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July 23, 2010

Data Over Emotion – Apple’s Response To iPhone 4 Reports

Filed under: Pay Per Click, SEO, Search engines, Web Analytics — Tags: , , — Chris Leone @ 7:30 pm

As a fan and user of Apple products, I closely followed the introduction and launch of the iPhone 4 as well as all the problems that ensued. These problems, which I’ll get to in a second, became a PR mess for Apple. When Apple came around to respond, they made an argument based almost exclusively on data. Their approach to responding fit well into our philosophy of a company about being data-driven in as many decisions as possible. Likewise, the opposing argument made against Apple was representative of a much different approach. One based more on emotion and sensationalism than actual fact.

[Let me clarify that there are technical issues that do exist in some iPhone 4 models. This has been proven as fact. What I'm more interested in is how the product has performed in terms of overall sales and customer satisfaction]

In case you missed everything that transpired regarding the launch of the iPhone 4, here’s a very quick breakdown…

  • Apple releases iPhone 4. Everyone happy and excited.
  • Within 24 hours, people report that touching a specific part of the phone causes bars to drop. Blogs post videos, but reports still limited.
  • Within a few days, more and more people report the same issue. Frustration beginning to mount among customers.
  • Apple announces software update to fix number of bars reported on phone. Not meant to be fix for “dead spot” on phone.
  • Consumer reports performs its own tests and says it can no longer recommend iPhone 4 until a free fix is in place. Mainstream news now picking up story.
  • Apple holds press conference 23 days after initial launch. Presents data suggesting problems and dis-satisfaction among customers isn’t nearly as widespread as is being reported online.

Apple wasn’t denying that certain problem existed. Instead, they were trying to paint a bigger picture. Something the individual reviews and blogs had failed to do. Here are some key data points Apple presented in their press conference.

  • For every 100 calls made, the iPhone 4 drops less than 1 more call than its predecessor, the iPhone 3GS
  • Only 1.7% of iPhone 4 users have returned their phone as opposed to the 6% return rate of the 3GS
  • Percentage of users who have called Apple Care regarding their iPhone reception: .55%

The internet did a great job of sensationalizing this story and blowing reality out of proportion. As it turns out, the iPhone 4 launch was more successful than the iPhone 3GS in most respects when it comes to customer satisfaction. And in case you hadn’t been following last year, the 3GS launch was thought to be smooth and without incident.

Prior to Apple’s response, everyone was relying on the emotion and limited personal tests to draw conclusions about the phone. Beyond reporting the “dead spot” on the phone, people began to conclude that 1) everyone was having this problem, and 2) everyone wanted a replacement. The data simply says otherwise. Is it possible we fall into similar traps when it comes to our internet marketing decisions? Do you ever find yourself drawing conclusions based on emotion without having data to back up your claim? Have you ever found yourself saying:

“Our website is terrible. I doubt it generates a single lead.”
“We’re paying for all this traffic but I don’t think it’s getting us a single call.”
“I have this feeling our marketing dollars could be better spent somewhere else.”

If you’ve ever thought any of the above, or worse, acted on it, you may have done yourself a disservice. You may have redesigned a site that didn’t need to be fixed or cancelled the most profitable marketing campaign in your company’s history. On the flip-side, you may have actually been right all along. The real shame is that we don’t know for sure. We only relied on our emotion and hunches instead of logic and data. Our website and company may be worse off for it.

Let’s say Scott is responsible for all leads that come into your business. When meeting with Scott to evaluate the productivity of your internet marketing campaigns, what would you like to hear and see in his presentation?

A) “The phone does seem to ring more since we started the campaign. We still have web forms coming in regularly. I can’t tell you how many more calls we’re getting each month but it does feel like a boost compared to before. When I ask, people will tell me if they used a search engine to find us, but they can’t be specific if they originated from SEO or PPC.

or would you rather have Scott present this:

B) The following is a breakdown of the number of leads generated and whether they originated from PPC or SEO traffic. I’ve used our monthly investment to calculate the cost per individual lead so we can determine which campaign is more profitable.

seo richmond va

The first scenario was subject to being biased by Scott’s emotions. Initial skepticism or optimism would have a significant impact on how Scott reported the change in leads coming in since they launched their SEO and PPC campaign. Had he wanted the campaigns to work, he would be more likely to say he felt a significant boost in the leads coming in. Had he been skeptical and advised against the initial investment, he would have been more inclined to say it wasn’t working. In this case, he reports a “boost,” but we have little else to go on. Biases aside we didn’t have a single numerical figure to go off of.

