With Buzzfeed losing search and social media traffic and many other huge publishing brands restructuring (remember About.com?), we cannot help but wonder: What is the future of digital publishing?
What’s changing and how to adapt to those changes? Let’s discuss!
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About @Mark_Barrera
@Mark_Barrera is Senior Director of SEO @ziffdavis, a leading global digital-media company. Mark leads SEO for the Ziff Davis Tech and Commerce brands: PCMag, Mashable, Offers.com, Geek, AskMen, BlackFriday.com, ExtremeTech, ComputerShopper and TechBargains.
Mark is also #StateofSearch Founding Chairman.
Connect to Mark on Linkedin
Questions we discussed
Q1 How did you become a digital marketer? Please share your career story!
As a kid, I was a computer nerd and ran a BBS. When the Internet and HTML came along, I would rent books from the library to teach myself how to code. I then found out how easy it was to rank sites in the search engines (Lycos, Excite, Yahoo, etc) and loved it.
It was a lot easier to rank sites back when there were only a fraction as many 🙂 I had the largest horse site online 1994-1998 It ranked for everything and made $400+ from AdSense a month #vcbuzz
— Gail Gardner (@GrowMap) April 30, 2019
So, I’ve been doing SEO forever (pre-Google days) but evolved since then to learn the broader skills needed to become a well rounded digital marketers (PPC, Display, Social, Affiliate, etc).
I worked agency side working with all sizes and types of business and learned a lot from this diversity of clients. I made the shift to brand side with Ziff Davis about 3 years ago and have loved the ability to be more focused on the overall strategy and implementation.
A1. I didn't. I became a marketer. I use digital tools where they add value. Digital marketing is just marketing that uses digital tools and deliver mechanism #vcbuzz
— LYNDON [THINK DIFFERENTLY] JOHNSON (@THINK_Lyndon) April 30, 2019
Q2 Overall, what do you think are the major changes in digital marketing landscape effecting big and small brands? As an SEO of huge digital publishers, what have you been doing differently to adopt the trends?
There have been and always will be big changes that will impact how digital brands and digital publishers operate. Facebook was sending lots of traffic to publishers but that changed recently and traffic there is falling off.
Google has been trending toward more no-click searches thanks to featured snippets and the way they continue to try to answer more queries directly in the SERPs, so we’re seeing a small decline in Google opportunities on the SEO front.
Apple News, Flipboard and others are growing as a source of traffic for digital publishers as well.
A2 Very generally speaking, content marketing has become more expensive, more complicated and more customer-centric which is great! #vcbuzz
— Ann Smarty (@seosmarty) April 30, 2019
On the SEO front, we’re seeing YouTube and video as big opportunity and are investing more there for a few reasons . 1) The audience on YouTube is massive and basic SEO principles can be used on YT to reach these audiences.
About 1/3 of the queries we care about have video results in them. People Also Ask (aka Featured Snippets) are now on 80+% so being able to win at Featured Snippets and answering questions in your content is also very valuable to win SEO traffic.
Local is also getting more prevalent for broad queries so publishers need to understand where opportunities may lie in creating content for specific cities.
@mark_barrera Youtube marketing is still your lowest-hanging fruit in many niches today #vcbuzz
— Ann Smarty (@seosmarty) April 30, 2019
Local is seems lawless. In our industry the companies at the top got there through PBN's and virtual addresses. #vcbuzz
— 24 Hour Translation Services (@24hrtranslation) April 30, 2019
Two parts of local as we look at it – The Maps results and the organic content that is localized. We focus on the latter as that can’t be as easily spammed.
Extremely easy to rank in Google, in many niches very little competition #vcbuzz
— Ann Smarty (@seosmarty) April 30, 2019
Our brands are getting beat on YouTube by people working from home producing video content on a specific topic. Definitely lots of opportunities for the little guy still on YT. Costs of video is low if you take the time to learn and perfect a process.
Q3 You retweeted this interview with Dotdash CEO: What do you think was wrong with About.com model and what did Neil Vogel do to fix it?
The main problem was that they had a dying source of traffic in Google and had to change. They had good content, but also a lot of bad content and Google stopped rewarding them with traffic. They had to make a change to try something new.
The thing that yielded good results was breaking the site down to focus on the user needs. Specific brands around specific content. Then doing this with a user experience (and ad experience) that put the user first.
They have seen great initial results from this and we’ll see how it stands the test of time.
In local, a company with 120 5 star reviews and legit content gets beat by linkfarmed sites with virtual addresses and a few fake reviews. #vcbuzz
— 24 Hour Translation Services (@24hrtranslation) April 30, 2019
Q4 If you were to start a publishing platform today, how would you proceed? Which innovative / different publishing models are emerging and winning bringing something new to the web?
Pick a topic you know well. Focus on quality. Focus on engagement. Make data driven decisions and do your research upfront to size the market/opportunity.
Have a business model that works. Make sure to have multiple revenue streams (Events (Virtual/Physical), Subscriptions, Ads, Commerce, Leads, etc). For our ZD brands more than half of our revenues are not display ads which helps us weather changing trends.
Don’t be dependent on one thing (Google, FB, etc). Plan on how your content can live outside of your Owned and Operated platforms. Plan for ways for your content to live everywhere.
Epicurious is an example of how to diversify content and platforms. Their site has recipes and great content, but their YouTube has a much different approach. A year ago, the channel was posting recipes getting small engagement but shifted that YT content.
Now their entire channel is focused on videos for trying new foods and guessing what you are eating. They now see 6-7 figure views on each of these.
Distributed channels are a big means of getting our content spread and building audience that we can funnel back to our O&O properties to re-engage with that audience in different ways.
Q5 Who are you following and read to keep an eye on digital marketing trends?
I read lots of things, from AdAge to Digiday, to a huge list of bloggers, etc. So I read a ton. But my main way to keep an eye on trends is to observe. Observe who is winning in Search, who is winning on Social. Who is winning with email, etc.
What things are others doing differently and what is leading to their success. You also have to keep a keen eye on what people want and cater to that. Try to know what the future consumer wants and give it to them.
A5 @rustybrick is my ultimate source of SEO news! #vcbuzz
— Ann Smarty (@seosmarty) April 30, 2019
Our previous SEO chats:
- SERP Features: Riding Google’s Presentation FTW: with Michael Stricker @RadioMS #VCBuzz
- The State of Nofollow Link Attribute with Patrick Stox @patrickstox #VCBuzz
- How to Update Your Content for More SEO Benefits with Joe Hall @joehall #VCBuzz
- SEO Then and SEO Now with Bonnie Burns @Burnsie_SEO #vcbuzz
- How to Combine SEO and Social Media w/ Anita Cohen @anitasearchguru #VCBuzz
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