![]() |
|
||||||||||||||||||
|
The latest Search Engine Marketing news and updates from the best and most trusted sources in the Search Engine Marketing industry. Home > Search Engine Marketing News Why the Social Media World NEEDS to Understand SEO Why the Social Media World NEEDS to Understand SEOby Jennifer Laycock As I find myself drifting further and further from my search engine optimization roots to focus more time and effort on exploring the worlds of social media, blogging and viral marketing, I'm sometimes astonished at the misunderstandings between these two worlds. Search engine marketers look to social media as a vast expanse of link opportunities, almost completely missing the true potential of social media. On the other hand, social media types tend to look at SEO as some type of dirty game of tricks and scams that would tarnish the pure image they hope to build in their social media utopia. The reality is, there's simply a slew of misunderstandings on both ends. The true potential for massive reward comes when someone who really understands the value of conversation in social media comes together with someone who understands the technical aspects of search engine optimization. Otherwise, we have campaigns that miss their full potential. Yes, they'll do well and yes, they'll bring on more business, but if you pay attention to both sides of the equation, you'll increase the impact of your campaign dramatically. Case in Point: Ogilvy's new Lenovo Summer Games Campaign
Since I'm still an SEO at heart, my first thought was of the link and traffic potential of putting together a site like this. True social content that allows people to interact around current events and hot topics is killer in terms of traffic. There's a reason for that...it's because good social media initiatives capture people at their passion points and gather them together. For that, I say kudos to the team at Ogilvy who dreamed this idea up. High Expectations, Saddening Reality
1.) The Site is Not Search Friendly In fact, almost none of the juicy content on this site is being indexed. Take the Contributors page. Aaron Cohen sits up there at the top, an American Athlete competing in Judo. With a search friendly site, there's a darn good chance the Lenovo blog campaign site would rank well when someone searched for him on Google during the Olympics. But it doesn't.
Only the athlete bio pages are designed in a search friendly manner. Granted, that's something in terms of content, but it's a drop in the bucket compared to what could have been indexed. 2.) The Site Isn't Link Friendly Here's the second key issue. The Lenovo site is using an Ajax driven pop up box to display the content from each of their bloggers. That means you don't get a unique page and a unique URL related to each entry, which means bloggers cannot link to a post on the Lenovo site. Don't understand what I mean? Let me show you. Here's a screen shot of the Lenovo site: Now, here's a second screen shot after I've clicked on one of the blog posts. You'll notice it's simply loaded in a floating window: Because the web site loads the content in those floating windows instead of linking to a unique URL on the Lenovo Olympic site, there's no way to link to specific content. (This is the same problem sites that are built entirely in Flash have, you cannot deep link.)
In reality, there's an even bigger issue at play that will keep the site from living up to it's linking potential. 3.) The Lenovo Site Doesn't House the Content
Instead, I found what amounted to a glorified RSS feed. While the Lenovo site serves as a one-stop spot to find all of these bloggers, it doesn't house the content. Instead, it offers up a bio of the blogger and the text of their latest post. If I want to see the images that come with the post or leave a comment in response to the post, I have to click through to the original post on the blogger's web site.
This would have created a treasure trove of indexable content that would have ranked for and driven oodles of long tail traffic to the site. It also would have given readers a reason to return to the site again and again as they spotted posts via RSS or Twitter that sparked their interest. Add in the user generated content of blog comments and you've got a content gold mine of Olympic proportions. Which brings me to the next problem. 4.) There's No Interactivity or Reason to Return By the time I wrote this article, I'd spent about an hour clicking through the site trying to get a feel for what the goal was. Obviously the most interactive part of blogging is the comments area. Unfortunately, you can't comment on the Lenovo Olympic site. When you pop open the window containing a blog post, the blog post is all you get. There's simply no comment option available: If I want to comment, I have to click on the "show original" link, head over to the athlete's blog and leave my comment there. Because the site is set up this way, Lenovo loses the content AND shows me I don't need to visit their site to read the blog post. Instead, I can add the athlete's blog directly to my feed reader and by pass Lenovo completely. Even beyond that, there was so much potential for content and interactivity on the site. Yes, they've done a good job integrating videos and photos (yay! they're using Flickr) and they do have a poll in the sidebar...but where's the true resource and interactivity? Where's the pooling of community resources? Where's the reason to return over and over and to link to the site as a resource? Take a look at the featured story page again: Take special note of the two red boxes. The first is the icon that tells you what sport the blogger participates in. The second is a flag letting you know what country the blogger competes for. Neither of these icons are clickable. They don't lead anywhere. Think of the potential here.
Imagine if that country icon linked to a page that did the same thing for country specific coverage. What if it also included links to each country's official Olympic site. What if you could subscribe to receive updates on medal counts, sports and so on. Imagine if they just took the concept a tiny step further. What a true social media masterpiece and absolute link magnet the site could be. Traffic from search engine would come pouring through the web. No Links + No Content = Massive SEO Fail The reason search marketers have come running into the social media space like bulls in a china shop is because they recognize the extraordinary potential for links and the potential of long tail search traffic.
Now, there's no doubt this site will generate links. With the power of an agency as large as Ogilvy and pockets as deep as Lenovo, they'll find ways to drive traffic and attention. Of course thanks to the issues I listed above, they'll drive only a fraction of the links they could have. Of course none of that really matters because there simply isn't any content for the engines to index. No indexable content means even a site with a million links won't rank well for very many keyword phrases. You simply have to serve up the content if you want Google to serve up the traffic. So Why is all of this a Problem? Searches for Olympic related keywords are going to be through the roof the next month or two. I know hobby bloggers who are already seeing extraordinary upticks in traffic and links simply because they've made one or two posts about the upcoming games. The traffic potential for a site with massive amounts of Olympic related content is extraordinary. Add in the branding benefit of having your name plastered all over that content and some well placed related offers and you've got a campaign that's bound to be successful.
The entire site could have been built with the same functionality it has now and still be indexable by the search engines. The site is running on Wordpress, a blog platform that is notoriously search friendly. Unfortunately, the site developers decided to throw the Wordpress functionality by the wayside in favor of the flashy (but non-indexable) Ajax content. Social Media and Search Have to Make Friends Which takes us all the way back to my original point. All too often, Social Media mavens eschew search engine optimization. They don't understand it and sadly, many don't want to. But just as the search community needs to take the time to learn how to use social media properly, the social media community need to learn the very basics of search engine friendly design. Otherwise, each group of marketers severely limits the potential of their campaigns. Why focus your efforts on one side of the solution when focusing on both leads to such a stronger reward?
Click Here to read the entire article... Find this article in Google Other Articles:Search Engine Guide : Small Business Search Marketing By rss@incisivemedia.com - Copyright 2008 - version: 1.5 Search Engine Guide : Small Business Search Marketing
By rss@incisivemedia.com - Copyright 2008 - version: 1.5 Search Engine Marketing NewsletterReceive monthly tips to improve your business’ Search Engine Marketing campaign performance. Kindly fill out the form below or subscribe to our RSS Feed. |