[Estimated read time: 7 minutes]
Over the past 9 years, I’ve probably attended hundreds of marketing conferences. In the early days, I was an attendee there to learn all the things. Then after I started at Moz, I attended them as “press” and I would write about the conference on the Moz blog and live-tweet and such. At some point along the way I began to speak at different events: first about SEO, then social media, now community, and all the marketing in between.
At every conference I attend, no matter what my role is, I try to walk away with one tactic, one idea, one thing I can take back to my team and test, or implement, or even just understand better. After so many events, though, it can be difficult. Certainly not because I know all the things, and not because the speakers aren’t giving out excellent advice — but because after so many events, it all starts to sound the same. It’s not the same, of course (except for those few times I’ve attended the same conference two years in a row and saw the exact same presentation from a couple folks. Yikes!).
As I mature as a marketer, I’m finding myself walking away from excellent events, not with one specific tactic or idea, but with an entire theme. And that the theme, the group of ideas and discussions, are what I really get out of the event.
For example, at MozCon 2015, the theme for me was “disruption.” Now, this wasn’t the actual theme of the conference, but the part that stuck out to me from many of the talks was the idea that you can disrupt your industry and, sometimes more importantly, yourself. Since then, the idea of disruption has constantly been top-of-mind. Asking things like how will this shake things up, how will this make a difference, why would we do this? Ronell Smith recently wrote about how brands can find their disruptive opportunity.
The theme of SearchFest for me
Today, a few days out of SearchFest 2016, I find myself excited about the theme of “continuous improvement” or “kaizen.” In fact, one of the sessions specifically called kaizen out, which was when it hit me like a ton of bricks. After the session, I had a discussion with Sha Menz, one of the speakers on the topic, and I realized then that this was my theme.
While kaizen began as a Japanese business philosophy of making continuous improvement, it’s now used often in production systems as a way of making positive changes on a regular basis, as to improve productivity.
It’s the idea that in order to get better, you need everyone working on a project to help make suggestions and improve the process all the time. Imagine doing this with your marketing and your team.
#1 is simply not enough
Our own Dr. Pete was the morning keynote at SearchFest this year. He dug into Google SERPs and helped us understand the importance and opportunities of index-generated answers. Pete made it very clear to everyone that if you want to jump the organic queue, you have to rank #0. Yea, that’s right. Being #1 simply isn’t good enough anymore.
But how do you even do that? Pete gave some specific tactics on how to find out which pages to optimize and what things to care about. Here are three ways Pete talked about getting incrementally better at ranking the ultimate #0:
- Check to see if you have a featured snippet for a “who is,” “what is,” “how is” type of terms, then make sure it’s optimized the way you want it to show up. Below is my snippet, and although my Moz profile and personal blog rank #1 and #2, you can see that my Huffington Post author profile is pulling in #0. And it’s wrong! Yikes. I need to get in there and fix it. Then my next incremental step will be to get my Moz profile to rank #0 instead. :D
- Once you’ve cleaned up the content that’s already showing up in the snippets, find phrases that you’d like to bump yourself up to #0 for. For example, in this scenario, I searched for “what is mozcon” and our Eventbrite page gets the #0 spot, while we’re in the low, low spot of #1. Obviously this one is “okay,” but definitely not ideal. We want folks to get the full MozCon experience by coming to our site. We’ll start working on making incremental changes to the actual MozCon page in order to take over that top spot.
To get the most out of Dr. Pete’s talk, be sure to check out his full presentation:
The Internet of things
Cindy Krum, one of my favorite mobile experts, piqued my interest when she started talking about “the Internet of things” and how that really was the same thing as “The SEO of things.” She was talking about how on mobile devices, you don’t just optimize for Google search, then boom you’re done. No, you have to think about Mobile SEO, Google Now, Google Local, App stores, iTunes, Google Play... and the list went on and on.
She hit this point home by not stressing about DOING ALL THE THINGS, but that by focusing on continuous incremental changes, it would lead to exponential growth (usually when you least expect it).
During the same session, Justin Briggs talked about some specific tactics you could do to enhance your mobile rankings and experience for visitors. Here are a few that he covered:
- Figure out the traffic you’ve lost because of poor UX for mobile. Knowing which pages are losing the most traffic because of a mobile experience can help you figure out what to work on first.
- I also really liked the idea of calculating the differences between mobile landing pages:
- Thumbnails are super important when it comes to keeping engagement high on mobile. He offered these tips:
- Increase saturation in thumbnails 20–30% to attract clicks
- Slightly over-sharpen thumbnails to improve visual experience on small thumbnails
- Repeat text elements from image/video title
- Use faces and emotion to connect to visitors & entice clicks
Want more of Justin’s tips? Check out his full deck:
Mobile SEO: Closing the Mobile Search Strategy Gap from Justin Briggs
Kaizen-style marketing
Although Sha Menz and Jon Cooper specifically talked about kaizen-style link building, it really hit me at this point in the day that this is what we should all be striving for. I loved the idea of making continuous, incremental improvements to how you do marketing, including everyone on your team, and perhaps even the entire company.
