Dealer Authority
Why Blogging has Failed Most Dealers (and how to not fall into the 'most dealers' category)
Most dealers have tried blogging at some point in the past. Some are still doing it today. Most dealers have failed at blogging. Some are still failing today. It's a trend that goes back to poor practices taught years ago that have somehow been perpetuated to the point that being like "most dealers" is a very bad thing.
Let's get all of the controversial points out of the way first. Blogging is NOT intended to create content that will rank in Google. I can hear the responses already being typed, but hear me out. Dealers should not want a blog post on their website to rank for important searches. That's where landing pages come into play. When people do a search for "2015 Toyota Camry Oregon" they are not trying to find a blog post about Toyota Camrys in the northwest. They're looking for inventory so you should be driving them to either a landing page that helps them get to the inventory or you should be driving them to the inventory itself.
You can and should, howver, blog about how the 2015 Toyota Camry Hybrid gets 680 miles on a single tank of gas. Within that blog post (which is not intended to rank on search engines for any important keywords) you can link to the inventory or landing pages that you do want to rank for important Camry keywords. This internal authoritative linking practice isn't just the most relevant way to do things from a search engine optimization perspective. It also happens to be the way that Google and Bing want you to improve your website through blogging.
A landing page has pertinent information for buyers and therefore is intended to rank for important search terms. A blog post has interesting, up-to-date news and opinions about thngs and is not intended to rank for car buying search terms. It can rank for things such as "Connecting Bluetooth in a 2015 Toyota Camry" but not for the buying terms.
Landing pages help convert. Blog posts help inform. They're both crucial for successfully driving shoppers to your website and must be used together. Alone, neither can be very effective for SEO.
There's another component. Just because you blog about something doesn't mean people are going to read it. It's for this reason that we tie in social media promotions and campaigns very closely with SEO. It's why the most successful at either search or social are almost always effective at both simultaneously. Search and social are tied together by content.
If you get exposure for your blog posts through social media, it helps the target pages such as landing pages or inventory to rank better. I could end up rambling about the entire strategy for several blog posts but I hope you get the basic point.
Now for the non-controversial stuff. Stop blogging with SEO in mind. Blog with readers in mind. Blog with the intention of bringing real value in the form of information, entertainment, or both through your blog posts and they will be much more successful. I think that few would be willing to deny this.
You're the expert. You're the authority about your particular brand in the local area. Help those who aren't authorities, namely the people who own or who want to own one of your vehicles. That's the point of blogging. When done in unison with landing pages and social media, blogging can be an incredible tool.
If you blog like the majority of dealers and vendors in our industry, you might be able to drive some traffic but it's not going to generate anything meaningful (such as a sale).
Dealer Authority
3 Keys to Knowing if Your Dealership's SEO is Really Doing the Job
This is one of those blog posts that my team will probably hate. I can already hear them. "Stop giving away our secrets!" As I've posted before, there really should be no such thing as secret sauce in automotive digital marketing, so I'm going to share our recipe.
There are three key ingredients to a proper automotive SEO awesomesauce. You can taste for these ingredients in what you're doing today as well as in the presentations you hear from other vendors as they try to sell you SEO. If you taste it, you're on the right track. If you're missing any of these ingredients, it's time to find a better sauce.
1. Focus on Driving Great Traffic
There are many ways to send traffic to your website. We look at social media, for example, as a way to attract shoppers to your website using dark posts and shopper data, but that traffic is great, not prime. Don't get me wrong - many of the visitors that come through proper social media advertising are ready to buy a car, but they're brought there aggressively rather than passively.
Most dealers don't like to think of search traffic as passive, but that's what makes it so valuable. It's not that the traffic itself is passive. It's that the techniques are passive. No matter how well optimized you are or how much money you throw into PPC, you still have to wait for your customers to actually do the search. With many forms of advertising like social, banners, and Pandora, you're aggressively driving traffic even though they weren't necessarily in "buying mode" when they came across the ad.
People who search for important keywords relevant to buying a car are doing so because they're in buying mode. Anyone can optimize a site to drive traffic, but focusing on the keywords that are certain to be searched for when people are hot to make a purchase is the sort of traffic that you should be attacking with your SEO.
2. Focus on Driving them to Great Pages
I remember a debate I had with an SEO company a couple of years ago. We were challenging the pages they were creating for our shared client. The pages were loaded with content and had a little button half way down the page that linked to inventory. I asked them how this page was going to help convert the visitors to leads or sales and their response was something to the effect of, "that's not our job."
Incorrect. It is your job. It's not just about driving traffic to any old page that can be optimized with content. That traffic has to convert in some form or fashion. There's an old notion that if you send people to a page, they can always click on inventory when they get there. I've seen the statistics. It doesn't work.
