Sunday, June 12, 2016

GUEST BLOG POST: Great Content More Important Than SEO — Jeffrey Baumgartner

Image credits/artist: Jeffrey Baumgartner

By Jeffrey Baumgartner
It never ceases to amaze me the number of organizations that invest time and money in search engine optimization (SEO: the process of making your web pages easy to find on search engines) and cutting edge design only to fill their web pages with mediocre content. That's stupid. Think it through, you invest in bringing people to your web site and then bore them silly with poorly written content and the same stock photos that your least interesting competitors are using. It would be like investing in fancy invitation cards to a party, delivering them to all of the important people in your area and then having a party in a messy living room serving only cheap beer and canned sausages served directly out of their cans. Not only are people unlikely to stay at your party, but they are even less likely to come to another party of yours, recommend you to friends or want much to do with you in the future.

On the other hand, if you make an effort to tidy up your living room; serve a variety of quality alcoholic as well as non-alcoholic drinks together with handmade delicious snacks; and you organize a few activities to make the party more fun, invitees will be impressed by the party and by you. Moreover, you leave a lasting good impression that makes it likely they will think positively of you, come to future parties and recommend those parties as well as you to others.

Compelling Content Leads To Sales
Likewise, if your marketing budget is limited, it makes more sense to invest in quality, compelling and original content than it does in SEO, advertising and design. This is because if your content meets these criteria, people will read it through, they will be interested in checking out your other content and they will recommend it. Other bloggers will link to it and reference it. You enhance your reputation. You get sales. Indeed, content on this web site and in the Report 103 newsletter have led to over a million dollars of sales of products and services in recent years − yet I have never made an unsolicited sales call or sent out an email sales pitch. People even tell me the web site's design is unimpressive or worse! Nevertheless, compelling contact has led to discussions and sales.

So, if your content is original, compelling and readable or watchable or listenable, (depending on how you present it), you build your reputation as being a thought leader. You are someone worth reading or watching or listening to. Your newsletter is read. Your blog is shared. Your videos make an impression. Your podcasts are recommended. I am sure that you, as a thought leader, can see the value in all of this.

So, this raises the question: why do so many organisations invest in SEO, advertising and cutting edge design and then pay some half-literate dweeb US$5 to write a blog post which they decorate with an utterly forgettable image from a stock photo agency? I believe a big part of the reason is that the metrics measure a lot of the wrong things.

Metrics Measure The Wrong Things
Click throughs let you know how many people click on your Google or LinkedIn or Facebook adverts, but fail to tell you how many people are reduced to tears of boredom when they reach your content. Web analytics tell you how many people visit various web pages, but fail to tell you how many people vomit after reading two sentences of a blog post or laugh at the fact that you are using the same generic office scene picture as they have on their home page. Sure, analytics will tell you how long a page stays open, but these days, most people open multiple web pages in new browser tabs to look at − or not − later.

SEO experts can tell you which words should be in your content and which should be in meta tags to boost your blog post's ranking in search engines, but they do not and cannot tell you how to string those words together so that they are meaningful in some way to the people who come across the post.

Banjos, For Example
Of course, if your only interest is to bring people to your web site to buy new banjos for just US$19 and you do not care what they think of you, you do not need to bother about content. Your only concern is selling cheap goods quickly. You're rather like a dingy shop in the bad part of town that sells cheap stuff. People go to you for for low prices and nothing more. They have no relationship with you. Indeed, they are vaguely embarrassed about doing business with you.

On the other hand, you could have a web site full of well written information and video clips about buying the right banjo. You could have professional photos of people playing your banjos in your shop, you could have banjo tips on your web site. You could have video tutorials on your web site. And you could sell banjos at reasonable prices. With quality, relevant content, you form a relationship with customers and potential customers. People will not only buy from you, but they will revisit your web site, recommend you to other banjo players and buy from you in the future.

As a result, you will hardly need to invest in SEO or advertising at all. You will have built a great reputation thanks to your content. And, of course, people like to buy quality goods from businesses that have great reputations.

What Is Good Content?
Content on the web can be in the form of text, video, sound, images or a combination of two or more of these.

Good content is well composed, presents an original view point and achieves a purpose. It may be informative, for example it could be an article that describes the features of a particular banjo. It could be a video that presents an argument, such as why a handmade banjo is better than a factory produced one. It could be a podcast that tells a story, for example the day you were playing in a bar and Pete Seeger joined you.

If you, as a business leader, can prepare content yourself, do so. You have the passion, the experience and the expertise to write knowingly and competently. But if writing is not your strong suit or you just have too many tasks on your plate, hire a professional who can write competently and will invest time in understanding the subject. And, just like a US$5 banjo will be a shoddy piece of crap that will sound awful and fall apart in no time, a US$5 blog post will be a shoddy piece of crap that will sound awful

On the other hand, a great blog post, like a great banjo will sound great, exude quality and last a long time. Most importantly, it will impress the right people. Some of the most popular pages on this web site are 20 years old.

A Word About Images
These days, a lot of companies buy subscriptions to stock photo libraries that allow them to choose and use from a wide range of generic images for a low monthly fee. These images are usually slick and well photographed, but are utterly boring and fail to represent YOU. A photo of three smiling, multiracial people in business casual clothing who are all pointing at a laptop screen impresses no one if you work out of the spare bedroom of a house in the suburbs. And, your customers will know that.

Moreover, so many small and medium sized businesses use these services that their images have become ubiquitous on the web. The result, to return to the party analogy of earlier, would be rather like throwing a party and having everyone show up in variations of the same outfit from H&M. Sure, the clothes are all fine and look good. But if everyone wears them, they all look the same and come across as dull for it. However, if someone comes to the party wearing an original, good-looking outfit, even if it was put together with clothes bought from a second-hand shop, that person will get everyone's attention for looking original and good. Likewise, do not be afraid to veer from boring, generic stock photos and use original images instead. Hire a photographer to take relevant pictures, such as you in action; I happen to think you look better and way more knowledgable than those silly stock-photo models.

Or go with illustrations such as cartoons (modest cough − like mine, for example). You could even ask your five year old aspiring artist daughter to draw some relevant pictures and use them to decorate your web site and blog. It would be original and, in the right context, relevant. Indeed, it would be so cool, I wonder if you'd mind asking her to draw some images for my web site!

Another Word About Design
There are a lot of awesome templates that allow anyone to put together a slick, professional and stylish web site and blog in no time. However, if you intend to include a lot of text on your web site, be sure that the style does not detract from the text and that it is easy to navigate. Many designs emphasize style over function which is fine if you want a simple web presence to enhance your professional image.

But if you intend to include content, be sure the style enhances the content and navigation rather than obscurifies it.

Quality Counts
If you use your web presence to communicate with customers, potential customers, suppliers, stakeholders, the community or any combination of these, focus your investment of time, effort and cash on producing quality content. There is no point in bringing people to your web site if the content is terrible. On the other hand, if the content is great, a minimal investment in promotion will have lasting positive results.

In spite of amazing advances in SEO, analytics and web technology, content is still king.

Jeffrey Baumgartner, Author, Artist, Trainer

No comments :

Post a Comment