Sourced from Search Engine Watch

Opportunities for effective, inexpensive search marketing are abundant when you “think outside the (Big Search) box” and look to vertical or specialised content sites.

How do you attract your target users to your site using search tactics that do not rely on Big Search — Google, Yahoo, MSN, AOL and Ask Jeeves? Scottie Claiborne, of Right Click Web Consulting and Harrison Magun, managing director of eonMedia, presented a wide range of tactics that would work for companies large and small.

The availability of off-the-beaten-path online visibility is huge, according to session moderator Chris Sherman. He and SearchEngineWatch founder Danny Sullivan have observed the growing number of industry-specific vertical portals that bring your message directly before your targeted users, as well as create highly relevant links to your website.

“There are plenty of opportunities to drive qualified traffic to a website outside of Google and Yahoo,” said Claiborne, principally by linking from relevant directories and vertical portals. Here’s why you should consider these “vortals” in your web strategy.

  • Steady traffic.
    “A diversified traffic strategy will allow the site to maintain traffic regardless of algo changes,” said Claiborne. “Remember Florida (Google’s December 2003 index update) . Many who put all their Christmas eggs in the Google basket were bombed by the algo change.” Verticals send their own search traffic — users who look for resources on industry portals. “HometownAnnapolis.com sends more traffic to a restaurant there than Google or Overture,” said Claiborne.
  • Credibility.
    “The web is all about trust,” she added. “Build credibility for your site by associating it with relevant resources.”
  • Conversion.
    Going vertical builds conversion by attracting users already interested in your topic. Would you rather have 1000 visitors and 10 buyers or 100 visitors and 50 buyers?
  • Link popularity.
    “Getting your name out there is like gold; you can’t beat it,” Claiborne said. Links help in search engines, especially Teoma, as verticals build link popularity.

Going vertical in paid search

For large advertisers with perishable inventory such as travel bookings and concert tickets, vertical focus will produce more effective advertising results, said Harrison Magun, of eonMarketing. This is critical for large advertisers because more than 90 percent of online customers use one of the major search engines, meaning that less than 10 percent of paid search activity is available below the major portals.

“If you’re relying on hundreds of millions of dollars in sales, you’re not going to find it on Dr. John’s Auto Parts.com,” he said. In the travel category, 80-90 percent of people who book travel use major search engines. Focus on making the majors profitable, advised Magun. The challenge is how to buy advertising in competitive markets without losing your shirt.

Perishable inventory makes the challenge even greater. “Searches for Bob Dylan tickets go away when the concert’s over,” said Magun, the same way searches for New Year’s Eve hotel rooms disappear on January 1. Flowers on Mother’s Day is another example of a seasonal item. “We all have mothers. Costs, click and conversions all soar around that date.”

Both speakers suggested trying to gain leverage with directory owners. Most will work for you because they need your market. “A lot of clicks are redistributed by savvy affiliate marketers, who arbitrage these to their profit. Conversion is 50 times higher because they have 50-50 sites.