Well, hello there.
Matt Edmundson:Welcome to the e-Commerce podcast with me, your host, Matt Edmundson.
Matt Edmundson:The E-Commerce podcast is all about helping you deliver e-commerce.
Matt Edmundson:Wow.
Matt Edmundson:And to help you do just that I am chatting with today's guest, Kevin
Matt Edmundson:Wiles, about why SEO is not just about the search engines but better websites.
Matt Edmundson:It's been such a while, such a long time actually, since we've
Matt Edmundson:had anyone on the show about seo.
Matt Edmundson:So I'm excited to get into this, Kevin, but before you and I jump into that,
Matt Edmundson:let me suggest a few other eCommerce podcast episodes that I think.
Matt Edmundson:You will enjoy listening to.
Matt Edmundson:So check out how SEO rankings can help you improve your customer experience
Matt Edmundson:with Nick Trueman, the legend.
Matt Edmundson:That is Nick Trueman.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, and also check out the three pillars of SEO with Alina Ghost.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, that two episodes definitely worth checking out.
Matt Edmundson:You can find them, uh, as well as our entire archive of episodes on our
Matt Edmundson:website for free at ecommercepodcast.net.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, and on our website you can also sign up for our newsletter.
Matt Edmundson:And each week we will email you these links that we mention along
Matt Edmundson:with the notes and the links from today's conversation with Kevin.
Matt Edmundson:You can get that direct to your inbox totally free.
Matt Edmundson:How amazing is that?
Matt Edmundson:Now this episode is brought to you by the e-commerce cohort, which helps
Matt Edmundson:deliver e-commerce Wow to your customers.
Matt Edmundson:Kevin, I am sure you have come across a whole bunch of folks.
Matt Edmundson:Right.
Matt Edmundson:Stuck With that e-commerce website, or they've got siloed into one or
Matt Edmundson:two areas they're just working on and miss the whole big picture.
Matt Edmundson:Well, enter e-commerce cohort to solve this problem.
Matt Edmundson:It's a lightweight membership group with guided monthly, monthly sprints that cycle
Matt Edmundson:through all the key areas of e-commerce.
Matt Edmundson:The sole purpose, uh, of which is to provide you with clear
Matt Edmundson:actionable jobs to be done.
Matt Edmundson:Yes.
Matt Edmundson:So you will know what to work on, uh, and uh, you'll get the
Matt Edmundson:support you need to get it done.
Matt Edmundson:So, whether you are just starting out an e-commerce or if, like me, you are
Matt Edmundson:a well established eCommercer slash e-commerce dinosaur, uh, I encourage
Matt Edmundson:you to definitely check it out.
Matt Edmundson:Visit ecommercecohort.com.
Matt Edmundson:That's ecommercecohort.com.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, or if you'd like, just email me with any questions that you've got and
Matt Edmundson:I'll try my level best to answer them.
Matt Edmundson:You can reach me at uh matt@ecommercepodcast.net, and of course
Matt Edmundson:you can also email me with any comments or thoughts you've got about the show.
Matt Edmundson:We'd love to hear what you've got to say.
Matt Edmundson:Now let's jump into the conversation with our fab guest.
Matt Edmundson:Kevin is a passionate, technical SEO lead with a career history of working with
Matt Edmundson:big household names across New Zealand.
Matt Edmundson:Oh yes, the Kiwis, uh, and the United Kingdom, including
Matt Edmundson:Halford's and Furniture Village.
Matt Edmundson:Kevin, thanks for coming on the show.
Matt Edmundson:Great to have you here.
Matt Edmundson:Super excited to be talking about SEO.
Matt Edmundson:How are we doing?
Kevin Wiles:All good.
Kevin Wiles:Thank you.
Kevin Wiles:I'm recovering from brightonSEO, so my voice is a little croaky, but all good.
Kevin Wiles:Um, lots of knowledge takeaways from that.
Kevin Wiles:So yeah.
Kevin Wiles:Excited to be on the podcast.
Matt Edmundson:Fantastic.
Matt Edmundson:Well, it's good to be here and thank you for, we were just talking
Matt Edmundson:before we hit the record button that you may be a little bit fatigued
Matt Edmundson:from the, uh, from all the stuff.
Kevin Wiles:I feel like if you're an SEO and you woke up today and
Kevin Wiles:you're not tired and fatigued, you didn't do brightonSEO properly.
Matt Edmundson:is that, is that how that works?
Matt Edmundson:Is that just do
Kevin Wiles:with the new model that they have on the website every year?
Matt Edmundson:the tagline, uh, on the, on the landing page.
Matt Edmundson:You guaranteed you'll be knackered and tired the day after.
Matt Edmundson:Pretty much.
Matt Edmundson:It's a sign up now.
Matt Edmundson:You'd be like, Okay, I'm in.
Matt Edmundson:I'm in.
Matt Edmundson:So what happened at Brighton SEO that made it so epic this year?
Kevin Wiles:Um, I think, I think for me it's just I typically go to Brighton
Kevin Wiles:and, um, use that time to a) go to some of the fantastic talks, but then also use
Kevin Wiles:at time to network with lots of people that live like Liverpool, New Castle,
Kevin Wiles:all across the different, the country.
Kevin Wiles:Um, and typically that just means you start networking.
Kevin Wiles:You start talking, it's by the beach.
Kevin Wiles:Nice sea views that leads to a few beers, which then leads
Kevin Wiles:to a hangover in the morning.
Kevin Wiles:Um, and I think that just over a three day period, so I usually typically,
Kevin Wiles:um, head up on the Wednesday, come back, uh, on the Friday.
Kevin Wiles:Um, it's a long way in a car.
Matt Edmundson:Oh yeah.
Matt Edmundson:I mean, where did you drive down from?
Kevin Wiles:Uh, so I'm based in Stratford-upon-Avon, so it
Kevin Wiles:took about three hours there.
Kevin Wiles:Five and a bit back.
Matt Edmundson:That does not sound fun.
Matt Edmundson:Do you, have you heard of a train?
Matt Edmundson:I don't know.
Matt Edmundson:Uh.
Kevin Wiles:I have the, so about trains and with all the train strikes, I was
Kevin Wiles:like, I think I'd rather drive than be stuck at, at train station, just being
Kevin Wiles:like, I just wanna be at home now.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, no, fair play.
Matt Edmundson:Fair play.
Matt Edmundson:So did you, um, did you take lots of notes at Brighton seo?
Matt Edmundson:Have you got lots of new ideas.
Kevin Wiles:I did, I actually took some advice this, this time around.
Kevin Wiles:So typically I, I go and geek out and do all the tech things around
Kevin Wiles:artificial intelligence and machine learning and eCommerce SEO, and this
Kevin Wiles:time around there's actually some good advice about going to do talks
Kevin Wiles:that you wouldn't typically do.
Kevin Wiles:So things like, Hey, I'm not a digital PR person, so going and sitting in
Kevin Wiles:some of those digital PR talks to just learn some new stuff, I guess.
Kevin Wiles:Um, and there's some fantastic talks specifically around, uh, agency growth,
Kevin Wiles:culture, uh, preventing burnout, that sort of stuff, which was, um, I
Kevin Wiles:don't think it's talked about enough.
Kevin Wiles:Mm-hmm, let's say seo, but digital as a whole about, uh, we, our
Kevin Wiles:laptops for enormous amount of time.
Kevin Wiles:Oh, we do?
Kevin Wiles:Yeah.
Kevin Wiles:Yeah.
Kevin Wiles:Every day.
Kevin Wiles:Um, so those, those talks are really insightful and good again, where some
Kevin Wiles:tips of, I should probably get out more.
Kevin Wiles:Doing less SEO and more walks and stuff.
Kevin Wiles:So I feel like a lot of my life is just, uh, work seo, and
Kevin Wiles:then you get FOMO missing out.
Kevin Wiles:And so yeah, those, those talks were good.
Kevin Wiles:Uh, but it's, it's, it's fantastic.
