
Recherche avancée
Médias (91)
-
MediaSPIP Simple : futur thème graphique par défaut ?
26 septembre 2013, par kent1
Mis à jour : Octobre 2013
Langue : français
Type : Video
-
avec chosen
13 septembre 2013, par severo
Mis à jour : Septembre 2013
Langue : français
Type : Image
-
sans chosen
13 septembre 2013, par severo
Mis à jour : Septembre 2013
Langue : français
Type : Image
-
config chosen
13 septembre 2013, par severo
Mis à jour : Septembre 2013
Langue : français
Type : Image
-
SPIP - plugins - embed code - Exemple
2 septembre 2013, par kent1
Mis à jour : Septembre 2013
Langue : français
Type : Image
-
GetID3 - Bloc informations de fichiers
9 avril 2013, par kent1
Mis à jour : Mai 2013
Langue : français
Type : Image
Autres articles (29)
-
Websites made with MediaSPIP
2 mai 2011, par kent1This page lists some websites based on MediaSPIP.
-
Creating farms of unique websites
13 avril 2011, par kent1MediaSPIP platforms can be installed as a farm, with a single "core" hosted on a dedicated server and used by multiple websites.
This allows (among other things) : implementation costs to be shared between several different projects / individuals rapid deployment of multiple unique sites creation of groups of like-minded sites, making it possible to browse media in a more controlled and selective environment than the major "open" (...) -
Publier sur MédiaSpip
13 juin 2013Puis-je poster des contenus à partir d’une tablette Ipad ?
Oui, si votre Médiaspip installé est à la version 0.2 ou supérieure. Contacter au besoin l’administrateur de votre MédiaSpip pour le savoir
Sur d’autres sites (7021)
-
Marketing Touchpoints : Examples, KPIs, and Best Practices
11 mars 2024, par ErinThe customer journey is rarely straightforward. Rather, each stage comprises numerous points of contact with your brand, known as marketing touchpoints. And each touchpoint is equally important to the customer experience.
This article will explore marketing touchpoints in detail, including how to analyse them with attribution models and which KPIs to track. It will also share tips on incorporating these touchpoints into your marketing strategy.
What are marketing touchpoints ?
Marketing touchpoints are the interactions that take place between brands and customers throughout the latter’s journey, either online or in person.
By understanding how customers interact with your brand before, during and after a purchase, you can identify the channels that contribute to starting, driving and closing buyer journeys. Not only that, but you’ll also learn how to optimise the customer experience. This can also help you :
- Promote customer loyalty through increased customer satisfaction
- Improve your brand reputation and foster a more positive perception of your brand, supported by social proof
- Build brand awareness among prospective customers
- Reconnect with current customers to drive repeat business
According to a 2023 survey, social media and video-sharing platforms are the leading digital touchpoints among US consumers.
With the customer journey divided into three stages — awareness, consideration, and decision — we can group these interactions into three touchpoint segments, depending on whether they occur before, during or after a purchase.
Touchpoints before a purchase
Touchpoints before a purchase are those initial interactions between potential customers and brands that occur during the awareness stage — before they’ve made a purchase decision.
Here are some key touchpoints at the pre-purchase stage :
- Customer reviews, forums, and testimonials
- Social media posts
- Online ads
- Company events and product demos
- Other digital touchpoints, like video content, blog posts, or infographics
- Peer referral
In PwC’s 2024 Global Consumer Insights Pulse Survey, 54% of consumers listed search engines as their primary source of pre-purchase information, followed by Amazon (35%) and retailer websites (33%).
Here are the survey’s findings in Western Europe, specifically :
Social channels are another major pre-purchase touchpoint ; 25% of social media users aged 18 to 44 have made a purchase through a social media app over the past three months.
Touchpoints during a purchase
Touchpoints during a purchase occur when the prospective customer has made their purchase decision. It’s the beginning of a (hopefully) lasting relationship with them.
It’s important to involve both marketing and sales teams here — and to keep track of conversion metrics.
