Eric Miltsch

Company: DealerTeamwork LLC

Eric Miltsch Blog
Total Posts: 123    

Eric Miltsch

DealerTeamwork LLC

Feb 2, 2018

9 Tips To Improve Your Landing Pages

There is a massive disconnect when using Landing Page best practices for automotive websites. 

How so? Too many marketing agencies and vendors are using outdated marketing tactics to solve the problems dealer face. 

  1. Dealers are forced to use Landing Pages that contain content simply for the sake of creating content. It doesn't help answer key questions such as payments and prices. 
  2. Dealers are still using iFrame page solutions. These pages are not structured properly so the Search engines can read the content. (If they can't read it - they can't index it) 
  3. Message Matching doesn't exist. Paid search ads don't have the ability to include dynamic pricing and don't take shoppers to responsive, topic-specific Landing Pages.

Let's examine what happens with other products and industries. There are three basic stages every consumer goes through when purchasing a product. 

  • They think about buying it.
  • They research it.
  • The commit to buying it.

This process may take six minutes to six months. Sometimes steps are repeated as buyers remorse can kick in even before the purchase. 

What's consistent among automotive and other industries? 

  • 90% of shoppers start their search on the Internet
  • 70%+ rely on online reviews 
  • 53% of shoppers begin their search on a mobile device
  • 33% of shoppers' entire time is spent on a mobile device

What defines a successful online shopping experience? 

  • Shopper searches, see highly relevant paid search ad that matches intent and includes prices and offers
  • Shopper clicks on ad
  • User goes to a relevant Landing Page and takes the desired action

Any experience that differs from this risks breaking trust, wasting ad spend and causes the user to do more work finding answers to their original question. (Or worse - they leave the site)

What's a Landing Page and Why Is It Important?

One of the best strategic tools for a digital marketing professional is a Landing Page. This single web page has a specific and unique purpose within an online marketing campaign.

This page is the final destination an online shopper lands on after they have completed a search and clicked a relevant paid ad or an organic search result. 

While there is a specific goal of this page, there are many objectives which must be satisfied.

  • The search result clicked on (whether a paid ad or organic result) must answer the shopper's question or match their desired intent
  • The Landing Page must have the proper hierarchy (Primary content with the offer displayed first)
  • Prominent Calls to Action must direct the user to the desired action (submit a lead, click to call, get more info) 
  • Trust needs to be established (Items that break trust: landing users on the home page or anywhere else the message isn't consistent, or the offer doesn't exist)

Successful Landing Pages are simple and don't confuse. When executed properly they will 

  • Create better online shopping experiences
  • Increase engagement and influence the user towards making a purchase decision
  • Improve on-page conversions and assisted conversions
  • Improve organic search results presence by occupying more digital real estate
  • Increase ad click-through-rates
  • Lower paid ad search costs due to the relevancy and on-page performance

This straightforward approach is what makes landing pages the best option for increasing the conversion rates of your Google AdWords campaigns and improving your opportunity to rank higher organically. 

Somewhere, at some time, the automotive marketing community decided that shoppers should be directed to search results pages, micro-sites or even worse, to their home page - regardless of the search query or their initial intent. 

Why Should I Have Landing Pages?


There's only one answer this question: To drive more conversions! 

Dealers want specific actions from shoppers who are shopping for vehicles. Responsive, relevant Landing Pages help accomplish these objectives because of their ability to feature a single goal, on specific vehicles. 

This is a fundamental element of targeted marketing. Send highly specific users that have a specific objective to a relevant Landing Page that matches their original intent. They clicked the ad for a reason - because they expected to land on a distinct page that will solve their problem. 

The user is forced to begin the second stage of their search if they land on the home page or a search results page. Shoppers looking for a Toyota Camry lease offers do not want to search your website to find the lease offer they just saw on TV. 

Break your ads down to simple intent categories and let that determine where you land shoppers.

  • Make-specific leaderboard Landing Pages are great for mid-funnel shoppers looking for 'Ford lease deals' and haven't indicated their specific model intent.
  • Body-style Landing Pages are also great for mid-funnel shoppers. They may not know the exact vehicle they want, 'GMC suv deals'; a Landing Page with specific examples can influence their decision. 
  • Model-specific Landing Pages are the perfect destination for in-market shoppers - those who have indicated their intent by searching for 'Ford Explorer lease deals'.  

Contrast the experiences of your home page and your SRPs vs. any of these type of Landing Pages. Your home page is a general experience. The home page is how you display your brand and showcase your unique selling propositions. Your SRPs are just a list of your inventory that makes the shopper do all the work. It has become the defacto destination for many marketers and is mostly a lazy solution.

Your home page, your SRPs and any other page that isn't a relevant Landing Page are guaranteed to include a multitude of links. Most of those links serve solely as a distraction and don't contribute to your desired goals. This is one of the biggest reasons ad spend, and conversion goals are wasted and miss their mark.

Why Is Message Matching Important?

Message matching is a vital aspect of a successful marketing campaign. When your Landing Page message is consistent with your paid search ad, you are making Google very happy. Google wants to know the message in your ad is consistent with where your visitors land. 

Which ads do you want to show your shoppers?

Search Query: Ford Explorer Lease Deals

Sample Paid Search Ad: Ford Explorer Lease Sale Going On Now! Check out our huge inventory

Landing page copy: (SRP's) 47 Ford Explorers for sale - no lease prices shown.

Or

Search Query: Ford Explorer Lease Deals

Sample Paid Search Ad: Ford Explorer Lease $299/mo W/$2500 Dn. $389/mo. W/Zero Down.

Landing page copy: Multiple Model/Trim-Specific Ford Explorer lease offers with monthly lease payments displayed. 

This tactic tells Google your messages match and your site visitors now have a better opportunity to convert. Your campaign quality scores now have a better chance to improve as well. 

9 Tips To Improve Your Landing Pages

  1. Optimize your Page Meta Titles to match the page theme. Titles should be within 60-65 characters long.
  2. Your page headlines should summarize the page theme so there is zero confusion as to the topic of the page.
  3. Be sure your primary conversion calls to actions are prominent and not cluttered with non-essential actions.
  4. Page Copy should focus on the key topic. This is how you frame the context of the page for both the user and search engines. 
  5. Include video. Video influences automotive shoppers by up to 80%.
  6. Use a responsive page that displays the same content on the desktop version as the mobile version - not an iFrame solution that prevents Google from reading the page content!
  7. Include social proof whenever possible.  
  8. Use short paragraphs with line breaks and use bullets or lists for easily digestible mobile content
  9. Don't send paid traffic to your homepage. Always use your relevant landing pages!