Kevin Wiles:I think it's a great initiative particularly for, um, The younger
Kevin Wiles:people coming up in the industry to have an opportunity to talk and learn
Kevin Wiles:those things that essentially will keep SEO alive for years to come.
Kevin Wiles:That's if robots don't kill us off first.
Kevin Wiles:But,
Matt Edmundson:you never know, right?
Matt Edmundson:You never know.
Matt Edmundson:Never know.
Matt Edmundson:I've seen the Matrix, so I know what happens.
Matt Edmundson:Um, so what was your biggest takeaway from, from the conference?
Kevin Wiles:Um, I think that search is advancing is always the biggest takeaway
Kevin Wiles:I take from many of these events, whether it's Brighton, Search Love, Moscon stuff.
Kevin Wiles:I think for me, the core principles of SEO haven't really changed since I
Kevin Wiles:started like 12 years ago, 14 years ago.
Kevin Wiles:And that was before Google even existed.
Kevin Wiles:I like left college and I fell into seo.
Kevin Wiles:Um, but I think that it's, it's advancing at such a rate, but actually
Kevin Wiles:it's, it's not in the same instance.
Kevin Wiles:I, Hey, the core principles around, is it technically sound?
Kevin Wiles:Is the site optimized for speed?
Kevin Wiles:Is it.
Kevin Wiles:Is facet navigation from most point of view done for a
Kevin Wiles:customer and an SEO benefit.
Kevin Wiles:Yeah, I think those things have stayed the same, but I think it's just insightful
Kevin Wiles:to come away and be like, there's now GPT three to automate content.
Kevin Wiles:Kind of there's a big caveat there.
Kevin Wiles:Don't go and do that on category pages and that stuff cause that's not
Kevin Wiles:great and Google doesn't like that.
Kevin Wiles:But I think just seeing how technology is helping the industry
Kevin Wiles:advance is the biggest takeaway.
Kevin Wiles:Um, but it's always learning something new.
Kevin Wiles:Always.
Kevin Wiles:Yeah.
Kevin Wiles:I think whenever you, you think you are at that point where there's
Kevin Wiles:something you can't learn, someone somewhere has done something that
Kevin Wiles:you're like, Oh, that's cool.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:That's the, um, I, I, and that's, for me, that's the appeal of
Matt Edmundson:going to things like that.
Matt Edmundson:They're usually far away.
Matt Edmundson:They're usually expensive, you know, in terms of time and just the
Matt Edmundson:cost of getting there, I suppose.
Matt Edmundson:And that's before you've paid the entry price, whatever that is.
Matt Edmundson:And so there, there are a few conferences that I would sort of entertain going to.
Matt Edmundson:And it's that, it's, for me, it's the whole idea generation.
Matt Edmundson:That's the value in going there.
Matt Edmundson:And you sit and you listen to other people, and I dunno if your mind does
Matt Edmundson:this, Kevin, but my mind certainly is I start to, I've sat there with my notebook
Matt Edmundson:and I start to wander in my thinking and I just jot down all my crazy ideas.
Matt Edmundson:And you've always found something, you know, and it's like,
Kevin Wiles:Yeah, definitely.
Kevin Wiles:And I think, I think, you know, um, I dunno about you, but like I pretty much
Kevin Wiles:work from home full time now, right?
Kevin Wiles:Like before when I was at Halfords I was like full-time in the office
Kevin Wiles:and you're then talking to people, networking, talking about different,
Kevin Wiles:you know, bouncing things off merchandise about how you can do,
Kevin Wiles:uh, PRP, optimizing, et cetera.
Kevin Wiles:And I think now going to Brighton, you actually get to speak to other SEOs,
Kevin Wiles:whereas at home, as much as I'm trying.
Kevin Wiles:I've got a nine month old kitten.
Kevin Wiles:She just doesn't want to talk SEO with me.
Kevin Wiles:She just looks at me like, I'm bizarre who wants her dinner.
Kevin Wiles:And then that's it.
Kevin Wiles:So going to Brighton SEO gives me the opportunity to actually talk
Kevin Wiles:and bounce the ideas off other SEOs and try and problem solve.
Kevin Wiles:And I think that's with, with any event you go to, um, IRX in Birmingham,
Kevin Wiles:for example, it's happening this week or, or won't be when this is
Kevin Wiles:aired, but it's happening in October.
Kevin Wiles:You know, it's a great opportunity to go and talk to uh, eCommerce
Kevin Wiles:platforms and suppliers and see what some of those people are doing
Kevin Wiles:in the tech and advancements that aren't holistically within seo,
Kevin Wiles:but will have an impact for seo.
Kevin Wiles:You know, you just look at things like split testing software where it's used
Kevin Wiles:for a user benefit, but those aren't implemented correctly, suddenly has
Kevin Wiles:an impact on site speed, which then from an SEO point of view, You're sat
Kevin Wiles:there going, Let's not do any of this.
Kevin Wiles:But there's different benefits and I think it's, it's good going to those events
Kevin Wiles:cuz you get to start to understand the wider picture of like, SEO isn't the only
Kevin Wiles:channel that exists and SEO isn't the only important thing that exists in eCommerce.
Kevin Wiles:Mm-hmm..
Kevin Wiles:Um, and just to network with cool people.
Kevin Wiles:There's lots of cool, fascinating people in SEO and tech and eCommerce that you
Kevin Wiles:just wouldn't get exposed to because as much as you wanna talk to 'em on Twitter,
Kevin Wiles:so do probably a hundred other people.
Kevin Wiles:Whereas in Brighton, you can bump into them, buy them a coffee, a beer, chips,
Kevin Wiles:whatever it might be, and start to just.
Kevin Wiles:Just pick their intelligent brain apart and, and find something, which to your
Kevin Wiles:point, you then come away with ideas.
Kevin Wiles:And I think most of my creative ideas are always, they start at
Kevin Wiles:Brighton, but they sort of come to fruition when I'm back home on walks.
Kevin Wiles:Sat in front of the TV when I think.
Kevin Wiles:Oh, I could take that idea that I didn't think I could use for any clients and
Kevin Wiles:I could actually use it by tweaking it and doing this, this, and this.
Kevin Wiles:And before, you know, you've got like these cool ideas.
Kevin Wiles:The downside to that is you've gotta put a commercial value behind those ideas.
Kevin Wiles:Or actually try and put a, Hey client, if we go and do this, is this a benefit?
Kevin Wiles:Rather than just, I've got this cool idea, it's gonna take a
Kevin Wiles:hundred hours, but it's cool.
Kevin Wiles:Um, which is the, the, the, always the impact of seo.
Kevin Wiles:Like there's a hundred things to do.
Kevin Wiles:What, what do you need to do to actually.
Kevin Wiles:You need to be able to prove what you should and why.
Kevin Wiles:Yeah.
Kevin Wiles:Rather than just here's a list of things and go and fix them.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:No.
Matt Edmundson:Brilliant.
Matt Edmundson:Brilliant.
Matt Edmundson:Okay, so let's, uh, let's rewind a little bit and, um, let's not make any
Matt Edmundson:assumptions, uh, of, from, for people listening to the show because I think SEO
Matt Edmundson:for years has been one of those things where people have either um, ignored
Matt Edmundson:it completely or they've, um, they've succumbed to whoever calls them that
Matt Edmundson:day, uh, and promises to get them on page one for like, you know, uh, of Google.
Matt Edmundson:Um, and we've all had those phone calls from SEO agencies promising us a world
Matt Edmundson:and delivering absolutely bugger all.
Matt Edmundson:Um, you know, it's that kind of, um, reputation, isn't it?
Matt Edmundson:So, Seo, is it?
Matt Edmundson:Let's start off with this question, right?
Matt Edmundson:Is SEO part of the dark arts?
Matt Edmundson:Is it just like a witchcraft?
Matt Edmundson:Uh, is probably my question
Matt Edmundson:. Kevin Wiles: I, I think for a long time,
Matt Edmundson:started seo, which was, like I said before, it, it was SEO wasn't a thing.
Matt Edmundson:Um, I don't think it was a dark art.
