Thursday 28 February 2019

YouTube + child safety: Is the service doing enough?

It has been a challenging month for YouTube.

As we recently reported, fresh concerns over child safety on the service came to light back on 17th February.

In a video published to the site, vlogger Matt Watson details how the service is being exploited by paedophiles who were using comment sections under innocuous videos of children to leave sexually provocative messages, to communicate with each other, and to link out to child pornography.

Of course, journalists and news sites were quick to level criticism at YouTube. Many pointed out that this wasn’t the first time child safety on the service has been called into question. Others were critical that its methods for safeguarding children were too ‘whack-a-mole’ in their approach.

And then came the actions of the advertisers – with Nestle, AT&T and Epic Games (creator of Fortnite) all pulling their ads from the service.

So how has YouTube responded? Is it doing enough?

Memo directly sent to advertisers

On 20th February YouTube sent out a memo to brands advertising on the service.

It detailed the ‘immediate actions’ it was taking to ensure children are safe in light of the recent allegations from Watson. These included suspending comments and reporting accounts to the NCMEC.

YouTube memo with immediate actions they're taking to address issues

The memo reiterated that child safety is YouTube’s No. 1 priority, but also admitted there was more work to be done.

It laid out a roadmap of tweaks and improvements, including better improving the service’s ability to find predatory comments (set to be implemented this month) and potentially changing how ads are placed on channels.

YouTube memo: Looking ahead, what's on the roadmap?

Changes to Community Guidelines strikes system – are these related?

In a potentially related move, YouTube also announced via a recent blog post that it was going to make changes to its Community Guidelines.

The changes – which came into force on 25th February – include a warning for users the first time their content crosses the line.

YouTube says: ‘Although the content will be removed, there will be no other penalty on the channel. There will be only one warning and unlike strikes, the warning will not reset after 90 days.’

The ‘three strike’ system still exists but is stricter and more straightforward. Now a first strike results in a one-week freeze on the ability to upload any new content to the service. Previously, first strikes just resulted in a freeze on live-streaming.

A second strike in any 90-day period will result in a two-week freeze on the ability to upload any new content. Ultimately, a third strike in any 90-day period will result in channel termination.

That YouTube has taken this opportunity to address its creator community directly is interesting.

The Guardian has reported that the fallout from Watson’s video resulted in a number of prominent YouTube users criticizing him, rather than the service. Their reasoning was that it was overreactive and a deliberate attempt to drive advertisers away.

Additionally, a report at ABC News shed light on stories from creators who have been the victims of false claims and extortion attempts by bad actors who promise to remove strikes only after they’ve received payment via PayPal or BitCoin.

With this in mind, we can see that YouTube have been quite diplomatic in how they’ve rolled this Community Guideline change out. Imposing stricter penalties against a backdrop of better transparency and simpler rules is quite laudable.

Further questions over safety since

In the wake of Watson’s video, further news stories have emerged which relate directly and indirectly to child safety on YouTube.

On 24th February, pediatrician Free Hess exposed that some children’s videos available on YouTube Kids had hidden footage detailing how to commit suicide spliced into them (as reported at The Washington Post).

Additionally, on 25th February the BBC reported that the service was stopping adverts being shown on channels which showed anti-vaccination content.

And the past couple days, widespread internet concern has raged over “The Momo Challenge,” a supposed challenge encouraging minors to do dangerous / potentially self-harming acts.

However, this morning The Atlantic reported that this has been a digital hoax. And that it has followed similar cycles as the so-called Blue Whale challenge, teens eating toxic Tide Pods, and the cinnamon challenge — all of which were found to have no reported deaths/injuries associated.

And yesterday, YouTube tweeted this:

The company has also just updated their Creator Blog with a post titled, “More updates on our actions related to the safety of minors on YouTube.”

In it, they summarize “the main steps we’ve taken to improve child safety on YouTube since our update last Friday.”

These steps include:

  1. Disabling comments on videos featuring minors
  2. Launching a new comments classifier
  3. Taking action on creators who cause egregious harm to the community

It does seem that they are moving quickly to remedy the problems. But I think anyone would agree — they’ve had quite the month.

So the challenge is certainly ongoing…

All this does highlight the difficulty YouTube has in keeping all its millions of viewers, creators, and advertisers safe and happy.

We know the service is constantly updating its algorithm across its search function and its recommendations in order to give users better – more trustworthy – content.

We can also be quite sure that there has been a fair amount of activity in protecting minors on the service since 2017 when unsuitable content featuring Disney and Marvel characters was being found to be available on YouTube Kids. This timeframe is in line with the aforementioned memo which assures that the service has been working hard to improve in this regard for the past 18 months.

I’m not sure it’s entirely fair, then, to call YouTube’s approach to safeguarding children a ‘whack-a-mole approach’ or one which only sees the site take action when the instances gain media attention.

The sheer amount of content and users on the service is so massive, it depends on the community to produce the content and – at times – to monitor how it is used. In this instance, a user flagged an issue up and YouTube worked very quickly indeed. The service is always improving. But changes, tweaks, and improvements are not always newsworthy. The same can be said for Google.

Yes, there is more to be done. As online video continues to boom and the creator community continues to grow, we can expect issues to arise.

But I think it is unlikely that YouTube wouldn’t be proactive here. After all, its very existence depends on having great videos, trustworthy content, a safe community of users who are having a positive experience on the site, and an ecosystem where advertisers want to be.

The post YouTube + child safety: Is the service doing enough? appeared first on Search Engine Watch.



source https://searchenginewatch.com/2019/02/28/youtube-child-safety-service-doing-enough/

How to dominate Google News search in 2019

A few weeks ago, Google published a blog post on its webmaster blog sharing some tips on how to get more success in Google News search in 2019. 

2019 will be a hard fight against fake news as fake news outlets are increasing with time. Along with some social media platforms, Google is also responsible for the spreading of fake and misleading news. If you are running a clickbait rich site with a lot of crappy content, you may encounter Google’s punishment this year.

Generally, Google looks at these five factors when ranking news articles:

  • Freshness
  • Diversity
  • Rich textual content
  • Originality of content
  • User preferences for topics or publishers

To succeed in 2019 your news content should be original, authoritative, and should provide timely news information.

