ORGANIC SEO PAY-PER-CLICK

ORGANIC SEO vs. PAY-PER-CLICK q!"#$ #%&p'r"(%) *!"+,

Understanding Searcher Behavior It’s no wonder that you’re vying for a top spot in SERP (search engine results page) rank; you want people to find you when they’re looking for a product or service solution. But what’s the best way to get there: organic SEO or PPC (pay-per-click)?

Did you know that in 2012 there were more than

5 billion searches done on the internet

every DAY? (Google, 6/18/2013)

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ORGANIC SEO vs. PAY-PER-CLICK q!"#$ #%&p'r"(%) *!"+,

Understanding Searcher Behavior Before implementing PPC or organic SEO initiatives, it’s important to understand searcher behavior, as well as the potential impact and strengths & weaknesses of each initiative. While both PPC and SEO have their place in an online marketing program, it’s important to look at which gives you the best

chance of converting prospects.

Searcher Behavior: This image is a heat map showing what areas of a Google results page get the most “eyes” – where searchers most often look as they select pages to visit for answers to their queries (and where they don’t). The chart compares organic vs. sponsored ad visibility shown in a percentage of participants looking at a listing in that location. RANK

ORGANIC

SPONSORED

1

100%

50%

2

100%

40%

3

100%

30%

4

85%

20%

5

60%

10%

6

50%

10%

7

50%

10%

8

30%

10%

9

30%

n.a.

10

20%

n.a.

3

ORGANIC SEO vs. PAY-PER-CLICK q!"#$ #%&p'r"(%) *!"+,

Understanding Searcher Behavior What this means is that 100% of people searching look to the first, second and third ranked

organic results; on the other hand, only 50%, 40% and 30% respectively look at those same results positions in the sponsored (PPC) ads. Across the board, far more people look at the sponsored ads. More importantly, though, today 85% of clicks resulting from a search are on organic links! That’s because people trust these results far more than paid ads.

RANK

ORGANIC

SPONSORED

1

100%

50%

2

100%

40%

3

100%

30%

4

85%

20%

5

60%

10%

6

50%

10%

7

50%

10%

8

30%

10%

9

30%

n.a.

10

20%

n.a.

4

ORGANIC SEO vs. PAY-PER-CLICK q!"#$ #%&p'r"(%) *!"+,

Understanding Searcher Behavior

Next, let’s take a look at the features of

ORGANIC SEO v(. PPC

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ORGANIC SEO vs. PAY-PER-CLICK q!"#$ #%&p'r"(%) *!"+,

Organic SEO & PPC Comparison FEATURE

ORGANIC SEO

PPC

Payment

Upfront

Pay per response

Available metrics

SERPs, Ranks, Site Analytics and Links

Click-thru rate and daily expenditures

Percent of overall click-thru/ search responses

85-90%

1-7%

Measurable

yes

yes

Lasting results

yes*

no, stops as soon as budget is reached or campaign ends

Seen as credible

yes

no; it’s understood that these results are paid

Open to competitive manipulation

no

yes, competitors can quickly use up a daily budget to stop your ad from appearing

Valuable to search engines

yes

no

Easy ROI evaluation

no (but see following pages)

yes

Enhances SEO

yes

no

Requires frequent oversight

no

yes

Immediate results

no**

yes

* While organic SEO activities impact long-term site performance, on-page activities should not be seen as a “one and done” activity. Ongoing link building and fresh content creation are crucial to maintaining organic SEO impact. ** Organic SEO takes time to populate since crawlers must find the information you’re putting out. PPC populates immediately once the campaign starts

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ORGANIC SEO vs. PAY-PER-CLICK q!"#$ #%&p'r"(%) *!"+,

Measuring Organic SEO’s ROI One of the questions we receive most often from clients and prospects interested in boosting their online performance via organic SEO is,

“How can we measure ROI of our SEO efforts?” ROI requires new business or increased business activity that generates revenue. However, improved organic SEO performance doesn’t necessarily lead directly to increased revenue. For example, your site could rank in the #1 spot of a search engine results page, but if that traffic isn’t converted, no new revenue is generated. That doesn’t mean the organic SEO hasn’t done its job or that you’re not getting your money’s worth; it means the rest of your site and/or your sales organization needs to do more to drive conversions. That being said, there are definitely metrics that should be tracked to make sure your organic SEO efforts are paying off.

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ORGANIC SEO vs. PAY-PER-CLICK q!"#$ #%&p'r"(%) *!"+,

Organic SEO Measurement Keyword SERP Ranks – What position is your site ranking on key search terms? How do those ranks compare to your rank before executing an organic SEO program? Keep in mind that click-thru rates drop off exponentially after the first page of search results so every position of improvement is extremely valuable.

Organic Site Traffic – The goal of organic SEO is to get more visitors to your site. Organic SEO’s goal is to continually increase visitor volume. Monthly analysis of your site’s traffic will tell you what search terms are performing well, which should be modified and which should be cast aside. In addition, monitoring traffic volume and sources will help you make decisions regarding link building and crucial off-page optimization activities.

Inbound Links – One of the best indicators of the success of your off-page SEO is the number of credible inbound links generated. Google looks at high-powered inbound links as “votes” for your site so the more quality links to your site, the more likely search engines are to positively rank your site.

Page Rank – PageRank is a component of Google’s analysis that assigns a number or rank to each web page on the internet. The basic purpose of PageRank is to list web sites from the most important to the least important. While not as big of a part of Google’s algorithm as it used to be, PageRank still impacts search engine results on specific search terms. When done well, organic SEO activities help boost a site’s PageRank helping it to appear more credible and reliable to search crawlers.

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ORGANIC SEO vs. PAY-PER-CLICK q!"#$ #%&p'r"(%) *!"+,

Organic SEO Measurement Visitor Source – This is how you measure the method to which visitors are finding your site. Ideally, you’ll want to see a large amount of traffic coming from organic search.

Bounce Rate – One of the goals of your website should be to keep people on it and view as much content as they can. Bounce rate is a measurement of how quickly someone bounces away from your site. A lower number is what you’re looking for here. Good organic SEO that accurately describes your page will attract and keep visitors looking for that information.

Search Term – Here’s where you’ll check to see if visitors are finding your site in search engines by searching for the keywords that you’ve optimized around. If users are coming to visit your site via other keywords, you can instead optimize around those, if they’re relevant.

Branded vs. Non-branded Keywords – If most of your traffic from search engines is coming from branded keywords (your company name or product name), you should focus more on attracting visitors to your site through non-branded keywords.

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ORGANIC SEO vs. PAY-PER-CLICK q!"#$ #%&p'r"(%) *!"+,

Do You Need Organic SEO? You know you need organic SEO if: ➡

You conduct a search for your primary products or services and your company does not appear within the top 10 results



You conduct a search of your company name and your website does not hold the #1 position



Your website does not currently incorporate on-page meta data or keywords



Links to your site are very few or non-existent 



You'd like more relevant traffic to your website



You’re getting almost no interaction on your site



Visitors spend very little time and/or view only a few pages on your website



Your direct competitors are much easier to find on the web than you are



You’ve gotten little or no sales/revenue from your website

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ORGANIC SEO vs. PAY-PER-CLICK q!"#$ #%&p'r"(%) *!"+,

Want To Know More? Weidert Group can help you maximize organic SEO through the power of inbound marketing – the kind of power that turns your sales funnel into a opportunity magnet, with the best prospects powerless to resist. Give us a call: 920.731.2771. Ask for Greg Linnemanstons, our president, at extension 231. Or email at [email protected]

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