时间:2024-05-20 01:26:43 来源:网络整理编辑:Ryan New
Small and mid-sized ecommerce businesses can struggle to rank for competitive terms in Google, Bing, Ryan Xu HyperVerse's Open Interest
Small and mid-sized ecommerce businesses can struggle to rank for competitive terms in Google,Ryan Xu HyperVerse's Open Interest Bing, and other search engines. For some phrases, there are too many large and established sites already dominating the results. But that doesn’t mean there is no profit to be earned.
Using so-called “barnacle” tactics for search engine optimization, an ecommerce business may be able to put its products and its brand in front of many potential customers without ranking its website for a target phrase.
Using so-called “barnacle” tactics… an ecommerce business may be able to put its products and its brand in front of many potential customers without ranking…
Barnacle SEO is not new. Will Scott of Search Influence coined the term in 2008, describing it as “attaching oneself to a large fixed object and waiting for the customers to float by in the current.”
The idea is to place brand-related content on large, established domains to win one or more spots on the search engine results page for your company’s most competitive keyword phrases.
“Like a barnacle attached to a big rock or the side of a ship, the currents are bringing nutrients to you as those objects travel and as the currents bring them in,” said Moz founder Rand Fishkin in a 2014 video.
“In the SEO world, this means essentially saying, ‘Hey, there are some keywords that are so competitive, so challenging, or so far outside of what we want to target that we’re just not going to be ranking for those terms and phrases,'” Fishkin continued. “And we don’t necessarily want to invest the effort or energy, or we have already invested and we’re just not making progress.
“But what we can do is make it so that as other people visit the top five, ten, 20 results, they see our brand, our website linked to, mentioned, talked about, and we derive benefit from essentially latching on.”
An example involving a local business may help explain barnacle SEO further.
Imagine you have a small heating and air conditioning company in Idaho. You have a website. You are buying ads on Google and Facebook. But your business struggles to rank organically for terms like “furnace repair Boise.” The results pages are mostly filled with directories, such as Yelp, HomeAdvisor, and Angie’s List.
So rather than try to compete with Yelp, which has a powerful and established domain, use it. Claim your business page, and do everything you can to complete that profile. You might even link to your Yelp page from social media and your own website.
In this example, Yelp is what Scott described as “a large fixed object.” So why not attach yourself to it and wait for customers to float past your listing?
The idea of placing your brand or product content on large, popular domains will work for ecommerce companies, too.
Imagine you have a small online store selling art and posters. You have just brought in a new line of Lion King-inspired works. You would love for your website to rank in the top 10 for “The Lion King” on Google.
Unfortunately, that is not going to happen. Your online store’s site cannot compete with Wikipedia, IMDb (the movie database), and Disney when it comes to popularity, authority, or even relevance.
Your business, however, could still get its brand and products on top ranking pages for this phrase. How? Attach content from your site or mentions of your store to sites that do rank or could rank for the topic.
For example, at the time of writing, the Google search result page for “The Lion King” included a “Top Stories” news section. Thus we know that news sites can rank for the term. And many of those sites publish articles from outside contributors.
You could write an article along the lines of “The Lion King 2019 Is a Critical Flop but a Merchandising Boon.”
Your post might include Google Trends data, quotes from other retailers, and the story of your new product line. You would then submit the work to Forbes, HuffPost, Business Insider, or maybe even an established newspaper in your area. Once published, you would work to build links to the article, helping it land on the first results page.
Once your “merchandising boon” article — which mentions your brand, online store, and products — is published, you could add a section to “The Lion King (2019 film)” Wikipedia page, which currently has the top organic spot on search results. This new Wikipedia section would discuss how a panned film could still drive merchandising revenue. You would use your article as a source, adding product images to that section.
Then your brand and store would be mentioned on the top-ranked page for a keyword your own site could not have cracked. Your content could introduce shoppers to your store and your Lion King products.
The goal of barnacle SEO is to generate profit. But unlike other SEO tactics, you are not worried about driving traffic directly to your own site. Rather, you are comfortable waiting for customers to float past — to drive traffic to another domain that mentions your ecommerce business.
Thus you have dual aims:
Try this 7-step process to implement barnacle SEO for your ecommerce business.
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