Category: SEO

The Importance of Online Marketing in Today’s World

In order for a business to survive, it must have customers. In order to have customers it must sell a product or service that people want or need. Then it must find ways to reach out to those potential customers in order to convince them that their wants and needs can be satisfied by that particular business. In a competitive marketplace, where every business is reaching out to a finite universe of consumers, getting enough customers “in the door” not only requires excellence in the product or service being offered, but most certainly in the ways in which the business promotes itself and markets it product or service to the public.

In the advertising world, there are two broad categories of marketing, sometimes known as the shotgun approach and the rifle approach. The shotgun approach just puts the word out there to be seen or not be seen by a broad swath of potential buyers. Examples are billboards, newspapers, radio and TV. In contrast, the rifle approach concentrates a business’ marketing efforts on a more narrowly defined audience. Direct mail marketing and ads in niche publications are two examples.

In today’s advertising environment, online marketing – marketing that uses websites, emails, and social media platforms to communicate – manages to marry the best of both strategies. With a robust and compelling website, a business can literally advertise itself to the entire planet at minimal cost. Anyone searching for a product or service can see anyone else’s electronic billboard at any time of the day or night through the medium of the World Wide Web.

But online marketing also lends itself to a laser-like personalization of customer relationships. Businesses can track its website use in order to cultivate those who have visited it, and then use sophisticated email campaigns, as well as all the various social media platforms – Facebook, Twitter, etc. – to reach out to specific individuals who are most likely to become, and stay, customers.

In today’s world, having an online presence and utilizing the internet to its fullest capacity, is crucial if a business is going to be able to reach people where they are and how they now shop. Businesses cannot survive without customers, and for the foreseeable future, those customers will be knocking on their doors via a home computer, a laptop, a tablet, and/or a mobile phone.

Arthur Chu Has a Superpower, and You Can Use It, Too!

arthurchu

Have you heard of Arthur Chu? I hadn’t until recently. However, if you’re an avid fan of the gameshow Jeopardy, you probably have. He is, quite simply, perhaps the most polarizing champion of that show’s long history, and when his 11-show winning streak ended on March 12th, his winnings of around $298,000 stood at the third-highest total ever. You may be thinking, “Fine, so he won a lot of money. That’s great, but how does that mean he has a superpower, and why does that make him so polarizing?” The answer may surprise you.
Arthur Chu is so controversial because he used his superpower to win, and here’s the kicker: his superpower is nothing more than math. Yes, math. As in, that subject you always knew your teachers in school were lying about when they promised it would come in handy one day, and time has, up til now, probably done nothing to disabuse you of that feeling. But if it can help you make some big money, that may make it interesting indeed. So how did Arthur Chu use math to be so successful at Jeopardy?
In short, Chu used game theory, a mathematical model of decision making that is particularly useful in economics, psychology, and biology, as well as for, you know, winning games. Namely, Chu skipped around the larger-value squares in the game, looking for Daily Doubles and denying them and the higher awards to the other players. He also, at one point, made a final round wager that tied him with an opponent instead of the more common wager to win by a dollar, because game theory favors that strategy when a player is unsure of their answer. These tactics are against the social mores of the game, and were what made him so controversial, yet also so successful.
But how does this help you and your business? After all, you’re unlikely to get on Jeopardy any time soon. You can, however, still use math to help your business. Don’t know how? That’s okay, here at The Click Experts we do, and we can help! From managing your PPC campaigns effectively with mathematical models to using statistical analysis on your website traffic to ensure the efficacy of your SEO and content, we have the know-how to make the superpower of math work for you! In the same way Arthur Chu optimized his winnings and reduced his risks by following the appropriate mathematical models, and the same way the Oakland Athletics revolutionized baseball by playing Moneyball and became successful despite revenue woes, we can put your business at an advantage in online marketing without costing an arm and a leg by using math to ensure our strategies are rigorously effective. Contact us today for a free quote, and put us to work making your business’ online presence the best it can be.
Watch Arthur Chu in action:

Google Has Updated Its Policies Again. We Explain What That Means for Your Small Business.

05_Flatbed_2 - SEPTEMBERGoogle has a problem. A big, big problem. It turns out that search engines aren’t actually  inherently worth any money. Since Google lists any page on its search results for free, and since Google’s search engine is available to use for free, the largest search engine company on the planet (and its shareholders) are slowly discovering an unalienable fact: it’s hard to make money off a search engine. So what do you do if you run a company whose net worth of billions is largely based on the success of its largely-worthless search engine?

