlines or misinterpreted data risk losing credibility with their target audience (at best). And that’s not even counting brands that click ‘share’ on a trending article without checking its veracity.

Now is a good time for a refresher on fact-checking, and Ann Gynn’s list is a fantastic resource. She brings a journalistic eye to verifying content — something we all could stand to develop as we seek to inform our audience.

One item of particular interest is how to identify and avoid questionable statistics. “Every piece of data-backed information should cite the original source or it shouldn’t be used,” she says. “Don’t cite a stat cited by someone else that was cited from a mega infographic that didn’t include the original source.”

What’s more, Ann says, beware of the context of your data, too. If you cite a survey of salespeople in a marketing blog, for example, it’s important to note where the data come from. Or if you’re citing an informal survey, don’t present it as a statistically significant, scientific report.

And, of course, while these tips are especially relevant right now, content creators should make fact-checking a regular part of their routine. It’s a discipline we could all stand to brush up on.

4. Publishers Put Virtual Events to the Test

The past few weeks have seen a boom in virtual events. Everyone from theater companies to bands to event marketers are trying to bring content to their audiences without meeting in person. But can a virtual event really substitute for an actual conference? 

In a well-researched post for Digiday, Kayleigh Barber evaluates the current landscape for virtual events. She quotes Larry Weil, an events sponsorship consultant, on the economic potential: “‘I don’t believe you can take a three-day conference and put it online,’ Weil said. ‘Sponsorship is definitely going to take a hit. But those who have a digital strategy, and can scramble, can defer a lot of the loss.’” Larry estimates that companies can recoup a third to one half of the revenue they might have seen from an in-person event. 

Kayleigh explores the different ways that companies can hold virtual events, too. It’s good to see a wide range of options, depending on the budget. Your brand might not have its own custom live-streaming solution, but you can still host through free options like LinkedIn Live, YouTube Live and Google Hangouts, or a low-cost alternative like Zoom.

Regardless of how you go about hosting a virtual event, it makes sense to focus on the value you’re providing your audience. Instead of trying to replicate every aspect of an in-person meetup, challenge your team to think of ways you can add value that’s unique to the virtual setup. For example, you could host interactive text chats with speakers, bring in two panelists from different sides of the world, and enable networking through social media.

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By: Sean Callahan
Title: What’s Trending: Adapting to a New Normal
Sourced From: business.linkedin.com/marketing-solutions/blog/what-s-trending-in-marketing--top-content-of-the-week/2020/what-s-trending--adapting-to-a-new-normal
Published Date: Mon, 30 Mar 2020 13:21:00 -0700


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The Water Cooler: Business Professionals Focused on Sharing #WFH, #RemoteWork Perspectives on LinkedIn


LinkedIn Water Cooler #WFH #RemoteWork
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There are now more than 675 million LinkedIn members, and every month on the platform these professionals engage with and discuss content that’s important to them — inside and outside the office. LinkedIn has become the global water cooler for business.

In March, many businesspeople had working from home top of mind, and we have identified the top 10 articles about remote working shared on LinkedIn. Interest in working from home should not be surprising as many have transitioned to remote work as COVID-19 continues to spread across the globe.

In the last four weeks, there have been more than 20,000 hashtags of #WFH and #RemoteWork shared on LinkedIn, signifying an 18% jump in #WFH the last four weeks versus the four weeks prior, and a 79% jump in 2020 versus the end of 2019.

Here are the top 10 articles professionals were sharing on LinkedIn in March around #WFH and #RemoteWork.

Top 10 Most Shared Work-From-Home Articles on LinkedIn in March 

>As Coronavirus Spreads in the US, Employers Gear Up for Massive Work-From-Home Experiment, By Catherine Thorbecke, ABC NewsWork-From-Home Gains Ground as Call Centres Run Pilots, By Jochelle Mendonca, The Economic Times, IndiaCoronavirus: Google Leads Tech Charge to Work From Home, Rory Carroll, The GuardianWill Coronavirus Accelerate the Adoption of Remote Work? [New data], Mimi An, Flock BlogCo-working Firms See Dip, Work-From-Home the Norm at Start-Ups, Nandita Mathur, Live MintHow to Work From Home Without Losing Your Mind, Brian Barrett, WIREDAs Coronavirus Pandemic Spreads, Demand for Remote-Work Startups Spikes, By TechCrunch (Subscription required.)Can’t Get to the Office? Tips to Thrive While Working Remotely By Heidi Joy Tretheway, ContentfulHK Under Coronavirus: Giant Lab for Work-from-Home, By Gu Mengyan, China Daily HKCoronavirus Could Spur Desktop-as-a-Service Adoption, By Mike Gleason, SearchVirtualDesktop.com

Lessons for Marketers

The top 10 articles this month deliver a few key lessons to marketers, but none more impactful than the lesson that professionals on LinkedIn are constantly curious about business culture. Every day, professionals are engaging in dynamic conversation on our platform to find solutions for complex problems. If you can provide an interesting, useful take on how your team meets unexpected challenges like the coronavirus pandemic, you are likely to find an audience on LinkedIn. We are all learning from one another during this dynamic time.

Our top 10 list reveals that companies are trying to find their footing in this new, unknown remote-work environment. The No. 1 story, “As Coronavirus Spreads in the US, Employers Gear Up for Massive Work-From-Home Experiment” from ABC News, provides expert tips on how to stay afloat and operational during the pandemic, while the No. 2 article from The Economic Times discusses the Uber-like disruption remote working has had on the customer-service industry for business process outsourcing.

Our list also shows that business leaders aren’t the only ones looking for help in transitioning to a work-from-home environment — their staffs are, too. A story from WIRED shares “How to Work From Home Without Losing Your Mind,” and Contentful’s Heidi Joy Tretheway provides useful tips for successful remote working.