Six important tips for news content

  1. Articles’ headlines should be clear. Keep it in the H1 tag. Headlines should be a minimum of 10 characters, between two and 22 words.
  2. Use proper time and date. Show clear and visible time and date below the title and above the article. Use structured data.
  3. Be transparent in your content. Fake news is a major problem on the internet, especially from the last American presidential election. Google will try to scan out fake news content in 2019. Best practice for this time is to create a very user-friendly site, not something crappy with lots of pop-ups and ads. Add detailed information, mention sources, make it authoritative.
  4. Don’t be deceptive in your content. Don’t mislead. Misleading information in the content can ban you from Google.
  5. Secure your website’s every page with HTTPS. A website that uses Hypertext Transfer Protocol Secure (HTTPS)  confirms a secure connection between the browser and user. It protects users’ sensitive information. For a news site, it is a very good search signal.
  6. Don’t participate in link spam to increase your ranking. Don’t buy links.

The five ‘w’s

To write your news content, you can use this popular news writing formula. Ask yourself the five ‘w’ questions and answer them all in your first paragraph of news content. The main aim is to provide a lot of information in the first paragraph.

Internet readers have a small attention span and most people scan the content, instead of line by line reading. This is especially true for news.

Write your first paragraph answering these questions.

  1. Who?
  2. What?
  3. Where?
  4. When?
  5. Why?

Use proper nouns in the headline

Generic nouns will not get as much attention as proper nouns in Google search. Use proper names of brands, organizations or of people related to your news in the headlines. If you can creatively use proper names where other news outlets are not, you will get a huge advantage in the Google News search.

Graphics, images and video content

Use graphics, images, and videos on your news content to explain your news or to provide more information. Google loves this. With engaging videos and graphics, you can attract more readers, and make your content more shareable.

But before sharing your multimedia follow the guidelines of Google.

Beware the sensational, exceptional, negative, and current (SENC)

SENC is sensational, exceptional, negative, and current events, which is a general definition of current news. But, if you follow this definition to produce your news, they will not be authentic or convey real helpful information.

Shocking, scandalous things can be viral, but these types of sensational news should not be your priority.

If you prioritize only exceptional things, your content will become misleading.

Current news is full of recency bias. The present most recent things, without much in-depth and background information. But every recent event has a root in something old and slow systematic change. In your news content, you should present the actual root cause as much as possible to make the content more authoritative. It will earn you good links and build your brand.

Your news should be foundational not sensational.

On publishing breaking news, you should not be in a hurry to publish it faster than your competitors. Instead, before publishing the content, ask yourself what new information your article will provide that is not found elsewhere.

Pay less attention to CTR, dwell time, and other UX signals on the landing page

Image on click-through rate

According to recent AMA of Gary Illyes, Google webmaster trends analyst:

“RankBrain is a PR-sexy machine learning ranking component that uses historical search data to predict what would a user most likely click on for a previously unseen query. It is a really cool piece of engineering that saved our butts countless times whenever traditional algos were like, e.g. “Oh look a ‘not’ in the query string! Let’s ignore the hell out of it!”, but it’s generally just relying on (sometimes) months’ old data about what happened on the results page itself, not on the landing page. Dwell time, CTR, whatever Fishkin’s new theory is, those are generally made up crap. Search is much more simple than people think.”

This thread from a couple weeks ago caused quite a stir. Perhaps we distract ourselves too much from the “simplicity” of what is actually search?

Ps — what are your thoughts on RankBrain and UX? Leave a comment below!

Muradul Islam is a Business Analyst at WeDevs. He can be found on Twitter @muradt20.

The post How to dominate Google News search in 2019 appeared first on Search Engine Watch.



source https://searchenginewatch.com/2019/02/28/dominate-google-news-search-in-2019/

Wednesday 27 February 2019

How to get started with data-driven attribution in Google Analytics

Google Analytics is used by more than 28.8 billion websites since its inception in 2005. And many have attempted to find a ‘one size fits all’ approach as far as attribution models are concerned.

While this is admirable in and of itself, it also goes against the very nature of Google Analytics. After all, the USP of the service is to customize reports according to your requirements. So why should attribution models be any different?

What is attribution?

Before we dive in any further, however, you must understand what we mean by attribution. In Google Analytics, the term attribution can mean lots of things, from giving credit for visiting the website to completing a particular activity, from a campaign to a kind of source. Attribution is mainly used for conversions and sessions.

Data-driven attribution

Now, attribution models can be of various kinds, but the one generating a lot of buzz lately is data-driven attribution. Rather than a traditional model, this algorithmically-generated model is exclusive to customers of Google Analytics 360 which offers an easy way to provide personalized experiences to your customers. Plus, you need to meet these two parameters across a period of 28 days:

  • 400 conversions of every type with a minimum of two interactions in every conversion.
  • 10,000 paths on your site, which is akin to 10,000 site users. However, a single user can create numerous navigational paths.

The standout feature of data-driven attribution is how it considers the touch points of the users before the start of the conversion process. The Model Explorer Tool reports these touch points. The data is then reviewed.

custom data driven attribution model

The data-driven attribution model serves as a baseline model in Google Analytics, enabling you to create new personalized attribution model. Create the new data-driven attribution model to share conversion credit with multiple touch points along the path of conversion before the implementation of personalized credit rules.

Use the data-driven attribution model to analyze both, the non-conversion and conversion path information. The latter is data gathered from visitors who were not converted by your site while the former is collected from the ones who did convert. A unique aspect of the data-driven attribution model is how it changes weekly.

Why does the data-driven attribution model work?

Understand that this model offers credit to the conversions of various touch points or marketing channels according to what they contributed in the conversion process. The touch point or marketing channel that offers the most assistance receives the most amount of credit for conversions, irrespective of whether it’s the initial touch, the middle touch, or the last touch. The rest of the touches or channels receive credit as per what they contributed during the conversion process.

As the task of assigning conversion credits depends on the latest conversion information rather than the touch point positions, the attribution becomes data-driven. This not only eliminates the need to assign random conversion credit to numerous touch points or channels but also explains why the entire model is called the data-driven attribution model.

Make it a point to remember that the validity of data-driven attribution lasts for a certain period of time since the model changes along with the conversion information.

What your business needs to implement the DDA (Data-Driven Attribution) model?

Never think for a second that an algorithm-based attribution model such as this one can be implemented by every business. First, meet and maintain various strict requirements, and only then can your business handle the data-driven attribution model.

  1. Access to a Google Analytics 360 account

Unless you have a Google Premium or Google Analytics 360 account, you cannot use the data-driven attribution model.