The answer is easy: relentlessly monetize anything and everything possible about the search engine experience, and constantly change your policies to force people to utilize those monetized services.

We’ve seen Google do this repeatedly, most recently with this new Hummingbird update, and a few months ago with their Penguin update, which was ostensibly aimed at making life difficult on black hat SEO types but really ended up penalizing small businesses who engage in any SEO to compete with the big boys. This seemed deliberate, as the main choice these businesses then faced was either paying Google for PPC ads or suffering from lower rankings and being relegated to back pages in search results. (See this past blog post in which we cover this issue in more detail.)

Unfortunately, it didn’t end there. Google has now updated their policies regarding the availability of search terms. Google is now encrypting and will no longer provide the specific search terms used to generate organic clicks, and so webmasters can now only access the specific terms generated by Google PPC ad clicks.

It’s not hard to see how this happened to Google. Many people have invested in the company without fully understanding their business model and the way monetizing search engine traffic works. These investors are now understandably demanding a return on their money, and this has put Google in the position it is in now. It’s hard to blame Google for making these changes from a business standpoint, even when the end result may not necessarily be the best thing for your bottom line. Google is a business, and businesses need to make money or die. This is the easiest and perhaps best way Google has to monetize it’s primary product, and it took the opportunity. In the end, this model will likely become the standard practice in the industry.

You may be asking yourself right now, “Why should I capitulate? There are other large search engines! I’ll just use the information they provide, and not worry about Google!” While this may seem like a good idea, and while focusing solely on Google is not a good idea (we explain why here), the truth is that Google is the 400-pound gorilla in the room of search engines. Bing and other smaller (but still large) search engines like Ask only collectively account for around two-thirds of all searches, and the vast majority of the searches on those engines are for the term “Google.” There are also demographic differences between Google users and users of other engines, sometimes very large differences, and these may change the relevance of their search term information enough to really make a difference for your business. The fact is that when it comes to search engines, it’s Google’s world, and everyone else just lives in it. This means that for better or worse Google, and its policies, ct of online marketing life that must be reckoned with.

angryatmguygooglelogo

So what does all this mean for your business? If your business is not a large player with a big share of the online market in its field (which it probably is not), then the answer is simple: if you want to be able to see the exact terms people are using to find your business, you are going to have to start a PPC campaign. If you don’t understand why knowing the exact terms is important, we covered that in this earlier blog post.

There is both a downside and an upside, however, to being forced into a PPC campaign. The down side is that PPC costs money. In the current economic climate, many savvy and/or frugal business owners are loathe to spend more money than they absolutely necessary, and expanding a marketing budget that may already be a large part of overhead is not an idea that is particularly relished. The upside, however, is that PPC campaigns are often much less expensive than other traditional marketing modes, and a well-managed PPC campaign rarely actually costs more than it generates in additional revenue. We explained why in a past blog post on how to manage PPC campaigns, but it really boils down to the way the PPC model works. You are literally only paying for ads when they actually send customers to your site, and as long as the campaign is effectively managed, this will never fail to be a net revenue generator. The truth is that in a business world that is growing increasingly orientated towards the internet, any business that wishes to be successful would do well to run a PPC campaign, and if this is the kick in the pants you need to bring your business into the 21st century, you may very well bless the day this happened.

Managing a PPC campaign can be time-consuming and difficult for the novice, however, and that’s why we here at The Click Experts offer PPC campaign managing by experienced professionals. We work tirelessly on behalf of our clients to ensure that the money they spend on PPC ads is well spent. With The Click Experts managing your PPC campaign, you can rest easy knowing that every dollar is generating the maximum revenue for your business without the need for you to spend hours managing the details and sweating the minutiae. It’s time to get your business the online presence and sales it needs and deserves in this brave new digital world. For a free quote and see all the benefits working with The C,lick Experts has for your business, be sure to contact us today. You’ll be happy you did.

If you would like to learn more about the Panda, Penguin, and Hummingbird updates and how they may effect your business, watch this informative video:

The SEM Revolution For Small Business

“Build a better mousetrap, and the world will beat a path to your door.”

