31.12.17

New Year’s Eve 2017 Google doodle brings back penguins for the holiday doodle series

Google started its holiday doodle series on December 18 when it first introduced the family of animated penguins. Since then it posted the second part of the series on Christmas, December 25, and now today’s third entry to mark New Year’s Eve.

“Our feathery friends have enjoyed their delicious traditions and are now ringing in the new year with sparklers in hand,” writes Google on its Google Doodle Blog, “As they all admire the fireworks overhead, they think about how much fun it was to spend this time together.”

While the first two doodles in the series led to searches for “December global festivities,” today’s doodle leads to a search for “New Year’s Eve 2017.”

It has also added the following two slides to its collection of images, showing the penguins celebrating the New Year:

According to the Google Doodle Blog, there will be one more doodle to complete the series that it plans to post tomorrow on New Year’s Day: “Tomorrow, follow along as our penguin friends start a new day in a new year.”


About The Author

Amy Gesenhues is Third Door Media's General Assignment Reporter, covering the latest news and updates for Search Engine Land and Marketing Land. From 2009 to 2012, she was an award-winning syndicated columnist for a number of daily newspapers from New York to Texas. With more than ten years of marketing management experience, she has contributed to a variety of traditional and online publications, including

MarketingProfs.com

,

SoftwareCEO.com

, and Sales and Marketing Management Magazine. Read more of Amy's articles.



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New Year's Eve 2017 Google Logo & Bing Theme

Today is New Year's Eve 2017, the last day of 2017 and of course, both Google and Bing have special logos and designs.

Here is the Bing background:

Here is the static Google Doodle:

To see the full Penguin slide show of New Years, check out the Doodle post.

Forum discussion at Google+.



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29.12.17

Marketing Day: 2018 marketing goals, Google My Business review policy changes & social media ads

Here's our recap of what happened in online marketing today, as reported on Marketing Land and other places across the web.

Please visit Marketing Land for the full article.


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SearchCap: Google Express search promo, SEO goals & search pictures

Below is what happened in search today, as reported on Search Engine Land and from other places across the web. The post SearchCap: Google Express search promo, SEO goals & search pictures appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.


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Daily Search Forum Recap: December 29, 2017


Here is a recap of what happened in the search forums today, through the eyes of the Search Engine Roundtable and other search forums on the web.

Search Engine Roundtable Stories:

Other Great Search Forum Threads:



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Three things marketers must do to better serve customers in 2018

The year 2018 will be the watershed year when savvy marketers move to expand their roles to encompass every aspect of the customer journey, end to end.

While 37 percent of marketing budgets are still spent on customer acquisition, according to the 2017-2018 Gartner CMO Spend Survey, 2018 will see marketers devoting increased amounts of time and resources to engaging with existing customers. In fact, current customers — always a core constituency — will soon be marketing’s primary audience, as CEOs, fearful of falling victim to disruption, look to invest in making the brand relationship more valuable.

Here’s why.

In the all-things-social world, customer sentiment now has the largest positive, or negative, effect on a brand. Their voices amplified by social platforms, existing customers are your most persuasive advocates or most damaging detractors. Combine that with the fact that it costs much more to acquire than to retain a customer, and it’s clear that nurturing existing customers delivers a significantly higher ROI on marketing spend.

[Read the full article on MarTech Today.]


Opinions expressed in this article are those of the guest author and not necessarily Marketing Land. Staff authors are listed here.


About The Author

Matt is group vice president of product marketing, leading Product & Solution marketing for Marketo. Before joining the company in 2013, Matt helped launch LineStream Technologies as the VP of Marketing. Previously, he spent time at Texas Instruments and Rovi corporation, where he held positions in sales, marketing, business development, and product management. Matt holds a B.S. in Computer Science from Santa Clara University and an MBA from UC Berkeley's Haas School of Business. He lives in San Francisco with his wife and son and spends his spare time playing golf and cooking.



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Negative reviews from ex-employees are finally against Google’s guidelines

I hear complaints from business owners and marketers all the time that the Google My Business guidelines are often ambiguous, and I tend to agree. It can be easy to read a guideline and interpret it incorrectly.

I have learned that the key to understanding the guidelines is through time and experience. Seeing what Google will and will not act on can provide insight into what things they really care about, and this can help you read between the lines.

[Read the full article on Search Engine Land.]


Opinions expressed in this article are those of the guest author and not necessarily Marketing Land. Staff authors are listed here.


About The Author

Joy Hawkins is a Local SEO expert who is a part of Google's Top Contributor program & MapMaker Regional Leads program. She regularly contributes to many online communities in the Local SEO world, including the Google My Business forum (Top Contributor), the Local Search Forum (Top Contributor), and the Local University Forum (Moderator). She also a contributor to the Moz Local Search Ranking Factors survey. Joy currently works as a product consultant at

Imprezzio Marketing

in Toronto. She also loves to blog on her own time about things pertaining to

Local SEO

.



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A year in review: Search Engine Land’s top 10 columns of 2017

We conclude our year-in-review series by calling out our most popular columns of 2017, which covered subjects ranging from technical SEO tips to local search updates and more. The post A year in review: Search Engine Land’s top 10 columns of 2017 appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.


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On the cutting edge of martech: Our top columns of 2017

It was a banner year for marketing technology. More data and tech flooded an already crowded digital marketing ecosystem, and the technologies that had previously been available to us became ever more sophisticated, providing even greater value to organizations than before. To get a taste of just how rapidly the space is growing, you need look no further than Scott Brinker’s oft-cited Marketing Technology Landscape infographic, which grew from a measly 150 martech and ad tech companies listed back in 2011 to nearly 5,000 today.

