Archive for the 'SEO (AU)' Category

Oct 07 2011

The SEO eCommerce Checklist

Our consulting team is often asked about what areas should be focused on when thinking about search for purchase driven or etail sites, as in today’s retail market companies really need to gain that competitive advantage. So, we’ve compiled this checklist as a foundation for what we like to call a ‘search friendly’ site.

The ultimate goal of search engine optimisation is to get Google to nod it’s head to your keywords, you can control this:

1) On-page Optimisation: keyword optimisations you make in your web page code

  • Distinguish between “content” and “administrative” pages – then optimise only content pages.
  • Choose just one keyword phrase per content page
  • Use the keyword in your page’s file name; delimit with dashes
  • Use keyword in the page title, “meta description” (twice if possible)
  • Use keyword in a headline (use H1 or H2). Usually this is your page title.
  • Use keyword several times in the body text where reasonable.
  • Make sure your content is useful. Ok, search engines aren’t that smart, but visitors are.

2) Off Page Optimisation: The links coming into your site

  • Submit your site to all the standard directories
  • Submit article-style content to for syndication, making sure your content contains many keyword links back to your other content pages. This will get you hundreds of quality keyword links.
  • Periodic press releases.
  • Create a Google site map and submit it to Google.
  • Create RSS feeds of your content and submit to various feed lists. This method will get you several hundred minor links per content page.
  • Add a “link to this page” box on every content page to encourage deep-linking with the right keywords
  • Locate quality sites linking to your competitor – contact the owner and suggest that they mention your site as an alternative option for their visitors. It’s amazing how many quality links you can get just by asking politely.

3) Site Optimisation: The navigation and linking structure you use across your site

  • Don’t use both www.yourdomain.com and yourdomain.com. Pick one or the other and stick to it
  • Don’t link to your home page as index.html. Google only knows pages by link target
  • Each content page should be linked to with one consistent keyword-friendly URL, and never with parameters

bad: http://firstrate.com.au/forum.php?topic=873736
good: http://firstrate.com.au /my-keyword-tp873736.html

  • Link to each content page with static text links (not JavaScript, not Flash, or Images) and the anchor text of links should contain the target page’s keyword phrase.

bad link: “click here for split testing tools” - this just confuses the search engine
good link: “click here for split testing tools”

  • Don’t link back to your home page with the link text “home”…
  • Interlink between content pages from within paragraph text. These links seem to “count” more and will get you a bigger ‘nod of the head’ from Google.

Site Optimisation is the most powerful SEO area over which you have total control! It’s all about how you link your pages together. If done properly, it can have a significant impact.

These are only some suggestions to think about. If you have any questions about best practice SEO for etail, write us a comment below or send an email to experts@firstrate.com.au

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Aug 04 2011

IAB Award Winning Case Study: Focus Property

Download our award winning case study

The Power of Longtail: Focus Property

First Rate increases leading brand’s search engine rankings, powering their online business so that they rank above their competitors.

We have 30 consultants across Sydney, Perth and Auckland managing over 100 Google Adword Campaigns and generating over 1 million clicks a month and are proudly Google Analytics and Google Adwords certified.

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Jul 29 2011

First Rate Wins IAB Award for Organic Search (SEO)

First Rate has taken the top prize for the IAB Australia Awards 2011, in the Organic Search (SEO) category for our client Focus Property.

The awards were held last night in Sydney and we’re all stoked to have claimed the top prize amongst a high calibre of entrants. Judges commented that our entry was

“a very well laid out entry with a nice focus on the right aspects of SEO. The point of differentiation is that they ticked criteria for SEO but went above and beyond focusing on Longtail strategy.”

Award Winning Case Study: The Power of Longtail, Focus Property

The state of play

Focus Property is Sydney’s leading property management firm. Currently managing over a 1/4 billion dollars worth of residential real estate with in Sydney’s CBD. Focus Property enlists services such as sales, letting and property management.

Our client operates in a highly competitive market with many large and established players, such as Ray White, LJ Hooker, Run Property and the Carrington Group. The competitors had strong presence in not only the property management segment but also the sales and letting segments.  Focus Property realised that an increasing amount of new business was being generated through the web as buyer behavior evolved, especially through the search engines.

