Mobile Search Marketing – Get A Head Start On Your Competitors.

Mobile Search

Mobile Search

The mobile search market is still in its infancy and many advertisers are taking a ‘wait and see’ approach. This lack of competition in the mobile search space surely presents an opportunity for businesses to get a head start on their competitors.

While most advertisers are reluctant to commit, it is relatively straightforward to get positioned well in the natural search listings of the mobile search engines, and PPC programme click costs are still comparatively low. So, how do you start to market your business on the mobile web?

The good news is that a mobile search marketing campaign is relatively simple to set up. But before you can promote your website to the mobile search market you need to ensure that it is compatible with mobile screens, or you need a specifically designed site in a mobile ready format such as XHTML, WML, or iMode.

The reality is that most sites will be difficult to adapt to small mobile screens and will not have the simplified functionality that is required by mobile users, so a dedicated mobile site is preferable. Fortunately, mobile sites are relatively cheap and quick to build. You can also register a .mobi domain so that users (and search engines) will know that your site is fully mobile compatible.

Once you have your site established, accessing the mobile search market is now quick, easy and cost effective with both Google and Yahoo offering the ability to place PPC text ads on their mobile web search engines. There are also other 3rd party mobile ad network providers such as Admob (www.admob.com) that allow you to place contextual ads on selected content.

In addition, mobile websites can be optimised for high visibility in the natural search results of the mobile websites using conventional SEO tactics. You can even submit a Google Mobile Sitemap. As few business have mobile ready websites the competition for valuable screen real estate is surprisingly light and it is relatively easy to get well positioned on the mobile search engines.

While the majority of people may not yet be ready to book their holidays on a mobile handset, there is clearly a business for other travel and tourism related suppliers like hotels, restaurants, bars, clubs, golf courses, attractions, tour guides and other local services.

Very few businesses have mobile versions of their websites, so there is an opportunity to get ahead of your competitors through early exposure for your products and services on the mobile web.

Should internal links use rel=”nofollow”?

Google doesn’t use the keywords meta tag in web search

Straight from the horses mouth – Matt Cutt’s from Google talks about keywords in the meta tag.

Questions to ask before you rebuild your website

Seth Godin, guru of permission marketing and leading edge thinking on new media, and new marketing has posted this list of questions to ask before you redo your website on his blog.

My additions/comments are shown in bold italics.

  1. What is the goal of the site?
  2. In other words, when it’s working great, what specific outcomes will occur? How do we measure these outcomes?
  3. Who are we trying to please? If it’s the boss, what does she want? Is impressing a certain kind of person important? Which kind?
  4. How many people on your team have to be involved? At what level? Who is ultimately responsible for the project?
  5. Who are we trying to reach? Is it everyone? Our customers? A certain kind of prospect?
  6. What are the sites that this group has demonstrated they enjoy interacting with?
  7. Are we trying to close sales? Have we thought of the back office logistics to process these sales?
  8. Are we telling a story?
  9. Are we earning permission to follow up?
  10. Are we hoping that people will watch or learn?
  11. Do we need people to spread the word using various social media tools?
  12. Are we building a tribe of people who will use the site to connect with each other?
  13. Do people find the site via word of mouth? Are they looking to answer a specific question?
  14. Is there ongoing news and updates that need to be presented to people?
  15. Is the site part of a larger suite of places online where people can find out about us, or is this our one sign post?
  16. Is that information high in bandwidth or just little bits of data?
  17. Do we want people to call us?
  18. How many times a month would we like people to come by? For how long?
  19. Who needs to update this site? How often? What skills/tools do we need to make the updates?
  20. How often can we afford to overhaul this site?
  21. Does showing up in the search engines matter? If so, for what terms? At what cost? Will we be willing to compromise any of the things above in order to achieve this goal?
  22. Will the site need to be universally accessible? Do issues of disability or language or browser come into it?
  23. How much money do we have to spend? How much time? Can we stage the roll out of the project?
  24. Does the organization understand that ‘everything’ is not an option?

Do you have any questions to add to this list?

Create your digital toolbox

When I first started in the digital industry 10 years ago, if you had a website your were using the internet as a marketing tool to it’s maximum and were miles in front of your competitors who didn’t have a website at all.

Now a website of some sort is mandatory for all companies and it’s how it is used in conjunction with an overall digital strategy that is the key factor in your online marketing.

Here are some digital tools that all businesses should have in their toolbox.

Read more

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