Here are the main touchpoints at this stage :
- Company website pages
- Product pages and catalogues
- Communication between customers and sales reps
- Product packaging and labelling
- Point-of-sale (POS) — the final touchpoint the prospective customer will reach before making the final purchasing decision
Touchpoints after a purchase
You can use touchpoints after a purchase to maintain a positive relationship and keep current customers engaged. Examples of touchpoints that contribute to a good post-purchase experience for the customer include the following :
- Thank-you emails
- Email newsletters
- Customer satisfaction surveys
- Cross-selling emails
- Renewal options
- Customer loyalty programs
Email marketing remains significant across all touchpoint segments, with 44% of CMOs agreeing that it’s essential to their marketing strategy — and it also plays a particularly important role in the post-purchase experience. For 61.1% of marketing teams, email open rates are higher than 20%.
Sixty-nine percent of consumers say they’ve stopped doing business with a brand following a bad experience, so the importance of customer service touchpoints shouldn’t be overlooked. Live chat, chatbots, self-service resources, and customer service teams are integral to the post-purchase experience.
Attribution models : Assigning value to marketing touchpoints
Determining the most effective touchpoints — those that directly contribute to conversions — is a process known as marketing attribution. The goal here is to identify the specific channels and points of contact with prospective customers that result in revenue for the company.
You can use these insights to understand — and maximise — marketing return on investment (ROI). Otherwise, you risk allocating your budget to the wrong channels.
It’s possible to group attribution models into two categories — single-touch and multi-touch — depending on whether you assign value to one or more contributing touchpoints.
Single-touch attribution models, where you’re giving credit for the conversion to a single touchpoint, include the following :
- First-touch attribution : This assigns credit for the conversion to the first interaction a customer had with a brand ; however, it fails to consider lower-funnel touchpoints.
- Last-click attribution : This focuses only on bottom-of-funnel marketing and credits the last interaction the customer had with a brand before completing a purchase.
- Last non-direct : Credits the touchpoint immediately preceding a direct touchpoint with all the credit.
Multi-touch attribution models are more complex and distribute the credit for conversion across multiple relevant touchpoints throughout the customer journey :
- Linear attribution : The simplest multi-touch attribution model assigns equal values to all contributing touchpoints.
- Position-based or U-shaped attribution : This assigns the greatest value to the first and last touchpoint — with 40% of the conversion credit each — and then divides the remaining 20% across all the other touchpoints.
- Time-decay attribution : This model assigns the most credit to the customer’s most recent interactions with a brand, assuming that the touchpoints that occur later in the journey have a bigger impact on the conversion.
Consider the following when choosing the most appropriate attribution model for your business :
- The length of your typical sales cycle
- Your marketing goals : increasing awareness, lead generation, driving revenue, etc.
- How many stages and touchpoints make up your sales funnel
Sometimes, it even makes sense to measure marketing performance using more than one attribution model.
With the sheer volume of data that’s constantly generated across numerous online touchpoints, from your website to social media channels, it’s practically impossible to collect and analyse it manually.
You’ll need an advanced web analytics platform to identify key touchpoints and assign value to them.
Matomo’s Marketing Attribution feature can accurately measure the performance of different touchpoints to ensure that you’re allocating resources to the right channels. This is done in a compliant manner, without the need of data sampling or requiring cookie consent screens (excluding in Germany and the UK), ensuring both accuracy and privacy compliance.
Try Matomo for Free
Get the web insights you need, without compromising data accuracy.
Customer journey KPIs for measuring marketing campaign performance
Measuring the impact of different touchpoints on marketing campaign performance can help you understand how customer interactions drive conversions — and how to optimise your future efforts.
Clearly, this is not a one-time effort. You should continuously reevaluate the crucial touchpoints that drive the most engagement at different stages of the customer journey.
Web analytics platforms can provide valuable insights into ever-changing consumer behaviours and trends and help you make informed decisions.
At the moment, Google is the most popular solution in the web analytics industry, with a combined market share of more than 70%.
However, if privacy, data accuracy, and GDPR compliance are a priority for you, Matomo is an alternative worth considering.
Try Matomo for Free
Get the web insights you need, without compromising data accuracy.
KPIs to track before a purchase
During the pre-purchase stage, focus on the KPIs that measure the effectiveness of marketing activities across various online touchpoints — landing pages, email campaigns, social channels and ad placement on SERPs, for instance.
