This session was pretty rife with Canadian search statistics (but in an interesting way). According to Ken Headrick from MSN Canada, Canadians made 12 billion search queries in 2006 and 1.4 billion queries in April 2007. Searching is the #2 activity that Canadians do (I'm assuming that the #1 activity is either wrestling moose or harvesting maple syrup). Ken also mentioned that, in Canada, searcher loyalty is declining. In February 2007 10.4 million searchers were uncommitted to a specific search engine, and the number jumped to 13.1 million in April 2007.
Jeff Lancaster from 24/7 Real Media talked about a variety of up and coming search engines, such as Kanoodle and Miva, and regional engines like La Toile du Quebec and Networld Media. He said that local search in Canada is still in the developmental stage, meaning that if it's an underutilized opportunity in the United States, it's a veritable goldmine up north. Jeff concluded that successful search marketers in Canada use a well-balanced approach to search, and that it's important to know your customer and know what works.
Guillaume Bouchard, friend of SEOmoz, talked about French Canadian search. Only 38% of French Canadians make online purchases because 80% of Frenchies purchase using debit, which often isn't supported online. The Quebec search landscape is more experienced than France, and Guillaume shared some search strings with the audience to show that a higher percentage of French Canadians perform long tail searches than French searchers. Montreal is a bilingual city, with 50% speaking English and 50% speaking French (if you go outside of Montreal it skews more towards 90% French). Guillaume then shared some interesting strengths and weaknesses of various search engines.
Guillaume presenting
Martin Byrne from YSM Canada said that Canadian searchers are more "conservative" than U.S. searchers. They are cautious consumers who will look at, on average, 2.5 brands prior to making a purchase--they are knowledge seekers and like variety, choice, and exploring the alternative. Searching also often leads Canadian consumers to new brands--the top ranking positions in search often convey perceptions of leadership, and ultimately drive traffic. Martin also noted that Canadians spend a "dismal" amount on search marketing, with 47% saying that it's too expensive, 27% saying they don't know enough about it or how to get started, and 20% saying they don't have enough resources to manage it.
Eric Morris from Google Canada also mentioned that Canada has a less competitive ad market. He added that, according to Google's Traffic Estimator, French Canadian terms are less competitive and are more heavily discounted vs. English Canadian terms, which makes for a great ad opportunity. However, there are some subtleties in the French market, such as a more rigid grammar, more synonyms (e.g. auto, autos, char, chars, voiture), and longer words.
I found this session to be very interesting in that I didn't know much about how the Canadian search landscape compares to the U.S.'s. Paid search is really an underutilized platform in Canada, and the French Canadian landscape is even more so overlooked. Overall, I found SES Toronto to be a nice little conference, though I would have liked to see even more of a Canadian emphasis.
Anyway, I'll end this post with some photos and some thank yous: Thanks to Ken Jurina and Matt Glass for arranging travel and a dinner venue, and thanks to Epiar, Acquisio, NVI, and Adviso for splitting the bill with us. Dinner was fun, drinks in Joe Morin's suite was crazy, and a 3:30 am run to Tim Hortons was scary. Thanks also to my weird cab driver for talking about various fruits non-stop from the airport to the hotel, and for insisting that I take a handful of rambutan with me (I'm not kidding, he gave me four). Lastly, it was great to meet some of the NVI crew--Eric, Francis, and Matt, you guys rock and are welcome to visit Seattle any time (I really have to schedule a trip to Montreal to hang out with all of my new Frenchy friends).
A gift from my cabbie
Rand, Mona, and Ken at dinner
Settling the big bill
Guillaume, me, Matt, Francis, and Eric (and Rand's head in the corner)
Settling the big bill
Guillaume, me, Matt, Francis, and Eric (and Rand's head in the corner)
Rand has more photos of SES Toronto that we'll probably share soon, including, I hope, one of the Link Bait panel that I participated on. Speaking of that panel, I thought I did much better than my first presentation at SEMpdx (I even had a cheering section!), so thanks to all of the folks who attended that session and gave me kudos. :)
UPDATE From Rand: I've added a few photos of slides from the Canadian Search Landscape session that I found particularly interesting/relevant:
Enjoy :)
UPDATE From Rand: I've added a few photos of slides from the Canadian Search Landscape session that I found particularly interesting/relevant:
Enjoy :)
Rebecca - thanks for the coverage. I have a few photos of slides that I'll try to insert into the post in the next few hours.
