Archive for January, 2009

Keyword Research and Blue Doohickies

January 27th, 2009 by Claudia D'Arcy

I am always amazed by the results of keyword research.

No matter what I think about a subject or field, or what I think I might know; the research consistently surprises me. Not sometimes, not most of the times, but every single time .

It is often a challenge explains the results to clients who really think they know their business and their customers and what people want, but I am coming to believe that people tend to get so engrossed in their niche that they look too closely and they think that everyone knows and thinks like they do.It’s even difficult to explain sometimes what we get as results and some clients are so surprised they cannot believe that no one searches for the industry jargon and lingo that flows off their lips daily.

CLIENT: “How can you say that no one searches for blue widgets!! I just typed it in and there are 3 million results.”SEO TECH: “Yes, but you are looking at the results of a search for blue widgets. That’s the competition that is also selling blue widgets. That’s NOT measuring the actual numbers of people who are typing into the search engines”CLIENT: “I don’t understand!”SEO TECH: “What we look at is the numbers of people who are sitting in front of their computers just like you are and actually looking for what you call blue widgets. Your industry calls them “blue widgets”, but when people look for them, they call them “blue doohickeys”. If you want your blue widgets to find the people who want to buy them, then you need to call them “blue doohickeys”CLIENT: “That’s crazy! No one calls them doohickeys!”SEO TECH:”The research does not lie.People don’t know widgets. They know and want doohickyes and what’s more, while everyone calls them blue widgets, you could be raking in the bucks selling blue doohickeys”***

Keyword research widens the field of vision to encompass not only the markets/ clients that a industry does attract, but also allows us all a peek at a unknown segment that could have fantastic results.

The research shows us the real thoughts, needs, desires and wants of people. It’s like peeking into their brains and finding all their dirty little secrets. Most people have been known to Google something odd at least once.Think about it. You don’t have to tell me and you probably wouldn’t want many people to find out. You don’t have to be open about what you type into their search bars when you are alone, and even in the middle of keyword research,
your anonymity is protected, but if enough people search as you do; I will find out providing I have a client who might find that information useful.Sometimes, the results of keyword research  is just very useful. Granted it is used for SEO to marry the key phrase to a web page and push the rankings, but very often we find in the research new markets for our clients. We can tell them what products people are looking for in great numbers and often advise then that there is no real competition out there like with the blue widgets. Sometimes  the reuslts of keyword research can be developed into a new line of something they already produce, and sometimes it is just a new market for an existing product that needs to be rebranded or renamed or just advertised with new language reflecting what the public needs.Sometimes, the information we share with a client is not welcomed. They don’t always want to grow or change the way they are doing things and that has to be OK, too. Our job is to let them know what the research tells us. If they don’t want to take advantage of it, then we just might nod our heads, and roll our eyes when they aren’t looking, but as they say, “You can lead a horse to water…”But you can’t make them rename their blue widgets….*** the account above was based on a real conversation with a exsperated client. The names of all widgets and doohickeys has been changed to protect the innocent.***

Seinfelds Urban Sombrero, Happy Spiders and Amused Fish: A Lesson in SEO Copywriting

January 23rd, 2009 by Claudia D'Arcy

One of the things we do at DragonSearch Marketing as part of SEO optimization is assisting website owners and copywriters how to write for search engines.

It’s hard because often these people are wonderful writers and very knowledgeable about what they do, experts in their fields and business, but they have no idea what will appeal to the mighty search engine spider. They can produce web content for humans, but the duel and complex nature of the web leaves them confused.

For the purpose of SEO,” we say, “we write for both humans and spiders.

We can only focus on one main subject and key phrase per page. Spiders are stupid and they can only understand one idea at a time.”

Most folks understand that concept going into our search engine optimization set up, but then it comes time to provide content and the idea of a whole page with over 300 words for one topic is daunting. Frequently, we take existing copy that has been assigned to well researched keywords and format our headers and add our tags with the agreed upon search terms. Inevitably we have to add in, highlighted in yellow, explicit directions for the PR person or project copywriters.

Sometimes, final drafts will come in and we get three more sentences talking about blue widgets and have to shake our heads. The page is supposed to be about amusing fish. I just know the stupid spiders won’t get it.

I know it’s hard to go on and gush about a product or service especially when you are so close to it. It is like not being able to see the forest through the trees. These people know so well what they do that the belief is that everyone else in the world knows as much as they do too.

“How can I say more about a red widget? Everyone knows how to amuse fish.”

Ah, but it’s not just any red widget. It’s your red widget and if you don’t love it enough to gush, then who will?  Besides, no, not everyone who wants to amuse fish knows about red widgets and if they do, we want them to find your red widget first.  We have to make sure the spiders understand to send the people who want to amuse their fish to your site.

Yes, it’s hard. I just finished an SEO based copy writing project that was almost 30 pages about birth announcements. I ran out of different ways to say “cute” and ‘new arrival’, but even with repeating the same feel and the same or similar features, every page has original content, even a blue version verses a pink version.

It’s perfect SEO copy; keyword rich, with tags and headers, in the right order, bullet lists and bold, specific anchor text cross linking.

The spiders will have a field day.

But putting the spiders aside, it reads well. There is an air of excitement about each product. And while they are a lovely line of beautiful products (they sent me samples, so I know. I carried them back and forth to the office for over two weeks) they sound just divinely scrumptious when you read about them.

When I got burnt out from pumping out emotionally charged excitement over the births of unknown children, I remembered the J. Peterman character on Seinfeld.  You remember Peterman: Elaine’s wacky boss, owner of the J. Peterman catalogue that read like a travel itinerary.

Sometimes, he is my muse.  J. Peterman knew it back then. It was all in the telling. I can hear him speaking in my head when I write. Elaborate, description, unraveling a story that might be simple, might be only about one subject, but never the less draws the reader in.

What if you are only trying to sell a red widget, but can speak about how the red widget amuses fish.  If many people are searching for ways to amuse fish, then they need to find their way to you and your red widgets. So you tell the story of the fish. They come for the fish, but they leave with the widget. Because you were the one who know all about it and gave them what they were looking for. A happy fish

And the spiders are happy too.

Write your SEO copy as if you were writing about Peterman’s Urban Sombrero.

“It combines the spirit of old Mexico with a little big city panache. I like to call it the Urban Sombrero”

Not just a big black hat.



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