The top stories also spotlight the opportunities that have come with the transition to remote working. A TechCrunch story explains that demand for remote-work start-ups like Zoom has grown, while Mike Gleason at SearchVirtualDesktop.com discusses how some organizations have turned to desktop as a service in the face of disruptions like the coronavirus.

If you want to take a deeper dive into the posts that are attracting the readership of professionals on LinkedIn, previous Water Cooler articles can be found here.





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By: Jennifer Brett
Title: The Water Cooler: Business Professionals Focused on Sharing #WFH, #RemoteWork Perspectives on LinkedIn
Sourced From: business.linkedin.com/marketing-solutions/blog/linkedin-news/2020/the-water-cooler--business-professionals-focused-on-sharing--wfh
Published Date: Tue, 31 Mar 2020 05:00:00 -0700


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5 Digital Marketing Trends To Dial Up In Uncertain Times



It’s always essential to get the basics right. Looking at this year’s digital marketing trends can help your business get in on the ground floor of tomorrow’s leading-edge strategies.

Let’s take a close look at the most critical aspects of the digital marketing trends you can’t ignore in 2020.

Quick Takeaways:

Taking the lead in digital marketing is essential for businesses in 2020’s high-tech marketing environment.Learning about – and embracing – critical trends in digital marketing can help companies rise to the occasion.With investments in voice search, customer experience, employee activation, personalization, and account-based marketing, businesses will be poised to take full advantage of cutting-edge marketing technology.

1. Voice Searches: Go to the Head of the Class

Although voice searches have been around for what seems like years now, they look to come into their own as a major player in 2020. Today’s shoppers have grown impatient and we demand swift, seamless experiences across digital platforms.

In other words, it’s all about the now. No need to pull over and search when a craving for fish tacos hits. Simply shout, “Hey, Siri!” and you’ll find the little out-of-the-way joint in mere seconds.

The one that best optimized its website for voice, that is.

There’s another reason, though, that voice searches will dominate 2020’s digital marketing trends: Position Zero. The coveted position atop the results page can only have your business’s name on it only if you’ve optimized your website for voice queries.

It’s all about natural language and questions. When you make your top keywords the questions people will ask when they ask Siri, you have a better shot at attaining position zero.

When you’re on position zero, your business not only is the first one Siri finds, but is also the first one desktop searches find as well.

Which is great – because that craving for fish tacos can happen at work as well as on the road.

2. Make It All About the Customer: World-Class CX

Which makes for a smooth segue into the next trend: customer experience. Not only are this year’s customers impatient, but they also want those fish tacos delivered on a silver platter.

Not literally, but they do expect a seamless experience from the first spark of interest to customer service after the sale. From personalized messaging that helps them solve problems to make a buying decision to a customer-focused culture throughout their customer journey, an experience that delivers quality across all channels is more likely to earn their business.

In addition to personalized marketing messages, find ways to listen and respond to their questions. Coordinate your digital marketing team with your sales and customer service teams to deliver quality throughout their experience.

Building the kinds of relationships with customers that drive loyalty is worth every penny you spend. As the management experts at Bain and Company point out, a mere 5 percent boost in customer retention increases profit by 25 percent.

Can you imagine how your profits would soar if you went the extra mile to deliver the kinds of experiences that build not only loyalty, but qualified referrals as well? When you coordinate your digital marketing strategy with all your teams to deliver those kinds of experiences, you’ll grow your bottom line well beyond even your highest expectations.

3. Employee Activation: A Giant Leap Beyond Engagement

That one giant leap for (hu)mankind – walking on the moon – is a piece of cake compared to convincing some companies to treat their employees like valuable colleagues instead of glorified house servants. Taking the next step – employee activation – requires you to treat your employees as your most treasured customers.

Employee engagement requires you to make your workplace such an attractive place to work that your employees’ happiness will spill on over onto the customers. Indeed, a smile and an extra effort to please that comes from the heart is one of the most effective forms of marketing out there. In fact, companies that engage their employees outperform their peers by a factor of two.

When you activate your employees, though, it’s marketing magic. Activation includes a wealth of tools to empower your employees to become walking billboards for your company, including:

Training that not only makes them more informed about your products, but also allows them to climb up the corporate ladder – imagine – you gotta love a company that trains you to qualify for a better jobPermission to post content on social media and elsewhere about your company’s culture, products, and servicesInvolvement in creating blog posts, videos, white papers, and other “official” marketing content, creating a platform on which they can showcase their expertise

Once your employees start sharing the love your company has shared with them, it will pay off. Not only will it pay off in good vibes, but it will also likely make a huge impact on your bottom line.

In fact, leads that your employees generate through social media marketing posts are seven times more likely to convert than leads you generate through other channels, according to Sociabble. In addition, content that they share will enjoy eight times more engagement than content that you share on your official brand channels.

4. Personalization: Your Key to Their Heart

When a customer has two relatively equal products in front of her, and she needs to decide which one she’ll buy, my money’s on the brand that won her heart. One of the ways to engage your customers’ hearts as well as their heads is to personalize marketing to meet their needs.

For years, psychologists have taught us that people love to hear their name and see it in print. But today’s technology allows digital marketing teams to dig deep into the data to identify the things that keep customers up at night – and identify what messages will solve those problems and give them a good night’s sleep.

Go way beyond the “Hi [Customer Name]” emails to find what makes your customers tick. Then, give them content that will win their hearts.

Again, a little effort will yield amazing results. In fact, 80 percent of customers surveyed by Epsilon indicated that they’d be more likely to buy from a company that gave them a personalized experience.

5. Account-Based Marketing: Personalization for Businesses

Although corporations aren’t people, their C-suites certainly are staffed by them. Specifically, by people with widely divergent interests.