KPIs to track during the consideration stage include the following :
- Cost-per-click (CPC) : The CPC, the total cost of paid online advertising divided by the number of clicks those ads get, indicates whether you’re getting a good ROI. In the UK, the average CPC for search advertising is $1.22. Globally, it averages $0.62.
- Engagement rate : The engagement rate, which is the total number of interactions divided by the number of followers, is useful for measuring the performance of social media touchpoints. Customer engagement also applies to other channels, like tracking average time on-page, form conversions, bounce rates, and other website interactions.
- Click-through rate (CTR) : The CTR — or the number of clicks your ads receive compared to the number of times they’re shown — helps you measure the performance of CTAs, email newsletters and pay-per-click (PPC) advertising.
KPIs to track during a purchase
As a potential customer moves further down the sales funnel and reaches the decision stage, where they’re ready to make the choice to purchase, you should be tracking the following :
- Conversion rate : This is the percentage of leads that convert into customers by completing the desired action relative to the total number of website visitors. It shows you whether you’re targeting the right people and providing a frictionless checkout experience.
- Sales revenue : This refers to the quantity of products sold multiplied by the product’s price. It helps you track the company’s ability to generate profit.
- Cost per conversion : This KPI is the total cost of online advertising in relation to the number of conversions. It measures the effectiveness of different marketing channels and the costs of converting prospective customers into buyers. It also forecasts future ad spend.
KPIs to track after purchase
At the post-purchase stage, your priority should be gathering feedback :
Customer feedback surveys are great for collecting insights into customers’ post-purchase experience, opinions about your brand, products and services, and needs and expectations.
In addition to measuring customer satisfaction, these insights can help you identify points of friction, forecast future growth and revenue and spot customers at risk of churning.
Focus on the following customer satisfaction and retention metrics :
- Customer Satisfaction Score (CSAT) : This metric, which is gathered through customer satisfaction surveys, helps you gauge satisfaction levels. After all, 77% of consumers consider great customer service an important driver of brand loyalty.
- Net Promoter Score (NPS) : Based on single-question customer surveys, NPS indicates how likely a customer is to recommend your business.
- Customer Lifetime Value (CLV) : The CLV is the profit you can expect to generate from one customer throughout their relationship with your company.
- Customer Health Score (CHS) : This score can assess how “healthy” the customer’s relationship with your brand is and identify at-risk customers.
Marketing touchpoints : Tips and best practices
Customer experience is more important today than ever.
Salesforce’s 2022 State of the Connected Consumer report indicated that, for 88% of customers, the experience the brand provides is just as important as the product itself.
Here’s how you can build your customer touchpoint strategy and use effective touchpoints to improve customer satisfaction, build a loyal customer base, deliver better digital experiences and drive growth :
Understand the customer’s end-to-end experience
The typical customer’s journey follows a non-linear path of individual experiences that shape their awareness and brand preference.
Seventy-three percent of customers expect brands to understand their needs. So, personalising each interaction and delivering targeted content at different touchpoint segments — supported by customer segmentation and tools like Matomo — should be a priority.
Try to put yourself in the prospective customer’s shoes and understand their motivation and needs, focusing on their end-to-end experience rather than individual interactions.
Create a customer journey map
Once you understand how prospective customers interact with your brand, it becomes easier to map their journey from the pre-purchase stage to the actual purchase and beyond.
By creating these visual “roadmaps,” you make sure that you’re delivering the right content on the right channels at the right times and to the right audience — the key to successful marketing.
Identify best-performing digital touchpoints
You can use insights from marketing attribution to pinpoint areas that are performing well.
By analysing the data provided by Matomo’s Marketing Attribution feature, you can determine which digital touchpoints are driving the most conversions or engagement, allowing you to focus your resources on optimising these channels for even greater success.
This targeted approach helps maximise the effectiveness of your marketing efforts and ensures a higher return on investment.
Try Matomo for Free
Get the web insights you need, without compromising data accuracy.
Discover key marketing touchpoints with Matomo
The customer’s journey rarely follows a direct route. If you hope to reach more customers and improve their experience, you’ll need to identify and manage individual marketing touchpoints every step of the way.
