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SDL Tridion Case Study: Virgin Money

Virgin Money, a financial service company which is part of the Virgin Group, was launched in 1995 using a call centre to field customer enquiries. In 2000, as adoption of the internet gathered momentum, Virgin Money spotted the potential of using a website to provide potential customers with information and the ability to order products, and so virginmoney.com was launched. Over the past two years, Virgin Money has made a strategic push to move its customer base away from telephony and onto its website, where it is able to communicate its product range and brand more effectively.

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The Essential Guide to Link Building

Link building is essential to the performance of websites. Links have been described as the ‘online currency’ due to the importance of incoming links to search engine optimisation. New Media Knowledge caught up with one of the UK’s leading lights in search marketing to learn how companies can effectively build links.

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What’s more important for interactive teaching tools, creative freedom or the curriculum?

An interesting dilemma we faced recently was about developing online resources which could be used in schools. The question was should we build tools which helped teach the curriculum or tools which helped the teachers to teach the curriculum? Anthony Story explains his ideas in this article.

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Search Party: Just How Can Marketers Keep Up With the Search Revolution?

Filed under: All Articles > Industry News
By: NMK Created on: May 28th, 2009
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It has been a busy couple of months in the search engine arena. With the main sites all adding upgrades and new players arriving on the scene. New Media Knowledge canvassed the market for advice on how digital marketers could possibly keep up.

The search engine market looks set for a shake up after the market leaders – Google, Yahoo and Microsoft – all announced new functionality. As competition between the main three engines heats up new players have recently entered the arena, including Oparla and semantic search tool Wolfram Alpha, each promising a different search experience in a bid to attract users.

Wolfram Alpha, described by its creator Dr. Stephen Wolfram as a “computational search engine”, has caused a particular stir using an algorithm machine that was 20 years in the making. While the hype labelling Wolfram Alpha as a potential “Google killer” may prove inaccurate, the concern for marketing managers keen to make the most of search engine optimisation (SEO) is how to respond to the fast changing new ways in which search engines hunt for data.

Googlewhacked?

For Dan Williamson, head of content and search at digital marketing agency Cimex, Wolfram’s appearance on the scene should not be seen as a direct rival to Google, rather marketers should focus on Google’s impending Show Options changes.

“[Show Options] has a big impact in two areas. Firstly, the main thrust of the new tools is ‘timeliness equals relevance’, so if web owners updated their content on a regular basis to improve their rankings in search previously, they'll have to now step this up big time, given that their twice weekly updated website won't now appear to millions of users who'll now refine their search results to timely pages published in the last week or last 24 hours,” he told NMK.

“Secondly, brands now have powerful (and free) brand management and crisis management tools at their disposal in the shape of forum-only searches. What impact this has on the many enterprise PR tools in circulation is now worth watching,” he continued.

Automation for Engines

SEO has become a crucial component of the marketing mix and therefore should be viewed as an ever changing process rather than a one-time exercise, according to Laust Sondergaard, chairman of content management firm Sitecore UK. This process can be automated by the deployment of Web Content Management (WCM) systems, which Sondergaard argues enables digital marketing managers to create organic SEO without adding resources while keeping up with the latest search engine changes.

“WCM can automate and optimise SEO processes without changing the way you publish your site’s content. This ensures long-term, sustainable SEO success without adding additional resources and budget,” Sondersgaard said.

Room Service

The hospitality industry is a particularly competitive market online, especially in the tough current economic climate. Adrian Land heads up SEO at online booking site Hotels.com, and he believes the key is recognising and responding to the ones that will gain the most serious influence and market share is a priority for him, regardless of the latest developments in search.

“We use a variety of expert sources to make this judgement, including in-house search specialists, external agencies and key industry experts, writers and bloggers,” he told NMK. “Our customers are searching for us in a growing number of ways, from traditional search engines like Google through to social media sites such as Twitter. As a result, we make sure our marketing messages and promotions are distributed through a wide variety of media.”

google

Searching for Answers

Martyn Jobber of Web analytics and optimisation specialist Omniture does not believe the latest round of search engine modifications alter the challenge for marketers, as they will have to continue doing what they have always been doing, which is measuring and optimising.

Jobber says that evolving search engine technologies can influence consumer behaviour and recommends the following practices:

- Watch to see the influence these new launches have by looking at referrals generated

- Understand if your target market is using them by looking at their impact on site Key Performance Indicators (KPI) for success

- See if they are indexing the site correctly, picking out those keywords and phrases that you have optimised for

- See if their influence is changing your optimal marketing mix

- See at which point in the customer lifecycle the new launch has its greatest influence, on the first visit or the last visit that drove conversion.

“Ultimately, in the ebb and flow of consumer trend there will be many factors which drive behaviour and visits to your sites. No one channel should be included in exclusion of another, but refining the mix of marketing spend to optimise for these new arrivals is how we can increase return on investment and drive business success,” he concluded.

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