dougandrews.co.uk

August 25, 2009

SEO and Google Insight

Filed under: Resources/Tools,SEO — admin @ 9:31 am

Google Insight is an excellent new addition to the Google toolbox of gadgets – effectively it is like Google Trends on steroids.

I used the benchmark term for www.selfcateringhols.com – it should come as no surprise to anyone that this is ‘self catering holidays’ – left most of the filters at the default apart from the categories filter, from which I selected ‘Travel’. Immediately the 1st insight came to light, as it said that the travel category only accounted for 25% of searches using this term. A bit of experimentation showed that recreation accounted for 10%, so what accounted for the majority? Local searches – so people are search for self catering [region] i.e. self catering france or self catering cornwall.

This we already knew, but I find it a good way to test a tool is to test it against a reality that you can compare it against. Other things that came to light was that (again no great surprise) pretty much nobody outside of the UK uses the term ‘self catering holidays’, and that when compared against ‘villa rentals’ it still gets more traffic but that the gap has been closing steadily since 2004.

By being able to compare terms against each other, over time and also location, it enables you to very specifically target your client base. Throw in ‘last minute holidays’ into the mix and you can see that overall this phrase accounts for about 50% of the annual total of self catering holidays, but that most of this is in one big august spike, so one worth going after.

Something I didn’t know was that northern ireland users do not use either ‘self catering holidays’ or ‘villa rentals’ but they do use ‘last minute holidays’, so even using phrases which I thought I knew inside out I learned something.

Finally, scroll down to the bottom of the page and you get a list of the top phrases using your keywords, so ‘self catering france’ is the king of the pile, along with a list of searches which are increasing in popularity even if they are not currently at the top of the list at the moment.

This latter is obviously a very valuable resource – the terms that people use over time change, see self catering holidays and villa rentals as a perfect example. When you invest a lot of time, effort and sometimes money into branding your site for a specific set of phrases it can be a slow boat to turn around should you decide to abandon your initial choice, so the earlier you spot a change in trends the better.

November 30, 2007

Hakia

Filed under: SEO — Tags: — admin @ 9:05 am

Hakia is a new search engine (still in Beta) with a new twist – you get the option to ‘meet’ people who’ve made the same query. The results are powered by Ask so there’s nothing much new there from an SEO perspective. When I tried it seems I was the first to try the searches (I even tried ‘Britney Spears’ in desperation!) indicating that Hakia is not heavily used.

Is it any good? The results were OK if a little slow to display. I suspect that the option to start a discussion with other people who typed the same result will be something that is quickly spammified by those who don’t appear high up in the search results.

Final word: a gimmick that will be very quickly abused ‘if’ the search engine ever gets significant traffic.

Hakia’s homepage

November 26, 2007

Keyword analysis

Filed under: Resources/Tools,SEO — Tags: — admin @ 4:02 pm

Researching the correct keywords is pretty much #1 on the list of search engine optimisation tasks, what tools do I use?

One of the industry leaders in the market seems to be Wordtracker; it is a constant surprise to me that people within the SEO community use this tool as I have tried on a number of occasions to make sense of it and have even tried unsuccessfully to get the Wordtracker people to explain where I could be going wrong. The nuts and bolts of it is that the keywords recommended by Wordtracker bear no correlation to my stats, so in the last analysis I did before giving up entirely:

- it recommended a word which we ranked #1 for, but which generated no actual visitors

- a phrase which DID generate visitors from a lowly page rank did not show anywhere in Wordtracker

- I had a page which ranked well for a keyword phrase which Wordtracker discounted (or omitted to mention), suggesting another instead. I re-jigged the page and came in on the front page for the Wortracker suggestion – but it didn’t generate visitors and I ended up changing the page back.

The Wordtracker people have always been very good at responding to questions and trying to resolve these issues but I’ve tried on more than one occasion and have never yet come to a satisfactory conclusion. Having said that, pretty much everyone in the industry counts it as an invaluable tool, so maybe I’m missing something?!?

Our keyword list is pretty much set now so I don’t find myself researching as much as I once did. I used the keyword suggestion tool with adwords a lot and also experimented on site: check what phrases you rank well for and see if it generates good levels of visitors; if not change it. Also check for phrases that bring in lots of visitors, does it rank well? If not then it clearly should!

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