Content Marketing Can Drive Long-tail SEO | Practical Ecommerce


Een krachtige campagne voor inhoudsmarketing kan kopers aantrekken die zoeken op trefwoorden met lange staart, wat extra verkopen zou kunnen genereren.

De term "lange staart" beschrijft statistische verdelingen waarbij er veel punten zijn, zo u wilt, ver van het piek- of centrale deel van een curve.

Veel meer mensen zoeken bijvoorbeeld naar de term 'loopschoenen' dan naar 'Nike hardloopschoenen'. Evenzo zoeken meer mensen naar 'Nike hardloopschoenen' dan naar 'Nike Free RN hardloopschoenen voor heren'. zoek, hoe verder naar beneden de lange staart is.

Hoe specifieker een zoekterm, hoe verder naar beneden het zal zijn.  In dit voorbeeld produceert "Running Shoe", een algemene zin, meer zoekresultaten dan "Nike Roshe Run FB Yeezy hardloopschoenen voor heren maat 9", een lange-zin.

Hoe specifieker een zoekterm, hoe verder naar beneden het zal zijn. In dit voorbeeld produceert "Running Shoe", een algemene zin, meer zoekresultaten dan "Nike Roshe Run FB Yeezy hardloopschoenen voor heren maat 9", een lange-zin.

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Gegevens van Google bevestigen de lange staart.  Een algemene term krijgt elk jaar veel meer zoekopdrachten dan een heel specifieke term.  Maar de zeer specifieke term kan veel betekenisvoller zijn en kan impliceren dat de zoeker eerder geneigd is zich te engageren of te bekeren.

Gegevens van Google bevestigen de lange staart. Een algemene term krijgt elk jaar veel meer zoekopdrachten dan een heel specifieke term. Maar de zeer specifieke term kan veel betekenisvoller zijn en kan impliceren dat de zoeker eerder geneigd is zich te engageren of te bekeren.

Chris Anderson, die in 2004 voor Wired Magazine schreef , bedacht de term 'long tail' voor zoekmachine-optimizers, marketeers en eigenaren van e-commerce. Anderson suggereerde dat bedrijven, zoals online retailers, online erg succesvol zouden kunnen worden door zich te richten op de lange staart, of anders gezegd, door relatief moeilijk te vinden producten aan te bieden.

Since the release of his first long-tail article, there have been many studies and reports that supported Anderson’s supposition. One of the best ways to succeed in a very competitive online market is, in fact, to optimize for long-tail search.

Long-tail Conversions

As far back as 2010, as an example, most of Amazon’s book sales (approximately 57 percent) came from long-tail search queries.

By offering hard-to-find books, Amazon drove many sales in spite of the fact that relatively few people might look for a specific title. Individually, these books might not sell many copies, but collectively they amount to quite a lot of sales.

Similarly, Anderson pointed out that, at the time, Walmart would not stock a CD in its stores unless it was likely to sell at least 100,000 copies. That left a lot of room for other businesses to focus on CDs that might sell 80,000, 50,000, or just 1,000 copies.

This basic approach is also true for content marketing. A depth of specific, useful content will likely attract visitors who have very detailed interests and intent.

In turn, the more focused a site visitor is, the more likely that visitor will convert or engage. Thus, if a business can drive more long-tail site traffic, it may see an increase in sales.

Long-tail SEO

Rand Fishkin, co-founder of Moz and C.E.O. at influencer marketing company SparkToro, suggested that there are two approaches to long-tail search engine optimization.

The first method is to research and optimize for a small set of low-volume but high-converting long-tail keywords. The second is not to focus on traditional SEO for long-tail words, but rather focus on customer-centric content marketing.

The idea is simple. If a company’s marketing organization can generate a volume of unique, useful, informative, or entertaining content, that company will begin to attract a significant amount of long-tail search traffic.

For example, a brick-and-click retail chain headquartered in the Northwestern United States has published about 330 content-rich videos on YouTube. On average, each video gets about 136 views a month.

For some, 136 views a month might not seem like much. But collectively, the company’s videos are watched about 45,000 times every 30 days. In January, viewers spent the equivalent of 94 days — one minute at a time — watching this retailer’s YouTube content.

Content marketing’s basic premise is that when your business provides helpful content, potential customers feel a sense of reciprocity and ultimately purchase. If this is correct, content marketing not only has the potential to attract long-tail search traffic, it should also help your business sell more.

Volume of Content

Long-tail SEO requires a significant amount of content since the business is not focusing on high-traffic keyword phrases and optimized landing pages, but rather on the specificity of content to drive traffic.

In practice, this implies that the company using content marketing to help with long-tail SEO has a few options.

  • Develop a body of evergreen content over a relatively long time.
  • Develop a lot of content in-house all of the time.
  • Rely on users to generate content.

The first case, slowly developing content over a relatively long time, is how the retailer mentioned above created its 330 YouTube videos. The first of the company’s YouTube videos was published in April 2014, nearly four years ago. The business chipped away at video creation, publishing about three videos every two weeks on average.

Mid-market or enterprise ecommerce operations might simply generate a lot of content all of the time. For example, Lowe’s publishes content on YouTube; maintains a significant “Ideas" content section on its website; has a Lowe’s TV app for Apple TV, Amazon Fire, and Roku; and releases content on its social media.

Finally, user-generated content can help. Merchants, for example, may encourage customer forums, user-managed question-and-answer sections, or even product reviews. All of this content can be useful. And all of it can drive long-tail search traffic.