Thursday, 19 September 2019

Local Legends: Claire Carlile on Setting Client Expectations and the Future of Google Maps

In this new interview series we talk to the people who make a real impact on local search, through their insights, their tools, or their good-old-fashioned hard work.

First up is UK-based local SEO consultant Claire Carlile, of Claire Carlile Marketing, who talked to us about setting client expectations, the power of GMB Products Editor and where Google Maps might be headed next.

Watch the 10-min interview below or read on for the full transcript.

Jamie Pitman, BrightLocal: Hello, thanks for joining us. I’m joined by Claire Carlile today, who’s going to talk to us about her experience working with clients in local SEO. Claire, why don’t you tell us a little bit about yourself to start with?

Claire Carlile, Claire Carlile Marketing: I’m Claire and I am a chartered marketer and I live in Pembrokeshire in West Wales and I work with small and medium-sized businesses to help them do better at digital marketing.

JP: Are there any particular industries you you work with?

CC: Ones that I like, so hospitality, attractions, some restaurants, but normally the types of businesses that have products or services that I would use.

JP: Okay. Does that help a lot? Does it help to know the industry quite well?

CC: I think so. If it’s something that you have experience of, you know as a consumer, and I think it’s easier to market that business. Because I’ve worked in some tricky industries, and it’s just easier to understand consumer motivations. There’s all sorts of things as a marketer, if basically you’re marketing to yourself.

JP: When you’re bringing on clients, is there a particular process you go through or is it really sort of bespoke depending on the needs?

CC: I think very bespoke, but in terms of, really, you know, understanding that business before you speak to them, understanding what they’re doing well, what they can do better, what problems they might be looking to solve, knowing the right person to speak to, having an in. Those are the main things. And also, you know, demonstrating a real passion for that business.

JP: You mentioned finding out as much as you can before you speak to them. Are there any particular techniques you use to find out what situation they’re in from an SEO standpoint, before making contact?

CC: Yeah, I’ve done some little mini audits beforehand, and also I think especially because I work with a lot of local businesses that are actually local to me okay and then I might understand their market place a little bit more by speaking to their customers. Sometimes I’ll have knowledge of that niche and their competitive landscape and that’s quite useful when you go in and you know that market inside out, you know that competitive space inside out and I think that’s quite useful.

JP: So do you find it a lot easier to work with businesses who you know have a good product in the first place, a really quality product or service?

CC: I would only work with those businesses. So I haven’t really ever been involved with anyone that doesn’t.

JP: I suppose it’s like if you’ve got great local SEO but not particularly good quality service, that can only get you so far, but if the reverse is true then you know the potential is much greater.

CC: Yeah that’s how to spot which client you want to work with right, yeah, I would say, in my experience. And obviously, you know, you can have a client that is weathering the storm in terms of: something has happened, a PR nightmare or problem with the service or the product for a period of time. You can help them through that, but I think I’m just really lucky choosing to work with businesses and people that I trust and people that I like.

JP: I’ve got agency experience and I know that if you have a naturally good rapport with someone when there’s not the best news, for example if there’s an algorithm change that suddenly means that their rankings have tanked and you have to explain, “I’ve not done this, we can act and there are things we can do”. That’s where the education comes in as well.

CC: And trust.

JP: Absolutely. And you’ve both got to work to build that. I think that clients have to behave in a certain way in the same respect that local SEOs do and agencies do. When it comes to working with clients and establishing KPIs and establishing expectations, again, is that something that you try and set in quite formal language or do you give people a broad idea of what you’re hoping to achieve and what you’ll be able to deliver?

CC: I think finding out what they’re hoping to achieve, to start off with, and then we can help them to understand whether or not that’s going to be something that is achievable, but also asking “Why?” “Why?” “Why?” over again and over again until you actually really drill down to what it is that they need, what they actually need.

JP: Money.

CC: Exactly, but how do you do that? You know, is it because I want to make more online sales, I want the phone to ring more, I want more people through the door, I want more referrals? What is it that we’re actually trying to build? And then, you know, benchmarking that.

JP: How useful are you finding Products Editor in Google My Business at the moment?

CC: The way that I’m using it, so speaking without huge amounts of experience, in terms of: I’m not managing six million profiles that are using it. I’m using it for the small, artisan businesses that I work with and so it is a way of putting some of your products into the knowledge panel. You know, basically what Google knows about you in terms of knowledge about your entity, and you can put them straight into in GMB so you know it is very much for small and medium-sized businesses, because we’re not talking about thousands of products. This needs to be a very carefully curated cross-section. Maybe it’s like your evergreen products,  because you need to curate this, because you create the product collection, you populate it with the products and it needs to be something that isn’t, you know, you don’t want to people to be looking at something that then is out of stock.