The chief financial officer wants to know how the widget you make will save steps in the manufacturing process, saving time. And time, as we all know, is money.The chief marketing officer wants to know how your widget can help make a better product – and why – so that she can explain it to her customers.The head of human resources wants to know how much easier your widget will make assembly line workers’ jobs, specifically, how it can help them avoid tendonitis.

And so on.

Account-based marketing personalizes messaging to businesses, targeting each decision-maker with the information they need to solve specific departmental problems. Like personalized messaging directly to customers, account-based marketing yields a higher ROI than other types of marketing. If you sell to other businesses, particularly large corporations, account-based marketing is one of the 2020 digital marketing trends you need to embrace during the coming years.

When you embrace these five 2020 marketing trends, you’ll take the lead in getting your message out to the right people at the right time. When you do that, you’ll take the lead in your industry in both reputation and bottom-line rewards.

If you are ready to get more traffic to your site with quality content that’s published consistently, check out our Content Builder Service. Set up a quick consultation, and I’ll send you a free PDF version of my books. Get started today–and generate more traffic and leads for your business.

The post 5 Digital Marketing Trends To Dial Up In Uncertain Times appeared first on Marketing Insider Group.


By: Michael Brenner
Title: 5 Digital Marketing Trends To Dial Up In Uncertain Times
Sourced From: marketinginsidergroup.com/marketing-strategy/digital-marketing-trends-you-cant-ignore-2020/
Published Date: Tue, 31 Mar 2020 09:05:43 +0000


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Monday, March 30, 2020

How to Rank Smaller Websites on Google in 2020 - FAST Method for Non-Techies



You see all these big sites dominating Google, but, hey, we're not all big sites, we're not all billion-dollar companies. What happens if we have a small website with little to no backlinks, very little content? Is it even possible for us to get rankings on Google? Today I'm going to break down how to rank smaller websites fast in Google in 2020. RESOURCES & LINKS: ____________________________________________ How to Do SEO For A Tiny Site With No Backlinks [video]: https://youtu.be/Y772PSqmudo How to Leverage Content Marketing When You Have No Traffic (Small or New Websites) [video]: https://youtu.be/DGaYx22GXNw Ranking 1-Page Websites in Google for Fun & Profit [article]: https://gaps.com/one-page-google/ ____________________________________________ Look, here's something that you may not know. Google's diversity update in June 2019 gave different types of sites more opportunities to rank by limiting the number of times a single domain can appear in a single SERP. A single website can't rank more than two times in a SERP. That excludes branded key terms, of course. But this allows smaller sites to have a chance to rank among the big dogs like Amazon, or Microsoft, or whoever else it may be that's dominating the SERPs. So, how do you go out there and rank your new site that's small, really high, at a quick time period? Well first off, you can start with exact-match domain name. Now a lot of people say exact-match domain names don't work as well as they used to, and that's correct, but they still do. Now creating a domain that's a exact match to the service or product you're selling is a great way to get some traction in the SERPs. This works specifically well for localized keywords and long-tail keywords. It doesn't work well for head terms. If your site gets a little traffic, scoring an exact-match domain name could get you a spot really high up in the SERPs. Gaps.com did a study on exact-match domain names for one-page sites. They tested multiple exact-match domain names and created small sites for those domains. And this is what they found. The next thing that you can do is build one-on-one engagements with customers. Where big brands often tend to ignore is small things like personal engagements with their customers. This is how I compete with really large companies. You'll see that I respond to comments on NeilPatel.com, YouTube, Facebook, LinkedIn, even Instagram. I'm pretty much everywhere, why? Because I care about you and I care about your success. And, just doing that more personal approach will start gaining you those social signals, which will help you with your search engine rankings. Next, I want you to focus on long-tail keywords. Focus on the less competitive key terms that big brands typically ignore. Focusing on long-tail keywords is a great way to find high-quality traffic. Since long-tail keywords are typically more specific in nature, scoring them typically generates more leads, more sales, more conversions. Now, if you're looking for these long-tail keywords, the easiest way to find them is you go to Ubersuggest, you type in a keyword that's a head term, and it'll show you in the keyword ides report all the long-tail variations, and even other head term variations of that keyword. Next, I want you to create valuable specialty content in your niche. Did you know that Google prefers niche sites over broad sites? Since your site is a smaller site, you can have a complete focus on your specialty and niche. This will help you do better than your competition. This allows you to provide more value for your users in your content, which is often ignored by those larger companies. You can become the credible go-to source for anything in your vertical. Just look at Backlinko.com. Brian Dean is known as the link guy in the SEO industry. He's really gotten niche specific. Sure he does more than that, and he's smart, and he's an amazing guy, I've known him for years, but taking that niche was really smart by him. This allows you to offer more value than any broad site out there, which then, in turn, helps with your rankings in the long run. Next, you want to make your site mobile-friendly. I can't reiterate this enough. Google has mobile-first indexing, and over 50% of the searches are now done on mobile devices. So having your site optimized for mobile devices is huge. If you're not doing this, you're not going to do well. So make sure your site's responsive, and it loads fast. ► If you need help growing your business check out my ad agency Neil Patel Digital @ https://neilpateldigital.com/ ►Subscribe: https://goo.gl/ScRTwc to learn more secret SEO tips. ►Find me on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/neilkpatel/ ►On Instagram: https://instagram.com/neilpatel/ https://youtu.be/totiNw9Rypc #SEO #NeilPatel #DigitalMarketing


By: Neil Patel
Title: How to Rank Smaller Websites on Google in 2020 - FAST Method for Non-Techies
Sourced From: www.youtube.com/watch?v=totiNw9Rypc


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5 SEO Strategies Every B2B Company Should Be Using


B2B SEO

Think of Search Engine Optimization (SEO) like taking care of a plant. Sounds weird right? Stay with us.

