Today I want to share an incredibly simple yet massively powerful process for building search-optimized, "great content." There's no fancy tricks and nothing proprietary about the approach, but it is rare indeed to find an organization that follows these steps and hence, it's a way to potentially differentiate and build a competitive advantage.
Step 1: Build a Survey
No one knows what searchers want better than the searchers themselves, so let's hear what they have to say. To find out, we'll start with a short series of questions asking the survey taker to imagine they've just performed the desired query. Here's an example:
See the full form in action here
The basic structure is simple - request the top 3 content pieces your audience desires, then ask specifically about features that would make the page worthy of sharing (this is important, because it often differs substantively from what makes a page merely answer the user's query). Finally, you can ask them to actually do the search (you don't want them to do it until the end, because what they find might bias their responses) and report any results they liked (which can provide additional insight).
Step 2: Send it to Your Customers / Potential Customers
I cheated and used a tweet:
You can find customers or potential customers virtually anywhere - your friends, neighbors, co-workers, friends on social networks, etc. Anyone who fits your customer demographic or is creative enough to imagine themselves as that demographic will work. A link in the bottom of your email newsletter or a share on Facebook/LinkedIn/Twitter can often do the job, too. You might even try posting a link in a relevant industry forum or discussion group (so long as you're sure it won't be perceived as spammy).
Step 3: Record Responses + Leverage them to Build What the People Want
My Twitter followers are clearly office chair experts because I got some fantastic responses:
There are some fantastic suggestions in there - enough to form a serious roadmap for content generation and to steer me clear of crafting a landing page missing these features (which would likely increase bounce rate, earn less links/shares and, probably, have a lower conversion rate).
It gets even more fleshed-out with the next section:
You can see all the responses to my Tweet here
Simply amazing. I really believe that by following the recommendations of these few, late-night, Twitter-obsessed, good web-samaritans, I could build a page of content better than anything the top 20 at Google or Bing have to offer right now.
When you're doing this formally, collect as many responses as you reasonably can (before all the answers start to look the same) and use your intuition plus the aggregates of the data to make the best page possible. Any feature/content mentioned by 3+ respondents should definitely make the cut. From there, you can learn from what they liked/didn't in the current SERPs and bolster it with any remarkable suggestions they gave for making the page "share-worthy."
That's all there is to it.
And while you're thinking, "He's right! It's so easy... I can do this in 15 minutes tomorrow and have the perfect roadmap to build something searchers will love," you're probably busy and might put this on the back burner for another time. Don't do it! Implement now - even for just one keyword and one page. Even if you only get 2 responses! Heck, you can just fill it out yourself 4 or 5 times with how you think others might respond and it will still give you a better plan than 90% of what's in the top 10 results for most queries.
If you follow this process and have examples to share, I'd love to see them in the comments. Feel free to use live links to your pages, feedback forms or responses. You might even be able to recruit some Moz readers to take your survey :-)
Well, you need
But you might be able to leverage Mechanical Turk or similar for this without paying too much.
Great post.
I agree that it doesn't make sense if you don't have a certain level of followership or personal connection with your target market. But your idea of using Mechanical Turk was really good, if the target query is mainstream. For example, I could see it working very well with a query like "patio furniture" but maybe not so well for "plan achromatic lenses."
Mechanical Turk is what came to my mind as a solution, too. YOu would have to ensure that you could a) target the right market and b) get accurate results (paying people for their opinions often changes their opinions!). It would certainly be worth a try, though.
...or a good network of friends on facebook or linkedin...
I think the key here is to keep the form short.
Love the idea though - anytime I can get someone ELSE to do my work for me, I'm all in. :)
I would not trust Mechanical Turk for this at all.
You dont need 20K Twitter followers either. Most businesses keep email marketing lists, if they dont then they have more to work on then building landing pages, because email marketing is AWESOME!
But I think this could even be done on a relativly small scale using existing and past customer lists.
Great post. Now if only I had time to act on all the great info I get here on a daily basis.
I love the idea but I'd unsure how this would translate into a real world context because the SEO community are quite a helpful bunch and if you tweeted it out people probably wanted to help you out but for customers to do it, even dedicated ones, I think most might want some kind of incentive (well apart from the ones you have a really great relationship with.)