Use these tips to create and manage your Landing Pages to improve engagement, increase conversion and lower your ad costs. 


How are you using relevant landing pages for your dealership's marketing efforts?

 

Eric Miltsch

DealerTeamwork LLC

Co-founder

Eric Miltsch is a Co-founder of Dealer Teamwork, creators of the first patented MPOP™ - a Merchandising, Personalization, and Optimization Platform. Eric's experiences included successful SEO, mobile and social media marketing campaigns. He is also a VP at Auto Outlets USA, a new chain of used car stores located in Upstate NY that now has four locations.

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1 Comment

Big Tom LaPointe

Preston Automotive Group MD/DE

Feb 2, 2018  

Awesome article, my brother!

Eric Miltsch

DealerTeamwork LLC

Nov 11, 2013

3 Things We Can Learn From Facebook Friend Collages

So, the Friend Collage is a popular thing on Facebook. Whether or not you like them, there are still some pretty cool things you can learn from this nifty bit of content. For the 17 people not on Facebook or you've just been more productive with your day, a friend collage is a simple 3rd-party application that automatically sorts through your recent Facebook interaction history and creates a pretty image of your connection's avatars. The end result is a grid pattern that sizes the images according to how frequent your interact with your connections. Larger images indicate more interaction and vice-versa. Simple formula.

There are several friend collage tools, FriendMatrix seems to be the go-to choice. Give it a try if you haven't, only take a few seconds and it'll post it to your wall. (If you choose to do so) 

Facebook Friend Collage

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
They're just pictures. What's so great about them? 

I honestly found them to be extremely annoying at first. Most of us have reached a point where content repetition has numbed our online social experiences; we're looking for something new, something jaw dropping and something memorable.

However, if you look beyond that there are some neat things we can all learn from these friend collages, what they mean and why we/re so attracted to them: 

  • These are branding activities: Some are using it for that reason, others may not realize it. Imagine putting together a picture collage of your customers and celebrating them in the same manner. And it doesn't just need to be online, it could bridge the offline gap as well.
  • These are relationship activities: We're strengthening our relationships with others. We're letting all of our friends know who we connect with and how we feel about those people; some may even be bragging about those relationships - which is a very good thing. Who doesn't love to name drop every now and then? Plus, who doesn't love to be included within a group, especially when your avatar is one of the larger images?
  • These are building mental lists: The speed of community building is reaching exponential proportions. We're seeing who people are connected with, the frequency at which they interact and creating the desire for newer connections in some cases. I saw several people who I would like to connect with more frequently. A great addition to simply tagging your connections is to kick it up a notch and comment about these people. Imagine sharing your favorite moments with them, how you met them or what you admire about them. Build that list. 

 

Facebook Friend Collage

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Our social media activities and behaviors speeds up our concept of mental list building. That is, we're constantly thinking about things we like, things we want and even those things that we don't care for - and they're made up of all the people, places and things we experience online. And all via our mobile devices. The friend collage does this exceptionally well as a reminder of our connections. Imagine creating those reminders with your customer's dealership experiences. 

Embrace the creativity and uniqueness to make your content stand out - make it memorable. Remember there are two simple factors everyone loves: 

1. People love to be included.

2. People love to laugh. 

What are you doing to include the people in your community and make them smile?

P.S. Here's my take on the friend collage.

Facebook Friend Collage - Jeff Kershner

Eric Miltsch

DealerTeamwork LLC

Co-founder

20618

5 Comments

Heather Brautman

CrossCheck, Inc.

Nov 11, 2013  

There's something much more visually appealing about the one on the bottom. I can't quite explain it - the colors/background? The top two are just a hodge podge, but this seems much more artistic. Does it mean that this person has only interacted with himself, haha? I like the nature-y background. I feel like this collage thing just contributes more to the (cringe) FOMO issue. And honestly, is there a permission you can set so you do NOT show up in peoples' collages? (I really want to know this.) Now that I think of it, my FB image is just another Hello Kitty line drawing, so if it shows up, it shows up. But this just seems like another "Look how popular I am, look at all my friends, look at all the cool things I am doing" way to contribute to the ongoing "Facebook makes you depressed" debate. Unless we can pull in pictures of peoples' cats. Then I am ALL FOR IT. :-)

Eric Miltsch

DealerTeamwork LLC

Nov 11, 2013  

@Heather - Yes, the collages absolutely contribute to the FOMO issue - who wants to miss out on being mentioned? And how do you miss out on being mentioned? Not interacting with your inner circles. I'd have to say no, there isn't a way exclude yourself from the collages. Have to agree, this is absolutely another way of saying "how popular" someone is - it's yet another way to validate your presence in this space as well. (My collage at the bottom was merely a parody; I purposely placed Jeff Kershner in every spot.)

Joe Webb

DealerKnows Consulting

Nov 11, 2013  

Eric - I think one more unflattering pic of Jeff would have added a lot to that collage. These collages show us one thing... we may be connected to many people, but when it comes to automotive retailing, there is a very small group of us that are responsible for most of the engagement. Of all the FriendMatrix collages I've seen, it is the exact same group of people, give or take a few family members, in every pic. If anything, we need more involvement from a greater group of people.

Larry Doremus Jr.

Tom's Ford

Nov 11, 2013  

Everyone's Facebook feed should display a "Kersh-lage"!

Eric Miltsch

DealerTeamwork LLC

Nov 11, 2013  

Larry...that's hilarious:)

Eric Miltsch

DealerTeamwork LLC

Oct 10, 2013

2013 DrivingSales Executive Summit Recap Part II

2013 DrivingSales Executive Summit

Here's my follow up recap for the rest of the 2013 DrivingSales Executive Summit held last week in Las Vegas. 

Dylan Swift, National Director of Marketing at Yelp, opened up Monday morning with an overview of the online review landscape. He raised some eyebrows with his initial recommendation to the crowd: "Don't ask your customers for reviews on Yelp!" Dylan said that reviews should simply be an organic extension of your dealership's experience. Bad experiences will yield negative reviews. So, make sure your experiences are as positive as possible. Sure, obvious stuff - but it does helps to hear directly from Yelp about their processes and admitting the possibility of reviews being stripped away. (I've had legitimate, positive reviews for my dealership removed - and with no explanation) 

Some dealers may have taken this guidance as a sign that Yelp doesn't necessarily understand the dealership review landscape (much like Google struggled a couple of years ago) Others may have interpreted this as a subtle hint that if you participate in Yelp's paid advertising programs, then maybe your reviews won't disappear. I don't believe this is a conspiracy of sorts, but the question does still remain about why so many positive reviews go missing. 

