If you're in the ecommerce space, this is one of the busiest times of
year for your business and your website. It's about to get even more
hectic from here on out.
The Monday after Thanksgiving, otherwise known as Cyber Monday, falls
on December 2 this year. If you're keeping count, that's about two
weeks away.
According to a Google-conducted survey,
49 percent said they knew when they would begin the shopping race, with
26 percent citing Black Friday and Cyber Monday as the starting line.
Technically, a comprehensive Cyber Monday marketing plan would have
began months ago. However, if you're wondering if there's still time to
prepare for the retail event of the year, then the answer is yes.
Marketers can still implement the following tips to ready your
website, drive more visibility, and connect with your target consumer in
time for Cyber Monday to claim your fair share of the estimated $82 billion that will be spent in online holiday shopping in 2013.
Mobile Considerations
It's no secret that shoppers are mobile this holiday season. Newly released data from Google
showed 76 percent of smartphone owners plan to use them for holiday
browsing this year, and one in four smartphone owners plan to make a
purchase on their device.
Consider the following:
- Shop.org's eHoliday survey showed online retailers gearing up for the growing trend, with about 57 percent saying they had invested in optimizing their mobile websites.
- If your website isn't mobile ready, it's a bit too close to Cyber Monday to forge a responsive web design overhaul, but there are other ways you can ready your site for mobile shoppers.
- Focus on small changes that can impact the user experience on revenue-driving pages and pages you'll anticipate will receive traffic during Cyber Monday. A big part of this user experience equation is site speed.
In fact, Google's Matt Cutts recently reinforced the importance of site speed during his talk at PubCon, stating Google is less likely to rank sites that are slow on mobile devices.
It's important you first get a snapshot of how your site is
performing in terms of page load times. You can access this in Google
Analytics in the Behavior reports section under Site Speed > Speed
Suggestions.
These suggestions will take you to the PageSpeed Insights
tool, which gives detailed recommendations on how to make the page
faster for both mobile and desktop devices. It's important to consider
both; Google reports 80 percent of consumers will use more than one
device at this holiday shopping season, with 84 percent starting on one
device and finishing on another.
Technical Considerations
If your ecommerce website isn't set up to handle the influx of
traffic you may be receiving on Cyber Monday, you could be in real
trouble. Back in 2011, a slew of top retailers online lost Cyber Monday traffic when their sites crashed, including Brookstone and Nordstrom. Just this year, Amazon.com was down for approximately 30 minutes, which reportedly cost the company $66,000 per minute.
Here are a few simple ways to ensure your site is prepped for Cyber Monday so your site visitor's have a good experience:
- Time your promotions well. Stagger email communications, for example, to groups of users instead of all at once to temper large quantities of traffic.
- Check Google Webmaster Tools (GWT). Check for any 404s your visitors might be incurring by heading to GWT under Crawl > Crawl Errors.
- Evaluate server performance. Work with your IT team to ensure the infrastructure is set up to handle spikes in traffic. You might consider a content delivery network (CDN) like those powered by Akamai to enhance your site's performance.
The Marketer's Cyber Monday Optimization and Marketing Plan
In a perfect world, most marketers would have started optimizing
organic search marketing campaign months ago in anticipation of Cyber
Monday. However, there are still steps you can take to gain more
visibility and connect with your target consumer.
1. Understand Popular Queries
First and foremost, apply the knowledge you have about what's trending among consumers to your products' marketing plan.
To help understand search volume for queries that are important to your business, you can use Google Trends to identify queries that surged on last year's Cyber Monday, and then decide whether they might apply again this year.
For example, Google reported the search term "free shipping" emerged
during last year's holiday season and peaked on Cyber Monday.
Shop.org data suggested
the demand for shipping would continue this year, showing 16.3 percent
of online retailers surveyed pledged to offer free holiday shipping as
early as October 28.
Other ways to glean keyword data that might be important to your
business this Cyber Monday is looking back at your analytics from Cyber
Monday last year, seeing which keywords drove traffic [pre-"(not
provided)" in Google].
