Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Has PR become an essential SEO tool?

As search engine algorithms are increasingly refined to weed out devious SEO tricks and focus on web site quality and relevance, so content becomes really important and this widens the scope and role of PR.

When we set up Virtual News Office over ten years ago we soon noticed that Google indexed our clients' stories and these showed up in searches in several ways. Although this wasn't an intended feature of the VNO, searches turned up not just for the client's name or brand, but the customer's name, the location and of course the generic product type. The VNO service was devised to allow marketing to regularly update news on their web site, rapidly - something their IT or web agency often struggled to achieve, or was expensive to do. The VNO service Technical Marketing Ltd offers is not just a means of publishing news online, but a searchable archive, a high resolution image resource for the press, an RSS news feed generator and a tool for delivering press releases.  Although CMS is now common on company web sites, actually updating a news module requires the discipline and time for someone in the marketing team to actually go and do. Because the news from the VNO is fed to an iFrame on the client's site there are relevant inbound links, something Google rates highly. But this system also allows us to feed news to other industry sites, news tickers or banner ads. We have found that our news server consistently ranks in the top 10 referring sites to client web sites.

An onsite news module merely supplies  page content, it neither generates in-bound links or provides editorial resource and may not be making best use of the content anyway. We reasoned way back during the development of the VNO that the news was what changed most often and required regular updates that most other pages didn't and was most effectively and efficiently managed by the PR agency. The only counter argument being that the company web site did not have the benefit of this content.  But this is easily overcome by examining news subjects and publication channels and re-purposing content that has a longer term value on the web site for search engine indexing. Important news should still go to the media and this requires to be written in a media friendly style and delivered typically by email. For customers and prospects the style can be different and the delivery channels include newsletters and social media.

Some news will be short term - an exhibition or event, financial results, staff changes etc. Other news may have longer term value such as new products, interesting customer applications or installations and these can be re-purposed as product support and testimonials to create quality, relevant web site content. News delivery can be used as appropriate such as Twitter or RSS for headline news and links to more extensive content on the web site, less formal communication on a blog and groups on LinkedIn.

The scope of this work seems to most naturally be within the remit of the PR agency, a role now expanded beyond the traditional press release, to include alternative publication and delivery platforms and now playing an important part in good search engine positioning.


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