While this process looks different for every business, it’s important to remember that your customers’ experience begins long before they interact with your brand for the first time — and carries on long after they complete the purchase.
In order to find these touchpoints and measure their effectiveness across multiple marketing channels, you’ll have to rely on accurate data — and a powerful web analytics tool like Matomo can provide those valuable marketing insights.
Try Matomo free for 21-days. No credit card required.
Try Matomo for Free
21 day free trial. No credit card required.
-
What Is Data Ethics & Why Is It Important in Business ?
9 mai 2024, par ErinData is powerful — every business on earth uses data. But some are leveraging it more than others.
The problem ?
Not all businesses are using data ethically.
You need to collect, store, and analyse data to grow your business. But, if you aren’t careful, you could be crossing the line with your data usage into unethical territories.
In a society where data is more valuable than ever, it’s crucial you perform ethical practices.
In this article, we break down what data ethics is, why it’s important in business and how you can implement proper data ethics to ensure you stay compliant while growing your business.
What is data ethics ?
Data ethics are how a business collects, protects and uses data.
It’s one field of ethics focused on organisations’ moral obligation to collect, track, analyse and interpret data correctly.
Data ethics analyses multiple ways we use data :
- Collecting data
- Generating data
- Tracking data
- Analysing data
- Interpreting data
- Implementing activities based on data
Data ethics is a field that asks, “Is this right or wrong ?”
And it also asks, “Can we use data for good ?”
If businesses use data unethically, they could get into serious hot water with their customers and even with the law.
You need to use data to ensure you grow your business to the best of your ability. But, to maintain a clean slate in the eyes of your customers and authorities, you need to ensure you have strong data ethics.
Why you need to follow data ethics principles
In 2018, hackers broke into British Airways’ website by inserting harmful code, leading website visitors to a fraudulent site.
The result ?
British Airways customers gave their information to the hackers without realising it : credit cards, personal information, login information, addresses and more.
While this was a malicious attack, the reality is that data is an integral part of everyday life. Businesses need to do everything they can to protect their customers’ data and use it ethically.
Data ethics is crucial to understand as it sets the standard for what’s right and wrong for businesses. Without a clear grasp of data ethics, companies will willingly or neglectfully misuse data.
With a firm foundation of data ethics, businesses worldwide can make a collective effort to function smoothly, protect their customers, and, of course, protect their own reputation.
3 benefits of leaning into data ethics
We’re currently transitioning to a new world led by artificial intelligence.
While AI presents endless opportunities for innovation in the business world, there are also countless risks at play, and it’s never been more important to develop trust with your customers and stakeholders.
With an influx of data being created and tracked daily, you need to ensure your business is prioritising data ethics to ensure you maintain trust with your customers moving forward.
Here are three benefits of data ethics that will help you develop trust, maintain a solid reputation and stay compliant to continue growing your business :
1. Compliance with data privacy
Privacy is everything.
In a world where our data is being collected nonstop, and we live more public lives than ever with social media, AI and an influx of recording and tracking in everyday life, you need to protect the privacy of your customers.
One crucial way to protect that privacy is by complying with major data privacy regulations.
Some of the most common regulations you need to remain compliant with include :
- General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)
- California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA)
- Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA)
- General Personal Data Protection Law (LGPD)
- Privacy and Electronic Communications (EC Directive) Regulations (PECR)
While these regulations don’t directly address ethics, there’s a core overlap between privacy requirements like accountability, lawfulness and AI ethics.
Matomo ensures you protect the privacy of your web and app users so you can track and improve your website performance with peace of mind.
2. Maintain a good reputation
While data ethics can help you maintain data privacy compliance, it can also help you maintain a good reputation online and offline.
All it takes is one bad event like the British Airways breach for your company’s reputation to be ruined.
If you want to keep a solid reputation and maintain trust with your stakeholders, customers and lawmakers, then you need to focus on developing strong data ethics.
Businesses that invest time in establishing proper data ethics set the right foundation to protect their reputation, develop trust with stakeholders and create goodwill and loyalty.
3. Increased trust means greater revenue
What happens when you establish proper data ethics ?
You’ll gain the trust of your customers, maintain a solid reputation and increase your brand image.
