Consider this…
Your Home Page
Title Tag is “Trademark Registration | Trademark Search UK, EU & Global.”
Google has over 1 million web pages in its index with “Trademark Registration” in the title. A search on that
precise term returns 15 million results.
Google has
only 1600 web pages in its index with “Trademark Search UK” in the title. A search on that
precise term returns 8,370 results.
(Searches that include those terms but
aren’t precise return many more results)
So – although you have a good website, (barring a few niggles), you are swimming in a sea of competition – trademark specialists, lawyers, accountants – all of whom will be saying much the same thing, charging much the same money and delivering certificates in much the same time.
You have little chance of being found in search results but if you are, your
site description says…
“
Revomark Offers Comprehensive Trademark Registration Services. Register A Trademark With Revomark. Trademark Search UK, EU & Global."
Will that inspire the searcher to click through to your site ? Differentiate you from your competitors ?
Here’s an alternative…
Google has 5 web pages in its index with “Trademark Registration for Architects” in the title. A search on that
precise term returns one result.
Google has 1 web page in its index with “Trademark Registration for Surveyors” in the title. A search on that
precise term returns no results.
(Searches that include those terms but
aren’t precise return many more results of course)
What does this mean ? It means that if you specialise, (or appear to specialise), in specific market segments you have a far higher chance of being seen and have searchers click through to your site.
How do you do this (remembering that Google indexes web
pages, not web
sites)?
- Create a separate page on your website for each market segment (eg architects).
- Ensure the title tag and descriptions on that page reflect the segment.
- Ensure the content on that page reflects the segment…
Go to ChatGPT or Gemini and ask something like “
Write a page describing how an architect would register a trademark in the UK”
As a test it came back with…
“Registering a Trademark as an Architect in the UK
Architects in the UK should be aware that the title "architect" itself is protected by law. It can only be used by individuals registered with the Architects Registration Board (ARB) https://www.arb.org.uk/. This legal protection makes registering a trademark for the simple term "architect" impossible.
However, there are still ways for architects to establish a unique brand identity through trademark registration in the UK. Here's what you need to know:..
… followed by a relevant page of text that you can check for accuracy/add to/modify or whatever.
- Include reviews on the page, especially (if you have any) from architects or related professions.
- Get your developer to sort out internal linking from the page.
Of course, most people will still search on broad terms like 'trademark registration' but you stand a better chance of capturing and converting those that specify a market segment. It's really just a variation of 'long-tail' search terms
Also, if you follow the market segment route it opens up other opportunities – eg. email campaigns, linked-in groups and so on.