Meanwhile, as companies grappled with transparency and trust, many brands looked toward emerging technologies to help solve the issue. After all, while technology can’t replace human judgment, we’ve at least reached a point where we can use it to solve marketing problems faster, more cheaply and more efficiently than humans.

Our readers were especially eager to learn more about artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning and how to apply them to an organization’s marketing structure to hone processes and services. Some of the most popular columns of the year predicted the future of AI in marketing and described how current technologies can be used to automate your digital marketing program.

For these topics and more, check out our top 10 columns of the year on MarTech Today:

  1. Four trends that will reshape marketing in 2017 by Russell Glass, published on 1/11/2017.
  2. Should PPC agencies be scared of automation? by Anna Shirley, published on 3/8/2017.
  3. The future of AI marketing applications in retail by Daniel Faggella, published on 8/8/2017.
  4. Voice search and data: The two trends that will shape online marketing in 2017 by Jim Yu, published on 4/4/2017.
  5. From algorithms to advertising: 7 steps to introducing AI to marketing by Tomer Naveh, published on 3/1/2017.
  6. The modern marketer’s guide to machine learning algorithms by Sean Zinsmeister, published on 4/26/2017.
  7. B2B applications of AI in marketing: Two use cases that matter by Daniel Faggella, published on 7/10/2017.
  8. Kiss your personas goodbye (and say hello, AI)! by Venkat Nagaswamy, published on 2/8/2017.
  9. 5-year trends in artificially intelligent marketing by Daniel Faggella, published on 3/20/2017.
  10. The value of applying artificial intelligence in display advertising by Adam Grow, published on 6/9/2017.

About The Author

Desiree Everts DeNunzio is Associate Features Editor at Search Engine Land and Marketing Land and a longtime digital media editor and writer. Formerly, she was an associate editor at PBS MediaShift, where she contributed to Digital Content Next's Intelligence Report. She's also worked for CNET, GigaOm and Wired magazine.



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8 tips for getting social media ads right

A friend recently complained to me that the targeted ads that persistently stud her social media feeds are not only disruptive but also frequently irrelevant. She uses social media primarily to keep track of friends and to follow artists and crafters that could offer her inspiration or technical knowledge.

As she vented her frustration, I wondered why the ads she saw were still so consistently missing the mark despite the great leaps in ad targeting technology. Surely there must be a better way for brands to reach audiences through social media.

Surprisingly, though almost two-thirds of social media users are irritated by the number of promotions that clutter their feeds, and 26 percent actively ignore marketing content, a whopping 62 percent follow at least one brand on social media.

According to the GlobalWebIndex, 42 percent of social media users are there to “stay in touch” with their friends, while over a third are also interested in following current events, finding entertaining content or killing time. Though 27 percent of users find or research products on social media, most usage is skewed toward building relationships. As such, it’s clear why many social media users are annoyed by ads they find intrusive, irrelevant or boring.

While this data helps us understand why users may find ads abrasive, it also gives us a glimpse into why they are so open to following brands on social media. Today’s hypercompetitive ethos is not limited to brands or ads. Consumers want to know about the latest trends in fashion and technology, and they want to know first. By following brands, users can keep tabs on the latest and greatest.

Following also allows consumers to interact with brands more directly and to voice their dissatisfaction when brands misstep. A full 46 percent of users have “called out” brands on social media, and four out of five believe that this has had a positive impact on brand accountability. The good news for brands is that when they respond well, 45 percent of users will post about the interaction, and over a third will share the experience with their friends.

Brands should note that 60 percent of callouts are in response to perceived dishonesty, which should lend some context to the fact that 30 percent will unfollow a brand that uses slang or jargon inconsistent with the brand’s image. This can be a costly mistake, as 76 percent of users aged 13 to 25 stopped buying from brands after unfollowing.

The news may seem bleak, but the truth is that these facts draw a clear path for brands that want to tap into the unprecedented consumer access offered by the social media revolution. Here are some tips to keep in mind.

1. Be authentic

Above all, brands need to strive for authenticity. Consumers have shown that they are not only open to branded social media content, they welcome it, provided the content is useful and relevant rather than disruptive to their experience.

From social media usage statistics, we see that users are most interested in staying connected and entertained. Brands that share news of upcoming trends or offer content that stands on its own merit can add value to users’ social media experience while reaching out to a more receptive audience.

2. Be useful

Understanding how individuals utilize their social media presence can help brands leverage their marketing dollars. Users may not want to see a soft-drink ad while scrolling through pictures of a friend’s trip, but an airline ad might hit home.

Instructional videos can be a particularly effective way of reaching an audience in a useful manner. Like many others, my friend would be far more welcoming of how-to videos from a yarn supplier than of the seemingly arbitrary clothing ads that pepper her crafting-heavy social media feeds.

3. Be contextual

As always, context is key. Not all social media interactions are alike. Users may look to one branch of their network for entertainment or news and to another for technical knowledge or inspiration.

While the current targeting approach estimates user proclivities based on the activity and interests of their network as a whole, determining how users relate to specific nodes in the network will enable brands to reach out to users when and where they will be most receptive to the marketing content in question.

4. Be credible

Differentiation is also critical in establishing credibility. An American Press Institute study showed that users place greater weight on who shares content than on where it came from originally. Social media users, especially those in the 13-to-24 age bracket, will actively share and discuss content they find engaging.

Brands can make use of this phenomenon to proliferate their content, but only if those who share it are perceived to be trustworthy by members of their network. How connections respond to a user’s posts or shares can be more important than how much the user shares.