SEO is the equivalent of care you provide your plant that leads to organic growth. Generally, plants need soil, water, air, and sunlight to grow. You’ll regularly water your plant, adjust the amount of sunlight it gets, prune leaves and stems, and maybe even move the plant to a larger pot when it’s big enough. Neglecting any of your plant’s needs could hurt its growth and overall health. But, if you pay attention to your plant and make a habit of providing proper care, it has a much better chance of flourishing.

By monitoring and tending to the various needs of your brand’s digital presence, it will also have the opportunity to thrive by way of attracting new clients and boosting your organic search rankings. The just-released Handbook: B2B Marketing Using Google & Paid Social gives a detailed look at beginning your B2B digital marketing efforts. In this blog, however, we’re taking that conversation a step further by exploring the most effective SEO tips for supporting your digital campaign and growing your brand.

1: Strategic Webpage Optimization

Keep your website pages current with thoughtful keywords that effectively describe your content. As your services evolve, new advancements in your industry arise, and rules and regulations change, you must be able to provide readers with up-to-date information. Web page optimization depends on quality writing and thorough research from your digital marketing team to have the biggest impact on the health of your site.

For large websites with a lot of pages, start by optimizing the high-performing pages (when something is working, do more of it!). It never hurts to make a great page even better and will give you a smart way to prioritize your optimization efforts. Also, take a hard look at why your high-performing pages are doing as well as they are: Is it simply the topic? Length of content? Tags? Graphics or imagery? Is the page being shown in Google’s featured snippet? Common ways to optimize your webpages include:

Incorporate long-tail keywordsAdd low-hanging-fruit keywordsUpdate copy monthlyTurn thin pages into longer pagesOptimize high-performing pages

2: Smart Link Building

Link building is a strategy that increases the number of legitimate hyperlinks on the web that send people to your website. One of the most effective ways to build external links to your site is by collaborating with other reputable websites and publications to create and promote content that connects with your shared audiences. That also makes link building one of the more challenging strategies to find continual success with.

Google and other search engines look at the number and quality of external links that point to your website, and that can have a significant impact on your ranking in the search results. By creating quality content for external sites and publications, you can build new business relationships and help them grow their audience. At the same time, that business’s audience is presented with avenues to find your content, creating a cycle of support that can significantly benefit growing brands.

3: Accurate Title Tags and Meta Descriptions

Ensuring the accuracy of title tags is a major factor in SEO. We see title tags every time we perform a search: they’re the single line of linked text that shows up along with each search result, informing you of what you’re clicking on.

Google uses automated bots, also known as crawlers and spiders, to browse the web and report back to help accurately index all the pages on the internet. As crawlers find your pages, they’ll analyze them and report back to Google, where the pages are then indexed and ranked. Accurate title tags are vital to ensuring this process works as designed.

Meta descriptions accompany title tags in search engine results and describe the content of the related page in a bit more detail. Accurate meta descriptions give readers the information they need to make decisions. When a user sees a search result with a vague description or one that doesn’t reflect the actual page content, they may promptly choose to look elsewhere to solve their needs. Meta descriptions don’t allow for a ton of text before Google cuts them off, so provide the essential bits upfront.

Finally, always be sure to follow the current character count and formatting guidelines. As of March 2020, meta formatting guidelines for optimal results on Google are:

Keep title tags to 50 – 60 characters to ensure they’ll display properly within Google’s pixel limits.Don’t stuff title tags with repetitive keywords.Give each page a unique title tag.Meta descriptions should be between 50 and 160 characters, and provide a compelling description of the page content, complete with appropriate keywords.

4: Frequent Blogging & Content Creation

Blogging is a great way to build content for your website. When you write about your industry and related topics, you’re creating new ways for people to find you. As your digital marketing team researches your online presence, they’ll gain an understanding of how people search and what they search for. Use that information to your advantage to create content that you already know people want to read about. Within your blogs, you can link readers to previous resources you’ve created, increasing the amount of time they spend on your site and increasing the trust they have in your brand.

Blogging is also an opportunity to establish your company as a leader in its industry. If you’re pushing boundaries, trying new strategies, and offer cutting-edge capabilities, you should be talking about it!

5: Domain Authority

Domain authority is a ranking system designed to predict how well a site will perform in the search engine results. Scores range from 0 to 100, with 100 being the best. Calculating this score considers: 

How many unique domains link to your siteThe “authority” of those domainsHow many unique domains those sites link to

Software takes care of the rest, and plots scores on the 100-point scale.

While Google can be secretive about how their ranking system actually works internally, smart digital marketers have a solid foundation for calculating Domain Authority and using that valuable data as a metric for your website’s ability to grow organically.

Take Your Brand’s Online Presence Further

Now that we’ve laid down the groundwork for a solid SEO strategy, what should you do next?

Well, there’s always more that can be done to enhance your online presence. Read through the Handbook: B2B Marketing Using Google & Paid Social to learn how digital marketers complement SEO with SEM and paid social strategies for more success getting noticed by ideal clients and customers.

The post 5 SEO Strategies Every B2B Company Should Be Using appeared first on Marketing Insider Group.


By: Mark Schmukler
Title: 5 SEO Strategies Every B2B Company Should Be Using
Sourced From: marketinginsidergroup.com/marketing-strategy/5-seo-strategies-every-b2b-company-should-be-using/
Published Date: Mon, 30 Mar 2020 07:15:49 +0000


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How Weekly Blogging Can Boost B2B Sales By 10x



In B2B Marketing, it’s all about finding leads that convert to sales. While it may seem counter-intuitive, when you take an approach that puts the customer’s needs in the driver’s seat, and you’ll be on the fast track to marketing success.

How do you show your customers that you care about their needs? The good ‘ole weekly Blog with consistently published articles is the proof your prospects are looking for.