  1. High-quality data and its availability

Always remember that your DDA model’s strength rests on the information you submit. So a poor entry will beget poor results.

Now, the problem is, most organizations might be able to download and install Google Analytics 360, but they stumble hard when it comes to figuring out how to benefit from the service.

What’s more? Even though they have the resources to hire experienced analysts, they cannot always create and maintain large volumes of quality data gathered from different data sources.

Thus, the insights received from the DDA model are likely misleading, flawed, and unusable.

  1. Compatibility of KPIs and goals

The KPIs and goals you select for your business need to align across organizations and marketing channels. Otherwise, the data-driven attribution model does not work. So, if the primary Twitter campaign target is to improve site sales, then your Facebook campaign goal should also be the same.

  1. Conversion tracking

Set goals in Google Analytics Premium to monitor conversions as well as ecommerce. Using this conversion information, Google Analytics generates the data-driven attribution for your business, irrespective of whether you are permitted to use it or not.

  1. Importance of meeting and maintaining the minimum conversion threshold

Be certain that the Google Analytics Premium view to be generated meets the minimum conversion threshold. Also, know that it doesn’t matter if your Google Analytics’ view meets the minimum conversion threshold once; it does not allow for continued DDA analysis in Google Analytics. Make sure the minimum conversion threshold is maintained.

  1. Minimum conversion threshold for every type of conversion

The Google Analytics view you’ve selected must not only meet the minimum conversion threshold for every type of conversion; it needs to be maintained as well. Each kind of conversion generates its own DDA model, and it’s always possible that the generated DDA model works for certain conversions but not all.

If you’ve implemented data-driven attribution and the generated model does not work for that conversion, then GA is going to flash a warning sign right above the attribution model reports.

image of model explorer

Valuate your organic search channel with the DDA model

Open the ‘Model Comparison Tool’. Begin a comparison between the ‘last non-direct click’ and ‘data-driven’ model and the ‘last interaction model’.

model comparison tool

It is best to select the ‘last interaction’ model as it is the basic model for Google Analytics’ multi-channel funnel reports. The ‘Last non-direct click’ works since it is the basic model for non-multi-channel funnel reports. Finally, choose the ‘data-driven’ model rather than ‘time decay’ because:

  • The former not only analyzes the details from the Google Analytics account but other linked accounts as well, such as Google Ads, Doubleclick Campaign Manager, etc.
  • The DDA model uses an algorithm to assign credit to conversions, which is more reliable than credits given through the ‘Time Decay’ attribution and/or manual conversion.

Check the column labeled ‘% change in conversions (from ‘Last Interaction’) to find ‘organic search’

report on change in conversions

Use this report to measure the percentage by which organic search conversion changed from the previous interaction model to the data-driven model. In this case, you can see that it is 22.66 percent. This means if the DDA model is used to offer organic search conversion credits, the process will yield 22.66 percent more credits. So, the last click model undervalues organic search by 22.66 percent.

Once you’re done, download the DDA model into an excel sheet by simply clicking the button marked ‘Download the full model’ to the above right side of the ‘Model explorer tool’.

Concluding remarks

Choose the data-driven attribution model in Google Analytics to implement it for your business and experience the benefits. There are lots of other attribution models available but this model is in a league of its own.

The post How to get started with data-driven attribution in Google Analytics appeared first on Search Engine Watch.



source https://searchenginewatch.com/2019/02/27/data-driven-attribution-google-analytics/

How important are featured snippets and how can you get them?

Featured snippets are one of the main engines of economic growth today, with countless businesses and aspiring entrepreneurs relying upon them to get their message out to prospective clients.

Despite the fact that featured snippets are a vital part of contemporary marketing and SEO success, however, many still struggle when it comes to properly leveraging featured snippets to the greatest extent possible, with some unlucky few having no idea where to begin at all.

Just how important are featured snippets, and how can you go about getting them?

Here’s a comprehensive breakdown of featured snippets and how you can bolster your SEO.

Today’s searchers are dominated by featured snippets

If you’re familiar with just about any popular search engine, from Google to Bing, you’ve likely already encountered featured snippets many times, even if you’re unsure of what they are.

To put it simply, featured snippets are those tidbits of information and links to websites that appear the highest in search results. When customers plug a question into Google, the first link and answer that comes up is known as the “zero position.”

It’s this option that gets the most clicks and pageviews.

It’s thus naturally desirable to have featured snippets in as much search queries as possible, as it necessarily directs customers towards your page and information rather than that of your competitors.

So how do I get a featured snippet?

The easiest way for you to ensure that your business or website can cash in on featured snippets? Make your content search engine optimized. This helps the algorithms which power sites like Google direct curious web-surfers towards your content.

There are many ways to make your content SEO, though some dated methods are still in use when they’ve long-since grown out of fashion.

Focusing your content on a single word or search term, for instance, used to be a staple strategy for getting featured snippets. However, it’s no longer ideal as the way algorithms operate has changed with time.

To avoid relying on these outdated methods of getting featured snippets, you should take some time and study up on the common SEO mistakes that too many small businesses make when trying to stand out in the digital realm.

You need more than digital expertise to make your content stand out – sometimes, you just have to make sure it’s not ladled with common errors and simple mistakes that a little homework ahead of time could have prevented.

As brutal as it may sound, the next step is scouting out your competition to steal their techniques and swipe away their snippets to make them your own.

It’s a dog-eat-dog world, and your business needs to do whatever’s necessary in order to stand out from the crowd. Finding and stealing major snippets that drive traffic to your rival sites is thus an imperative part of success in the 21st century economy. 

The exception being, of course, that you have zero intention of cashing in on the ongoing digital boom.

By targeting the snippets your competitors rely upon the most, you’re building your market share by swiping away their consumers and luring them to your superior products or services.

Stealing snippets from your competitors

Don’t be uncomfortable with the notion of “stealing snippets” from your competitors. First of all, you’re not actually “stealing” anything in the illegal sense.

Furthermore it’s a necessary part of success in today’s market that everyone is aware of. You should rather view this as a natural consequence of the cut-throat nature of modern marketing, where only those on the top get any page views at all.

The first thing you should do is head to a service like SEMrush and type in the URL of your competitors so that you can get a glimpse at their site analytics.

By heading into the “organic research” tab and clicking on “position,” you’ll be able to view the keywords your competitors are using to drive traffic to their site.