One simple take away: If you're using specific call to actions in your CRM follow up emails, you may want to remove Yelp as an option. Showroom iPad kiosk solutions that include Yelp should also be considered for removal. 

Next up on the agenda was the DrivingSales Best Idea Contest. This has always been one of my favorite portions of the entire event. Creative and progressive dealers compete against each other by sharing their best ideas to help improve their dealerships performance. There is never a shortage of great efforts and ideas. Another reason why I like this contest is that it helps the audience get a wonderful view of the enthusiasm these dealers posses - that's refreshing to see and should act as an inspiration to everyone in the audience for them to bring back to their dealerships as well. All of the contestants did an excellent job with their ideas; their presentations were also top notch this year. 

Congratulations to Robert Karbaum, eCommerce Director for Weins Canada Inc. as he took home the top prize of $3000 with his Appointment Boarding Pass idea. (A strong signal that the Canadians are serious about upping their game!) Cheers to the other contestants who eagerly shared their efforts with the attendees - that alone is an awesome gesture and something that everyone respects tremendously. (There was some online chatter about this portion not being about the dealer's individual ideas vs. them showing of variations of vendor products - the main point here is that the dealers are trying to personalize these efforts and make them their own.) The others dealers competing were: 

  • “Picture Perfect Reputation Management” – Megan Barto, Marketing Director, Ciocca Honda

  • “True Internet ROI” – Mark Brady, CTO/CMO, Fisher Honda-Kia

  • “Sell My Car” – Zack Freed, E Commerce Director, McCombs Automotive Team

  • “How to Visualize Big Data in the Dealership” – Jason Stum, Digital Marketing Manager, LaFontaine Automotive Group

 

And for those in attendance, please don't be lazy and simply copy their idea. add your dealership's flair and personality to the concepts is you'e so inclined and make it fit your brand's personality. That's how you stand out among this crowded space. 

The next keynote to speak was Dr. Joeseph Weintraub, Professor of Management and Organizational Behavior, Babson College. Dr. Weintraub is an expert authority on leadership concepts and strategy - he's also one of those people that makes it extremely difficult to fit all of his experiences and knowledge into a 30 minute presentation. This is the type of guy you listen to all day long and then sit around a nice meal and simply soak up his wisdom. His emphasis on coaching content and leadership initiatives should speak volumes to dealers. He struck a chord with me with his message about creating learning through relationships to help improve the method and the processes. It needs to work on both ends and can't just be a one way street. His concept of allowing an organization's leaders to help grow future leaders make complete sense; the future of any dealership lies within the abilities of tomorrow's leaders, yet many simply ignore this path or don't recognize it at all. Dr. Weintraub's key elements of innovative companies is also something that dealers should consider adopting to help maintain a fresh stance in today's stagnant culture. Some examples include: 

  • “Avoid analysis paralysis when we identify new opportunities by exhibiting a bias towards action; we are constantly experimenting"

  • "We are not afraid to fail, we treat failure as a learning opportunity"

  • "We have the right recruiting and hiring systems in place to support a culture of innovation" 

  • "We are consistent in actually doing the things that we say we value"

  • "We have a deliberate, comprehensive and disciplined approach to innovation" 

2013 DrivingSales Executive Summit

The next portion of the event I experienced was the breakout sessions. This year's DSES had a stellar lineup to choose from depending on your own personal needs and situation. I made it a point to visit as many dealer breakout sessions as possible because I was most interested in seeing what these dealers are doing. And I was not disappointed with the content I experienced. While they were all filled with timely, relevant information, two sessions that stood out for me were given by Aaron Wirtz (Subaru of Wichita) and Grant Gooley (Boyer Automotive Group). These two sessions were both highly polished and you could tell they had months of preparation and rehearsal put into them. Both presenters created an infectious enthusiasm among the audience and shared great concepts. The actual tools and tips shared almost seemed secondary; I enjoyed the way Aaron and Grant made their successes seem effortless - and fun. You could tell they simply love what they do. If your dealership doesn't have someone with that type of passion in that role, then you need to find one, quickly.  

After the breakout sessions, everyone rushed back to catch Bruce Kimbrall, Disney Institute, talk about their favorite brand - Disney. Always so much you can learn from top brands such as Disney and it was a treat to hear their perspective. The message is also so powerful when you hear from such a historical brand and you begin to piece together how a company can become such a part of our lives. Bruce shared Disney's six stage of branding: 

  • Unbranded Goods

  • Unbranded References

  • Brand as a personality

  • Brand as an icon

  • Brand as a company

  • Brand as a policy

 

He shared their philosophy on brand loyalty - always a hot topic for dealers. He insisted it boiled down to brand integrity. It doesn't matter what your product or service is, it will always come down to creating a positive experience for the guest. This philosophy transfers nicely into the concept of valuing all consumers to create the lifetime value effect. It does your organization no good to only create a portion of consumer value during their lifetime - it must be ongoing. He also described the steps involved in this process:

1. Create internal service quality (How you treat employees) 

2.  Employee satisfaction

3. Employee retention

4. External service quality (How you treat your customers) 

5. Customer satisfaction

6. Customer value

7. Customer loyalty

8. Profit/Growth/Revenue

 

Leadership was another key theme during his keynote. Everyone is empowered to lead - and create magical moments for every guest at Disney. He also indicated there was a direct correlation between those who created the highest guest satisfaction and who ultimately became a great immediate leader within the organization. And while everyone may assume various reasons why guests come back to Disney time and time again, they really come back because of three reasons: How clean they keep Disney, friendliness of the staff and because guests feel safe. Very universal emotional triggers and Disney appeals to these factors on a consistent basis. 

2103 DrivingSales Executive Summit

Tuesday's session kicked off with the ever-popular Digital Battle Debates hosted by Joe Webb (DealerKnows). Joe lined up some great participants in this year's debate and paired them up with the perfect competitors to help fuel the debate fire. This format works great and creates for a memorable session - especially when you get people like Bryan Armstrong battling against Kevin Frye in a debate over who should be handling your marketing efforts: Either old school car guy vs. new school technology guy. These guys are both animated speakers and also good friends - but the key element is the passion with which they stick to their side, yet can walk away with a hearty handshake and a hug. Conversely, JD Rucker and Ralph Paglia debated a topic in which I can barely remember because they both kept agreeing with each other. I couldn't tell which side either of them was representing. Its a debate. We want to see blood. 

Congrats to all of the debate winners: Subi Gosh, Dan Boismeir, Kevin Frye, Jerry Thibeau and JD Rucker. 