Weekly blogging is the express lane to boost your B2B sales by a factor of ten.

Quick Takeaways:

Providing actionable content to B2B customers is the key to winning their business.Regular, frequent blog posts at intervals of one week or less keep your company on potential customers’ radar.Targeted follow-up content, coordinated with your sales team, can boost your sales to incredible levels.

Post Content that Position You as a Valuable Virtual Consultant

The key to successful blogging – just as in successful selling – is to provide useful information that can help your target customers solve the kinds of problems that keep them up at night. That focus is even more critical when you’re a B2B company, whose challenges involve major financial and reputational risks.

Like a consultant, your blog needs to pose plenty of solution-oriented questions about those challenges. For every one of those questions, you need to provide a well-researched, innovative answer.

When you provide that ongoing “consultancy” regularly, your customers will come to depend on your advice, building your authority with every post. With authority comes customer trust.

We wanted to delve into exactly what blogging frequency our B2B clients need to aim for to build that customer trust. We turned to two sources: HubSpot research and our own internal data.

Blog Consistently and Often to Build Visibility and Brand Awareness

Although many B2B companies blog daily, it’s not a necessity for building awareness of your expertise in your industry. Consistent posting once or twice a week will build your online authority over the long term.

Furthermore, that sort of consistency in your content marketing strategy will also help you boost your visibility online over the long term. The reason is that done right, your blog posts’ traffic will gain visits over time – it compounds, just like interest does on money in the bank.

When your blog posts solve real-world problems for your B2B customers, those customers will share them with their colleagues and friends. Then they, in turn, will share them with their circles of influence, building your authority and your traffic with every share.

For that reason, it pays to create content that your target customers will find valuable enough to share.

That means updating your posts with relevant, recent data.That means finding new channels to distribute your content on.That means taking the time to research what value you can bring to your customers.

Unlike blog posts aimed at consumers from businesses whose primary customer base is the consumer (B2C) companies, post quality becomes a critical factor. That doesn’t mean that your writing must reach literary perfection or that your videos could win an Oscar.

What quality means in B2B blog posting is crafting easy-to-understand posts that puts your company in the position of the go-to business consultant in your industry.

That’s brand awareness – and it’s essential in B2B blogs. And, as Carmicheal points out, you can achieve that goal with one to two blog posts per week. That’s doable – even for solo entrepreneurs. Just share your expertise, just as you would if you were hired as a consultant.

Delve into the Data to Find Your Sweet Spot for Blogging Frequency

If you can, though, aim for at least two blog posts a week. Our own internal data shows that publishing blog posts two to four times per week will yield the best results in both conversions and web traffic.

The rewards are stunning. HubSpot’s research also showed that companies that make effective marketing a top priority will have 13 times the chance to experience positive ROI than those who do not.

If you and your content team don’t have the time or resources to create at least two blog posts a week, you could consider outsourcing at least some of your posts to a content marketing agency. Also, engage your internal teams outside of your marketing silo to share their expertise in some of your blog posts.

After all, to hit that sales target, your blog posts need to position you as an expert in your field – a virtual consultant. Teams that actually design and create your products and services: Engineers, researchers, developers, economists, chemists, and other subject matter can contribute the very advice potential customers need to put their trust in your company. This specialized focus in your employee activation program can be a game-changer for B2B companies.

Rake in More Qualified Leads with Targeted, Frequent Blogging

You also need to look at the blogging frequency that produces the most leads. For B2B companies, qualified leads are the key that can get your foot in your corporate customers’ door.

B2B companies that blog at least 11 times a month garner 1.75 times the leads as those that blog six to 10 times a month. If you can stretch your once-weekly blog posts with outsourced content or employee-generated posts, you can get 3.75 times more leads.

When those employee-generated posts showcase your best producers’ expertise, you’ll likely attract the kinds of qualified leads that need your company’s expertise to solve their business problems, as Business2Community’s Christa Tuttle points out. Use targeted titles that get busy executives’ attention, such as “Why Your Software Company Needs X to Overtake Your Competition,” “X Easy Tips to SEO Success,” or “How to Boost Your Widget Sales by a Factor of 10.”

For even more mileage on these insanely helpful types of blogs, plan to offer a more thorough treatment of the problem’s solution in a piece of gated content, such as an e-book or white paper. A call to action at the end of each blog post – one that asks readers to submit their email address and perhaps their job title – in exchange for more detailed information provides your sales teams with a list of interested, qualified prospects to pursue.

Use Account-Based Marketing Content to Clinch the Sale

Finally, among those qualified leads, use account-based marketing to clinch the deal. Account-based marketing provides key decision-makers within each of the companies that respond to your call to action with content tailored to their particular interests.

For example, if you’re a legal services firm marketing to a healthcare provider, you could send the doctors in the C-suite information about reducing their risk for malpractice suits by retaining a specialized law firm. The CFO in that same firm, however, would receive information about how to save money on legal fees through a long-term retainer.

With carefully targeted content from your initial blog posts to highly targeted account-based marketing pieces, you’ll position yourself as the consultant with all the answers. When you have that kind of reputation, your sales will skyrocket.

If you are ready to get more traffic to your site with quality content that’s published consistently, check out our Content Builder Service. Set up a quick consultation, and I’ll send you a free PDF version of my books. Get started today–and generate more traffic and leads for your business.

The post How Weekly Blogging Can Boost B2B Sales By 10x appeared first on Marketing Insider Group.


