Canadian Music Trade - December/January 2018 | Page 9
FROM THE FLOOR...
W
hen someone enters your
store’s name into Google,
what do they see? What do
you want them to see? And
how do you ensure that’s what they see?
Scott Dailey of Single Throw Marketing
is presenting a NAMM University double
session entitled “What Google Wants” at
The 2018 NAMM Show and wants to help
you get to page one on Google – and
stay there. Here, he graciously offers a few
tips you can put into practice right away,
though check out his Idea Center session
at 11 a.m. on Friday, Jan. 26 th for more on
maximizing your SEO efforts.
CMT: Terms like “Google rankings” and
“SEO” have been pretty much ubiqui-
tous over the past several years, and
yet it seems that many MI retailers have
been slow to recognize their impor-
tance and take action. Any ideas as to
why that’s been the case?
Scott Dailey: In my experience, the slow-
ness to adopt isn’t that people don’t rec-
ognize the importance of optimizing their
online presence, but rather that they don’t
know where to start with coming up with a
plan and getting it correctly implemented.
In a lot of cases, too, they may have hired
someone to handle it that just wasn’t effec-
tive. The shame is you’ve got an industry
that’s great at talking about tone and sound
and quality and presentation, but often
isn’t great at marketing itself, so people are
often susceptible to someone saying, “I can
optimize your Facebook page,” or “I can get
you on [Google’s] page one.” But really, I talk
to small business owners all the time, and in
a lot of cases, they just don’t know where to
start in getting this right.
CMT: Why is it so important that
they do get it right? How do Google
rankings affect retail operations like
those of the music store owners and
managers you’re presenting for at The
NA MM Show?
SD: Well, put simply, if you’re number one
on page one [in a Google search], you’re
getting one in three clicks. If you’re last on
that same page, it’s one in 40. So just think
of what that means over the course of 1,000
searches. You’ve got a lot of online retailers
looking to swallow you up, and the compe-
What Google Wants
Q&A with Scott Dailey of Single Throw Marketing
tition from brick-and-mortar stores selling
online is increasing.
Now, what’s important to know is that
when you are looking at page one, it’s not
uncommon to be looking at the best of
the worst. Sometimes, it doesn’t take much
to outrank someone, which you might do
because your site’s hygiene is better or
accountability is better in some way, so
that means that while there are a lot of
consistencies, there’s sometimes a discrep-
ancy between what Google wants and
what your customer wants, and you need
to navigate that.
It’s what I call the principle of buyer
assumption. The most effective way to get
someone to buy is to provide them an
experience that’s totally in line with what
they expect – what they want to see. You
need to be consistent with the consumer’s
buying expectations, which is sometimes
inconsistent with what Google is going
to recognize. When you narrow that gap
between what the buyer expects and what
you’re offering, they stop searching and do
the thing they’re supposed to do – which is
buy from you.
CMT: What are a few key takeaways
from your presentation that readers
can put into practice right away?
SD: I’ll throw a few things at you that I think
are important. First, know that the sellers
on page one are there for surgical reasons.
There’s nothing there that’s an accident.
There are hundreds of signals that have in-
formed Google about why your competitor
should be on page one. Everything Google
does is methodical, tested and tested again,
so if you’re on page one, it’s because you
belong there until someone dethrones you.
If you want to be optimized for Google,
that involves being totally engaging to your
buyer. So I’m telling you what your buyer is
expecting to see – what they want to see
– and then how to apply that technically to
have Google recognize it.
I talk with so many small business
owners, and know that about 40 per cent
of their sleepless nights come from trying
to acquire customers – better customers or
more customers. That’s done by narrowing
the gap between your buyer’s assumptions
and expectations and what you’re actually
providing to them.
I’ll explain what your buyer wants and
what Google is looking for, which differs in
some cases. I’m going to talk about how
many times a buyer should have to click
before purchasing, or how you can engage
them after they’ve purchased, but bottom
line, it’s about meeting your buyer’s expec-
tations – what they want and how they
want it served to them.
CMT: Is there anything you’ve noticed
about the MI retail sector specifically
when it comes to their approach or
effectiveness in this area?
SD: The thing I’ve encountered with the
music industry is that they’re great with
personal engagement and know how to
make the buyer feel like the only buyer
on the planet. If they can get the buyer in
the sales funnel, they won’t likely lose [the
sale] because they’re so good at taking
care of people.
What’s so strange is that this rarely
translates digitally. They know what to do
when they encounter the buyer, but are of-
ten bad at communicating digitally the fact
that they’re so empathetic to the buyer’s
needs and what they expect outside of the
physical store environment.
I’ve talked to hundreds of music
retailers – hundreds of them – and they
often have these beautiful stories about the
business. They really care about the journey
and want to share it with the buyer and use
it to communicate to the buyer that they
understand what and how they want to
be sold; they just seem to have the hardest
time translating that digitally, so that’s
where we’re trying to help.
CANADIAN MUSIC TRADE
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