2013 DrivingSales Executive Summit

The next keynote was Cameron Chell, CEO Podium Ventures. This was among my favorite keynote of the entire event (along with Danny Sullivan) Cam is an extremely dynamic speaker who is definitely not lacking anything in the confidence department. He's also not afraid to tell his story. A very powerful personal story. His presentation was all about the value and the cost of trust. And to help make his point, he shared some of the most personal elements of his life and how he has moved along his life path. He described incredible successes of having built a business worth a half billion dollars and then experiencing losing it all due to drug and alcohol addictions. He shared how his experiences on 9/11 changed his entire thought process and the incredible pains it created in his life. And he talked about his incredible recovery; he shared how this process taught him to put others first and what it really meant to build and maintain trust. He told a wildly inspiring story about how he was able to convicine five of the world's largest nations to help him put video cameras on the International Space Station. I can't even imagine how one goes about taking a risk as large as this. This was moving, it made me think a lot and left me with such a strong positive feeling afterwards. I'm not sure if everyone in the audience felt the same, but that's the beauty of the these events - so much for everyone to take away when you have such high quality speakers. 

2013 DrivingSales Executive Summit​The event was closed out with Danny Sullivan, Founder of Search Engine Land, and one of the top authorities on search marketing in the entire world. Danny was also among my most anticipated keynotes. He could easily fill up several days of SEO/SEM/search marketing content but I was impressed with how he managed to cover so many key topics in such an easily digestible format within 45 minutes. Some may argue he wasn't specific enough, but I liked how he covered the most relevant topics for dealers and the areas where they should be focusing. Danny could have easily buried the audience with a very granular, deep-technical dive - one which nobody would have enjoyed. 

As a dealer, I would have focused in on the the following items that Danny mentioned within his presentation: 

  • Create better, more creative content. Yes - this is a very difficult thing to do.

  • Participate within Google+. Google is centralizing it's product quite & this will help your activity and rankings.

  • Build your local reviews. Do it right by creating great experiences. The reviews will follow. 

  • Mobile optimization. Make sure your site works on other devices, provides the right content and has the proper mobile architecture with regards to the mobile redirects. 

  • Start using structured data. Tools are available within Google Webmaster tools to help tag your content properly. Hint, work with your website vendor on this. If they can't help you, find someone who can. This is a must-have element as the Semantic Web continues to grow and take over the search engine results. 

Overall this was another great event and one that you must be at if you consider yourself a forward thinking, progressive dealer. The audience continues to get more aware and smarter every year, you'll need all the help you can get to stay a couple of steps ahead of your competition.

2013 DrivingSales Executive SummitThe opportunities to meet, hang out and collaborate with other top-notch dealers and vendors are limitless. My experiences at this event each year are so valuable because of the quality people I meet. Those relationships are more meaningful now because of the personal friendships that have grown as a result of this event. I encourage everyone to put in the effort to meet more people and build your relationships - I'm fortunate to have such incredible industry friends.

Congratulations to Jared and team for another stellar DSES, looking forward to seeing who's on stage next year!

Thank you!

 

 

Eric Miltsch

DealerTeamwork LLC

Co-founder

7309

5 Comments

Joe Webb

DealerKnows Consulting

Oct 10, 2013  

Thanks for the shout-out to the Digital Media Battle, Eric. DSES was a great time.

Robert Karbaum

Kijiji, an eBay Company

Oct 10, 2013  

Honoured to be mentioned in Part I, AND Part II !

Oct 10, 2013  

Great recap(s), Eric! Fantastic event and what a fantastic group of people that put this show on; all with one goal and that's to help the fellow dealer.

Kevin Frye

Jeff Wyler Automotive Family

Oct 10, 2013  

I know how much work goes into a recap like this - great job Eric! I really enjoyed the conference, with the highlight being able to meet with so many great folks. I am already looking forward to a follow-up on the data panel and to see if any progress is made. Cheers to all!

Eric Miltsch

DealerTeamwork LLC

Oct 10, 2013  

Robert - I knew you were going to light up the stage when I heard your prep-deck up in our room. You've got a gift. Will - Thanks. We're all lucky to be a part of such a fantastic group that is certainly trying to help one another. Kevin - Appreciated. Unfortunately I missed the data panel; the tweets & offline chatter were among the most lively.

Eric Miltsch

DealerTeamwork LLC

Oct 10, 2013

2013 DrivingSales Executive Summit Recap Part 1

 

Wow. Five and half years years ago I received a phone call from Jared Hamilton. He asked, no - told me, I had to head out to Las Vegas to attend a new event he was holding specifically for "progressive dealers." I had no idea what he meant by that; as a relatively new dealer on the scene I just assumed every dealer was progressive. It sounded awesome and I knew I had to be there. so off to Vegas I went. 

Jared described a conference that would speak to dealers about their current problems, provide greater awareness and help dealers actually improve operations. I recall him telling me how this was going to be the best thing ever and that someday, eventually, it would be the biggest & best retail conference. I also remember getting off the phone saying to myself, "I like that kid - he's a dreamer, but I like him." 

True to his word Jared has delivered on that promise to the retail industry. After five years the DrivingSales Executive Summit has become the defacto retail automotive conference to attend. Nearly 3000 people have attended all five events over the years, thousands more have followed along online to soak up the knowledge from the speakers and the attendees. (The event has even been a national trending topic on Twitter. Twice.) 

Jared and his superstar event planning team have attracted the best industry speakers, world-class keynotes from outside the industry and the best retail dealers to contribute their experiences with attendees. This year was no exception. In fact, this year's event was extended to include a special pre-DSES Canadian section for our dealer neighbors to the North. This group of dealers, vendors and speakers nearly equalled the same number of attendees from the 1st DSES. 

The Canadian portion of the event signifies a new shift in the retail industry. The Canadians appear to be even thirstier for the information flow US dealers have been sipping at the past few years. The speed at which they're absorbing and implementing this content is staggering. These dealers needed their venue due to the culture changes and DrivingSales was able to respond with the help of Jay Radke. (Did you know that Canadians are the largest consumers of YouTube content in North America?) Jay assembled an all-star cast of successful Canadian dealers such as: Robert Karbaum, Aleksandra Banas, Dave Hicks, Doug & Andrew Maciver. Brent Wees (Glovebox) was also invited to share his knowledge on responsive web design and mobile strategies. Bringing everything to a close and validating everyone's presentations was Al Awadia (Google).

Later on Sunday master of ceremonies Charlie Volgleheim opened up in the festivities tighter than ever and with his unique blend of professionalism and wit. Jared Hamilton wasted no time in delighting the attendees with what to expect over the next couple of days. He then delivered what I believe to be one of his strongest keynotes to date. He whipped the audience into a frenzy with fixed operations stats and performance data over the years and how this segment has fared against other dealership departments. Bottom line - it isn't pretty. His presentation ended like the finale of a fireworks display. He rattled off performance numbers in a Ran Man-esque manner that was not only impressive but made clear and simple sense: dealers need to pay attention to their fixed ops activities, how they manage this department and how their marketing activities can impact their fixed ops efforts.  

