Posts Tagged ‘Search Engine Optimisation’


I read an interesting article recently comparing the search volume for SEO Vs. Social Media overseas and this got me thinking about what these trends are for us Aussies!

I guessed prior to searching that Social Media searches would far outrank SEO, however, I was somewhat surprised when the results came back …

seovssocialmedia_search

Now you can see in the news reference volume (bottom graph) that Social Media has taken the lead, however, my interest is peaked and more centred on the search volume (top graph) where SEO is still being searched more often than Social Media.

It is interesting that even during the hype and immense news coverage of Social Media, that Search Engine Optimisation is still a force to be reckoned with!

So what does this mean?

While interest in Australia is growing on the Social Media topic, ranking in a top search result position on Google or Bing is still higher on the agenda for most Australians and with the number of small businesses in Australia, I would hazard a guess that it is the business community that is the driving force behind this search trend.

Social Media is emerging as a fantastic opportunity for the small to medium  business to compete on a level playing field with large budgeted business, but maintaining the basics of web marketing should still be high on the SMB agenda. And, since the advent of social appearing on searches, combining the two could be the internet marketing answer that most businesses are looking for.

What about you?

Are you a small to medium business utilising the web as part of your marketing mix? Do you combine your SEO with your social media and your email marketing to achieve search result domination?

Or have you chosen to focus your digital marketing efforts in one place?

We’d love to hear from you in the comments!

ISP Media Internet Marketing Services

Search Marketing Methods

View CommentsPosted by ISP Media on May 13th, 2010


The main methods used for achieving the goals of Search marketing are Search Engine Optimisation (for organic listings), Bid Management (for paid listings) and Web Analytics (for both types of listings).

Search Engine Optimisation (SEO)

SEO is about changing the HTML code of your pages and the structure of your site in such a way that when an SE robot reads the site, it can understand that the pages have valuable content related to your keywords, and then rank them high. SEO also tells about ways to increase your link popularity – the number of links from other high-ranked pages to your site. This is important because most search engines consider your link popularity a vital ranking factor.

Bid Management (BM)

BM is about controlling bids, i.e. the amount of money you spend maintaining your visibility in the sponsored listings. Usually you try to detect the best converting keywords and keyword groups, in order to increase bids on them; as well as decrease or take off bids on keywords that don’t break even. Attention also should be paid to leveraging your paid and organic listings, so to spend less on paid advertising campaigns when you get enough traffic from natural results, and invest in paid advertising when an algorithm changes or strong competitors force you out from the top positions in the organic listings.

Web Analytics (WA)

WA is about getting, analysing and using the information about your visitors, their details, their behavior on your site, the ways they have found your site, the efficiency of referrers and advertising, conversion rates, and, together with all that, eCommerce information.

So here’s what you should remember from this post:

  1. Search Marketing, or Search Engine Marketing, or SEM, is the aggregate of efforts aiming at increasing your search engine visibility.
  2. SEM deals with your organic and paid listings on the search engines.
  3. SEM includes and uses the techniques of Search Engine Optimisation, Bid Management and Web Analytics.

Where Do The Best Online Customers Come From

View CommentsPosted by ISP Media on April 22nd, 2010


Did you know that people who come from search engines are self-motivated, and are considered the best buyers.

According to WebCEO.com statistics for the first 3 months of 2010, visitors from search engines buy 3.6 times more often than visitors from sites, and 2 times more often than visitors from paid ads and bookmarks.

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Top 5 Bing SEO Tips

View CommentsPosted by ISP Media on January 7th, 2010


  1. Backlinks - Backlinks are no longer the be all and end all of SEO. They are not as important for Bing as they are for Google.
  2. Links – In-bound links are supreme for Bing – and the anchor text matters most. Links from websites that say “click here” are nowhere near as important as links that use an important keyword. Quality anchor text does well in both Bing and Google.
  3. Link Spamming – this won’t help you much for Bing SEO. The quality of backlinks is most important, not the quantity. Link spamming is just as worthless for Google SEO as well.
  4. Domain Name – The age of a domain name is very important for Bing.
  5. Bing is more Flash-friendly than Google is – at the moment. Optimising a Flash site for Google has always been a bit of a nightmare. It is still too early to say for sure, but it does appear that for now, Bing appears to be flash-friendly in its results.

The Internet Marketing Acronym War

View CommentsPosted by ISP Media on October 6th, 2009


SEO – SEM – SEA – PFP – PPC – PPA – SM – LM – CD ….

Where does it end and what does it mean?

Nowadays, the Internet marketing industry has become a complicated and branchy science involving a great deal of theoretical knowledge in combination with applied techniques. As a science, it ranges from browser-side and server-side programming and coding on one end, to marketing and economics on the other.

Internet marketing means the use of the Internet to advertise and sell goods and services. It includes Banner and Text Advertising, Email Marketing, Interactive Advertising, Affiliate Marketing and Search Engine Marketing (including Search Engine Optimization and Pay-Per-Click Advertising).

So let us take a look at SEO.

SEO is not to be confused with Search Engine Marketing (SEM), as they are two very different techniques with very different connotations and outcomes. Search Engine Marketing, or SEM, is a form of Internet marketing that seeks to promote web sites by increasing their visibility in search engines result pages through the use of paid placement, contextual advertising and paid inclusion.

Search Engine Optimisation, or SEO, is defined as the fundamental process of improving the volume or quality of traffic to a website from search engines via “natural” (organic or algorithmic) search results.

Without doubt, for the vast majority of businesses, organic SEO provides the highest possible Return on Investment (ROI ) and affordability of all Internet marketing and promotional activities.

Organic Vs. Paid

Organic Vs. Paid

SEO is literally the foundation to your success online – think of it as the platform from which you can launch all of your other Internet Marketing strategies from.

As an Internet marketing strategy, SEO considers how search engines work and what people search for. Optimising a website primarily involves editing its content and Hyper Text Markup Language (HTML) and associated coding to both increase its relevance to specific keywords and to remove barriers to the indexing activities of search engines.

There are many types of search engines including meta, pay-for-performance and human-powered, however, most of us are more familiar with the most common type, the crawler-based engines e.g. Google, Bing and Yahoo!.

TIP: It is important to know that most search engines are powered from Google and Bing, and while you may not rank accordingly on the other smaller or niche search engines, you will at the very least be listed or indexed.  This is important for Small Business owners as it means you can focus your Search Engine Optimisation efforts.

SEO is a specialised field of internet marketing that requires the skills to not only understand the search engines requirements, but also the ability to manipulate code and web site, it is a scientific process and it can take up to 3 months for you to actually begin seeing genuine results if your site is under-optimised or brand new to the web.

Once you get going and then regularly maintain your optimisation, you can experience great results like increased traffic through your higher rank on the search engine results pages. Then it is up to you to do what you do best – convert the leads into paying customers and grow your business.

 Happy optimising!

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