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The top ten tricks to get more traffic and conversions from your website. From some easy wins, some free methods, some paid techniques and the ones that take a long time to take effect but you can do yourself and drive sales.
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@annstanley
An Integrated Approach to Driving More Traffic to Your Website
by
Ann Stanley
May 2012
@annstanley Top UK sites by visits Source: Hitwise week ending 8/5/2012
@annstanley
Part 1 - Top 10 Tips • Getting the basics right
– Customers and competitors
– Web Design and “Calls for action”
– Is your site mobile-ready?
– Measuring website performance with Google Analytics?
• Quick wins – Email marketing
– Local listings/Maps
– Google Merchant Centre for ecommerce sites
– Using Google AdWords or pay per click (PPC)
• Slow burns – Search engine optimisation (SEO)
– Social marketing - blogs, Twitter, FaceBook, LinkedIn etc
@annstanley
Customers, competitors and objectives
@annstanley
Understanding your customers? • Your website look and feel should be designed for your
target customers (especially age and demographics)
• All customers are consumers at heart – and they will judge you against the sites they like and use - rather than your competitors (the “John Lewis” effect)
• If you have more than one type of customer (eg consumers vs trade) make it easy for them to know where they need to go and what they can do on your site
• If you don’t meet your customers needs then your competitors will!
@annstanley
Target audience - site aimed at parents and kids
@annstanley
Target audience - site aimed at techies
@annstanley
Branding – lifestyle & aspirations
@annstanley
Who are your competitors? • Your competitors are not only the companies that
offer similar services to you, they include:
– Other companies that compete for your customers’ pounds
– Other companies that might appear for the same keyphrases in the search engines
• If you are redesigning your website make sure it has a better design and functionality than your competitors - as they may be building a new improved site right now!
@annstanley
The key to getting the best website
We need to get a balance between these elements
Design first impressions counts
Functionality
what the site does for the user and your
business
Content what the site says to the user and search
engines
@annstanley
Why is the design and first impression of your website so
important?
@annstanley
Instant impression of your website!
SECONDS
@annstanley
Example Britain’s Best Breaks – effect of design on web results
@annstanley
Examples of “calls for action”
@annstanley
Is your site mobile ready?
@annstanley
Device responsive design
• Same url for all devices rather than a separate mobile site or sub-domain • User detection agent (distinguishes device) • Liquid or responsive design suitable for each size device/operating system/browser • Mobile design often has a single column with most important content/features
moved to the top and in some cases some content hidden
@annstanley
Amazon.co.uk responsive design or Amazon.co.uk App
Main site – with adaptive CSS Amazon App
@annstanley
Using Google Analytics
@annstanley
Ecommerce – differences in conversion rate by traffic source
@annstanley
Analytics Conversion Attribution – top paths to a conversion
@annstanley
Use of email templates and reporting
@annstanley
“MailChimp” email marketing tool
@annstanley
Spike in traffic due to email
@annstanley
Analytics URL builder
@annstanley
How to get a local business listing - so you appear
next to the map?
@annstanley
Getting listed in Google Places (Local Search)
@annstanley
Add your company details
@annstanley Bing Map – listing through My118 Information
@annstanley
Using Google AdWords or pay per click (PPC)
@annstanley
Listings
dynamically
ordered by
bid price &
relevancy
2
User
submits
search
1
Pay Per Click in Action
User clicks
on paid link,
triggering
payment to
3
@annstanley
PPC Account Hierarchy
Keywords
3-30 per ad group
Ad Groups 20-100 per campaign (each has its own ad
copy and landing page)
Campaigns (<20)
(set a budget and targeting)
Timber
Timber Company
timber company
timber companies
Timber Merchant
timber merchants
builders merchants timber
Timber Supplies
timber supplies
timber supplier
@annstanley
Typical PPC results
Glossary
Impressions = number of times your ad is seen
Clicks = number of times searcher clicked on your ad
CTR = click through rate clicks divided by impressions (>2% indicates a more
relevant keyphrase and ad combination)
Avg CPC = average cost per click (amount paid when users click on your ad)
Cost = total spent in period (clicks times average cost per click)
Avg Position = Average position achieved in results
Conversions = completed sales or completed registrations
Conversion rate = conversions divided by clicks
Cost per conversion = total cost divided by number of conversions
@annstanley
Managing PPC – what’s important • Quality Score – Google’s measure of relevancy – it affects
your position and how much you pay (eg QS of 8/10 you pays half as compared with 4/10)
• Click through rate – pause phrases and ads with a CTR below<1%, otherwise this drags down your QS
• Position and bidding – you may have to bid lower (cost per click) and settle for position 3-6 to avoid the bidding war of position 1-3, where the CPC will be too high!
• Cost per acquisition (CPA) – most sites have a typical conversion rate of 1%. Your cost per sale or lead will be 100 x your cost per click – can you afford this?
