A HubSpot Customer Reacts to Penguin [Customer Story]

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A HubSpot Customer Reacts to Penguin [Customer Story]

  
  
  

Penguin

The following is a guest post by Tom Schwab, owner of Goodbye Crutches and a HubSpot customer who attended a recent Inbound Learning webinar with us on Google's new search algorithm, Penguin. He shared his reflections on the changes with us, and we thought we'd share them with you.

With the release of Penguin, ranking higher on Google seems to be less about gaming the system and more about engaging the visitor. It’s no longer enough to just drive visitors to your site by any means possible. In fact, SEO itself seems to be becoming a far more long-term, human strategy than a short-term, technical tactic. 

This is undoubtedly a good thing.

I’m a business owner, not an SEO consultant, and so I’m excited about the change. As Google becomes more advanced and learns more about how visitors interact with our sites, SEO "tricks" are becoming less important, while the human element is becoming more vital. Having a good website becomes more like having a good party -- invite the right guests and then show them a good time them once they arrive.

With the new changes in mind, we looked at our own site to see what we needed to do next. Here's what we learned.

Not all traffic is good traffic

It seems counterintuitive to not want more traffic.  But we needed to discourage traffic that doesn’t actually apply to our site.  By looking at our organic traffic in HubSpot's Sources tool, we noticed several keywords that were driving visits but not, apparently, visits from people who were likely to convert into leads. In short, our site was clearly not satisfying the vast majority of visitors who were searching on certain keywords, based on what Sources showed us were our lead conversion rates, customer conversion rates, and bounce rates for these keywords.

With Penguin, this sort of activity is likely to be penalized. So it's time to clean up our keyword strategy, and try to attract less of this unqualified traffic by removing keywords that were frankly a little out of place on our site.

Keywords out of place

We identified several keywords that were out of place on our site, but for the sake of this post we'll just look at two. Neither of these keywords were producing quality visits to our site, and they were likely to cause trouble for us down the road.

Vacation -  We had published a series of blog articles about vacationing while recovering from surgery or injury. Each of these posts had been tagged with the word “vacation."  This ended up driving hundreds of visitors to our site who were looking for something very different.  So while our page views on these posts were high, the bounce rate was huge. We changed the tag to the more specific “vacation on crutches," hoping that this would attract more relevant visitors and reduce the bounce rate problem.

Mad Baby - A few of our blog posts had featured a picture of a screaming baby and the alt text “Mad Baby.”  While this alt text accurately described the picture, it didn't attract the right visitors to our site. People were finding our posts by searching for "mad baby" on Google, but then bouncing right away when they saw we weren't at all what they were looking for. So we changed these alt tags to “baby’s not happy when mommy’s on crutches,” hoping this would attract more appropriate traffic.

Keep your visitors at the party

As Google continues to evolve they'll be continuing to dig deeper into who visits your site (traffic), who stays on your site (time on site), who turns around in the parking lot or stays (bounce rate), and who tells their friends about it (social shares).

Our investigations demonstrated to us that many of our pages were simply not engaging. Our bounce rate was high, as was the exit rate.  Using our Hubspot analytics tools, we identified the pages with the most visits that converted to leads or customers. Then we examined these pages through the eyes of our customer personas. Would this content be compelling to us? Would our next steps be clear? This thought experiment was a good start, and A/B testing our advanced landing pages should help us continue to improve our visitors' experience.

Any change can be difficult, but this latest Google update is inspiring to us.  Improving in Google’s search engine seems to be less of a short-term game and more of a long-term strategy to serve our customers with the information they are searching for.  Blogging, lead nurturing, and engaging customers in fresh ways is not only a better way to do business, it is a better way to rank over the long haul.

 

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Image by the approximate photographer

Comments

Excellent insight and great examples. True, not all traffic is the right traffic and kudos to you for focusing on the right metrics. It's brave to change keywords when it seems that the words are drawing eyeballs. Engaging content is absolutely key.
Posted @ Wednesday, May 23, 2012 8:14 AM by Jody Raines
Well said, especially for a "non-seo" person. I found your example about "vacation" very enlightening as it relates to Penguin. I had a similar experience by using "Shakespeare" in a title of a blog post.  
 
Thanks for sharing your experiences with us. 
 
Posted @ Wednesday, May 23, 2012 8:37 AM by lawrence berezin
Great piece. It seems that the changes to Google fit very nicely with how we've positioned ourselves with our website. We have always had the philosophy of educating our customer base and not to work SEO to get better traffic rankings. We've never had outstanding traffic to our site, but I think our conversion rates have exceeded any expectations I've had for what inbound marketing could do for us. We have always focused on driving conversion from traffic to customer. We are hoping the changes lead to more of this for us.
Posted @ Wednesday, May 23, 2012 9:17 AM by Sam Ricchezza
Great post Mark! 
 
I love your analogies and your thought process behind SEO and Penguin. 
 
That said, I have to add some comments on bounce rates: 
 
- Bounce rates aren't always the fault of the website owner. Sometimes they're the fault of the search engine. Google is not perfect and they know it. 
 
- What's a high bounce rate? One man's high bounce rate is another's low bounce rate. The sales cycle (instant, short, medium and long), industry, ecommerce, design, content, SERPs, etc. affect the bounce rate. Where one site might have a low bounce rate at 85% another might have a high bounce rate at 15%. 
 
http://www.kunocreative.com/blog/bid/51228/Inbound-Marketing-Bounce-Rates-The-Meaningless-Metric 
 
- Bounce rates are measured differently across search engines and analytics packages. Google analytics may report a bounce as a time on site of five or less seconds. Other tools may report them as a time on site of 10 or less seconds. With Google Image search the bounce rate may be one second. It may be five. If it's five wouldn't the vast majority of image search users be counted as bounces?  
 
- Google is not looking to penalize non-spam sites. Penguin is designed to go after spam. SEOs DO NOT KNOW how bounce rates effect Penguin if at all. They're merely speculating that when a site is reported as spam bounce rates may be an attribute used to determine if the site is such. Makes sense right? If I report a competitor as spam and Google sees a 70% bounce rate that site is certainly not spam because 30% of the people who visit it stay. 
 
The point is - don't get caught up in the technical mumbo jumbo of SEOs (I used to be one). The smart ones know they need to transition over to content marketing because that will out perform technical SEO most of the time. As Google continues to improve with updates like Penguin more and more sites lacking in frequent content updates will begin to disappear from the SERPs. 
 
Here's what Penguin really means: http://www.kunocreative.com/blog/bid/74670/What-Google-s-Over-Optimization-Penalty-Really-Means 
 
Keep publishing great content and you will be rewarded :) 
 
@CPollittIU  
 
Posted @ Wednesday, May 23, 2012 9:17 AM by Chad H. Pollitt
When a client recently said to me in realization "just because you have traffic, doesn't mean you have sales. People buy, not search engines."  
I felt more than a little justified and validated for saying those same words to anyone who would listen for over a decade. Good to know others are seeing the light "In fact, SEO itself seems to be becoming a far more long-term, human strategy than a short-term, technical tactic. "  
 
As it should be!
Posted @ Friday, June 01, 2012 2:53 PM by Carole Mahoney
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