In the second scenario, we let the data tell the story. We’ve removed the human element and instead let the numbers dictate the result of the internet marketing campaign. SEO works, PPC works better, but both are contributing favorably. This is the same approach Steve Jobs presented in his press conference. By doing so he was able to paint a clearer picture and restore faith in the iPhone 4’s brand and future.

Using data isn’t just another way to make an argument. It’s a way to remove biases and extraneous variables and put a clear, numerical and economical value on a result. In the case of the iPhone 4, everyone jumped to conclude that it was a complete and utter failure. In reality, we were only listening to those that reported problems. We tuned out the thousands of people who reported having zero issues with their new phone. Relatively speaking, making the same mistakes with our marketing dollars can be just as costly – if not more. As we work to refine, optimize and reallocate our marketing dollars, we need to ask “why” and make sure we have the appropriate data to back up our decisions.

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July 20, 2010

Do Excesses in Our Lives Apply to Internet Marketing?

Filed under: Email marketing, Internet Marketing, SEO, Web Design, email marketing — Tags: , , — Chris Walke @ 2:07 pm

I stopped to get coffee this morning on my drive into town, and watched with fascination as another customer stood and poured packet after packet of sugar into his coffee.  He was grabbing two and three at a time, and by my estimate there were 30 or more packets in his medium sized cup by the time he finished several minutes later.  He actually requested a spoon to mix the slurry, since the provided plastic stirrers simply bent double.

That experience got me to thinking during the remainder of my drive about excesses in our lives, and I wondered if this held true for us in when it comes to the field of Internet Marketing.  When is enough, well, simply enough?  Someone probably has named a law for it, but demand in our lives always seems to fill capacity.  Our lifestyles seem to expand to consume our income.  Hard drives fill up.  I remember my first Mac notebook computer had a 20 MB hard drive.  Oh the joy after a couple of years when I doubled it to 40 MB, allowing me to keep up with apps such as MS Office that seemed to be bloating with code even then.  I couldn’t envision a day when hard drives would store hundreds of gigabytes, or what we could do with all that space.

A 28 kbps dial-up modem allowed me to transfer text files and the occasional image, albeit slowly.  That seemed fine at the time, but then came DSL, then cable modems, and now fiber optics.  At each step consumption seemed to keep pace, with large video files that could be downloaded in a reasonable amount of time, and now stream real-time.

That leads me to the field of Internet Marketing.  On the negative side, there are certainly excesses when it comes to spam emails, and there is an ongoing battle with techniques to limit the number reaching our Inboxes.  In terms of white hat marketing techniques, advances in bandwidths and device speeds are leading to rapid changes.  A few years ago designers were placing waving flags and sparkles on web pages to attract user attention.  This gave way to downloadable white papers and embedded video files, making the browsing experience more interesting and interactive for the user.  

The key now is for us to use advances in technology to provide users with meaningful, rewarding experiences.  Lists should be segmented so people receive mailings that they are interesting in reading.  Use videos not just to grab attention, but to convey information to a website visitor that would be difficult or take too long to communicate with words alone.

In summary, we need to avoid going after the quick hit, the “sugar high” in our marketing approaches, because it rarely leads to loyal, long term customers.  Providing fresh, targeted, meaningful content, and keeping abreast of advances in technology is a good way to build company awareness and brand loyalty.

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May 13, 2010

Why Is My Site Loading So Slowly?

Filed under: SEO, Software, Web tools — Tags: , , — David McKillen @ 4:24 pm

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I was looking around for a nifty way of examining load issues on clients sites. I wanted some way of quickly pin pointing which images/files were causing the issue (or the delay was even being caused by site file sizes in the first place!). I discovered a cool little site called Pingdom that did the job.

Simply enter a URL and even check the save URL box. Pingdom drills down through your file load times and display in KB each different component of the page. It also gives you an outline summary of basic info about the site, how many images, style sheets, plugin, redirects, external objects etc. Simple and neat it does what I needed!

