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Showing posts with label "search engine marketing" Google Local. Show all posts
Showing posts with label "search engine marketing" Google Local. Show all posts

Monday, August 24, 2009

Local search opportunities and challenges

This is a screen shot from the ReachLocal website. Leslie-Anne McAlllister has been marketing the local search co-ordinator's services by building relationships on Internet forums such as remodelcrazy.com.

Yesterday, I had a fascinating conversation with Leslie-Anne McAllister, who represents ReachLocal, a search engine marketing agency.

Based in Atlanta, McAllister naturally gets most of her business within her own region, but she isn't restricted in her territories, and so we initially "met" through the remodelcrazy.com forums.

McAllister believes paid local search provides the best marketing opportunities for many businesses. Budgets will vary, but you can expect to spend $2,000 or so a "cycle" for paid keyword searches. The "cycle" won't be less than a month, but could go longer, depending on how keywords are taken up by the search engines, or the business's operational or seasonal requirements.

Not surprisingly, big Yellow Pages advertisers are the primary market for local Internet search providers, especially clients who want to mind their business more than the Internet, and are used to having dedicated advertising representatives to guide them in their decision-making.

McAllister makes a few interesting points. First, although she uses the moniker "Google Girl" in her online postings, she says Google is not the 900 pound gorilla in local search. Yahoo and Microsoft's Bing share the spotlight -- and she says Bing is currently providing better value and results than Google.

(She says ReachLocal isn't beholden to any single search engine, "We're agnostic", meaning her business will place the search engine ads with whatever provider provides the best results for her clients.)

Of course, local search services like ReachLocal provide some genuine advantages over the old Yellow Pages. You aren't locked into irreversible annual contracts with a fixed message; you can track, measure, and change your advertising strategies virtually instantly, and you can reach target markets and specific demographics easily.

(McAllister says the Yellow Pages, in fact, probably is only really useful these days in some specialized circumstances -- say you provide emergency roofing service and wish to get information out to potential clients when the power is out.)

Of course, the question arises, could you do things yourself, and would organic rather than paid search be a better value?

McAllister says the "do it yourself" approach is usually false economy, with experience, not-so-obvious keyword combinations often provide much better results, and the tracking and managing of local search is a task that truly is beyond most businesses. For example, she said: "Lots of people think Atlanta Plumbing or Atlanta Plumber is the way to go, but that can cost $10 to $14 a click, when 'leaky faucet' at $1.10 may be better, or localized search such as Roswell or Kennesaw might be more appropriate if you are in these neighbourhoods or suburbs."

However, she says one of the most important preconditions for success is to have a solid website, and she will recommend prospective clients fix their sites before they get started with an organized local search marketing campaign.

(ReachLocal also provides tracking resources for other media; you can include a tracking number in your print ads, for example. Calls are funneled through special phone numbers ensuring that businesses know how many people are calling from their online advertising.)

These points made, I asked if search engine marketing is best for business-to-business services such as hers (or ours). And here, I confirmed an important marketing distinction. She says that she gets most of her business through online forums, networking, community activities, and repeat business -- that she wouldn't expect search engine marketing to provide enough volume of the right type of clients for her own marketing, and probably not for mine.

In essence, she uses appropriate marketing techniques to market her own marketing services.

Can she (or anyone) help everyone?

"I have to make sure that we don't raise unrealistic expectations," she said. One electrician wanted to spend no more than $500 a month, and wasn't certain if he wanted to serve commercial or residential clients, for example.

This person will have trouble getting results, especially if he is expecting immediate reward.

Another contractor, with a specialized service, wanted to cover a wide geographical area. She suggested he narrow his search parameters to communities closer to his home.

Friday, July 31, 2009

Plumbing and plumber marketing: The accidental discovery


A search of Google keywords "Plumbing Marketing" leads you to plumbermarketing.com, not Adam Hudson's Plumbingmarketing.com, which I discovered yesterday. Why?

Yesterday, I reported on my discovery of some really useful resources at Adams Hudson's Plumbingmarketing.com site (one of a network of sites he operates from Alabama.) But what do you find when you key in "Plumbing marketing" without quotes on Google?

Another site, plumbermarketing.com has first ranking (at least from my Canadian base, but using the global Google search engine, not its "Canadian" version. That takes us to this site, whose domain is owned by Torske & Sterling Pty Ltd. in Sydney, Australia. When you search into Torske & Sterling, you find some stuff relating to "legal marketing" which of course makes this even more confusing.


Nevertheless, yesterday evening, in searching for the ownership of plumbermarketing.com I inadvertently used the whois.sc tool to research "plumbingmarketing.com" and discovered Adams Hudson's site, truly accidentally. His hudsonink.com site ranks fourth on the first page for "plumbing marketing", but the "plumbingmarketing.com" site is nowhere to be found. In any case, as I reported a few weeks ago, there are big differences in search site visits and time spent between first and fourth place on the Google rankings.

I have calls out to both Hudson and someone named Grant, who provides phone numbers serving the U.S., Canada, Australia, and the U.K., and provides audio testimonial clips focusing on U.S. clients. I sense Plumbermarketing.com has a cleaner, simpler, and less stereotypical Internet interface, but the real key to its success may be the mysterious Torske & Sterling in Australia.

The research continues, but I had one other question to solve: How important and valuable are the search terms "plumbing marketing" and "plumber marketing"?