5. Be accessible

Brands need to build an audience of active and reliable followers who will help spread branded content to loyal followers of their own. Beyond publishing content that is engaging and true to their image, brands can accomplish this by making themselves more accessible to consumers.

Instant messaging can be a powerful tool for answering consumer questions, responding to complaints and building more intimate relationships with followers. By responding in a more immediate and personal way to users, brands can empower users to take the initiative in building a stronger relationship with them.

6. Be persistent

The most important factor that determines a brand’s success in the world of social media is perseverance. In part, this means being responsive to user feedback and actively working to improve their social media presence.

At the same time, brands need to stick to their guns. A majority (some 60 percent) of users need to interact with content between two and four times before taking action, according to a Sprout Social survey. A steady production of quality content will keep users tuned in, translating user engagement with content into tangible results.

7. Be testy

Brands too often fail to invest in testing to understand the effectiveness of their social media advertising. It’s easy to make excuses for not doing so: “the per ad investment is too small,” “I get metrics from the platform,” or “we don’t have time” are the most frequently heard.

This is a mistake. Without independent validation that the ads achieve their objectives (both attitudinal and behavioral), a brand can’t be sure it’s made it through the gauntlet of challenges outlined above.

8. Use your listening skills

Brands that listen actively to social media users and respond earnestly to their needs and interests stand to gain a foothold in the new marketing frontier. Over 75 percent of users in the Sprout survey report purchasing a product after interacting with marketing content on a social media platform. Furthermore, just as many users discovered a new brand through social media as in-store or via a conventional ad.

While many brands are struggling to reach consumers on social media (and not for lack of trying), they can overcome the resistance they are experiencing by opening their ears — before their pocketbooks.


Opinions expressed in this article are those of the guest author and not necessarily Marketing Land. Staff authors are listed here.


About The Author

Peter Minnium is President of Ipsos Connect, where he leads the US team in helping companies measure and amplify how media, brands, and consumers connect through compelling content and great communications. Prior to his switch to market research, Peter was Head of Brand Initiatives at the IAB focused on addressing the under-representation of creative brand advertising online.



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What piqued your fellow marketers’ interest this year — our top 10 columns on Marketing Land

If you’re here for strategic social media insights, you’re definitely not alone, as the bulk of the most-read columns of 2017 touched on social media marketing topics. From LinkedIn’s Matched Audiences to Facebook algorithm hacks to selling on social media and creating compelling content, these columns explored both time-tested tips and new products and techniques.

In the “new twists” category came AJ Wilcox’ piece — our top column of the year regardless of topic — which explored LinkedIn’s Matched Audiences product and compared it to Facebook Custom Audiences. Chris Kerns introduced marketers to Twitch, a live-streaming video platform, while Brian Patterson explored the viral phenomenon that is the Instant Pot, which really hit the mainstream in 2017. Also on our virtual pages, Wesley Young talked up Facebook’s new ad targeting capabilities and Andrew Dubatowka defied expectations about brand safety — a hot topic in the display space in recent years.

But perennial topics like selling on social media, creating compelling content and leveraging analytics were also big hits with the Marketing Land audience, which understands that marketing fundamentals often remain the same even if their expressions change as new technologies drive shifts in consumer habits. If you missed any of these insightful columns, we encourage you to take a look as we consider the lessons of 2017 and dive into the challenges and opportunities of 2018.

  1. LinkedIn’s new Matched Audiences feature just blew Facebook Custom Audiences out of the water for B2B by AJ Wilcox, published on 4/24/2017.
  2. 9 ways to sell on social media by Jordan Kasteler, published on 1/3/2017.
  3. Why marketers should be paying attention to Twitch by Chris Kerns, published on 1/16/2017.
  4. 5 Facebook algorithm hacks to up your content marketing game by Sweta Patel, published on 9/4/2017.
  5. The magic behind the Instant Pot viral phenomenon (and the CEO’s favorite recipe) by Brian Patterson, published on 3/13/2017.
  6. The most brand-safe app category is not what you’d expect by Andrew Dubatowka, published on 7/17/2017.
  7. Facebook tests a new ad format that puts it further ahead of its competitors by Wesley Young, published on 9/11/2017.
  8. 10 tools for creating compelling content for social media by Jordan Kasteler, published on 8/15/2017.
  9. 10 things you should be doing now on social media to grow your business by Will Scott, published on 2/27/2017.
  10. Are you leveraging these underutilized Google Analytics features? by David Booth, published on 2/27/2017.

About The Author

Pamela Parker

is Executive Features Editor at Marketing Land,

MarTech Today

and

Search Engine Land

. She's a well-respected authority on digital marketing, having reported and written on the subject since 1998. She's a former managing editor of ClickZ, and worked on the business side helping independent publishers monetize their sites at Federated Media Publishing.



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New test prominently showcases Google Express in mobile search results

Image: Google

This week, we spotted a new treatment for Google Express in the search results. This included two new elements: a promotion for the program at the top of the results and a new look for Google Express ads in the Shopping carousel.

The “Get it with Google Express” promotion at the very top of the results, just below the navigation, touts the program’s easy checkout and free delivery. The Google Express Shopping ad features the program logo and displays the participating retailer name — in this case, Walmart — selling the product showcased in the ad.

These changes combine to make the Google Express program much more prominent on the page. Google typically displays these ads with “Google Express” in place of the retailer name and “Free shipping” in the promotion area of the ad. Here are examples of these ads in a Knowledge Panel and a regular Shopping carousel:

The test is quite limited. It’s running on mobile only in the US when it regards the offer to be particularly relevant to the query.

