After Google Penguin, Travel Sites Need to Get Serious About Inbound Marketing

To grow and sustain success in the competitive online travel space, travel sites need to be better at attracting visitors from a variety of sources and converting the traffic they have. Looking at online marketing as just PPC and SEO isn’t enough.

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Date published
May 29, 2012 Categories

Google’s Penguin algorithm update has impacted several travel affiliate websites. What did all those travel sites have in common? A search engine optimization (SEO) strategy that depended heavily on a non-diverse link profile with a majority of their links coming from low quality sites with over-optimized anchor text.

As a result, many businesses were decimated by Penguin, just like Panda before it. These sites won’t recover the organic traffic and rankings they once had unless they do some cleaning up and reinvent their online marketing strategy.

Now the focus for travel sites should be on how to create and implement a comprehensive inbound marketing strategy (although many of these principles apply to other segments) to not only recover from an algorithm hit, but to avoid one altogether.

In travel, the search engine results pages (SERPs) – especially on Google, less so on Bing – for high volume keywords are unsurprisingly dominated by big brands such as Expedia, Kayak, Priceline, etc. Smaller travel sites found their way into the SERPs by using exact match domains, link building practices that are now outdated, or by pursuing extremely narrow niches.

Other travel sites sidestepped the SERPs entirely by going with a 100 percent pay-per-click (PPC) model and built successful businesses using this approach. Organic visits and rankings weren’t a priority as they felt their resources were better spent increasing the reach of their paid campaigns.

However, as more players with deep pockets and vast resources enter the online travel space, the increased competition is greatly impacting the PPC business model. Over a three year period, based on data from some of our PPC partners, they have seen an average cost-per-click and average ad positions increasing over 40 percent. As a result, margins are razor thin and the trend shows no signs of changing.

Most travel affiliates don’t have a contingency plan for the day when their PPC model is no longer profitable. Not to mention having a plan for growing the business beyond what PPC can do by itself. Sure, some sites implement some basic SEO best practices, but few think about a more complete approach to marketing their site.

In order to grow and sustain success in the competitive online travel space, travel sites need to be better at attracting visitors from a variety of sources and get better at converting the traffic they have.

Looking at online marketing as just PPC and SEO isn’t enough anymore. In a post-Panda and Penguin landscape, sites need to be better than that.

Successful travel sites will look at online marketing as a holistic effort that includes as many pieces of inbound marketing as possible – SEO, content, social media, conversion, user experience, on-site merchandising, just to name a few.

Image credit: Chris Fernandez

While many travel affiliates are nervous about the future, algorithm updates like Penguin should be seen as an opportunity to review your online marketing strategy. Those that see where online marketing is going will outpace their competitors.

Is your site taking an inbound marketing approach?

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