JP: So when we think about Google ‘Follow’, when we think about Local Guides, when we think about Google Posts, it all feels like it’s a secret social network that’s been created all around the world for local businesses and their customers. Do you think that the endgame is creating a bit more of a formalized, centralized place for it all or do you think that they’re mostly going to just add more and more features until Google Maps is a bit of a hodgepodge of lots of different things?

CC: I don’t know who said “social transactional” or who first said that or what it actually means, but for me that makes sense in terms of Google ring-fencing something in the Maps app. People might like looking at pictures of things far away but personally I use the Maps app and navigate to find things to do locally, so ring-fencing that, keeping people in there, social, because they’re adding all these social features, transactional because it’s transactional for Google essentially offering a good service and user experience, and then monetizing that in some way, transactional for businesses because that’s how they’re going to reach customers and the customers are going to come and spend money with them, and then keeping it there in Maps which is all populated by GMB data, which is essentially almost like gamification: you’re pressing the buttons, request a quote, click to call, and it’s a much nicer user experience, potentially, than visiting someone’s website.

So, yes, Google want to keep you in Google and want to create that immersive search experience, keeping someone in there but also that’s partly because people have had such awful experiences trying to navigate a local business website on a mobile. I think there’s lots of elements to it.

JP: It almost feels like the only thing that’s missing is the interactions between customers. So it feels like everything is there to allow you, if you think about Google My Business messaging as well, you’ve got all the hallmarks of a social network between customer and business but you don’t have the community element there between customers, so it almost feels like you need this extra level. I can imagine it working really well because, like, a local pub might have a bunch of regulars that like chatting to each other online, and whereas in the past they might have used a Facebook group or the Facebook business page to chat and and engage with what the business is posting, it feels like there’s a huge opportunity for Google to create mini communities around these much more popular businesses.

Know a Local Legend?

Want to nominate yourself or someone else as a Local Legend? Get in touch at contribute@brightlocal.com and we’ll see what we can do. It’s a very new format for us, so let’s see where it goes!

The post Local Legends: Claire Carlile on Setting Client Expectations and the Future of Google Maps appeared first on BrightLocal.



source https://thebtrade.com/2019/09/19/local-legends-claire-carlile-on-setting-client-expectations-and-the-future-of-google-maps/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=local-legends-claire-carlile-on-setting-client-expectations-and-the-future-of-google-maps

Tuesday, 17 September 2019

Google’s New Link Building Guidelines

Customer Spotlight: How We Helped Evolve Canon’s Content Strategy

At NewsCred, we are obsessed with achieving customer success by building strategic relationships and driving product adoption. Here’s how we drive success for Canon.


Our partnership with Canon is ever-evolving

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Seasonal and evergreen articles on Canon’s content hub.

Canon USA is a long-standing NewsCred customer. But the partnership looks very different today than it did when we first started working together, over two years ago.

In the beginning, we primarily produced short, SEO-friendly articles for their content hub, Educational Articles. Geared at an audience of scrapbookers and homemakers, these articles were designed to build brand awareness and ultimately drive consumers down the funnel

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Custom seasonal GIF for Canon’s social channels.

In 2018, we expanded the content mix to include a lot more design work, such as custom GIFs (like the one above) and illustrated printable files. Not only could our visual work fortify the article content, but they could also be repurposed and redistributed across channels.

Given the client’s increasingly voracious appetite for storytelling with visual content, the eventual push into video came as no surprise. We tested the waters with stop-motion animations, and moved into live-action videos from there, refining the strategy with every production. In the past year alone, we have shifted our content approach almost entirely from article-centric to video-centric, in an effort to meet Canon’s growing need for high-value brand videos

Canon came to us with a big project

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One of 3 sets for Canon’s PIXMA shoot.

The Canon team tasked us with pitching and producing three product videos and lifestyle images to support the launch of their new PIXMA printers. These would live on Canon USA product pages, social channels, and Amazon. The catch? We had less than a month to pitch, plan, style, shoot, edit, revise and deliver final cuts.

We put together three pitches –– one for each video –– as well as three storyboards and a mood board, all of which were submitted to the client for review ahead of the shoot. Working closely with our preferred photo and video partner at Ireland Studios, as well as models and a prop stylist, we brought three different sets to life. Given the tight deadline, we expedited the post-production process, delivering the full batch of images in just two days. The videos took a little longer to put together, but feedback flowed quickly and revisions were done efficiently.