In August, Walmart and Google partnered to enable shopping on Walmart through Google Assistant, including Google Home devices when users link their Walmart accounts to Google Express. Target expanded a similar voice-commerce agreement nationwide in October.

It is interesting to see Google promoting its own program so prominently here. Google Express launched in 2013 as a way to take on Amazon. More than 50 retailers now participate in the program, which offers free delivery or shipping when qualifying order values are met, same-day to a week out depending on the user’s location.


About The Author

As Third Door Media's paid media reporter, Ginny Marvin writes about paid online marketing topics including paid search, paid social, display and retargeting for Search Engine Land and Marketing Land. With more than 15 years of marketing experience, Ginny has held both in-house and agency management positions. She provides search marketing and demand generation advice for ecommerce companies and can be found on Twitter as @ginnymarvin.



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‘Alexa: How will voice impact my mobile marketing?’

If you thought mobile transformed marketing and customer engagement, get ready for voice to change everything again.

Thinking back to the early 2000s, people had no idea how complex and clunky Blackberry devices were. It was the “gestation phase” for smartphones — when the platform was new, expensive and difficult to use. Then Apple and Google came along, leapfrogged everyone and drove a massive adoption of smartphones.

The mature growth phase spurred by Apple and Google kicked off a period of exponential growth. Ten years ago, we didn’t know how big a disruption smartphones would be — but just look at what we’ve learned in a decade.

In essence, the last 10 years created a mobile marketing revolution, which helped brands reach audiences wherever they were, collect loads of critical data and use that data to create and hone real-time interactive experiences with their users.

At that time, if your brand didn’t have a mobile strategy, chances are you were left for dead. (This still holds true today, by the way.) Today, we find ourselves on the precipice of the next catalyst: voice. If you’re not thinking about how to incorporate voice into your mobile strategy, you, too, may be left in the dust.

Disruptor or disrupted?

Needless to say, engagement as we know it is drastically changing. The use of voice technology such as that of Siri, Amazon Echo and Google Home — and soon, Apple’s HomePod — has increased dramatically, and it’s only expected to continue growing.

In many households, it’s become commonplace to ask Alexa to play a song or check the weather, and this technology is even dipping its toes into retail. In fact, research company NPD Group, Inc., found that overall online spending by consumers rose after the purchase of an Echo in every category except for travel. Another example is the partnership between Google and Walmart that will allow customers to “voice shop” via Google Assistant.

Are we past the days of touching, tapping and swiping? Probably not quite yet. But 2017 has already been called “The Year of Voice,” and more and more we’re bypassing screen time and interacting through the medium of voice.

Soon, the norm will not only be talking to our phones and devices but also to our refrigerators, washing machines and cars — some of the more complex devices we own. This is not surprising since it’s expected that there will be more than 30 million voice-activated digital assistants in US homes by the end of this year.

Additionally, by 2020, voice is expected to drive half of all searches on mobile, while mobile is expected to drive half of all e-commerce transactions.

So what does this mean for brands trying to establish themselves in the burgeoning market? Think about it: You likely don’t care from where you get the weather when calling out to Alexa, just that you get an accurate report.

Furthermore, when you’re calling out for Alexa to add milk to your shopping list, she may simply respond confirming the best options based on price. But when you’re using text to Google a question, you are met with pages upon pages of options.

Among many other things, marketing as we’ve known it is going to change tremendously. How can brands compete in this logo-less space? Marketing itself has typically included some form of visual real estate — a website, a mobile app or something else — where there was a logo and a UX that were recognizable and connected you with the brand experience. With voice, these elements disappear.

This means that brands must now focus on making it easy for consumers to search and shop for products using voice commands. And brands will need to be able to track and understand voice interactions in the same way as other interactions to provide the right experience to the right customer at the right time.

Additionally, brands will need to make sure that their apps and voice strategies play nicely together. There are certain experiences that are purposely built for voice interactions, but many that are not. For example, asking for the weather on a voice device makes sense, but if you want to look through the hour-by-hour weather report, an app is still the best experience to consume that information.

Brands will need to be able to balance the immersive experiences that apps provide with simple, powerful voice experiences to ensure they are meeting the demands of their customers. And they will need to be thoughtful about how they approach and design each channel to meet those demands.

The future is now

The beauty of voice is that it can be integrated into an existing app. The use of voice to make it easier to compare prices and hail a car will only help bring convenience to consumers who are growing to expect such service. Soon, we’ll not only be using voice for commands and queries, but we’ll be able to have intelligent conversations with bots.

Marketers need to be thinking about and planning for the impact of voice on their brand and engagement strategies — now. The winners here will be those who put machine learning and big data to work strategically — and quickly — enough adapt to this new reality.

The year 2018 will certainly deliver plenty of opportunities to test and learn, but I believe it’s safe to say that, unlike the 10 years we’ve had with the iPhone trying to get mobile engagement right, voice engagement is going to happen much faster.

With the name of the game being voice, speak now or forever hold your peace.


Opinions expressed in this article are those of the guest author and not necessarily MarTech Today. Staff authors are listed here.


About The Author

As the Director of Marketing Communications at

Localytics

, Kristin is focused on driving the public relations, analyst relations, thought leadership, event sponsorship/speaker's bureau and social media strategies for the company. She brings 15 years of experience in leading global public relations, marketing communications and content marketing campaigns and programs for a range of B2B technology companies, including early stage startups all the way up to large public companies.



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Year in Search: The most fantastic fads of 2017

SMART goals for SEO

As 2017 comes to a close, many SEOs will be looking forward and setting some goals for their campaigns in 2018. In this post, I am going to take a look at the SMART goals methodology that can help you set and achieve aggressive, yet realistic goals.