- 62% of drivers research the service technicians recommendations before coming in.

- 43% of drivers search online when deciding where to take their car for service. 

- Dealers must go with a fixed ops approach in your BDC structure.

Scott Hernalsteen took the stage next and shared some of their and insights on how to help improve merchandising efforts. While he offered some general best practice reminders, the data points can clearly help any dealership with regards to their 3rd party merchandising efforts: 

 - VDP views increase by 34% when vehicles arelisted below MSRP.

- 186% more VDP views when priced below the market and also have multiple customer photos.

- 70% of new car buyers actually pay more than the price they saw online.

 - 26% more people traveled 30+ miles to a dealership when there are custom vehicle comments

Up next was Leif Babin, US Navy SEAL Officer. This was an intense keynote with one simple message: Leadership. Also important to note, Leif is only the second person in DSES history get a standing ovation after his presentation. (Gary V. was the 1st) 

Rather than try to convey the emotions his keynote elicited, I'll share some of the hard hitting items Leif provided us: 

 - If the team fails, everyone fails. 

- Laws of Combat: 1. Cover & move. 2. Simple. 3. Prioritize & Execute. 4. Decentralize Command.  

- Orders need to be given in a clear & concise manner so everyone understands them.

- When it's overwhelming, relax, look around and make a call. 

- Talk through what could go wrong with your team so they're prepared. 

- Your team needs to understand not only what what to do, but why they need to do it. 

- Leaders take ownership when things go wrong. 

- (And my favorite) It's not what you preach, it's what you tolerate.

I'll follow up tomorrow with the rest of the DrivingSales recap - so much more to review. 

Eric Miltsch

DealerTeamwork LLC

Co-founder

5028

3 Comments

Oct 10, 2013  

The conference was great! This recap is spot-on. Jared certainly opened my eyes to some fixed-op shortfalls that we have and will start working on. Looking forward to part 2. Thanks Eric

Mike Hastings

Stephen Automall Center

Oct 10, 2013  

When you say "research the service technicians recommendations" are you referring to online reviews and what is a "fixed ops approach in your BDC structure?"

Eric Miltsch

DealerTeamwork LLC

Oct 10, 2013  

Thanks Jake - appreciate you checking it out. Mike - I interpreted Jared's comment meaning that customers are seeking out a 2nd opinion in the form of additional online research; they're checking on the tech's recommendations. As the BDC structure, fixed ops should also be a focus. Phone reps should be trained on the specific scenarios, customers scenarios and the revenue opportunities - the BDC doesn't need to be limited to just sales appointments, if it is you;re leaving a lot of money on the table every single day.

Eric Miltsch

DealerTeamwork LLC

Oct 10, 2013

New Penguin Update: Get Rid of Paid Links Now!

Google announced another update to Penguin's algorithm that is clearly targeting website owners who have bought paid links. 

Simplest breakdown: If you have bought links that point back to your website, lose them. And they specifically said, "If your website rankings dropped after Google's Penguin update, you should try to get rid of the paid links."  

Think of Google as a bloodhound. They'll sniff these links out eventually. I'm going to keep pound the table on this topic - Google is turning into an "Answer Engine" and morphing away from simply being an index engine. they're going to make this transition by finding the old-school methods of trying to rank content and rewarding sites who are doing things the right way: Creating content that actually helps the user. 

Google's exact response has always been a very top-level approach:

We’ve always targeted webspam in our rankings, and this algorithm represents another improvement in our efforts to reduce webspam and promote high quality content. While we can't divulge specific signals because we don't want to give people a way to game our search results and worsen the experience for users, our advice for webmasters is to focus on creating high quality sites that create a good user experience and employ white hat SEO methods instead of engaging in aggressive webspam tactics.

So, what can you do to act upon this? 

Stop thinking like a traditional SEO by relying solely on your ability to use a keyword suggestion tool and place those keywords within your website solely for the purpose of trying to rank for a keyword phrase. Sure, this will continue to work some sites based on the competition and the keywords chosen, but it won't be a successful long term strategy. This is what will separate the real marketers from the hacks.

Google is now in the entity optimization business. 

Think of the entities involved with your business - three simple factors need to be highlighted now more than ever: 

1. People

2. Places

3. Things

How will these be all tied together to provide better results? Elements such a Gogle+ profiles, stronger social content, Q&A content & leveraging the Structured Data Markup tool within Google Webmaster Tools will all contribute to the new wave of search marketing.

Google wants to find these entities and tie them together to create deeper meaning behind them using structured data (the semantic web) so they will have better methods of understanding user intent by drawing on larger databases of marketing information. 

See, SEO isn't dead. It's just being born. 

Eric Miltsch

DealerTeamwork LLC

Co-founder

7427

3 Comments

Allyn Hane

Coastal States Automotive Group

Oct 10, 2013  

Hey Eric- I have to admit, I get some entertainment out of these updates and watching for those who step up on the Google WMT blog to complain about how their site traffic tanked. Then I go to their sites, run a quick AHREFs scan and find obvious paid links. I don't understand why people keep doing the same things over and over: buying links, making thin mini-sites, "buying do-follow ads," etc, and expecting that they will get away with it. Maybe someday this will all end and we'll have an update called "Unicorn" - the non-existent spam free web! :)

Allyn Hane

Coastal States Automotive Group

Oct 10, 2013  

BTW - best part of your post IMO: "Google is now in the entity optimization business. Think of the entities involved with your business - three simple factors need to highlighted now more than ever: 1. People 2. Places 3. Things " SPOT.ON.

Eric Miltsch

DealerTeamwork LLC

Oct 10, 2013  

There will always be gamers. Funny how some even think they can outsmart the SE's. Thanks for the nod.

Eric Miltsch

DealerTeamwork LLC

Oct 10, 2013

Social Media Image Sizes and Dimensions [Infographic]

 

Updating social media profile avatars, backgrounds and images is a basic necessity of managing either your personal or professional brand. Unfortunately it’s also the biggest pain; just when you think you’re all set, another social platform changes their design and your images simply don’t fit the new layout. (Yes, this applies to you, the OCD reader)

So, hopefully this nice infographic will keep you looking good. The helpful folks over at Raidious (Go figure, they help build brands) covers all the bases for you with the latest sizes and dimensions for Facebook, Twitter, Google+, LinkedIn & YouTube channels. Why these channels? That’s all you really need to help with your objectives and also keep it manageable.

Now go check your images and get something cool and unique in place.