Pages that are not designed to either generate a lead or clearly direct people to a page that can generate a lead is nearly worthless regardless of how well it's optimized. The stats are clear. People will go to the page from a search term like "New Honda Accord Houston" because that page has plenty of content about the topic, but if the page is designed specifically for optimization and does nothing to compel action, the people who visit it don't see what they want so they bounce.
Pages must be optimized and they must convert or push the traffic to a page that does. If that's not a core philosophy in your SEO sauce, you might as well pour Prego all over your website. It'll be just as effective at generating leads.
3. Traffic Should be Going Up Year Over Year
There are always factors that come into play that affect traffic, but any good SEO company today can drive more organic traffic. The market is in a good place. If you're not seeing significant year-over-year increases in organic search traffic, something's not working.
I bring this one up even though it should be a no-brainer because we ran across someone who was pitching against us the other day. They were pointing out several keywords that we weren't ranked at the top for and using that as an example of how our SEO was bad. Some of the keywords were relevant. Most were worthless.
When we pulled up analytics and showed a huge increase in year-over-year organic traffic, the conversation ended quickly.
There's a reason that around 300 companies in the automotive industry offer SEO. It's not because it's easy. It's because it's easy to sell and hard for dealers to quantify. If you apply these three keys to your SEO checking, you'll know that you've got a great sauce.
No Comments
Dealer Authority
3 Keys to Knowing if Your Dealership's SEO is Really Doing the Job
This is one of those blog posts that my team will probably hate. I can already hear them. "Stop giving away our secrets!" As I've posted before, there really should be no such thing as secret sauce in automotive digital marketing, so I'm going to share our recipe.
There are three key ingredients to a proper automotive SEO awesomesauce. You can taste for these ingredients in what you're doing today as well as in the presentations you hear from other vendors as they try to sell you SEO. If you taste it, you're on the right track. If you're missing any of these ingredients, it's time to find a better sauce.
1. Focus on Driving Great Traffic
There are many ways to send traffic to your website. We look at social media, for example, as a way to attract shoppers to your website using dark posts and shopper data, but that traffic is great, not prime. Don't get me wrong - many of the visitors that come through proper social media advertising are ready to buy a car, but they're brought there aggressively rather than passively.
Most dealers don't like to think of search traffic as passive, but that's what makes it so valuable. It's not that the traffic itself is passive. It's that the techniques are passive. No matter how well optimized you are or how much money you throw into PPC, you still have to wait for your customers to actually do the search. With many forms of advertising like social, banners, and Pandora, you're aggressively driving traffic even though they weren't necessarily in "buying mode" when they came across the ad.
People who search for important keywords relevant to buying a car are doing so because they're in buying mode. Anyone can optimize a site to drive traffic, but focusing on the keywords that are certain to be searched for when people are hot to make a purchase is the sort of traffic that you should be attacking with your SEO.
2. Focus on Driving them to Great Pages
I remember a debate I had with an SEO company a couple of years ago. We were challenging the pages they were creating for our shared client. The pages were loaded with content and had a little button half way down the page that linked to inventory. I asked them how this page was going to help convert the visitors to leads or sales and their response was something to the effect of, "that's not our job."
Incorrect. It is your job. It's not just about driving traffic to any old page that can be optimized with content. That traffic has to convert in some form or fashion. There's an old notion that if you send people to a page, they can always click on inventory when they get there. I've seen the statistics. It doesn't work.
Pages that are not designed to either generate a lead or clearly direct people to a page that can generate a lead is nearly worthless regardless of how well it's optimized. The stats are clear. People will go to the page from a search term like "New Honda Accord Houston" because that page has plenty of content about the topic, but if the page is designed specifically for optimization and does nothing to compel action, the people who visit it don't see what they want so they bounce.
Pages must be optimized and they must convert or push the traffic to a page that does. If that's not a core philosophy in your SEO sauce, you might as well pour Prego all over your website. It'll be just as effective at generating leads.
3. Traffic Should be Going Up Year Over Year
There are always factors that come into play that affect traffic, but any good SEO company today can drive more organic traffic. The market is in a good place. If you're not seeing significant year-over-year increases in organic search traffic, something's not working.
I bring this one up even though it should be a no-brainer because we ran across someone who was pitching against us the other day. They were pointing out several keywords that we weren't ranked at the top for and using that as an example of how our SEO was bad. Some of the keywords were relevant. Most were worthless.
When we pulled up analytics and showed a huge increase in year-over-year organic traffic, the conversation ended quickly.
There's a reason that around 300 companies in the automotive industry offer SEO. It's not because it's easy. It's because it's easy to sell and hard for dealers to quantify. If you apply these three keys to your SEO checking, you'll know that you've got a great sauce.