Customers who trust you to protect their privacy and data want to keep doing business with you.
So, what’s the end result for a business that values data ethics ?
You’ll generate more revenue in the long run. Trust is one thing you should never put on the back burner if you have plans to keep growing your business. By leaning more into data ethics, you’ll be able to build that brand reputation that helps people feel comfortable buying your products and services on repeat.
While spending time and money on data ethics may seem like an annoyance, the reality is that it’s a business investment that will pay dividends for years to come.
5 core data ethics principles
So, what exactly is involved in data ethics ?
For most people, data ethics is a pretty broad and vague term. If you’re curious about the core pillars of data ethics, then keep reading.
Here are five core data ethical principles you need to follow to ensure you’re protecting your customers’ data and maintaining trust :
1. Data ownership
The individual owns the data, not you. This is the first principle of data ethics. You don’t have control over someone else’s data. It’s theirs, and they have full ownership over it.
Just as stealing a TV from an electronics store is a crime, stealing (or collecting) someone’s personal data without their consent is considered unlawful and unethical.
Consent is the only way to ethically “own” someone’s data.
How can you collect someone’s data ethically ?
- Digital privacy policies
- Signed, written agreements
- Popups with checkboxes that allow you to track users’ behaviour
Essentially, anytime you’re collecting data from your website or app users, you need to ensure you’re asking permission for that data.
You should never assume a website visitor or customer is okay with you collecting your data automatically. Instead, ask permission to collect, track and use their data to avoid legal and ethical issues.
2. Transparency
The second core principle of data ethics within business is transparency. This means you need to be fully transparent on when, where and how you :
- Collect data
- Store data
- Use data
In other words, you need to allow your customers and website visitors to have a window inside your data activities.
They need to be able to see exactly how you plan on using the data you’re collecting from them.
For example, imagine you implemented a new initiative to personalise the website experience for each user based on individual behaviour. To do this, you’ll need to track cookies. In this case, you’d need to write up a new policy stating how this behavioural data is going to be collected, tracked and used.
It’s within your website visitors’ rights to access this information so they can choose whether or not they want to accept or decline your website’s cookies.
With any new data collection or tracking, you need to be 100% clear about how you’re going to use the data. You can’t be deceptive, misleading, or withholding any information on how you will use the data, as this is unethical and, in many cases, unlawful.
3. Privacy
Another important branch of ethics is privacy. The ethical implications of this should be obvious.
When your users, visitors, or customers enter your sphere of influence and you begin collecting data on them, you are responsible for keeping that data private.
When someone accepts the terms of your data usage, they’re not agreeing to have their data released to the public. They’re agreeing to let you leverage that data as their trusted business provider to better serve them. They expect you to maintain privacy.
You can’t spread private information to third parties. You can’t blast this data to the public.
This is especially important if someone allows you to collect and use their personally identifiable information (PII), such as :
- First and last name
- Email address
- Date of birth
- Home address
- Phone number
To protect your audience’s data, you should only store it in a secure database.
For example, Matomo’s web analytics solution guarantees the privacy of both your users and analytics data.
With Matomo, you have complete ownership of your data. Unlike other web analytics solutions that exploit your data for advertising purposes, Matomo users can use analytics with confidence, knowing that their data won’t be sold to advertisers.
Try Matomo for Free
Get the web insights you need, while respecting user privacy.
4. Intention
When you collect and store data, you need to tell your users why you’re collecting their data. But there’s another principle of data ethics that goes beyond the reason you give your customers.
Intention is the reason you give yourself for collecting and using the data.
Before you start collecting and storing data, you should ask yourself the following :
- Why you need it
- What you’ll gain from it
- What changes you’ll be able to make after you analyse the data
If your intention is wrong in any way, it’s unethical to collect the data :
- You’re collecting data to hurt others
- You’re collecting data to profit from your users’ weaknesses
- You’re collecting data for any other malicious reason
When you collect data, you need to have the right intentions to maintain proper data ethics ; otherwise, you could harm your brand, break trust and ruin your reputation.
5. Outcomes
You may have the best intentions, but sometimes, there are negative outcomes from data use.