 

Social Media Image Sizes DrivingSales

Eric Miltsch

DealerTeamwork LLC

Co-founder

4819

4 Comments

Grant Gooley

Remarkable Marketing

Oct 10, 2013  

Great resource. Right click, save as.. Thanks Eric!

Eric Miltsch

DealerTeamwork LLC

Oct 10, 2013  

Cool - hope it helps Grant. I always dreaded editing this stuff when things changed.

Dara Moore

Rairdon Automotive Group

Oct 10, 2013  

Perfect timing!. Redoing the profile graphics for ALL of my stores is on this month's project list. Thanks.

C L

Automotive Group

Oct 10, 2013  

Solid post thanks

Eric Miltsch

DealerTeamwork LLC

Sep 9, 2013

Google Announces All New Algorithm: Hummingbird

Google HummingbirdHuge news day for Google and the search marketing world. Google announced their new algorithm called Hummingbird. The name obviously conjures up images of the small, swift bird that is impossible to catch. It's also a distant departure from the classic "black & white" themes of Panda and Penguin. 

Also interesting to note, these are not merely updates like Panda and Penguin were, rather it's an entirely new computing engine. A massive overhaul to the inner workings of Google's search technology.

This is historic in that now all the talk about creating exceptional content and unique experiences will finally be put to the test. This is no longer about pure keyword suggestions and inserting them in the right places. While on-page and off-page optimization techniques will still continue to be included in the calculations to determine rank, there are newer, other high importance factors included as well.

Hummingbird will help usher in a new lexicon within the search segment with terms such as conversational search, rich data, schema.org, The Internet of Things and the widely popular (yet misunderstood) semantic web. This is where things will get interesting for website vendors, dealerships and marketing agencies. 

Typical keyword insertion techniques on your webpages and link building activities outside of your website help Internet users find things based on the phrases used in the content. Nothing special needs to happen in your content - just keyword placement. Your organic ranking is the end result of the efforts made on your site, your competitors trying to rank for the same terms, the number of results indexed and other factors. 

Hummingbird's algorithm will now help apply the core principal of the semantic web to the text on your pages: Meaning. This algorithm is going to look for the meaning, or the context, of the words on the page and their relationship to each other. (And even their relation to other factors such as people - think Google Author attribute) 

For example, instead of just searching for Chicago used cars a shopper can use more natural, conversational search phrases such as, "Where can I buy a Dodge Viper for the best price? or "Which dealership can I finance a new car at the lowest rate? Google will now be able to apply meanings - or connections - between the words within the search query. Associating words such as buy, purchase and finance with words such as car, dealer and dealership it can determine what we mean, what our intent is and plus, they already know our location. Being able to do this enables Google to deliver us even more accurate content. Content that matches our specific desire and intent. That's the start of the semantic web. (Now do you see why it has been so important to get your website organized and optimized?) ​

This is where the challenge comes into the play. Say goodbye to the default, stale page copy your website comes filled with from the website vendors. It's needs to be so much better than that!

We use conversational search in our daily dialogue when we ask friends questions. We're also using it on social media. And Google wants our search activities to be just as natural and they want these type of questions to be answered with better content - creating an even better search experience regardless of the device we use or if it happens to be a voice search.

I believe this will be one of the hottest topics for the rest of the year and throughout 2014 as Hummingbird continues to improve and mature. Watch these developments closely - I plan on staying very close to this topic and intend to be a major advocate of this change. It's a safe bet we'll hear Danny Sullivan cover this topic at DSES next month as well. 

Stay tuned. SEO, social and content marketing - or as I like to refer to it - Integrated Search Marketing is going to become really fun again. 

Eric Miltsch

DealerTeamwork LLC

Co-founder

9383

9 Comments

Brian Pasch

PCG Consulting Inc

Sep 9, 2013  

The good thing about being in digital marketing is that it never stays the same and you have to continue to adapt to change. Which means, you need to stay nimble and invest in testing! Thanks Eric for the update, and now I can add another thing to my testing this week!

Eric Miltsch

DealerTeamwork LLC

Sep 9, 2013  

Of course Brian! Sitting back and thinking we're in the clear w/regards to Google & their tricks isn't an option. Blink and we'll miss it. Please keep us posted on your findings as well. Plenty for us to dive into: How this has affected sites over the past 30 days (it's actually been in place for the past month) How new pages/content responds to it and even how competing dealerships within the same markets are fairing. Now the question is where to start?!

Grant Gooley

Remarkable Marketing

Sep 9, 2013  

What I'm personally excited for is that we will survive to see computers understand humans in a way that we only ever saw on movies. The human brain is all about contextual thinking and now computers will have similar capabilities. I always wanted my own Johnny 5!

Allyn Hane

Coastal States Automotive Group

Sep 9, 2013  

Thanks Eric for the information - I always learn from your points of view. I also am very much in favor of this change. As far as I am concerned, this is 85% a change geared towards mobile and Google Glass. I have noticed in analytics a lot of queries over the last 12 months coming in like "Ford dealers near me" or "used car lots near me" and these are almost always mobile searches. I never saw this 4 or 5 years ago. I think it's about time Google started answering these questions better. Personally, I'm waiting for the day when, as I travel the country, I can speak into my phone "BBQ restaurants that also have a good craft beer selection" and get a good result. We're not even close to that yet - but I bet we will be soon.

Eric Miltsch

DealerTeamwork LLC

Sep 9, 2013  

Thank you Allyn - appreciate the comments. Also enjoy your perspective as well, I like the way you think. Yes, the mobile market, incl. wearable tech, will surely benefit from these changes. Not only will you be able to speak a your query (maybe to your car's dashboard?) - the notifications could be so contextually relevant that it pings you at the most appropriate time/location. Please keep us in the loop If you see anything else interesting happening with Hummingbird.

Joe Webb

DealerKnows Consulting

Oct 10, 2013  

I'm really upset. I put $1,000 on the Vegas odds that the next Google update was going to be called Peacock.

Steve Duff

Panama City Automotive Group

Oct 10, 2013  

I thought it was going to be called Skunk

Kevin I. Parker

Garber Automotive

Oct 10, 2013  

Eric, thank you for your insight & for shining a light on this. The Cheese has moved again & you will help our stores stay ahead of the trap.

Eric Miltsch

DealerTeamwork LLC

Oct 10, 2013  

Hey Kevin, Thanks for checking it out. I'll keep doing what I can to help move the Cheese faster.

Eric Miltsch

DealerTeamwork LLC

Sep 9, 2013

Google To Stop Passing Keyword Data

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Well, it's finally happening. Google has announced that it will stop passing along organic keyword values to Google Analytics. The values will not flow through as users are being directed to the secure version of Google. Even if you type in http://Google.com your browser will redirect you to the secure version. (https)

Why are they doing this?