SMART goals

SMART goals set out a series of criteria that can be used for setting marketing objectives. This is all wrapped up in the clever mnemonic acronym — Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Realistic and Timelined — which makes SMART goals so easy to remember.

S — Specific

Specific objectives are crucial to success in any marketing campaign. We need to know what a goal or conversion is for your website and how this relates to the broader business objectives. It is easy to think, “We want to rank #1 for various search terms,” but that’s just a detail. What we really want is more exposure, more visits and more leads or sales.

It’s essential to ensure that our goals are crystal-clear and connected to our business objectives so that everyone from the boardroom to the marketing department understands what success looks like.

M — Measurable

The promise of digital marketing is that everything can be measured. But simply installing analytics is rarely enough. We have to be specific regarding our SEO goals so we can ensure we know how to measure these goals and then how to illustrate that improvements in SEO metrics are clearly correlating with improved business results. As an example: a 50 percent rise in organic traffic resulted in a 50 percent rise in conversions from organic traffic.

There are many business and SEO KPIs we can track here, but here are a few to consider:

SEO metrics

  • Rank for main converting keywords (local/organic).
  • Rank for secondary benchmark keywords (local/organic).
  • Citation Flow.
  • Trust Flow.
  • Trust & Citation Balance.

Link-building metrics

  • Total links built.
  • Number of links from authority sites.
  • Number of links from relevant sites.

Real-world metrics

  • Increase in organic traffic.
  • Increase in number of pages on the site that generate traffic.
  • Increase in non-branded search traffic.
  • Percentage increase in organic conversions.
  • Organic Impressions (Search Console).

A — Achievable

This is a big one with regard to planning. We want to set aggressive goals so we aim high (maybe our chance of hitting the goal is 50 percent), but we don’t want to set our goals too high such that they are simply unattainable.

Key areas to consider here are:

  • SEO feasibility: Can you target the keywords you are going after?
  • Situation: Are you in the same league as the big players on the first page?
  • Resources: Do you have the resources to hit these goals?

Developing SMART goals will often be an iterative process as we consider what we want and what is achievable in our campaign window with our available resources.

R — Realistic

Setting realistic SEO goals requires a solid understanding of the search results for the search terms you are targeting. If you are a national business and results for the keywords you are targeting show only local business results, then ranking in the top three may be an uphill battle. However, you may be able to generate first-page visibility with really well thought out location pages.

Realistic has to take the following into consideration:

  • Can this be done?
  • Do we have enough resources to do this?

So, you may decide that you can achieve your objective, but your goals for 2018 are to move you 80 percent of the way toward the finish line.

Realistic vs. achievable is an important distinction, as it plays into the short- and long-term nature of SEO as a marketing tactic. You may have to invest for 12 months to reach your goal, so ROI during this period may be low, and you have to factor this into your budgets when lining SEO up against more instant forms of marketing like PPC.

Note: “R” can also stand for “relevant” when considering SEO goals. It’s important to ensure that the keywords or traffic we are targeting are relevant to the products or services we provide. If we increase rankings and traffic without seeing an improvement in conversions, odds are the traffic is not relevant enough.

T — Timelined

Time is hugely important when setting SEO goals, as SEO will often take far longer than other forms of online marketing. PPC delivers visibility and traffic instantly. And no objective can ever fail if it is not timed. So we have to be realistic about what can be achieved in a given time period.

It is not always easy to determine how long SEO will take or cost, yet we must do all we can to estimate timelines and use our KPIs to track progress toward the goal.

Using SMART goals for SEO

At Bowler Hat, the SEO agency I run in the UK, a good number of inquiries will simply state that they want to rank #1 for a given keyword (or set of keywords). This is not a SMART goal. SMART goals need to state why that goal will help achieve the business and marketing objectives.

SMART goals don’t have to be complicated and will look more like:

“We want to achieve leads from organic search by 50% over 12 months. We will do this by moving our target keywords from the bottom of page 1 to the top half of page 1.”

  • Specific — We want to increase leads from organic search by 50 percent.
  • Measurable — Easily measurable through rankings, organic traffic and results.
  • Achievable — Rankings can always be improved, so this is achievable.
  • Realistic — This is an improvement to an existing lead source.
  • Timeline — 12 months gives us a deadline.

This approach also allows you to conduct a simple situation analysis and identify if elements of your digital marketing toolbox are not up to the job. Maybe you are lacking in content assets for your SEO campaigns, or your website SEO is just not dialed in. Whatever the issue, setting SMART goals will help you identify problems and sharpen up your SEO and digital marketing in 2018 and beyond.

SEO SMARTer, not harder

In the rush to go digital, it is all too easy to forget to get the foundation of your marketing dialed in. Tools like the 4 Ps, SWOT Analysis and SMART goals can ensure your SEO is strategic to maximize results.


Opinions expressed in this article are those of the guest author and not necessarily Search Engine Land. Staff authors are listed here.


About The Author

Marcus Miller is an experienced SEO and PPC consultant based in Birmingham, UK. Marcus focuses on strategy, audits, local SEO, technical SEO, PPC and just generally helping businesses dominate search and social. Marcus is managing director of the UK SEO and digital marketing company

Bowler Hat

and also runs

wArmour aka WordPress Armour

which focuses on helping WordPress owners get their security, SEO and site maintenance dialled in without breaking the bank.



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Advertising is on life support

I’m sure a lot of you immediately rolled your eyes when you saw this headline. After all, advertising as a practice isn’t dead just yet and, in reality, it isn’t going away anytime soon. Advertising is a fundamental part of how brands communicate with customers. So, to say that advertising is on its last legs might seem like a stretch. Allow me to explain why there’s some truth to it.