Take a peek at Sha's presentation, and take special notice at how she talks about striving to do better in everything we do, every time we do it.
Kaizen Link Building - Embracing Your Pursuit Of The Unattainable from Sha Menz
Jon Cooper pulls a lot of this together in his deck, even though it's focused on link building. You can picture how to make this work in all Marketing. Plus, I love his tip about using the "X..Y" search operator (slide 37).
Imagine a world where your SEO, Social, Content, Branding, PPC, and PR teams worked together like a well-oiled machine. Because each and every person on the team was working toward the making continuous improvements of the greater goals, and not just their own small individual goals. And I know this exactly what I hope for within the Moz marketing team.
Bringing it all together
As I mentioned on Twitter during the conference last week, the biggest issue I have with multi-track events is that I have to miss some of the talks. I’m sure I missed a lot of really great information from some excellent speakers.
At the very end of the event, it was announced that SearchFest would be changing their name. Since the conference has expanded to be beyond just search, the new name, beginning in 2017, will be Engage.
I seriously had one of those “aha!” experiences when this was announced. It wasn’t because the word “engage” meant a lot to me — it was the idea of improving. It seemed to perfectly tie together my personal takeaway theme from SearchFest. And it has inspired me to be a better leader and marketer by working to continuously improve.
PS – If all else fails, do the chicken dance.
PPS – If you're interested in seeing my deck from SearchFest, you can find it here.
Fantastic recap Jen! I really enjoyed your takeaways and how you approach conferences. I've attended a few conferences myself and try to recap all of it and often times it comes across very jumbled. I will try your approach of one idea to take action on and recapping as a theme.
Thanks Shawn! I started getting to a point where I was feeling like I wasn't getting anything out of conferences, which was ridiculous as there's always great information. Once I started focusing on big themes, I found that I'd get so much out of them. My favorite was last year I attended a Women's Leadership Conference and the theme for me was "storytelling." I decided to do an Ignite talk, which forced me to hone my storytelling skills, then for my next marketing presentation, I put it together in a completely different way than I used to. I feel like it was my best talk to date. Mostly because I focused on the story I was telling, and not my bulleted list of items I wanted to get out.
Well that was a long way to say thank you. :D
I love how you spoke on how you first started and your goal to learn everything, but from your different perspective of going as press allowed you see deeper into the industry. Great work I have been following your post and insight for a long time now at Moz and what you share is amazing. Also Kaizen is my new term for marketing and all things I am trying to attain why worry about #1 when #0 is so much better.
Great!!
I think one of the secrets of marketing is that we can always teach, and above all learn from others. We will never know everything, and that's what makes it magical !!!
Congratulations for the post
Awesome post, Jen! I almost feel like I've attended the event - or even better, got all the valuable bits without spending a heap of time travelling and being there! Thank you so much for the summary.
Would love to see more posts like this on the blog :)
Really glad you enjoyed it!
Putting the focus on what the client (or your project) is missing, is a nice way of showing the client what can be done and improved. Thank you for this post!
Amazing story! Thanks for your recap! Well done and be happy! :)
I am very glad to read about "continuous improvements" it is the best tool for get success,achieve any type of goal or as well as SEO also.
Jen, this is such a great redux on SearchFest. Thank you! Couldn't agree more about the kaizen theme. I'll add one more: Right after your (excellent!) talk with Matt, Kristy Bolsinger and Allison Hartsoe gave an insightful overview on understanding the full spectrum of customer experience and using the right data for insights. They both echoed the need for ongoing, incremental improvement that brings deeper understanding and connection, and better results.
What a great in depth article - I went on a frenzy after reading the Google Answers tip on who is and where is etc. I went off for 3 hours just looking into that and trying my hardest to come up with some cool ways to implement them on my sites, thanks.
I have never been to anything like this and wonder where in the UK is the searchfest occuring?
Hi James! Haha I pretty much did the same thing looking up all the who is and where is stuff. :D Glad it was helpful!
What it comes to the UK, I know that SearchLove London from the folks at Distilled has received great reviews in the past. Check them out!
Thanks for the recap - I'm definitely going to borrow that UX data to convince some of my clients who have terrible sites to re-design with UX in mind.
Hi Jennifer
Such an amzing efforts...those who didn't attend the SearchFest they can get the falvour of it through your post. Thank you for sharing your great exposure there.
I never attained any marketing conference but I am glad to learn a lot from your experiences and things you learned from searchfest. Thanks Jennita for making us aware about kaizen marketing and sharing the Peter's "SEO for Answers".
I am going to make a chart of my webpages those having snippets for mostly been asked questions and will make sure to fix them as soon as possible.