For example, British Airways’ intention was not to allow hackers to gain access and harm their users. But the reality is that their customers’ data was stolen and used for malicious purposes. While this isn’t technically unlawful, the outcome of collecting data ended badly.
To ensure proper data ethics, you must have good standing with your data. This means protecting your users at all costs, maintaining a good reputation and ensuring proper privacy measures are set up.
How to implement data ethics as a business leader
As a business leader, CTO or CEO, it’s your responsibility to implement data ethics within your organisation. Here are some tips to implement data ethics based on the size and stage of your organisation :
Startups
If you’re a startup, you need to be mindful of which technology and tools you use to collect, store and use data to help you grow your business.
It can be a real challenge to juggle all the moving parts of a startup since things can change so quickly. However, it’s crucial to establish a leader and allow easy access to ethical analysis resources to maintain proper data ethics early on.
Small and medium-sized businesses
As you begin scaling, you’ll likely be using even more technology. With each new business technique you implement, there will be new ways you’ll be collecting user data.
One of the key processes involved in managing data as you grow is to hire engineers who build out different technologies. You must have protocols, best practices and management overseeing the new technologies being built to ensure proper data ethics.
Global businesses
Have you scaled internationally ?
There will be even more rules, laws, regulations and organisations to answer to if you start managing data unethically.
You should have established teams or departments to ensure you follow proper privacy and data protocols worldwide. When you have a large organisation, you have more money and vast amounts of data. This makes you a bigger target for leaks, ransomware and hackers.
You should ensure you have cross-departmental groups working to establish ongoing protocols and training to keep your data management in good standing.
Leverage data ethically with Matomo
Data is powerful.
It’s a crucial point of leverage that’s required to stay competitive.
However, improper use and management of data can give you a bad reputation, break trust and even cause you legal trouble.
That’s why you must maintain good data ethics within your organisation.
One of the most important places to set up proper data ethics and privacy measures is with your website analytics.
Matomo is the leading, privacy-friendly web analytics solution in the world. It automatically collects, stores, and tracks data across your website ethically.
With over 1 million websites using Matomo, you get to take full control over your website performance with :
- Accurate data (no data sampling)
- Privacy-friendly and GDPR-compliant analytics
- Open-source for transparency and to create a custom solution for you
Try Matomo free for 21-days. No credit card required.
Try Matomo for Free
21 day free trial. No credit card required.
-
What Is Ethical SEO & Why Does It Matter ?
7 mai 2024, par ErinDo you want to generate more revenue ?
Then, you need to ensure you have a steady stream of traffic flowing to your site.
Search engines like Google, Bing and Yahoo are powerful mediums you can use to scale your business.
Search engine optimisation (SEO) is the process of creating search engine-friendly content to draw in traffic to your website. But, if you aren’t careful, you could be crossing the line of ethical SEO into unethical SEO.
In this article, we break down what ethical SEO is, why it’s important in business and how you can implement effective SEO into your business while remaining ethical.
Let’s begin.
What is ethical SEO ?
Since the early days of the internet and search engines, business owners and marketers have tried using all kinds of SEO tactics to rank atop the search engines for relevant keywords.
The problem ?
Some of these practices are ethical, while others aren’t.
What exactly is ethical SEO ?
It’s the practice of optimising your website’s rankings in search engines by following search engine guidelines and prioritising user experience.
Ethical SEO is also referred to as “white hat SEO.”
On the other hand, businesses that break search engine rules and guidelines to “hack” their way to the top with faulty and questionable practices use unethical SEO, or “black hat SEO.”
Ethical SEO aims to achieve higher rankings in search engines through sustainable, legitimate and fair methods.
Black hat, or unethical SEO, aims to manipulate or “game” the system with deceptive strategies to bypass the search engine’s guidelines to rank higher.
The two core branches of ethical SEO include :
- Strategies that align with search engine guidelines.
- Accessibility to broad audiences.
Some examples of ethical SEO principles include :
- Natural link building
- Compliance with search engine guidelines
- Establishing great user experiences
- Creating reader-focused content
By sticking to the right guidelines and implementing proper SEO practices, businesses can establish ethical SEO to generate more traffic and grow their brands.
8 ethical SEO practices to implement
If you want to grow your organic search traffic, then there’s no doubt you’ll need to have some SEO knowledge.
