SEM - Research Measures Success
Search engine marketing success comes from good research. By
applying research to understand your competition and target
audience, your optimization efforts will succeed.
Remember when homework from school often required some research on your part to complete? It is much the same scenario for
search engine marketing: you need to apply yourself by
researching in order to understand your competition and
target audience. Your visitors need to relate to you and
understand your message and what you want them to do.
Know Your Industry
You must spend time understanding the industry you are
trying to make a profit from. If you sell widgets, know
everything you can about widgets: where they come from, how
they are typically sold, why people need them, etc. You can
learn a great deal from your competitors. Research using
industry communications such as online magazines, forums,
newsletters and blogs. Read articles written by industry
leaders and keep up on the latest news about your industry.
The more you know, the better your basis for building an
authoritative website.
What's Your Point?
Ok, so you've got this product you want to sell online. What
are you saying to your audience? Make sure you write in a
clear, concise way so your message does not get lost in the
process. Just because everyone in your company understands
your message doesn't mean the visitors to your site will.
Have a few test scenarios set up; ask a few objective
readers what they understand from your website and see just
how much your message is getting across. You'd be surprised
that what may be obvious to you is not necessarily obvious
to your website visitors. If you are having trouble creating
a clear message for your website, consider hiring a
copywriter to convey what you want to say.
Know Your Target Audience
Who buys your product and why? Who needs the information you
have on your website? Who would you like to have visit your
website that isn't already there? Who is visiting you? Are
they professionals who understand your technical terms or
visitors of varying levels who all need the same information
from you? What do you offer that a certain market would want
from you? Take the time to get a good look at what is out
there and how your competitors are presenting their
information to online visitors. Use your log statistics
reports to track who comes to your website. Get familiar
with the keyword terms they are using in the search engines
to find you. Research the domains that most visit you. Find
out why visitors are clicking away from certain pages before
going deeper into the content of your website. Is it a lack
of information? Too many choices to click on? Is the
language used or instructions given easy to understand?
Don't give your visitors a reason to leave before they
understand your message.
Know Your Competition
Take a good look at your top competition and see what they
are offering online. Even looking at websites that are not
direct competitors may give you an idea of what to offer
your visitors. Think of it this way: someone put effort into
creating those websites. Visit your competitor's website.
Search in the major search engines for your most important
keyword phrases and see if your competitors show up in the
top thirty search engine results. Learn what you can and see
if what they are doing is something you should be doing.
It's always good to know if your competitors are using SEO,
Paid Inclusion, PPC, Link Building and other means to rank
well.
Make Your Website Accessible
There's nothing worse than muddling through a website
looking for what you want and clicking so much you finally
give up. Use easy navigation, make sure your information or
products are easily accessible to your visitors. Create
written text that is easily understood in order to get your
message across readily. Give your visitors plenty of written
information. There's no such thing as "too much text" when
it comes to search engine robots "understanding" your web
pages. What's good for the visitor is often good for the
search engine robots.
Do The Work
Research is the cornerstone to your success. The more you
know about your subject, the better you will be able to
inform your visitors. By informing your visitors you build
trust and interest in learning more about your website. Do
the math - get searching!
Daria Goetsch is the founder and Search Engine Marketing Consultant for Search Innovation Marketing, a Search Engine Marketing company serving small businesses. She has specialized in Search Engine Optimization since 1998, including three years as the Search Engine Specialist for O'Reilly Media, Inc., a technical book publishing company.
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