Successful SEO copywriting tips for catalog marketers
Every once in awhile, I come across an oldie article that’s still a goodie – with a little updating. I wrote this article around 2004 or so and wanted to update it because of it’s importance in today’s marketplace. Catalog marketers are doing everything they can to get sales in the door and stay in business. Print costs are through the roof. Postage costs are expensive (and who knows if the post office will continue six day a week delivery?). If you’re a cataloger marketer and you haven’t focused on your Website and organic SEO, now is the time to get started.
One of the main ways catalog marketers can gain search rankings and site conversions is through well-written SEO content. I’ve talked a lot about SEO copywriting for catalog sites and I’ve posted my catalog marketer SEO copywriting case study from SMX West. But let’s get into the how-to – and discuss what catalogers can do, right now.
Catalog marketers face a unique situation: Every page means potential profit. Print catalogers have known this for some time, relying on talented copywriters to pen persuasive prose that gains qualified leads or eventual sales.
Unfortunately, what works in a print catalog (short product descriptions with multiple items featured per page), will not help a company gain online positioning in Google and Yahoo. The good news is that the same copywriters who create compelling catalog copy can master the SEO copywriting art – and you’ll see higher page rankings.
Once your marketing staff learns SEO copywriting best practices, your copywriters will produce text with a double-duty emphasis – a seductive call to action plus stellar search engine positioning. It’s simply modifying your copywriter’s existing process and learning how search engines work.
B2B or B2C catalogs – both can win with SEO copywriting!
Traditionally, B2C catalog marketers have seized the online space, knowing that search marketing lets them reach customers at every stage of the buying cycle. However, B2B catalogs can also benefit from search engine optimization techniques. For instance, if a company searches for a particular product, such as “decanter centrifuges,” top search engine positioning builds brand recognition and places your products front and center in the search engines. Although it’s true that “businesses don’t search,” individuals within those businesses need solutions – and B2B catalog optimization allows your solutions to be featured at the exact time your future customers are searching for the exact product you offer.
To simplify catalog SEO strategy, remember that you are reaching at least two distinct markets: Customers who are ready to purchase now and customers who are gathering information. Developing a content development strategy that satisfies both masters will help you drive additional targeted traffic at every phase of the purchasing process.
Let’s examine the content optimization steps catalog marketers and copywriters can take for stellar positions and conversions:
Laser-focus your keyphrase choices
Your customers use search phrases to find your products – and statistically, some search phrases are more searched upon than others. The key is to determine exactly what phrases your customers type into the search box and determine exactly how they search. Broad and specific keyphrases reach customers in different phases of the buying cycle. Once the marketing department understands user behavior and the psychology of search, this knowledge can be honed for search engine benefit.
Some searchers are close to making a purchase, know exactly what they want, and will search on highly specific phrases. For instance, one lingerie catalog site owner said that her site logs showed that women almost exclusively searched for lingerie names and stock numbers. Once they found their items (under searches like “ethereal half slip 8710″), they were ready and motivated to buy. Women were able to do their search, click through to a specific product page and immediately make a purchase. Search marketing helped this company reach women who were extremely motivated to learn about a particular product.
However, what about customers who may not have an item number – or who are in an earlier stage of the buying process? General keyphrases provide searchers an SEO road map, helping them narrow their search and gain new information. Examples of general keyphrases are “women’s half slips” (rather than the specific “ethereal half slip 8710″), “import auto parts” (rather than “FastCar body kit CX-3459″) or “decanter centrifuge” (rather than “Alfa decanter centrifuge 34X1″). Although these customers may not be ready to make an immediate purchase, your search engine presence alerts them to your site – and tempts them to click thru to gather additional information.
The best sites have a mixture of general and specific keyphrases that capture buyers in all phases of the cycle. Keyphrase research tools like WordTracker and Keyword Discovery will help your staff determine the best keyphrases for your site and will indicate how your customers search.
SEO copywriting best practice: Focus on 2-3 specific keyphrases per page, and repeat your keyphrases throughout the copy. You don’t have to worry about meeting a certain keyphrase density, but you do want to make sure that your copy reads well.