@annstanley
Ad Extensions, Local Listings (map) and new Product Listing ads
@annstanley
Remarketing in AdWords (aka stalking)
@annstanley
Remarketing results
Client 1
(from Aug 2011)
Client 2
(from Jan 2011)
Client 3(from July 2011)
Client 4
(from Jan 2011)
Campaign Conv. (1-per-click)
View-through
Conv.
Conv. rate (1-
per-click) Conv. (1-per-click)
View-through
Conv.
Conv. rate (1-
per-click)
Conv. (1-per-click)
View-through
Conv.
Conv. rate (1-
per-click) Conv. (1-per-click)
View-through
Conv.
Conv. rate (1-
per-click)
TOTAL 445 84 1.7% 2833 220 2.57% 559 118 2.44% 862 1716 1.06%
Brand 39 0 6.7% 413 0 8.99% 433 0 5.13% - - -
Remarketing 9 84 2.3%* 54 215 3.11%* 15 118 1.34% 179 1716 3.06%*
Competitors - - - 216 0 2.01% - - - 184 0 1.88%
Vouchers 29 0 15.26%
Product 1 133 0 2.3% 1 0 50.00% 109 0 0.96% 2 0 1.57%
Product 2 12 0 1.9% 1 0 14.29% 17 0 1.48%
Product 3 156 0 1.7% 6 0 11.76% 85 0 1.29%
Product 4 30 0 0.8% 1 0 11.11% 13 0 1.18%
Product 5 5 0 0.7% 1 0 11.11% 25 0 1.05%
Product 6 2 0 0.5% 3 0 8.33% 155 0 1.03%
Product 7 93 0 7.98% 2 0 0.62%
Product 8 16 0 6.35% 22 0 0.61%
Product 9 3 0 5.88% 31 0 0.59%
Product 10 1 0 5.56% 31 0 0.58%
@annstanley
Google Merchant Centre for ecommerce sites
@annstanley
Integration with Google Merchant Centre
New Product Listing ads
AdWords product extensions
Shopping results from Merchant Centre
@annstanley
Summary of different shopping results in Google
Keywords =
Samsonite luggage
Organic shopping results
(Merchant Centre)
AdWords Products ad extension
Product Listing ads Map
and Places listings
@annstanley
Increase in daily traffic due to Merchant Centre
Merchant Centre set-up
@annstanley
Search engine optimisation (SEO)
On-page optimisation
@annstanley
Search engine results
Ads - paid
Display options
Organic or natural
results
Universal results –
news, shopping etc
@annstanley
How to get into the Google results • Map – create a free Google Places listings (also in Bing)
• Shopping results – feed your ecommerce database into Google Merchant Centre
• Images & videos – make sure these have keyphrases in the file names and tags
• News, blogs and Twitter results – create ongoing blog content on your site or via Twitter and news feed sites (PR)
• Sponsored Links – set up an AdWords pay per click account – where you bid on relevant phrases and you pay if they click on your ad
• Organic or natural listings – search engine optimise your website ie SEO
@annstanley
A search engine is made of three basic components:
A Spider or Robot An automated browser, it
searches the web for new
websites and changes to
websites then views the
web pages and strips out
the text content
A Storage System
or Database A record of all the pages
viewed by the Spider
A Matching Process or
Relevancy Algorithm The rules that tell the search
engine how to determine
what would be relevant to
your search
How Search Engines Work
@annstanley
Check that your site is indexed?
Do you have
keyphrases in
your url, title
and
description?
@annstanley
Google keyword research tool
@annstanley
Determine the level of competition
@annstanley
Page plan with levels of monthly searches vs competition (results in Google)
@annstanley
• Title Tag
• Meta Tags (description, keyword etc)
• Content
• Heading content
• Frequency of phrases (how many times they are mentioned)
• Density of phrases (proportion of the text)
• Internal Link structure with anchor text)
• Image optimisation (file names, Alt tags)
• Avoid Spam techniques and over-optimising
• Create new ongoing content on your site eg a blog
On-page factors
@annstanley
Keyphrase density (using SEOQuake)
@annstanley
Checklist for optimising your website • Carryout keyphrase research • Prioritise your keyphrase by high search volume and low
competition (use pay per click data if you have it?) • Produce a topic and a page plan (ie which pages are to be
optimised with which phrases) • Write new optimised content or existing and new pages,
(URL, title, description, headers, keyphrase density, anchor text, image optimisation)
• Upload your content through your CMS and add new links from the homepage for new pages eg in the footer (you may need to get your developer to do this)
• Add new optimised content every week via a blog • Review results using Webmaster Tools and Analytics
@annstanley
Search engine optimisation
Off-page
@annstanley
• Domain age • Domain name • Filename/full URL • Directory listings • External Link Structure • Anchor text of inbound links • Page quality of inbound links • Social bookmarks • Reviews and testimonials • Social indicators especially Google +1 and Facebook
“Shares”
Off-page factors
@annstanley
Key to Google’s algorithm:
• Indicator of value: PageRank • Indicator of relevance: Anchor text
Best links from:
• Highly trusted sites (high PageRank) • Pages with relevant content • Your keywords as anchor text
Why are Links important?