Every business owner has probably heard this. Most, especially those who really care about their businesses, have done their best to live this motto. It held true for many years, but unfortunately the times, they are a-changin’. The modern truth is, that those with the better mousetrap don’t have the world beating a path to their door. The ones with the world beating a path to their doors are the ones who have convinced the world they have built a better mousetrap, whether or not their mousetrap is in fact better or not. In these modern times, how you market your product is as important as the product you are offering. This is sad, but true, and those that fail to adapt are going to quickly find themselves falling behind the wayside. A better mousetrap matters, but if no one knows it won’t mean anything. There are many ways to market your business, but the most cost-effective for many small business owners is using the internet.

There are many ways to utilize the internet to market your small business, but the primary one being used is called SEM, or Search Engine Marketing. It is a sort of catch-all term for those efforts and processes that a business can use to improve its rankings and visibility within search engine results. SEM includes SEO (Search Engine Optimization) and PPC (Pay Per Click Marketing). According to Wikipedia, in 2012, North American advertisers spent US$19.51 billion on search engine marketing. That is a vast ocean of money, and a small business’ marketing budget can seem to the proprietor of the business a drop in the ocean, While that may be true, even a small budget can have an enormous impact when effectively utilized.

That’s where we at The Click Experts come in. With our knowledge and experience, we have the ability to formulate a SEM strategy that will get you and your business the most bang for your buck. It is far too easy these days for an inexperienced business owner to use their limited marketing budgets in a haphazard and ineffective way. See our recent articles regarding the pitfalls of not managing your PPC account and the recent changes to Google’s algorithms that are changing the effectiveness of traditional SEO tactics. Don’t make a major mistake. Get your business’ marketing on track and start letting the world know about your mousetrap. Contact us today for free and see what we can do for you.

Watch this quick video explaining SEM more thoroughly:

The Google SEO Squeeze

Google is changing it’s search algorithms again, and this time, it’s webmasters who may be forced to pay the price. This is not the first time Google has changed it’s algorithm, but the new update, referred to internally as “Penguin 2.0”, is one of the most drastic and sweeping changes yet. While Google claims that the changes are intended to give users more diverse and accurate search results, some are claiming another purpose. It appears that the new algorithms may have the intentional or unintentional effect of putting traditional SEO efforts on the back burner, forcing many companies to consider a PPC campaign in order to get the hits that they need and are now going to be denied. Both the reasons for this and the motivations behind it are fairly straightforward.

Google’s algorithms that rank where a website will appear in its search rankings are complex and involved, but they can be easily summed up. Basically, a website ranks better based on a few key factors. These include the number of hits the website gets, the number of links other reputable and well ranking websites have to the site in question, and the amount of organic content the site has that relates to the search in question. Because larger, more established sites and businesses will naturally have more of these, what follows is a scenario where the rich get richer and the poor get poorer. In the past, there used to be a number of slick SEO tricks that a webmaster could employ to boost the rankings of a site. These tricks allowed the Google algorithm to be spoofed. These tricks have always been frowned upon by Google, but they could be applied with a lot of care and a little luck. However, with the new Penguin updates, Google has more aggressively gone after these tricks and is now much more able to identify and thus neutralize them. It is becoming harder and harder for small and mid-sized businesses in fields with many competitors, particularly large ones, to compete in the current paradigm of the Google algorithm architecture. No relief is in sight for these smaller sites, either, since Google has absolutely no motivation to change that and every motivation to keep restricting access to the top rankings.

The reason is simple: money. Sites do not pay Google to be listed in Google rankings, and running the search engine and generating those results cost Google an enormous amount of money. Google only makes money when sites pay to advertise, mostly through PPC, or Pay-Per-Click, wherein advertisers pay Google for each visitor, or click, Google sends to their site. Since this is Google’s chief way of making money, why on Earth would they want to make top rankings easier to achieve? If small businesses can’t get those free rankings, they are forced to engage in advertising in order to drive traffic to their site, and Google gets paid. This is the crux of Google’s business strategy, and in Penguin 2.0 and other websites, Google can continue this process while hiding behind the excuse of “improving user results.”

In this situation, spending money on traditional SEO is becoming less and less cost-effective. While “white hat” techniques like blogging to create organic and useful content and legitimate link building should not be neglected, business may be well served to consider diverting some of their SEO budgets into PPC campaigns instead. But remember, not all PPC is created equal, and businesses and individuals without good PPC experience can find themselves wasting money by paying for clicks they don’t really want or need. For this reason, hiring a firm like The Click Experts to manage a PPC campaign can be a wise choice. See this past blog post for the reasons why.
At The Click Experts, our goal is to make your business successful in the online arena in a cost-effective manner, and we are always keeping an eye on developments in the online world to make sure we are up-to-date and can perform our functions well. Contact us today for a free quote to see what we can do for your business.

