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SEO Tricks: Content vs SEO: Business Profit Margins

Started by SEO Manager, February 15, 2009, 09:56:51 PM

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SEO Manager

Content vs SEO: Business Profit Margins
 


<p>I was sad to see some people who claim to be search experts actually syndicate that John Dvorak article stating that it was good. Of course there are some scammers in every piece of the marketing industry because anywhere where there is demand for a marketing service opportunistic people will look to take advantage of people, but not all SEO techniques are seedy or shifty. In fact, most are not. </p>
<p>Steven Arnold You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login "Gaming search engines for fun or profit is of zero interest to me as are those who practice these dark arts," and he wrote that content was the secret. "SEO is a way for content free sites to game the indexing systems. Content, Aaron Wall, content. Not tricks, spoofs, and carnival tricks." That is the mindset of a guy who has probably spent thousands of hours researching search. Bizarre.  </p>
<p>Sure SEO can be used to temporarily promote garbage, but it is also used to make quality publishing business models profitable. </p>
<p>It is no secret that many publishing business models are no longer effective. Mainstream publishing businesses are going bankrupt. They have nearly limitless content, but even with their huge online archives, it does not create enough traffic and profit to effectively subsidize the cost of new content production.  </p>
<p>The New York Times recently shared their profitable publishing strategy - You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login, and hoping they get enough inventory to become profitable. </p>
<p>So here is a publishing company with a strong brand, tons of content, losing money, and their growth strategy is hoping that competitors go bankrupt before they do. These newspapers get direct promotion in the search results through the Google News OneBox (a rankings boost subsidy), and yet they still can't turn a profit. That really shows the flaw of the "content" mindset in the age of the internet. </p>
<p>As Robert Thomson, the managing editor of the Wall Street Journal You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login:</p>
<p>But one of the â€" Google â€" I mean, the harsh way of just defining it, Google devalues everything it touches. Google is great for Google, but it’s terrible for content providers, because it divides that content quantitatively rather than qualitatively. And if you are going to get people to pay for content, you have to encourage them to make qualitative decisions about that content.</p>

<p>Relevancy algorithms are built around making sure the search ad network makes money (even while many publishers do not). Some people run businesses. Others are bankrupt, but are just not aware of it yet. </p>
<ul>
<li>I have sites with great content that went nowhere.</li>
<li>I had a few sites with sub-par content that got tons of rankings and exposure.</li>
<li>Some of our sites make good money.</li>
<li>Other projects have lost more than I care to mention.</li>
<li>And we have sites at just about every level in between.</li>
</ul>
<p>What is the difference between all of them? Marketing. SEO is a subset of marketing. It can be done effectively or ineffectively. It just depends on how healthy the target market is, who is doing the work, and how much they care for the project.</p>
<p>Many businesses struggle for survival or flourish based on a tiny couple percent change in profit margins. If you routinely rank #5 in the search results then it is pretty easy to see You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login.



You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login highlight this distribution trend as well.</p>
<p>Based on eye-tracking studies, we know that people tend to scan the search results in order. They start from the first result and continue down the list until they find a result they consider helpful and click it â€" or until they decide to refine their query. The heatmap below shows the activity of 34 usability study participants scanning a typical Google results page. The darker the pattern, the more time they spent looking at that part of the page. This pattern suggests that the order in which Google returned the results was successful; most users found what they were looking for among the first two results and they never needed to go further down the page.</p>

<p>Last year Google's Peter Norvig stated that Google did not use usage data directly in their relevancy algorithms because You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login. When the order of search results are changed, people will still have a strong tendency to click inferior result You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login.</p>
<p>Like people, businesses are born, grow, then die. A solid SEO strategy can be the difference between a solid company and a company that no longer exists. </p>
<p>As many of the newspaper companies go bankrupt with tons of “content,” our sites (and profits) will keep growing. Not because of “content” but because we leverage marketing &amp; SEO to ensure our content garners enough exposure to turn a profit.</p>

 

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