Kay Byfield – Thoughts On How Social Media Is Changing the Search Landscape (Guest Post)
5 Feb, 2010 in General, Marketing Thoughts, Rants & Raves, Social mediaEditor’s note: Today we have a guest post from Kay Byfield, a highly reputable Marketing Communications Professional. Kay is currently the Executive Vice President Membership at DFW American Marketing Association. Kay expresses valuable insights into “How Social Marketing Benefits Business” in an environment where social media is changing the online marketing landscape (See Video). You will also find Kay’s LinkedIn Profile Below the video in this post.
As a marketer, I have been waiting for analysis of search engine effectiveness to include measures for user relevance and the power of the communications to establish connections. I am encouraged because that finally seems to be happening. According to Dwamian Mcleish and Jose Guerra, SEO is passé; the new term should be Content Search Optimization (CSO). Communications specialists like me should be cheered because the system has finally begun to catch up with what we always knew.
Graphic designers have similar concerns to those of content providers. They believe that attractive, easily navigated sites will increase the power of the organization’s web presence. Unfortunately, the traditional measures by search engines do not include many metrics for these factors. In fact, only recently have search engines begun to read flash so designers were cautioned not to use those impressive graphics.
Similarly, search engine rankings required that content developers integrate as many key words as possible in the copy but also keep it short. This is not useful to the reader however, because target audiences expect messages to respond to their need. Packing search terms into the text does not add value for the reader. It was just another way of gaming the system to increase visibility of the website on the Internet.
The goal of the search engine is to provide highly relevant, easily accessible information to the consumer. Consumers will benefit as organizations begin to realize that the easy measures are not enough anymore. As the website owner, attracting visitors through high page ranks is about helping them find you but it is also about delivering value once they are there. Overall, you increase your rankings if you build that trust over time. At the Branding SIG for the DFW AMA on February 2nd, Dwamian said that the search engines are beginning to develop measures that incorporate content relevance into the rankings. It cannot happen too soon.