Love the concept though
What about a 5 $ discount when people click send on the form and announced in the beginning? If it is about a more general and deep content rethinking it can be worth.
Anyway, I am not so sure of people greed for everything.
I am always hesitant to offer incentive for opinions. I think it can sacrifice the accuracy of the results. It is the most engaged users that will answer these surveys honestly without an incentive, these are likely the ones consuming your content anyway. I'm always in favor of rewarding, just not incentivizing.
Correct... in reality i was thinking more to a reward system.
For sure, incentivising opinions in such a direct way tends to lead to inaccurate results.
Some kind of giveaway might work?
I'm not talking about greed per se but I do think most people nowadays expect something in return for helping out with research providing feedback etc because it has become the norm.
I like how Rand has tried to incentivise providing feedback by pointing out the improvements in content quality that arise from taking part, if you have a dedicated enough audience then this would work very well.
if you sell products, use free delivery as an incentive (or a free upgrade)
It means you only get answers from people who are real buyers and also make some money ;)
Right, but not all types of companies can incentivise this process.
Lawyers? Recruitment firms? What can you give away for those? I think this would be very tough to translate into real world responses in many cases.
They can add any details to survey simply to get those incentives or extra discount.
For this we should have competent people who is taking survey and must read the details throughly and ask them again if they find anything wrong or not proper (though this is possible only when you interacting with them face to face) ...
But to gather these kind of information through online format will be a tough nut to crack.
This approach works well if you have dedicated account managers that have relationships with customers. You can leverage them to get the survey done. From my experience, this process usually outside the scope of SEO though.
Incentive or extra discount will always work if you want to get this kind of information and data from your customers.
More and more big corporate started to using facebook, twitter and other social media and there is only one reason - to know the nerve of their customers.
I am also a service provider and I also provide once in a month free service to my existing clients and in return I want to know how I can provide more better and user friendly service.
I'd even doubt the effectiveness of an incentive in this case, people who genuinely aren't interested and just want an incentive may not give you accurate data at all.
However, I'm speculating as much as anyone else so I could be completely wrong.
I had some fairly good success doing this last year with a wedding gift website. We got some good results by offering 10% discounts to customers who agreed to take the survey. It was a good tactic that led to some great coverage, even got us some interviews on the radio! It's one of those SEO tactics that comes right out of conventional PR and this can often be the source of many of the most successful SEO approaches.
Great post... that tells one thing: the simplest the better. If we start to over think about content creation we are probably going to have no good content at all.
And a post scriptum to your post for all those business that have a customer care department. Create this forms and instruct the department in order to propose it and do it to all those ones calling you.
And this forms can be also delivered easily using the old but still greatly working Newsletter... if you collect clients data, start using them wisely (they are not collectibles).
But the main drawback is many less big organisation or government wanted to use these kind of strategy.
I love when Nokia or Sony give me option to choose my mobile phone or my lcd by giving all those options are available. This will save my huge time and my brain can relax as well.
Certainly a great post and give food for my brain.
I've been using this techinque extensively - the real problem is people can't really write "quality" writing, but they get to all the points. Take a look at this article for one I ran: https://www.electricbikesexperts.co.uk/electric-bikes-experts-interviews.html
Take it a step further, don the editor hat and use this wealth of crowdsourced knowledge to build a community-curated resource, like this (although the videos are the same "survey snippets" format) https://www.electricbikesexperts.co.uk/benefits-of-electric-bikes.html
What's tricky, in my experience is working with a large group of people and ensuring they're all happy with the content. All bias' have to go out the window - else you'll get lynched! No fun at all...
Nice, why don't you write a youmoz post for us given that you have good experience with this?
What software did you use to conduct the survey?
In the screenshot it's Google Form (part of Google Apps or Google Docs)
Awesome post and the best is the last part. Implement, if you don't do it or try nothing will come.
Very imaginative. There is probably a way to get the survey to be a "cool" type of promotion and less serious. Other than presenting how you did the survey, I find the answers pretty interesting and worth paying attention to :) Thanks for sharing!
Very useful information. Can you share any metrics around how this content performed in comparison to the previous content? Thanks.
