Why SEO is vital to surviving the Retail Apocalypse
Chris Ailey
Founder & CEO of Honchō - Award Winning SEO & PPC for Retail & Automotive - Established 2008
Retail is struggling, we are in a period labelled the ‘retail apocalypse’, and this isn’t going to change anytime soon. Shopping centres see shops appear, then disappear on what seems like a weekly basis; with many town centres comprising largely of hairdressers, restaurants, coffee shops and charity shops.
The internet brought a change in consumer behaviour and only those retailers that are strongest online will survive. So why are retailers still weighting their budget so heavily on paid digital channels to get them sales?
In ecommerce, SEO is too often a neglected channel and despite retailers recognising the potential of traffic from natural search, the journey to achieve it is seen as a long and expensive one. A lot of outlay before any real revenue is achieved.
An all too common theme in retail is where paid search budget is sacrificed to fund SEO activity. As a result of this, immediate orders and revenue are lost. Budget holders feel the pain and have to justify an overall lower ROI on their marketing spend to their peers.
The result is that SEO budget is cut after a few months because results aren’t coming fast enough and PPC (paid search) can get a ‘bigger bang for the buck!’.
Whilst it is now more widely understood across retail that Search Engine Optimisation is a much longer, more complicated and bigger game. It’s not unusual for board members to still expect the same instant results as PPC and the biggest challenge is managing expectations that being patient now, will bear fruit a plenty in the future.
With PPC, you can see an instant return, increase or lower spend dependant on performance and report as far down as keyword level. Instant visibility where you want it, total control over when and where you appear, and granular reporting are always going to come at a price.
Ask yourself,
“If you lost all your marketing budget tomorrow, how much traffic would your site attract the day after?”
SEO is designed to build an organic footprint of your brand. The reason it is so powerful is because it can make the difference between your brand and your competition. It can rival the biggest advertising budgets because it can get you top of Google with no direct cost for every visitor that clicks your link.
The high street is dead, but online is thriving
In 2018, online grew at ten times the rate of store sales in the first half of the year, whilst the UK’s high streets suffered 5,855 store closures in 2017.
n a recent high profile case, Debenhams announced it will be closing up to 50 retail stores in a £100M cost-saving plan, a third of their high street presence. Yet, a new report from Pi Datametrics shows Debenhams is the clear leader in a Google Share of Voice Report in the fashion market.
14,000 of the most valuable keywords around fashion were analysed and Debenhams are dominating in all sub categories, meaning their organic footprint is in fact bailing them well and truly out of trouble. Take everything away and they still have a business online.
SEO is a long term and ongoing strategy, you need to keep building site authority, gaining links and citations, producing content and making your site as user friendly as possible.
Every day you are leaving this your competition is getting stronger, because they are doing exactly that.
More can always be squeezed out of a PPC budget but with every conversion from this channel comes a cost of acquisition. SEO can drive more profitable revenue than PPC, it also gets considerably more of the Google traffic.
There are a number of sources for organic CTR from Google but as a guide position 1 is around 35%, position 2 is 15%, position 3 is 9% on desktop (source: GETSTAT).
If you’re getting anywhere near 35% CTR from your paid search terms, then its only likely to be from a brand term or a long tail search term that is unique to you. A position 1-3 organic listing for your target search terms is worth every penny of investment in SEO. However, achieving this is getting harder and harder all the time.
With more competition in the SERPs, the CPC’s and the cost per acquisition will only continue to increase. Will your margin increase in this time? Will delivery get cheaper? Your returns rate decrease? In a world of margins, the biggest gain you can make is a lower cost per acquisition, that’s why customer loyalty is so important.
The Search landscape is becoming more and more competitive with the number of pure play retailers increasing all the time. These new competitors have no fixed overheads like a brick and mortar presence, their entire business is built for the digital age.
Can you really afford to rely so heavily on paid search to buy your traffic and customers? With every day that you are leaving SEO, seeing it as a luxury instead of a necessity, you are falling behind your direct competition and the new competitors arriving in your space.
It’s very likely that you are using some of your paid search budget to target top of funnel search terms to create awareness. With data-driven attribution modelling you can understand what role specific keywords or phrases play in conversions, it is here that you can make savings that make the least impact in performance overall.
Moving paid search budget into SEO will affect the dynamics of your revenue for a while, but long term you will be building a more solid foundation for your business. Ultimately, should the worst happen and your marketing budget disappear, at least you will still have a business.
Marketing Manager - Transport and Logistics - X2 (UK)
5 年Very good article, the importance of SEO is often overlooked with even basic 'house-keeping' to conform to fundamental SEO standards being neglected.
Founder @ Swayven Digital | Game Analytics Consultant | Digital Optimisation Strategist
5 年Well said Chris Ailey. SEO can certainly be a massive asset to ANY business, even the ones that don't sell directly through a website. However SEO is a long term game and the business must have the bandwidth (& patience) to wait the typical 6,9 or sometimes even 12 months before seeing decent ROI. I always advise businesses to start off by investing equally into SEO & PPC and then decrease their PPC budgets gradually once their SEO efforts starts to kick in.
Chris, I entirely agree with your views as SEO is misunderstood by many senior managers.