PayPerClick Articles

Big business is learning the hard way that there are no quick-fixes for attracting quality search traffic. Stephen Murphy looks at how smaller businesses can avoid the same mistakes.

When search engine marketing emerged as an industry, practitioners fell into two distinct camps: white hats – ethical companies that abided by the specific search engine rules; and black hats – companies that specialised in tricking, keyword stuffing or spamming for short-term results. These days, most black-hat techniques are ineffective, thanks to highly sophisticated search engine technologies. 


Many Australian online marketing agencies suffer from wear-many-hats syndrome. This is when they profess to provide search engine marketing and search engine optimisation techniques. Many digital companies – including web developers, media buyers and affiliate marketers – say they offer paid search and natural search campaigns. The offerings between each service type and agency vary greatly in technique, depth, performance and ultimately return on investment. So how can you tell if they’re any good at it?

Some people fall for the idea that all you need is good software. If that’s the case, you can buy a package off the shelf that claims to have everything you need to deliver top-10 results in Google.

While you’re dealing with a digital world, the consumer is still human. You still need the human intelligence of usability experts and copywriters. Search engine optimisation tools are useful to a point, but they cannot replace human analysis in determining strategic directions.

Unfortunately, most business owners don’t understand the science and art of search engine optimisation and some agencies take advantage of this.

Comparison engines and discount rate sites are sprouting all over the web. Stephen Murphy finds out which sites are succeeding and how you can benefit from the new way of letting your fingers do the walking.

Thanks to the perception that conducting business on the web is more cost effective than in bricks and mortar, people generally expect to buy things cheaper online. Comparison engines are an excellent example of how the web can work for consumers.

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Small business protection means being prepared for the punches so that you can roll with them when disaster strikes. Many small businesses need to re-examine their approach to insurance and take a more active role in assessing their needs.

Small business owners spend most of their time working hard to establish, maintain and serve their clients and business. This doesn’t leave much time for pondering potential future challenges and establishing safeguards to protect their business against adversity.

Sydney Business Exchange owner, Colin Bennie, has over 20 years experience as a business broker, and has often been involved in selling the same business more than once. Colin’s years of experience have left him with enough stories of success and failure to rival the Lord of the Rings trilogy. Colin believes it’s how a business owner handles and prepares for adversity that is ultimately the difference between success and failure. Adversity comes in many forms, from the most known to the least-considered, such as industry and technology changes, and personal health and relationships.

It doesn’t matter if you’re a new start-up, taking over an existing concern, or a long-term business owner, there are many steps and actions you need to take that will protect your business. The following is a top-level roadmap to help you in planning for your business longevity and ongoing success and growth.

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Google CEO, Eric Schmidt, says cloud computing is the next step: think all data and applications stored on the internet – including your medical records. But at what cost, asks Stephen Murphy?

At the recent Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society (HIMSS) annual conference in the US, Eric Schmidt discussed Google’s latest manoeuvre in its quest for world domination, Google Health. Predictably, more than a few eyebrows were raised over issues of trust and security.

The implications of the much discussed Microsoft and Yahoo! merger (jokingly referred to as MicroHoo) are yet to play out but, as in a chess game, the search leaders are still considering any number of strategic moves.

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If you ever wonder why many Australian companies’ web efforts fail, ask them how long it takes to respond to online enquiries.

You have a business, you build a website. You fuss about layout, content and design. But when you get an online enquiry, you can’t be bothered to respond. Sound ridiculous? It turns out around 59% of Australian companies don’t respond to an online lead enquiry within seven days. 

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SearchCap: Daily Search Engine News Recap
SearchCap is a free daily recap of search engine news. Subscribe, and at the end of each business day, we'll update you with a summary of what happened in search that day. This will include all stories we've covered on Search Engine Land as well as headlines from sources from across the web.