Be sure to mirror this language as closely as possible if you’re trying to mimic the success of a thriving competitor.

Other low-hanging fruit that you can focus on includes the social media posts of others in your industry. These are likely jam-packed with viral content which you can study so as to embrace the better parts of their ad campaigns.

Recovering snippets that have been stolen from you

You should also take some time to learn about how to recover snippets which have been stolen from you. After all, your competitors aren’t going to stand idly by as you swipe their customer base out from under them.

Mastering the art of tracking down and reclaiming your lost featured snippets can seriously bolster the traffic you enjoy on a monthly basis, and it can even become a sense of pride for entrepreneurs when they reclaim their lost mantle at the top of the search results in their economic niche.

Take a deep dive into the art of recovering stolen snippets and don’t be afraid to run an audit to see if your competitors have been sniping away at your customer base.

This brutal aspect of running a business should serve as a constant reminder of how fierce competition can be, which is why it’s so important to distinguish yourself from the crowd and establish your links as credible and click-worthy.

Making your featured snippets last

Many small business owners are enthused when they get their first featured snippet, as they rightfully recognize this moment as the turning point in their digital careers. Sustaining the momentum you’ve started to develop is easier said than done, however, and making your featured snippets last once you have them should be at the top of your to-do list.

By tapping into ever-spirited nature of social media, you can guarantee that your brand and links are always generating a buzz.

Making your featured snippets last isn’t always possible; sooner rather than later, someone may kick you out of your spot, or worse yet your content might just become dated and thus unable to attract viewers at all because it’s simply stale. Producing engaging content on a regular basis is thus an essential part of staying at the top of the featured snippet scoreboard, and to do that you should be mastering today’s leading social media platforms.

SEO-content and social media boards go together hand in hand, so you need to integrate your strategies for the two if you want your digital brand to endure. Content promotion and link-building aren’t easy and investing in advertisements and SEO-content that helps you bolster the potential of securing a featured snipped doesn’t always come cheap. Getting a featured snippet to prominently display your brand or services online can be a godsend, however, and generate tons of business for even the smallest of companies.

Consider enlisting the help of some social media talent to help you generate a digital buzz, and never stop on your quest to produce engaging, SEO content that will cut through the noise and reach out directly to users when they search.

Chris Porteous is the CEO of Framestr / My SEO Sucks, building high performing sales funnels and marketing workflow solutions for businesses across North America.

The post How important are featured snippets and how can you get them? appeared first on Search Engine Watch.



source https://searchenginewatch.com/2019/02/27/featured-snippets-how-important/

Tuesday 26 February 2019

Conversation mapping: The new rules to win in search and content marketing

Almost two-thirds of marketers now admit that digital content strategy powers their entire digital plan and yet the majority of those that use it struggle to create a mix of content ‘good enough’ to win.

That is the main finding from the second annual State of Content Marketing Survey, an annual temperature check of the UK’s top digital marketers.

In it we discover that not only is the game getting harder to win, but skill and resource shortages are holding many of you back from the results you demand.

And with an average of 23% of overall marketing budget now being attributed to content marketing it has to work.

Marketers also made clear that a very significant gap still exists between being able to create a strategy that resonates with audiences but also delivers measurable ROI. Only one in five of those that took part can confidently claim to know how to tie those two things together and more than half claim to struggle in terms of creating the type of content that will actually work.

You can dive deeper into the full survey, but this post is designed not just to share that top-level view of opinions, but instead go some way to offering a solution for those key challenges.

Overall the takeaways from the study tell us that there is a single, overriding question to fix the challenges of producing content that delivers ROI – ‘How do we create a content strategy that aligns with search growth, consistently?’

This post is designed to answer the ‘how’ element with an appreciation that designing such a digital content strategy has never been more complex and nuanced.

Where do we start?

With multiple touchpoints and a plethora of different journeys through to your product or service, there is no shame in feeling like you have no idea where to start.

And that’s a problem.

It’s an issue because of the emphasis, and rewards, now placed on the overall content experience.

It’s a challenge I’ve spent thousands of hours contemplating and the result of that thinking is captured in this post. A process focused not on content ideas, or keywords, but on the audience. I call it ‘Conversation Mapping’.

It’s a concept that borrows from the world of user experience and is designed to focus on the shift towards ‘conversational search’ and Google’s quest to solve the entire journey and follow the intent.

So, rather than thinking of the traditional ‘keyword research’ approach to designing a content strategy around what people are searching for we instead use the brainstorming process to develop and capture a number of theoretical conversations being had around our products and services.

That process can, and should, be backed by data of course.

Here’s how it works in detail…

Start with people. Always.

All marketing must start and end with people. It’s a statement I’ve made many times before in my Moz posts and it’s central to this strategic approach.

As a marketer, you’ll probably already be sick to death of posts explaining how to extract and turn data into useful personas so I’m not going to go into full detail on that again. You can always read a previous post on that process, or take a look at this one for some great tips.

And the best way to bring the conversation mapping process to life is to walk through it end to end with an example. In this case, we’re going to choose the PC components market.

This critical initial work will leave us with two to four personas such as in the example below:

conversation mapping personas

With these in place, we can then use a tool such as the Global Web Index to understand things like internet use motivations for each of our personas – against the overall audience profile (Grey) (Blue = Gary, Purple = Tim, Turquoise = Imogen).

graph on conversation mapping personas

For details of how to build this yourself follow this brilliant guide by the GWI team if you’re interested in giving it a go for yourself.

This kind of data mash-up helps shape the more detailed picture that we can capture from qualitative research sessions and bigger data crunching.

With a clear picture of who it is that is likely to be interacting with the products or services, it means you can more accurately map that conversation and the corresponding conversation map (more on what this looks like a little later!) because there is clear understanding about the likes and dislikes of the intended audience. It becomes much easier to imagine their conversations with this picture in your head!

Mapping the conversation with data

With the personas clearly outlined, the next phase is to gather all the data insight you can to better inform the understanding of the key questions Tim is asking around your product or service.

In this example, Tim is in the market for a new gaming PC and we want to understand what his journey is at present and where he is obtaining his information. Do this and then build a super-targeted content plan around it.

What else do you need to know?

Before we start diving into the data it is important to remind ourselves of what we are trying to achieve here. We know from the state of content marketing research that marketers are struggling to align results’ delivery to content planning and need to upskill and resource to deliver that.

