December 28, 2007

Google Product Results Monopolizing Prime Pay-Per-Click Real Estate?

monopoly-guy2.jpgUniversal Search has created quite the stir in the SEO community throughout 2007. Many companies that had enjoyed living on Page 1 of Google for quite some time began seeing their precious high rankings slip down or entirely off the page as videos, images, blog posts, news stories and the like began to take over significant parcels of organic real estate.

In this continuing quest for the ideal search results layout, it seems Google is once again experimenting with its blended results - though for once, organic listings are not taking the hit…

This time around the latest blended search tweaking and testing actually has an effect on the PPC community. Over the past month, Google Product results have randomly appeared in the right hand column where PPC Sponsored Listings normally reside. Some examples:

Google Product Listings - New Placement

hp-56-screenshot-new-product-results2.jpg

The impact if Google should decide to keep their Product listings in this right hand column position?

  • Fewer PPC ads making it onto Page 1, as they are pushed farther down to make room for Product results
  • Even lower click-through rates for the right hand PPC ads
  • More fight for PPC positions 1-3 above the organic results
  • Potential bid inflation due to the increased demand for less PPC real estate

So for all paid search managers out there who have secretly snickered a bit over the mad SEO scramble this year, I suppose we had better sit up and start taking note! In fact, while I have only caught the occasional Product results sneaking in there, Google Blogoscoped and ValleyWag have reported instances of video even showing up in prime PPC real estate.

Next up? Product images in PPC territory? Product reviews? Product blog posts? Whatever may be on the horizon for blended search it is certainly a topic that all search engine marketers, both on the organic and the paid side, should continue to keep a close eye on in 2008.

 

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December 19, 2007

Evil Usability #3: When Business Goals and User Goals Collide

388484452_72202d7ea82.jpgWe’ve all experienced it at some point; the sneaking suspicion that those we’ve chosen to trust may not be entirely worthy.

Take web sites, for example.

We visit a web site, look around and like what it has to offer. We want to believe that the site””and the company behind it”” has our best interests at heart. Perhaps we’ve even had a good experience with the site before.

But then the oddities begin to creep in, the strange little inconsistencies that make us wonder… is it me?

Suspicion…

It doesn’t take much to plant seeds of doubt in a visitor’s mind. Small broken promises and misunderstandings can suffice, such as:

  • We click on an ad, then don’t find the promised item on the landing page.
  • We carefully click on a product link, only to find something different highlighted on the next page.
  • We start a registration process, only to encounter many more steps than the site indicated.
  • We try to complete a specific task quickly, only to find our progress slowed by questions, ads, and confusing page layouts.

What’s going on here? Don’t these companies know what their visitors want?

In many cases, the answer is yes””perhaps too well. They know exactly what we want, they just choose to use that understanding in a way we don’t expect. In a way that serves their business goals, not necessarily those of their visitors.

Let’s take a look at a couple examples I’ve run into over the past few months.

Example 1 - GeoTrust

Recently it came time to renew the GeoTrust secure certificate I’d installed on a personal server. The email notice contained a convenient link which led to the following page (I’ve enlarged and called out the product list for clarity):

evilusability-1a.gif

So far so good, this looked like exactly what I needed. I wanted the first item on the list, the “QuickSSL” product, so I clicked on the first dark-blue “Renew” button.

And came to this confusing page:

evilusability-1b.gif

Here’s where the doubt crept in. The page title is what I expected, but the content on the page seems to be all about the “QuickSSL Premium” product. Did I make a mistake? I didn’t want the Premium product, I wanted the less expensive “QuickSSL” product.

At first glance (and most visitors won’t give the page much more time than that), the only available action on this page is the huge orange “Upgrade to QuickSSL Premium” button:

evilusability-1b1.gif

Yikes! How do I purchase the plain “QuickSSL?” Ah, there it is, a visually de-emphasized link in small blue text:

evilusability-1b2.gif

This is a great example of evil usability at work. Notice all the factors that contribute to this link’s obscurity:

  • Unclear design - Compared to the orange button, this option does not look much like an action item. It’s smaller, in a darker color, and doesn’t look like a button at all.
  • Unclear wording - the call to action, “Stay with QuickSSL,” isn’t what visitors to this page expect to do next. What they expect to do””what I expected to do when I came here””is to “purchase” or “renew,” not “stay with” the QuickSSL product.
  • Unexpected positioning - visitors interested in purchasing the QuickSSL product don’t expect the next step in the process to be hidden down at the bottom left-hand corner of a page, outside the shaded area that contains the emphasized text, and after a bunch of unexpected content. The orange button, on the other hand, IS in the expected position on the page for a next step.