Great tip. Simple yet so can so powerful. Now I'm thinking on how I can best use this on my given industry. Ummmm.
I think it's a great idea, you don't have to get all content for everything through it... just use it to help towards making content, combined with what you'd normally do anyway. People seem caught up in seeing it as an all-in-one solution which wouldn't work... but it doesn't have to be that way, it could just be an extra tool :)
Love it, simplicity at its best; "just ask people" Doh, why can't I come up with stuff like that, just done one for my site, it took about 5 mins, and discovered google docs forms too! Thanks looking forward to getting some results now!!!
@ Rand:Its really an awesome way to generating great content. Participation is one factor where your social network will help. My question is: what to do if the question is for a very tight niche and you do not have that many contacts in that niche. How would you approach that?
This is really nice idea getting useful feedback from the users & present them with exact information they are looking for. So are we seeing survey as an effective way of development in future? As with Panda update everything changed, just the a way it did during bigdaddy update.
SEO's are finding various ways to overcome the loss that has already been done & Rand suggesting an idea content generation simple survey is just a small bail-out.
Very useful information. Can you share any metrics around how this content performed in comparison to the previous content? Thanks.
good post thanks for sharing it
Great idea for asking for customer advice with Twitter. I will definitely have to keep that in mind.
Your sample doesn't really ask solely SEO questions.
I think the idea of 'customer survey' is good although not new. It also takes skills to design a good one.
I'd advise to go from general to particular: How do you buy chairs? (to eliminate perhaps those who wouldn't even google this but go to ooffice depot) How would you buy a chair online? (perhaps they will go to the office depot website) What might you type to find new office chairs in Google? etc...
In your question there are lots of question about how to present chairs in an ecommerce. Follow Guy Kawasaki's advise: don't design a product (including your website) by asking your customer... or at least be extra careful if you do it? (are those really potential customers? Aren't you asking the wrong segment? etc...)
Nice read:
https://news.cnet.com/8301-13579_3-20117575-37/what-i-learned-from-steve-jobs/
This is a great idea, I've just posted a survey like this on my blog, asking people what makes a good artist's website.
Any ideas are gratefully received :) - https://artistsitebuilder.com/blog/announcements/help-me-make-better-artists-websites/
Interested idea, thanks for your time.
I saved this article for a long time, waiting for just the right opportunity to give it a whirl. So this weekend, when planning a marketing email campaign for my Venetian plaster business, veneshe.com, I adapted the format to create the survey, added a $25 gift card sweeps as an extra incentive (survey monkey makes this easy to do), and included it in the eamil. Then I scheduled several tweets about it and posted it on our Facebook pages.
We've had only one person take the survey, despite my increasingly pleading tone to the tweets. Does this tweet from @veneshe sound too desperate:
Only 1 response to our survey on #venetianplaster so far - please help? chance to win @giftcard as our thanks #giveaway https://dld.bz/acsfJ
I suppose it's a stark lesson in how little social influence I have :-(, or maybe that asking people to complete a survey with text boxes that make you think and not multiple choice responses, for even a short survey, is a lot to ask.
The survey is open till the end of June - I anticpated a challenge getting responses so I wanted to give myself plenty of time to try various strategies and learn from the experience. Any suggestions or ideas from the community would be most welcome!
This was a great and simple article Randfish. Sometimes as designers and developers, we forget that simple things like this can provide us with a lot of help. And when we need answers catered to our audience, why don’t we just ask them?
Sometimes we think there’s a certain technique or tricks to find out information but more often than not, the information is right in front of you and all you have to do is ask or dig for it.
I’m a student at Seattle Central Community College and currently taking an SEO class so I’m fairly new to the game. However, I’ve been keeping up with the SEOmoz.com blog and always seem to find useful information.
The three steps you mention in the article are simple and basic, and they get you the information you need, from the audience you cater to.
Step 1: Build a Survey
The questions here pinpoint the keywords and content a site needs.
Step 2: Send it to Your Customers and/or Potential Customers
Here you will get direct feedback from your audience. With many different social media outlets, friends, friends of friends, etc, the possibilities are endless.
Step 3: Record Responses and Leverage them to Build What the People Want
Data is recorded and strategically applied to increase the SEO and content of your website.
