DealerMark: forget the glitz
The February 2008 issue of Dealer Marketing Magazine has been shuffled around the office all month. Since I have settled into my new desk, this issue and I have become entangled in a love hate relationship.
The best article in this issue is on page 22. Mark Bonfigli of Dealer.com writes, “Five Simple Website Strategies You Cannot Do Without.” There are two ways you can read this article online. You may view the whole magazine online for free here, or read the text version here.
The overall message of Mark’s tips is to cater to the user; give them what they want and nothing more. I like the article especially because of Mark’s final tip. Tip #5, Forget the glitz, is valuable advice even for the likes of DealerMark and NIADA.
Market research is 100 percent clear: Customers do not care about fancy website effects unrelated to their car-buying decision.
Similarily, dealers do not care about fancy website effects unrelated to their car-selling-research decisions. Two of the major industry publications, Dealer Marketing Magazine and NIADA’s Used Car Dealer Magazine, have implemented fancy magazine viewers based on “page-turner” flash animations.
I first saw this approach to displaying online publications on the Arctic Cat Powersports websites. See one here.
The effect is neat, but I think the time and money sunk into these presentations could have been spent more wisely. Dealer magazines, it is time to take your own advice. Here is why these glitzy flash viewers are hurting the effectiveness of your publication and your business:
Flash animations require a browser plugin to be installed
Any extra steps required to access content increase the chance that individuals will never reach your content.
Search engines cannot crawl your content
Your magazines show case some successful and talented people. You owe it to them to increase their visibility online by promoting their writings in a manner that can be easily found and properly referenced as a magazine source. DealerMark does provide a text version of each of their articles, and I applaud them for that effort. Used Car Dealer Magazine’s flash version is the only place online that its content can be found in the aggregate. Some articles can be found elsewhere in the event that the author republishes them, but becoming the primary source for this content a missed opportunity for the association.
- Search engines help other people find your content, reference it as a source, or call you and inquire about advertising
- Search engines detect how often a website is updated, but they will not find 30 new articles each month if they cannot crawl the content that is updated because it is embedded in a fancy animation
- Search engines detect duplicate sources and attempt to eliminate dupes in search results, and only one site can be the authority
Other websites cannot link to your magazine articles
While I am typically negative (I’ll be nicer after you begin publishing me), you want people to talk about your articles and link to them from their own websites. The world wide web is based upon the hyperlink, the method that documents are linked together to create a virtual web. Search engines calculate website popularity based on the number of links to a website and where those links are coming from. This means that any publicity is good publicity as long as it contains a link back to your website. Also, linkable content increases the likeliness that it will be used as a reference in some other article. There is a substantial opportunity for these magazines to be used as sources in Wikipedia, a very large and very respected website in the eyes of search engines. Not to mention that Wikipedia ranks for everything.
Almost any solution other than the one you have chosen could greatly help your websites to gain traffic and your publication to reach are larger audience. The results would be more advertising dollars and more subscription dollars, and step one is to forget the glitz!