Matt Edmundson:I think that we, as SEOs did things that weren't ideal for, for the
Matt Edmundson:user, but knew we could get away with them, tech wasn't advanced back then,
Matt Edmundson:Altavista was the biggest search engine.
Matt Edmundson:I remember working on sites where white text on a white background
Matt Edmundson:with all your keyword stuffed at the bottom, and you could rank number
Matt Edmundson:one and like Yellow Pages site on your own website to get links.
Matt Edmundson:I think we as SEOs have kind of sold this magic because we believe
Matt Edmundson:that's how it needs to be sold as a product to get sales in.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:Um, but it, it's like most things, it's just a methodical approach of saying,
Matt Edmundson:Okay, if Google guidelines say this, what does that actually mean for me?
Matt Edmundson:And I'm not saying, Hey, Google's guidelines are always fundamentally
Matt Edmundson:correct because they're, there needs to be context behind
Matt Edmundson:what that recommendation is.
Matt Edmundson:But I definitely don't think it's a dark art.
Matt Edmundson:I think, um, it's just understanding, let's take a
Matt Edmundson:retail shop, right, for example.
Matt Edmundson:Let's imagine you've got the best shop ever, but then what you've gone
Matt Edmundson:and done is blacked out the windows because you don't want anyone to see in.
Matt Edmundson:Well, probably customers won't come in because they might
Matt Edmundson:think you're closed to renovate.
Matt Edmundson:And go actually maybe it's just a bit weird a shop, but they don't wanna go
Matt Edmundson:into that and SEO's the same, right?
Matt Edmundson:It's, Hey, you've got the best content in the world.
Matt Edmundson:But then you've not got your tech stack set up correctly and you've
Matt Edmundson:not got site speed set up, or there's issues with JavaScript.
Matt Edmundson:Well, suddenly Google can't see any of that content to help your shop front
Matt Edmundson:be visible for different keywords and then suddenly no one comes.
Matt Edmundson:And I think it, it is just that simple.
Matt Edmundson:Um, I think we have just mis-sold it.
Matt Edmundson:There's been lots of kind of like statements released that probably
Matt Edmundson:aren't factually correct or slightly tweaked to push an agenda.
Matt Edmundson:Um, and that's made people, particularly with less understanding of seo, have
Matt Edmundson:this view to your point that is.
Matt Edmundson:A dark art and it's magic.
Matt Edmundson:And for years it was like, well, I can just do PPC and I know
Matt Edmundson:exactly what I'm getting back because I spend X and I get X, Y.
Matt Edmundson:And it's much easier to, And even that's true today.
Matt Edmundson:When I was at Halford's, it was cool, but if we spend this
Matt Edmundson:at ppc, we can get this back.
Matt Edmundson:And what can you do from an SEO point of view?
Matt Edmundson:And then you start doing forecasting.
Matt Edmundson:But none of that forecasting is robust enough and still isn't today.
Matt Edmundson:There's lots of modeling and stuff you can do, but I, I still don't think it gives.
Matt Edmundson:Actually, this is what you can get.
Matt Edmundson:Because hey, the caveat is, well, if devs don't go and do this, or the
Matt Edmundson:head of e-com goes and turns off the Black Friday page each year and then
Matt Edmundson:creates another one, suddenly that forecast is all thrown into doubt.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:Out of your control.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:No, fair enough.
Matt Edmundson:I mean, if I'm if I'm Halford's, I get the value of seo, right?
Matt Edmundson:I'm a big site and I, I'm, I'm, I, I, I can see that.
Matt Edmundson:But if I'm, if I'm Rob's Car Parts, you, I've just got a little car part
Matt Edmundson:shop, uh, on the back streets of Liverpool, I'm thinking, you know what?
Matt Edmundson:I'm gonna set up a website.
Matt Edmundson:Is SEO something that he should think about?
Matt Edmundson:Is it, or is he just gonna look at Halford's and go
Matt Edmundson:there's no way I can compete.
Matt Edmundson:I'm not gonna get on page one.
Matt Edmundson:Um, so why should I even think about SEO?
Kevin Wiles:Yeah.
Kevin Wiles:I think, and if this is where I was talking to that like the advancements
Kevin Wiles:of search, I think maybe many years ago that have been this, we can get you
Kevin Wiles:ranking potentially for these high volume search them, cuz we could do lots of
Kevin Wiles:sort of like obscure shady link building.
Kevin Wiles:I think now it's much tougher to compete at a national level for things like car
Kevin Wiles:parts or mot for example, against Kwik Fits and Halfords, but where you can win
Kevin Wiles:as a like smaller brand is understanding what that search actually returns.
Kevin Wiles:And what I mean by that is if I go and search, um, Mot booking for
Kevin Wiles:example, what I'll probably get is Google saying, Hey, we think you're
Kevin Wiles:in Stratford-upon-Avon and here's some garages in Stratford-upon-Avon,
Kevin Wiles:which in some instances may not even have a halford or a Kwik fit.
Kevin Wiles:Some of the big brands for term because they don't have a garage that close.
Kevin Wiles:And that's the kind of sweet spot is Google's now starting to
Kevin Wiles:understand different search queries.
Kevin Wiles:Actually we think that is a local query and therefore you have an opportunity to
Kevin Wiles:rank free maps or for the local stuff.
Kevin Wiles:So I think it is becoming more of a level playing field and
Kevin Wiles:definitely has more value.
Kevin Wiles:Um, but it is still the big players typically rank and win
Kevin Wiles:across the big, the big sites.
Kevin Wiles:And the, the other is absolutely true as well.
Kevin Wiles:When I was at Halfords, we actually started to lose ground for things like
Kevin Wiles:mountain bikes and tires and stuff.
Kevin Wiles:Um, local landing pages, and that meant that some of the smaller brands and
Kevin Wiles:that we then had to go and do strategy, we had to build our local pages out.
Kevin Wiles:And there's a post that I did recently about, um, a small convenience
Kevin Wiles:brand called Select and Safe near me, and they have the same issue.
Kevin Wiles:They have a main website, but no dedicated local landing
Kevin Wiles:pages for say convenience store.
Kevin Wiles:And people are trying to find those products or services close by.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:I was, when I was sort of coming through the ranks of e-commerce, Uh,
Matt Edmundson:I've seen stuff come and go around, um, seo and I've seen stuff come and
Matt Edmundson:go about, around a whole, and it seemed to me maybe about, I wanna say about
Matt Edmundson:five years ago, maybe seven years ago, content marketing was big on the scene.
Matt Edmundson:You know, HubSpot kind of came across and said, Do content marketing.
Matt Edmundson:Um, inbound is the way of the future.
Matt Edmundson:Get everybody coming to you rather than doing the megaphone and sharing out.
Matt Edmundson:The whole idea being you go on the web, you do some research, you find a question
Matt Edmundson:that somebody is asking, and you write a blog post with the question as the title.
Matt Edmundson:In theory, you would then rank for that on Google and that would
Matt Edmundson:bring traffic back to your website.
Matt Edmundson:And it was always, that was a stage where you were told that was easy
Matt Edmundson:to do than say, rank for a product.
Matt Edmundson:So, um, I have, uh, a company vegetology.
Matt Edmundson:The products sat on my desk here.
Matt Edmundson:It's a vegan supplement, an Omega 3 supplement, which is awesome.
Matt Edmundson:Um, and so there was a whole strategy then done around, let's
Matt Edmundson:just write a load of blog posts around Omega 3, does omega 3 work.
Matt Edmundson:Why should I take Omega 3, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Matt Edmundson:And you do all these blog posts and you put 'em on the blog.
Matt Edmundson:And yes, they do bring traffic in, but is that still something that is
Matt Edmundson:relevant for today or is that kind of gone by the wayside as well?
Kevin Wiles:I think it's, it's definitely still relevant.
Kevin Wiles:I think it, its only relevant if you're gonna do it and be
Kevin Wiles:the expert in that content.
Kevin Wiles:So I'll use a Halfords, for example, when I first joined halford's, we owned
Kevin Wiles:pretty much all the commercial terms related to all the bike categories.