Short catalog copy won’t always work online
Google states in their Webmaster guidelines that site owners should create an “useful, information-rich site.” Additionally, the way the keyphrases appear in the body copy is incredibly important for search positioning. If your product page text is a mere 50 words pulled from the product box, the search engines may not consider your page as relevant as another site with well-written, original product copy.
Consider also that prospects are entering your site through individual product pages – not just your home page. These prospects may have no idea what your company benefits are, what incentives you offer (like free shipping) and what differentiates you from the competition. If your pages are short and benefit-free, you lose two crucial advantages:
- Short text – especially for competitive keyphrases – typically does not position well.
- If your landing page doesn’t educate your customer about your main benefits and provide complete product information, you’re losing an opportunity to educate your new prospect and help gain their trust.
Need another reason for your marketing department to embrace pages with a longer word count? Your customers, especially for larger-ticket purchases, require information before they will make a purchase or contact you for information. If they don’t learn what they need to know, they’ll surf to your competition. Fast.
Updated content tip: If your platform is such where you can’t edit the template – and adding new copy is impossible- a blog may provide the benefits you need. Check out this article about blogs for catalog marketers. If you don’t know what to write about in your blog, here’s a post by Google’s Matt Cutts discussing how to write useful articles.
SEO copywriting best practices for catalog sites: Although 250 words is the SEO copywriting “sweet spot,” write as much quality copy as you can while integrating your main keyphrases (try to write a minimum of 125 for catalog copy.)
Create unique Titles for each page
The Title does double SEO duty. Search engines consider them a highly important coding element and they index words in the Title to determine relevancy. However, Titles are also crucial to the conversion process. The words in your Title are what are displayed in search engine results as the clickable link. If your Title doesn’t contain the main keyphrases found on your page – and fails to be compelling – you run the risk of losing positions or conversions.
Update: In a previous blog post, I discussed how Kitchen Kaboodle, a local Portland, OR retailer, could spice up their Titles for greater SEO and conversion benefit.
SEO copywriting best practices for catalog sites: Each page should have a unique Title, reflecting the keyphrases utilized for the page. Write around 50-75 characters and make the Title as compelling and keyphrase-rich as possible.
Creating keyphrase-rich content for catalog pages will help each page gain higher positioning and ROI. With just a little education, your copywriters will be kicking out keyphrase-rich copy in no time – and you’ll see top positions and sizzling conversions.



Why shouldn’t I do my SEO copywriting in house?
April 14, 2009 • posted by Heather
But that’s not quite true.
Recently, Mike Moran wrote a great blog post titled, “Why shouldn’t I do my search work in house?” In it, he listed some very specific reasons why outsourcing makes good sense for some companies.
I would argue that it’s the same for SEO copywriting. Yes, it is very possible to keep your SEO copywriting in house. Yes, good copywriters can be transformed into excellent SEO copywriters.
But sometimes, it makes more sense to outsource. Here are six of those times.
Photo credit:© Risto Hunt | Dreamstime.com
Filed under Copywriting, Daily SEO copywriting candy, In-house SEO copywriting
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Three free ways to get your online marketing butt in gear
April 7, 2009 • posted by Heather
Bob posed the question, “Are your customers tightening their belts?” The DM News study he cited said that 84 percent of people surveyed have “cut back their spending.” Bob even mentioned his own experience – higher returns, less robust sales – the normal “we’re all in this recession together” blues.
But let’s think about this.
The reality is – no matter how bad things are, people are still buying. Yes, companies are going out of business and yes that is sad.
But people are still buying. Maybe not as much. Maybe not as often.
But there is money to be made.
Listen to your own self-talk. Are you saying things like, “We have to hunker down and get through this. We’re slicing all spending and new projects until the economy gets better?”
Or are you saying, “OK, we have to slice our budget – but what creative things can we do right now? Where should we focus our efforts?”
See the difference? One firm is making the best of what they’ve got, and the other is too scared to move.
What firm would you rather be?
Start thinking of some ways you can start gaining a little more market share. They don’t have to cost money – they just need a little work and a strategy. Here are three free ways to get started:
So, what free marketing tactics would you add to the list?