Anyways, this post is very informative and it’s a simple tool we overlook. I will definitely be using this tool/tip in some of my future website projects.
-Marcus
Superb post and made even more poignant after reading through your webinar on content for local sites and search.
This is a really good idea. Just what I needed to generate some new content for my site. Thanks.
thank you very much. i will try this.
Would this work in the real world? Rand, you're lucky enough to have thousands of followers, something that few people or companies have available to them. In addition, you're a real person, even those companies on Twitter with 10,000 followers don't feel like individuals or real people so I very much doubt the response would be near as positive as one would hope.
I fear this sounds quite negative. I really like the idea and would love it to work, but I seriously doubt it's effective in a real situation.
Rand, I have done work 15 months on Office Chairs website. Right now, my website is on 11th position. I resigned from that job. But, when I optimized my home page to sell Office Chairs in USA so, I just made verbal survey in my social network. I am really happy to read this post which direct point to my 15 months experience. I am 100% agree with your post. Because, If we are on eCommerce market & want to sell products so, we have to understand buyers requirement. If we develop website in close cabin & imagine that: I developed world best website so, It may be wrong because, every mind or searchers have own requirement after search. If buyers want to buy DELL laptop so, we can not approach with HP laptop.
Brilliant post Rand! I've just discovered my morning project.
Great post here, Rand. I did a survey on my site a few weeks ago when trying to figure out next steps on testing a page title issue. It led to not only strategies, but also content for another post.
I think taking this approach and applying it to creation of websites is fantastic too. If you have a social following and an established reputation (which could be really tough for some industries or startups), then attaining feedback should not be too difficult.
Yet another fantastic strategy to implement.
Excellent advice! Sometimes the most simple actions can yield great results. If you don't know what to say on a page of content, get ideas from the horse's mouth and give the people what they want!
Is there something like Feedback Army that would apply well to this sort of thing?
What about a survey tool that lets a community of paid or unpaid folks answer AND vote up others' answers?
You can use Google Docs and their forms. Its nice because it will give you results in a spreadsheet, although there isn't the voting feature you are looking for.
You can add one question as vote, like -
Do you like our service
- Yes
- No
And you will get the details in spreadsheet, from there you can summarise the details.
A couple of weeks ago i luanched a miniwebsite for my products. In short looking for family'w who want to test my products.(children bikes ) Just fill in the form (name , email and why do want to test these products) within a few days over 200 reactions
Next week i mail them l with a promocode in it for now i have great content and an insight what they are looking for and maybe next week some extra sales.
What i did not but do next time , first form very short form and the second with more questions ?in stead of only a short form
Its very difficult for me
I love the post Rand, I'd be interested to see all of the creative ideas people came up with. It stuns me to see how often I run across the same old product grid, and how difficult it can be for me to extract the information required for my purchase from these pages. The idea of brainstorming the best result page for the user is something that businesses need to get serious about if they want to stand out.
Most people who have been in this business a while will likely have created or helped clients create content that ultimately, really missed the mark. It happens, you learn from it and carry on. This approach is useful though, it's so easy to survey nowadays (survey monkey / google docs etc) that there is no excuse to ask your users what it is they want and to deliver on it.
Knowledge is power eh! :)
Rand told me to do it :)
https://www.hotel.info/en/blog/booking-a-hotel/
I would love to see your results though!
heck, I filled it out for you. see how easy this is?
Id love to see your results too!
Please share your results after this survey over.
Would love to see ...
I think you forgot a step Rand: Step 2.1) Incentivize the crap out of your survey! I've found that in quite a lot of niches people aren't very keen on taking survey's if they don't get anything in return, especially if you or your business aren't "household names" like SeoMoz is. So, in come the freebies: a free ebook on ..., access to content about ... no one has ever seen before, a video with in-depth advice on ..., a free consultation via email/phone, etc. As you can see, there are many ways to hook and reel in website visitors for a survey. I do agree with you on how survey's are a kick ass way to get ideas for high quality content.
This is a good idea. It is a very common practice among large businesses to conduct surveys and then submit a press release with their findings. Gives me ideas on how to integrate the press releases that are relevant to my core categories into those pages to create a category-hub. Only hard thing is filtering out all of the financial press releases and just honing in on the meat to link out to :)
Good idea Rand. It's going on my to do list.