Kevin Wiles:Mm-hmm.
Kevin Wiles:, but we didn't have anything that would be like, uh, how to find the right
Kevin Wiles:size bike or how to measure your child for your bike or the Mountain Bike
Kevin Wiles:buying guide, or whatever it might be.
Kevin Wiles:Yeah.
Kevin Wiles:And then when we started to do that content, uh, for caveat here, just so
Kevin Wiles:people don't think I'm a terrible SEO content sat in a completely different
Kevin Wiles:team, um, those articles were basically created to be maybe 200, 300 words.
Kevin Wiles:Mm-hmm.
Kevin Wiles:. But if you then flip that, and I use a example, I remember when I was a a kid, I
Kevin Wiles:used to go into Clark Shoe store and, and parents would be like, Cool, we need to
Kevin Wiles:get some new trainers, whatever that is.
Kevin Wiles:And that whole experience would be someone measuring my feet in their little, um,
Kevin Wiles:electronic machine and clamping it either side, and then they'll be like, Cool, you
Kevin Wiles:can have these trainers with the light up thing because they've got a padded sole.
Kevin Wiles:It was a whole experience.
Kevin Wiles:But if you take that and put that into a blog content piece, you can't
Kevin Wiles:explain that journey about how to measure your feet in two hundred words.
Kevin Wiles:And similar to the, the mountain bike example.
Kevin Wiles:And I think, again, we as SEOs have said, Hey, create loads of
Kevin Wiles:content and traffic will come.
Kevin Wiles:But actually what people have ended up doing is creating lots of terrible content
Kevin Wiles:rather than saying, rather than saying, um, okay, if you're talking about Omega
Kevin Wiles:3, and you are explaining what is Omega 3.
Kevin Wiles:If you go and look at like Healthline for example, that article is probably
Kevin Wiles:a couple of thousand words and the word count is slightly relevant, but
Kevin Wiles:the point of it is they've gone away and understood every question and
Kevin Wiles:sub question that's related and the benefits the side effect, the dosage.
Kevin Wiles:Yeah.
Kevin Wiles:And then come back with the most comprehensive piece of content.
Kevin Wiles:And they've done that for a whole broad set of topics.
Kevin Wiles:And I think that's where we're seeing this pivot and sort of like change
Kevin Wiles:at the moment where for years we said we'll sell you 10 blog posts a month.
Kevin Wiles:Thank you very much.
Kevin Wiles:We'll create 10 blog posts without much thought or direction.
Kevin Wiles:It's just 10 blog posts.
Kevin Wiles:We'll definitely get traffic.
Kevin Wiles:Cool.
Kevin Wiles:Tick in a box, and now it's going the other way, where people are
Kevin Wiles:doing content audits and actually removing a lot of content.
Kevin Wiles:There's just been done because SEO said we should do content, and it's kind of
Kevin Wiles:got to that place where it's like now less is more and of that less content.
Kevin Wiles:The more well written it is, the more well researched it is, the better.
Kevin Wiles:Um, and then you start tying in the FAQs and you mark that with FAQ
Kevin Wiles:scheme and you get the, like the feature snippets in Google and stuff.
Kevin Wiles:There's still a play here to get traffic from those.
Kevin Wiles:But I do think it's a less is more.
Kevin Wiles:And if you can be the authorities, so, uh, particularly in certain
Kevin Wiles:industries for the omega3, for example, if I wrote a piece of content about
Kevin Wiles:omega3s, I wouldn't rank anywhere.
Kevin Wiles:Mm-hmm.
Kevin Wiles:I'm not authority.
Kevin Wiles:I don't have the accreditations and education to be the right
Kevin Wiles:person to talk about omega 3.
Kevin Wiles:But if a doctor did it and had those profiles marked up and Google
Kevin Wiles:understands actually, uh, they've written it, they've got the right
Kevin Wiles:degrees, et cetera, there's probably a higher chance they'll rank for it.
Kevin Wiles:Yeah.
Kevin Wiles:Um, so I do think it is just about understanding the audience and then
Kevin Wiles:creating detailed content that is what you would get if you went to the pharmacy
Kevin Wiles:or the doctor and got the same advice.
Kevin Wiles:Mm-hmm..
Kevin Wiles:Um, but again, we have SEOs that have just for many years gone.
Kevin Wiles:How do I cut the corner?
Kevin Wiles:What's the little loophole?
Kevin Wiles:I can go around and get some rankings and stuff?
Kevin Wiles:And it works for a long time, right?
Kevin Wiles:Like there's always this view of SEO should be about getting traffic, but.
Kevin Wiles:I before joined Halford's was always agency side, and I
Kevin Wiles:lived by that for a long time.
Kevin Wiles:It's like, well, traffic's up 30%.
Kevin Wiles:We've done a great job.
Kevin Wiles:Thank you very much.
Kevin Wiles:When I went to Halfords, it shifted my whole mindset a lot to be like, I don't
Kevin Wiles:care if traffic is actually down as long as revenue is up, because revenue is
Kevin Wiles:what keeps stores open, which keeps the staffs in job and helps the business grow.
Kevin Wiles:Um, but to do that we actually started declining the amount of traffic, uh, the
Kevin Wiles:amount of content we were doing right to make that content useful because
Kevin Wiles:otherwise it's basically just gonna sit on a shelf, like an old toy in a toy
Kevin Wiles:story that no one plays with anymore.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, no, that's fascinating because I think, it sounds
Matt Edmundson:like Kevin, and correct me if I'm wrong, it sounds like, uh, for years,
Matt Edmundson:and this is not just peculiar to SEO, this is, you know, every aspect of
Matt Edmundson:e-commerce has fallen foul to this.
Matt Edmundson:We've always looked for the shortcut.
Matt Edmundson:We've always looked for the hack, you know?
Matt Edmundson:Yep.
Matt Edmundson:Um, how to hack life, How to hack seo, Do you know what I mean?
Matt Edmundson:We want the hack.
Matt Edmundson:We want the quick, easy, dirty win where we don't have to do anything.
Matt Edmundson:The put in all the keywords in white text on a white background and just, and just,
Matt Edmundson:you know, that, that was the hack, but the more complicated um, technology has got,
Matt Edmundson:it feels like the more Google has gone actually guys, we're gonna cut the hacks.
Matt Edmundson:It's not that we wanna stop divvying up the content, but we want to divvy up
Matt Edmundson:the right content and quality content.
Matt Edmundson:And it seems to me that if we invest in that quality side of things, long
Matt Edmundson:term, that's the winning strategy.
Matt Edmundson:Would that be a fair reflection?
Kevin Wiles:Yeah, for sure.
Kevin Wiles:And I think, you know, the last maybe two months have shown that,
Kevin Wiles:right, like GPT three and content automation and, and machine learning
Kevin Wiles:stuff has been a big play to that.
Kevin Wiles:Where there's sites out there that purely exist and they only exist
Kevin Wiles:because they've got automated content.
Kevin Wiles:None of it is reviewed, it's just completely automated.
Kevin Wiles:And Google's then obviously released the helpful content
Kevin Wiles:update, and it's been purely to say.
Kevin Wiles:This isn't good for the audience because it's autogenerated
Kevin Wiles:through machine learning.
Kevin Wiles:And that machine learning right now is not perfect.
Kevin Wiles:And that's where again, we as SEOs are going, Cool, I can build this API thing
Kevin Wiles:and I can do this machine learning stuff and then auto-generate the content.
Kevin Wiles:Cool.
Kevin Wiles:I can then sit on my sofa for a couple hours in the evening and chill while
Kevin Wiles:my content's just doing its thing.
Kevin Wiles:Um, and that's again, we as SEOs are trying to cut corners.
Kevin Wiles:There's a place for it.
Kevin Wiles:That place isn't full automation.
Kevin Wiles:You know, with some tweaks, with some analysis with the keywords and all
Kevin Wiles:the internet and stuff taken into consideration, um, I think we'll get to
Kevin Wiles:a place where that becomes more, There's like lots of hot topics and Brighton
Kevin Wiles:had some great ones around AI and all that sort of stuff that are coming
Kevin Wiles:into content to help us build that at scale, but I don't think that will ever.
