Landing Page Magic

We have recently been working with a large solar panel website that provides solar panel pricing information. This is an interesting market as the government has really stimulated growth in this market by introducing Feed In Tariff subsidies.

These subsidies have caused a great deal of consumer interest and have created more demand for solar panels. From a historical SEO perspective, there have been some solar panel companies within the market for years but the subsidies have caused a lot of growth in new companies and installers. Competition is now getting intense when it used not to be.

Google have recently updated one of their patents with a likely view of launching a new product that will have a profound implications on the publishing and the e-commerce industry. The product will identify search-content gaps throughout the long tail of search topics.

What will the “Inadequate Search Content” Patent Technology Do?

The technology will identify search topics that have been poorly addressed by online publishers, bloggers, content aggregators and user generated content. The technology will provide a weighting based on the volume and quality of content associated to a search topic VS. the volume of search for that topic.

How will the “Inadequate Search Content” Patent work?

It will collect information around a search topic including:
– The relevance of content relating to that topic (Google calls it the Information Retrieval Score)
– The Node Rank of those search results (similar to Page Rank)
– The Click Through Rate on those search results
– The length of time a user spends reviewing the search results
– The volume of search traffic relating to that search topic

The Google “Statistics Collection and Analysis Engine” will then allow process this data to provide a weighting that will not only identify topics of inadequate content but also topics of adequate content.

Who will use the “Inadequate Search Content” technology?

Google will look to make money out of this technology. It will generate money in 2 ways:

1. Businesses will want access to “Inadequate Search Content” and also “Over Adequate Search Content” Topics and Data

The types of business that will want this data will include:

– Online Publishers, so they can know what to write about or what NOT to write about. An example might be for a major newspaper group, who wants to focus some of their editorial away from areas that have a lot of content to topics that need addressing.

– Online Retailers, so they can identify areas of products to sell and NOT sell. The example that Google use is “purple alligator leather belts”. They may be lots of people searching but if there aren’t many products serving that search topic then retailers can know to stock them.

– Print Publishers, so they can identify new topics to write about. The example that Google use is “Biography of Millard Fillmore”. If there are decent search volumes for this, but few results then why not get a book commissioned to fill this gap.

2. Google will release a tool to allow searchers to generate content, around topics where there is no or little quality content

Google will likely have an add content function within their search results that will allow users to potentially aggregate or create content.

Who will be affected by this technology?

This most profound implication this technology will bring, is to make the Internet a better place as more quality content and products will be created to address the longtail.

Therefore searchers will benefit from better quality Internet content and products relating to what they are searching for.

Online publishers which address the long tail of content by aggregating, mashing and producing low quality content will likely suffer, as better content comes online.

This technology could potentially be a God send to newspapers and magazines who often aren’t very well versed in SEO, as it will allow them to start focusing editorial on areas where there is a search-content gap.

The likes of Yahoo’s Associated Content, AOL’s seed.com, About.com and DemandMedia have been using their own versions of this technology for years. Their content is likely to have a lot more competition as other publishers start using Google’s tools.

However it will become harder for them to sell their technology to other publishers when the Behemoth Google enters the fray. Google’s data will be better than anything they can get their hands on, so it will be unlikely their solutions will be able to perform as well as Google’s. That said they all have a good head start on Google, and they could potentially use Google’s data and their own freelance networks.

DemandMedia’s Richard Rosenblatt should try to IPO before Google get this technology out.

It has been a long delay since I last posted a response. We have been doing some work for an excellent site called cliniccompare.co.uks. We have been finding that the simpler, whiter and more beautiful the site is the more likely people are to fill out their enquiry.

The site allows people to get quotes for private healthcare treatment such as Laser Eye Surgery, Laser Acne Treatments and Nose Job Prices. Go check it out and provide comments on how you think we might improve it. Thanks.

I was trying to buy some boxes last night as I am moving house. A mundane subject you may think but I was very much mistaken. This company boxes2move.co.uk have created entertaining product descriptions for their range of cardboard boxes.

http://www.boxes2move.co.uk/index.php?act=viewProd&productId=13

They made me laugh and gave themselves some personality over all the other dull as  s*** box websites. Brilliant.

A command line search engine for the more geek minded

http://goosh.org/

Quick and clever photo searching

http://www.taggalaxy.de/

http://www.zoo-m.com/flickr-storm/

Quick testing for SEOs and coders

http://tester.jonasjohn.de/

Creating videos from your screen
http://www.screentoaster.com/

Create “Lorum Ipsum” text for designs

http://www.blindtextgenerator.com/

Why does SES London (Feb 2009) dedicate so little time to Landing Pages? It would be great to see more landing page sessions within the conference. Landing pages are as important as search engine marketing and search engine optimisation in any progressive web company. See the line up. It would be great to see Johnathan Mendez there.

A Marketing Sherpa guide suggested that the average conversion rate across email and search landing pages is 3.84%. On shopping engines it is said to be 2.9%. Paid search is the highest, followed by SEO, followed by in-house email lists, followed by 3rd party email lists.

We found that drop downs help bounce rates in forms with 6 to 10 questions. I think the reasoning behind this is that a form looks smaller if you use drop down boxes instead of radio buttons.

1. BRANDING HELPS

Trusted brands have better conversion than unknown brands. Branding efforts can impact conversion rate. I am not suggesting a large brand awareness campaign as these are expensive. Large email newsletter shots impact our conversion rate across all traffic sources. Partner with a famous brand website and white label your site to help conversion rate.

2. ADD SEARCH TERMS TO LANDING PAGE

I have yet to experiment with this yet, but I hope it will impact conversion. Any recommendations on this.

3. SIMPLE QUESTIONS FIRST

When trying to get user input, ask an easy question first and don’t ask for contact details straight away.

4. MAKE SURE YOUR LANDING PAGE WORKS IN 800×600

We find about 4% of traffic is 800×600. This is important, so make sure your landing page communicates your main proposition at this screen resolution.

5. DROP CANCEL AND CLEAR BUTTONS

Never ever have cancel or clear buttons on a landing page. These significantly decrease conversion rate.

More coming soon.

I think this Slideshow by Jonathan Mendez describes the power of dynamic and relevant landing pages and online advertising. Enjoy!

OnSite Tageting Strategy

View SlideShare presentation or Upload your own. (tags: onsite site)

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