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Why Search Marketing is Different Brad Fallon CEO Free IQ [email protected] cell/text 404-849-2199 Copyright © 2006 Smart Marketing, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Search Marketing is Just Advertising ● Direct Response Advertising Not “Image Advertising” ● Well Established, Time Honored Rules ● Works Even Better on the Web Testing Analytics Speed Cost Copyright © 2006 Smart Marketing, Inc. All Rights Reserved. But Ad Placement is Different ● Off-line, you control placement and your message ● On-line, the message is “self placing” via search engine algorithms ● e.g. the Insertion Order Placement is a technical aspect of the message and things connected to the message Message and message placement are no longer independent Copyright © 2006 Smart Marketing, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Where Worlds Collide Copyright © 2006 Smart Marketing, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Where Worlds Collide ● ● Copywriting meets SEO Conversion demands control of the copy SEO demands control of the copy Site design is important for both Writing for both humans and machines Traffic depends on machines liking it Conversion depends on humans liking it Copyright © 2006 Smart Marketing, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Dealing with the Collision ● ● ● Trade-off: Traffic over Conversion “Write for the engines” Sub-optimal Conversion, but overwhelm with traffic Trade-off: Conversion over Traffic “Write for People” Traffic suffers, lots of PPC, but Conversion is Great Find an Integrated Solution The problem is technology The solution is more technology Copyright © 2006 Smart Marketing, Inc. All Rights Reserved. SEO Copywriting ● ● More than the sum of the parts Copywriting is easy SEO is even easier Putting them together is NOT Technology, Process and People Technology bar is raised substantially Integrated conversion and traffic management Combined skill sets Copyright © 2006 Smart Marketing, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Top 5 Critical Elements ● Page Title ● Meta Description ● Page Linking ● Site Linking Topology ● Paying Attention (Tracking/Changing) Copyright © 2006 Smart Marketing, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Page Title ● The most visible part of the “ad” ● Must persuade the searcher to click ● In less than 50 characters ● A critical element of message positioning ● Has to have the keywords ● Best to have the exact phrase ● What else is possible? Copyright © 2006 Smart Marketing, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Long Tail ● ● ● ● ● Where do you draw the line? “Buoyancy” Bigger the base, the higher the whole site does Think of animal standing on its own tail. Build out the long tail yourself. Example: Promotional products, stupid long tail, colors/sizes. Only way to win, rank for 80,000 words. Harder than it used to be to rank from outside links. The “footprint” problem Copyright © 2006 Smart Marketing, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Search Meta Description ● ● ● ● ● ● Needs to support the title (match) Second most important click-through control after Title and before URL We really would like it to read sensibly It is auto-generated [yikes!] often by grabbing first occurrence of search phrase. Take a second bite at the apple “First Occurrence” means first “in file” not “in view” -- a tedious technical task to control both Copyright © 2006 Smart Marketing, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Page Linking ● Humans understand and need links to consume your site ● You want to extend their site visit using links ● Short text, in context, is easiest to process ● ● Link text, including internal links, is critical to ranking. Worthy of a 90-minute webinar. (option) Search engines don't understand “context” so complete key phrases are best, but often won't fit the nav-bar Copyright © 2006 Smart Marketing, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Site Linking Topology ● Not all of our pages are sales pages ● And not all sales pages are created equal ● Humans need links to all of our pages ● Links distribute Google PageRank (PR) ● ● We only need PR in sales pages, not support pages We need two linking structures, one for Google and one for humans Copyright © 2006 Smart Marketing, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Paying Attention ● What to track and what to do about it ● Organic CTR ● Top 10/50/100 ● Big improvements are possible Copyright © 2006 Smart Marketing, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Important Trends ● Search is “Disruptive Technology” It changes the way we must work It changes our organizational structures and processes ● Long Tail Niches ARE the Market ● PPC vs CPM (trend bodes well for “customer”) ● One Site or Big Sites vs. Thousands of Sites ● Not “Adapt or Die” - but HUGE opportunities for early adopters. (“online dating” vs. “atlanta dentist”) Copyright © 2006 Smart Marketing, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Opportunity ● The Web Redefines Huge ● The Challenge ● Enormous wealth is available on-line “Overnight” success is the norm and still possible Adopting new technology Integrating new business processes The “one trick pony” is dead The Reality Guru vs. Process Continuing education: StomperNet, Free IQ “seo” (Jeff Johnson) Copyright © 2006 Smart Marketing, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Any questions? Chris Watson and will be at our table all day tomorrow. 1. $1 StomperNet 2. Free IQ New Media PPC Ads on a Long Tail Content Network with no competition Brad Fallon CEO, Free IQ [email protected] cell/text 404-849-2199 Copyright © 2006 Smart Marketing, Inc. All Rights Reserved.