Kevin Wiles:Or at least for the short term, take away from if you are a great writer,
Kevin Wiles:you understand your audience, you understand your product enough, you are
Kevin Wiles:the best person to create that content for your audience because you know,
Kevin Wiles:well, you know your audience, whereas a machine at the moment just doesn't.
Kevin Wiles:Yeah.
Kevin Wiles:And tools can only give you so much.
Kevin Wiles:Right.
Kevin Wiles:Just because Google says these keywords are what you should include
Kevin Wiles:in content, doesn't mean you should go and include them 50 times.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, no, that's a fair comment.
Matt Edmundson:I like that.
Matt Edmundson:And I, I like the idea that actually quality wins and it's less about creating
Matt Edmundson:10 blog posts, but about creating one really good quality, uh, post for your
Matt Edmundson:content and, and so, If that's the case.
Matt Edmundson:Right.
Matt Edmundson:And, uh, sorry, let me just, uh, go back a sec.
Matt Edmundson:You've mentioned this phrase GPT three a couple of times.
Matt Edmundson:What do you mean by that?
Matt Edmundson:Just let's just clarify that.
Kevin Wiles:Yeah, so I'm definitely in no expert here, but GPT three is
Kevin Wiles:a, um, like many others, sort of like.
Kevin Wiles:AI type based model mm-hmm.
Kevin Wiles:That can basically, you give it a load of inputs and it gives you outputs and, um,
Kevin Wiles:there's tools like phrase.Io, et cetera, that basically you go in type a keyword
Kevin Wiles:or a topic you wanna create, it will spit back a thousand word pieces of content.
Kevin Wiles:Um, and that's a very broad, high level example.
Kevin Wiles:Um, and there are contents sites today that are purely generated.
Kevin Wiles:Hey, I've given a load of keywords.
Kevin Wiles:It's gone away and created content and there's a, I won't name drop
Kevin Wiles:them cuz they wouldn't be very happy.
Kevin Wiles:But there's eCommerce sites that I know that their whole category
Kevin Wiles:content today is completely automated.
Kevin Wiles:It then goes through a manual process of someone internally reviewing it,
Kevin Wiles:but it saves them 80% time from someone actually creating that from scratch.
Kevin Wiles:And that's allowed them to rank and rank very well, uh, in one
Kevin Wiles:of the biggest eCommerce spaces.
Kevin Wiles:But there's different models out there.
Kevin Wiles:But I think Google's helpful content update was aimed at saying.
Kevin Wiles:There's lots of rubbish out there that those things are doing because
Kevin Wiles:there's great models that take lots of time to train and, and tailor.
Kevin Wiles:And then there's lots of like lower end models that you can buy
Kevin Wiles:subscription for, for like $99.
Kevin Wiles:And again, we as SEOs are going watch us build loads of content with that
Kevin Wiles:$99 subscription, spin up a site, get it to rank, make loads of money, and
Kevin Wiles:then if it gets hit by Google's next update, I'd just spin it up again.
Kevin Wiles:Um, so yeah, that's broadly, it's probably a terrible, um, explanation, but
Kevin Wiles:that's broadly what it, what it covers.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:No, that's great.
Matt Edmundson:That's great.
Matt Edmundson:So what's your, If I'm, if I'm starting, let's think of the two, two
Matt Edmundson:sort of two, two words if you like.
Matt Edmundson:So you've got people who have been around, they, they're in eCommerce,
Matt Edmundson:they've been around for a little while.
Matt Edmundson:So like Vegetology, you know, that website's been around for a while.
Matt Edmundson:Um, and then you've got the, the, the, the, you know, the guys and
Matt Edmundson:gals who are starting out, they're, they're starting out fresh.
Matt Edmundson:So what should, um, What should I think about, as someone who's been
Matt Edmundson:around e-commerce for a little while, for an from an SEO point of
Matt Edmundson:view, what should be some of the strategy points that I, I need to hit?
Kevin Wiles:Yeah, so good question and it, with anything in seo, it's gonna
Kevin Wiles:depend on the context here, but like, For me, I try and understand, a, if
Kevin Wiles:you have local stores, that's probably gonna be a different strategy altogether
Kevin Wiles:because you can double down on local.
Kevin Wiles:But for the purpose of this, let's just say you've got traditional
Kevin Wiles:Ecom with, uh, crps, PLPs, and then PDP templates, for example.
Kevin Wiles:I'd be trying to understand what's on those PDPs.
Kevin Wiles:So one of the things I see lots of people do is build load of great
Kevin Wiles:products, great products imagery, and I work with a client right now
Kevin Wiles:that has fantastic product imagery.
Kevin Wiles:And then the description of that product is about 50 words.
Kevin Wiles:Now does that describe the product in enough detail?
Kevin Wiles:In terms of the ingredients, the, if it's dosage, for example, if it's
Kevin Wiles:vitamins, um, all the benefits, does it link out to support and content?
Kevin Wiles:Does it have related products that you should take, like a vitamin
Kevin Wiles:stack in the morning, for example?
Kevin Wiles:And I think that's the biggest missed opportunities because as SEOs, we go
Kevin Wiles:after volume or traditionally we've always gone after volume, right?
Kevin Wiles:We've go here Omega three, that's got 10,000 search a month.
Kevin Wiles:Great.
Kevin Wiles:I'm going after that.
Kevin Wiles:Yeah, but actually what about, you know, touch upon a minute.
Kevin Wiles:Go vegan.
Kevin Wiles:So what about vegan Omega three tablets, or what about a Omega vegan three?
Kevin Wiles:Uh, vegan Omega three.
Kevin Wiles:Uh, Men's joint supplements or something that's much longer tail that has lower
Kevin Wiles:search volume, but actually would return a product that that user is then more likely
Kevin Wiles:to buy because they're in that mindset.
Kevin Wiles:And I think that's typically the biggest missed opportunities because
Kevin Wiles:doing product page SEO is hard.
Kevin Wiles:Right.
Kevin Wiles:Particularly the big catalog your gets Yeah.
Kevin Wiles:How do you work out where you focus and Halfords had the same example,
Kevin Wiles:they had like 70,000 products.
Kevin Wiles:It's like cool.
Kevin Wiles:Where do we start?
Kevin Wiles:And then that, then that goes back to the same thing.
Kevin Wiles:It's like, okay, that goes back to the exact same SEO process that you would've
Kevin Wiles:done years ago, which is keyword research.
Kevin Wiles:Mm.
Kevin Wiles:Group those keywords by the, the topic and then work out, okay, what's
Kevin Wiles:Google returning today in their, in their kind of like sub listing and
Kevin Wiles:then tailor that content around it.
Kevin Wiles:And then, you know, if I went into a store, people are getting more conscious
Kevin Wiles:these days to say, what's the ingredients?
Kevin Wiles:Where's it come from, where's it sourced?
Kevin Wiles:Et cetera, et cetera.
Kevin Wiles:That information should also be online.
Kevin Wiles:Mm-hmm.
Kevin Wiles:, I think retailers are getting better, but then it's about what's the
Kevin Wiles:differentiator between you and like my protein, if it's vitamins or Holland
Kevin Wiles:and Barrett in those in instances.
Kevin Wiles:And I think that's, then it ties back to the content to say, well they are
Kevin Wiles:covering a huge catalog of products and they're going after, let's say my protein
Kevin Wiles:is going after whey protein, cause that might be their best selling product.
Kevin Wiles:Mm-hmm..
Kevin Wiles:So they're probably not supporting the omega three section as well.
Kevin Wiles:They're not probably looking at supporting content and the health benefits and stuff.
Kevin Wiles:It's like that's your niche Double down.
Kevin Wiles:Yeah.
Kevin Wiles:Think four supporting content and then go from there and, and I think
Kevin Wiles:that's just where people are like lacking because everyone tries to do
Kevin Wiles:everything too fast and it doesn't typically work unless you've got huge
Kevin Wiles:budgets and then that's different story.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah which none of us really have.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, but it's, it's, no, I like that.
