By Derek Paulus, Supervisor of Website Content, DealerFire
It may be obvious that investing in SEO is a necessity for your dealership. You may know you need an optimized website suited for mobile, and to enhance digital visibility, one that gets supplemented with digital ads and content creation. But, do you know if you’re actually getting something for your SEO investment?
Many aren’t sure how to answer that question. It’s no surprise considering there isn’t one correct way to measure SEO strategy success. It’s going to vary from industry to industry and dealership to dealership. And it can even vary from one webpage to another.
How to Measure Digital Marketing Success
For example, when bidding for keywords in search ads, you would expect a specific cost-per-click (CPC). You are spending a specific amount of money on that, and you’ll want to know how much you are paying for one customer click or lead through that advertisement. When it comes to content marketing, however, the deliverables are different. Because website content works organically, you may not be able to rely on that specific CPC, and moreover, the desired results may take weeks or months to appear. The benefit, however, is that these results will last over the long-term rather than fading away after the short-term.
Either way, the bottom line is you want to sell more cars, and although there is much more that goes into selling vehicles than just your digital strategy, you at least want to see that new potential customers are viewing your website inventory or getting in contact with you based on something they saw on the website.
What Makes a Blog Successful?
While landing pages that focus on inventory or sales are an important part of your digital strategy, website SEO, from a content marketing perspective, begins with a blog. The content posted on a blog usually isn’t as sales oriented as it is on other web pages, but it plays a critical part in gaining and maintaining long-term SEO success.
Because blogs are so versatile, there are many types of content you can create for them. Generally speaking, the primary goals behind your website blog are to generate a consistent traffic flow and build brand awareness, helping to increase your domain authority over time (in other words, your standing in the eyes of Google).
Though a basic metric, consistent traffic to your blog, is a good indicator that the blog is doing its job. Because of the topics covered in your blog, many of the pageviews will be from areas across the country, and that is fine for this form of content marketing. Even when a blog post is targeted to your local audience and gets significant local traffic from posts highlighting community events or dealership sponsorships, etc., significant traffic coming through that blog post is still a sign of success. Again, the purpose behind your blog isn’t necessarily to sell a vehicle—it’s to generate a healthy flow of consistent traffic for building your domain authority and increasing brand awareness, so getting this content visible and clicked on both nationally and locally is your focus.
What Makes a Landing Page Successful?
Since your website blog is focused on building your domain authority and brand awareness, your custom landing pages can focus on attracting current car buyers to the site and guiding them along the buying process. This content should still get locally targeted, but you’ll have less concern about how much traffic is coming through these pages and more concern on the quality of that traffic.
When users land on this page, are they leaving the website, or are they clicking to view the inventory? If we want users to fill out a contact form on this page, are they doing so? Is this page attracting new website visitors through organic search, or are these returning users continually coming back to this page?
These are all questions worth asking when determining if your custom landing page content is successful, and some of these questions may be more important than others based on the page. For example, research-based landing pages are key aspects of our clients’ content strategy. This helps keep customers on the website by providing them with the information they need to complete their research on vehicles and compare models side-by-side. Because of this, overall page views aren’t the best way to measure success. Sure, you want these pages to get traffic, but most importantly, you want that traffic to convert. The term “conversion” can have many different definitions, all depending on what page you’re talking about. In some cases, it means a form completion. In other cases, it can simply mean clicking over to view the inventory. On our model research and comparison pages, for example, we include a scrolling vehicle carousel relevant to the model highlighted on that web page. This page module allows users to see specific models in the inventory and click to view them in more detail. So, naturally, we measure the success of these pages by determining how many of the visiting users click over to view the online inventory. Since form completions are much less common than they once were across the Internet, this goal of transferring potential customers from the research stage of the buying process to showing intent to buy a specific car is crucial to measuring the custom landing page’s success.
How Important Are Website Conversions?
Though much of the buying process can happen through the website, ultimately, the sale of a vehicle or service is happening at the physical dealership location. Because the digital and physical processes can become intertwined, the buying process for car dealerships can be quite fluid. This makes it difficult to pinpoint whether your SEO efforts have played a role in any one specific vehicle sale.
This doesn’t mean conversions such as contact form completions or click-to-call buttons are not important, but it does mean they aren’t always telling the whole story. Take, for example, a customer who searches for $0 down lease specials in their area via Google. They see a link to a page on your website advertising $0 down lease specials available during this month’s sales event. Rather than completing the contact form on that page, they click over to the inventory, where they view some of the models available to lease. After completing their research, they leave the website. The next day, they conduct another Google search for the dealership’s phone number and call the dealership directly through Google to ask questions and schedule a time to visit. Organic search optimization clearly played a role in obtaining that customer, but there aren’t any form completions or call tracking triggers to show for it. In a case like this, seeing that traffic is coming to the page and that the traffic is local with a low bounce rate, is likely a good enough indication of that page’s success.
Assisted Conversions Through Organic Search
You may also want to analyze assisted conversions in Google Analytics. A page or channel can play multiple roles in the conversion process, from being responsible for the first interaction a user has with a website to the last interaction. Assisted conversions show you pathways that contribute to a conversion, but don’t result in the final conversion. Since much of your SEO efforts focus on attracting the right traffic to the site and then leading them along the buying path, whether that is to inventory or a service scheduler. This is important to analyze if you want a true sense of the impact content marketing and PPC is having on your SEO strategy.
What Results Should You Expect?
The results you desire from your SEO investment won’t always be there from day one. An SEO investment is just that… an “investment.” It’s not the same as spending a specific amount of money and receiving a product, such as when buying a car. A better analogy is investing in a business, where success is measured over a longer period, and that’s essentially what you’re doing.
Just as with starting a new business, SEO strategies take time to develop and mature. They require a clear plan but must also remain fluid to confront potential challenges and changes in the market. When it comes to the content marketing side of your SEO strategy, it can take months to see the desired ROI through organic search visibility. That domain authority we talked about isn’t built overnight.
Moreover, a successful digital strategy requires communication between your dealership and those implementing your SEO efforts. Understanding your dealership’s goals and working out the best way to accomplish those goals takes time as that relationship develops, and as those goals evolve and change new strategies must continually be worked out.
About the Author
Derek Paulus is Supervisor of Website Content for DealerFire starting with the company in 2015. Previously a freelance journalist, he is passionate about writing and storytelling. EMAIL: [email protected]