@annstanley
Off-page factors - Linking
@annstanley
Off-page factors - Linking
@annstanley
• Content that people will want to link to
• Free stuff
• Blog posts
• Useful documents/articles
• Online tools
• Video and audio
• Funny or entertaining content
• Your content on other sites
• Article syndication site
• Guest blogging
• Online PR
• Directories
Getting Links
@annstanley
Integrating PPC and SEO
@annstanley
Why use PPC data to determine the most effective keyphrases for SEO?
• It can take 6 -12 months to see the result of your SEO activities
• But you may have wasted your efforts on optimising for keyphrases with high volumes of searches but no conversions
• We recommend you use PPC data as part of your SEO strategy – Narrow down your list to the keyphrases that convert – Use as many months data as possible and use “See Search
Terms” to see the actual converting phrases – If you are not currently using PPC then you may want to run
a PPC campaign before starting your SEO, in order to understand your keyphrase profile
@annstanley Selecting keyphrases for SEO using PPC conversion data
Keyword Searches (phrase match)
Competition (Allintitle:
"keyphrase") Ratio
PPC data Conv. (1-per-
click)
See search terms
conversions Total
conversions
1 2900 14,200 0.20 307 307
2 27100 2,050,000 0.01 196 196
3 14800 598,000 0.02 185 185
4 2400 3,540 0.68 86 86
5 73 551 0.13 42 18 60
6 1600 472,000 0.01 29 29 58
7 590 82,400 0.01 49 49
8 58 168 0.35 48 48
9 4400 582,000 0.01 47 47
10 260 8,060 0.03 45 45
11 3600 516,000 0.01 44 44
12 880 210 4.19 43 43
13 16 366 0.04 25 11 36
14 260 28 9.29 16 18 34
15 140 10,500 0.01 29 29
16 210 8,270 0.03 16 12 28
17 3600 51,300 0.07 24 24
18 58 6 9.67 24 24
19 73 30 2.43 23 23
20 1600 205,000 0.01 22 22
@annstanley
Increase in organic traffic and sales Jan 2011 – Dec 2012 – visits from organic (dark blue line) vs revenue (light blue line)
Visits from organic 2011 (dark blue line) vs 2010 (orange line)
SEO project started July 2011
@annstanley
Social marketing - Blogs, Twitter, FaceBook, LinkedIn etc
@annstanley
Importance of social • Direct sales e.g. Facebook commerce
• Direct traffic e.g. Brand pages (Facebook, Google Plus, Twitter)
• Community, loyalty and word of mouth (Facebook Likes, Twitter, Reddit, Digg, Delicious) and social shopping sites e.g. Kaboodle
• Referrals, links and SEO benefit (Google Plus, Facebook Shares, social bookmarking)
@annstanley
Building Communities • Why?
– Marketing to a specific target market that uses the platform
– Loyalty and referrals – viral marketing
– Link building benefits for SEO
• How? – Recommendations and Social book marking eg Delicious, Digg
– Social Networking for promoting discount codes, events & competitions
– LinkedIn, Facebook Group, Twitter profiles
– PPC on these platforms (paid social)
@annstanley Social networking for businesses (personal vs company profiles)
@annstanley
Part 2 – what’s new in Google?
@annstanley
Google’s “Search, Plus Your World”
@annstanley
Panda?
LSI – Latent semantic indexing http://searchenginewatch.com/article/2104571/Google-Panda-6-Months-Out-Still-Has-People-Baffled
@annstanley
Google Panda update and need for ‘good quality content’
• In 2011, Google implemented a rolling algorithm update known as ‘Panda’, which ‘penalises’ sites that host poor quality content and/or provide a poor user experience
• The effect of the Panda update was widespread and, with every update, Google becomes more sophisticated at judging the quality of content on a site
@annstanley
Optimise for the user – not search engines
• Making sure a site is optimised to provide a rich, relevant and rewarding experience for visitors is the best way to avoid Panda penalties, which means: – No duplicate content
– All pages to have unique, relevant and useful content (even the 1000s of product pages on ecommerce sites!)
– Good levels of interaction on site (low bounce rates, inbound links to ‘deep’ pages, social mentions etc…)
@annstanley
Ecommerce optimisation – unique content on category pages
@annstanley
Ongoing ‘Fresh’ content (blogging with social plug-ins)
@annstanley
User-generated content • User-generated content, or UGC, is still a great way to add unique and
relevant content to web pages – especially product pages in the ‘post-Panda’ search environment:
@annstanley
Video integrated with product pages
@annstanley
Use of Schema.org and rich snippets
@annstanley
Thank You
Ann Stanley
@annstanley
www.anicca-solutions.com