Photo credit: © Mona Makela | Dreamstime.com
Filed under Daily SEO copywriting candy, In-house SEO copywriting, Twitter
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Daily SEO copywriting candy: Could SEO copywriting help Kitchen Kaboodle?
April 1, 2009 • posted by Heather
They decided to close their retail store three days a week, opening their doors Thursday-Sunday only.
Wow.
The co-owner, John Whistler, said that it was because of market demand. Customers wanted lower prices. Cutting expenses elsewhere wasn’t feasible. So, they closed during their slowest days.
Wow.
I’ve been chewing on this story for a long time. Stories like this upset me – there are far too many small local businesses that are suffering right now. The good news is that these folks came up with a workable solution. Closing the retail store three days a week may indeed be the perfect alternative to a recession-mindset economy.
And then I looked at their Website. And I wonder, “If their site was optimized, would that help replace the income they’re missing three days a week? If they invested a little bit of time and cash into their site, could that help take their business in a new (and profitable) direction?”
The answer is yes – and that’s very exciting.
I spent 10 minutes reviewing the site and came up with three SEO copywriting opportunities. Here are some things that Kitchen Kaboodle can try:
In fact, the only (very short) description is below the fold.
Ecommerce sites can also look beyond their product pages, and build out unique content that they know their customers will enjoy. For instance, Sur La Table has recipies. Cookware.com features product reviews from publications like The New York Times and Ebony. Strategic content marketing allows companies to capitalize on keyphrases used at all phases of the buy cycle. This means that Kitchen Kaboodle could have articles dedicated to, say, cookware reviews – and people who are looking for cookware reviews could click through from the SERP, read the article and immediately make a purchase.
To their credit, it looks like they’ve built out unique content on some product pages, and they’ve tried to insert keyphrases (although they’re doing it in a way that’s not very effective.) This certainly helps them, but they’d have better results if they…
However, even if a page does position well (as this page did for “Silicone Madelaine” – a product search,) there’s nothing about the Title that provides further details or encourages click-through – especially when compared to the SERP competition:
Notice the second SERP result – it’s keyphrase rich and highly detailed. Which one would you click?
Is there more that Kitchen Kaboodle can do from a SEO, SEM and social media perspective ? Definitely. Certainly, if they wanted to grow their online orders, they could transform their site into a high-performing ecommerce kitchenware destination. It may not be where they want to focus their efforts or budget. After all, Kitchen Kaboodle is a “local” store, so a national focus may not be their cup of tea. At the same time, in the spirit of “controlling the controllables,” it’s always nice to know there’s another way to gain new customers.
Photo credit – © Alexander Raths | Dreamstime.com
Filed under Content marketing, Copywriting, Daily SEO copywriting candy, SEO Copywriting Tips
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Daily SEO copywriting candy: DIY SEO copywriting
March 30, 2009 • posted by Heather
For a large number of companies, DIY SEO copywriting makes perfect sense. These companies may have existing print or online copywriters on staff – so it’s easy to train them in the SEO copywriting fundamentals. However, bringing SEO copywriting in-house is much harder for smaller businesses, Typically, small businesses “promote” someone to blog editor or SEO copywriter who may not have a lot of SEO copywriting experience. These companies may not have the time or resources to train their new writer. Whatever the copywriter learns is on her own – through forums, books and blog posts.
Which would be OK. If most of the SEO copywriting information out there was…oh, I don’t know…accurate. Case in point: If I see another “keyword density” article pop up on Twitter, I may just go ballistic.
(Side self-promotional note: We’ll be releasing a small business SEO copywriting online training program in just a couple short weeks. Stay tuned!)
So, for those folks forced into an in-house DIY SEO copywriting frenzy, here are some good back-to-basics blog posts by some must-follow experts.
Photo credit: © Barbara Helgason | Dreamstime.com
Filed under Blog writing, Copywriting, Daily SEO copywriting candy, In-house SEO copywriting
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Daily SEO copywriting candy: Twitter your way to online writing success
March 27, 2009 • posted by Heather
It’s my 40th birthday. I’m with my favorite search buddies and eating at one of Vegas’ hottest restaurants (and most expensive…we learned THAT after getting the bill.) Drinks are flowing, food is flowing. It’s all good.