I am a bit dubious about the quality and amount of responses we would get, however i've always taken the scientific route in these things and go with what the evidence indicates rather than what I think. There seems to be plenty of good feedback for adding a survey so will give it a go.
I think the quality of response will be in direct promortion with your own authority - therefore the quality of your followers.
Awe sad. None of my responses made it up. Nice turn around time on the post though and great idea :-)
I just done the same thing for a different purpose, a survey to find out the key factors which go into Spiritual Development: https://goo.gl/WdB3S. Later I will publish the results for all to see, which should make for some interesting blog content at my blog https://thedivinewithin.blogspot.com/.
Another idea to encourage response is to have a free gift, ebook/product of some sort which users can download after they have filled in the survey. No responses yet, but it's early days ;)
I must say that your survey is having too many words and making people to keep safe distance from it.
I just checked and within few seconds I closed it.
Keep it simple and reader friendly.
You're right, its definitely a wordy and very long survey, and I'm sure there are better ways to do it, but that's as simple as I could personally make it (especially since there are 116 factors for people to rate and will take 15 minutes to complete!)
Had about 7 responses so far and its just been one day, so seems to be working in spite of that fact...
Also, I WOULD rather make most people keep a safe distance from it, so only those who are truly inspired to contribute will do so, thus hopefully a higher-quality set of data (perhaps this logic is flawed though!)
Thanks for the great tip. I joined today and my first blog content piece excited me :-)
This is also great to get an overview of what customers want from a business and for people like me who work on behalf of businesses in the health and wellness industry it will let me know what kind of thing they are looking for/click on when searching for a therapist online, which I can then share with my clients.
Brilliant stuff.
Diane
I agree and disagree: 1.) Better to use KissInsights or similar tool 2.) Crowd sourcing is only best when it's the right crowd. That said, it's a helpful method and should be given credence, however, voice of customer data should be thoroughly analyzed before it's implemented.
Wow - this required zero original though! I've built a quick survey - copied most of your questions and tailored it a bit for our needs. I also posted a link from our homepage to the survey and we're giving away a $250 gift certificate for every 100 entries.
Check out the survey: https://www.since1910.com/engagement-ring-survey.aspx
80 fully filled out forms in 15 minutes! Some good insight here!
Thanks Rand!
Surveys and customer feedback is always great however with ideas such as this getting the feedback is usually the easy part. The work starts when you have to try and impliment the suggestions that people make which either require a large amount of development time or your own time, not to mention actaully mnaking the content fit within your current setup.
Great post though and something I would certainly recommend doing if you have not already tired this.
What a fantastic idea Rand.
Thank you.
I ran a survey on one of my sites a couple of months ago, but never thought to take the information and use it for content.
Brilliant!
Developing great content for SEO has never been simple. A content which is great (get lot of sharing and some links) on one website might perform poorly (little to no sharing/links) on some other website. This is because no content is great by itself. It is what people (your target audience) make it. So if I don't have those target audience which can provide such greatness to my contents, i will have a hard time achieving greatness (shares, links). So when my clients ask me why my good contents are not great, i ask them to build a network of target audience first who can recognize their greatness. The one who shows interest in what you say. Becuase if people have no interest in what you say/do, your surveys or any social media effort will fall flat on the ground. Here is what i do to turn good contents into great:
1. Build/Hire subject matter expertise to develop authority in your niche.
2. Develop a network of target audience to whom you can demonstrate your expertise.
3. Develop unique informative contents.
Often marketers/webmasters jump straight to step 3 cos of lack of time, resources or inclination and generally end up with contents which fail to become great. I know this is all very time consuming. But then if I already don't have a fan following like seomoz then i don't see any other option. On a side note I use zemanta, postrank, yahoo pipes and thecadmus to get content ideas. Through these free tools I can easily review and filter articles, blog posts, tweets etc and quickly get ideas for developing contents which my target audience would most probably share with others.
It's a great idea. My site drives conversions within the first visit so I don't want to confront my visitors straight away. Perhaps it could go after the lead was generated? These results are obviously pricess, however I'm not sure for my industry I could get them through this method :(