How SEO Can Help Your Paid Search Campaigns
by Eric Baggett ~ January 26th, 2010It’s common for businesses to ask how SEO is going to help their paid search efforts. This is an often misunderstood relationship, and when working with Fortune 500 companies, you can’t simply say because I said so. So, I thought I’d tackle this with a three-fold approach:
1. Market Share
2. Improved Metrics
3. Revenue
Market Share
For small service-oriented or e-Commerce businesses, click-through-rate and conversions are paramount. However, for large companies, brand recognition is an equally important component of search marketing. Combining organic search with paid campaigns increases exposure for important branded and non-branded key phrases, ensuring that you are in front of your target audience at critical times. It’s pretty simple math – more listings means more chances someone will see one of your listings and associate your company with the search term. When presented with a viable opportunity to increase exposure and position your company as the industry leader, why wouldn’t you?
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December 7, 2009 Google launched real-time results and it changed the world of SEO as we all knew it. After reading the news and experiencing it for myself, I was left with a few questions. Does the change present more positive or negative implications to the art and science of SEO? How do I, as an online marketer specializing in SEO, continue to tout to clients the value of SEO and importance of showing up in organic search? In regards to whether the implications are positive or negative, as usual in the world of SEO, it’s a draw. Depending on who you talk to, the answer can go either way. On the other topic though, the vote was almost unanimous; we maintain our value by refocusing what we report as important, and draw inferences on visibility and rank.
Search engine marketing is one of the marketing activities, which in most cases, is relatively easy to expand to other markets. Marketing in Europe is one of those cases where it’s not so easy. Why not, you ask? The answer is because there is no Europe when applying any type of marketing strategy.
It’s the last day of SES for me, and while my head is still a little left brain heavy, I am excited about all the new information that I’ve absorbed. This was my first SES conference, and while I came here almost completely unbiased on what to expect, I was prepared for the salesy, hit or miss session content, blah, blah, blah…that I had heard prior to leaving St. Louis.