I learned something new and amusing today about the SEO term called PR or Page Rank that you can use to win bar bets with. (no guarantees of course) I always knew it was different than the term SERP rank which stands for Search Engine Results Page rank which means are you #1, #2 or #3 … in the search results. Most people call this Page Rank. However Page Rank has always meant the relative authority/importance of a particular page or website based on a Google algorithm that weighs things like number and importance of other websites that link to the page or domain and other factors. What I learned today that was new and amusing was that Page Rank was named after Larry Page who cofounded Google and who came up with the concept of the Page Rank approach.
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Something I bet you didn’t know about the term “Page Rank”
ESS: Educate, Sensitize, and Sell
Is ESS the New Model for Remodeler Marketing?
Even though more and more homeowners don’t like to be “sold to,” your job is to get homeowners to buy your remodeling services. What’s a remodeling company marketing pro supposed to do?
We suggest you remember “ESS,” “Educate, Sensitize, and Sell.” Homeowners today want help making intelligent decisions about what they buy and from whom. So the best way to sell is to help homeowners make the right decisions. You can educate them in all sorts of ways about remodeling, selecting a remodeler, design trends, green remodeling, and a whole host of other topics homeowners would be grateful to receive information about.
But beyond educating, you probably also want to help sensitize homeowners to things they should be concerned about so that they can weed out those remodelers who are less likely to provide them with a quality project and an enjoyable experience.
This does not mean bad-mouthing others in your industry. It does mean acquainting homeowners to the dangers and downsides of hiring unlicensed and uninsured remodelers, perhaps remodelers with lower qualifications, or remodelers that do not have a well-oiled team working for them, as well as a whole lot of other things that a homeowner should know in order to make a wise decision when they select a remodeler.
If you have any questions about this post or other remodeler or contractor marketing questions, please contact us.
Remodeler Marketing 101: Site Maps
Most remodelers nowadays know what a site map is when it comes to their website and remodeler marketing. It is a page that has hypertext links to all the pages on your remodeling company website. But did you know you really need two and possibly three types of site maps to do the most good?
The first site map, the one people use, needs to be simple, straightforward, and well-organized. The second site map, sometimes called an XML site map, is for search engines and search engine optimization. This site map tells the search engines what pages you think are most important, least important, and how often the search engines should check for updates on a given page. The last type of site map is of value, for search engine optimization purposes, if you have videos on your website. There is a special format for video site maps that tells the search engines what they need to properly index videos on your website. The fact that you have videos on your website also helps your site in search engine optimization by improving its ranking… At least as long as videos are not on all websites.
If you have any questions about this or other remodeler or contractor marketing questions contact us.
PPC versus SEO or PPC and SEO For Remodeler Marketing
PPC (Pay per Click) marketing and SEO marketing are often seen as competing marketing tactics. While it is true that some remodeling companies select one or the other, in an ideal remodeler marketing world, you would use both PPC and SEO and use their strengths in a complementary fashion. (In most cases this is also the most cost-effective strategy, although not cheap.)
The benefits of PPC for remodeler marketing are that it is highly localize-able, controllable, quick to roll out, and you only pay for clicks. However, you still have to do keyword research, write ads, create landing pages that are similar to what you need for SEO remodeler marketing, tweak and modify the program over time, and of course you could end up paying for a lot of clicks that generate no leads. Therefore, when doing PPC, it is extremely important that you also do website optimization to make sure that your landing pages and website make the best use of every click you pay for.
The benefits of SEO for remodeling company marketing is that it is long-term, you don’t have to pay for clicks (especially ones that don’t turn into sales), and it can be less expensive for similar or better results. Furthermore, remodeler SEO efforts build upon themselves so that the longer you use SEO, the better your results. SEO also lasts longer than a pay per click program which is either on or off. Perhaps most importantly, SEO results show up in organic searches, where most people prefer to click, rather than sponsored links and ads.
