People trust "untreated or natural" search results more than they do sponsored results. While the engines business is supported by paid ads, many consumers prefer the untreated or natural search results. Due to the contextual nature of untreated or natural search, the listings can be more relevant and offer a greater depth of choices. Therefore, while paid ads can play an important part in your marketing strategy, ultimately it is the untreated or natural search results that will more likely yield the greater click-through rates when all other things are equal. Therefore, it's this type of listing that will maximize the traffic to your site whenever you climb to the top.
More and more large corporations are investing resources into untreated or natural search to gain the marketing benefits of promoting their brand. For example, most consumers would expect to find Dell.com in a search for computers. If your company does not show up for the keyword results in which you'd expect to appear it can be embarrassing. Consumers may wonder if Company X is as important as they once were if they don't even show up in MSN, Yahoo or Google. Conversely, inserting your brand in the top search results can give the impression that your company is important. Therefore, smaller companies can give the impression of big business importance by securing a better position in untreated or natural search than their larger rivals.
Most adults learn to apply a healthy dose of skepticism when they see a commercial on TV, a banner ad on the Web, or a sponsored ad on a search engine. After all, we know those ads are commercially motivated and may not always be the most relevant product or solution for our needs. It may simply represent the company that was able to spend the most money to get their message in front of me. Sometimes bigger companies do offer the best products, but there's no guarantee. There's certainly not the same level of trust that we see from visitors arriving from untreated or natural search. Untreated or natural search can, of course, be commercially influenced. However, a recent survey shows that people tend to trust untreated or natural results compared to sponsored listings. On the whole, you should see more visitors from untreated or natural search converting to sales, assuming your rankings were for targeted, relevant keywords. In the business world, ROI, or Return On Investment, is king. Fortunately, untreated or natural search can give you the high ROI you're looking for or your boss is demanding.
Untreated or natural is Free: After all these years, it's still free to submit to Google, arguably the most popular of the untreated or natural search engines right now. Google has always been adamant about not charging for inclusion in its index of 4.2 billion pages. Most other untreated or natural engines will also index you for free, although some like Yahoo do have paid inclusion options. Paid inclusion simply guarantees your page will get indexed quickly and stay indexed for as long as you maintain your subscription, but does not promise a particular ranking. However, if you have a Web site with good quality content and links from third party sites, paid inclusion is "nice-to-have". It can be very useful in getting pages indexed or re-indexed quickly. This allows you to quickly test various page designs and to feed news and other time-sensitive content to the search engine as quickly as possible. |