Delivering it means focusing and prioritizing on the opportunity closest to the ‘cash register’ – and that almost always means the search channel comes first.

By diving into organic search engine traffic, we are most likely to be able to tap into buying intent – therefore impacting traffic, conversions, and revenue fastest.

The upside to this approach is that search really is aligned now to the wider audience picture anyway, so in building out a search-focused content plan first you are working on solving the biggest pain points that your customers have and helping them in the process.

In doing so you stay front of mind and add value, meaning that you’ll be the first port of call when they do decide it’s time to buy.

Keyword research

The obvious place to start then is by digging into the keyword opportunity for your market.

That doesn’t mean having to trawl through every opportunity in your niche but instead, we want to focus on the informational and functional content opportunities.

Informational content

By far the most important area from a content strategy perspective is the informational piece – as it is here that we can create assets that answer three of the four key micro-moments that your customer will experience.

As a reminder here are the four key moments that an audience will work through as they search for answers to key questions.

graph on key audience moments

Informational content focuses on the ‘I Want to Know’, ‘I Want to Do’ and ‘I Want to Go’ moments and this taps into a huge pool of traffic opportunity.

To give you a feel of what that looks like I have included a visual here showing the size of the prize from a selected keyword set of 4,502 phrases in the PC component niche.

Let’s look then at the process for pulling that data into useful formats to aid the content planning process.

The objective now is to establish where to focus effort in content creation to ensure you have the assets necessary to cover the entire user journey, which you can join together later.

To kickstart the process, I’ve used a tool that Zazzle Media built specifically for this task called the KIT (Keyword Identification Tool) but here’s how it basically works:

The ‘KIT’ process

We begin by extracting a large set of both functional and informational keywords using a mix of competitor keyword research and keyword explorer research. To maximize the size of the set, you can opt for multiple sources and then de-dupe using tools like Ahrefs, Moz and SEMrush.

Once you have the keyword set you are going to be working from, it is best to get ranking data, so you can see where your site is ranking for this content already. This will help later when creating your content strategy, as being able to see where you currently rank for a keyword lets you know whether you need to optimize an existing page or create a new one.

We have our own in-house tools to gather this position data in bulk, there are however third-party tools you could also use, for example:

Whatever rank tracker you decide to use, after it has scraped your position data you will need to export a CSV then use VLOOKUP to pull that information into the ‘Keyword Research’ tab in this free Google sheet tool we’ve created to help pull it all together easily.

There is more detail about the different ways to then categorize that data in this blog post by Zazzle Media’s Sam Underwood, and below you can see a couple of my personal favorites:

  • Incremental informational keyword opportunity by category

graph on incremental informational keyword opportunity by category

  • Incremental traffic by an operator

graph on incremental traffic by an operator

This is useful as it helps us to understand where the persona ‘Tim’ is looking for information and across which product categories. This is the gateway from which you can dive deeper into specific areas to prioritize where to focus next.

To get further value, you could also combine the category information you already have with the most frequently used search operators. From this, you are able to not only work out where Tim is searching, but also how – allowing you to shape and prioritize what questions and pain points you write content for first.

In this example, it might make sense to prioritize ‘motherboards’ for instance and look to create content around ‘best’ and ‘reviews’.

Content auditing

Next up we need to take a closer look at the quality of what is already out there to understand the level at which we must compete to win.

‘To know your enemy, you must become your enemy.’
Sun Tzu

To do that, you need to look both at what you already have and also what is currently out there and working.

This subject is enough to fill a post all of its own so I’m not going to dive into both elements of that here. Instead, for the content auditing part, I implore you to read this recent post by Everett Sizemore, which does a brilliant job of walking you through the perfect process. A lot of this focuses on the technical elements of content auditing but this is still an important element as to maximize ROI (the key fix here) we must also ensure that the platforms from where we publish are ‘fit for purpose’.

However, we need to focus more on the other half of this, by diving into the wider picture and answering the question, “what is working now?”.

To do that you can jump into Buzzsumo or Ahrefs’ content explorer. There are already excellent guides on using Buzzsumo for content research, such as this one so we won’t go over information that has already been covered in-depth.

The output from content research should really be some solid data on what kind of content we know people like related to a specific industry and niche. You should be able to explain the following things:

  1. The types of content that work
  2. Which social networks you should be promoting on
  3. What the ideal word count is
  4. Any topics that work well

For this piece of work, some other beneficial things to gather are below:

  • Most popular content types

graph on most popular content types

  • Traffic by word count

graph on traffic by word count

It’s incredibly clear that for Tim, articles work best and videos where in-depth ‘how’ questions are asked and that’s hugely powerful for shaping your overall content strategy.

In scenarios where we know that written content is key, the next important step is to get a better understanding of how to go about creating it – and the biggest variable is word count. Here we can look at organic traffic by word count and therefore understand the most visited (and visible) content length as well as the most shared content through social (second chart).

This data is not to be viewed as a suggestion that word count affects rankings, or indeed has any effect on the SERPs; instead, we are using it to understand content consumption patterns – and the takeaway here is that Tim likes more in-depth content, as is more willing to share it.

Conversation mapping

The challenge, of course, is bringing all this to life in the context of the user/visitor and this is where our ‘Conversation Mapping’ concept comes into play. To bring that to life let’s follow our current example journey for Tim.

The idea here is to use the usual ‘brainstorming’ meeting to work through every possible conversation around the purchase journey for your product or service.

Instead of looking for individual content ideas, we instead think about the buying process and journey Tim might take through our fictional PC component site.

Clearly, this can be a lengthy process that will spit out multiple examples. For the sake of this story, however, we will look at one – the motherboards opportunity.

And to do so it requires a second voice, not just a list of questions that Tim may ask, and as a result this is where we can also start to think about the emerging voice search opportunity and know more about where Google is taking search following the logical user journey from beginning to end around intent.

Not following what I mean? Let’s look at an example:

conversation mapping example

This theoretical ‘conversation’ is one of the many Tim will be having around this product and the idea is to take the ‘motherboard’ concept and sit in a room to brainstorm the potential conversation variations that may exist around the product.

You may find there are only one or two – or it may be there are dozens, in which case distill them down to a core of the most important ones post brainstorm, to make it easier to then think about designing the content plan around it.

