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Why SEO Is Not Just About Search Engines But Better Websites
2nd February 2023 • eCommerce Podcast • Matt Edmundson
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Have you ever wondered why some websites seem to skyrocket up the rankings while others struggle to stay on the first page? It's not just about tricks and manipulation — optimizing for SEO requires a deep understanding of how to build better websites that offer an unforgettable user experience.

Kevin Wiles joins Matt Edmundson in this Episode to talk about all things SEO.

ABOUT Kevin

Kevin is a passionate technical SEO lead with a career history of working with big household names across New Zealand & United Kingdom.

Here’s a summary of the great stuff that we cover in this show:

  • SEO is not a dark art. It is just a methodical approach to understanding how Google works and what guidelines they give. It has been mis-sold in the past by statements that are not factually correct or slightly tweaked to push an agenda.
  • It is much tougher to compete at a national level for things like car parts or mot against bigger brands, but where you can win as a smaller brand is understanding what that search actually returns.
  • Creating less content that is well researched and comprehensive will be more effective than lots of low quality content. This is because people are looking for authoritative sources of information that can provide detail and answer all their questions in one go.
  • From an SEO point of view, some strategy points to consider hitting are: understanding what is on the PDPs (Product Display Pages), making sure there is enough detail, and to go after supporting content. A missed opportunity that many people face when it comes to product page SEO is not thinking about longer tail keywords that have lower search volume but would return a product that the user is more likely to buy.

For complete show notes, transcript and links to our guest, check out our website: www.ecommerce-podcast.com.

Transcripts

Matt Edmundson:

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.

Matt Edmundson:

And you can also sign up for the weekly newsletter that I mentioned

Matt Edmundson:

and get all of this good stuff directly in your inbox totally free.

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.

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