Posts on State of Search about ‘Research’

5 Insights for Christmas 2012

How was your summer? Looking forward to Christmas? Wait, its early June, what the … are you talking about? Christmas?

It’s not the bad weather which makes me ask this, we are still hoping for a good summer. But as James Murray pointed out in his last post about contact lenses it might be a smart idea to look forward. So why not look at Christmas already?

Experian made the video below as an introduction to one of their webinars. It gives you 5 insights for Christmas 2012.

Did you know for example that customers like to open e-mails more when Christmas time comes around? But that they are more tempted to spend when that Christmas e-mail is sent in November? And that Cyber Monday this year will be on December 3rd? Experian also expects the UK to spend no less than 27 million hours on social media sites on Boxing Day.

What are you doing?

These numbers show it is good to be prepared for specific events, like Christmas, but also for example the upcoming Olympics. So that makes me wonder: how ready are you for the Olympics? Or for Euro 2012? What have you done to prepare yourself? Let us know and we’ll collect them and you might just feature in our next post!

How to Research Your Target Audience With Google

Real-Time-Insights-tools

To be really successful in both search and social my strong opinion is that you need to do research. Not just on which rankingfactors are important, but, maybe even more important, on your target audience.

Whenever I do training sessions I tell my students to find and research this target audience, find out who they are and what they do.

Research who will potentially be visiting your site, who has the need for your products and who is potentially going to be your ‘brand advocate’ by spreading your content around the web.

To find these target audiences is one thing, the next thing is to actually tailor your content so it will appeal to them. Appeal so they will find it and appeal so they will act on it. To be able to tailor that content its important to figure out for example what people are searching for. The question my students always ask me: “Where do I start and is there a tool for that?”. (more…)

Why do People Search for Contact Lenses in October?

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When Bas asked me if I wanted to join the State of Search team and have a regular blogging spot I jumped at the chance. It was a real honour to be asked but it left me with the difficult task of deciding what to write about for my opening post. I work for Experian which most people associate with the financial industry and credit checks, but at its heart, Experian is a big data company. It’s my job to bring some of that data to life and I like to do that by telling stories. So I thought for my first blog I would share a story about contact lenses.

Now contact lenses I realise is not the sexiest of topics to talk about, but in my experience it is often in the most unexpected places that you can find some fascinating nuggets which make for great stories. This particular story started with a request from a journalist writing a piece about the online optical market in the UK. In essence he wanted to know what was more popular: prescription glasses or contact lenses.

Using Experian Hitwise data we have access to 50 million unique search term variations every week being typed into search engines by a quarter of the UK Internet population – so this was a fairly easy request to process. Putting together the thousands of different ways that people search for prescription glasses and contact lenses into two portfolios I charted these over time to show that typically, prescription glasses are three times more popular online than contact lenses.

What surprised me when I saw the chart was that there were three very clearly defined peaks in the blue line which represented overall searches for contact lenses. Intuitively, you would expect that the demand for contact lenses would be fairly flat, it’s not a seasonal item like searching for a summer holiday, nor is it an impulse buy which could have resulted in random spikes in searches. Curious, I asked a few people around the office: “What month of the year do you think people search for contact lenses the most?” The most common replies were January (start of a new year, stock up on contact lenses) and June (a need for different contact lenses because of hayfever in the summer). Both of these were logical answers, and yet our data clearly showed spikes each year in October.

What was even more intriguing was that the October spikes weren’t just small seasonal variations, in some cases there was three or four times more volume of search clicks than in other months of the year. It was only when I interrogated the search data further that the reason for these search spikes became clear. October of course is Halloween and every year people want to dress up as vampires, zombies and ghouls – hence huge online interest in searches for vampire contact lenses, zombie contact lenses, scary contact lenses, blood red contact lenses and about 8,000 other variations of searches along these lines.

My second surprise came when I was looking at the websites receiving traffic from these Halloween related searches. I was expecting a high proportion to be going to fancy dress websites, and yet less than 3% of searches were going to fancy dress websites, the overwhelming majority of search clicks were going to optical specialist websites. This makes sense when you think about it, as people are (understandably) careful with what they put in their eyes, and are therefore more likely to go to a trusted source when buying contact lenses, even if it’s for a party event.

There were however, a number of major high street brands who were not receiving traffic from these Halloween contact lenses terms. This represents a huge opportunity for any business in the optical arena. If you are not stocking Halloween contact lenses in October, then you need to start doing so, because if you don’t, people will go elsewhere to buy them, and then you’ve lost a potential customer for repeat business. One thing that is certainly true about online shopping is people are lazy and will look for the path of least resistance. If they can find one shop which caters for their vampire contact lenses and one day Acuvue’s, you can bet they will shop their than go to two different stores.

So there you have it. Searches for contact lenses are seasonal and massively skewed by Halloween. It’s these counter-intuitive examples which make my job fun, but that also show the importance of data in market research and how this can be turned into something which is going to make you money.

I will be back next month with another story to share with you, but if you want to find out more about the kind of data and insight Experian can provide, you can visit the website follow us on Twitter @Hitwise_UK, or send me an email direct to james.murray@uk.experian.com.

Until next month.