In that ideal world of remodeler marketing, one would kick-start an online marketing program with a PPC marketing program while at the same time developing and executing an SEO marketing program. If done properly, you will be able to determine which keywords yield high organic rankings via SEO and therefore for which you can stop using, and paying for, PPC. As the SEO program for your remodeling firm continues, you can build your rankings for many of your keywords with SEO and stop paying for those keywords in your PPC program.
Eventually, you may find that there are some important keywords that, no matter what you try, you cannot feasibly rank high in the organic listings using SEO. For those words, you can continue a PPC program and therefore get the benefits of each – SEO and PPC – most cost-effectively when marketing for your remodeling firm.
If you have any questions about this post or other remodeler or contractor marketing questions, please contact us.
Without a doubt, jobsite marketing is one of the most cost-effective remodeler marketing approaches. At one end, jobsite marketing involves a well-designed and visible jobsite sign with your company name, logo, website, phone number, and perhaps a tagline and a “take-one” box with brochures. At the other end, jobsite marketing includes a jobsite sign as above plus trucks, vans, and trailers with company branding and information on them, branded dumpsters, postcard and/or letter mailings to surrounding homes, handouts or door hangers, or gifts and perhaps even an end-of-project party for your homeowners so they can show off their newly remodeled home to their friends and neighbors.
Jobsite marketing can also include a clean, safe jobsite, being a good neighbor to the project site’s adjacent homes, and generally ‘wowing’ your client with service and quality.
So what are the cons of jobsite marketing for remodelers?
The biggest problem with jobsite marketing for remodelers is your lack of control over where the jobsite is and how many jobsites you have going at one time. You might have a great project in an area that may not have many homes close enough to realize there is a remodeling job going on, or the home may be in an area that has poor visibility, like the end of the pipe stem or cul-de-sac. Or maybe it’s in an area where the other homes are not likely prospects for you. The other control problem with remodeler jobsite marketing, and you are all familiar with this by now, is that when the market slows, your cost-efficient jobsite marketing approach has fewer and fewer opportunities for use. Few jobsites means less marketing and less marketing means fewer jobsites.
There are also neighborhoods and buildings (if you work on condos) that do not allow the use of jobsite signs or the parking of commercial vehicles where they can be easily seen. However, you can still do direct mail and sometimes personal canvassing in these situations.
What you should take away from this post, is that you should have a good, multi-faceted jobsite marketing program that cost-effectively generates business when you can use it, but you should not rely solely on jobsite marketing because when you need it most you can use it the least.
If you have any questions about this post or other remodeler or contractor marketing questions, please contact us.
Consider this: a specific page on your remodeling company website has 100 visitors. 99 of the people came to the page from within your website and after visiting the page moved to other pages on your website. However, 1 person came to that page because they found it on a search engine. They came to your site directly to that page and then left from that page.
What would be the Google bounce rate for that web page? Would it be 1% ? (99 people visited the page and continued viewing your site.) No. It would be 100%. That page on your website would have a 100% bounce rate. All because one person visited that page from “outside” your website and then left your website without exploring your site more!
So, if you look at Google Analytics and see that the specific page on your website has a 100% bounce rate, should you panic? Not necessarily. It depends on the page. If the 100% bounce rate is for a “landing page” you created, then a 100% bounce rate is a BIG problem. It means that all of the people who were coming to that landing page from outside your website are leaving before they explore the rest of your site. That is bad.
However, if the page with the 100% bounce rate has information on it like a staff member’s name, the site visitor may have found that page while doing a search for a different person with that same name. And if that page is not a landing page, nor is it particularly important, a high bounce rate to that page would not be a problem.
As it was explained to me, Google calculates its bounce rate the way it does mostly because of Google Adwords. When a Google Adwords link is clicked and someone goes to your website, you are paying for each click.
So you really want to know that people going to the page you just paid for them to go to are staying on your website and not bouncing from the site. When you think about it from that perspective, the seemingly counter-intuitive percentage calculation makes sense. Once you understand how the bounce rate is calculated and what it should be used for, you can start making better decisions about your remodeling company website.
If you have any questions about this post or other remodeler or contractor marketing questions, please contact us.