Advertising still has a certain amount of sexiness to it. Many of us still hold onto a “Madmen”-induced nostalgia for advertising — and, for those of us who were a part of the world of advertising before the digital revolution officially took hold, those memories are not easily forgotten.

Unfortunately, those days are long gone. That was a time when the entire advertising ecosystem was linear: A client created a brief; the agency developed rounds of concepts (until a campaign idea was chosen); the agency fleshed out the concept across deliverables; and then those assets were placed into purchased media channels so that a brand’s marketing message could get in front of consumers and encourage them to take a specific action. Next campaign comes along. Rinse and repeat.

While that may be a simplistic view of the advertising world of yore, it illustrates a fairly important point: That’s not how advertising works today.

Not only have the media channels that brands use today to connect with customers changed dramatically — and are constantly in a frenzied state of flux — but consumers themselves have changed a whole lot, too.

And guess what? Consumers are today’s change agents. The proof of this is in how they engage with and adapt to the ever-changing digital media landscape. This alone has dramatically changed their overall view of advertising, especially among digital natives.

In fact, according to a Harris Poll study commissioned by our company, 74 percent of millennials have said they are tired of brands “shouting at them” on social media, responding to the growing presence of social ads in practically every social feed today.

There’s another side of this coin that’s worth mentioning: Consumers are becoming a lot savvier at ignoring or completely blocking ads altogether. In more traditional advertising channels — think TV and radio — the rise of on-demand digital video and streaming music services, sometimes offering ad-free subscriptions for a premium price, has made it easy for consumers to almost entirely bypass major media networks that are heavily reliant on advertising revenue.

The truth is, if you’re still relying on traditional media to do the heavy lifting for your brand, it’s time to rethink your strategy. You not only have to go where consumers spend most of their time now, but you also have to think one step ahead — in terms of both media and message.

Influencers, UGC and brand advocates

And honestly, that’s still the bare minimum. You have to think about advertising a lot more broadly these days. Social media is a great case for this. It has paved the way for a new kind of advertising (if you can even call it that): influencers.

People with massive followings now command a lot more authority, trust and sway over consumers than most brands. And even though some of these self-proclaimed influencers have about as much authority as your run-of-the-mill email scam, the reality is, if they like something — and create engaging social media content to share their likes with their followers — there’s a good chance their followers will do the same.

In fact, a single nod to a product or service they love or even a social movement they feel strongly about can send engagement skyrocketing instantly for a brand. It also can create a chain reaction of user-generated content (UGC) that can serve as free “advertising” and positive word-of-mouth. Great examples of this are the “Ice Bucket Challenge” and the hilarious “Black Mask Challenge.” (If you haven’t seen the latter, it’s worth watching!)

And whether you see this as “influencer marketing” or simply UGC, it really is an incarnation of advertising at its very core. It’s not the kind of content you necessarily “plan” as you would a more traditional advertising campaign, but its overall return, even when purely organic, can be tenfold.

You’ve got think of your loyal customers as your biggest advocates, with influencers coming in a very close second. Building relationships with these people, through social and other digital media, is practically table stakes today for brands. Stop polishing every word in your campaign brief and, instead, genuinely engage these valuable advocates to help tell your story — on your behalf.

Developing new forms of content

The other part — and this is a big one — is all about content. Now, we’ve started to find ourselves in that “chicken or the egg” scenario. Do we develop amazing content and then figure out where to place it? Or do we look at the available media channels — specifically where our target customers spend most of their time — and then build content around it? To be honest, it’s not one or the other; it’s both.

Much of today’s media landscape is dictated by technology. The challenge is that as technology rapidly evolves, it can be hard for brands — and even consumers — to keep up. Virtual Reality (VR), Augmented Reality (AR), 360-degree cameras, drones, and even our mobile phones are changing the rules around how we create content.

Consumers want content that’s dynamic, engaging, immersive, interactive and more lifelike than ever before. Technology enables this. Now, it’s up to brands to harness the power of new technologies, take creative risks and develop new forms of content before they ever go mainstream.

By all means, run your tried-and-true ad campaigns. Just don’t be afraid to allocate resources to try new things, too.

And here’s why — as exhausting as technology’s rapid evolution can be, it’s also made measuring and optimizing for success much easier. We now know what works and what doesn’t, all in real time — and that’s valuable.

But it’s also one reason advertising has become so transactional. By having access to every detail of every campaign — with the utmost granularity — we now have the power to refine campaigns endlessly to reach our desired results. What would Don Draper think of that?

This all leads me right back to where we started: Advertising (as we once knew it) is on life support.

Advertising’s past was all about ideas and pursuing the “creative process.” Advertising today is much more focused on transactions and conversion, with a dash of customer experience thrown in for good measure. And thanks to technology, the changing media landscape, evolving consumer behaviors, data and so much more, “old school” advertising is now nothing but a distant memory.

Is that good or bad? That’s for you to judge. However, if you aren’t adapting your marketing efforts to thrive in today’s digital advertising landscape, I’m pretty certain your nearest competitor will — and reap all the benefits!


Opinions expressed in this article are those of the guest author and not necessarily MarTech Today. Staff authors are listed here.


About The Author

Dayle is SVP of Marketing for Lithium Technologies. In his role, Dayle is the head of marketing, responsible for all strategic marketing activities for the company including branding, positioning, communications, customer acquisition programs and go-to-market strategy. Dayle is a marketing executive with 19+ years’ experience across all marketing disciplines. Prior to joining Lithium, Dayle led Corporate Marketing and Corporate Communications at Aruba Networks. He has also held multiple marketing roles at Cisco and Oracle.



