Friday, July 23, 2010

Make them cry; Make them buy!

Just a quick thought on the importance of making an emotional connection with your prospects...

As many of you know, my wife and I own a beach wedding and photography business. Our online marketing efforts feature two important ingredients:
  1. Pictures
  2. Music
We get emails quite often from people who happened upon our website, and were captivated by the presentaion of our clients' wedding images. Sometimes these people aren't even potential new clients, they just enjoyed the pictures and slideshows on our website and beach wedding blog so much they felt compelled to write. Their comments almost always have one thing in common - they always say "the pictures on your website made me cry".

If your marketing efforts can make a stong enough emotional connection with your prospects to bring them to tears, you'll win more often than you lose!


I realize this may be harder to do if you're, say... a plumber or an electrician (though I have been known to cry over plumbing problems!). But I bet if you sit down, clear your mind, and think about it for ten minutes or so, you can come up with a clever new way to connect with your clients. Give it a try and then share your idea with the rest of us by leaving a comment below.

TGIF!

The Russia Effect

This post is intended for people in the Tampa Bay area. So if you live in Albuquerque, it may not be as relevant (to my knowledge, there is no Albuquerque in Russia), sorry!

But for you Floridians out there, I have an interesting experiement for you to try. Go to Google and search for st petersburg restaurants or st petersburg hotels. Go ahead - I'll wait...

Chances are, the map listings that come up in your search results looked something like this: Keen observers will note that every single listing is for St Petersburg, Russia! The organic listings seem to be a mix of Russia and Florida results. Muy interesante, no?

This is an interesting Google quirk, but perfectly understandable when you consider that St Petersburg, Florida has around 250,000 residents, and St Petersburg, Russia has almost 5 million, or about 20 times the population of our beloved little Sunshine City!

Taking this one step further, I've found that this "Russia Effect" has caused an interesting impact on search behavior. Even though the cities of Tampa and St Petersburg are roughly the same size, and have similar infrastructures and economies, users of Google and other search engines use "Tampa" as a geographic modifier far (like 10 times!) more often that "St Petersburg". Here are a couple of examples:


Term (#Monthly Phrase-Matched Searches on Google)
insurance tampa (18,000)
insurance st petersburg (1,600)
photography tampa (6,600)
photography st petersburg (720)

(Note: I suspect another contributing factor to this phenomenon is tourism - people from other areas of the country have been conditioned to think of this entire area as "Tampa" or "Tampa Bay" - but that's another blog post!)

Alas, we come to my point...What does this all mean for you as a local small business owner and internet marketer? A few thoughts come to mind:
  1. If your business targets the entire Tampa Bay area, be sure your are using "Tampa" or "Tampa Bay" in your web content, title and meta tags, and other ad copy. You need not exclude other local references like St Petersburg, Clearwater, etc. - just don't make them your primary focus.
  2. If your business markets specifically and only to St Petersburg, Florida, be sure to append "FL" or "Florida" to St Petersburg throughout your content, so that search engines and human visitors alike know which city you're in. Otherwise they may assume you're wearing one of those fuzzy hats and drinking vodka for breakfast!
  3. If you have the opportunity to do so legitimately (i.e. you have an address and/or phone number in Tampa that can be tied to your business), consider setting up a seperate Google Places (Maps) listing with a Tampa address and phone number - you might be surprised how much more business it generates than a St Petersburg listing.
Until next time, Do svidaniya my friends!

Friday, July 2, 2010

SEO Like It's 1999

As I was sitting in my office this morning, I glanced over at my bookshelf. On a whim, I picked up my old college marketing textbook, Contemporary Marketing by Boone & Kurtz (1999).

I intended to look up "search engine optimization" in the glossary and see how things have changed. The term was not even listed.

So I looked for "website" or "websites"...again, nothing in the glossary.

I did find a reference to "search engines", and quickly turned to the respective page. The information presented on search engines was in a chapter titled Marketing Research and Decision Support Systems, and was buried in a graphic titled "Online Sources of Secondary Data". Below is the 740 page marketing textbook's reference to search engines in it's entirety:

Search Engines
These search engines can help track down online information on a variety of topics:
  • Search.com (http://www.search.com) - This site gives access to over 300 specialized indexes and search engines.
  • Metacrawler (http://www.metacrawler.com) - This tool submits your query to nine of the top search engines at once.
  • Altavista (http://altavista.digital.com) - This service provides one of the largest search indexes on the web.
  • Infoseek Guide (http://www.infoseek.com) - This search index includes millions of listings.
  • Yahoo! (http://www.yahoo.com) - This useful search index divides reference sites into logical groups.
So there you have it - everything a marketer needed to know about search engines in 1999!

A couple of questions come to mind:
  • Do you notice any big names missing from the list above?
  • What (and who) do you think we'll be talking about in 2019?