While online video advertising platforms provide the capabilities for SMBs to automatically syndicate video ads to the major video search engines, and automatically submit them to some of the major video sharing sites like YouTube, it is ultimately up to the SMB to define who they are, how they are different, and to think through the words and phrases they think prospective customers would use to find them. Here are some of the considerations that I have seen SMBs use effectively:
Really define yourself and how customers may find you. Seems obvious enough, but when I evaluate some of the keywords SMBs associate with their videos, it seems more like a random shopping list rather than a thoughtful assessment of words and phrases that define how customers may find you. Would people find you based on your business category? Geography? Is your business name “top of mind” enough that you should secure it, or probably not something anyone would search for? Video technology is great, but there’s no substitute for taking this step seriously and doing it right.
Understand your competitive set. How do you leverage knowledge of your competitors for search? Where do you feel you are losing prospective customers? For example, a local photographer felt he was losing business to a big franchise photography studio chain. Included in his SEM efforts was to bid (high) on keywords that included that competitor’s name. His rationale, and a good one, was that the big business was being used generically by consumers looking for a photographer. This SMB also illustrates another lesson from the front very effectively.
Garbage in; bounce rates up. Really tied to the earlier point about defining business, also think about what your business is not and weed out negative keywords. Looking again at the local photographer, his core business is as a local studio photographer. When he first applied keywords to his videos, he used a broad list of keywords that included photographer, photography, art photography, studio photographer. Seems like a cohesive group of keywords, but what he found was that photography and art photography caused high bounce rates because people were looking for art photography (finished photos) not someone to shoot for them.
Relevance, relevance, relevance Video search offers nuances from text based search, such as the fact that it is the metadata around the video (not the video) that is indexed, so it is critical to stay clean and not include keywords that may be popular but have no relevance to the contents of the video. As I’ve mentioned in this column before, the video search engines are unkind to businesses that try to game the system just as they are to businesses submitting the same video content in a scattershot approach – thinking it will drive higher rankings.
Source from Search Engine Land
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