No Comments
Dealer Authority
Google: Go Mobile-Friendly or Go Away, Automotive Website Providers
We have had the blessing of only "blacklisting" a couple of website providers since we started doing SEO for dealers in 2013. Now, there's a chance we'll need to blacklist some more thanks to Google finalizing its "mobile-friendly" algorithm update.
More and more traffic going to dealership websites is on mobile devices because more people use their phones and tablets as their primary (often only) method of going online. The mobile-friendly update only affects those searching on mobile devices (for now) so some dealers have challenges and they don't even know it based upon no loss in rankings on desktop searches.
They'll see it in their traffic numbers.
In essence, the update is designed to push websites lower in mobile searches if they do not play well with mobile devices. There are a handful of things that can cause this such as small fonts, small buttons, Flash components, or basically anything that is not conducive to delivering a great mobile experience.
It's page by page, meaning that having a page that's flawed will not necessarily tank the whole site. This is good because it makes it easier to fix but it's bad because it makes it harder to identify. You need to check many of your pages, particularly inventory, video pages, and specials, using Google's mobile-friendly test tool.
This is separate from Google's 1:1 mobile:desktop search component which favors websites with pages that load on any type of device. A website can be 1:1 compliant and not be mobile-friendly; visa versa is true as well.
Thankfully, most website providers have been making the move to mobile for some time and most dealers don't have to worry, but some do. This is one of those things that can truly affect business. If you find that your website is not mobile-friendly, it's time to make a change very soon.
6 Comments
Autofusion Inc.
Agreed! One thing I would like to add is that Google put together this awesome FAQ to answer questions about their latest Mobile update: http://googlewebmastercentral.blogspot.com/2015/04/faqs-april-21st-mobile-friendly.html
RevPoint Media
Dealerships need to embrace mobile and start looking into click to call technology. As a very large supplier of inbound calls in the insurance industry we are seeing a lot of carriers and agents having tremendous success on a pay per call rather than a pay per lead. Our dealer call program will be launching in a month so please reach out to me to find out how it works. steve@revpointmedia.com
AutoStride
Yes and I've been preaching Responsive Automotive Websites for 5 years and one reason my former employer ranks #1 in the world for https://www.google.com/search?q=automotive+responsive+sites and https://www.google.com/search?q=automotive+responsive+websites Ahead of all of the giants! *In an evil sounding laugh, "Muhahahahahah!"
Interactive Marketing and Consulting Services
Good post, JD, however dealers and the website providers need to go so much deeper. The mobile-friendly test is a surface one. Per the post, many pass. However, one step further through the number of tools Google makes available via the Developers and Webmaster sites/blogs will reveal the speed and user friendly tests. By the way, Google made the mobile algorithm announcement on their Developers site February 23, 2015, nearly TWO MONTHS before the industry and most major publications started paying attention. There is where the real litmus test begins since nearly ALL automotive website providers have issues with their sites that are structural and code-based. Run your website here: https://developers.google.com/speed/pagespeed/insights/ and wee what results develop, then contact your website provider and open a ticket with the fixes. That's where the issues go way, way, way deeper. IM@CS has been providing insight to clients since 2014 about the move to mobile, specifically server-side responsive sites. While nearly no automotive dealer website provider is compliant across the board, some will be able to get up to speed quicker than the rest. What's truly laughable is some of the website companies have been "spinning" the mobile-friendly only test, indicating their sites are fine. Marketing at its best, however not true! This effort to truly keep automotive in the forefront of marketing just get a swift kick, and that was no surprise. Only the most progressive who have great relationships with their partners are going to lead, keeping in mind Google (and Bing and others) will continue to make more significant changes and data updates as the results come in. Notice how few vendors and consulting companies, including those that profess "digital knowledge" are not addressing the specifics, let alone providing much insight at all. Yes, it's all about mobile (we've been saying that since 2013), it's all about the customer experience, it's all about speed and compliance, it's all about staying focused on an area the the majority of dealerships are still not willing to. Wishing everyone a greater understanding, focus, knowledge and a more determined resolve to improve. Gary May IM@CS
AutoStride
That aspect has been discussed many times Gary, just different threads.
Dealer Authority
Google: Go Mobile-Friendly or Go Away, Automotive Website Providers
We have had the blessing of only "blacklisting" a couple of website providers since we started doing SEO for dealers in 2013. Now, there's a chance we'll need to blacklist some more thanks to Google finalizing its "mobile-friendly" algorithm update.
More and more traffic going to dealership websites is on mobile devices because more people use their phones and tablets as their primary (often only) method of going online. The mobile-friendly update only affects those searching on mobile devices (for now) so some dealers have challenges and they don't even know it based upon no loss in rankings on desktop searches.
