Jennifer Laycock

Jennifer Laycock

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Well over a year ago I wrote an article here on Search Engine Guide that talked about the need for both search marketers and clients to start looking beyond simple rankings and to place a heavy focus on increased traffic and conversions. After all, in no other area of marketing does "success" equal being one of the top ten of anything in the entire world. Lee Odden has tackled that same subject this week over at his blog and asks if search engine rankings are dead.

Lee notes:

With the advent of personalization and impending changes with the interface of search results, the notion of ranking seems to be on it's way out. In the past 3-4 years, most SEO consulting firms have been focusing on traffic and especially the past 2-3 years on conversions. Standard search engine rankings as a proxy to sales will become irrelevant, especially as other channels of search have emerged in popularity.

If you consider all the traffic opportunities from news search, blog search, social media as well as stand alone image, video and audio search, there's a lot of accountability left on the table when not considering all the possible sources of web site visitors. "Ranking Reports" only document web page positions on standard search engines. This logically leads to the need for better metrics and reporting overall, but that will have to wait for another post.

Here's what I had to say back in my article on the subject:

...the last year has seen the exodus of many hard-hitting search marketers from some of the more competitive arenas as they find that the effort required to maintain rankings isn't always worth the pay-off of those rankings.

Imagine, for a moment, that other marketing industries had set themselves up with similar expectations. That email marketers were considered unsuccessful if you didn't make the top ten list in terms of visitors to your site, that public relations professionals were a failure if you weren't one of the top ten stories of the year, that television commercials were a failure unless they resulted in more store visits than all but ten other companies in their industry. Starting to sound a little silly?

Of course it does! Marketing is about finding new and innovative ways to present a product so that it drives purchases. It's as simple as that. Commercial marketers work to capture an audiences' attention in a way that keeps a company top of mind when the need arises for their product. Direct mail advertisers seek to capture a potential customer's interest with a compelling enough offer to create a sale or at least an inquiry. In the world of traditional marketing, results are measured by ROI, not by some arbitrary "top ten" achievement.

This isn't about admitting defeat or trying to lower expectations in a competitive industry...it's about recognizing that rankings mean diddly squat in the grand scheme of marketing a web site. Who cares what your rankings are if you aren't seeing more quality traffic? Who cares what your rankings are if you aren't increasing sales?

That's not even mentioning the traffic that search marketers gain from link placements, social media campaigns and other search related efforts. You can't run a ranking report on those things, yet they play an important role in helping raise your site's visibility.

Hmm...maybe that's the new direction we need to take things?

Maybe we're no longer search engine marketers or search engine optimizers. Maybe now we're WVO's...website visibility optimizers?

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Jennifer Laycock is the Editor of Search Engine Guide, an educational web site aimed at translating the search marketing world into something that small business owners can understand. Jennifer specializes in common sense search engine marketing, viral marketing and customer outreach via social media and blogs. A former search marketing consultant and in-house trainer, Jennifer’s clients have included companies like Verizon, American Greetings and Highlights for Children. Her primary clients now are a little girl named Elnora and a little boy named Emmitt.