Streamlined collaboration was crucial to success

PIXMA-TS6320-wireless-inkjet-all-in-one-printer-leadin.jpg

One of 3 sets for Canon’s PIXMA shoot.

While it is too soon to adequately measure the qualitative impact of the videos, it’s safe to say that this project opened up new ways of working with Canon on big-rock content initiatives. Years of experience in the space of content creation have taught us the importance of closely collaborating with the client during every step of the production process, from preliminary ideation to post-production to optimization. Whether we are creating a text-based article for Canon’s content hub or an animated video for their product pages, putting in the time for documented, strategic planning is crucial to success.

View live images and videos here, here and here.

Interested in what NewsCred can do for your brand? Click here to request to speak with an expert.

Gaby Tama is a Content Strategist at NewsCred. 

The post Customer Spotlight: How We Helped Evolve Canon’s Content Strategy appeared first on Insights.



source https://thebtrade.com/2019/09/17/customer-spotlight-how-we-helped-evolve-canons-content-strategy/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=customer-spotlight-how-we-helped-evolve-canons-content-strategy

Thursday, 12 September 2019

What the Flux?! Introducing Local RankFlux

We’ve all been there: you fire up your ranking-monitoring tool of choice.

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You see a massive change in rankings.

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Your heart rate increases.

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WTF? Was it something you did? Was it something you didn’t do?

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Or was it (eek)… an update to Google’s search algorithm?

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There are plenty of free tools out there to help you investigate fluctuations in organic rankings, but until today there’s never been a volatility report that focuses on local rankings.

Why local rankings? Because the algorithm that manages these is completely different to the organic algorithm we all know and fear.

Local ranking factors like proximity, prominence, and relevance are treated in a very different way by Google, so an organic rankings monitor won’t tell you anything pertinent to those all-important local rankings. That’s why we built…

Local RankFlux: Your Free Local Rankings Volatility Report

Local RankFlux is the only early warning system dedicated to fluctuations in local rankings. It’s here to help you see the broader picture of changes to local rankings and show your company or clients that you’re on top of it.

TRY IT NOW – FREE

 

Local RankFlux Score

Local RankFlux shows fluctuations in local rankings over the last 7 days

Changes in local rankings can have an immediate impact on visibility, and every time Google tweaks the importance of a ranking factor, many businesses come out as winners and losers.

In order to continue reporting success, you need a tool that gives you the confidence to explain big changes in visibility and suggest strategies to respond to them.

SEE THE LATEST FLUCTUATIONS

 

Local RankFlux Industry Breakdown

Contrast and compare fluctuations in rankings for up to 26 industries

 

Local RankFlux offers:

  • Last 7 days of scores at a glance
  • Industry-level segmentation of fluctuations
  • Urgent email alerts or weekly/daily updates
  • Permanent record of fluctuation scores (since May 2019)
  • Highlights of Twitter buzz around algorithm changes
  • Completely free access – no BrightLocal account needed

 

Local RankFlux email alert

Urgent email alerts notify you as soon as we detect signs of an update to Google’s local algorithm

SIGN UP FOR ALERTS

 

How the flux does it work?

Here’s our Head of Marketing, Kristian Bannister with a quick overview:

 

 

Win a Local RankFlux t-shirt!

Anyone who is signed up for a Local RankFlux update email two weeks after today’s launch (Wednesday, 11th September) will be entered into a sweepstakes to win one of 20 t-shirts with a very clear message…

Local RankFlux t-shirts

Finally, you can show the world how you really feel about algo updates!

Click here for competition terms and conditions.

 

Where do we get all this fluxing data?

The methodology and mathematics behind our calculations are suitably unwieldy and complex, but in a nutshell we look at changes in local rankings for 26 industries, monitoring 28 keywords per industry. These are looked at across 20 cities, giving us a pool of nearly 15,000 keywords.

The tool then looks at how much the change in ranking for each keyword deviates from the previous day’s, and calculate an overall Local RankFlux score based on this deviation. Here’s what the scores (out of 10) mean:

  • 0-3 indicates ‘low’, expected fluctuation (i.e. nothing significant has happened)
  • 3.1-6 indicates ‘medium’ fluctuation (i.e. something minor has happened)
  • 6.1-10 indicates ‘high’ fluctuation (i.e. something major has happened – likely a local algorithm update)

Click here for a more detailed explanation of the calculations and methodology behind Local RankFlux.

