Many marketers take for granted the search transaction. Many believe it’s simply a matter of a user typing in a search, the search engine spitting out results, and the searcher reviewing them and ultimately deciding on the best one. But this doesn’t take into account the subtle nuances of human behavior. Human beings are irrational, unpredictable and multifaceted beings with different beliefs, backgrounds, and values.
Proficient search engine marketing requires a further examination of searcher behavior. In this post, we will cover a few of the factors that affect searcher behavior.
1. Domain expertise
Domain expertise refers to a searcher’s familiarity with the subject their searching. When seeking specific information, a layman will be less certain how to begin, use less precise language, and have more trouble evaluating the results. Compare this to a subject matter expert who would know the exact verbiage to produce the desired results.
2. Search experience
This relates to a user’s search capabilities and knowledge. Knowing how to use Boolean operators, exact strings, and filtering controls gives you a much bigger tool set to help you search effectively. This factor seems to be secondary to domain expertise, however. Many people with little search experience but a lot of domain knowledge can do better than a technophile searching within an unfamiliar subject.
3. Cognitive Style
This can be thought of as a spectrum between Global thinking and Analytical thinking. Global thinkers will initially seek a breadth of knowledge across related topics, while analytical thinkers will dive into a single topic to find highly specific information. Now keep in mind, this is a spectrum, and these are just extremes. Most searchers will fall somewhere between these two.
4. Goal Type
Goal types can be broadly lumped into three categories:
· Navigational: are efforts to reach a particular web location, for instance an employer’s timesheet.
· Informational: seeking out documents or information related to a specific topic.
· Transactional: are meant to accomplish something online, such as paying a bill.
5. Mode of seeking
Essentially the mode of seeking boils down to someone’s understanding of what they are trying to find. This level of understanding can range from knowing exactly what the user needs and where to find it, to exploratory searching, where they are only loosely able to describe what they seek.
6. Situational idiosyncrasies
Finally, the user is affected by situational idiosyncrasies that are mostly impossible to record. These can include mood, atmosphere, stress level, and any number of other factors.
While many of these factors are difficult or impossible to record, they should help you think about your user’s and the experience they have when searching online. You can shape these factors into different personas to help you better target your web design and search campaigns to better serve the spectrum of your searcher market.
Posts Tagged ‘search engine marketing’
Lessons In Search Engine Marketing: Factors Affecting Searcher Behavior
Friday, January 27th, 2012What Everyone Should Know about #SEO #Marketing Bots
Monday, October 25th, 2010
SEO bots can be both helpful and hurtful in the work of search engine marketing. Photo courtesy of Bouncehouse Marketing.
In the world of SEO marketing there are various (ro)bots used to perform tasks like crawl Websites, check search rankings, automate social media and more. In some cases these bots are good tools that help gain faster access to information. However, some bots are used to steal content, toy with PPC ad campaigns and more. These bots can end up costing the business owners lots of money. Here are 6 SEO marketing bots and what you need to know about them.
Website Scrapers: These bots find and download text or images from a Web site. They can save marketing administrators time; however, scraping is usually associated with taking someone else’s content and using it as your own, a big no-no.
Website Crawlers: These bots are sent by search engines to index content from your Web site. This is what helps rank your Web site in the search engine. Once this bot crawls your site you’ll be able to get a higher search engine page ranking. However, in order to make sure your site is search-engine friendly, you need to learn how this bot works, which can be difficult.
Twitter Bots: These bots automatically follow, un-follow, retweet and more. They can help you gain followers quickly and without effort. However, if your followers realize they are following a bot, they’ll most likely unfollow and your company’s reputation can be tarnished. Also if you use bots too often and Twitter catches on, you could be banned from the Web site.
Facebook Bots: These bots can friend people, message, post on walls and more. They can build your friend/fan base quickly as well as update your status, however, excessive use can get you banned from Facebook.
PPC Bots: These dangerous bots can click on your competitor’s PPC ad, influence bounce rates and skew with Adwords accounts. PPC bots are unethical and using them will put you and your site at risk for the Google blacklist, which is somewhere you don’t want to be.
Comment Spam Bots: These bots post spam comments on blogs and forums in order to build links. Using comment spam bots is another way to get your site banned from Google and other search engines.
Although some SEO bots can be good, like search engine bots, many are used for spamming and other unethical marketing techniques that can end up getting your site banned from the top search engines, which is definitely bad for business.
