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Posts Tagged "Search"



How to build great landing pages

Thursday, August 20th, 2009

We are constantly being asked by our clients “what makes a good landing page and why” – so much so that we thought it may be worth while sharing our thoughts on the subject with you. So here it is.

Firstly it is important to remember the process of how and where the visitors will be coming from and what prompted them to navigate to your page. Bearing this in mind you need to immediately deliver on the same message which prompted the click through – no time wasting, nothing getting in the way – just hit them with it. Essentially you have promised them something by dangling a carrot on the SERPs or via PPC etc and now you have to fulfil your promise. Get straight to the point and big up the benefits!

Secondly do not confuse the matter by giving them loads of choices or other things to look at. Yes, you should always provide access to auxiliary information but you don’t want to send the visitor off on a tangent and potentially lose the conversion. Give them a clear and strong call to action.

Along the same lines as before you need to reduce clutter so that the page is engaging and easy to follow. All you really need are benefits/features, call to action, links to supporting content if necessary and a lovely clear and stimulating design which promotes your brand identity & values. No waffle, no hardcore sales pushes, no gimmicks – just good clean content.

Now, we all know that most people have a natural resistance to being sold to and even if what you are offering is not necessarily being “sold” it is still worth bearing in mind the kind of objections or barriers people may have to conversion. Your landing page should do its upmost to calm and overcome these barriers; reducing anxiety and making your visitors feel safer. Such things could be logos of trade or industry affiliation/accreditation, money back guarantees or even certain insured payment methods like PayPal etc. Make sure your page addresses these issues.

Finally, it is always good to get some kind of gravitas for your product/service and increase the visitor’s affinity to your offering. The best way to do this is by showing accreditations, real-world usage examples, reviews, testimonials or even other places they may hear about you (i.e. “As seen on TV”). This instinctively builds trust levels in the visitor.

So there it is – 5 very simple ways of maximising the impact of your landing pages.

Image search marketing

Friday, July 3rd, 2009

It’s probably fair to say that most of us know about image searching on SEs like Google, Yahoo, Bing and Ask but we keep noticing that many people totally ignore the potential of this search type to market their websites. Not to put too fine a point on it but you can often achieve very good results by using image search optimisation – you just have to think a little about your offerings and the related image keywords you would expect people to search for. For example if you are a travel agent then you may want to optimise your images for the keywords “Air Travel” or “Aeroplane” – or if they are destination based then name them after the destination name.

For a list of image keywords which are popular you could try looking at sites like iStockPhoto or Flickr

In order to optimise your images for image search make sure you pay close attention to the use of the actual image file name and the image “title” attribute as well as the standard “alt” attribute. Try to keep names and attributes under 5 words. And if possible make them relevant to your overall page for further on-page SEO.

Once you’ve got your image SEO in place you can use Google Analytics to track visitors coming from image searches – although to track the keywords used you would need to slightly modify your GA JavaScript code to add images.google.co.uk and others as the referring search engine – see here if you need more details on achieving this: http://www.google.com/support/googleanalytics/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=57046

The case of the web page

Friday, July 3rd, 2009

OK so this may sound like a really boring murder mystery title but what I actually mean is the letter case of the page URL. A very medial thing you are all probably thinking but I’m not too sure. I’m pretty confident that the case of your URL has no significant effect in SEO but consider the visual power of uppercase URLS in search listing. Here’s an example – try doing a search for “windows” in Google and you should see something like this:

Letter case search results

You can see that result #2 has got the word Windows in capitals (plus Google makes it bold) – and result #3 has the URL in sentence case. Now I’m sure it’s not just me but I feel these links both stand out better and are easier to read. It follows the same idea as Google AdWords’ “Display URL” – if Google can see the benefit of honing your visible URL then I think it is something we should all think about – and not just for our PPC campaigns.

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