They'll see it in their traffic numbers.
In essence, the update is designed to push websites lower in mobile searches if they do not play well with mobile devices. There are a handful of things that can cause this such as small fonts, small buttons, Flash components, or basically anything that is not conducive to delivering a great mobile experience.
It's page by page, meaning that having a page that's flawed will not necessarily tank the whole site. This is good because it makes it easier to fix but it's bad because it makes it harder to identify. You need to check many of your pages, particularly inventory, video pages, and specials, using Google's mobile-friendly test tool.
This is separate from Google's 1:1 mobile:desktop search component which favors websites with pages that load on any type of device. A website can be 1:1 compliant and not be mobile-friendly; visa versa is true as well.
Thankfully, most website providers have been making the move to mobile for some time and most dealers don't have to worry, but some do. This is one of those things that can truly affect business. If you find that your website is not mobile-friendly, it's time to make a change very soon.
6 Comments
Autofusion Inc.
Agreed! One thing I would like to add is that Google put together this awesome FAQ to answer questions about their latest Mobile update: http://googlewebmastercentral.blogspot.com/2015/04/faqs-april-21st-mobile-friendly.html
RevPoint Media
Dealerships need to embrace mobile and start looking into click to call technology. As a very large supplier of inbound calls in the insurance industry we are seeing a lot of carriers and agents having tremendous success on a pay per call rather than a pay per lead. Our dealer call program will be launching in a month so please reach out to me to find out how it works. steve@revpointmedia.com
AutoStride
Yes and I've been preaching Responsive Automotive Websites for 5 years and one reason my former employer ranks #1 in the world for https://www.google.com/search?q=automotive+responsive+sites and https://www.google.com/search?q=automotive+responsive+websites Ahead of all of the giants! *In an evil sounding laugh, "Muhahahahahah!"
Interactive Marketing and Consulting Services
Good post, JD, however dealers and the website providers need to go so much deeper. The mobile-friendly test is a surface one. Per the post, many pass. However, one step further through the number of tools Google makes available via the Developers and Webmaster sites/blogs will reveal the speed and user friendly tests. By the way, Google made the mobile algorithm announcement on their Developers site February 23, 2015, nearly TWO MONTHS before the industry and most major publications started paying attention. There is where the real litmus test begins since nearly ALL automotive website providers have issues with their sites that are structural and code-based. Run your website here: https://developers.google.com/speed/pagespeed/insights/ and wee what results develop, then contact your website provider and open a ticket with the fixes. That's where the issues go way, way, way deeper. IM@CS has been providing insight to clients since 2014 about the move to mobile, specifically server-side responsive sites. While nearly no automotive dealer website provider is compliant across the board, some will be able to get up to speed quicker than the rest. What's truly laughable is some of the website companies have been "spinning" the mobile-friendly only test, indicating their sites are fine. Marketing at its best, however not true! This effort to truly keep automotive in the forefront of marketing just get a swift kick, and that was no surprise. Only the most progressive who have great relationships with their partners are going to lead, keeping in mind Google (and Bing and others) will continue to make more significant changes and data updates as the results come in. Notice how few vendors and consulting companies, including those that profess "digital knowledge" are not addressing the specifics, let alone providing much insight at all. Yes, it's all about mobile (we've been saying that since 2013), it's all about the customer experience, it's all about speed and compliance, it's all about staying focused on an area the the majority of dealerships are still not willing to. Wishing everyone a greater understanding, focus, knowledge and a more determined resolve to improve. Gary May IM@CS
AutoStride
That aspect has been discussed many times Gary, just different threads.
Dealer Authority
Vendor Partnerships and the Importance of Making Ego Begone
The word "begone" is such a funny word. It has a powerful meaning but is so rarely used outside of board games and exocisms. We're going to use it today, mostly because it fits in nicely with the topic of discussion.
As fate would have it, one of our team members was picked for jury duty. While he is fulfilling his civil responsibility as a citizen of this wonderful country, I'm filling in for him on the social side. It's good to roll your sleeves up and get to work sometimes (which is why I believe even general managers should take ups every now and then) just to get a feel for what's happening in the trenches.
Facebook is all about momentum, which is why I normally do not like our posts to run over others. Conversely, I don't like other people's posts to run over ours. Collaboration is an important key to a strong social media strategy that takes some thigns from the dealership and some content that we create, so we like to time everything out to maximize things.
Today, I had a post that the dealer ran over with their own post. It turned out to be an awesome one. I had worked really hard on our post, sifting through images and finding the four perfect pictures of a 1959 Chevrolet Apache. It was a great post and we were running ads to it for exposure. Then, the dealership posted a picture of happy customers who bought two Camaros. As proud as I was of the one I posted, his live shot of real buyers and their twin Camaros was 100% better.
