Monthly Archives: December 2008

Bounce Rate: The Forgetten Rule of SEO

Search the internet for SEO rules, tips, secrets and guides and you’ll certainly find enough information to start optimizing your site.From there after you do all of your keyword research and incorporate your key words into your meta tags, headers, text and anchor text, chances are you’ll get some new visitors to your website.Overtime, chances are good that your rankings will eventually drop. Early in my experience, I attributed this to timing and the creation of new pages with similar content. While I was partly correct, I definitely underestimated the importance of user behavior and the minimization of my bounce rateWhat can you do to minimize your bounce rate?

  1. If you are a local service company, get local. If you are in Kansas offering cleaning services, attracting a visitor from California does you no good. Chances are the visitor will leave the site without looking at any further pages. Include your geography in a lot your keywords and pages.
  2. Get specific. A potential customer looking for something specific has a higher chance of sticking around on your site if you offer specifically what they are looking for. The searcher may also be closer to making their purchase decision if they are searching for something specific.
  3. Make sure you have a clean design. Nothing can ruin your credibility as a good company if your site looks like it was designed in 1997 on Geocities.
  4. Administer some A/B testing  prior to launching a redesign. Show a few people a couple of designs and test how easy it is for them to find the types of information they are most likely searching for.

Heathcare Marketing Notes and Word-of-Mouth Marketing

Moving from a position as an Internet marketer to a healthcare marketer, I’ve seen how different successful social media marketing can be depending on the industry.Specifically within healthcare, patients are looking online for information about conditions, treatment options and physicians.

A recent study however showed that their decisions about which physician they want to see still comes down to word-of-mouth suggestions from primary care physicians, friends and family members; not necessarily from something they read on the Internet.Look no further than Minneapolis-based Carol.com to see that online word-of-mouth and price comparisons factor very little into decision making about which physician patients go to see.

Carol.com was social healthcare web site that wanted to do for healthcare what Travelocity did for the travel industry. The site allowed patients to rate service and compare pricing among competitors.Since going live with the site in January, the company has decided to shift the focus of their company to software and consulting. Their sites for the Minneapolis and Seattle area’s will remain live, perhaps to be redeveloped when more consumers are ready.

With that said, the Internet is an important place to reinforce suggestions made by friends and family members. Search engine optimization and web design are critical parts of reinforcing image and reputation. A well designed web site with good content might help raise the level the perceived care a potential patient thinks they will receive.

Another note about Carol.com The concept behind the site was perhaps a bit too ahead of the times. Pricing for consumers may become more important as more people switch to high deductible insurance plans.

The underlying  issue behind the lack of success may have been that most people don’t want to think about healthcare until they have to and at that point, pricing is not always on the top of their minds. Additionally from a healthcare providers perspective, providers had to pay for a listing on the site while many of the individual services listed were rarely offered and priced individually. And while many physicians still in practice were taught to never advertise it is tough for marketers and administrators to justify costs.

Facebook Connect Not For Every Web Site

Facebook Connect is the “next evolution of Facebook Platform” allowing developers to integrate Facebook into their own web sites.Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has said that privacy will be intact as Facebook expands outside of its walls, however after speaking with many of my friends who are Facebook power users, many of them seem skeptical about expansion at the risk of mixing their personal and professional lives.To preface further discussion, most of my friends are around 25 years old and have been on Facebook for over four years since the days when they were in college. Many of them use Facebook to post pictures of their Friday nights, to connect with friends of the opposite sex, to evesdrop on old acquaintances, to learn about new acquaintances and to send messages.Additionally, most of my friends use the internet to learn, connect and discuss things that pertain to them professionally. Almost none of them use Facebook for professional purposes.Facebook Connect is being added to professional blogs and other web sites that offer professional discussions has many of my friends concerned that this could take the fun out of Facebook.I think many of my friends would be much more receptive to this service on professional/business focused web sites from a site like Linkedin. From here, professional discussions online could remain on a professional platform.For web sites focused on personal hobbies and interests like health & fitness, sports, music and video games, Facebook Connect could work out nicely. Despite what some people hype the service to be, it’s not for everything.[polldaddy poll=1176162]