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Great post
The problem is there are so many website designers, marketer, SEO companies, etc. who will just take money off people with no consideration as to whether they think it is a good business idea or not.
Someone comes to them with a £20k redundancy package in their pocket and they will do them a £20k website.
Even if they are just selling hand made cards more expensively than MoonPig.
I will advice any business that relies on one main channel (such as Google) DONT! You are doomed to fail sooner or later.
You've obviously never been in the position of having an average 10 orders a day - along comes a major Google change and the orders drop to about 2 a month. I also spoke to a fellow trader who had an average of 50 orders a day, 95% of which disappeared almost overnight. This was a year last February.Why ?
Do you mean 1,000 totally different products or 1,000 products in the same range?Nope I haven't - thanks for the answer makes sense
What if you have say 1K products spread across many areas then surely google is going to have some coming in and going out all the time and so the risk is different ?
Would that be 10 sites selling the same products or literally 10 different businesses?The idea is to have lots of sites supporting a business.
If one gets a hit ,still 9 more keep going.
I will advice any business that relies on one main channel (such as Google) DONT! You are doomed to fail sooner or later.
You've obviously never been in the position of having an average 10 orders a day - along comes a major Google change and the orders drop to about 2 a month. I also spoke to a fellow trader who had an average of 50 orders a day, 95% of which disappeared almost overnight. This was a year last February.
We lost a lot of traffic (about half) overnight in July 2012. We never did anything that Google said it didn't like. But it did at that time implement an algo change which preferred big companies. How exactly I don't know.In my experience any merchant who has lost to a Google update did so because they didn't follow the rules. Google make no secret about what to do and what to avoid. Merchants constantly try methods outside of those recommended by Google because it works, short term. If you break the rules you may suffer the consequences of the next Google update. Do it the "Google Friendly" way and you wont.
Show me a site that lost out through NO fault of their own and I will show you how to get back on top.
We lost a lot of traffic (about half) overnight in July 2012. We never did anything that Google said it didn't like. But it did at that time implement an algo change which preferred big companies. How exactly I don't know.
The rankings in our sector were dominated by small niche sites like ours and from one day to the next, the small sites were pushed out and replaced with big companies who sell the product as a miniscule part of their total offering. As an example, say you had some small companies specialising and selling hundreds of different types of umbrellas. The next day those sites disappear to the 2nd and 3rd pages of Google and big companies who might sell a dozen or so umbrellas types take the first page listing. To this day the first eight results in my sector still are:
Debenhams
NEXT
John Lewis
House of Fraser
ASDA
Monsoon
Boden
Amazon
despite the niche companies trying to fight back.
You can't be serious. That is like saying any animal that relies on air to breath is dead. Without Google NO business can thrive online today. Any business that IS making it without Google is most definitely under trading.
For real? There are many very successful businesses that use Amazon or eBay that do not rely on Google on any level.
Businesses that use a single sales channel have an inherent single point of failure. Not only that but with Google they are relying on a commercially motivated business who change the rules of their game to give themselves the competitive advantage.
It's the equivalent of town planners moving the high street your shop sits on and sticking it out in a sink estate![]()
There are many very successful businesses that use Amazon or eBay that do not rely on Google on any level.
No disrespect to you (or all the other SEO/site building companies out there) but that is the response I would expect. You have every minute of every hour of every day to check what Google is up to - most people running an ecommerce business don't. You see in my mind, if I'm doing fine one week and not the next, I'm sure you can come along and tell me what the problem is and make a nice few quid at the same time. Then what happens in a year when Google move the goal posts again? The only basic rule I have ever followed in regards to Google is to ignore them and set my site up for the customer. Individual headings and descriptions, good photos and a site that's easy to navigate, as well as filling in all the relevant meta tag information. I am not, for example, going to go through my descriptions and see if I have used a keyword too many/not enough times. If I have, tough sh*t. I wrote it for the customer not Google.Like it or not Google have the power to make or break your business.
In my experience any merchant who has lost to a Google update did so because they didn't follow the rules. Google make no secret about what to do and what to avoid. Merchants constantly try methods outside of those recommended by Google because it works, short term. If you break the rules you may suffer the consequences of the next Google update. Do it the "Google Friendly" way and you wont.
