There is so much minutiae around ranking factors that affect brand opportunity to hold the coveted “above the fold” space in a Google search that sometimes it’s good to take a step back from tactics and make sure you’re looking at the big picture. Here are four reasons you might not rank as well as your competitors in Google.
Is the organic search channel not performing as well as you were expecting? Finding the cause in such a complex channel can prove difficult. Perhaps your search visibility is being negatively impacted by one, or all, of the following strategic issues.
1. You Aren’t Answering the Right Questions
Topic/Category Focus
It’s no longer as relevant to focus on keywords or phrases to drive organic search.
Efforts to understand the keywords your searchers use should now be focused on the actual topic and category that will inform their full customer journey.
Focusing on answering questions rather than populating content with keywords will help drive larger gains in organic search.
Semantic Search
Relevance and context are important to Google’s semantic search. As Google gets better at context and improves the user experience it isn’t enough to focus on keywords.
Marketing efforts focused on organic search need to evolve to be more inclusive with how a user searches throughout their journey not just in siloed keyword-focused approach but a topic and category approach that’s more reflective of how people really search.
An evolution of a search may start with a single keyword phrase and evolve as the searchers understanding evolves “hotels in Greece”, “luxury hotels in Greece”, “luxury hotels in Greece with beach access”, “luxury hotels in Greece with spas”, “luxury hotels in Zakynthos, Greece” to “book Porto Zante Villas”. This contextual thinking is more akin to a conversation and less like a keyword search.
If you want your brand to be the best direct answer to a question, then you need to understand the questions being asked and you need to truly be the best answer to that question.
Removing keyword-level reporting was just one effort Google made in its’ analytics program to push marketers to focus less on a single query and more on the full user experience (one could also argue they also did it to bolster paid ad placement, but that’s another conversation).
Knowledge Graph
Customizing your knowledge graph is a fairly straightforward but enormously helpful path for sharing brand information.
Though the content is organized and aggregated from multiple data sources, providing the right structured data markup ensures that your contact information, logo, and social profiles are displayed correctly. Learn more about structured data here
Content Strategy
Part of a great content strategy includes documenting a strategy (something only 35 percent of brands are doing), understanding your audience, content mapping that audience’s questions and problems, and answering them with the right asset in the right channel at the right time.
2. You Aren’t Understanding Your Audience
Online Reputation Management (ORM)
ORM is an integral part of your digital footprint as a brand. Whether this belongs to the brand team or the web team, it’s important that someone owns understanding your brand ORM, good stuff and bad stuff.
Your audience cares deeply if there are bad reviews about your luxury hotel in Greece, particularly if it dominates their search experience. Understanding your audience starts with understanding their experience.
Whomever owns ORM in your organization needs to go through the motions of being your audience then honestly tackle any negative brand experience they may encounter.
Device Flow
Just as marketers focus on the conversion funnel from a channel perspective, you must also understand device flow as a factor in conversion.
This understanding helps inform brand content shared, which in turn improves our ability to correctly answer questions and have a larger opportunity to beat competition in the SERP (search engine results page).
Local Search
Knowing your audience means knowing how they search.
Search queries with the words “near me” have increased 11X since 2013. If you only pay attention to organic search when your brand is location-dependent, then you could be missing opportunity that your competitors are grabbing.
3. You Aren’t Integrating SEO With Other Digital Marketing Efforts
SEO (search engine optimization or search experience optimization) isn’t a one-time event or annual project. It should be ongoing and search efforts should be woven into the fabric of your marketing efforts and asset creation.
Marketers with a top-level understanding of SEO understand that every page should have a purpose (read Kristina Halvorson’s, Content Strategy for the Web to learn more) and the titles and descriptions (meta tags) of those pages should be crafted as if they were your most important marketing messages. In many cases they will be seen more frequently than any other content that describes a page, video, PR, image, or other content asset.
When SEO is siloed from day-to-day marketing efforts, you miss opportunities to share your brand message and optimize assets appropriately. This can often be the difference in your competitors winning, not just the top of the search funnel but the conversion as well.
4. You Aren’t Originating Your Content On The Property You Own
As the Internet continues to evolve, one thing digital marketers are learning, sometimes painfully, is how important it is to primarily originate content on your site, the property you own.
This Hub and Spoke Model from Vertical Measures does a great job of showing how a content pillar or inclusive content asset originates on their own site, then leverages other channels and extrapolated content (derivative content and social posts from the larger content asset) to grow the message with their audience where their audience lives.
Using this model does a couple of things:
- It forces marketers to think about a campaign which answers their customers questions that are more likely to be present at the right time in the customer journey. For example, a financial services institution could create a large ebook about “Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About Your 401K”. Then each part of that ebook could be broken up into multiple blog posts and dozens of social networks shared in the right place at the right time.
- Fine-tuning the content to a particular audience becomes easier when we can pick and choose the most relevant content from the larger asset. For example, the financial services company could share relevant posts with their “Young Family” audience about using a 401K to pay for college and they could share posts with their “Preparing for Retirement” audience about the benefits of investing more heavily in a 401K in your 50s.
Originating the large asset on your own site allows for that great content to be evergreen and to reap the benefits of all of the sharing, linking to, and engagement from other channels. It also helps brands protect themselves from the potential that social platforms change and even go away.
Authority for your site and all of the social platforms in your digital ecosystem is enormously integrated from Google’s perspective. Growing that authority will help Google deliver your brand as the answer to a question and also help your digital team deliver on being the right answer to those questions.
Do you have any questions about why your site may not be ranking as well as you’d like in Google? Let us know in the comments, and we’ll do our best to help you out!