I was run over and I loved it!
The most important aspect of any vendor/dealer relationship is communication. In some cases, this manifests in the form of collaboration. In a true collaboration, there are no egos involved. It's all about the end goal of helping to sell more cars.
It's not what "they" do versus what "I" do to make things happen. It's all about what "we" are doing together. Ego has no place in collaboration if it's going to be effective.
2 Comments
Apple Chevrolet
As an Internet Manager... guilty as charged. I've occasionally posted on my own when I think it's worthy to do so and I've felt timeliness was important. Usually, it works. I've never believed in washing my hands of the job just because I hired someone to manage it. Great insight JD. Thank you!
Faulkner Nissan
Great post, JD - so what you're saying is sometimes Dealers do have good ideas & posts! :-P :-)
Dealer Authority
Vendor Partnerships and the Importance of Making Ego Begone
The word "begone" is such a funny word. It has a powerful meaning but is so rarely used outside of board games and exocisms. We're going to use it today, mostly because it fits in nicely with the topic of discussion.
As fate would have it, one of our team members was picked for jury duty. While he is fulfilling his civil responsibility as a citizen of this wonderful country, I'm filling in for him on the social side. It's good to roll your sleeves up and get to work sometimes (which is why I believe even general managers should take ups every now and then) just to get a feel for what's happening in the trenches.
Facebook is all about momentum, which is why I normally do not like our posts to run over others. Conversely, I don't like other people's posts to run over ours. Collaboration is an important key to a strong social media strategy that takes some thigns from the dealership and some content that we create, so we like to time everything out to maximize things.
Today, I had a post that the dealer ran over with their own post. It turned out to be an awesome one. I had worked really hard on our post, sifting through images and finding the four perfect pictures of a 1959 Chevrolet Apache. It was a great post and we were running ads to it for exposure. Then, the dealership posted a picture of happy customers who bought two Camaros. As proud as I was of the one I posted, his live shot of real buyers and their twin Camaros was 100% better.
I was run over and I loved it!
The most important aspect of any vendor/dealer relationship is communication. In some cases, this manifests in the form of collaboration. In a true collaboration, there are no egos involved. It's all about the end goal of helping to sell more cars.
It's not what "they" do versus what "I" do to make things happen. It's all about what "we" are doing together. Ego has no place in collaboration if it's going to be effective.
2 Comments
Apple Chevrolet
As an Internet Manager... guilty as charged. I've occasionally posted on my own when I think it's worthy to do so and I've felt timeliness was important. Usually, it works. I've never believed in washing my hands of the job just because I hired someone to manage it. Great insight JD. Thank you!
Faulkner Nissan
Great post, JD - so what you're saying is sometimes Dealers do have good ideas & posts! :-P :-)
Dealer Authority
Why Search and Social are so Closely Tied Together (and why they're not)
When you have two people who have combined for over two decades of working with automotive website providers, you would think that they the company they would build together would be another website provider. It wasn't. There's a reason for this.
Search and social are the marketing venues we chose to pursue for one big reason: minimal parody. Car dealers have seen products and services come and go where there seems to be very little difference between one player and another. That's not the case in either search marketing or social media marketing. Sure, there are similarities between products, but the results delivered by one company can be completely different from the results delivered by another. That's not the case in other areas such as website marketing where switching from one to another normally yields only a minor difference in results.
There's another reason that we chose these venues. They're tied in very nicely together. The activities that are associated with proper search engine marketing are often complimentary to those in social media and visa versa. In fact, we often find that dealers can kill more than one bird with a single stone. That stone normally comes in the form of content.
When dealers or vendors separate out content into its individual goals, it doesn't always work as intended. For example, you could build a landing page that works properly for PPC, but it isn't easy to optimize and it can't achieve great results on social media. You can build great content that is socially sharable, but it doesn't rank for the right keywords organically and it can't be a target for PPC.
When you take these and other factors into account when building a piece of content, you'll find that the end result is often better than it would have been had you built different pages for each discipline. This is because the flow of benefits crosses over. This is the part where they're tied in and it's the part that I'll (hopefully) explain in detail here.
Social media is a part of the SEO puzzle despite what Google reps have said in the past. The numbers do not lie. When a page performs well on social media, it tends to rank better on search. Conversely, when a page has a high social caliber and it ranks well in search, it gets more visitors and thus more opportunities for people to share it.
Then, you bring PPC into the equation. The core of PPC is in driving action, which means that a proper landing page for paid search should get the visitor to do something. Call. Fill out a form. Visit the dealership. Something.
The second part of PPC is Quality Score. To achieve a higher quality score, a page must contain relevant content for the keywords it's target. This should sound familiar to anyone who studies SEO because search engine optimization calls for the same ideas. In other words, a proper PPC landing page should be easily optimized as well without having to do much to it.