This short video explains the Penguin 2.0 in more detail:

What the “Long Tail” means for your SEO or PPC Campaign

In SEO as well as in PPC, the main idea is to focus on certain “keywords”. I’ve discussed this before, but a brief refresher may be in order. Keywords are certain words or phrases that a potential customer or visitor to your website inputs into a search engine. Some keywords are more popular than others, and thus from a SEO perspective they are more difficult to achieve high rankings for since they are more targeted, and from a PPC perspective, again, they are targeted more, and thus become more expensive per click. This issue highlights two important strategies when engaging in either a SEO or PPC campaign. First, keyword selection is of paramount importance. Second, it’s advantageous to not ignore the so-called “long tail.” More on that later.

First, let’s discuss choosing the right keywords to focus on. Choosing the right primary keywords to focus a SEO or PPC campaign can make all the difference. When choosing keywords, you need to be specific, but not too specific. You also need to try to avoid very heavily targeted keywords, as that competition can derail a SEO campaign or cause a PPC campaign to quickly become prohibitively expensive. Instead, try to focus on keywords that a potential customer might use to find your business when searching, with enough specificity to avoid drawing in users who aren’t interested in your business but with a broad enough net to get all or most of those potential customers who are. This is especially important with a PPC campaign, as you, the business owner, are paying for every click, whether or not a customer is qualified. With a SEO campaign, you aren’t paying for the click, but going after heavily competed for keywords can waste valuable time and effort without producing much result.

Results for “pizza”: too general

What will this keyword selection strategy look like in action? For instance, a pizza joint in San Diego should avoid focusing on general keywords like “pizza” or “pizza delivery”. These keywords are heavily competed for and largely dominated by the large national chains that have resources with which a small business owner will find hard to compete. Instead, focusing on a keyword (key phrase) like “pizza delivery in San Diego” will be more cost effective and will separate the wheat from the chaff, as it were. This phrase is specific, and will draw in customers looking for exactly what the owner is offering, while not being so specific as to lose potential customers. However, there is a way where those more specific and less competed for terms can be useful.

The “Long Tail”

Let’s now move to discussing the so-called “long tail.” So far we have discussed where and how to focus a keyword campaign, but we haven’t discussed those keywords of less desirable status. In the hypothetical example above, these keywords might be things like “meatball subs delivered in San Diego” or “pizza delivery in downtown San Diego” or the like. They are generally keywords less focused on because they are either considered less likely to be used in a search or so specific as to be inappropriate to focus on, which is very true. However, when looking at all keywords from a statistical standpoint, when graphed with number of user searches on the x axis and level of specificity being on the x axis, keyword price (for PPC) or level of focus (for SEO) generally takes the form of a inverse square proportional curve, with the most desirable keywords being at the top and less desirable ones forming a trailing “tail”. However, simple math can tell us this tail accounts for around fully 70% of all possible keywords and searches. This means that while it isn’t really a good strategy to focus a campaign around these keywords, it does behoove a business owner to not ignore these words entirely, as that would potentially be ignoring many possible searches that could potentially yield many qualified customers. These tail keywords also have the advantage of being very specific, so they are more likely to convert into sales, as customers tend to know exactly what they are looking for. Additionally, these terms have the advantage, particularly from a PPC perspective, of being cheap, or in SEO terms, of being easier to achieve rankings for. SEOMOZ has some great data backing these assertions up here.

What have we learned? In short, keyword selection is everything. Choosing the right keywords to focus on can make or break a business, while not ignoring the “long tail” can be extremely cost-effective and profitable for a business. Confused by all of this? You aren’t alone. That’s where The Click Experts comes in. We are a company that specializes in focused and targeted SEO campaigns. We have the experience and expertise to put these principles to work for your business, large or small. We can help design a PPC or SEO campaign, or both, that will increase your business’ online presence in a way that will bring in more qualified customers and greater conversions, and we can do it in a cost-effective manner. Contact us today for a free quote to see what we can do for you!

Learn more here:

What does Facebook’s New Graph Search Mean for Google?

Google has long been the leader among search engines. Many have tried to claim the number one spot from them. They have all failed. In fact, none have even come close. But that isn’t stopping the latest challenger from trying. Facebook has made a limited release of its new Graph Search engine. Is Google worried? No, not yet anyway, says Google chief Larry Page in this interview with the Atlantic Wire. There may be some corporate hubris and arrogance in that answer, but deeper than that, there are several key reasons why the team at Google isn’t shaking in their collective boots yet. But to understand why, you must first understand how Graph Search works.