By: Michael Brenner
Title: How Weekly Blogging Can Boost B2B Sales By 10x
Sourced From: marketinginsidergroup.com/content-marketing/how-weekly-blogging-can-boost-b2b-sales-10x/
Published Date: Mon, 30 Mar 2020 08:54:13 +0000


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COVID-19: We’re Fighting a War, But There’s Hope



Stay safe out there! --- About ColdFusion --- ColdFusion is an Australian based online media company independently run by Dagogo Altraide since 2009. Topics cover anything in science, technology, history and business in a calm and relaxed environment. If you enjoy my content, please consider subscribing! I'm also on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/ColdFusion_TV Bitcoin address: 13SjyCXPB9o3iN4LitYQ2wYKeqYTShPub8 --- New Thinking Book written by Dagogo Altraide --- Learn the stories of those who invented the things we use everyday. Get the book on Amazon: http://bit.ly/NewThinkingbook Get the book on Google Play: http://bit.ly/NewThinkingGooglePlay https://newthinkingbook.squarespace.com/about/ --- ColdFusion Social Media --- » Twitter | @ColdFusion_TV » Instagram | coldfusiontv » Facebook | https://www.facebook.com/ColdFusionTV --- ColdFusion Podcast links --- Google Podcasts - http://bit.ly/2xo8doR Apple Podcasts - https://apple.co/2WI2IeU Spotify - https://spoti.fi/2KT1taB Stitcher - http://bit.ly/2WI4f4E Sources: https://examine.com/topics/coronavirus/ https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-51609840 https://foundation.chestnet.org/patient-education-resources/acute-respiratory-distress-syndrome-ards/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rb94GXQVEKQ&t=1807s https://qz.com/1816060/a-chart-of-the-1918-spanish-flu-shows-why-social-distancing-works/ https://graphics.reuters.com/CHINA-HEALTH-SOUTHKOREA-CLUSTERS/0100B5G33SB/index.html https://www.businessinsider.com.au/photos-show-worlds-first-human-trial-of-potential-coronavirus-vaccine-2020-3?r=US&IR=T https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0924857920300996?via%3Dihub https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/figures?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0109180 https://www.the-scientist.com/news-opinion/is-hype-over-chloroquine-as-a-potential-covid-19-therapy-justified--67301 http://www.xinhuanet.com/english/2020-02/17/c_138792545.htm https://www.nature.com/articles/s41422-020-0282-0 https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32074550/ https://raymondjames.bluematrix.com/docs/pdf/ca6aa508-123d-4204-bbe3-750026ecf1b6.pdf?pdf https://www.nature.com/articles/s41421-020-0156-0 https://www.webmd.com/drugs/2/drug-8633/chloroquine-oral/details/list-sideeffects https://www.axios.com/scoop-bayer-to-donate-potential-coronavirus-drug-to-us-cc8c1a5a-6a14-4e36-8b07-07eccf4eff36.html https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/mar/18/japanese-flu-drug-clearly-effective-in-treating-coronavirus-says-china https://virologyj.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/1743-422X-2-69 //Soundtrack// **coming soon** » Music I produce | http://burnwater.bandcamp.com or » http://www.soundcloud.com/burnwater » https://www.patreon.com/ColdFusion_TV » Collection of music used in videos: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YOrJJKW31OA Producer: Dagogo Altraide Why are you still reading?


By: ColdFusion
Title: COVID-19: We’re Fighting a War, But There’s Hope
Sourced From: www.youtube.com/watch?v=RFnSmcfKWQo


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Saturday, March 28, 2020

Comprehensive guide to exact match domains in 2020

Exact match domains (EMDs) are domain names that incorporate the exact keywords that you are trying to rank for in Google’s SERPs.

Examples of exact match domains include:

carinsurance.combuygroceries.comdogfood.com

In some industries, people will call their company’s name after the product that they offer, for example, Window Cleaners London.

But in the competitive world of SEO, EMDs are commonly bought by webmasters to gain a quick advantage when it comes to ranking on search engines.

Other studies have shown that having an EMD can help clicks with PPC, given that it targets a particular search enquiry.

The history of exact match domains

Looking back at the evolution of SEO over the past 20 years, having an exact match domain was originally a sure-fire way to rank top of Google.

Even dating back 10 years ago, many SEO practitioners benefitted from just buying an exact match domain, adding a bit of content and getting links from directories and this was enough to secure a page one position.

A new market emerged from domain-name selling. Many entrepreneurs were eager to get their hands on a valuable domain name, whilst thrifty businesspeople held onto domain names hoping to ‘flip’ them at a higher price.

This market continues today, with companies like GoDaddy and 123 Reg offering a marketplace for buying and selling domains, amongst other products.

But webmasters holding onto domains for their potential value has seen the most promising businesses never seen to be made, with websites such as cars.com, food.com, loans.com offering affiliate sites but not transpiring into major brands.

With long-winded exact match domains starting to rank such as buybluejeans.com and carinsurancequotesonline.com – Google responded with an EMD update in 2012 to penalize and filter these out.

Is using exact match domains a problem in 2020?

Not necessarily, there is a place for EMDs in 2020 and the right level of SEO can make it successful.

You do not get penalized just for having an EMD and in some cases, you will get a boost.

However, for the larger part, using exact match domains is going to be like walking on thin ice and could make you very prone to Google penalties.

For instance, creating new landing pages becomes an issue and you risk the possibility of keyword stuffing or over-optimization.

Your homepage should be the welcome page for your website and you should have nicely optimized landing pages coming off it and this where a lot of your SEO traffic will go to. The issue is that if your homepage is homeinsurance.com, using the right words for landing pages becomes tricky. Would you realistically create a page homeinsurance.com/home-insurance and would Google rank this?

When your homepage is likely to have more links pointing to it initially, there will be difficulty in ranking for other landing pages for that exact match keyword.

However, it is link-building that really becomes tricky.

Whatever anchor text you use, you risk the chance of using too much exact match anchor text – and this is a simple way to get a penalty. There are ways around this, such as using a wide range of anchor text, but finding the balance is tricky and it only takes one link of yours to be shared numerous times to make it look like you are running an exact match anchor text campaign.