But Pingdom is more than just that, it is also an uptime and performance monitoring system. The system lets you know if you site has gone down, gives you uptime reports, response time reports and connects nicely to Twitter, SMS and Email to alert you if troubles a-brewing.

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April 23, 2010

Do PPC and SEO Work Well Together?

Filed under: Pay Per Click, SEO, Search Engine Optimization, Search engines — Neal Lappe @ 1:29 pm

Clients ask us frequently if they should do both PPC and SEO at the same time.  Our answer is always the same – “it depends”.  Of course it depends mostly on whether the particular client can benefit from search engine marketing.  If they can, then we talk.  But if we don’t believe it’s the best use of their marketing budget, we work with them on other marketing campaigns.  If search engine marketing can benefit the client, then the question is PPC, SEO or both.  Often times both can get the best results.

SEO and PPC work well togehter in two ways: 1) brand strength and 2) branding vs. promotion.

Brand Strength: Studies have shown that when a company has 1st page placement in the Sponsored Links (PPC) and in the organic listings (SEO), it creates a synergistic approach.  See the PackandRide.com example below.  For example, PPC listings typically get about 24% of click-throughs on a SERP (search engine results page), while SEO gets the remaining 76%.  That equals 100%.  However, when 1st page placement is achieved for both SEO and PPC, the click-through rate exceeds 100% – that is, it is not 1+1=2, but rather 1+1=2+.  The theory here is that brand strength and click-throughs are heightened when the searcher sees multiple listings for the same company.

Search Engine Optimization

Search Engine Optimization

Branding vs. Promotion:  SEO is the best long-term branding strategy online, but what about promoting a certain product or service – or what happens when an important search phrase is so competitive that you can’t get it onto page 1.  That’s where PPC can close the gap.  Let’s say you are in the moving business.  You hear about a military post being relocated but the search phrase “military moves” isn’t one of your targeted search phrases for SEO.  So, you go after that term on the PPC side and position yourself to generate traffic from the recent announcement about moving the military base.

In summary, PPC and SEO both have their places in search engine marketing.  Used at the right times in the right places, you can achieve significant, long term brand strength online as well as have the agility to responsd to current events and opportunities to promote your products and services.

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December 11, 2009

Web Analytics, Data & Manure

Filed under: SEO, Search engines, Web Analytics — Chris Leone @ 4:57 pm

“Web analytics packages are sold as if it’s an automatic coffee marker. In fact, it’s more like buying a coffee plantation.

You can still get your coffee (eventually), but you’re going to have to stick your hands in a lot more manure than you ever knew.”

- Tom Cunniff

Web analytics software is free. Data is cheap. The return on insightful analysis that ultimately drives key decisions can be worth it’s weight in gold.

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December 7, 2009

Google Launches Real Time Search – What Does It Mean For SEO's?

Filed under: SEO, Search engines — Tags: , — Chris Leone @ 4:01 pm

Today, Google unveiled their new real-time search feature. It’s still very new, even in internet terms, but what we see in the video below as well as in our own field tests is that results populate starting from when the search results page loads (so to take advantage of the new opportunity for visibility, it’s a “right place at the right time” kind of thing). Most of these results are tweets or recently crawled articles/blogs on the topic. Our tests have shown tweets to show up with about a 10-20 second delay from when they were originally published. Not bad.

So how can SEO’s use this to their advantage? In a white hat world, you would say, “it forces people to keep generating content and conversation around the topic they want to show for in Google search results.” In a black hat world, one might contrive methods for abusing the new feature using automated tweeting applications. For example, you could schedule keyphrase stuffed tweets to post relentlessly to guarantee almost constant visibility. I’d bet good money Google’s algorithm has parameters in place to weed out this kind of spamming, so I’m optimistic it won’t be that much of a problem.

When used correctly, I have no doubt something like real-time search will reward those who are active on social platforms and especially those who post content regularly. Wait, did I just say Google will reward those who post fresh content frequently? This sounds so familiar.

Bing, I believe it’s your move now.

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November 26, 2009

Strengthen Your SEO through Blogging

Filed under: SEO, Search Engine Optimization, Uncategorized — Tags: , , — Neal Lappe @ 10:00 am

A recent survey I read mentioned that more than a million blogs are launched each week and sadly about 95% die just as quickly.  The problem – the bloggers just aren’t committed to quality content on a continuous basis.  Those of us committed to effective internet marketing and seo know how powerful blogging is. 

