Search Engine Marketing

Clarity in Search Engine Marketing and Advertising

In explaining website marketing and advertising, we often refer to the search engine results page as being like a split-screen television. The natural , organic results appear in the left/center of the page, and the ad results (called “Sponsored Links” in Google AdWords) display on top center and down the right side column. While both results are triggered simultaneously by the same search, the mechanisms behind the two types of results have many differences.

Search Marketing PPC Keywords: Attracting or Filtering Searchers

In this posting, when we use “keywords”, it relates to search terms, also known as “queries”, which computer users type in the search box when searching online. The term “keywords” is also used elsewhere: regarding page code (“meta tag keywords”); and in describing content on web pages (“keyword density”). A computer user’s query with keywords simultaneously triggers a search engine results page (SERP) containing both natural/organic results in the center of the page and ads on the top and side of the page. This fact usually compounds the confusion in those new to search marketing.

Twelve Factors To Consider When Having A Website Overhauled Or A New Site Built

Many business owners are surprised to learn that a website can look good, contain many pages of original content, and still not be found by the search engines. Or even when it gets traffic, the same site may not be effective at converting visitors from natural or pay per click traffic to customers. Depending on the category, more than half the visitors “bounce off” the average website. This means they exited the landing page without going deeper or stayed less than a prescribed amount of time, usually 30 seconds for most web analytics programs.

How To Use Search Engine Marketing and Sponsored Links In A Slower Economy

Reach Potential Customers While They They Are Searching

The most powerful benefit of search marketing is remarkably simple: the link for your website gets displayed to your potential customers at the moment they are actively searching online. When there are fewer potential customers in your market due to a slower economy, it becomes even more important for the link to your website to be on the first page of search results.

Opportunities When Your Competitors Don’t Plan

Why Online Searchers Often Do Not Include a City Name or Geodescriptor in Their Queries

From our experience with search engines, online ads, and local advertisers, we can say with certainty that searchers looking for products or services to be purchased locally often do not include the name of their city, town, or zip code in their searches. We’re talking a lot of the time…around half or more in some verticals. From the search perspective, this is significant, because including a city name usually triggers local natural search results as opposed to what we’ll call national results to contrast the two.