- Apr 6, 2009
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- First Name
- Mitch
Guys, my point isn't SEO is bad. I'm in on SEO, I just feel as though the fluff needs to be murdered so that even when experiments go bad people say "Thank god we learned not to do that again" instead of trying to spin it into a positive. I've seen over 400% traffic increase (5K to +20K) over the past 5 years, I'm not bragging, please know we could do tons better, but I've made a shit ton of mistakes and feel like I've grown and learned a few things, and I feel like SEO is over hyped.
Yago, we could get into a debate on your example being good or not. I have a fairly pragmatic opinion. If it's getting eyeballs that are viewing multiple pages and sticking around >6 minutes then it's great. If not, it's mediocre (or worse). In my experience these type of long tail targets yield <25 visits that don't engage, to which I would be better off spending time figuring out how to optimize for more competitive and lucrative search terms such as "Used Cars in Geo" "OEM in GEO", but that's a long term play and takes tons of effort. Getting something that ends up on page one for a long tail is a great way to get pats on the head, but not to sell cars.
My point is simple, the terms that yield results cannot be gamed by a single landing page with good key words and some work on your meta. It takes many forms of marketing to build them up and in my opinion car dealers aren't well equipped to handle them. It's so much harder then it looks, which is why I think car dealers jump in with both feet because we're suckers for a huge challenge!
Yago, we could get into a debate on your example being good or not. I have a fairly pragmatic opinion. If it's getting eyeballs that are viewing multiple pages and sticking around >6 minutes then it's great. If not, it's mediocre (or worse). In my experience these type of long tail targets yield <25 visits that don't engage, to which I would be better off spending time figuring out how to optimize for more competitive and lucrative search terms such as "Used Cars in Geo" "OEM in GEO", but that's a long term play and takes tons of effort. Getting something that ends up on page one for a long tail is a great way to get pats on the head, but not to sell cars.
My point is simple, the terms that yield results cannot be gamed by a single landing page with good key words and some work on your meta. It takes many forms of marketing to build them up and in my opinion car dealers aren't well equipped to handle them. It's so much harder then it looks, which is why I think car dealers jump in with both feet because we're suckers for a huge challenge!
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