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Best of 2017: Our top 5 search industry articles

As we come to the end of 2017, we’ve decided to take a look back at some of our most-read articles throughout the year. For the rest of this week, we’ll be highlighting the top five most popular articles in various categories across the site.

So far this week, we’ve rounded up our top five articles on SEO and top five articles on PPC. To wrap up the week, we’re taking a look at our top five most-read articles about the search industry.

Our Industry category on Search Engine Watch covers any developments in the wider search industry, such as new search engines, the evolution of Web 3.0, or major changes to search engines like Google, Bing, Yahoo, etc. It also covers articles about strategy and how marketers should approach SEO, PPC and SEM in their day-to-day jobs: such as how to get execs excited about SEO, or how much SEO should really cost.

To the surprise of no-one, our most popular articles in this category tend to be things that Google is doing. So here is our very Google-centric list of the top 5 most popular Industry articles published in 2017.

#1: The 10 best Google Doodles of all time

Who doesn’t love a good Google Doodle? The creative and inventive Google Doodle, which we’re now accustomed to seeing on the Google homepage with regularity, actually began life in 1998 as a quirky out-of-office message to notify users that Sergey Brin and Larry Page, co-founders of Google, had gone to Burning Man festival.

Soon afterwards, Google began experimenting with Doodles to mark historical events, and the Doodle’s popularity was so great that it has become a regular fixture on Google’s homepage, with a dedicated team of around 10 staff members.

In our most-read Industry article of 2017, Clark Boyd looks back over nearly 20 years of Google Doodles to pick the 10 best Doodles of all time.

The 10 best Google Doodles of all time

#2: Google just released verified customer reviews: 3 ways to come out on top

Customer reviews are important for SEO and brand reputation, particularly in the new age of linkless link-building. But they aren’t always reliable. As such, Google’s introduction of Verified Customer Reviews, a method of leaving feedback in which you can guarantee that the reviewer is a genuine customer – was a big development.

Amanda DiSilvestro looked at how business owners can sign up for verified customer reviews, as well as three ways to make sure you come out on top.

Google just released verified customer reviews: 3 ways to come out on top

#3: A visual history of Google SERPS: 1996-2017

Over the past 20 years, Google has revolutionized how we source information, how we buy products, and how advertisers sell those products to us. And yet, one fact remains stubbornly true: the shop-front for brands on Google is still the Search Engine Results Page (SERP).

Since Google began as a college project named Backrub in 1996, those “ten blue links” which make up the Google SERP have undergone all kinds of evolutions, from the advent of local results in 2004 to the introduction of Google Suggest in 2008, to the more recent removal of the right-hand rail of search ads in 2016.

It can be easy to lose sight of just how much the SERPS have changed as a whole, over the years. This brilliant infographic by Clark Boyd, Safiya Lawrence and Chelsea Herbert looks back over how far Google has come, and considers the trends that predominantly define the SERPs today.

A visual history of Google SERPs: 1996 to 2017

#4: What do we know so far about Google’s new homepage?

And speaking of changes to Google… Without a doubt, the biggest change to come to the internet’s most popular search engine this year has been the launch of its new, feed-based mobile homepage in July.

Perhaps the most drastic update of the Google.com homepage since Google’s creation in 1996, the new homepage allows users to customize a news feed that updates based on their interests, location, and past search behaviors.

On the heels of the new homepage’s US launch, Clark Boyd looked at what we knew so far about the homepage, why Google chose to launch it when they did, and the potential new opportunities for marketers.

What do we know so far about Google’s new homepage?

#5: Google Chrome SSL certificate proposal could affect millions of websites

In another major piece of news this year, potential millions of websites that use SSL certificates issued by Symantec and affiliated resellers faced finding out that their certificates were effectively worthless as far as Google Chrome was concerned, after a member of the Chrome team published a proposal that would make them untrusted over the next 12 months.

According to the Google Chrome team, Symantec had not properly validated thousands of certificates. In fact, the Chrome team claimed that “an initial set of reportedly 127 [misissued] certificates has expanded to include at least 30,000 [misissued] certificates, issued over a period spanning several years.”

Al Roberts looked at the news for Search Engine Watch and its potential impact for website owners

Google Chrome SSL certificate proposal could affect millions of websites

And that’s it for us in 2017! We hope you enjoy revisiting the best of our published content over the past 12 months, and we’ll see you in the new year!



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How agencies are adapting to continued pressures on their business model

 

The modern advertising agency is dead. Long live the modern advertising agency.

Agencies are effectively mercenaries, independent entities hired to help a business conquer a market. That has always been the case and will remain the case in 2018. But recent pressures on agency business models are forcing these shops to shift how they serve clients and prove their worth.

“The modern agency is going to have to really shift away from communications and messaging as the sole driver of revenue and have to really understand product and experience as the core thing they create and layer messaging around that. I think that a modern agency is building a lot more than agencies ever have in the past,” said Ben Gaddis, president of independent agency T3.

Financial pressures

Often isolated from brands’ marketing organizations, many agencies are angling to ingrain themselves deeper within clients’ businesses, to centralize themselves closer to the bottom line. At the heart of this repositioning among agencies is a broad retrenchment among marketers.

“One of the flashpoint issues for agencies is the financial reality of their business model and clients’ continued activity around margin compression,” said Forrester analyst Jay Pattisall.

[Read the full article on MarTech Today.]