2. Benchmark Where You're at, Plan Accordingly
SEO takes time to move the needle and build visibility for your
business around certain topics. Being this close to Cyber Monday means
applying a discerning eye on the queries you choose to target
organically. Of course, adding a PPC campaign in preparation for Cyber
Monday is a great way to capture more traffic faster, but that's another
post.
After you excavate query data to benchmark where your site is today,
you can then use Google's Keyword Planner to discover search volume and
bid values on keywords. This will help you gauge how competitive a given
keyword might be, and then weigh that against the timeline you're up
against.
You may want to:
- Focus on those keywords that aren't the most competitive, but are still important to your business – your "second-tier" keywords. If you're in Position 5 in the search results for a second-tier query, for example, you may have enough time to get yourself to Position 4 for Cyber Monday.
- Consider the competitive landscape. While evaluating keywords and the subsequent on-page optimization of important pages on your site is the first step in gearing up quickly for Cyber Monday, understanding the competition comes next. What are you up against?
The important thing is that you're looking at multiple avenues as a
means to become as competitive as possible in a short amount of time.
3. Content: Focus on How You Can Help Your Consumer Now
Take what you've learned about what your audience is looking for
during their shopping quest and consider how you can help your target
consumers now.
Look at the content on the pages you're investing efforts into and
evaluate the user experience. Does the content answer the query well?
Your goal is to make the shopping experience for that product the best
it can be.
Consider an aggressive content creation plan that facilitates the
decision-making process for your target consumer ahead of Cyber Monday.
Answer common problems people have about which gifts to buy, how certain
products compare and so on. Add this content to your product pages and
push them out via social media to drive traffic.
Social Media: Your Cyber Monday Content Vessel
The more social signals
your content has in the form of endorsements and shares, the more
search engines like Google can take into account the quality of that
content, and act accordingly. In fact, in a recent Google+ Hangout, Eric
Enge of Stone Temple Consulting suggested Google's Hummingbird algorithm enables Google to better make use of social signals now than ever before.
But it's not just about driving people back to the content on your
site; it's about having a social media plan specific to your audience on
Twitter, Facebook, Google+, and so on. Make sure you understand the
behavior within those social networks and what sort of deals people
would be looking for in advance of Cyber Monday.
Don't forget about other channels you can explore to drive visibility
to your site, including image campaigns for your products on Pinterest,
or videos on YouTube for brand awareness, to name a couple.
Pinterest
is especially interesting for Cyber Monday in that it is image-heavy
and ripe for consumers to view products. Consider the following tips:
- Align your Pinterest marketing with the products you wish to sell on Cyber Monday. Then, make sure you understand the audience on Pinterest, and what they're looking for.
- For each audience, identify a handful of themes to start Pinterest boards around. Pin images that are visually attractive and aligned with your Cyber Monday strategy. But don't aim to sell. Instead, inspire your users. If you're selling home goods, think décor ideas, boards that represent "moods" or DIY projects.
Holiday Marketing: Better Late Than Never
Remember, Cyber Monday is just the beginning stage of the holiday
shopping season. Going back to Google's survey data, we see the majority
of holiday shoppers are still unsure when they'd begin the shopping
process.
Conclusion
You still have time to refine your Cyber Monday marketing plan and
even beyond through the 2013 holiday season. Target your consumers,
starting now, by becoming an integral part of their decision-making
process, and taking steps to ensure your brand is more visible in more
places online.
Cyber Monday checklist:
- Consider small improvements you can make to your site for your mobile audience, even if you don't have time for a responsive design overhaul.
- Give the back-end of your website a health checkup to ensure it's ready to receive the influx of traffic it could face on Cyber Monday.
- Evaluate what's feasible in terms of your organic marketing and the timeline you're working with, and plan accordingly.
- Create social-specific campaigns and great content that helps the buyer make a decision about his or her Cyber Monday purchase.
Source Link:- http://searchenginewatch.com/article/2306310/Cyber-Monday-Optimization-Checklist
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