Matt Edmundson:It's interesting because people ask often ask me, actually, you know,
Matt Edmundson:how do I compete against Amazon?
Matt Edmundson:It's one of the big questions people ask, and I'm like, well,
Matt Edmundson:Amazon's commodities, right?
Matt Edmundson:It's a website.
Matt Edmundson:It could, you can put this product on Amazon and it's just
Matt Edmundson:gonna be one of 10,000 Right.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, of a omega 3s on there.
Matt Edmundson:And it's like whoever gets that page, you can put the content on
Matt Edmundson:there that Amazon doesn't care.
Matt Edmundson:What Amazon can't do.
Matt Edmundson:Um, and where I can absolutely kill it compared to Amazon is with the knowledge,
Matt Edmundson:is with the passion, is with the personality, is with the authenticity,
Matt Edmundson:is in answering the questions.
Matt Edmundson:It's in the, you know, all that information on there.
Matt Edmundson:And so back to Halfords, you know, Amazon may sell a mountain bike.
Matt Edmundson:Halfords may sell a mountain bike, but if I'm, if I've got a
Matt Edmundson:little mountain bike business man.
Matt Edmundson:I can totally rock my website because I can put so much more into
Matt Edmundson:that, that Amazon's not doing that.
Matt Edmundson:Halford's can't do it cause it's got 70,000 products.
Matt Edmundson:Amazon just doesn't care because it's got 4 billion products on there or
Matt Edmundson:whatever the amount is these days.
Matt Edmundson:So I, I, I think you're right.
Matt Edmundson:I think that that..
Matt Edmundson:Investing in that, investing in, in that kind of content to me
Matt Edmundson:seems like a really smart strategy.
Matt Edmundson:And actually what you are saying, Kevin, if I'm hearing this right, is not only is
Matt Edmundson:that a smart strategy from just a, a brand voice point of view, from differentiating
Matt Edmundson:from Amazon, from differentiating from your competitors, but it's also a smart
Matt Edmundson:strategy from an SEO point of view.
Kevin Wiles:Yeah, for sure.
Kevin Wiles:And I think your, your example is, is a great one because hey, if I'm a, um,
Kevin Wiles:let's say I run a small bike shop off Stratford-upon-Avon and I wanna own that
Kevin Wiles:space, well, like instantly I've got new topic opportunities, which is cool.
Kevin Wiles:Well, my audience may be looking for repairs.
Kevin Wiles:They may be looking for same day repairs.
Kevin Wiles:Well, they may be looking for, uh, I've got a family of three.
Kevin Wiles:I want a bike journey that's maybe an hour.
Kevin Wiles:On a flat surface, on a tarmac.
Kevin Wiles:And I, as a specialist, because I run in my small bike shop, can create
Kevin Wiles:some content that's like top five bike rides in Stratford-upon-Avon, which
Kevin Wiles:a big retailer isn't gonna do because they're gonna go, Well, who cares?
Kevin Wiles:You know who I am, You're gonna come buy to me.
Kevin Wiles:And I think the other part is if I pull on a different example, I, um,
Kevin Wiles:one of my friends, um, runs a kind of Michelin star gastro pub, which I
Kevin Wiles:went to on Saturday, which was lovely.
Kevin Wiles:But um, they were like, Hey, we wanna start ranking for things like Michelin
Kevin Wiles:Star restaurant Cotswolds, for example.
Kevin Wiles:But actually when you go and Google that, There aren't any pubs ranking for
Kevin Wiles:that because Google's interpreted that search term as, Hmm, maybe it's not fair.
Kevin Wiles:We just return one result.
Kevin Wiles:So what they've done is returned sort of like inspiration blogs where it's
Kevin Wiles:like, here's the top five restaurants in the Cotswolds, et cetera, etc.
Kevin Wiles:Mm-hmm.
Kevin Wiles:My job as SEO is to get bookings into that restaurant.
Kevin Wiles:So it's while I can optimize that website for that search term, actually
Kevin Wiles:the smart play here is understanding what that page is being returned from
Kevin Wiles:Google and saying, Well, actually here, I just wanna get their website
Kevin Wiles:into those top five articles.
Kevin Wiles:Because either way, SEOs, a byproduct is gonna get them,
Kevin Wiles:hopefully to then have a booking.
Kevin Wiles:I think that's the smart place, just understanding
Kevin Wiles:what are people searching for?
Kevin Wiles:And if you then run a restaurant in, in the Cotswolds, and it's a country
Kevin Wiles:pub, for example, or most people are gonna go to the Cotswolds potentially
Kevin Wiles:for a hike, So then why don't you start providing hiking routes and information
Kevin Wiles:about that that says, Oh, actually, if I plan my route from this pub, do
Kevin Wiles:a hike and then come back for dinner.
Kevin Wiles:That's my journey and that's my day out.
Kevin Wiles:And then the pub takes that booking.
Kevin Wiles:And I do think that's the smart players, just understanding what the customer,
Kevin Wiles:particularly if you are localized, is looking for, and then answering that,
Kevin Wiles:creating content, whether that's video, articles, lists, whatever it might be.
Kevin Wiles:And just being the expert in that.
Kevin Wiles:And, and before, you know, you'll start to build up awareness.
Kevin Wiles:You'll start to get traffic and stuff, you know.
Kevin Wiles:A mechanic, it could be we're heading into winter.
Kevin Wiles:What other things you need to check in your car?
Kevin Wiles:Creating videos, putting 'em on social, put 'em on YouTube, put on whatever it
Kevin Wiles:might be, and being that useful person.
Kevin Wiles:And before you know your start to get traction, start to get reviews, which have
Kevin Wiles:you rank locally and so on and so forth.
Kevin Wiles:But Halfords probably aren't gonna sit there and go, um, How to, uh, stay safe
Kevin Wiles:in Stratford-upon-Avon in the winter on the roads because they just don't care.
Kevin Wiles:And I'm sure that's maybe is, that's a terrible piece of
Kevin Wiles:content that you could create.
Kevin Wiles:But there are other examples where, you know, that is exactly
Kevin Wiles:the sort of stuff that smaller people could, should be doing.
Kevin Wiles:And they probably don't need much guidance from an SEO to say, go write this in
Kevin Wiles:terms of this keyword, this structure.
Kevin Wiles:They know that stuff.
Kevin Wiles:That's, that's why they're in that business they're in.
Kevin Wiles:Whereas, we as SEOs are just going, Here's a load of keywords.
Kevin Wiles:Go and build some content.
Kevin Wiles:Yeah, yeah.
Kevin Wiles:It's got, it's got better.
Kevin Wiles:But I think there's still loads of gap where it's just like, here's a
Kevin Wiles:spreadsheet, here's some keywords.
Kevin Wiles:Build some content with no real thought to the audience piece.
Kevin Wiles:Or actually, what is that content gonna lead to a booking or a product buy?
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, no, I, The more you talk, the more I agree, Kevin, in
Matt Edmundson:the sense that, um, I like it because you're thinking about the customer, you're
Matt Edmundson:thinking about the customer journey, and you are thinking about how you are to get
Matt Edmundson:your story and their story to overlap.
Matt Edmundson:And in that space, you can really do some great stuff.
Matt Edmundson:And I think that's where we win.
Matt Edmundson:and actually everything you said, I'm sat here thinking, Well, I, the first question
Matt Edmundson:to ask you is, I've, I'm established in e-commerce, what's my strategy?
Matt Edmundson:My second question was gonna be, I'm new to e-commerce.
Matt Edmundson:What's my strategy?
Matt Edmundson:It sounds like actually it's the same strategy.
Kevin Wiles:Yeah.
Kevin Wiles:I think the only difference, I mean, both of them will have
Kevin Wiles:some aspects of technical, right?
Kevin Wiles:If, if I play back the three pillars of sort of like where I look at SEO
Kevin Wiles:in terms of technical content and then sort of digital PR and marketing.
Kevin Wiles:I think if you are a new e-com site, It's looking at what's the tech stack and
Kevin Wiles:making sure that it's lightning quick.
