TopRankings Blog

Posts Tagged ‘rankings’

We Have Results Now What?

Saturday, February 28th, 2009

Many of our clients obtain their stated results within the timeframe set by our technical team, however next question is we get should we stay with getting our site optimised even though we now have achieved these results.

Now on the surface this sounds like a ridicilous question to ask but after a while I realised it was a genuine concern from many of our clients. Well the answer forms many parts, their are a list of questions I ask my clients.

. Are you measuring where new clients are coming from?
. Did they actually find you thru the search engines?
. What keyword did they use to find you?
. What is the cost of acquiring the customers? ie does the profit the new sales derive from the internet justify the cost of SEO?
. Should your site not rank highly in search engines what would this do to your bottom line?

Once you know where new clients are coming thru only then can you safely say if you need SEO or not.

The second part of this answer, if you decide to stop SEO; gradually your rankings will fall, this is due to numerous reasons a) SEO techniques change on a weekly basis and not keeping your site upto date with the latest changes will impact your rankings b) Your competitors will often be employing their own SEO techniques thus boosting their rankings which would make your rankings drop.

Everyone knows that the economy is not the best at the moment and organisation are cutting expenditure, however to earn money you need to spend money, it is ultimately upto you to decide if you can afford not to have SEO.

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Rankings Are Dead!!!

Monday, November 24th, 2008

Historically speaking all of our clients employ our services to get their websites Top Rankings, however search is now becoming personal and customisable.

So what does this mean? In simple terms the search engines can work out your current location where you are searching from and will display results based on your location e.g. if you are residing in South Yarra, Victoria and you typed in hairdresser as a search term in a search engine it will assume that you are searching for a hairdresser within proximity to your location and that you are not looking for a hairdresser in Las Vegas. Therefore everyone’s results can be varied depending on their location and it is for this purpose that we at TopRankings firmly believe that measuring success by rankings will not be a valid option.

What is more important is the amount of traffic coming to your site and the conversion ratio of these visitors.

All websites should have analytics installed and at the very least this should include Google Analytics. Analytics allows you to view the traffic coming to your site, some of the metrics analytics show is how users get to your site, where they go on your site, how long they been on your site, the geo-location of your visitors etc.

In summary if you noticed an increase of sales/enquiries to your website then your SEO is working, if you haven’t noticed an increase then perhaps it is time to engage an SEO company.

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Being #1 Is Not The Be All End All

Friday, September 12th, 2008

Being #1 Is Not The Be All End All

We all know how important it is for your website to be on the 1st page of search engines for your online success. But is having your website in position #1 better than position #2 and lower in the rankings.

Initial feedback from many of our prospective clients is that they want to be #1. But being an ethical Search Engine Optimisation company we tell them that being #1 won’t suddenly mean that you will capture and convert the majority of online sales/enquiries etc.

Web visitors are very quick to judge within a few seconds if they trust the site in front of them. Just think for a minute what makes you purchase from one site over another, does the site have annoying animations? Perhaps it takes too long to load, unnecessary music? Can you clearly see the contact details of the company on the site ie phone number, email address, quick contact form?

Case Study

Let me give you a real world example, we had a client who was in the luxury service business, their service was attractive but at the premium end of the market. When we took them on, they were sitting on page 2/3 for the majority of keywords which wasn’t too bad for a site that hadn’t been SEO’d in the past. We knew with our techniques we could get them to the top or near the top of the search engines.

The problem was our team strongly recommended the client to change a number of elements on their site to increase their conversion opportunities. Some of the points which were noted to the client were the following:

·  Unnecessary music playing in the background

·  No phone number listed, yes can you believe it…..you are asking people to pay for a service valued at thousands of dollars and you don’t even provide them a phone number they can call you on to confirm who you are etc if they so wished.

· No contact form, only a booking form, not too sure about you…but if I am contemplating buying something of a luxury nature over the web I would most likely feel more confident in sending them an online enquiry 1st rather than make an immediate financial commitment.

· Not even an email address on the website

· All service prices were posted on the site failing to present the opportunity to the business owners to even engage with a prospect or at least add them to a list of prospective clients for future marketing purposes etc.

When comparing the above client’s websites to its competitors it was fairly certain they would struggle to get an enquiry let alone a conversion.

Despite strong repetitive recommendations the client was hesitant to change any aspect of their website, however they were determined to let us start the optimisation for them. We managed to get them in the top 5 searches for their chosen keywords but unfortunately for them because their site was not what the viewer wanted they didn’t convert any traffic. We learnt a valuable lesson:

Don’t take on a client that is not willing to make common sense proven practice changes to their website.

So what does this mean? Well it is one thing being at the top of the search engines but it is another thing to convert those visitors to real life customers. Take your `I love my site’ mentality out and design your website for the user and not for yourself, after all you can’t make money if you are the only one buying from your site.

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