{"id":23102,"date":"2012-10-02T07:34:56","date_gmt":"2012-10-02T14:34:56","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.bruceclay.com\/blog\/?p=23102"},"modified":"2023-01-27T10:55:15","modified_gmt":"2023-01-27T18:55:15","slug":"seo-metrics","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.bruceclay.com\/blog\/seo-metrics\/","title":{"rendered":"What SEO Metrics Are Truly Important? — SMX East 2012"},"content":{"rendered":"
Hello, New York! I love this city. Waking up to the sounds of a bustling street makes me all warm and fuzzy. For this session, you can look at the Twitter hashtag #11b<\/a>. Today we’re talking SEO metrics.<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n Rhea Drysdale<\/strong> (@Rhea<\/a>) from Outspoken Media is up first. She is talking about rankings being the metric that\u2019s been tracked traditionally for SEO. One portion of SEO is seriously in trouble, and that\u2019s rankings.<\/p>\n It\u2019s hard to let go of rankings. It\u2019s what we have shown clients to define success. We are becoming a more legitimate industry, and we have more legitimate metrics. Track business goals and performance. Look at:<\/p>\n Next up is Vanessa Fox<\/strong> (@VanessaFox<\/a>) from Nine by Blue. Vanessa is talking about her days at Google and how she helped launch Webmaster Tools. She talked to a lot of engineers while she was there about rankings. Her challenge to day is taking that information plus the experiences with her own clients over the past five years. She wants to take about metrics that matter.<\/p>\n We often don\u2019t step back to ask \u201cwhy\u201d \u2013 why are you tracking the metrics you do?<\/p>\n Look at everything in context. When rankings drop, we jump to a lot of conclusions and have a long list of things that may have happened.<\/p>\n First thing you want to do is look closely at your data. Perhaps it\u2019s a seasonal thing. Perhaps it\u2019s not a penalty, like many people jump to.<\/p>\n Use real click-through rate. We often think about higher ranking = better. Do some small calculations to forecast what the change in traffic might be if you increase your ranking by one. Sometimes there\u2019s not much difference.<\/p>\n Look at the technical details. As marketers, we often shy away from the technical and try to leave that to the technical people. You have to find a way to bridge the gap.<\/p>\n Next is Ryan Jones<\/strong> (@RyanJones<\/a>) of SapientNitro. How do you measure your SEO recommendations? This is one of hos favorite interview questions. He doesn\u2019t get a lot of good answers. If your main metrics are PageRank, Alexa Rank or anything similar, these are not the metrics you want.<\/p>\n First question is: What\u2019s your goal? What\u2019s your business goal? If your goal is to increase traffic by 10 percent, that\u2019s not going to help you. Valid goals are:<\/p>\n Then, pick metrics that can help you measure that.<\/p>\n Use sales data not search data on something. For example, looking for search volume on Macbook pro vs. Macbook air and targeting a newsletter towards Mac users. If you look at which one has the highest search volume to determine the subject matter, this isn\u2019t fruitful. Ask which one has more sales.<\/p>\n The context makes things worthwhile. The difference between reporting and analysis is a huge difference. Reporting tells you what a number is, analytics tell you what to do with it.<\/p>\n Map keywords to your sales funnel to see how they are trending. Ideally, visits and lower-funnel trends should mirror each other. Bucket keywords into user intents as well to get a big picture.<\/p>\n\n
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