While there are dozens of ways to “game” SEO, it’s best to stick to proven, ethical SEO techniques to improve your rankings.
Stick to these best practices to increase your rankings in the search engine results pages (SERPs), increase organic traffic and improve your website conversions.
1. Crafting high-quality content
The most important piece of any ethical SEO strategy is content.
Forget about rankings, keywords and links for a second.
Step back and think about why people go to Google, Bing and Yahoo in the first place.
They’re there looking for information. They have a question they need answered. That’s where you can come in and give them the answer they want.
How ? In the form of content.
The best long-term ethical SEO strategy is to create the highest-quality content possible. Crafting high-quality content should be where you focus 90% of your SEO efforts.
2. Following search engine guidelines
Once you’ve got a solid content creation strategy, where you’re producing in-depth, quality content, you need to ensure you’re following the guidelines and rules put in place by the major search engines.
This means you need to stay compliant with the best practices and guidelines laid out by the top search engines.
If you fail to follow these rules, you could be penalised, your content could be downgraded or removed from search engines, and you could even have your entire website flagged, impacting your entire organic search traffic from your site.
You need to ensure you align with the guidelines so you’re set up for long-term success with your SEO.
3. Conducting keyword research and optimisation
Now that we’ve covered content and guidelines, let’s talk about the technical stuff, starting with keywords.
In the early days of SEO (late 90s), just about anyone could rank a web page high by stuffing keywords all over the page.
While those black hat techniques used to work to “game” the system, it doesn’t work like that anymore. Google and other major search engines have much more advanced algorithms that can detect keyword stuffing and manipulation.
Keywords are still a major part of a successful SEO strategy. You can ethically incorporate keywords into your content (and you should) if you want to rank higher.
Your main goal with your content is to match it with the search intent. So, incorporating keywords should come naturally throughout your content. If you try to stuff in unnecessary keywords or use spammy techniques, you may not even rank at all and could harm your website’s rankings.
4. Incorporating natural link building
After you’ve covered content and keywords, it’s time to dive into links. Backlinks are any links that point back to your website from another website.
These are a crucial part of the SEO pie. Without them, it’s hard to rank high on Google. They work well because they tell Google your web page or website has authority on a subject matter.
But you could be penalised if you try to manipulate backlinks by purchasing them or spamming them from other websites.
Instead, you should aim to draw in natural backlinks by creating content that attracts them.
How ? There are several options :
- Content marketing
- Email outreach
- Brand mentions
- Public relations
- Ethical guest posting
Get involved in other people’s communities. Get on podcasts. Write guest posts. Connect with other brands. Provide value in your niche and create content worth linking to.
5. Respecting the intellectual property of other brands
Content creation is moving at lightspeed in the creator economy and social media era. For better or for worse, content is going viral every day. People share content, place their spin on it, revise it, optimise it, and spread it around the internet.
Unfortunately, this means the content is sometimes shared without the owner’s permission. Content is one form of intellectual property (IP).
If you share copyrighted material, you could face legal consequences.
6. Ensuring transparency
Transparency is one of the pillars of ethical marketing.
If you’re running the SEO in your company or an agency, you should always explain the SEO strategies and tactics you’re implementing to your stakeholders.
It’s best to lean on transparency and honesty to ensure your team knows you’re running operations ethically.
7. Implementing a great user experience
The final pillar of ethical SEO practices is offering a great user experience on your website.
Major search engines like Google are favouring user experience more and more every year. This means knowing how to track and analyse website metrics like page load times, time on page, pageviews, media plays and event tracking.
8. Use an ethical web analytics solution
Last but certainly not least. Tracking your website visitors ethically is key to maintaining SEO ethics.
You can do this by using an ethical web analytics solution like Matomo, Plausible or Fathom. All three are committed to respecting user privacy and offer ethical tracking of visitors.
We’re a bit biassed towards Matomo, of course, but for good reasons.
Matomo offers accurate, unsampled data along with advanced features like heatmaps, session recording, and A/B testing. These features enhance user experience and support ethical SEO practices by providing insights into user behaviour, helping optimise content.
Try Matomo for Free
Get the web insights you need, without compromising data accuracy.