Basically this does two things. It keeps the SEO's guessing and more importantly it puts the focus squarely on content. Google wants websites to be important with regards to the quality of their content rather than just the quality of the marketing ability. 

Some may argue a Google-conspiracy theory at work in that this will just push more activity to Google Adwords (Adwords keyword data will still flow through to analytics) and therefore help drive revenue. Hooray for shareholders if that's the case; Booo for website owners and those just relying on organic activity.

Keyword data will still flow for Yahoo and Bing - and I believe there is a huge opportunity for many sites to grab valuable long tail traffic from those search engines as well.

So. What should you do?

My first thought is to make sure you have your pages cleaned up and organized. Get rid of duplicate titles and description. Organize your organic efforts and be sure you're tracking your keywords and their respective pages within your software - regardless of who is managing the efforts. You need to know where you rank, what the long term performance of that page is and how it performs.

Are you creating individual content for that page? Do you have something different (something different than the thousands of other pages that have been created by your website vendor for the other dealers on the same platform?) 

Are you tracking the performance of the pages and their content? Here's an example of a custom Google analytics report you can use to easily track how your pages are performing: Content Efficiency AnalysisBe sure to set up your goal conversion tracking to track the form activity. 

Do you have custom tracking numbers on your pages? Track as much as possible. 

And lastly - Merchandise as best as possible. You're still going to drive valuable traffic to your site, so make it all worthwhile for the visitors. You know the drill: 35+ photos real videos, price, location, phone number, history reports, etc. And make sure sure the photos are high quality, in a photo booth if possible with great lighting. This all comes together like a puzzle to drive results. 

Nobody knows for sure where the analytics reporting is headed, but we've known this day was coming. Maybe Google is done giving this product away for free. They have plenty of data; paid analytics could be the next step. (I've also said it for a while - this is the beginning of the Semantic Web/Structured Data...more on that in another post)

Don't be left behind and neglect the best practices for on-page optimization, usability and tracking keyword ranking with helpful search programs.

How do you see this changing your activities?  

Eric Miltsch

DealerTeamwork LLC

Co-founder

15592

11 Comments

Paul Rushing

Stateline Sales LLC

Sep 9, 2013  

You scooped me... Let me add my own take on this here too.. Your website provider can no longer report what keywords website visitors used to find your website using Google.com. This is great news for the real SEO firms in the space and traffic centric Social Media providers You can still determine what keywords your site is getting traffic from using Google tools. Google will provide the keyword data in Webmaster Tools so the data is still available for now. If you are using Adwords to drive traffic the keyword data is available and this seem to be the end plan. There are several software tools that will help you determine where your sites ranks for keywords and you will still get the data on search referrals from Yahoo and Bing. It is just Google, for now, that is being over protective of their keyword data and in the process forcing website owners to verify their site with them. Eventually the data from Webmaster Tools should become available in Google Analytics but it will not be available to your website providers reporting software. Dealers need to make sure they have Google Analytics installed on their website and that their site is in webmaster tools using a Google account they control not one created and maintained by their website provider. You do not want a website provider using their Google account for this purpose at all. If they have their own Google Analytics and Webmaster Tools on your domain you must insist they remove it and add you as an admin for your website profile for you to maintain the data. (A whole blog post in and of itself the many many reasons why.)

Eric Miltsch

DealerTeamwork LLC

Sep 9, 2013  

Thanks Paul - yet another reason to focus on the goodies WMT (still) provides!

Bruce Etzcorn

Dealer Inspire

Sep 9, 2013  

Thanks for the post Eric! As Paul mentioned, Google Webmasters will still show the search queries (for how long that's anyone's guess). I think this makes connecting Google Webmaster Tools and Analytics even more important for businesses ( found in Google Analytics under Traffic Sources --> Search Engine Optimization ). It's easy enough to do but this is often neglected in the setup process.

Eric Miltsch

DealerTeamwork LLC

Sep 9, 2013  

Thanks for adding those steps Bruce. Still puzzled why the vendors don't emphasize WMT (I have a thought, but that's another conversation) I see that many will add the verification tags but it's never integrated with their Google analytics. Plus, with the new tracking code it's as simple as clicking the verify button within WMT - no additional steps needed now.

Paul Rushing

Stateline Sales LLC

Sep 9, 2013  

If I were to make a speculation we are going to probably see a consolidation of Google services over the next 12 to 24 months when it comes to WMT, Analytics and Adwords. If that happens it will really make an even bigger impact on the marketplace. Your right Eric. Maybe we should coauthor a piece on why vendors avoid WMT.. Many don't like to add analytics and this change will completely disrupt home grown reporting that most of the providers offer. Your server logs are blank...

Eric Miltsch

DealerTeamwork LLC

Sep 9, 2013  

Right on Paul - the reporting will most likely become less fragmented, all three sources will become one destination (maybe even a paid version) I believe we'll see deeper versions of the structured data markup tools available as well.

Jason Hamblin

L2T Media

Sep 9, 2013  

+Paul Rushing- You made some valid points! I agree that this is good news for SEO companies. No longer can "so called" SEO companies just send a ranking report of the top 20 keywords. You can still get keyword data from Google Analytics but you need to work harder to get the data. Branded vs non branded and tracking buckets of head terms will be useful. The complexity of SEO just increased and this will benefit the Savy dealerships I agree with Eric that you will need to look at content pages instead of keywords. As always it comes down to creating a unique user experience with content that the user is looking for. Funny thing is SEO experts have been saying that keyword rankings is irrelevant for over a year now. Now that the keyword ranking are gone everyone is up in arms. It is like the keyword ranking gods struck back at the SEO experts You can link Webmaster tools to Google Analytics currently to view links, search queries, and sitelinks . here is info https://support.google.com/webmasters/answer/1120006?hl=en I do agree that Google is pushing publishers to use the AdWords platform and here is why I think that. Google recently added a new report in Google AdWords called Paid/Organic. You need to link Google Webmaster Tools to Google AdWords (Link Below). This report is located in AdWords under the dimension tab and it listed under Paid/Organic. The new paid & organic report is the first to let you see and compare your performance for a query when you have either an ad, an organic listing, or both appearing on the search results page. It is important to note that you can view ALL keywords where Google served your SERP either paid or organically. This means that you do not need to be bidding on paid keywords to see the data. You can setup a shell account to view the Keyword data. This is going to force a ton of publishers to use the AdWords platform to view keyword data. It is the hope of Google that publisher will see how much opportunity they are missing and will be compelled to use Google AdWords. Google recently extended the Top Search queries report from 90 days to 1 year. On a big picture level, I think that Google will soon be moving away from tracking individuals with cookies ( Cookie technology is used to determine consumers interest so relevant ads can be served). I believe that Google will soon be assigning everyone an anonymous identifier for advertising or AdID. This will give users more control over how they are tracked online but it will give all the power to Google. Google is looking for the same type of data that Facebook has, which is incredible. Google has been working hard to track users across multiple devices and to track offline conversions. Both Universal Analytics and offline conversions confirm this. Links below. Would you give up keyword data to track offline vehicle purchases? Let me know your thoughts? http://adwords.blogspot.com/2013/08/analyze-and-optimize-your-search.html Offline Tracking https://support.google.com/adwords/answer/2998031 Universal Analytics https://support.google.com/analytics/answer/2790010?hl=en -Jason

Matt Lowery

Proactive Dealer Solutions

Oct 10, 2013  

I absolutely love the graphic used in the post. It sums up the topic in one picture.