Two birds. One stone.
Now that we understand why search and social are so closely tied together, let's talk about how they're different. I'll go into more details about this in a future post, but the basic concept is this: intent.
Search is passive. No matter how well optimized you are or how much money you're spending on paid search, you still have to wait for the shopper to initiate the search. They are actively in the market and are searching for you.
Social is aggressive. It puts the message in front of shoppers in the venues they visit the most during their day. It's much more like television that search in that they're going to these social media sites without an intention of finding a car. That's why it's so important to have the cars find them. They aren't actively pursuing anything at that moment, but when a relevant message is placed in front of a current car shopper, they're willing to leave the casual task of checking social media in order to pursue the more important task of finding their next vehicle.
To say that search and social go hand-in-hand is not exactly true. They're different aspects of marketing that play in the same field. Understanding how to make them sing together is the key to finding the right marketing harmony.
No Comments
Dealer Authority
Why Search and Social are so Closely Tied Together (and why they're not)
When you have two people who have combined for over two decades of working with automotive website providers, you would think that they the company they would build together would be another website provider. It wasn't. There's a reason for this.
Search and social are the marketing venues we chose to pursue for one big reason: minimal parody. Car dealers have seen products and services come and go where there seems to be very little difference between one player and another. That's not the case in either search marketing or social media marketing. Sure, there are similarities between products, but the results delivered by one company can be completely different from the results delivered by another. That's not the case in other areas such as website marketing where switching from one to another normally yields only a minor difference in results.
There's another reason that we chose these venues. They're tied in very nicely together. The activities that are associated with proper search engine marketing are often complimentary to those in social media and visa versa. In fact, we often find that dealers can kill more than one bird with a single stone. That stone normally comes in the form of content.
When dealers or vendors separate out content into its individual goals, it doesn't always work as intended. For example, you could build a landing page that works properly for PPC, but it isn't easy to optimize and it can't achieve great results on social media. You can build great content that is socially sharable, but it doesn't rank for the right keywords organically and it can't be a target for PPC.
When you take these and other factors into account when building a piece of content, you'll find that the end result is often better than it would have been had you built different pages for each discipline. This is because the flow of benefits crosses over. This is the part where they're tied in and it's the part that I'll (hopefully) explain in detail here.
Social media is a part of the SEO puzzle despite what Google reps have said in the past. The numbers do not lie. When a page performs well on social media, it tends to rank better on search. Conversely, when a page has a high social caliber and it ranks well in search, it gets more visitors and thus more opportunities for people to share it.
Then, you bring PPC into the equation. The core of PPC is in driving action, which means that a proper landing page for paid search should get the visitor to do something. Call. Fill out a form. Visit the dealership. Something.
The second part of PPC is Quality Score. To achieve a higher quality score, a page must contain relevant content for the keywords it's target. This should sound familiar to anyone who studies SEO because search engine optimization calls for the same ideas. In other words, a proper PPC landing page should be easily optimized as well without having to do much to it.
Two birds. One stone.
Now that we understand why search and social are so closely tied together, let's talk about how they're different. I'll go into more details about this in a future post, but the basic concept is this: intent.
Search is passive. No matter how well optimized you are or how much money you're spending on paid search, you still have to wait for the shopper to initiate the search. They are actively in the market and are searching for you.
Social is aggressive. It puts the message in front of shoppers in the venues they visit the most during their day. It's much more like television that search in that they're going to these social media sites without an intention of finding a car. That's why it's so important to have the cars find them. They aren't actively pursuing anything at that moment, but when a relevant message is placed in front of a current car shopper, they're willing to leave the casual task of checking social media in order to pursue the more important task of finding their next vehicle.
To say that search and social go hand-in-hand is not exactly true. They're different aspects of marketing that play in the same field. Understanding how to make them sing together is the key to finding the right marketing harmony.
No Comments
Dealer Authority
How to Keep Your Digital Marketing Organized and Vendors Held Accountable
As we work with more and more dealers, we're starting to see some trends in the way that digital marketing is being handled. In some cases, dealers aren't fully aware of everything they're supposed to be getting from their vendor partners. This can be challenging because most vendors that we've seen over the years will only give you what you expect from them.
Part of my responsibilities with Dealer Authority is to make certain that promises are kept, not just by us (that's the easy part) but also by other vendors we have to work with on behalf of the dealers. A case in point happened last week when had to hound a website provider for a demonstration of their new product. One would think that keeping a current client happy would be the top priority, but after a couple of scheduled meetings postponed and a dealer wondering what was going on, we finally made contact. The strange thing is that the new platform they showed us seems to be a great improvement but the bad taste they left in the dealer's mouth by not making it happen more quickly might lead them to having us find them a new website provider.