I do want to say that Rebecca did a terrific job. Joe Morin and I sat next to each other in great respect of your ability to keep the audience excited, interested and comfortable. Those "first timers" shakes are all gone - congrats!
Thanks Rand--you were like a proud poppa sitting in the audience. :D
That conference was a blast. Thanks for spending the night with all of us, it was great :D
Going to bed at 7-8am on Wednesday morning and driving back 5hours to Montreal was awesome... especially Toronto's traffic.
And I lost my SES virginty :D
I honestly don't know how you do it...it's awe-inspiring...
...hey, now that I think about it, I lost my SES virginity, too! (Though that sounds pretty dirty...)
You'll never forget your first!
Rebecca, if you ask the average Canadian what our number one activity is, I'm sure it has something to do with Hockey :D. Moose wresting a close third.
That or curling, right?
One of our #1 activities is listening to The Tragically Hip. They've been selling out Hockey Arena's here for 15+ years and probably didn't sell out The Moore Theatre while in Seattle back in March.
We are a little out to lunch here on SEO/SEM. Here is an example. A small firm my friend runs just finished a full re-design for a division of a Large U.S. Food Co. here in Toronto under a .ca domain. The food giant invested 100k into the site and continues to use this firmto manage all their email-list needs.
Well I spent 30 minutes with my friends at a cafe and ran the domain, obvious keywords like their brand and the type of food and their main competition thru some Tools etc. The search results and link situation were no short of embarassing for a Company of this size or should I point the finger at my friends who have a decade in the business of design and email marketing.
They now realize now there is money sitting on the table (or as I pointed out serious exposure for another firm to approach and finish the job.)
So to the veterans... when you do land an appointment to discuss a situation like this here in Toronto... many prospects require a serious Education 101...before you can present the investment. Most would then ask themselves.. well why didn't are web guys tell us this?
How do you run through that conversation? Fairly new to this trade and enjoy the community here.
Thanks,
Jeff
I like The Tragically Hip. I saw them in concert in Detroit a number of years back. :D
I've never seen moose wrestle, but hockey or curling would be impressive... not sure how they'd hold the sticks though? Quite the sight indeed, eh!
Tim Horton's at 3:30 AM! that really was a let down. I would have paid 1 week's salary for a poutine that night. In Montreal we don't have to revert to depressing Tim Hortons at 3:30 AM. We have 24/7 poutine places all over!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Was that only 3:30am? How did it take till 5 to get back to the hotel?
guys... I think I may have been abducted by aliens tuesday. seriously. Does anybody remember any small gray creatures that night other than the tim hortons staff?
Tim's is HUGE in Buffalo, NY. Not at 3AM though.. Garbage Plates FTW!
Oh god. Poutine.
I knew a Frenchie-Canadian from my online gaming era (i.e. college) who would regale us with epic homages to poutine.
I'm pretty sure I know what my first and last meal when I hit Quebec will be.
NVI has convinced Rebecca that French canadian area is better than US :P
Well, for anyone who thought Canada was a similar virtual landscape to the US, this is news!
Couldn't have said it better. When I heard canadian search landscape I thought "pfft. What's the big deal. It's the same as here."
Obviously my ignorance is ahead of me. I couldn't have been more wrong.
Canada has a search landscape? News to me! J/K I love all my neighbors to the north.
The demographics are interesting and there is no doubt that the way different countries search is certainly not the same as US search trends. The newer niche search engines including the local listing services should be hot up there and for surfers who visit Canada.
Look forward to the SMX stuff and the COMICS, procrastinators!
Glad you're feeling better and back in Seattle posting again, we all missed you while you were gone.
We had a fun time with you out of the office...our desk was used to make a fort in the back room!
You forgot the, eh ! I was surprised that American's even knew where Toronto was ! Hey, I had to add some kind of American stereotype from a Canadian ;) OK, so some Canadian Internet usage numbers are low (remember we are a lot smaller in population), but as a percentage of population, reports show stronger Canadian then US numbers in certain areas. I had put together a blog post outlining the differences and other online Canadian statistics.