Kevin Wiles:Because again, the issue you have when you're more established is the bigger
Kevin Wiles:you get, the more sort of like corporate red tape that comes into those things.
Kevin Wiles:And then there's more tech partners, or Bazaar Voice, or Cubeit or Hotjar
Kevin Wiles:or any of the other big providers that want code, and you've got e-com,
Kevin Wiles:you've got merchandise, you've got all these different people wanting
Kevin Wiles:tracking and stuff on the site.
Kevin Wiles:I think when you're let's say a startup, you have the ability to scale and,
Kevin Wiles:and pivot and go, Right, We don't want that on the site, or We can do this
Kevin Wiles:without building that, that provider.
Kevin Wiles:And that gives you the ability, in some instances, to do
Kevin Wiles:better than the big players.
Kevin Wiles:Because when I was at Halford's, they, their site speed was horrendous.
Kevin Wiles:It was terrible.
Kevin Wiles:They ranked purely on the fact they had just the solid backing profile.
Kevin Wiles:Yeah.
Kevin Wiles:But then we had competitors like Pure Electric coming up that were on a
Kevin Wiles:Shopify platform that was streamlined.
Kevin Wiles:Their site speed was like under two seconds.
Kevin Wiles:And that's all the things Google wants.
Kevin Wiles:Right?
Kevin Wiles:And that's the things users want.
Kevin Wiles:Mm-hmm.
Kevin Wiles:, while they might not rank for the competitive terms, when they rank
Kevin Wiles:for a specific product term, the customers going, Man, this checkout is
Kevin Wiles:lightning quick click, click thanks.
Kevin Wiles:Yeah.
Kevin Wiles:And, and they start to take market share that way.
Kevin Wiles:Um, so it slightly differs, but then.
Kevin Wiles:If you are new it, it is about going after the longer tail keywords, lower
Kevin Wiles:volume, easier for you to rank with, start starting shop as a competitor with
Kevin Wiles:the long term view of 6, 12, 18 months, whatever might be, you can start to
Kevin Wiles:compete on some of those, like head tail product terms that have just high volume.
Matt Edmundson:So where would I, um, I'm sitting here listening to you think about
Matt Edmundson:this and I, and I I'm going, Well, if I'm starting out in e-commerce and you're
Matt Edmundson:saying go after the long tail keywords, how do I, how do I know what they are?
Kevin Wiles:Yeah, so I think, I mean, I think you can learn a lot by just Googling
Kevin Wiles:what you think a customer is searching.
Kevin Wiles:And it's what I always say to customers when I'm like, So tell me what
Kevin Wiles:you think a customer is searching.
Kevin Wiles:Because if I went and searched for mountain bikes, for example, Cool,
Kevin Wiles:I'll start to understand more.
Kevin Wiles:Most of those category pages, and those are quite broad, but then.
Kevin Wiles:What if it's a different size Mountain Bike.
Kevin Wiles:So it's, I need a 21 inch mountain bike.
Kevin Wiles:And then you've got the different size variance.
Kevin Wiles:You know that because you've got that product range sat in your warehouse or
Kevin Wiles:whatever, and then you're like, cool.
Kevin Wiles:And my bikes are orange.
Kevin Wiles:Oh, cool.
Kevin Wiles:So it's 21 inch orange mountain bike.
Kevin Wiles:Cool.
Kevin Wiles:And it's full suspension.
Kevin Wiles:So you should start like putting this pattern together.
Kevin Wiles:Like, well, someone might search them.
Kevin Wiles:And that, that when you start to get the, the much longer tail stuff,
Kevin Wiles:there's obviously tools, there's keywords everywhere, which is just
Kevin Wiles:a Chrome plugin you can, um, pull in that says, Hey, you search this, but
Kevin Wiles:here's related to things you could do.
Kevin Wiles:And there's obviously Moz, SEMRush, Ahrefs that you could just pull in that
Kevin Wiles:then gives you the long tail variations.
Kevin Wiles:But I do think it's just, you know, what do you actually think someone
Kevin Wiles:is searching for that product term?
Kevin Wiles:If we take a tyre example, If I go and check my car on the drive,
Kevin Wiles:I won't just search car tires.
Kevin Wiles:I'll search, Cool.
Kevin Wiles:I need to replace one, and I've got Toyota tires and their 225 R 18,
Kevin Wiles:whatever the rest of the speed rate is.
Kevin Wiles:Suddenly that query's much, much smaller than just car tires.
Kevin Wiles:Mm-hmm..
Kevin Wiles:But the benefit here is if you build the best product page that ranks that
Kevin Wiles:tyre, You're probably gonna rank, which means you're gonna get sales, which
Kevin Wiles:means you can reinvest that money back into SEO or PPC or whatever it is.
Kevin Wiles:Mm-hmm.
Kevin Wiles:and then do that 10 times, 20 times, 30 times, 40 times, et cetera.
Kevin Wiles:Suddenly a lot more money coming into the business where the big players are like,
Kevin Wiles:Well, we rank for tires, so like we're always gonna capitalize on the market.
Kevin Wiles:Yeah.
Kevin Wiles:And I think that, I think that's the sweet spot.
Kevin Wiles:And the example I always have is, I had a car client once that was
Kevin Wiles:like, We wanna rank for cars, but they only sold Audis and I was like.
Kevin Wiles:But why?
Kevin Wiles:They're like, Well, it's got a hundred and odd thousand search a
Kevin Wiles:month, whatever it was back then.
Kevin Wiles:But they were just fixating on the volume thing.
Kevin Wiles:They had the budget, they just wanted to be known for cars.
Kevin Wiles:And I was like, But the amount of people that are gonna come to the website and go.
Kevin Wiles:I actually wanted a bmw.
Kevin Wiles:I wanted Volkswagen, I wanted a Peugeot and you can't service that, that client.
Kevin Wiles:So you'd much better refine it and be an Audi and then look at the types, the
Kevin Wiles:models, the variations, the doors, the engine sizes, et cetera, and then own
Kevin Wiles:all of those different long tail stuff.
Matt Edmundson:Does it, um, I dunno if this is still the case,
Matt Edmundson:Kevin, but it used to be, um, if, you know, let's take that example.
Matt Edmundson:Someone ranks, they invest heavily in ranking for cars, but they only sell Audi.
Matt Edmundson:And so that means a lot of people are gonna come to their site and
Matt Edmundson:disappear again quite quickly.
Matt Edmundson:You know, the bounce rate is, people call it, they, you know, people bounce.
Matt Edmundson:Does that still affect your SEO ranking?
Matt Edmundson:So if people are coming to your site and disappearing quite quickly are Google
Matt Edmundson:going, We don't like this website.
Kevin Wiles:That's a difficult question.
Kevin Wiles:And the reason I say that is there's um, lots of theories and, um, actual
Kevin Wiles:case studies and stuff that say bounce rate technically does have an impact.
Kevin Wiles:Google's official stance is we don't take any Google Analytics metrics into account
Kevin Wiles:when we're looking at SEO rankings.
Kevin Wiles:Um, I'm unsure is my honest answer.
Kevin Wiles:I think they right in some degree have an understanding that if you are clicking
Kevin Wiles:from search and then clicking straight back, that probably doesn't enter in
Kevin Wiles:the intent and that impacts things.
Kevin Wiles:But I don't think we'll ever get a firm answer from Google to say it does.
Kevin Wiles:Um, but again, why?
Kevin Wiles:Why would you want to build content or landing pages that
Kevin Wiles:aren't good for your customers?
Kevin Wiles:Because if anything, the long term here is people are gonna get
Kevin Wiles:annoyed and frustrated at your brand for being a bit rubbish.
Kevin Wiles:And actually that's probably more important than thinking I
Kevin Wiles:can rank for cars, which mm-hmm.
Kevin Wiles:isn't gonna put sales and it comes back to that exact same conversation.
Kevin Wiles:It's traffic or, or cash.
Kevin Wiles:And I'd rather have cash over traffic.
Kevin Wiles:Yeah.