Content planning around the conversation

The next phase is to then map content opportunity against that conversation, as in the below example:

So, what we have done here is to think about all of the opportunities there are along that conversation to create content to help make Tim a smarter consumer.

content planning around the conversation

Turbocharging the opportunity

With your informational and functional plan in place and your conversation mapping exercises complete you’re already looking good for returning a greater ROI when it comes to measuring impact at year end. But there’s also another reason to focus on this approach – and it’s all to do with future market share.

Featured snippets

Unless you’ve had your head under a rock these last few months you’ll have been bombarded by news about the importance of featured snippets. For those that don’t know what they are, snippets are the SERP feature that pulls out and highlights content designed to answer the question being asked by the searcher.

An example of one that Tim may come across in his search for his PC components can be seen below for clarity.

google snippet example

Claiming a snippet requires you to create the best answers to those specific informational queries and doing so better than anyone else.

Google and Bing both do a lot of testing of contenders for these slots to ensure they have the best of the best by measuring bounce rate, dwell time and other factors, and that gives you a really good opportunity to use your content prowess to claim them.

And don’t expect the format to go away anytime soon. Google has been very open in its end game plan to produce a ‘Star Trek’ computer with one answer for everything, as those answers will be triggered by snippet results. It’s something I’ve written about recently here and how the plan will push voice search to the forefront of our planning within the next couple of years as a result.

Given then that such features will only grow in prevalence and importance in the coming months and years then it pays to ensure you have a very solid snippet plan as part of your ROI-focused content planning process.

To do that we can dive back into the data to understand the current snippet share and also where the opportunity still lies ahead of you.

Snippet market share

Before we dive into the planning process it is important to benchmark. To do this we dive into an internal tool called ORT, but it is possible to use a manual process utilizing data from a tool such as Ahrefs or Moz that allow you to extract snippet information and to then use VLOOKUP to push it into separate tabs that show you pieces of insight such as:

Overall snippet market share:

overall snippet market share

  • Featured snippet opportunity by category

featured snippet opportunity by category

 

  • Featured snippet opportunity by an operator

featured snippet opportunity by operator

 

And while this level of traffic is clearly a welcome opportunity it is all critical to understand what it means for the future as well.

We’ve already discussed how snippets will play a key part in the move to voice interfaces, as they provide the ‘direct answers’ given by voice assistants such as Google Home. With 50% of all search queries expected to be delivered by voice by 2020, that key SERP has never been more important as part of a rounded strategy.

Claiming them 

Snippets themselves are important as Google is building SERP ‘real estate’ around them simply because they are part of its growing conversational search strategy. As we move towards voice-led searches the phrases we use naturally become longer and contain much more natural language.

Google wants to incentivize the building of more useful, conversational content to fuel its voice plans and snippets are therefore precisely that – a reward for creating such content and are, as a result, the perfect way in which to test your own voice strategy. Snippets serve as the perfect signposting to a great ‘conversation mapping’ plan.

To give yourself the best possible opportunity of claiming snippets the key factor is a focus on content quality and structure. Numerous recent studies like this and this have pointed at the importance of precisely structuring pages to separate paragraphs into bite-sized 40-50 word direct answers and make the use of bulleted list and tables to present information.

Other useful insights include:

  • Create lists if your users are predominantly mobile-first
  • Write succinct headers that exactly describe the answer being given
  • Use strong external links to trusted sources
  • Use HTTPS
  • Make sure your site is mobile friendly and fast
  • Use multiple images
  • Use tables where appropriate

To make it really easy you can download a really simple guide to page and content structure for snippets here.

Summary

In short, the key to getting over this clear disconnect between content strategy, production, marketing and a return on growing investments is to double down on data and make search the key focus for activity.

Of course, by becoming successful, content has the unique power to positively affect many other key indicators as it never works in a silo.

And with search engines now much better at rewarding people-based marketing efforts with more traffic, rather than keyword focused strategies, a content-led approach is the only way to attack.

Data plays a critical part of that as the days of subjectivity are behind us. By leveraging search data, we can truly understand what our audiences are looking for, what pain points they have and how we can make their journeys more informed and easier to navigate.

The process for doing that starts with the insight piece, defining key persona groups within your target audience and then in understanding their ‘I want to go’, ‘I want to do’, and ‘I want to know’ moments through the informational content research process.

In short, we need to be using data to help us map conversations and not ‘keyword opportunity.’ Do that and you’ll ensure that you deliver positive ROI from your owned and earned marketing activity.

And if you missed the wider findings from the state of content marketing survey then here’s that link again.

Simon Penson is the founder and Managing Director of Zazzle Media. He can be found on Twitter at @simonpenson.

The post Conversation mapping: The new rules to win in search and content marketing appeared first on Search Engine Watch.



source https://searchenginewatch.com/2019/02/26/conversation-mapping-the-new-rules-to-win-in-search-content-marketing/

Top trends to increase value for paid search spend

If you’re like many small to medium sized businesses, budget is everything and every dollar counts.

And while spending advertising dollars may be a big part of your PPC campaign, it’s really the how behind the spend that matters.

More money doesn’t necessary equate to a successful campaign, and before you up your budget for the next quarter, take into account these top trends that can increase the value of your current paid search advertising spend.

Getting your ads and landing pages right on mobile is more important than ever

Expand your reach to millions of potential customers by optimizing your ads and landings pages for mobile device users. Every year, new data is released showing the growing prominence of mobile paid search vs. desktop paid search clicks. According to the Kenshoo Quarterly Trends Report, mobile shopping campaign impressions have more than doubled year-over-year, while click-through rates have stayed consistent. What does this mean to you as a small business?

To maintain a solid quality score and create ads the actually convert, make sure your ads are designed for mobile and your landing pages are user-friendly, no matter the device people are using.

As a PPC advertiser, you probably understand that bidding for a keyword doesn’t guarantee your placement in search results for that keyword. Ad platforms like Bing, Facebook and Google want to know that your ad will provide value to users who click on it.

So, if your ads look terrible from a mobile standpoint, or, if when a user clicks on the ad, they are taken to a landing page that isn’t optimized for a mobile experience, you’re going to get smacked with a low-quality score.

From a customer stand point, that makes sense. Have you ever felt frustrated trying to navigate a website from your phone that has hasn’t been built for that screen experience? Probably.

Bing, Google and Facebook know that too, so they try to prevent a bad user-experience by bumping your site down the list.

If you still insist on getting that un-optimized ad displayed, you’re going to have to pay for it, because the lower the quality score, the more you have to pay for your ads.