There are many reasons that a dealer isn't certain about what their providers are actually providing. Sometimes, it's just turnover; a new internet manager can have a challenge getting to know everyone that their predecessor had established for the dealership. Sometimes, it's just a matter of having a fluid and accurate process for monitoring their vendor partners. This is what I want to addess here with some tips I've accumulated over the last couple of years.
- Know Everything in the Contract: This can be an Excel spreadsheet, it can be tied into a full-blown project management systemt, or anywhere in between. You should be able to go to one place and find out how much you're spending (broken down by components), how long the contract lasts, what the cancellation requirements are, and most importantly what all is entailed with everything you're getting. This last part is where we often find the biggest gap. We've worked with dealers who, upon closer inspection of the contract, were not receiving everything they were promised in the initial agreement.
- Schedule Monthly Meetings with Everyone Together: When going over results and adjusting strategy, it can be very useful to have all parties on the phone at the same time. We were on a call Friday with String Automotive who facilitated a meeting with the dealer, the website provider, the PPC provider, the SEO company, and the social media company to devise an attack strategy for this coming month. These calls are crucial to make sure that if we're trying to impove sales of a specific vehicle in a specific zip code, that we're able to all be lockstep in our strategy and implementation. Brainstorming together works well which is why we really appreciate all that String does to make this happen.
- Force Vendors to Keep You in Mind with New Developments: I've worked for several vendors since leaving the retail side of the car business and one thing seems to be universal: the new stuff goes to new clients. It's not fair. You should never have to hear about the latest development by a vendor by reading a press release. In our world, the squeaky wheel really does get the grease, so make sure they don't forget to give you the real stuff. When negotiating new contracts, remember to include a clause about it. You want the new stuff. You don't want to be a guinea pig, but you want the stuff that the new clients are getting.
- Keep a Record of Every Interaction: Just as you log every call and email into a CRM when talking to your customers, so do the vendors. They know every communication. You should, too. It can be tedious without an appropriate process, but if you have a CRM that you like, you can treat your vendors like your customers. Just make sure they're separated.
Every day, we're forced to hold other vendors accountable for our clients. This is great if you have us, but if you're doing it on your own, I hope that these little tips will help you make the most out of your digital marketing.
No Comments
20 Comments
Manny Luna
DealershipMarketingServices.com
Nice read JD, What audience are you wanting to talk to online is the key. At some point depending on the markets blogging does increase a dealers traffic and sales. If the user is looking for a car loan with bad credit in Ada, OK and they find helpful tips to buy a car, thats where a blog can work for a dealership. Dealers need to be blogging about a niche, like GMC Trucks or Looking for that First Car? Niche blogging with video works great! Great Post JD!
Carl Maeda
Autofusion Inc.
I agree. Good insights! This has so much long term value. If you write interesting posts, your reader-base will grow and the next time your reader is considering a vehicle purchase, you're already at the top of mind. In my opinion, blogging is about readers and gaining an audience.
C L
Automotive Group
I totally agree with you JD. I knew going into building our blog http://heroautogroup.com that we weren't going to see lift and conversions coming from SEO traffic that might be siphoned away from our sales website. With that mindset we decided to build it as a resource for our employees. A place that they can go to and see the latest tv spots, pictures from events and news from the manufactures. Mixed in with some fun productivity and lifestyle content. There are opportunities where I am able to soft sell some things which is great too. I even created a subdomain that houses our entire groups inventory and now our BDC's lives are easier because they know exactly where to go to find what they want. Doing things this way we've been able to see what our teams like, don't like and so on. The difference I think for me is that I treat it like a real marketing channel though. For example I use mailchimp to send out newsletters to our staff each week. I watch open rates, CTR's etc. This helps me find the stuff that interests them so they can and will talk about it more. Each week our traffic goes up, shares of stories to peoples social channels goes up, open rates on newsletters goes up and conversations around the stores are increasing. To me thats what it's all about.
Manny Luna
DealershipMarketingServices.com
Paid ads too Chris K Leslie? I like that:)
Jason Stum
Launch Digital Marketing
THIS: "Stop blogging with SEO in mind. Blog with readers in mind." If your sole reason for blogging is #BecauseSEO you're missing the point.
Manny Luna
DealershipMarketingServices.com
Idk? Stop blogging with SEO in mind. Blog with readers in mind. VS How to Write With SEO in Mind, both work like #1 and #2 ... http://bit.ly/1OLmCjw
Timothy Martell
Wikimotive
Onsite blog, onsite blog, onsite blog, onsite blog! Did I mention an onsite blog is better than offsite? And not the one that 99% of your horrible website vendors provide you (Dealer Inspire's is the only exception we've found so far. Feel free to use it). Oh and if you're blogging offsite. STOP! And move your blog onsite! Did I mention you should have an onsite blog? Great post, JD.