Graph Search is a so-called “social search” engine. Social search isn’t new. Most notably, Bing has experimented with it. Social search is a different way of searching the web than users get with Google. Social search combines search results from the web with information from a social networking site. In the case of Graph Search, this will obviously be data from your Facebook profile. This information is combined to, ostensibly at least, improve the relevance of a user’s search results. For instance, one might search for “ski resorts in Colorado” on Google, and get a list of resorts in the results. With Graph Search, this search will yield a list of ski resorts in Colorado that a user’s friends may have visited or commented on. The idea is that users may find results more relevant or useful to their searches.

While the search results yielded by Graph Search may be useful or provide relevant results for some users, many may find a dearth of results or may not be looking for those kinds of results. There are also the cases where what a user’s friends have done or said may not be helpful at all. Because Graph Search provides a different type of search experience with different results, it is unlikely to replace Google entirely, even if it does take a bite out of Google’s business. It remains to be seen how big a bite that may be, since Graph Search is not available to the general public yet, but there are so far two factors on Google’s side. For one, Graph Search has so far received lukewarm and mixed reviews. Two, Google certainly has some business to spare, capturing around 2 out of every three searches in the U.S.

For now, the best advice is not to count Google out in any way, but businesses should be prepared to take steps to increase their Facebook presence. Increasing likes and reach on Facebook is a good business strategy anyway. That’s where The Click Experts can help. From creating your Facebook page and managing it, to linking it to your site via a custom app, we know the ins and outs of Facebook. Contact us today to see what we can do for you.

Learn more about Graph Search:

The Google-Focused SEO Pitfall

So you’ve decided to expand your business’ presence online. You’re adding a website, maybe looking into some PPC advertising, and after doing some research, you realize you need some SEO, or search engine optimization. All well and good, but there are several pitfalls newbies and even experienced SEO pros can fall into. One I’m going to discuss today is focusing your SEO too hard on Google alone.

Sure, Google is the unrivaled king of search engines. It generally accounts for around 66.7%, or two thirds, of ALL searches. And of that other third, of course, it turns out a large number are for, ironically, “Google.” But what often gets overlooked in all these subjective number comparisons is the sheer objective number of total queries. The United States generates around 16 BILLION search engine queries every month, so while other engines such as Bing and Yahoo are only combining for a paltry third of them, to ignore them in your SEO campaign is to cast aside around 5 BILLION queries every month.

It isn’t hard to pick up this slack. If you already rank well on Google, making sure your site does so on Yahoo and Bing among others is frankly picking low-hanging fruit. Google, Yahoo, Bing, and others all rely on different algorithms to determine a site’s rankings. These algorithms look at a site and attempt to accurately rank it’s relevance according to certain factors. These factors can include things like keyword occurrence and density, the number and quality of other sites that link to the one being ranked, and even how and when bold and italic fonts are used. While each engine’s algorithm necessarily gives each factor different weight, they all do tend to look at the same factors generally. This means that while focusing on one or a few factors specifically can help your site climb the rankings with one engine (like Google), it may not always have the same results across the board. A well tailored SEO campaign will focus on all the components of a site that search engines use for determining rankings, not just cherry picking those stats or factors that Google values highest. Doing this not only helps a site rank higher on Bing, Yahoo, and others, it can also be that extra edge a site needs to climb those last few sites on Google and come out on top. In the end, all search engines attempt to rank sites based on their best overall user experience, and they are constantly changing their algorithms to better reflect that when ranking sites. A good SEO campaign focuses on legitimately enhancing a site’s content and structure to better provide a good experience to the user while doing so in a way that allows maximum rank among ALL factors used by ALL search engines to provide a comprehensive solution for the client and avoiding cheap black-hat tactics that can end up detected and cause a site to become blacklisted.

Hiring professionals like The Click Experts to do your SEO can provide benefits to the client well beyond the cost. Just think what your share of those 16 BILLION queries every month could be. A good SEO campaign run by professionals can draw in a large amount of new and qualified traffic to your site, allowing you to grow your online presence, something no business in our current day and age can really be without. As the old adage goes, “build a better mousetrap, and they’ll beat a path to your door.” We can be the way potential clients find out you have built that better mousetrap. Contact us today and let us show you what we can do for your business.

