By far the largest sources of website visitors are paid online advertising and organic searches. Organic visitors arrive on your website through search engine queries. They type in a phrase or question – known as a keyword – and select your website from the results displayed by Google. Paid traffic originates in exactly the same way, but instead of clicking one of the 10 ‘organic’ links on the (usually first) results page, they click on one of the paid adverts to the top or right of the search results, arriving on a landing page. Google claimed more than one trillion individual web searches in 2016, so it is clear that both organic and paid approaches to search marketing offer the lure of impressive results.
The two strategic options for businesses looking to increase web traffic are therefore to invest in Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) to increase organic visits, or Google AdWords, to increase hits from paid adverts.
Both start from the same point (keyword searches) and have the same goal (increased web traffic), but which of the two options gives better value for small businesses?
Search engine queries account for a significant percentage of web visits. Statistics vary widely, but it is something between 40% and 80% of web visitors – a lot of people no matter how you look at it. This explains the importance of SEO for improving your web traffic. Search Engine Optimisation isn’t a form of advertising. Rather it is a means of optimising your website and online content so that Google takes notice and ranks you for important keywords and phrases.
‘Google ranking’ isn’t an absolute value. You rank differently for different keywords and this changes over time depending on your actions, and those of your competitors. No one outside of Google knows exactly how Google’s algorithms work, so some of SEO is a matter of trial and error. However, there are about nine factors that marketing experts agree are influential in determining how Google ranks a website.
Applying these to online content as part of a long-term strategy will gradually increase the prominence of your website in relevant search results and improve your web traffic. Taking this approach has both advantages and disadvantages over using paid advertising. Learn more about Search Engine Optimisation with these great articles:
- Get More Website Traffic and Increase Leads and Sales with Effective SEO
Google AdWords is an advertising service provided by Google to allow users to rank in their search results for keywords and phrases. On setting up an AdWords account you can bid for keywords, which are allocated a Cost Per Click based on their popularity and relevance. You can control your budget by setting spending caps and reduce your campaign costs by monitoring the quality of your landing pages and advert content.
Google AdWords is fast, efficient and cost-effective if it is managed correctly. Many businesses prefer it to SEO as it gives faster and more predictable results. Learn more about Google AdWords with these articles:
- How to Advertise On Google: How Google AdWords Could Solve Your Pain
- What Is Google AdWords Quality Score And Why Does It Matter?
- 3 Fatal Google AdWords Mistakes Most Small Businesses Are Making!
Google AdWords and SEO are not competing strategies, but are two approaches to the same problem. You want to direct more high quality visitors to your website: Both SEO and PPC let you do this, in different ways. As we have seen, there are strengths and weaknesses to each approach on its own, but when used together, you amplify the benefits of both.
Search engine optimisation is used to improve the long-term value of your web presence, with AdWords stepping in to bridge the gap and generate short term traffic and increased conversions. To find out more about a combined marketing strategy that includes both SEO and paid search to your best advantage, contact one of our specialists at JDR today.