Alex Lau
AutoStride
@ Timothy. Yep! Onsite blog, onsite blog, onsite blog, onsite blog! Did I mention an onsite blog is better than offsite? And not the one that 99% of your horrible website vendors provide you (Dealer Inspire's is the only exception we've found so far. Feel free to use it). Oh and if you're blogging offsite. STOP! And move your blog onsite! Did I mention you should have an onsite blog? Great post, JD.
Alex Lau
AutoStride
Ditto, from your last blog JD and what Tim said. With over 5,000 articles published on over 50 dealership websites, I couldn't agree more. I've been doing this for over five years. Yes, that's WordPress being pulled into a custom, responsive website too. Customized hack. I've left WorldDealer, someone there isn't following my geolocation effort, but if you look back to February and previously, you'll see it. http://baierl.com/blog http://faulknermazda.com/blog/2015/01 http://baierltoyota.com/blog http://billyfuccilloford.com/blog/2014/09/ http://kellynissanofroute33.com/blog/2014/10/ http://courtesyimports.com/blog/2015/01/ http://kellyford.com/blog/ etc, etc. there are too many to list.
Alex Lau
AutoStride
@Tim. Dealer Inspire is built on WordPress, but so is Dealer X. Another viable option.
C L
Automotive Group
Might as well get paid while we're at it too right? Plus Since I have the positions there I can place my own ads in inventory as house ads too rather than giving them their own real eastate
Manny Luna
DealershipMarketingServices.com
So many pros and cons... Having an offsite blog where potential customers feel welcome to interact without feeling intimidated by a major brand name could be beneficial. Pros + Audience leeching.The greatest tangible benefit to offsite publishing is the ability to reach someone else's audience. When publishing offsite, you're immediately exposed to whomever already consumes information from that site—ideally a network that's way bigger than your own.http://www.iacquire.com/blog/whats-better-publishing-onsite-or-offIn a vacuum, hosting your blog on-site or off-site each have their own benefits. When deciding on where to host a blog, it comes down to your blog's ultimate goal: http://www.ecreativeim.com/blog/2013/02/b2b-business-blogs-on-site-or-off-site/It's good to know both ways will work. Many companies have their own agenda.
Manny Luna
DealershipMarketingServices.com
I love it Chris K Leslie!
Manny Luna
DealershipMarketingServices.com
Did I mention you should have an onsite blog? Yes Did I mention you can also have an offsite blog too? Yes Nice Alexander and Tim!
Timothy Martell
Wikimotive
Alex, thanks for the info on Dealer X. I'll check it out. Manny, not sure I understand your comment. If you are a brand you need an onsite blog, period. There are only cons to an offsite blog if you are a brand. The only reasons to have an offsite blog is - if you have to because your website provider won't allow for you to have a custom wordpress install on your domain or because you are not a brand and are looking to create the next mommyblog or whatever that you can monetize. If the goal is to make it seem like you are not the brand you represent to trick customers into a false sense of security, then that is both bad marketing and web spam. Again, there is no benefit to an offisite blog if you are a brand that is seeking to share information and be a resource to your potential client base. You simply cut your potential for SEO in half and likely ensure that no social signals hit your site as they will most likely be directed to your offsite blog.
Alex Lau
AutoStride
Tim,Actually, I retract that positive statement. I had an extremely difficult time with them. They don't give 3rd parties access to the WP platform blogging tool and there lacks a page creation area, at least from my experience.
Timothy Martell
Wikimotive
Yikes! Thanks for the update!
Alex Lau
AutoStride
Dealer Inspire is one of the best I've seen and it rides the WP platform.
Adam Hansen
Gregg Young Chevrolet
"Stop blogging with SEO in mind. Blog with readers in mind. Blog with the intention of bringing real value in the form of information, entertainment, or both through your blog posts and they will be much more successful." Why can't you do both?? They are not mutually exclusive.
Timothy Martell
Wikimotive
The point we're making, Adam, is that if you can tell content has been "SEO'd", then you've failed. The object is to write relevant and valuable informational content. It also needs to be not only unique, but remarkable and truly add something of value to the web. If you're doing this as part of a larger strategy, then the interconnectedness of your content and social media initiative will already drive the SEO. No keyword stuffing required! I see posts almost weekly from Digital Marketing Directors asking how people like this or that "landing page" they've created. Without fail, they are almost always thin, spun content with a bunch of image ads. And these are by people who are generally respected as top performers in their field! The purpose of this post is to make people realize that 95% of what is going out there now is not only not good enough, but harmful.