The Strategy

First Rate was engaged to help improve search engine visibility and drive qualified organic leads and increase footprint. While there was a significant traffic available for head terms such as “property management”, these would not be best for converting into high quality leads. This is because they were generic and at the research phase of the buying cycle rather than being brand focused in their search queries.

First Rate discovered Focus Property had service offerings in 118 suburbs that had sufficient volume to blanket the long tail search market.  Long tail local keywords were focused on because collectively the volume of these keywords was large and anticipated that conversion rate and lead quality would be greater. This was consistent with focus on generating high quality traffic. Personalized landing pages were created for the target suburbs, giving more personalized pages and relevant content. Suburb pages were created and optimized for terms such as “<suburb> property management” and variants of that. This would then result in high quality localized leads.

Tactics

Content would be needed to target the identified keywords for example, “Bondi Property Management” and no 1 for virtually all terms relating to suburb name, property management as above. Working with Focus Property, we created pages for each of the 118 target suburbs, containing information and photos specific to each suburb Information was sourced from a number of locations such as the Australian Bureau of Statistics. This created rich content for the search engines, as well as creating a relevant, personalized landing page experience for prospects as originally forecast.

Results

We saw not only a significant increase in unique visits and visits from organic search but also an increase in ranking for head and secondary terms securing the head term as ranking number 1.

  • In 12 months traffic jumped from 481 visits per month in Dec 09 to over 3300 unique visits per month in Dec 10.
  • Monthly visits from non-paid, non-brand organic search increased 15 fold (from roughly 110 visits in Dec ’09 to over 1,700 visits in Dec ’10).
  • #1 ranking in Google for head term “property management” achieved in early 2011.
  • Top 5 rankings for a variety of secondary terms.



Get in touch with our team for more information about the power of longtail or SEO.

experts@firstrate.com.au

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Mar 28 2011

Press Coverage: Why you need SEM

Read Mark Baartse, Consulting Director of First Rate’s comments on one of the most important things that you need to know about SEM in this recent .NETT article by Luke Telford.