The role of partial match domain names

Partial match domain names are a combination of the main keyword you are trying to target and something that is not related. A number of successful brands have used other words with the main keyword such as “hut”, “hub”, “network”, “market”, and so on.

Some examples of partial match domain names:

suitsdirect.co.ukbooksetc.co.ukbrownsfashion.comsunglasseshut.com

These brands only use half the target keyword, service or object, such as “sunglasses” or “fashion”.

This approach means that natural landing pages can be created without the risk of keyword stuffing and there is no risk of anchor text causing penalties when the brand name is linked.

Another partial match option is that you take a different word, which is more of an adjective or selling point.

A good example is a price comparison site, Forces Compare, which benefits from having ‘compare’ in its domain, and therefore gets a boost for every product it compares across cards, accounts, loans, and more.

There is also the business provider, Funding Invoice, which benefits from having the word “invoice” in its domain.

Some smart uses of partial matches could involve using words such as “free”, “cheap”, and “best” or locations such as “London” and “California”.

Using the right words by association

If you want to generate brand value, but do not want to risk the chance of a Google penalty, you can use a domain that has an association. You do not gain any immediate benefits from Google, but it will certainly look good from a user’s perspective and gaining a good click-through rate (CTR) will notably benefit your rankings.

This includes the infamous doorbell company, Ring.com, the dog food provider, Paws.com and the dating site, Match.com.

re some industries better than others for using exact match domains?

Yes, we have to accept that Google treats some sectors very differently and when it comes to very competitive industries such as fashion, insurance and finance, they do not want to give anyone a quick advantage just because they own an EMD.

The best approach is to look at each industry and the SERPs that you are targeting. For some industries such as loans and insurance, there are very few (if any) in the UK search results, where “loans” and “insurance” are mentioned in the domain and they are positioned on page one.

However, if you look at the key term “casino bonuses”, around seven to eight sites on page one have the word “casino” in their domain name – highlighting the importance of researching each industry.

For industries where there is less competition and fewer penalties handed out (and this is particularly in local listings), there is only going to be a handful of people searching for “good plumbers in Orange County” or “pizza places in Brooklyn”– you are more likely to be successful using an exact match domain.

Is it too late to change my exact match domain?

No, if you have started with an EMD and have struggled to get it to rank or have been subject to penalties, you can look at changing the domain and you will still hold a lot of the good SEO you have built up.

Doing a 301 redirect to the new domain will hold 90% to 95% of the SEO value and also have a very quick turnaround time, providing that you have good content and UX to back it up.

A recent rebrand of the company Bridging Loan Hub to Octagon Capital showed that the rankings were restored within two weeks and continued to grow back to their original positions, and higher.


Example of exact match domain sites - Octagon Capital

Conclusion: Do your research and focus on the brand

Exact match domains (EMDs) still have a role to play in successful SEO and this includes some target industries and local searches.

One has to be careful if they have a large SEO strategy depending on optimizing an exact match domain since this could see initial growth but also be high-risk in the penalty department.

The best advice is to research the industry and see who is ranking on pages one and two of Google. Do they use exact match, partial match or neither?

Either way, Google does not want SEO to be easy and they want it to be earned through other factors such as good design, UX, content, and link-building.

Every time, the most effective and risk-free approach will be to create a keyword-free brand name and build an online brand using good, clean SEO. This should be complemented with other traffic sources such as direct, email, referral and social media to see the maximum effect.

Daniel Tannenbaum is co-founder of Tudor Lodge Consultants.

The post Comprehensive guide to exact match domains in 2020 appeared first on Search Engine Watch.


By: Daniel Tannenbaum
Title: Comprehensive guide to exact match domains in 2020
Sourced From: www.searchenginewatch.com/2020/03/26/comprehensive-guide-to-exact-match-domains-in-2020/
Published Date: Thu, 26 Mar 2020 16:02:05 +0000


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Search specialist shares five ways to adapt your search strategy in uncertain times

The events of the last few weeks have had a dramatic effect on millions of people’s lives. Uncertainty over health, childcare, work, food and the wellbeing of loved ones has dominated all of our thinking over the past few days.

Not only has it changed the way we’re shopping and interacting with others, an expert at online search specialist Epiphany, Paul Norris, has looked at how it has impacted what users are turning to the internet for and advises how businesses can adapt their search strategy during this tricky time.

The Prime Minister’s speech on 13th March 2020 served as a catalyst for many to search for “working from home essentials” with searches such as computer chairs increasing by 185%.

As a nation, we also considered our options for emergency deliveries, including “wine delivery” services, which nearly tripled in just one week.


search strategy and trends in tricky times

As people’s searches change to reflect new (increasingly home-based and socially distant) situations, it’s important that marketers adapt to the shifts in search behavior.

Here are a few ways to navigate the next few weeks and to prepare for when we emerge from the current situation:

1. Identify and capitalize on emerging trends

Monitor your search query reports closely – look for increased use of convenience and supply modifiers as availability and fulfillment is valued more. Searches containing “near me” have started to fall as queries for “online” services have increased.

If your business offers quick deliveries (and can still fulfill them), ensure it’s prominent in messaging, listings and on-site. Searches for next and same-day delivery will only continue to grow.

2. Listen to your visitors – use your site search reports and Hotjar polls

Your on-site search function is an absolute gold mine in times like these – demand and behavioral changes from your visitors are picked up directly. Use the Site Search report in GA (found under “Behaviour” on the left-hand side) as a listening board.


closely monitor site search reports to effectively work on your search strategy

Surface the most-searched-for products and services on relevant high traffic pages. Rethink, test and measure your carousels and other key product and service listing elements where relevant. Enabling Hotjar (or similar) polls can also enable you to get more specific insight.

