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Search Engine Marketing: March 2008 Archives

Yesterday The New York Times reported on a new search-within-a-search option Google has made a standard feature of its site.

Now, if you search for certain high profile brands - Best Buy, let's say - you have the option of searching Best Buy Web only.

best buy - Google Search.png

Very convenient for searchers, especially for sites with clumsy navigation or an enormous number of pages. The complications set in when you enter your Best Buy search term - in this case, "laptops" - and go to the new Google page. Here's what you get -

laptops site-bestbuy.com - Google Search detail.png

Notice the PPC advertising for competitive sites. People searching for a laptop at Best Buy will view ads from HP, Dell, Tiger Direct, and several others.

What to make of this? Even with competitive ads, Google's new feature probably helps Best Buy. By organizing all of the retailer's many laptop options, Google saves the consumer time conducting internal searches on the Best Buy site for certain types of purchases or information. Sure, some customers will be lured away by the PPC ads, but most will likely stick with Best Buy, or at least review Best Buy's information, since they wouldn't have started there in the first place unless they intended to shop there.

On the other hand, Google may have leveled the playing field for brands with poor navigation and internal search capability.  If my company has invested millions in developing a high quality site, I don't think I'd like that. Regardless of how it all pans out, this new feature highlights the enormous power of search engines to not only organize information, but influence outcomes.

Whatever the outcome for Best Buy, it's quite possible the new Google feature will be a plus for PPC advertisers. The "Best Buy laptop" SERPs are of higher quality to retail advertisers than SERPs for "laptops". Whether these brand-specific pages yield a higher conversion rate for advertisers remains to be seen. If they do, that's good news for Google. The ultimate test will be whether consumers find the new Google search option more convenient than simply searching the brand's actual site.


Protecting Your Company from an Online Crisis

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whoast fire engine.jpg

Although much has been written about promoting a business online, one thing that has impacted businesses today way more than mere web presence is the "new" power of the online customer. All the positive influences of having a state-of-the-art web site, miles of thought-provoking blog entries and virtual reams of up-to-date newsletters may be easily written off by a flick of a button when you encounter a negative customer feedback or review. For almost every industry you will find sites dedicated to reviewing its products/services; sometimes even a customer's own personal blog is capable of broadcasting personal feedback in a way that could reach hundreds or thousands of people.  

This is certainly not a new phenomenon, but the popularity of myspace sites and other social-networking portals have redefined the term "word of mouth". Case in point - the Steak and Shake episode as outlined in Liz Fuller's post Crisis Case Study: Steak and Shake Refuses Service to Deaf Mom   - an awful incident of bad service becomes a post in a blog and as you can see the rest is history --

The next day, she (Karen Putz) itemized over 80 blogs that had picked up her story.  The story was also picked up that night by ABC News and Fox News.  Today, approximately three weeks after it happened there are almost 1000 hits on Google when typing in the search words, "Steak and Shake" and "Deaf Mom" and worse yet  "this story appears in positions #3 through #9 on the front page of Google when searching on the terms "Steak and Shake".

So what is a company supposed to do in this instance?  Shel Holtz gives a primer on Crisis Communication Fundamentals  that might help you outline actions that need to be taken in case of negative PR hits such as that of the Steak and Shake incident. Liz Fuller also addresses crisis management in her post When A Crisis Hits, Where Do You Want To Be?  where she has this to say about crisis management-

 
The best case scenario is where your business already has established a blog. Using the existing blog to manage the crisis is a natural extension of the blog's reach to your customers.

The coin does flip both ways, the "power" of mass communication that some consumers/customers have may be pretty devastating when turned against you, but on the other hand, the positive influences of good word of mouth can certainly turn the tide in your favor as well. Understanding the online sphere that your business "lives" in and where your customer finds information is one step towards keeping a finger on your companies' identity and reputation.

(Image courtesy of FreeFoto)




 

About this Archive

This page is a archive of entries in the Search Engine Marketing category from March 2008.

Search Engine Marketing: February 2008 is the previous archive.

Search Engine Marketing: April 2008 is the next archive.

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