Here I used the Google Keyword Analysis tool to discover that the local search volume in June was 590 inquiries, with the monthly global search inquiries at 720. "Plumber Marketing" meanwhile had 110 and 170 searches respectively.

For comparison sake, I tried "Construction Marketing" and discovered 12,100 local searches and 9,900 global searches.

This doesn't necessarily mean this blog has a better "place" in the actual keyword value because more people who are really interested in -- and willing to pay for -- plumbing marketing services may go to the appropriate plumbing site(s) than here. But I'm not complaining!

Can we learn anything from this research?

First, most readers here are seeking to serve local rather than international markets. If you are a contractor in Chicago, you don't really want inquiries from people seeking services in New York -- though you might want potential customers based in New York but with a job in Chicago to find you!

Second, a great search engine ranking does little for you if you cannot convert the initial inquiries into real clients. This is easier said than done, and is a key element of my current research project (one I wish to solve, because of truly enlightened self interest.)

But I am going to take a stab on explaining why I think Google may like plumbermarketing.com so much more than plumbingmarketing.com.

Back-end SEO sophistication
Torske & Sterling appears to know something about SEO. I'll call them to see if I can learn more about what they are doing and how (assuming they will share things with me).

Simple design using video and audio tools
Note the audio clip and video image

Multi-national contact information
This may not be helpful if you are purely local, but if you have a worldwide service, Google probably loves it.

There are some puzzling gaps on the successful site. For example, you can't easily find who "Grant" really is, and I can't determine on the surface exactly where the site owner is located! These would seem to be essential in building real trust (but, then again, the top Google ranking may trump these qualities.)

Monday, July 20, 2009

How important is it to be first on Google?

This chart showing the importance of high ranking on Google is published in Distribution of Clicks on Google's SERPs at seoresearcher.com, October 26, 2006.

How important is it for your architectural, engineering or construction business to be in first place with relevant keywords for organic Google searches?

The answer is "very" if you consider two important elements, the percentage of searches that rely on Google, and the amount of attention given to the top position on the search rank compared with others, even on the first page of organic search listings, at least if you can believe one widely quoted study from Cornell University researchers Laura A. Granka, Thorsten Joachims and Geri Gay.

The Cornell study using student volunteers discovered that 56.26 per cent of people click on the first organic listing, and the number of clicks declined to 13.45 per cent for second place and 9.82 per cent at third place. Near the bottom, the 10th ranked spot attracts 2.55 per cent and the seventh ranked is in a kind of black hole, at 0.36. Nevertheless, if you are in the top three spots, you have an advantage in two ways: First, 79.63 per will click within the first three places, and they will spend 68.23 per cent of their time there.

How important, however, is Google in relationship to other search alternatives? According to comScore, in June 2009, Google had close to two thirds of the search market at 65 per cent, followed by Yahoo at 19.6 per cent and Microsoft's new Bing at 8.4 per cent. (See this Eweek.com story, Microsoft Bing Gamed Market Share in June, says comScore.)

If you extrapolate this data, you can see how important it is to have top spot on Google -- more than 35 per cent of the total search volume from all engines and sources occurs if you are lucky enough to be first there.

My check shows this blog is referenced in the first, third and fourth places on Google when you search "Construction Marketing" (without quotes), suggesting it is capturing almost 45 per cent of all search inquiries from all engines, based on the Google searches alone. The actual numbers are probably better. While this blog doesn't rank as highly on Bing and Yahoo.com, it still is in the first three to four places.

If you fear you don't think you have a chance of reaching these glorious heights, I should add a couple of other important considerations: Geographical targeting, and true keyword relevance.
Increasingly, Google is segmenting its search results to achieve greater localization. Certainly, at the highest level, Google results vary by country, but Google Local is creating a new level of relevance if you are strong within your community, and have little market elsewhere.

The second point, true keyword relevance, relates to the actual probability of someone searching for your keyword with the intent of finding you (or your type of business). This is where Google has been so successful -- its search results generally are relevant, and it appears to bias its results so that business manipulation to achieve top ranking doesn't really help very much. In other words, (unless you pay Adwords for the privilege), you can't pay your way to the top.

The consequence of negative publicity for high search engine rankings can be equally devastating.

Consider the story of Christian Kirschner in Denver, who declared personal bankruptcy at the same time as the High Country Club destination club he founded went bankrupt earlier this year, leaving hundreds of people who had prepaid for vacations in the queue of unsecured creditors. This thread on the Destination Club Forums tells the story.

One of the forum's participants noted:
When you do a Google search of Christian Kirschner this website is #1 and #2 in the SERP (Search Engine Results Page).

Statistically 1st place gets 42.1% of all clicks for the search and 2nd place gets 11.9% or 54% of all mouse clicks are done for #1 and #2.

Job well done.

Now try for #3 which adds an additional 8.5%....
(Full disclosure: Our family participated in this club and we had four successful vacations before the business failed.)

Kirschner
is working to rebuild his Denver-based Kirschner Partners real estate brokerage business. Despite the Destination Clubs Forum reference, his brokerage's own listing has first place on Google searches from our Canadian location. I cannot tell from here how he ranks in Denver, where it matters the most to him.

Sunday, June 28, 2009

A reminder about Google Local

This Contractortalk.com thread and Seth Holdren are reminding contractors to waste no time in clarifying their free listings on Google Local.

When something is free, takes just a few minutes, and can profoundly affect your search results and in-bound business over the next few years, you should not hesitate to take immediate action.