About The Author

Tim Peterson, Third Door Media's Social Media Reporter, has been covering the digital marketing industry since 2011. He has reported for Advertising Age, Adweek and Direct Marketing News. A born-and-raised Angeleno who graduated from New York University, he currently lives in Los Angeles. He has broken stories on Snapchat's ad plans, Hulu founding CEO Jason Kilar's attempt to take on YouTube and the assemblage of Amazon's ad-tech stack; analyzed YouTube's programming strategy, Facebook's ad-tech ambitions and ad blocking's rise; and documented digital video's biggest annual event VidCon, BuzzFeed's branded video production process and Snapchat Discover's ad load six months after launch. He has also developed tools to monitor brands' early adoption of live-streaming apps, compare Yahoo's and Google's search designs and examine the NFL's YouTube and Facebook video strategies.



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Search in Pics: Google Christmas tree in a police box, office ski lift & who’s working

In this week’s Search In Pictures, here are the latest images culled from the web, showing what people eat at the search engine companies, how they play, who they meet, where they speak, what toys they have and more.

Google’s Boulder office has a ski lift:


Source: Twitter

Google has a Christmas tree in a police box:


Source: Instagram

Google’s office is empty during the holiday season:


Source: Instagram

Google’s Penguin winter theme display:


Source: Instagram

Google’s kettlebells are painted in Google colors:


Source: Instagram




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MarTech Today: Showpad helps sellers sell, agencies adjust to pressures & more

Here's our daily recap of what happened in marketing technology, as reported on MarTech Today, Marketing Land and other places across the web. From MarTech Today: Showpad gives companies a new way to help their sellers sell Dec 28, 2017 by Robin Kurzer The platform says it’s creating “salespeople of the future” How agencies are adapting to continued pressures on their business model Dec 28, 2017 by Tim Peterson To contend with increased financial pressures, agencies are a[...]

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Search Buzz Video Recap: Google Spam Update, SEO Tips, AdWords Tests & Christmas Workers


This week Google may have pushed another algorithm update, this one targeting black hat link spam. Google’s Maccabees updates may have hit many celebrity web sites. Google said they hope to communicate more about algorithm updates in 2018. Google said most SEOs don’t know when unnatural links work or don’t work. Google said long term noindex directives lead to nofollow as well. Google said you should try not to experiment with SEO with Google Tase Manager. Google said hiding structured data from users is cloaking. Google said fetching content from other sites and placing it on your site is no value add. Google AdWords is testing a similar look carousel and easy checkout icons. Google is testing related searches box in image search. Google said they will keep their pre-2012 FTC commitments even though they expired. Google Maps now doesn’t allow negative reviews from current or former employees. John Mueller was working at Google on Christmas, again. The search community honored Matt McGee, Rae Hoffman Dolan, Joe Hall and Aleyda Solis this week. That was the search news as we covered it at the Search Engine Roundtable.

Make sure to subscribe to our video feed or subscribe directly on iTunes to be notified of these updates and download the video in the background. Here is the YouTube version of the feed:

For the original iTunes version, click here.

Search Topics of Discussion:

Please do subscribe via iTunes or on your favorite RSS reader. Don't forget to comment below with the right answer and good luck!



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New Google Update Targets Link Spam & Other Unnatural Links?

google black hat smoke

For the past few days, I have been tracking webmaster forum chatter around another update that may have started around December 26th or so. The dates are a bit fuzzy, but the theme is that more SEOs on the "black hat" end of the game are complaining about their rankings. This is unrelated to the Maccabees update that seemed to target more white hat techniques.

This one seems to have targeted unnatural links, links built through link spam, PBNs, or other forms of black hat link development.

There are threads at Black Hat World and new discussion in the ongoing WebmasterWorld thread. The discussion is somewhat slow and limited but most of the world is closed this week and forum chatter in general since Christmas has been very slow.

The automated tracking tools, for the most part, are not showing any significant changes around the 26th of December but we can't always depend on those tools for tracking these things.

Here are some comments from the community around this potential update:

Several sites that I was following have literally disappeared from Google, they only appear when I write their name with ".com"

The sites I was following were using a lot of BH links, PBN and whatnot, my site seems unaffected if not a tad-bit better. What about you?

There has been some chatter (and I've received some inquiries) about many sites, affiliates, in particular, being hit with unnatural link manual actions. Has anybody here heard anything of this yet?

While some webmasters, more on the "white hat" side of things are reporting nice climbs:

Whoah, my numbers are starting to climb. I don't know if it's a temporary glitch or if all the work adding schema to my pages (500 finished, 300 to go) is starting to work.
Today I also see an improvement after this daily drop.
Same here jump in traffic starting on the 25. Yesterday back to "normal". today too early to tell but looks promising.

Here are some posts on Twitter:

There is a lot more chatter, but I can't post everything here.

Are you a black hat? Did you see changes in your client's rankings in the past few days or so?

Forum discussion at Black Hat World and WebmasterWorld.



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Google: Fetching Content From Other Web Sites Does Not Add Value

You see this a lot in the publishing world, where you have the same article published on hundreds of web sites. Normally it is from a news source like AP, where they send out the feed, third party publishers fetch it and then post it on their site. Google literally finds the same article, same exact content, from hundreds of web sites.

Aaseesh from Google told a webmaster who operates a financial web site that his idea about "fetching" news from Reuters and then posting it on his site is not the best idea. Aaseesh wrote:

Doing that may not provide much value to users since he can find the content on the source site itself. Think of what value you can provide to users on your site and start from there. Here's some guidance to get you going: http://ift.tt/24Px9zP.

Yep, he is linking to the Panda post from 2011 - interestingly enough.

"Everyone is doing it" is what you are all thinking. Yep, but still, do all 500 publications posting that same story rank number one for that story in Google? Nope, only one can rank number one, the 499 others do not.

Forum discussion at Google Webmaster Help.



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