Searchable Sites

A prospective client recently came to me with a problem: his new website, which looks great, isn’t performing at all on search for his keywords.

This is a problem I see very frequently. Most of the time I can assist by simply providing some advice about improving onsite Search Engine Optimisation factors and acquiring backlinks as well as writing new and unique content; but on this occasion the issue was a lot deeper.

The whole site is a collection of images. The designer who built the site did not place any searchable content on the page!!! What’s more he/she charged quiet a lot for the site.

This is a warning: A website that cannot be searched is as useful as a rained on catalog stuffed in a random mailbox. No. It’s worse!

When you are planning to launch a new website, or to refresh your existing site, make sure that the designer/developer knows how to make the site searchable. Ask him/her lots of questions. If you don’t understand his/her answers ask them to explain.

The worst thing that can happen is you spend a few thousand dollars on a new site and no one ever finds it!

If you need advice on your particular project a business consultant can assist.

The iPad: A game changer

Every so often technology changes the way we experience the world. The iPad is one of those monumental shifts.

I know a lot of people who still claim to “Not get it” or to argue about the value of a tablet, saying that they would prefer a laptop/netbook which has more “power”. These, mind you, are often the same people who have not actually used an iPad for any prolonged period of time.

The iPad is a game changer because it changes the user experience so drastically. It enables the user to overcome the limitations and preconceived notions that computers are “tools to do a job”. Its form factor, operating system and tightly controlled user experience allow users to lose themselves in a completely different reality, one where you are not bound by deadlines or other commitments.

iPads can do a lot for businesses too. They can allow customers to interact with products and catalogs in a completely new and less mentally cluttered way. They allow for tangibility in oft intangible products like business plans or financial advice.

Consider adding an iPad app to your marketing material, it may well be worth the effort.

Source: What the iPad’s success says about us | iPad Atlas – CNET Reviews.

The right tool for the job

“Do I need to get coffee cups with my store’s name on it?” Anna asked me as I was paying for my coffee. “That depends on what you want to achieve” I said. She had hoped for  simple yes or no, she wanted me, as a “marketing guy”, to simply tell her what to do about advertising.

Anna runs a small and growing coffee shop & bookstore in Cronulla. When she first asked me this question she worked 7 days a week from 6am to 7pm at the store and employed 5 par-time staff to assist her. Anna was burning out.

I asked her if she wanted to have a chat about her business and so we set a date. This was really the first time that Anna had thought about her business in the two years that she had been running it. She’d been too bussy working in it to work on it.

At our meeting we worked through her goals & her objectives. In the end Anna realised that advertising on her coffee cups was not the most important thing she could do to grow.

We worked on an action plan, obtained some missing data and were able to make some sound decisions which have freed Anna up to continue to grow and to spend time on her business rather than in it.

Anna didn’t need advertising and media buying advise, she needed someone to help her to see the big picture.

I HATE bad advertsing

I love great advertising. I really do. It has the power to move us, to inspire us, sometimes even to make us want to buy something (if that’s what its job is). But I really HATE poorly conceived, badly executed, irritating adverts whose sole goal is to annoy you into remembering the message!

The advert below aired during on Channel 10′s Master Chef program. It is the most recent example of irritating advertising that I can think off. Be warned: it’s BAD!

On the flip side, here is a beautiful advert from the marketing genius that is Apple (TBWA\Media Arts Lab):

Where would you rather shop? Apple or Coles?