Do WordPress SEO Plugins Work?

I often work with WordPress sites doing SEO. I recently had an opportunity to build a site for a friend, Crystal Anne Artwork. My friend is an artist and being that the site is essentially all pictures and no text, an interesting problem presented itself. Without any text to work with, how would I accomplish the SEO?

Crystal Anne Artwork

After some research, a WordPress SEO plugin seemed to present the answer. Having never used one before, though, I was initially skeptical. Nonetheless, I thought it had very little potential downside and a large potential upside. At worst I would waste the time and effort of installing it and setting all the keywords and such, and I weighed that small downside against the potential upside, a boost in rankings. In the end, I decided it was an easy choice and that I would go ahead and install one.

There are a number of different WordPress SEO plugins offered. Yoast’s SEO plugin seems to be one of the most popular, as well as SEO Ultimate by SEO Design Solutions. I went with another popular choice, the All in One SEO Pack. In the end these plugins all do pretty much the same thing and my choice was motivated more by the aesthetics of how the plugin integrates with the dashboard and the edit page more than any reason. Yoast has a very good interface as well and also allows the user to analyze the page for things like keyword density, which many users may find very helpful. In my case, more than anything else I was attempting to give Google some text to grab on to in order to generate a site description for the search results page, so I didn’t feel the need for a bunch of bells and whistles, but some users may find these helpful and I probably would as well in a different application.

A view of the All in One SEO Pack’s interface during page/post editing

After activating the plugin and setting the values, it was time to sit back and wait to see if it worked. In this case, after about 24 hours I noticed an appreciable rise in both the search rankings for the site and the image rankings. Google also started catching the site description and loading that as opposed to random text from the page.
It should be noted for the novice user that these plugins have some very powerful features that can create disastrous results if used incorrectly. Many of these plugins utilize the noidex and nofollow features, which tell a search engine to ignore the contents of the page. When attempting SEO, except in very specialized instances this is exactly the opposite of the desired results, so unless you know what you are doing I highly recommend these options be left alone.

In summation, a WordPress SEO plugin seemed to work for this author, at least in this instance. It is definitely something I will be adding both to future sites and to the sites I am currently maintaining.

Do Site Rankings Matter Anymore?

Once upon a rosy time not long ago, site rankings were king. That #1 spot on the search result rankings was as coveted as gold, sought after, fought for, envied, coveted, and dreamed about: a modern-day internet marketing analog to the Holy Grail. But with the advent of personalized search engine results, many have begun to question whether rankings matter as much as they used to, and further, some have begun to ask the question: When search engine results are personalized to every user, can there even be such a thing as a true #1 ranking anymore?

A lot of study and thought have been put into answering these questions, and while true believers may question their validity or refuse to accept the truth, the fact is that it appears that even with personalization turned on, SERP appear to vary little from one query to the next, regardless of what other queries have been made recently. Stephan Spencer at searchengineland.com has done some fairly extensive testing into this phenomenon, and reports his results here. In a nutshell, what he found was that regardless of what other recent searches may have been performed, for certain keywords site rankings adjusted very little. There may be some minor shifts in positions, but in general the same results appear, even in keywords that may have very different meanings or desired results based on past searches, and that positions appear in roughly the same order, whether or not personalization is on and regardless of recent queries.

He further went on to interview Mike Moran, SEO genius and 30-year man at IBM, on this issue. This is what Mike Moran had to say:

Mike Moran

“What I think is true is that, for many queries, a single search result is #1 the great majority of the time, but I think it is less true than it once was and that ranking reports are not nearly as valuable as they were a few years ago. It’s better to focus on traffic and conversions and not get too hung up on rankings.”

This quote really cuts right to the crux of the matter. Rankings only matter inasmuch as they drive traffic, and traffic only matters when it’s the traffic that you want coming to your site. Otherwise, you will just end up with high bounce rates and a bunch of wasted effort. The true key, then, is to make sure you show up high to the potential customers you want visiting your site, and drawing them in and keeping them once you get them there. And the secret to that is content, content, content. As the old adage goes, “Give them what they want and they will beat a path to your door.”

More on content and keeping customers on the page once you get them there, but for now the lesson is easy: Even in this crazy world of search engine result personalization, rankings still matter, but rankings are and should always be viewed as merely a tool to drive the type of traffic you want to your site. That’s true marketing, and that’s where sales, and success, begin.