At the risk of getting a stern talking to, I'm going to have to ask: really? I'm confident that where you see a well-known brand's site next to an anonymous brand, the recognised name will get a disproportionate number of clicks. The location of each user's click can't be modeled by some exponential decay function; the titles, descriptions and URLs (including the goodwill associated with a strong brand) will have a significant effect on click through rate.
So, there's our opportunity to stack the odds in our favour. If it's true that more than 50% of people click on a result other than number 1, this means that most people disagree with the search engine's judgment as to which page best satisfies their query. And what about all the searches that don't result in any clicks at all?
Quite a few sites appear to be thinking creatively to improve the number of clicks they receive, so here are some tips you can implement in order to get more visits from any keyword, without having to improve your ranking.
Use language that sells
Use compelling language in the snippet where possible, by placing sales-orientated text near the first occurrence of the target phrase. For example, in the screenshot below (and overlooking any brand loyalty that people may have to Amazon or Game), the idea that a Wii Remote has free delivery is more compelling than knowing it can be used as a sword AND a paintbrush.If you've got a strong brand, use it
Remember that sometimes there's no competition for clicks when the user has their destination in mind before seeing the results. For instance, a user may know they want to go to Wikipedia when they search for "The Shirehorses" and head there despite it ranking at #3.A very similar thing is likely to happen for product / shopping searches, where the searcher has brand loyalty to a particular retailer. I imagine that Amazon receives a similar amount of traffic (if not more) than Canon does for the search 'canon 400d' - this might still be a destinational search.
However, in this situation Canon could get the clicks from people who are researching the product as well as those about to buy if they manipulated their snippet to say something like, "See full details for the Canon EOS 400D, and buy it direct for the best online price."
Prove that your site is going to be useful
Get listed in Google Local, and get a map and reviews next to your branded search results. OK: you'd hope not to ever lose clicks from your branded search, but a result like that below gives real trust to the visitor.
Prove that your site is going to be useful
Get listed in Google Local, and get a map and reviews next to your branded search results. OK: you'd hope not to ever lose clicks from your branded search, but a result like that below gives real trust to the visitor.To see an example where users might avoid the official site in a branded search, consider another London venue: is it easier to find the opening hours on the official Sketch site, or on the View London page?
Cover all the bases for organic DKI
Fake your way into using dynamic keyword insertion for organic search. Although Google still prefers to use the meta description of a page as the snippet when possible, in a search of more than a couple of words, it often needs to pull a quote from the page in order to show text relevant to the search. By using the exact match of popular variants of your search terms (particularly ones with valuable searcher intent) within your text, you can have the search terms highlighted in your snippet in order to demonstrate high relevancy. (Of course, you should be doing this anyway if you want to target those particular terms.)The example below shows three of the UK results for 'choose an engagement ring'. The user doesn't want to know how to buy one, doesn't want to know the etiquette, but wants help choosing one - the third link is likely to get the click.
Don't give everything away too early
Let's say a searcher needs to know the height of Mount Everest in inches, or can't remember the order of parameters in PHP's strrchr command. They might see the following results in Google:There's no need for them to click through to the results. Using a variation of the earlier advice, make sure the 'answer' on the page isn't right next to the first mention of the search term if you want to get people to actually visit your page. These similar examples ('height of mount everest in yards' and 'str_replace') don't spill the beans too early.
If you've being using similar techniques, or have seen sites that you think should be getting more clicks from their search results, please do share them in the comments.
Funny your last point in "Dont give everything away to early" is exactly what Google is trying to do with Richer Snippets
Yeah... I hate when I go and search for definition of a word and it says TITLE: Definition for "STUFF" and META Desc: Find out more about "STUFF". Arghh... frustrating. I argue a better way to aproach it would be:
STUFF - means THINGS etc... Did you know that STUFF also has 2 alternative meanings, click for more information and find out why this and that.
Yes; Google announced their potentially significant chances to the SERPs display as I finished writing this post. This should be really useful for everyone - though yes, there's potential that it will canibalise CTRs.
I'll look forward to writing more about it when I've had a chance to test things.
Fantastic post Rob - you make great points, and I agree with the assertion that great "marketing" in the SERPs can help you to overachieve based on your ranking.
Along with the items you mentioned, folks might want to think about:
I'll bet there are lots of other great strategies around this line of thinking - awesome discussion.
In that case, I'd reconsider moving string "SEOmoz" at the end of title tag on all seomoz.org pages, something like Wikipedia does.
In above example we saw: "Shirehorses - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia". I think it's generating a way better CTR than "Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - Shirehorses"
I agree, although one nice advantage to having a short domain name like SEOMoz is that you have some leeway to put the domain first and yet still have a lot of room left for other text.
break787 & JoelJonathan,
I disagree... in this case and in the case of blogs. The way SEOmoz title tags for blog posts are structured makes the most since to me because "SEOmoz" is such a powerful brand. I believe in this case moving this brand to the end, combined with some long post tiles, would result in losing the impact that a great brand has on click-ons in SERP's. It also seems to me that the domain seomoz.org has enough link popularity and trust strength to compensate for keywords not being placed in the front. I personally like it when blog post page headers match meta titles. Less confusion.