Kevin Wiles:And it's kind of like, it is trying to get that like C-suite
Kevin Wiles:level, like ownership to say.
Kevin Wiles:Traffic means nothing if it's not converting.
Kevin Wiles:Um, because sometimes it's fixating on the numbers that are bigger.
Matt Edmundson:So, Kevin, listen, I'm aware of time and
Matt Edmundson:I, I regret to inform you now.
Matt Edmundson:It's just one of those where I could, I just feel like I'm
Matt Edmundson:scratching the surface on this.
Matt Edmundson:So if someone sat there like me and going, Oh, I've got the question about
Matt Edmundson:this, I've got a question about that.
Matt Edmundson:What's some good resources in terms of finding out more?
Matt Edmundson:Where's a good place to start?
Kevin Wiles:Well, that's a good question.
Kevin Wiles:So I think the, um, it depends how.
Kevin Wiles:How detailed you want to go.
Kevin Wiles:So Google has its own like beginner's guide to seo.
Kevin Wiles:Um, then there's brands like HubSpot that have some great ideas around
Kevin Wiles:just building an SEO strategy.
Kevin Wiles:Things you need to look at, which can be more high level, but give you the
Kevin Wiles:calling to go look at keywords this way.
Kevin Wiles:Um, Aleyda Solis has a great, um, she's spent a lot of time in the industry
Kevin Wiles:building out resources for people to understand SEO from tech, strategy,
Kevin Wiles:insights, analytics, reporting, which I think is, uh, learningseo.io.
Kevin Wiles:Um, so I'd definitely check that out.
Kevin Wiles:Um, and then just start to Google those things.
Kevin Wiles:If it's about starting in local seo, there'll be a good guide
Kevin Wiles:about how to build up your G&B profile to make sure you can rank.
Kevin Wiles:It is difficult to say.
Kevin Wiles:This will be the ultimate guide for SEO that you'll ever need, because I don't
Kevin Wiles:generally think this one exists because I think there's so many disciplines of an
Kevin Wiles:SEO that like, Hey, local SEO is different to enterprise seo and therefore, Someone
Kevin Wiles:who specializes in enterprise SEO isn't gonna be the best person to go and follow
Kevin Wiles:for, for if you just say run a bakery.
Kevin Wiles:Um, but I will try and follow up with some notes that you can put in the comments
Kevin Wiles:and, um, and send those up to users.
Matt Edmundson:That'd be great.
Matt Edmundson:That'll be great.
Matt Edmundson:Listen, Kevin, here's my, my crazy question that I've, I've started
Matt Edmundson:asking people and I'm really curious to know what your answer is, right.
Matt Edmundson:You've just given your best keynote speech in your life ever.
Matt Edmundson:I always say to, to guests, imagine it's been to the e-commerce
Matt Edmundson:cohort who sponsor the podcast.
Matt Edmundson:So all the cohorts have sat in a hotel room.
Matt Edmundson:You've delivered your best keynote ever on seo.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, the crowd's going crazy.
Matt Edmundson:Go, Kevin.
Matt Edmundson:Wow.
Matt Edmundson:Um, and you stand up, you take a bow and you do that thing that they do at the
Matt Edmundson:Oscars, which say, I would just like to thank, um, who would be on your list?
Matt Edmundson:What?
Matt Edmundson:Would there be people, uh, a podcast, a book.
Matt Edmundson:Who, who would be on your list of, of people to thank.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah,
Kevin Wiles:so I think, um, I mean, when I first started there was
Kevin Wiles:definitely what I call the OGs of seo.
Kevin Wiles:So, um, people like Barry Adams and stuff were the reason that I
Kevin Wiles:got into SEO many, many years ago.
Kevin Wiles:And then I think more recently the people that have made me stay
Kevin Wiles:in SEO and keep motivating and stuff is, um, Martin McDonald's.
Kevin Wiles:So he, uh, I work for an agency called MOG Media.
Kevin Wiles:Martin's the CEO of that agency.
Kevin Wiles:So, um, definitely him, but I think outside of that, a lot of
Kevin Wiles:it has just been, I'm honest, self-motivation because I wanna buy
Kevin Wiles:some land to not live near people.
Kevin Wiles:But, um, as bad as that sounds, that's, there's been, there's generally been
Kevin Wiles:lots of people I could sit here and thank, but a lot of it has also come
Kevin Wiles:down to late nights just learning, getting stuck into beds and stuff.
Kevin Wiles:I wanna buy a field and build a house to not be near people.
Matt Edmundson:That, that's, uh, fair enough.
Matt Edmundson:I I totally get that.
Matt Edmundson:I, I wouldn't personally do it, but I, It's good to have
Matt Edmundson:a dream and a goal, right.
Matt Edmundson:Um, listen, Kevin, brilliant.
Matt Edmundson:How do people reach you?
Matt Edmundson:How do they get in touch if they want, If they want to do so?
Kevin Wiles:Yeah, sure.
Kevin Wiles:So I'm on Twitter just at Kev Wiles, um, as my handle.
Kevin Wiles:Uh, I've got a LinkedIn profile, which is, uh, Kevin J.
Kevin Wiles:Wiles, uh, just on LinkedIn.
Kevin Wiles:Obviously my website, which is Kevin Wiles, And then the agency I work
Kevin Wiles:for, which is just mog.media, which is a enterprise, um, agency that has a
Kevin Wiles:SaaS platform coming up soon as well.
Matt Edmundson:Fantastic.
Matt Edmundson:Fantastic.
Matt Edmundson:We will of course, uh, link to all of those, uh, links in our show notes, and if
Matt Edmundson:you are subscribed to our email list, they will be coming to your inbox directly.
Matt Edmundson:If you're not subscribed to email list, subscribe.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, because you just get those things straight to your inbox.
Matt Edmundson:You don't even have to worry about it.
Matt Edmundson:Right.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, so there you have it.
Matt Edmundson:What's a fantastic conversation.
Matt Edmundson:Thank Kevin.
Matt Edmundson:Thank you so much for joining us.
Matt Edmundson:Thank you very much.
Matt Edmundson:I really appreciate you being here today.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, all good stuff.
Matt Edmundson:I'd like say I wish I had another two hours carry on this conversation.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, a big shout out to today's show sponsor the e-commerce cohort.
Matt Edmundson:Do head on over to ecommercecohort.com for more information about this new type
Matt Edmundson:of community and membership, uh, which I really think you should check out.
Matt Edmundson:And, uh, join.
Matt Edmundson:Be sure to follow the e-commerce podcast wherever you get your podcast
Matt Edmundson:from because we've got some more great guests like Kevin, uh, lined up and
Matt Edmundson:I don't want you to miss any of them.
Matt Edmundson:So subscribe, follow, I think follow is now the word we use, uh, because
Matt Edmundson:Apple Podcast ditched the word subscribe and changed it for follow.
Matt Edmundson:Anyway.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, in case no one has told you today, dear listener, you are awesome.
Matt Edmundson:Yes you are.
Matt Edmundson:It's just a burden that we all have to bear.
Matt Edmundson:Now, the E-Commerce podcast is produced by Aurion Media.
Matt Edmundson:You can find our entire archive of episodes on your favorite podcast app.
Matt Edmundson:The team that makes this show possible is Sadaf Beynon, Josh Catchpole,
Matt Edmundson:Estella Robin and Tim Johnson.
Matt Edmundson:Our theme song was written by Josh Edmundson and my good self.
Matt Edmundson:And as I mentioned, if you would like to read the transcript or show
Matt Edmundson:notes, you can head over to the website ecommercepodcast.net, uh,
Matt Edmundson:where you can see them for free.
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Matt Edmundson:Amazing.
Matt Edmundson:Yes, it is.
Matt Edmundson:So that's it.
Matt Edmundson:A big thanks from me and also from Kevin.
Matt Edmundson:Thank you so much for joining us.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, it's been brilliant, mate.
Matt Edmundson:Honestly, uh, we will see you next time.
Matt Edmundson:Have a great week wherever you are.
Matt Edmundson:That's it.