 

Okay, we’ll stop making ‘flux’ puns now…

It’s been a long time in the making, but we’re incredibly proud of this new free tool and are excited to see the impact it’ll have on the local search industry. If you find it useful, let the world know using #LocalRankFlux.

Have any feedback, questions or innovative ideas for how to use the data? Don’t keep it to yourself; let us know at @bright_local or drop us an email.

The post What the Flux?! Introducing Local RankFlux appeared first on BrightLocal.



source https://thebtrade.com/2019/09/12/what-the-flux-introducing-local-rankflux/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=what-the-flux-introducing-local-rankflux

Wednesday, 11 September 2019

Customer Reviews — Why It’s an Important Marketing Initiative

When people search for a service, for instance, a restaurant or a hotel, most people turn to the world wide web for a list of recommendations. These usually come in the form of reviews. Customer reviews can greatly influence the buying decisions of consumers. It’s imperative that businesses recognize customer reviews as an essential marketing initiative.

Here’s why:

People trust customer reviews

  • People trust customer reviews

Consumers want to know what type of experiences others have had when dealing with certain businesses. Depending on what kind of service they’re looking for, people go to a variety of websites including:

    • Homestars, when looking for a contractor
    • TripAdvisor, when travelling
    • Amazon, when searching for products
    • FourSquare, when deciding on restaurants

Reading customer reviews allows them to choose a company that they feel they can trust with their problem. People love reviews and want to get recommendations from their peers within the community.

Google trusts reviews

  • Google trusts reviews

One very important factor to consider when marketing online is the EAT Principle — expertise, authority, and trust. This is one of the higher tier signals Google uses to determine the search engine ranking of websites. Having a collection of positive reviews online denotes the trust existing clients place in your company. Because of this, Google places a great deal of weight on customer reviews.

  • Businesses can inform customers

When potential clients are trying to decide between companies, they want to gather as much information as they can. Customer reviews provide a way for you to present information by responding to feedback.

  • Star ratings sell

Customer reviews also feature star ratings. Consumers are drawn to businesses with four-star or five-star ratings. Getting high ratings can significantly boost sales.

  • Reviews increase opportunities

Commenting on reviews — whether positive or negative — can shine your business in a positive light. It shows that you’re responsive. You have the opportunity to make a good impression. Personalize your responses and don’t forget to thank them for taking the time to leave feedback.

Responding to a negative review gives you the opportunity to show your customers that you care, that you are willing to listen to their complaints, and resolve issues. When responding, be prompt and take the high road. Again, thank them for their time and acknowledge the error or issue.

Get a Positive Reviews

How to Get Positive Reviews

The challenge lies in getting high-quality reviews. Most of the time, those who write reviews are those that have had negative experiences looking to voice their frustrations and amplify that online. Here are a few tips to getting quality reviews:

  • Ask

Send clients a request after a job or a purchase — and not just the clients who you know will give a great review. Ask all of them so that you can offer your potential customers a solid look at what others have seen.

Keep this idea top-of-mind. Make it a habit. After an interaction (like a call) or a sale, request for feedback, if they could do you the favour of writing a review to help both your business and other customers.

You can do this via the receipt or by sending them an email with a link to the review site. Be sure to give them options. If you send them a link to Google Reviews, for example, they may have trouble accessing it if they do not have a Google account. You can send them links to other sites. Yelp and Facebook are great alternatives.

  • Register at various platforms

It’s better to have customer reviews or testimonials at a third party website as compared to featuring them only on your own website. It’s easy for businesses to post made-up reviews on their own website, third party sites have their own rules and restrictions.

Sign up for a profile on Better Business Bureau, Online Yellow Pages, and Yelp; but don’t stop there. Be sure to also look into websites that cater specifically to your industry. For example:

  • RateMD, for medical professionals
  • Opencare, for dentists
  • FindLaw, for lawyers
  • Homestars, for general contractors

Search online to find the top online directories. Perhaps the most important among these is Google My Business. This is a surefire way of getting Google to notice your business, which can give your business a boost in the rankings.

In the past, before the Internet, clients gave reference letters. These were powerful tools during a sales call. Reference letters served as a case study — except on paper — which were presented to potential customers after a presentation. Customer reviews serve the same purpose, but online.

Take advantage of this avenue to generate more leads, gain a loyal following, increase chances for conversion, and make the most out of your marketing dollars.



source https://thebtrade.com/2019/09/12/customer-reviews-why-its-an-important-marketing-initiative/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=customer-reviews-why-its-an-important-marketing-initiative

Can you make a great six-second ad? Here’s what we learned from the best