On the flipside, by designing a site that is mobile-friendly with a fast and efficient check-out process, and creating ads that are meant for mobile screens, your quality score (and ROI) is given a good boost.

More importantly, prospective customers are more likely to click-through and convert.

Create a remarketing funnel to capture those who were close to converting

Remarketing is a cost-effective way to get in front people who may have visited your website, maybe even added things to their shopping cart, but then abandoned ship before closing the sale.

With remarketing, businesses are able to appeal to a subset of audiences who didn’t initially convert, staying at the forefront of their search. It can help you exclude, cross-sell or upsell to existing site visitors, and ultimately drive a higher ROI.

Remarketing in paid search can help you improve on your current campaign investment, by using data to target specific subsets of people who have visited your site before.

For example: Let’s say you’re an online retailer, and there’s a potential customer searching for a brown leather jacket on your website. She goes through multiple webpages on your site and adds a leather coat to her cart, but then she exits out of the website without actually completing the sale. With a strong remarketing strategy in place, that initial exit is just one step in her purchase journey.

Based on the time that this prospective customer spent on your site, you can pull data and use that to continue to reach her. Since you know that she has some level of interest surrounding a brown leather jacket, the next time she’s searching online for it, you could initialize ads that remarket that exact coat she added to her cart. You can essentially automate a very targeted ad, specific to that user. Pretty cool, huh?

The space between someone’s initial search and actual purchase shouldn’t be a dead zone for your business. Use customer data in a strategic way to guide targeted customer segments in the right direction, helping them remember what they added to your cart in the first place and why they did it. Learn more about remarketing funnels on Bing and how to incorporate them into your current PPC campaigns.

Technology is changing the level of personalization customers expect

As technology continues to evolve and new audiences begin to emerge (taking a larger stake of overall buying power) the purchase journey for your typical consumer is transforming. That is to say, consumers are becoming anything but typical. These new consumers have a set of user experience expectations that are nuanced, and to put it simply, needs to be all about them.

New consumers have had a smart phone since they were 13.

They have no problem sharing private information for a more individualized, personal purchase experience. They want information to be provided to them without having ask for it, and they want to be recognized for their uniqueness in every interaction.

This means that winning the new consumer requires understanding who each person is, and creating contextually relevant experiences to meet these rising expectations. Relying on old methods to attract and retain new consumers isn’t going to add value to your campaign. Instead, learn more about how consumers of today are changing and evaluate how you need to change your marketing perceptions to reach them.

Better user experience is key to increase the value of your spend

The common thread between all three trends is this – better user experience and engagement. A streamlined mobile experience, personalized ads attuned to a customer’s purchase journey, and campaigns designed with the individual in mind will help your business reach the people you want without increasing your current spend – just making it more valuable.

Kenneth Andrew is General Manager SMB Sales at Microsoft / BingAds.

The post Top trends to increase value for paid search spend appeared first on Search Engine Watch.



source https://searchenginewatch.com/2019/02/26/increase-value-paid-search-spend/

Monday 25 February 2019

5 Star: Billy M. "Created successful internet marketing funnels that I would've never been able to create on my..." https://t.co/iSPt8rkYqq https://t.co/SgPsyZItVs


from Twitter https://twitter.com/RisingPhxSEO

Ten reasons your SEO campaign isn’t working

The pursuit to keep up with the latest SEO trends has managed to overwhelm a lot of website owners and marketers in the digital sphere.

Competition is driving this mad race of ranking further and maintaining your online presence has become more difficult than ever.

The top reason for brands taking their Search Engine Optimization strategy this seriously is that they want to score an insane amount of traffic and as a result, they want to stay at the top of the search engine rankings. However, being able to achieve that is far from making simple SEO fixes here and there.

If your SEO strategy is really working, you can expect it to give out results in at least three months. If you don’t see the efforts kicking in, your SEO campaign is probably not working as it should. But, what are the reasons that lead to the failure of your SEO strategy or campaign?

Let’s find out.

Ten reasons your SEO campaign might not be working

  1. Your website has poor content

The top reason behind your search engine optimization campaign’s failure is that your website is not putting out the content that really deserves the viewership of your audience. The traffic on your website is determined by the viewership percentage of the target audience. Your website will only be visited and surfed by the people of the Internet if they find content on your website that is worth going through and consuming.

Making sure that your website is putting out good content is an obligation for you, as a website owner. If your content is not original, plagiarism-free, and free of any grammatical errors, your audience will begin to abandon your website and this might result in them not coming back. Overall, you must make sure that your brand’s content is consumable and that it is of great value to your audience.

  1. Your choice of hosting is not competent

Your hosting provider plays a very important role in determining the search engine performance of your website. If the choice of web hosting for your website isn’t reliable and competent, you are killing your website’s search engine ranking.

Choosing the right web host and investing in a reliable provider is going to be the best decision for your website. So, make sure that you review the best web hosts available in the market before making a confirmed choice.

  1. There’s a problem with your link profile

The link profile of your website is a huge determinant of your site’s survival amidst all the algorithm update changes. Playing by the rules will help your website’s SEO campaign perform better and not eventually fail.

Building the right link profile for your website, having hyperlinks that attract users to your site, and earning backlinks from authoritative websites will make your website fail-proof. In this pursuit, please make sure that you are not buying backlinks for a fee or on a barter basis. Google is smarter than you think and it will eventually catch up with your strategy and penalize your website, rendering your website’s SEO strategy to fail.

  1. You are not keeping up with Google Algorithm update

A lot of website owners, digital marketers, and SEO strategists are often left baffled at the number of Algorithm updates pushed out by Google. As notorious they might be, failing to abide by the directives of these Algorithms can lead to the failure of your SEO strategy.

With Google changing its search algorithm every now and then every year, you must not ignore the fact that these changes affect your site’s search results in significant ways. As for now, make sure that your website’s SEO campaign is in accordance with the major Google Algorithm updates such as Google Panda, Penguin, Hummingbird, Fred etc.

  1. High bounce rate

Is your website experiencing an unusually high bounce rate? Well, that is one of the reasons that your SEO campaign isn’t working. You can check your site’s bounce rate by heading to Google Analytics and checking your page metrics. FYI, if too many people are leaving your website after visiting just one page, that’s a high bounce rate for you.

  1. Your SEO strategy is outdated

Well, that’s the simplest explanation for your SEO campaign not performing well, as per your expectations; your SEO strategy is outdated and not at par with the current SEO trends.