Search engines look for good, quality, fresh content and when you optimize that content around a theme that you want to be found for, your blog becomes a powerful search engine optimization (seo) tool to get your website good visibility.  That’s a huge benefit over and above sharing good information.  Additionally, when search engine spiders see fresh content on a frequent basis, those spiders will increase the frequency they index your site.  While no one really knows the “secret sauce” – search engine algorithms that is – the frequency with which search engine spiders visit your site does play a role in your search engine visibility.   

Blogging is all about sharing your best stuff – its about offering your intellectual property to help others be successful.  But, don’t lose site of what good,quality content can do for your search engine rankings.  Share your best stuff and do it frequently.  Your personal brand and the visibility of your website will benefit.

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November 25, 2009

Web Analytics – Don’t Spend Money Without It

Filed under: SEO, Web Analytics — Tags: — Neal Lappe @ 9:25 pm

We all know the beauty of internet marketing is that you can measure everything right?  This is one of the reasons why the internet has become such a dominant marketing medium.  And of course the opportunities to spend money doing PPC or other search marketing activities are endless.  Unfortunately there are businesses out there spending their hard earned money and not getting any return from it.  I ran into just one of those cases a few days ago.

A business owner I was talking with was complaining about spending money doing PPC marketing and not getting any business from it.  I took a quick look at his website and quickly began to make some preliminary conclusions about why.  His website wasn’t very good.  So, we looked at his Google analytics data and found his bounce rate near 90%.  Bounce rate is defined as the % of visitors that come to the site and see one page, and then leave the site.  He had spent several hundreds of dollars in search marketing and at least 90% was wasted – with very little brand strengthening to boot.

Unfortunately there are endless businesses out there that have no clue about the power of Google Analytics, and how data can be used to improve your website design and internet marketing activities.

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November 20, 2009

Six Reasons Why You Shouldn't Measure SEO Success On Keyword Rankings

Filed under: SEO, Search engines — admin @ 5:42 pm

As data capturing tools advance and web analysts get smarter, the depth and breadth of search engine marketing becomes more complex while the potential for reward becomes greater. Website visits have long been regarded as the primary measure of website success, popularity, and influence. Likewise in the SEO world, keyword rankings have historically been a cornerstone for measuring search marketing success. Here are six reasons I believe this should no longer the case.

1) There’s no gold medal for showing in the top organic spots
Despite holding several top positions in search engines, Google or Yahoo or Bing have yet to send me my certificate and fancy gold medal for defeating all lesser sites that sit below me in the rankings. The reward is what happens on your site and it takes more than traffic volume to achieve that.

2) Just because you’re ranked in the top positions doesn’t mean anybody is searching for it
“AWESOME! I now rank number one in the search engine for ‘male Affenpinscher stylist Comstock Nebraska.’” Nicely done. Now tell me how many Affenpinscher dogs there are in Comstock Nebraska.

3) You SEO-stuffed your way to the top so your listing looks terrible and no one wants to click on it

abckeyword

Which one would you click?

4) The keyphrase you rank for and the relevance to your site are not in line

So you made it to the top of the search engine, but unfortunately, there is little to no overlap between the keyphrase and what you offer on your site.

image_002

So while you get the click, it won’t accomplish anything for you in the end.

5) Personalization of search means different people see different numbers

Google serves up different results based on the searching habits of the searcher (provided they are logged in to Google). You may be thrilled your business ranks number one until you realize you’re on the 5th page when anyone else does the search.

6) Conversion rate isn’t necessarily higher the better you rank

It’s fitting to put this one at the end as it summarizes the previous points. Conversions are most influenced by the overlap of searcher relevance and website purpose/intent. The site that accomplishes this the best while also getting the traffic the winner. You don’t sell more because your ranked one position higher. You sell more because your website better meets the objectives of the searcher than your competitors.

My point is not that search engine visibility isn’t important. It’s VITALLY important to a successful online strategy. The point is we can not get carried away measuring success by only one variable, especially when it is as volatile and misleading as a search engine position. Rankings are simply a means to an end and another tool in the box. Spend the time meeting the objectives of those searching for your product through testing and data analysis – not trying to go from position 3 to position 1.

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