Show me a site that lost out through NO fault of their own and I will show you how to get back on top. Ignorance is no excuse.
I love Google and so do my clients.
Where do you think Amazon and EBay get the majority of their traffic? Yes, Google.
I think that half the problem here is the belief that Goggle is there for your benefit. Trust me it isn't. Google clearly have their own agenda. That doesn't make it bad.
Believe me, we all need Google today.
For real? There are many very successful businesses that use Amazon or eBay that do not rely on Google on any level.
Businesses that use a single sales channel have an inherent single point of failure. Not only that but with Google they are relying on a commercially motivated business who change the rules of their game to give themselves the competitive advantage.
It's the equivalent of town planners moving the high street your shop sits on and sticking it out in a sink estate[/qu
No disrespect to you (or all the other SEO/site building companies out there) but that is the response I would expect. You have every minute of every hour of every day to check what Google is up to - most people running an ecommerce business don't. You see in my mind, if I'm doing fine one week and not the next, I'm sure you can come along and tell me what the problem is and make a nice few quid at the same time. Then what happens in a year when Google move the goal posts again? The only basic rule I have ever followed in regards to Google is to ignore them and set my site up for the customer. Individual headings and descriptions, good photos and a site that's easy to navigate, as well as filling in all the relevant meta tag information. I am not, for example, going to go through my descriptions and see if I have used a keyword too many/not enough times. If I have, tough sh*t. I wrote it for the customer not Google.
As Deniser said, one week we were on page one with hundreds of our products, the next week all you could find were the big boys. So would you have told me my site was perfect one week and not the next.
It's for this reason I have scaled right down on the internet side of things and found something else to do. Checking what the competition was up to and doing the best you could to present your products made ecommerce a fun and enjoyable experience. Checking the latest from Google every day is most definitely not.
Nope, I would wager the vast majority of Amazon and eBay shoppers go direct. Google listings will contribute no doubt but not in such a huge way with these other well established sales channels.
A bit like banks, why do people think they exist for their benefit!?
Nope, my existence would not be negatively impacted by the absence of Google... unless the only way you could take a wicket or score runs on a weekend was to use a Google-powered cricket bat![]()
Would you like to fix the serious errors on your own sites? No Charge.
I figure from your response you doubt I will have much to offer...From the few minutes I spent on your sites I found no first page listings and many items not on the first ten pages. Is this a problem you are aware of?
It's a load of rubbish idea
survival of the fittest is the only way forward, Small shops have the facility to change quickly to meet customer requests whilst larger companies get so large (co-op springs to mind) they cannot react and die
A big threat is that trademark companies start restricting their sales to middlemen and only tradmarks come up on Google searches which is the owner company. they have the power to stop all others using their trademark
But take any large company which is well known as a trademark brand either in a country or world wide a few random ones, could be say Samsung, Levi's, Bendix, Dickies, Honda, Epson, and so on,
They could easily stop selling to retailers by opening up country based e-commerce centers and sell direct with far larger profits, just like Easy-jet and Ryan-air did a couple of years ago, so we end up with every thing being brand led with massive advertising to get brand awareness.
Small companies unless in a niche area would stand no chance and even monopoly commission could not act as they would be growing rather than merging companies
I believe that Hornby are trying to do something similar to this. They want people to go to their website and buy. They are squeezing the dealer margins and not increasing the RRP. Less profit for dealers so less stock and sell Hornby products, more go to the Hornby website and more profit for a failing company. I can see why they are trying to do it with all their product range.
We manufacture our own product too but everything we do is quickly copied and while our product is a quality one, the copies are poor quality and consequently cheaper but there is no way (other than seeing and touching the product) that people can distinguish by looking at photos online. So very difficult to do as an online business.
So my final piece, take everything you have said above and then look at your business, how has any of that helped you? Rant over![]()
I assume you've never been in retail B&M or online? If you were you'd understand how frustrating it can be, not only as a business but dealing with the public. That's not to say it can't be great fun and good money can be made if done well. But some days it becomes all too much and it feels like death by a thousand cuts sometimes.
After all is said and done I still love it after all these years.