If you are still falling for outdated SEO tactics such as reciprocal linking, flat URL structure, keyword stuffing, Link and article directories, exact-match domains etc., you are murdering your site’s SEO campaigns.

  1. Your site’s on-site duration is terrible

The amount of time spent by a visitor on your site defines the dwell time on your site. If it’s not as per the standards i.e. if people are leaving your page soon after they drop on your website (for whatever reasons) your website’s SEO campaign is not going to reap any results.

  1. You are expecting results too soon

As mentioned above, your SEO efforts started yielding results after a period of 3 months or more. Hence, if you are expecting your SEO campaign to be a quick sprout, we request you to be a little more patient and wait for it to give out relevant results.

  1. You are not tapping social media properly

The success of your overall SEO strategy is determined truly only when you tap into all the relevant grounds that determine the SEO performance of your business website. We are talking about the social media channels that significantly contribute to the success of your SEO campaign.

  1. Your website isn’t mobile-first

It’s 2019 and this shouldn’t be the case. If your website isn’t responsive and mobile-friendly yet, we have a few harsh words for you. One of the most basic requirements is to have a mobile responsive version of your website. If people are unable to access your website on their mobile devices, you are missing out on significant traffic and that could be a key reason for the failure of your SEO campaign.

Conclusion:

There are so many reasons that might lead to the failure of your SEO campaign. However, the ten listed above are the most common ones. By making sure that you have checked all of them out, you can move to explore any more reasons that might be causing your SEO strategy to fail.

Once you have determined what was the root cause of your problem, you will need to place an action plan to step up your SEO game. This will call for the revaluation of your existing SEO strategy and making a few fixes. Once you are done, you just need to stay calm and wait for the machinery to kick in.

Let us know what were some reasons that your SEO campaign didn’t work as expected?

The post Ten reasons your SEO campaign isn’t working appeared first on Search Engine Watch.



source https://searchenginewatch.com/2019/02/25/ten-reasons-seo-campaign-not-working/

What can we learn from voice search in 2018?

A study by HigherVisibility on voice search over the past few years has revealed some interesting trends in the industry.

Dubbed How Popular Is Voice Search?, the 2018 study is a follow up to the first one that was done the previous year.

According to the study, the number of mobile users who trusted the accuracy of voice search dropped from 87% in 2017 to 82% in 2018.

Additionally, while up to 53% of the respondents admitted to using voice search while driving in 2017, that number dropped to 35% in 2018.

These are just some of the many surprising findings by the study that suggests a declining use of voice search, loss of trust in voice assistants, increasing adoption of voice search by the older generations and a lot more.

While certain studies (especially those done with more accuracy) might show a rather depressing look of the industry, at the end of the day there is a guaranteed silver lining: We get a better understanding of voice search usage.

2018 gave us a lot of lessons that can be applied going forward to ensure you make smarter marketing decisions.

Here are three valuable lessons from voice search in 2018:

  1. Very often, voice search is local

An April 2018 study done by Brightlocal revealed that often when people use voice search, the searches are local. In the survey, of the 1,012 US customers who participated, 58% had used voice search on a smartphone to find information about a local business in the previous 12 months. Of the voice search users, 46% said they searched local business information on a daily basis.

This frequent application of voice search in finding local business information shows how important this trend can be for a brick-and-mortar business. At every point in their journey, the buyer needs access to information that can help them make quicker and more sound decisions. It’s important to improve your business standing in the local search environment by providing relevant information when the buyer needs it most.

As you make the content relevant for the user, remember also to brush up on your SEO so search engines can find it. Apart from making sure the content on your website is relevant and optimized for the search queries you want to rank for, manage your online reputation by making sure people are saying positive things about your business and all concerns are addressed.

  1. Domain authority trumps page authority

Domain authority is a hint to search engines as to how trusted your website is as a source of information. It also determines how high you rank for certain keywords, making it an important part of SEO.

When doing a text search on their mobile or PC, users are presented with a list of results, complete with snippets so they can quickly filter through the list. This makes getting traffic from the SERP much easier than on voice search.

With voice search, the user doesn’t get to scroll. They ask a complete question like “where can I get a plumber near me?” and get an answer as opposed to text search where the query would probably be like “best plumber Lagos.” 

As Backlinko points out, “Google needs to be extremely confident that they are giving you accurate information.” Therefore, domain authority becomes a strong signal for reliable information.

According to Backlinko, the average Domain Rating for a voice search result is 76.8. This is quite a high bar.

  1. Mobile voice search losing ground to smart speaker search

It wasn’t too long ago when mobile voice search was as shiny as voice-controlled smart speakers are. Google Assistant, Siri and Cortana received localized queries like “Siri, show me an Indian restaurant near me” and they gave answers to the best of their ability.

Brands were kept on alert about this new way of searching and they started preparing to serve those consumers who wanted their answers right when they needed them — “in the moment searches.” The future of voice search was going to be mobile and local.

But since 2016 when Google’s Sundar Pichai gave the statement that 20% of all searches “made on Google app and on Android” “in the US” were voice queries, the search giant has kept mum on the mobile voice search statistics. This leads to a common concern: Is the mobile voice search fire still burning?

Verto Analytics released data that indicates mobile voice search is losing ground to smart-speaker search. According to the data, usage and engagement with Siri declined between 2016 and 2017, the same period during which Alexa’s usage skyrocketed.

However, this isn’t to say mobile voice search is too low to optimize for. Mobile search has advantages that smart-speaker search can’t easily cover for right away. For instance, while smart speakers are conveniently located in specific rooms, smartphones are everywhere inside and out, increasing the chances of mobile voice search. The mentioned Brightlocal study shows not just the influence of voice search on local businesses but also the dominance of mobile voice search.

Conclusion

There is no doubt that the use of voice search will only become more popular over time. Many experts and studies predict a significant increase in adoption by as early as 2020. Aside from the expert predictions, the convenience if voice search is enough to make me root for the technology.

By knowing who’s using voice technology and how they are using it, smart marketers can allocate more appropriate portions of their budget to voice search optimization. These lessons show exactly that.

Ayodeji Onibalusi is the Founder of Effective Inbound Marketing.

The post What can we learn from voice search in 2018? appeared first on Search Engine Watch.



source https://searchenginewatch.com/what-we-can-learn-from-voice-search-2018/2019/02/25/119934/