Why would GeoTrust design the page this way? Those not as cynical as I may say it’s incompetence, poor audience task modeling, or a loose-cannon designer.

I think not.

It’s an example of a business goal overriding the visitor’s clearly stated intention. Now, we can debate the company’s intention. Perhaps they truly believe the basic “QuickSSL” product is inadequate for most customers and see this as a way to helpfully guide customers to a better solution.

What’s more likely is that this is a pure and simple upsell that disguises its intent by twisting well-understood usability principles such as:

  • Web visitors don’t generally read text. So all that verbiage that tries to make this sound like an option, instead of the only available action? Ignored by most visitors. But great cover.
  • Buttons get clicked. Visitors arrive on a page looking for the next step. What’s clickable? they ask. And on this page, that clickable item is the big orange button. It’s not a carefully considered thought process, it’s a trusting response to what appears to be clear guidance. “There’s a button!” Click.

Let’s look at another example.

Example 2: GoDaddy

Another task I undertook recently was registering a domain name through GoDaddy.com. Let me preface this by saying I’ve had a decent customer experience with this company, overall, so I came into this with a fair amount of goodwill.

I’d just found the domain name I wanted, and clicked the “Continue” button. Below is the page I saw next.

Take a look: What’s the one item that looks most clickable on this page?

evilusability-godaddycheckout1.gif

If you answered, “The huge green button,” you’re right!

But if you click that button, you add two additional domain names to your order, just like magic! What if that’s not what you wanted to do? What if you want to register only the domain name you picked on the previous page?

To do this, you’d have to click the small text link under the huge green button:

evilusability-2a.gif

This annoys me every time I go through the GoDaddy checkout process. I’m used to it now, but each encounter incrementally diminishes the store of goodwill I have for the company. I never send friends to the site without detailed caveats along the lines of:

“It’ll be very confusing and they’ll try to sell you extra stuff, but just ignore all that. Look for the tiny little text links that say “No thanks” and keep on going.”

Again, it’s remotely possible GoDaddy truly believes they’re doing customers a service here. Or that they’re incompetent or don’t understand their audience.

Again, I think not.

You’ve Got to Change Your Evil Ways… Baby

It’s easy to shake an accusing finger at these and other sites who deliberately lead visitors into unintended actions. But waiting for them to change their ways isn’t the answer. As long as the rewards of this approach are greater than the downside (customer complaints, blog rants, etc.), they’ll keep right on down the same path.

What can we do about it? How about starting here:

  • Complain to the company, often and annoyingly.
  • Warn and educate everyone you know about tactics like this.
  • Avoid companies that consistently use these tactics, and spread the word about them.
  • On the flip side, reward companies who treat visitors with respect. Visit them, buy from them, and spread the word about them.
  • Help those who are less internet-savvy than yourself through the minefields.

Meanwhile, I’ll keep doing my small part, here on the CLM blog. If you run across a good example for this series, post it in a comment, I’d love to hear about it!

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December 11, 2007

Lance Loveday Speaking at Web Design World

Web Design WorldLance Loveday, the founder and CEO of Closed Loop Marketing is speaking December 10th, 11th, and 12th at Web Design World in Boston. Lance is a regular speaker at Web Design World and this trip he will present “Web Design for ROI,” which is also the title of his new book. Later he will present “Pleasing Users and Search Engines Alike: Balancing Design, Usability, and SEO.” Lance will also be on the “Deconstructing You” panel.

Lance Loveday Speaking at Web Design WorldLance’s first presentation, “Designing for ROI,” addresses how to prioritize your design efforts by identifying the elements with the greatest impact on Web page effectiveness. Lance discusses the most important concepts and elements to address for effective landing pages, home pages, category pages, product pages, forms, shopping carts, and the checkout process. He will share guidelines, show case studies, and look at current examples to illustrate what works and why.

In the later presentation, “Pleasing Users and Search Engines Alike: Balancing Design, Usability, and SEO,” Lance discusses how traditionally Web designers were taught to focus on aesthetics. More recently their scope has expanded to include usability and search engine optimization (SEO). Conventional wisdom says focusing on one detracts from the others. Designers often feel like they compromise - and end up with a mediocre design. Lance will explore, “What if you could do it all?”

Finally, Lance will co-host the panel, “Deconstructing…You!” In this discussion, top Web designers will join Conference Chair Jim Heid in critically evaluating several of the attendees’ sites. This should be a very valuable and popular wrap-up session.

We wish Lance the best for his current and upcoming presentations. For information on upcoming presentations please visit the Closed Loop Marketing home page.