And we’re talking about Twitter. Really. On my 40th birthday. Sadly, I am not making this up.
As I’ve said before, I didn’t quite get this “Twitter thing” until Lee Odden from TopRank Marketing patiently led me through the benefits. And then I got it. And then, the SEO copywriting light turned on as I realized its networking potential.
And then I became a Twitvangelist. It happens to the best of us.
Can Twitter be a waste of time? Hell yeah. But can it be a powerful way to make contacts and even gain business? Hell yeah. For the unconverted (and I know you’re out there,) here’s some Twittips to maximize your Twit-efforts (OK, I’ll stop now.)
Won’t you follow me on Twitter? I promise not to drunk Tweet you. Really.
Filed under Copywriting, Daily SEO copywriting candy, Reputation management, SEO Copywriting Tips, Twitter
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Daily SEO copywriting candy – Gee, honey, I’m SO sorry!
March 25, 2009 • posted by Heather
And then shut up, put their heads down, and start doing some major damage control.
Anyone who has ever been in a relationship can recognize “that moment.” You say something that’s not meant to be bad. Hell, it may even be meant as a compliment. And then you see your partner’s eyes narrow, their mouth do that “I’m pissed off,” pursed thing,” and steam start flowing out of their ears.
Oops.
One of the most interesting things about SEO copywriting (and marketing in general) is you have to be very, very careful about how you say what you say. In your head, you may be thinking one thing. However, your target audience is perceiving things a completely different way. What you think is clever and edgy can actually be…well…insulting. Here’s some examples:
Are you feeling the need to confess your own SEO copywriting relationship sins? Zip me a Tweet on Twitter.
Filed under Copywriting, Daily SEO copywriting candy, International SEO copywriting
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SEO copywriting daily candy: Should you write an ebook?
March 23, 2009 • posted by Heather
A very common SEO content strategy question is, “What about writing an ebook? How will an ebook help me?” Of course, there is always the obvious answer of how an ebook can help estabish your company as an expert. And, if you’re looking for an additional revenue source, ebooks can be mighty profitable. But is an ebook really right for your company? Let’s see…
Hey, only two weeks left until the new and improved SEO Copywriting site – and a new online SEO copywriting training program. Want to know the latest and greatest as it happens? Follow me on Twitter today!
Filed under Content marketing, Daily SEO copywriting candy
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Daily SEO copywriting candy: More ideas for controlling the online marketing controllables
March 19, 2009 • posted by Heather
Remember folks – it’s not enough to just “hold on” during this economy. Yes, it’s an accomplishment just keeping the doors open for some companies – I get that. At the same time, there are ways to position a cash and client-poor business for the future in a way that (1) doesn’t strap immediate cash flow and (2) sets the foundation for lots of business…later. Fortunately, other bloggers are sharing ways people can make sense of this super-strange economy and streamline their online marketing. Here are some helpful tips to get you through.
Hey, and if you aren’t following me on Twitter – what are you afraid of? Follow me and drop me a line.
Oh, and we’re about 2 weeks (or less) away from launching the new site along with the new logo and new…well…everything. Stay tuned!
Filed under Daily SEO copywriting candy
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Daily SEO copywriting candy: Is A-B-C for y-o-u?
March 18, 2009 • posted by Heather
It’s just as important to know your online ABC’s, too. The key is, “closing” can mean different things to different sites. It may be lead generation, and “closing the online deal” is obtaining an email address. Or, you may be selling a super-special widget, and moving units is where it’s at. The key is using your direct-response and SEO copywriting skills to figure out the exact right approach for a successful sale. Today’s Daily SEO copywriting candy focuses on the ABC’s – and shows how we can close our sales just a little bit better.
Hey, are you following me on Twitter yet? If you just can’t wait for the latest SEO copywriting musings, follow me today!
Filed under Daily SEO copywriting candy, Direct reponse copywriting
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