Hello Jennita,
Thanks for sharing. I like the Kaizen concept. In any marketing startegy continious improvement and effor is required. Its more like a circle. You will start with a point and do all the effort to solve. Once you will complete the full circle you will reach to the same question again but in more advanced form. Because when you have left that question and moved ahead, someone was still studying.
Regards,
Vikas Singh
Jennifer,
Thank you for the great post. I recently went to SMX West and had similar feelings about taking away a theme and making incremental changes for exponential growth. This post helped me to generate ideas and really dig deep.
-Ray
Wonderful! Glad I could help. :)
Hi Jennifer,
Thank you for the insights and the kaizen spirit. Always improving yourself, your site, your company is the way of success. You don’t need to work on everything but just keep focus on your most important thing: the one thing.
I love this. And "the one thing" isn't always the same thing. All you can do is keep improving, even the little small changes are an improvement. As Cindy mentioned in her talk, at some point those small changes lead to exponential growth. :)
Question about the site: + question query.
(Tried reaching out to Dr. Pete on twitter but haven't heard back)
If you do this and the result does not display a featured snippet... does this mean something is wrong in regards to how the page is programmed? Or you haven't displayed enough signals to Google that you are positioning something as an answer?
I have a page that is 100% queued up for an answer box. Headline has "What is ___?" The next two lines answers that question. And the rest of the page provides terrific supplementary material to support that answer.
We rank #1 for that search. We rank #1 for that search WITHOUT the "what is." But for that search without the "what is" a competitor who bounces between #4 and #5 and has 1/4 of our page authority has an answer box result.
It's driving me NUTS trying to bump them off when I feel like I'm positioning the content in a way that it should be!
Any ideas?
Hey, sorry... still catching up on the post-show tweet stream.
Is the query with "What is..." not showing a Featured Snippet at all, or just not showing one when you add "site:"?
Oh totally get it. It's Monday AM; who tweets during the weekend anyway ;)
Both queries without the "site:" parameter show featured snippets. That is, the two-word phrase and the "what is (two word phrase)."
Can take this offline, if you'd prefer. That way I can give you specific examples which I'm not doing here.
The question really revolves around why when I was trying that "trick" you mentioned in your deck (site:domain.com [two word phrase] and site:domain.com what is [two word phrase]) it wasn't showing up when I thought I understood that it should be.
If the general query has a snippet but you're site doesn't, I'm afraid we're left with guesswork. It could be Google doesn't consider any of your pages to be a good match to the question, or it could represent some kind of technical problem parsing content. The latter seems unlike if the page is ranking well. The former is trickier, because it seems like Google's view of what's a "good match" is still pretty unsophisticated right now. They're frequently getting it wrong.
One thing I'm hearing, anecdotally, is that Google may prefer certain formats for certain questions. So, if you see Google parsing the Featured Snippet as a bulleted list (for example), you may need to work your page into list format.
Feel free to let me know what the query is via Moz DM, if you'd like. I'm curious, but I doubt I'll have any clear answers. We're all in the guesswork phase on it right now.
What a great way to catch up on the nuggets from events we miss! So many industry giants there. Thank you, Jennifer Lopez! Now I will be watching and applauding as you move up to #0.
It was a nice reminder by Jon Cooper to use URLprofiler.com
I would love your honest evaluation of my article on <a href="https://www.hillwebcreations.com/google-knowledge-..." title="Google Knowledge Graph and Featured snippets">Google Knowledge Graph and Featured snippets</a>
I am curious, are you finding it easier to get featured snippets when using schema markup that is visible on the page?
This is such a good post! I'm glad that you could grow in the field you love; wish everyone'd be so lucky :D
We do this at work too. The idea you do an improvement kata to help you move the needle on a large or hard test. The ability to break it down and keep chipping away at the idea until you start to see movement is impression. I've done a lot of this years work around ad copy and trying to double my CTR across a few major account. I'm still not where I want to be but I've seen an improvement in numbers.
Awesome to see how articulately you put forward the concept of "each and every person on the team was working toward the making continuous improvements of the greater goals". It is what we should all strive for!
Great info again. Thanks jennita
Amazing videos
Thanks for showing us your experience and make a fantastic summary
Wonderful article. I sure gained a lot from this.
Great, I am looking forward to being on the first page of google search , but #0 is really a big accomplishment, though it is a long way to go
Good point about taking home theme from conferences. And love your story from listener to teacher. Well done Jen, love your posts. Thank you for sharing
it is really good ,Thanks for sharing
Todo muy bien argumentado y muy bien Explicado Hay Que Ver de Una Cosa tan facil lo Que Se Puede Llegar a lograr.
Thanks for sharing, very good article
For us beginners we are so happy to read this insipirational blog posts, thanks for your efforts
Wow, it is fascinating! However, you forget to mention about an alluring content that can capture audiences' attention. I think that it is also a necessary thing to consider!