Archive: August 2008
Achieving visibility in search is not the end of the digital marketing journey
If search engine visibility alone were a leading indicator of sales, the Big Three Detroit automakers would still be on top. Last month iCrossing released the findings of its Vertical Visibility Index: Automotive, its first study analyzing the paid and natural search visibility leaders amongst automotive OEMs in the U.S., and revealed:

Rich automotive sites without sacrificing organic search
Richly interactive websites are an integral part of the automotive industry. To sell a product as complex and as nuanced as an automobile, requires the use of engaging web technologies such as Flash, DHTML and AJAX. In the past, this would mean sacrificing organic search indexing of the dynamic content presented in these interactive experiences. Due to technical constrains by the search engines they could not see the dynamic content in these experiences and thus not have the ability to affect search ranking by indexing that content. (See Figure 1 at right, which illustrates how typical Flash sites are indexed, showing the exclusion of xml and media content.) The only other option then was paid search to compensate.

Search, iPhone and GPS: Envisioning the future of digital automotive
In When your car is your phone, which appeared in the Mobile issue of the Headlight blog, I covered phone/car integration and the potential impact of the current mobile-application-development frenzy. I posited that the platform of choice for automakers will likely be the iPhone for two reasons:

Three ways OEMS can make their search campaigns more effective
Searching for a new car? If so, your search won’t be simplified by the paid search ads on Google, Yahoo or MSN.