Having my start in, and majority experience as an SEO, I spent years ignoring brand impact on search. Over the past few I have come to learn the error of those early years. I now make it a point to better understand each clients brand and how I can use it to help with search and the other areas of internet marketing. In doing so, I have been able to make adjustments to campaigns to perform better leveraging the brand that the client has developed.
my 2.0 cents
The impact of brand definitely is something to consider. I would hesitate to say that putting the brand name first in every single title tag on every single page for every single website in every single niche is the best thing to do but you are right in that brand plays a key role in increasing the CTR.
Great post Rob. I imagine there is variation also depending on the keyword used and the user intent. For a generic keyword then I wonder if users are more likely to scan through the SERPs first before clicking just to weigh up their options. Maybe it's the other way round (i.e. more refined searches get a better chance of a scan).
Either way, for these places where searcher are going to scan the SERPs - making a strong call to action through all the elements you display (title, meta description and URL) could bring you really great traffic.
It is hard to imagine that structured data as part of the rich snippets efforts Google's undertaking isn't going to "give away too much to soon" but then there is the other side of the fence where if people get what they want quickly (at least once in a while) the brand sticks (or website name)...
Then when they need something that you can convert - the case is much stronger. But then again that is a complete discusion point.
This post is great. I've often thought of the same things you mentioned here. My favorite is "Don't give everything away too early". I use to have a co-worker who would write descriptions that would cause people not to click through. After a change we saw a 450% increase in click throughs.
I agree, I don't necesarily recommend this tactic in all cases but sometimes I will kind of "salt the oats" in the meta description tag by doing something like:
Target KW: How to Break Dance
Meta Description: Learning how to break dance is easy with these quick tips. The first thing*
What this accomplishes is including the target KW as close to the beginnning of the description as possible and then it also causes people to want to click through in order to find out the real "how" (even though I may not be using up the full 160 character snippet limit imposed by most search engines).
*I don't always do this but does anyone think that not finishing a complete sentence in the description tag (only the description tag not in the content body of course) is bad?
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Great post. It takes great effort to get the balance of keywords into the title and description, as well as making it enticing to readers.
Thanks, good info. I am in the directory business and am always looking for advice and input. It seems that Google puts a little "penalty" on directory sites. We are now pushing an adwords campaign to clean and produce better up to date information. We are doing the page rank battle right now. At this point www.fast411.com is at a 3 and we are working steadfast to produce a 5 or better. Is it true that Google only updates the page rank about every 1-3 months? I agree with dave lorrez, somethings that google does in completely unexplainable. Again, thanks for the input and I appreciate the work.
This appears to be a very powerful concept, I can't wait to test it out on a few products.
Many thanks,
Michael
Great write up! The last point of "Don't give everything away too early" is certainly interesting. Will do some testing on it.
p.s.
Seems that the images are broken.
unfortunately, server crashed over the weekend and many images, and not only images, are lost.
Thanks for sharing this beneficial information on SEO.But I still wondering why my website https://www.gadgetreader.com can't have huge of visitors. please advise me. thank you.
Really interesting blog post, thanks. Not being an SEO myself I can't say I'd ever thought about a lot of these things in terms our of site, but I would agree that the ordering of metadata words and other small changes is vital - indeed it's something to think about outside of SEO in other types of marketing.
The great thing about the web is that you can quantify things and check these, albeit not perfectly but you can get some great stats pretty quickly to analyse any change in performance. It would be enlightening (but I imagine nigh on impossible) to see click throughs for normal Google searches in the same way you can for Adwords. The SEO's dream?
Thanks for sharing this beneficial information on SEO. This information has been extremely helpful.! You’re great! Always you are rock!
Build relationships online: get to know people in your niche via twitter and commenting on their blogs. People who know, like and trust you are more likely to retweet your content, leave comments, or link to your blog, all of which will lead more visitors to your site. Thanks for your great suggestions
Hey Rob,
I really liked this article, although I do have one tiny question.
How exactly can I achieve the “fake your way into using dynamic keyword insertion for organic search”, I don’t think I ever thought about this technique. Which is actually a very smart one.
But how to achieve it? I mean, for sure you can write articles and include the strings literally as it is, but there should be some easier ways, right?
Thanks a lot.
By not adding meta description to the page.
Google will pull relevant text from the page into the snippet under the link in the SERP's.
This is often to be avouded as you loose control of the message conveyed in the snippet but has the benefit that it will at contain the keywords searched for even fro searches you maybe didn't think the page would rank for.
You can still have a meta description and do this.