3. Shift budget into investment channels

If you’re pulling back on sales activation because demand is dropping, look to move that budget and resource into a medium and longer-term activity that will pay dividends when demand picks up. With the previous points in mind, conduct a meta-data review and weave more highly valued services such as next day delivery into titles and descriptions. Has content taken a back seat? There are some definite benefits to content strategy, planning, and creation with the headspace you’re afforded when working from home.

4. Bypass dev queues and do what you can from your CMS

Prioritizing your activity in a busy dev queue can be difficult at the best of times. If dev time is booked up because the team is completely promo and sales activation focused, do what you can. Are you able to edit content and optimize existing pages in the CMS? Can you create new landing pages in your CMS without tech intervention? If so, now is the time to utilize those capabilities.

5. Maximize performance where demand is strong

Identify where demand remains strong (or has even picked up) and do what you can to capture and convert it. Your top landing pages and product reports are a good first port of call and can provide you with some quick wins. Segmenting and analyzing site performance by product/area/service (depending on your sector) can help you identify and capitalize on bigger emerging trends. If you’re a retailer, think about splitting out essential and non-essential products.



Paul Norris is Senior Strategist & Head of London Operations at Epiphany.

The post Search specialist shares five ways to adapt your search strategy in uncertain times appeared first on Search Engine Watch.


By: Paul Norris
Title: Search specialist shares five ways to adapt your search strategy in uncertain times
Sourced From: www.searchenginewatch.com/2020/03/27/search-specialist-shares-five-ways-to-adapt-your-search-strategy-in-uncertain-times/
Published Date: Fri, 27 Mar 2020 15:09:30 +0000


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How to Make Your Website SEO-Friendly When You Can’t Code | Neil Patel



A lot of people think that you have to know coding when it comes to doing SEO. They fear that they won't be able to optimize their site because they know nothing about HTML or coding and they're going to get paralyzed. But there's a lot of tools that you can help you with the really important parts of SEO without you having to lift a finger when it comes to coding. Today I'm going to break down how make your website SEO-friendly when you can't even code. RESOURCES & LINKS: ____________________________________________ Google Structured Data Helper: https://www.google.com/webmasters/markup-helper/ Schema Markup Generator: https://technicalseo.com/tools/schema-markup-generator/ Cloudflare: https://www.cloudflare.com/ Yoast:https://wordpress.org/plugins/wordpress-seo/ Rank Math: https://wordpress.org/plugins/seo-by-rank-math/ ____________________________________________ So the first way that you can make your website more SEO-friendly is schema generators. By having it, it can drastically increase your CTR compared to your competitors when they don't have it. Especially let's say you're selling a product and you have the review rating there and people know yours is a five star out of five based on 500 reviews, whereas your competitors, they don't have any of that data in their schema markup. Well, luckily there are schema generating tools out there that can help you out. Here are some good ones. Google Structured Data Helper. This tool allows you to visually tag elements on your webpage and generate proper markup. Another one is Schema Markup Generator. This tool helps you create code that you can simply copy and paste into your site's HTML. The next thing you need to do is start leveraging XML sitemap generators. And you're probably wondering, why is a site map important for SEO? Well, if Google has a hard time crawling your site, then those pages may not be indexed. If Google has a easy time crawling your site, you're likely to have more pages that are indexed, and more of those pages are probably going to rank higher. Now, with a sitemap, what this is doing is telling Google, hey, here's a whole list of all the pages that are on my site, and please index them. They may not index them all, but you got a better chance of them crawling your site and indexing it. If you can't forget out how to create a XML sitemap, no worries, there's Screaming Frog. This is software that can help you with a variety of SEO activities, including creating XML sitemaps. If you're on WordPress, you can just use the Yoast SEO plugin. But if you're not on WordPress, check out Screaming Frog, because it's going to help you. And once you generate that sitemap, make sure you submit it to Google Search Console because this will tell Google, hey, go crawl all of these pages. The next thing you need to do is create a robots.txt file. So why does a robots.txt file matter? Well, they tell robots which pages they should be crawling and which pages they shouldn't. Do you want Google to be crawling your sensitive pages that you don't want users to touch? Of course not. Let's say you have pages out there that you're continually improving, but you don't want Google to see, and you're using for, let's say, social media campaigns or a paid advertising campaign. These are all pages that you want to block through robots.txt. Now, Internet Marketing Ninjas has very simple robots.txt generator tool that you should check out. You can just plug in any of the pages you want, index in Google all the pages that you want excluded, and they'll create something for you. You just upload, and boom, you're off to the races. Next, you need a CDN to speed up your time. Faster sites create better user experiences, and those pages rank better on Google. Google has even said that they look at a load time of a site to determine its ranking as well. So CDN is a content delivery network, and what that does is put your site throughout servers all across the world. And there's this company called Cloudflare that helps put your site on all the servers throughout the world. Now, what's cool about Cloudflare is they have a free plan. So you can get started for free, and this can help improve your load times, which in theory will help improve your rankings over time as well without you being a developer. Next, I want to go over SEO and content optimization tools. A lot of times I receive the question, "How can I optimize my site for SEO?" Well, if you're not sure on how to optimize your site for specific keywords, having a tool to help you optimize your site can be a virtual lifesaver. ► If you need help growing your business check out my ad agency Neil Patel Digital @ https://neilpateldigital.com/ ►Subscribe: https://goo.gl/ScRTwc to learn more secret SEO tips. ►Find me on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/neilkpatel/ ►On Instagram: https://instagram.com/neilpatel/ https://youtu.be/Cfjn_515kr4 #SEO #NeilPatel #DigitalMarketing


By: Neil Patel
Title: How to Make Your Website SEO-Friendly When You Can’t Code | Neil Patel
Sourced From: www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cfjn_515kr4


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