6 unethical SEO practices to avoid
Now that we’ve covered the ethical SEO best practices let’s talk about what kind of unethical SEO practices you want to avoid.
Remember, SEO isn’t as easy to manipulate as it once was 20 years ago.
Algorithms are much more sophisticated now, and search engines are getting better at detecting fraudulent, scammy or unethical SEO practices every year.
Avoid these eight unethical SEO practices to ensure you can rank high in the long term :
1. Keyword stuffing
Keyword stuffing is probably the most common unethical SEO practice. This is where someone deliberately stuffs keywords onto a page to manipulate the search engines to rank a web page higher.
Where this is unethical isn’t always easy to detect, but in some cases, it is. It comes down to whether it’s relevant and natural or intentionally stuffing.
2. Cloaking
Cloaking is another unethical SEO practice where someone manipulates the information search engines see on their website.
For example, someone may show search engines one web page on their website, but when someone clicks on it in Google, they can direct someone to a completely different page. They do this by detecting the incoming request from the user agent and presenting different content.
3. Deceiving functionality
Another way companies are unethically implementing SEO tactics is by deceiving people with misleading information. For example, a website may claim to provide a free resource or directory but may intentionally lead visitors to paid products.
4. Fraudulent redirects
Another way to deceive or mislead searchers is by creating fraudulent redirects. A redirect is a way to take someone to a different web page when they click on another one. Redirects can be useful if a page is broken or outdated. However, they can be used to deceptively take someone to a website they didn’t intend to view.
5. Negative SEO
Negative SEO is the intentional attempt to harm a competitor’s search engine rankings through unethical tactics.
These tactics include duplicating their content or generating spammy links by creating low quality or irrelevant backlinks to their site.
6. Hidden text
Placing hidden text on a website typically has one purpose : keyword stuffing.
Instead of making it visible to users reading the content, websites will place invisible text or text that’s hard to read on a website to try to rank the content higher and manipulate the search engines.
3 reasons you need to implement ethical SEO
So, why should you ensure you only implement ethical SEO in your organic traffic strategy ?
It’s not just about what’s morally right or wrong. Implementing ethical SEO is the smartest long-term marketing strategy :
1. Better long-term SEO
Search engine optimisation is about implementing the “right” tactics to get your website to rank higher.
The funny thing is many people are trying to get quick fixes by manipulating search engines to see results now.
However, the ones who implement shady tactics and “hacks” to game the system almost always end up losing their rankings in the long term.
The best long-term SEO strategy is to do things ethically. Create content that helps people. Make higher quality content than your competitors. If you do those two things right, you’ll have better search traffic for years.
2. Great brand reputation
Not only is ethical SEO a great way to get long-term results, but it’s also a good way to maintain a solid brand reputation.
Reputation management is a crucial aspect of SEO. All it takes is one bad incident, and your SEO could be negatively impacted.
3. Lower chance of penalties
If you play by the rules, you have a lower risk of being penalised by Google.
The reality is that Google owns the search engine, not you. While we can benefit from the traffic generation of major search engines, you could lose all your rankings if you break their guidelines.
Track SEO data ethically with Matomo
Ethical SEO is all about :
- Serving your audience
- Getting better traffic in the long run
If you fail to follow ethical SEO practices, you could be de-ranked or have your reputation on the line.
However, if you implement ethical SEO, you could reap the rewards of a sustainable marketing strategy that helps you grow your traffic correctly and increase conversions in the long term.
If you’re ready to start implementing ethical SEO, you need to ensure you depend on an ethical web analytics solution like Matomo.
Unlike other web analytics solutions, Matomo prioritises user privacy, maintains transparent, ethical data collection practices, and does not sell user data to advertisers. Matomo provides 100% data ownership, ensuring that your data remains yours to own and control.
As the leading privacy-friendly web analytics solution globally, trusted by over 1 million websites, Matomo ensures :
- Accurate data without data sampling for confident insights and better results
- Privacy-friendly and GDPR-compliant web analytics
- Open-source access for transparency and creating a custom solution tailored to your needs
Try Matomo free for 21-days. No credit card required.
Try Matomo for Free
21 day free trial. No credit card required.