Every small business wants to get more online exposure for their brand online. This is why SEO is such a competitive industry. Businesses are constantly vying for the number one spot in search listings, but what many don’t know is that there’s more than one way to get there.
A term that is often used interchangably with SEO is SEM, or search engine marketing. SEM is significantly different to SEO, and it’s important for anyone who is trying to improve their search rankings to understand how each of the services can benefit their business in different ways.
Every time someone uses a search engine, they encounter SEM. SEM results are the highlighted links that appear at the top, and in a column to the right of search results. Advertisers pay to appear in the results for specified keywords. When a searcher clicks on their link, the advertiser is charged a commission by the search engine.
Kate Conroy, product specialist for AdWords at Google Australia, explains that SEM is essentially a way for businesses to buy ads or sponsored links on search engines.
“It’s distinct to SEO, which stands for search engine optimisation, which is about making your website more search engine friendly, so that it shows up higher higher in the organic, or free search engine lists,” she explains.
One major benefit to SEM is that it can provide a very quick turnaround in search results.
“SEM can give you immediate results,” explains Mark Baartse, consulting director of First Rate. “[It allows you to] respond a lot faster to changing market conditions, and you can respond a lot better to changing campaigns.”
“One of the most important things about SEM is that it’s a very quick way to get a presence on a search engine,” says Google’s Conroy. “When you buy sponsored links, or ads, on a search engine, you can often be up and running in under an hour, so you can have your ads showing very quickly. Whereas for SEO, generally it’s a very long-term project, so you may have to spend months or even potentially years making changes to your website and waiting to see if that will improve your results in search engines.”
Another benefit of SEM is that it allows you to control the exact details of the message that the searcher sees.
“With SEO, you can’t always control the page that people are going to end up on. With SEM you can,” says Conroy. “If you have a good understanding of your site, and which pages are likely to lead to something that’s going to cause a profit for the business – like buying something or coming in to visit your store – then SEM is going to give you greater control over that. You can put them in a place on your site where they’re more likely to drive the business’s bottom line.”
“Probably the big advantage with the SEM side of things is the real ability to tailor your marketing message,” explains Craig Somerville, managing director of Reload Media. “If you’ve got a great offer like ‘free delivery’ or ‘overnight shipping’, or if you’ve got a price point on a particular product, then you can get that across to the potential customer as they’re searching for that product, and display it to them in those four lines.”
SEM also allows businesses to set up a very specific way of measuring its return on investment.
“It gets to the point where you can actually track how profitable every single keyword you’re running is,” explains Somerville. “You can also track things like which ad messages are working best. You might find out for instance that free delivery is working better than overnight shipping, or that free gift wrapping is a better offer,” he continues. “So you can actually use SEM as a really good way to A/B split test your marketing messages which can then help drive other marketing strategies as well.”
The practical application that sets SEM apart from SEO is that it allows businesses to target short-term goals like marketing campaigns and promotional offers. Whilst the benefits of it are much more direct and measurable than SEO, explains Google’s Conroy, it shouldn’t be viewed as a replacement.
“We recommend for all businesses, if they’ve got the time and the budget, that they should be looking at both SEM and SEO,” she suggests.
One reason for this is that the cumulative effect of having the top ranking position in both paid and organic search generates more traffic than either would separately. “Let’s say that somebody types in a keyword for Katoomba Accommodation, and your business is actually showing on both the free listings and the paid listings, the clickthrough rate on both will go up, so it’s greater than the sum of its parts, just because you own more real estate on the page,” explains Conroy.
One criticism of using paid search is that most searchers just ignore the sponsored results, automatically blanking them out in favour of the ostensibly more relevant organic listings. Despite this, Conroy insists that the paid links do generate quite a lot of traffic, although the amount depends considerably on the nature of the searcher’s query.
“Say for example someone puts in a query like ‘history of the roman empire’. In that case we wouldn’t expect that many clicks on ads, as it’s not really something that’s commercial in nature,” she explains. “But if we have someone type in ‘car insurance’, then we would actually expect a significant portion of the traffic to go to ads, because people are looking for somethingsthat’s commercial, and the ads are meeting that commercial need, often in a way that the natural search results are not, because they’ll say things like ‘Get a 10 per cent discount if you buy car insurance online’ or something like that.”
Conroy reports that in her personal experience she’s seen clickthrough rates from anywhere between 1-2 per cent up to 50-60 per cent, especially for listings that target brand terms.
On the other hand, Reload’s Somerville has a more specific idea on the exact proportions between SEO and SEM clickthroughs.
“The average split is about 70 per cent SEO and about 30 per cent SEM,” he estimates. “But it depends on the search term. What we’ve found and what a lot of the other articles that have come out have shown is that SEM tends to be used by a more purchase-ready customer.”
Someone who’s at the information-gathering stage of the purchase cycle will probably favour organic listings over the paid results, elaborates Somerville.
“When the person actually gets ready to purchase stage, they’ll get to the point where they type in the exact make or model of the camera that they actually want,” explains Somerville, “and that’s where you’ve got to hit them with the targeted ad saying ‘this is the model you’re looking for, this is the price point, and a great offer like free delivery or guaranteed next day, or whatever it might be; that’s where we often see really good conversion rates on SEM, and that’s where the percentage of people clicking on paid ads actually goes up.”
Given this, many small business owners would no doubt like to know how many searches are commercial, rather than informational, in nature. Google’s Conroy explains that her company is also curious about this information, but has been unable to ascertain the exact figure itself.
“It’s a really tricky thing to do, because you need to discern a user’s intent from a query and often you get queries that could go either way,” explains Conroy. “If somebody’s searching for ‘Lamborghini’, for example, does that mean they want to buy one, or does that that mean they’re just a fan, and they want to read a fan site about other people who have this specific car. We’ve actually had people try and look at it, and we’ve found it hard to discern ourselves.”
See  the .NETT article here

follow mark on Twitter @markbaa

follow First Rate on Twitter @firstrateau

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