William Charlwood

Internet Marketing Consultant
calendar September 23rd, 2008 by William

The answer will depend on the relative economics of your business.  There are several errors that businesses tend to make when choosing between SEO and PPC. The first is not recognising that any traffic that is profitable is profitable.

The goal businesses often focus on is Return on Investment (ROI) whereas what actually matters is profitability (assuming you are not struggling with cash flow issues).

Don’t turn down profitable traffic just because it costs money.

Just because you can get search engine traffic free does not mean that paid-for traffic is no good. If you make £50,000 from free traffic but could make an extra £20,000 by spending £5,000 on PPC traffic you should do it. It will increase your profitability by £15,000 and probably do it fast.

Don’t design your site for SEO and ignore your PPC traffic.

A second problem people have is to focus the design of a site around SEO even if in practice most traffic is coming from PPC. I have seen many cases where a site’s design is centred around search engine rankings with the functionality, and especially the functionality associated with getting the most wanted response, relegated to second place.  If your traffic is largely coming from AdWords you don’t need to worry about designing your landing pages for SEO. You want to focus all your design efforts on converting that traffic into profits.

Let’s now compare the features of SEO traffic versus natural (organic) web traffic.

Speed of implementation.

SEO takes time to deliver results which means the testing cycle is long. Consequently you can end up several months down the road with no benefit. In the worst case you can end up with less SEO traffic than you started with.

PPC on the other hand delivers traffic almost instantly. Results are testable quickly too so you can spot fast campaigns that are profitable and those which are not. Switch off unprofitable campaigns and accelerate the profitable ones.

Web copy

SEO may require you to make changes to your copy which interferes with you getting your most wanted response.  PPC advertising makes few if any demands on your web copy (but watch out for the Google Slap).

The opportunity cost of “free” SEO traffic

SEO traffic is apparently free but don’t forget the hidden opportunity costs of traffic you missed whilst waiting for SEO to deliver. And there is also the cost of actually getting the work done. Of these, the opportunity costs are often the greatest and incredibly easy to overlook simply because they are invisible: you can’t see sales you didn’t get because you weren’t advertising. But you should try and estimate what you could be missing in value terms. To do this you need to have some idea of your visitor value and then estimate how much traffic you could have bought whilst waiting for your SEO work to kick in. Then deduct from this your estimated cost of advertising. The result is going to equate roughly to what you lost in profits by waiting for SEO to work and by not advertising with PPC in the interim.

Get more traffic by appearing twice

Another factor to consider is that there’s a fairly well documented phenomenon relating to how much traffic you get if you appear high up in both natural search results AND in ads on the same page as well. The sum of traffic you get by appearing twice can be significantly greater than the amount of traffic you get if you appear exclusively in natural search or in paid search results. So even if your SEO work has paid off, it can still make sense to use pay per click advertising. As ever though, you need to test the results you actually get because all sites behave differently.

Opportunistic advertising

Whilst it is true that some blogs get ranked very fast for new content, in general new content on a website can take a while to get indexed. This means that if you want to capitalise on a development in the news for example, adding relevant content to your site may not deliver the instant response you want. With AdWords and other PPC advertising, you can effectively get listed almost immediately.

So for example, if you sell suncream and a heatwave is forecast for the weekend, you can put up an ad in 5 minutes to sell suncream online for next day delivery. You can’t do this with SEO.

Reliability

PPC traffic is controllable and reliable whereas SEO traffic is not. So if you build your business around SEO traffic, you are stuffed if the search engines suddenly change the way they rank sites and your site drops from number 2 position to number 56 overnight. Being this vulnerable to a source of traffic is dangerous and not a suitable way to build a business. With PPC, you can always appear on the first page provided you can afford it.

Chasing the Long Tail of Search

With SEO you generally need to focus on your main keywords which means in practice that you do little to attract traffic from the Long Tail of Search. With PPC you can go after as many keywords as you want, instantly. Furthermore, the wider you cast your search net with PPC, the cheaper the clicks can be because there is usually less competition.

Trademarks and PPC keywords

Some PPC companies put restrictions on how you can use trademarks. There used to be a time when you couldn’t use trademarks as keywords and that is changing gradually although each country will have its own legislative framework within which search engines have to operate. The restriction applies more often to the copy of your PPC ads. However, with natural listings, these issues don’t usually arise so if you want to use a trademark in a suitable way on your site, it may well show up in the natural listings even if you are not able to use it in your PPC campaigns.

calendar August 14th, 2008 by William

The Long Tail of Search is the myriad of unique searches done daily that add up to the vast majority of search engine activity.  The top 10, 100, 1000, 10,000, 100,000 or even 1 million searches done each day are but a tiny, tiny fraction of the total.

The sum of the obscure, esoteric and often quirky makes up the majority and is known as the Long Tail.

Part of your role as an internet marketer is to market your web pages to people doing searches on line so you need to understand the implications of the Long Tail and how you can use it to get free targeted traffic and clicks if you are to maximize your AdSense affiliate or direct income.

For example, one effective way of capturing traffic from unusual searches is to create niche content that targets a huge range of similar search phrases or keywords.  There are tools available right now that can automate this for you. They essentially take single articles or web pages and generate thousands of permutations by replacing words with synonyms and phrases with other phrases with the same meaning. You then publish these different versions of your articles on your site.

In this way, you can capture a much larger volume of search engine traffic whilst still delivering the same informational value to your site’s visitors.

Here’s a quick example scenario.

Suppose you have an article that ranks well for the keyword “bicycling in France”. What if someone searches for “cycling in France”, “bicycling across France” or “bicycling around France” instead? Will you rank as well for those?

The answer is that you probably won’t but you might if you replaced the phrase “bicycling in France” in your article with the phrase “cycling in France”, “bicycling across France”
etc. and published those versions of your article too.

That is what chasing the Long Tail is all about and don’t forget, it is where the majority of your potential free traffic lies.

But don’t forget other languages too. If you create content in English, why not get it translated too so that you can attract searchers who are using different search terms altogether. So The Long Tail Of Search could just as easily become

  • Der lange Schwanz der Suche
  • La longue queue de la recherche
  • La larga cola de la búsqueda
  • A longa cauda de pesquisa
  • La lunga coda di ricerca

Simply by placing these phrases on this blog I am likely over time to get a few visitors who are searching for the long tail of search in these non-English languages.

calendar July 16th, 2008 by William

Private Label Rights are rights that apply to content that you have a right to use, publish and sell as if you were the author. You also have the right to modify the content to make it unique.

Webmasters used PLR content to increase the size of their online presence in order to attract more search engine traffic. They also use PLR to make their websites and blogs content rich in order to keep visitors on their site for longer.

The use of Private Label Rights is very similar to the way that newspapers use syndicated content from Press Agencies. In fact many PLR sites now exist to sell PLR content. However, there can be less editorial freedom with syndicated news content.

If you use PLR you need to be careful. First you need to check the quality of the content supplied. Some PLR content is very poor quality. Some is of a very high standard.

You also need to find out how many other webmasters are using the same content. The issue here is of duplicate content. If too many people publish the same content without making it unique there will be increased competition in the search engines. Additionally, there are theories that search engines penalise duplicate content. In other words, they treat duplicate content sites as being of lower quality than sites with original content.

For this reason many web publishers use software to turn articles into unique content by replacing words with synonyms. Other software is more sophisticated and re-writes complete phrases whilst maintaining the meaning of the content.

Good Private Label Rights content can enhance the quality of a site and is often available for very little money.