Who Says Facebook Is Not A Sales Tool? 40% Of Small Businesses Use It That Way

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Social Media is not regarded as a sales tool. Most people will tell you not to expect too much of it if you want to use Social Media that way. After all, Social Media is a platform which will help gain you visibility, not sales. Right?

You might think that, but as it turns out it could be a very useful sales tool after all. At least, that is what 37% of small businesses say when asked about Facebook sales. They state that Facebook Commerce is their sole sales channel.

The respondents were all customers of social commerce platform provider Payvment, who performed this research last month. They were asked about how they use Facebook and how they liked it. Some results were interesting. (more…)

Google Search Ads Pause Study Gives Food for Thought on Integrated Strategies

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I read with interest – and a degree of cynicism the recent research study by Google which highlighted a number of mindboggling statistics as to the impact of paid search in terms of driving incremental clicks to a site. The study for those that haven’t read it yet, suggested that an estimated 89% of ad clicks are incremental. At first glance that suggests a significant missed opportunity to potential advertisers that may be undecided about employing a doubleplay (or even triple play) search strategy which encompasses and tactically uses PPC alongside a mature and highly visible SEO campaign.

One may call me a sceptic – however I have been doing this job long enough to not take any research study at first glance However one has to take a closer look at the figures before jumping to any significant decisions as to how to move your integrated search spend forward in the long run. Firstly one has to accept – Google makes NO money from organic search and much of the revenue Google generates is from sources such as their traditional paid search inventory, the rapidly increasing mobile offering and the display network which Google increasingly takes more and more market share every month. As such any such studies are more than likely going to favour these channels rather than the organic model. One has to ask yourself in a similar situation with your business hat on – would you? (more…)

Who Gets The Most +1′s? Daily Mail and Telegraph, Times Not on G+

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It is a dangerous area: taking a look at how many likes, how many tweets or how many +1s a specific website gets and drawing conclusions out of these results. Because, what does it really say about the popularity of those sites?

Searchmetrics decided to take a look at UK newspaper websites and try to figure out which one of them has the most authority. Not just based on one metric, but on several.

Searchmetrics found that despite these having fewer Google+ followers than others the Daily Mail and the Telegraph web sites are more frequently shared. (more…)

Google Grows Even Further in UK, Beating Bing and Yahoo

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Google is the dominant force in many countries World Wide. In the UK Yahoo and Bing might have thought they still had a chance but that dream now seems to have shattered if we look at the numbers released by Experian Hitwise today.

Experian Hitwise shows us that Google Sites now account for almost 92% of all searches conducted in the UK in February 2012. That means Google has grown again, almost a percentage, whereas Bing and Yahoo saw a decline. (more…)

Twitter Grows Faster Than Facebook

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We recently saw that when it comes to the time spent on social networks Facebook wins. Where Google+ only could ‘grab’ people for an average of 3 minutes, Facebook had users clicking around for six to seven hours. Twitter in that list had 21 minutes, so was way behind Facebook.

Average time spent is an interesting metric, like other metrics it should be taken with the necessary criticism. It should be seen in the light of active users, not number of users and the numbers from Comscore last week didn’t show the mobile users for example.

New numbers can be seen in that light. eMarketer reports that, in the US, Twitter is growing more rapidly than Facebook. (more…)

Almost 1 in 2 Europeans Visit Newspaper Sites

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The Internet is supposed to be the ‘death’ of the newspapers. Who will buy one in a few years, once it gets printed it is after all, not news anymore.

Newspapers are looking to find different ways to get their business back on track and the Internet is the best place to do that. Comscore numbers show that newspapers are still popular, but then mostly online. Half of Europe’s internet population visits newspaper websites.

The numbers from Comscore show that people still trust newspapers as an’authority’. They might see news on social media first, but they still go to newspaper websites to read more about the specific topics. (more…)

Think Insights – Google’s latest research tool

Think Insights with GoogleWhile on the one hand Google is making some forms of data less accessible (*coughSSLsearchcough*), in other areas Google seems intent on making data more accessible and easy to use.

As a part of its ever-expanding Think initiative, Google has now launched Think Insights for the public. Positioned as an “information and resource hub for marketers”, Think Insights provides a wealth of market research, industry trends, and consumer behaviour data in easily digestible forms. (more…)

Impact of SSL Search

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Google has introduced encrypted search per 17th of October. It rolled out initially on google.com

The introduction of this so called ‘making search more secure‘ strategy caused quite a stir and ongoing discussion takes place here, here and in our own State of Search podcast here.

At the beginning the impact seemed to be in the single digit numbers being about 2%-3%. Last week I started to notice a dramatic increase on these numbers, so I decided to do some historical reporting on the percentiles. (more…)

Business Development and SEO data: Winning That Pitch

Winning SEO Data

This is a guest post by Andy Betts, who is currently VP of Strategy and Marketing at Linkdex. He explains how the right analysis can help you win an SEO pitch.

Losing that big SEO pitch is something that strikes fear into the heart of every search marketing professional. Regardless as to whether you are a large agency or a small independent – it hurts like hell. That’s because 90% of us care so much for our product and our industry. Search is an industry built on passion and losing should never be an option. (more…)

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