If your page is targeting 'engagement ring' then the point is to include long-tail / modified phrases around the keyword where it is mentioned on the page. So, if you mention all of the following:
- choosing an engagement ring
- cheapest engagement ring
- engagement ring guide
- etc
then these will be pulled into the snippet and highlighted when people search for those terms.
A place to start would be to choose a page on your site, look at the terms that it ranks for, then see how you could work those keyphrases that are modified versions of the page's main term into the page's text.
Wait until the modified page has been indexed, and then see what the snippet of the page looks like for those queries.
Great post! I've been doing adwords training lately and we should be applying the same ideas when thinking about an awesome ad creative as we do when writing page titles and meta desc/content so that our conversion is as high as possible - the info about "dont give everything away too early" is so true - I search like that all the time and I always scroll down to see if the answers in the meta desc because i'm too lazy to click into the site!!
Excellent post. Superb copywriting is a powerful tool in the SEOs hands. One can consider it along the same lines as writing powerful copy for a landing page:. The snippet is googles gift to you: an intro to your landing page that has the power to increase your click-through and conversion rates.
Nice piece. I would say there are occasions when it does make sense to "give everything away early". For instance, a business might put its phone number in its homepage meta description, particularly if it knows it has high conversion rates for phone enquiries.
Very true, although I think that most people generally think of that strategy as a strategy for PPC because its essentially free advertising if the user doesn't click but rather calls the number in the PPC ad.
I've been dealing with this scenario since we started ranking for top keywords in the automotive industry. We are a small two man show, and in the search results we are ranked next to big brands like autoanything, jcwhitney and others (if you know anything about the auto industry). Even though we outrank them for a lot of our keywords, we still have a lower CTR. We even tried some test to see if it was title/meta tags, but after changing the meta data, we saw virtually no change. Turns out, BRAND has a LOT to do with CTR, especially the closer to the top of competitive industries you go in the search.
Not to complain, because we are still getting the great traffic from the searches, but in some instances, its just 20-30% less than the major brands we are listed next to.
I also noticed that in product searches SERPS, if we can compete or beat our competitiors on price, we need to get our pricing in the meta tags and get that info out there so they can see it immediately and get another reason to click on our product pages. That may go against the "don't give anything away too early" approach, but like others have said, sometimes the details in SERPS listing are what pull people in.
I think that if you have a particular sales message (better price, free delivery, etc) then that's definitely the kind of thing you would want in the description.
You might even brave a competitive message in your meta description. "XYZ.com is cheaper than JC Whitney for 90% of products! Try us today and save yourself money"
Of course, check your local laws (IANAL), but if the claims are true, then you might be able to pick up some more clicks for a while - at least until they try to sue you.
Good points! The "Don't give everything away too early" advice made me think. It shows how important is the copywriting on every single page of a website. Each sentence is a potential way to attract more traffic even if that sentence is not located on titles or meta-descriptions.
Great post and comments! I love this place.
Here's another tip - have an awesome looking website. A lot of people ctrl+click on multiple results, opening them in new tabs. If your site stands out from the crowd, people will notice.
I agree that having a site that looks good will help with conversions, bounce rate, etc but I have to say I don't really think that it is typical user behaviour to open all of the search results in a new tab and then look at them tab by tab.
Typical user behaviour is to simply click on a result and then if they don't like what they see then just to simply hit the back button or backspace key and then click on the next result they want to see.
This typical user behaviour holds true probably even for the more tech savvy power users that know all of the FireFox/Chrome browser keyboard shortcuts because even if you ctrl+click and then ctrl+tab or ctrl+shift+tab to navigate tabs it's still a time waster to have to do all of that rather than just clicking on a link and then hitting backspace to return to the Google results page (not to mention you have to ctrl+W close down all of the tabs you just opened by using ctrl+click).
Granted, some times you are searching for multiple things and want to use ctrl+click to open multiple pages and get different snippets of information from different sources but in that case it's not a matter of comparing tabs its just simply that you need multiple pieces of info from multiple places.
Interesting post. The image on the youmoz post is completely bogus as they applied the AOL data to local listings in the SERP. To the best of my knowledge the AOL data contained click throughs from organic listings only.
It's a shame that you're linking to https://searchlightdigital.com/the-ultimate-guide-to-serp-click-through-rates which sadly plucked the data used from the original post on this at https://www.redcardinal.ie/search-engine-optimisation/12-08-2006/clickthrough-analysis-of-aol-datatgz/ without any attribution. Not nice when someone takes your work and repackages it as their own :(
Great tips. The "don't give away" portion definitely makes you think. Thanks for sharing.
<a href="https://www.mccloudphotography.com">Justin</a>
Thank you, Mr. Spammer, for not investing 3 seconds, of your very valuable time, to learn how to make your link looking as link.
I like this one. It gaved me a description idea to get click through on my site.
Thanks.