 

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December 3, 2007

Optimize Your WordPress Individual Blog Posts

Optimize Your Wordpress Individual Blog PostsThis is part three of a three-part follow-up series to my article Complete Blog Optimization Guidelines.

Part one, Optimize RSS and Atom Feeds for Wordpress, focused on Feed optimization. Part two, Optimize Your WordPress Blog as a Whole, focused on overall Blog optimization. This article focuses on WordPress platform-specific guidelines for optimizing Your Individual Blog Posts.

Note: These tips assume you are using WordPress as an installed application on your own dedicated or shared server, and not as a free hosted blog on wordpress.com. These tips do not take into account any WordPress upgrades in the recently released version 2.3.

1. Add Social Networking Links

Adding a few links to popular sites like StumbleUpon, Digg and del.icio.us makes it very easy for readers to share your posts with the rest of the world. Pick a few of your favorite sites, or sites that you think would be the most receptive to your content.

Social networking links - increase your blog visibility

There is a plugin called Gregarious that can help automate this. I’ve heard good things about it, however we decided to go the custom route which involved a little hand coding.

If you want to follow suit, you will need to edit the single.php file for your current theme. This file resides here:

blog-root-directory/wp-content/themes/your-current-theme/single.php

It will depend on your theme, but you should see some code like:

<?php the_content(something in here); ?>

You’ll want to insert the code for your networking links after this so they show up at the bottom of your post. Again, it will depend on your theme and design as to exactly how you do this, but here is the linking code for StumbleUpon, Digg and del.icio.us:

StumbleUponhttp://www.stumbleupon.com/submit?url=<?php the_permalink(); ?>&title=<?php the_title(); ?>

Digghttp://digg.com/submit?phase=2&url=<?php the_permalink() ?>&title=<?php the_title(); ?>

del.icio.ushttp://del.icio.us/post?url=<?php the_permalink() ?>&title=<?php the_title(); ?>

If you are displaying your full posts on your blog’s home page, category pages, or any other pages that display more than one post, then you will need to make the same additions to the index.php file found in the same directory as the single.php file.

blog-root-directory/wp-content/themes/your-current-theme/index.php

(Yes, you could write a php method to alleviate having duplicate code.)

2. Add an ‘Email This’ Link

Add a link that will allow your users to easily email your post to a friend.
Email your WordPress blog post to a friend
We use FeedBurner to facilitate this. Because our feed goes through FeedBurner, we can just use the proper linking code and FeedBurner handles the rest. There are a couple of options when using FeedBurner for this functionality, but we manually inserted the code in the same location as the Social Networking example above. Here is the linking code:

Email Link Code for FeedBurnerhttp://www.feedburner.com/fb/a/emailFlare?itemTitle=<?php the_title();?>&uri=<?php the_permalink(); ?>

3. Add tags

Your WordPress blog has built-in categories, but categories should be used as an organizational tool specific to your blog. Tags allow you to attach universal meta data to your posts, and can be used by sites like Technorati, which will increase your blog’s visibility. A great plugin for this is the Ultimate Tag Warrior plugin.

This plugin works well in conjunction with the SEO Title Tag plugin. I talk about the SEO Title Tag plugin in my article Optimize Your WordPress Blog as a Whole.

Note: WordPress 2.3 has native support for tags, but my experimentation so far has shown that the new tag functionality is very limited. I recommend using the Ultimate Tag Warrior plugin even if you’re using WordPress 2.3.

4. Show Related Posts

Provide links to other posts on your blog that are related to the post the user is reading. This will make it very easy for them to find more information, and it will increase the chances they will pass your articles onto friends and colleagues.
WordPress Related Posts
A great plugin for this is the Related Posts plugin.

5. Consider Using Sticky Posts

A ’sticky’ post is one that always remains at the top of a page regardless of whether or not it is the most recent post. If you have a page that has ranked well because of a keyword rich post, you might want to consider making that post sticky so it remains at the top of the page. This could keep that page ranked well for a longer period of time. You also might want to utilize sticky posts if you have a particular article that represents a page very well.

The Adhesive plugin can create sticky posts. It doesn’t seem to be highly configurable, but you can make a post sticky for all pages, or just for Category pages.

That’s All Folks

There are other obvious optimization techniques for your blog posts like including targeted keywords in your titles and body copy, and using ‘alt’ attributes in your <img> tags, but this article has focused on WordPress specific solutions. Check out Complete Blog Optimization Guidelines and Increase Your Blog Traffic - 8 Important Steps for more general optimization techniques.

This article concludes my series on WordPress specific optimization techniques. I hope you’ve found this information as useful as I have while trying to optimize your WordPress blog.

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