Interesting article. I didn't know that only 38% of Canadians are buying online, it makes me want to re-think my marketing strategies for Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Being an SEO Montreal firm [link removed] doing a lot of organic search marketing and PPC with Google Adwords and Facebook Ads this article helps me to re-design my campaigns.
Please note that this post is seven years old, and the information is out of date. Feel free to browse the Moz site from the most recent posts for more current information. All of our comment links are NoFollow, so there's no need to use the blog for link building.
To complete this overview of the Canadian Search Landscape you can check out this study on behaviour and attitude of French Canadians when searching on the web conducted by SEM Agency Skooiz.com available via their blog here
Also feel free to share with me any regional data regarding search habits across the world. It would be very interesting to compare international results.
Rebecca, nice wrap up of SES Toronto. It was my first SES conference and I found it very informative and filled with good speakers (though some I could do without). In response to your "wrestling moose or harvesting maple syrup"... I believe the more accurate Canadian stereotype would be "frying up some back bacon & cracking open a few stubbies (full credit to Bob and Doug Mackenzie). Enjoyed the link bate panel, thanks for coming up to Toronto and hope to see you and the SEOmoz team at future shows.
I love reading what everyone gets up to at these various conferences and events but it makes me sad as I'm down on the other side of the world in Australia and as far as I'm aware we don't have anything like this.
I understand that this is a supply-and-demand thing and since Australia's search industry is still a little infantile there simply isn't the demand for such things...
But I would love to be proven wrong - any Aussies out there... come say Hi and perhaps we can get an event organised down here.
Thanks again Rebecca and Rand for your updates on SMX recently... Keep up the great work!
Oh man, I'd beg Rand to send me to Australia for a search conference.
Let the begging begin :)
I'm sure I speak for all Aussie's who are members of SEOmoz - we'd love to have you visit down-under (no pun intended).
Come to Cape Town, Rebecca. Much more beautiful, possibly closer, part of Africa (and we South Africans can play better rugby...)
Must say the article got me wondering that if Canada can be that different, how different must Australia be, and how complete-other-universe South Africa and the Middle East (some of the areas I get involved in for work) must be.
I would love to visit Cape Town. I'm just excited at the possibility of traveling anywhere. :)
As a South African living in Australia, I'm torn. Choose either one, I'm due a visit back :P
I'm South African living in Canada, and I know why Canadians search so much, it's because there are so few local sites, you really have to 'search' to find anything, and I usually end up on a US site anyway :), I'd be happy to zip home to CT too - anytime!!!
It's interesting that someone from Yahoo of all places would point that out, because Yahoo was the last of the big 3 search engines to provide country-level geotargeting for ads. Before the Panama release, Canadian advertisers could advertise either to French Canadians, to all of North America, or not at all; there wasn't a way to target Canadians only or specific provinces.
But advertisers do need to realize the benefits of search engine marketing. Gord Hotchkiss has a good wake up call on his Ask Enquiro blog. :-)
"Fish," it was nice meeting you at the conference!
Yeah, I never could figure out that Yahoo Canada thing being en francais.
Nice one :) I'll write something more helpful tomorrow, when i have more time, and have re-read this. But it looks shiny.
Go Boowrecka! :p
Hmm....those are interesting stats.
We are close to launching a .ca for our brothers and sisters up north...but I might sugggest we put that on hold till we get a French version of our content.
thanks, Rebecca!
It is friggen hilarious that I missed Toronto SES by so close, I wish I could have been there.
I am moving to Toronto in three days!
I love moving to cities with conferences a few days after they happen.
Welcome back Rebecca. Sorry you were sick, sound crapilicious.
Nice timing, Pat. :P
I tried marketing for a client in Canada before w/o much luck. The search aspect was successful, but the service we were selling had its advertising restricted in other mediums, like print. We couldn't buy a magazine ad in any publication.
Our brandng suffered, and it never took off there like it did in other markets.
Great stuff in here though, Rebecca. I just realized I knew nothing about search in Canada. Add it to the list, I guess. :)