Eric Miltsch

DealerTeamwork LLC

Oct 10, 2013  

Hah Matt - was wondering if someone would notice that:)

Bruce Etzcorn

Dealer Inspire

Oct 10, 2013  

Doh! http://searchengineland.com/google-webmaster-tools-blocks-keywords-173153 (it's a bug but thought I'd scare someone here)

Eric Miltsch

DealerTeamwork LLC

Oct 10, 2013  

Oh that's not good. Thanks Bruce!

Eric Miltsch

DealerTeamwork LLC

Sep 9, 2013

Five Myths To Better Google Organic Ranking Busted

Here's a nice interview I stumbled across with Googlers from the Google Search Quality Team. They were asked to share their experiences and knowledge about Google, what impacts search ranking and a few tips on what you shouldn't be doing! (The article claims to interview ex-Googlers, but I'm not so sure about that claim.) Regardless, this is still helpful info for anyone involved with ensuring their website runs as effective a possible. 
 
1. Quality content is more important than fresh content
Fresh content can have a positive influence on the rankings of a web page as long as the content is high quality content. The quality of your web pages is more important than their freshness.
 
Why quality? Quality gets shared and when content is shared it creates social signals - think popularity signals - and additional links and activity around your site. 
 
2. Internal link anchor texts are important
Internal linking with optimized anchor text makes it easier to understand your website navigation. For that reason, you should use meaningful anchor texts on your web pages.
 
This is such a common mistake made within dealer websites - pages will link to each other using anchor text such as "click here" - "hours" - "for more information." Make this anchor text relevant to the page you're linking to: "Vehicle trade in calculator" is much better. 
 
3. Overusing AdSense and other ad systems can hurt your rankings
Although it is okay to display ads on your website, overloading a website with ads can influence your website’s visibility in Google’s search results. This is not limited to any particular ad system.
 
While most dealers don't place ads on their primary website (not sure why you would) - however many dealers do try this on their landing pages and blogs. Just be smart about the amount and frequency. If your goal is affiliate marketing and ad revenue, then you need to consider the branding emphasis being placed on those sights so you don't hurt your overall efforts.
 
4. Linking to other websites is important
Some people think that not linking to other websites is a good practice. The ex-Googlers recommend to link out to sources you trust. Linking to pages that are relevant to the content of your website is normal. If you’re unsure about the quality of a page, just use the rel=nofollow attribute. “Ask yourself, would you trust a scientific report without any citations to other scientific sources? Most likely not.”
 
In the past I would link to industry reports, Green Car white paper reports and Government mileage/MPG reports. This is a great opportunity to create helpful content and link to it other pages using relevant long tail anchor text. (Which they confirmed was important in item #2 above)  
 
5. Being a Google AdWords customer does not help your organic rankings
According to these guys Google AdWords and organic search are completely separated from each other. Changing your Google AdWords budget won’t have any effect on the algorithmic evaluation of your website. 
 
 
 

Eric Miltsch

DealerTeamwork LLC

Co-founder

4640

2 Comments

Allyn Hane

Coastal States Automotive Group

Sep 9, 2013  

Great overview Eric- very important information here that is so easy to implement. I think the hardest one for dealers and SEO companies alike is the "linking out" part. It's like sharing your beer with strangers (in this case, sharing your juice LOL) but I agree it's so important. I have recommended to clients they link out to local non-profits they support, or to their local chamber of commerce, the local high school, etc. These are great geo-signals as well, strengthening local citations.

Eric Miltsch

DealerTeamwork LLC

Sep 9, 2013  

Thanks Allyn. Great thought, the local citations can be very valuable indeed!

Eric Miltsch

DealerTeamwork LLC

Sep 9, 2013

The Battle: Facebook VS Google+ [Infographic]

Most people may simply look at the headline and proclaim Facebook as the winner based on size and user base. Don't be so quick to judge without taking a good look at the key characteristics of both platforms. Grasping the differences can help shape your content strategy as well as the tactics used to connect with users. 

Notice, and understand, the differences with regards to the how users behave within these networks. Facebook has become a personal escape for many; checking in on your friends' activities, benign updates about their daily rituals and a seemingly never ending stream of game invites. Google+ has almost positioned itself as a place to escape Facebook and connect people with more related interests with their ability to easily build your Circles. 

The demographics also tells an interesting story. Facebook has more females and a younger user base while G+ skews towards older males. 

Oddly, the infographic below doesn't mention Google+'s Knowledge Graph, but it does reference Facebook's Graph Search. Both are keys elements of the semantic web, the future of search as it relates to adding more meaning to content and connecting personas with content for improveed search results. Still early stage stuff, but important enough to be aware of as it develops and user behavior slowly shifts.

Ultimately both platforms offer tremendous opportunities for dealers. Marketers need to continue creating experiences that enable social users to explore and connect within a deeper layer of the social exploration spectrum. 

 Facebook vs. Google+

Infographic credit: SocialAnex 

Eric Miltsch

DealerTeamwork LLC

Co-founder

6934

1 Comment

Timothy Martell

Wikimotive

Sep 9, 2013  

While I (begrudgingly) agree that G+ is a (last on the list) necessary social platform for businesses, some of the data here is very misleading. Particularly when considering things like daily active users. One must consider the type of user; the percentage of fake accounts, etc. Remember, figures lie and liars figure ;) Also, the suggestion that Google + effects organic SEO is speculative and not based on fact (However Google + does affect Organic seo for personalized results according to Matt Cutts). Lacking from this comparison is also a similar speculation that shares and posts on Facebook affect organic SEO. This too is speculative and not factual. Context is everything here. Should a social media strategy include G+? Maybe... Maybe even a really strong maybe. Should it include Facebook? Without question.

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