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Last week, I had the chance to attend the Direct Marketing Association’s annual conference after presenting a social media case study at the DMEF, the Direct Marketing Educational Foundation. Yes—a social media case study Social marketing was on the agenda for much of the DMA 2011 Conference, as was paid search, SEO, web analytics, and email. Sessions explored the success of online communities, channel partner marketing, social media strategies, and email creative. It was a far cry from the stereotype of direct marketing as being all about mail campaigns and infomercials. Direct now encompasses all things digital, other than some display, and most things print. Direct is now the normal paradigm for marketing.

How did this come about? How did the DMA become the standard conference for all things marketing? For one thing, marketing has become increasingly direct. The reasons are multiple: consumers are now ignoring blanket campaigns—they tune out TV commercials, read fewer general and more niche print publications, and are handy at ignoring outdoor (when was the last time you stopped to admire a billboard?).

The best way to reach an audience now is through targeted messaging aimed directly at them—their region, their profession, their demographic, and most successfully, them personally. Direct is how consumers want to be reached, be it through email, targeted search, or even old-fashioned print. Does this mean broad campaigns are over? Certainly not—there’s still a role for television, outdoor, and broad-based social media acquisition campaigns. Often, the only way to acquire customers whom you can then reach directly is through a non-direct campaign.

But direct in all its forms is where the marketing dollars are now, because that’s where the ROI is—in the emails you send to your best customers with special offers, in the online community that mobilizes your brand advocates, in the print piece that beautifully conveys your message to a chosen audience. The ROI on email is still around $44 for each $1 spent. Marketers are projected to spend $3.1 Billion on social media by 2014, according to Forrester. Crafting your message thoughtfully with very specific groups of end users in mind is now essential to making your marketing message heard above the noise.

Direct isn’t easy. It requires far more thought, far more muscle than the broad campaigns of old. Having a good backbone of technical infrastructure is now essential-you don’t want to spend valuable time reinventing the wheel when automation and solid backend systems can take care of repetitive tasks. Integrating your testing, targeting, email, web analytics, basic SEO, and CRM into a cohesive unit provides the background for making direct work. So too, does breaking down silos within an organization to make sure that functional units within marketing talk to each other—or staying on top of trends if you’re among the many solo CMOs out there. It’s a big undertaking. But it’s also the key to reaching your customers in the one-on-one conversation they now expect from you.
 

admin
Oct 11, 2011

Several months into the radical changes brought about by Google’s Panda/Farmer update, it’s becoming apparent that user experience has grown in importance. The series of updates to how Google ranks sites for search results started in February, with successive changes rolled out through late July. The stated goal was to penalize lower-quality sites, and make the Google Search Engine Results Pages (SERPs) more responsive to social media.

What has resulted is a wholesale change in what makes a website come up on the first page of results when someone types in a search term.   Sites are now judged on a new set of criteria to determine if they’re worthy to rank in those coveted top spots. Gone are the days when simply writing a lot of content with the keywords you want to rank on, soliciting links to your page, and putting in the right title tags were close to enough. Google felt these criteria made the system too easy to “game.” To prevent this, they've changed their ranking algorithm, and added more human evaluation of web pages, rather than automated.
 
What now matters, note industry insiders, are a host of UX-related factors. OpenView Venture Partners’ Brendan Cournoyer specifically notes that user experience is a factor that ranks high for Google’s human evaluators of websites. Other key factors now, according to Wordtracker’s Mark Nunney, are
  • How many visitors return to your website after their first visit
  • How many pages they view per visit, and
  • How long they stay on your site
Although interesting content is the main reason people stay a long time on your site, view a lot of pages, and keep coming back, usability also a vital factor. If your site is easy to navigate, people stay. And great content needs to be made accessible and easy to find if visitors are going to enjoy it. Features that were once nice to have, such as social share buttons, are now among the most important, as Likes and Tweets impact search rankings. Navigation, share buttons, and layout join content and structure to form a much more complex way sites become highly ranked. Search has become about big-picture, strategic thinking, as it always was when done well.
 
Perhaps SEOmoz’s Rand Fishkin put it best when he said in a recent podcast: “the job of SEO has been upgraded from SEO to web strategist.” Looking holistically at your site, at the user experience in the fullest sense of the word, meaning how actual users are experiencing your site, is now the only way to rank high. 

 

Christina Inge
Aug 09, 2011

When working on a site redesign, one of the main questions site owners often have is how to make sure that months and years of careful SEO work, often building to #1 rankings in the search engines, can be preserved when the new site launches. We’ve all heard of site relaunches in which a company dropped from page one in Google to page 20, or disappeared for weeks altogether. Then there are complaints from users who had a specific page bookmarked, only to find it gone when they visit the site. These concerns are especially top of mind when deploying a new CMS. Fortunately, with good content migration practices, all of these issues can be averted, and a site can maintain its top rankings.

For the purposes of SEO, migrating content over depends on first determining which pages have value, and then migrating them over to the new site in a way that preserves their value. Determining which of your pages has value is the more complex process. You’ll need to look at every page of your site to make sure hidden SEO gems are not overlooked. To measure value accurately, you need to use multiple tools, too:

  • A web analytics solution
  • A ranking tool such as RankChecker, to measure where a page ranks on different search engines for specific keywords
  • A backlink checker, also called a link popularity tool, to measure how many websites link to a specific page

With these tools, you’ll be able to analyze each page to determine whether a page is worth migrating based on these criteria:

 

A page doesn’t need to meet all four criteria to be worth migrating. Indeed, as long as it meets one, it’s generally worth migrating. When in doubt, migrate over more, not less, for maximum SEO value.

Migrating Your Content to Preserve Rankings

Once the decision is made to migrate, preserving value is a matter of making sure search engines (and customers) can still find the pages:

  • If possible, use the same URL, and simply change the template of the page
  •  If you must change URLs due to rebranding, company merger, or name change, or the use of an entirely new domain name, use 301 redirects to tell  search engines that the new URL is the permanent new address of the content of the page from the old URL
  • If you need to eliminate pages entirely—for instance, because you’ve discontinued a specific product or program—provide 401 redirects to pages where people can find similar information, so loyal visitors don’t become frustrated when they can’t find information they had bookmarked

An Opportunity for Change

 

Managing SEO during a site relaunch is not all about preservation—it also presents new opportunities. Properly deployed, Drupal can enhance your existing SEO efforts, with its numerous modules for controlling key data that search engines use to determine rankings. New site launches are often part of a larger rebranding, and SEO can, and should, be part of the mix.

Preserving the URL of a page with SEO value is important, but other aspects of the page can be changed—and in fact, you can use the opportunity of a site redesign to change TITLE tags, descriptions, image ALT text, and more. Don’t completely revamp the content of the page—after all, you were ranking highly for that quality content—but make sure your META tags are making the most of that content. Look at your headings and descriptions, especially if your website relaunch is part of an overall rebranding. Things change with rebranding, and you should ensure that your new descriptions—what searchers see first, before they even come to your site—accurately reflect your new messaging and brand. With good planning, a site relaunch can breathe new life into your SEO, as well.

Christina Inge
Apr 29, 2011
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