How to Sell Products Online

Shopping online is becoming less of a bonus and more of an expectation these days. While mega online stores like Amazon and eBay aren’t as popular here in NZ as they are in other countries, they won’t stay that way for long. With many big NZ chains already having online stores and Amazon AU now open to New Zealand, online shopping is becoming massive worldwide. COVID-19 showed us how convenient shopping online and having products delivered straight to our door can be. Now, it’s almost an expected feature. So how can you start to sell products online?

Why sell products online through your website?

Not long ago, it was common to find many businesses that list their products online but have no prices or options to buy on the site. The idea was that people would see a product they like, drive to the store to buy it, and maybe pick up a few other items while they’re already there. It might seem like a solid idea, but now it’s an outdated one. Websites can suggest great pairs of products right there while you’re shopping. And while a lot of people were resistant to shopping online, the COVID Pandemic forced it upon them–and a lot of people found they preferred it. In the US for instance, online shopping rates doubled compared to the 2 years previous, and the trend continues to go strong.

This means that when possible, businesses should be considering adding e-commerce options–options for purchasing products directly from the website–to make sure that customers can find what they’re looking for and can buy what they want easily. Having an e-commerce option lets visitors decide they want something and buy it on the spot. Without it, you could be missing out on people on the final stage of the Buyer’s Journey, the ones ready to buy now. If you have shipping options, you can also reach people across the country who would never come into your physical store. If you don’t sell online, you could be missing out from people from all over who want what you have to offer!

How to sell products online

Once you decide to start online, how do you get started? We’ve got you covered; simply follow these 9 steps to start selling products online!

  1. Decide what items you want to sell online and choose an e-commerce platform.
  2. Decide on and purchase an inventory management system.
  3. Choose and purchase a payment gateway.
  4. Build the website and integrate inventory management and payment gateway systems into your site.
  5. Write out descriptions of all your items, take/upload images and videos, and publish them to the site.
  6. Sort out a shipping option (if having items delivered).
  7. Customise your checkout process to fit your ideal customers.
  8. Preview and test your new online store and ensure that everything is working.
  9. Refine and update your processes based on how customers buy products and use the site.

In this article, we’ll briefly cover each of the 9 steps. We’ve also covered each of these in more detail and we’ll link to the full article with more information at if you want to know more about any one of them.

1. Choose an e-commerce platform

An e-commerce platform is the place your website is built and how it is stored. Each e-commerce platform has its own ways of adding and displaying products along with advantages and limitations. Some platforms are designed specifically for certain industries or business sizes. Others are more general purpose.

The right choice for you will depend on the number and type of products you plan on selling, how comfortable you are with technology, your budget, and who you want to build your website.

Who will build your website?

For most businesses, budget is the most important factor for the website. Your budget determines who builds your website and how much money you have to invest in it. If you have a small budget but a lot of time, you’ll probably want to use a platform like Shopify. With these platforms, you choose a templated site and simply change the elements like the logo and pictures to fit your brand. These are relatively easy to use; however, you’ll be limited in customisation and features. Getting found on Google through SEO will also be more challenging without added plug-ins, most of which are on a paid subscription plan.

If you have a higher budget and want a professional to build your website for you, a custom option like WordPress with WooCommerce will be better. With these sites, your website design will be structured around your brand and how your customers use the site. This means you’ll likely have higher conversion rates and the site will feel more natural to your users. A professionally-built custom site takes longer to make but it will be unique to you.

To find out more about Shopify, WooCommerce, and other e-commerce platforms, take a look at our article What is the best eCommerce platform for my business?

2. What’s the right inventory management system?

While you might be able to try to keep track of your inventory with a notebook and a pen, it’s a lot of trouble that can be automated away with an online inventory management system. Depending on your business size, a simple database manager may do the trick, or you might need a comprehensive digital suite to make sure everything is handled properly.

Using an online inventory management keeps track of how many of each product you have left and allows you to quickly change prices for sales. Many will also automatically track sales numbers and create reports comparing month-to-month performance. A solid offering will also integrate with your in-store stock so you don’t have to try to coordinate stock manually. There on many to choose from, we’ve covered some of the best inventory management systems in NZ in a quick comparison below.

Inventory Management Systems Comparison

NamePrice (Month)Number of Products TrackedTrial PeriodFeatures
Unleashed$259-$899Unlimited14 DaysCloud-based, Multiple Currencies; Optional B2B eCommerce; API Access; Document Designer
Sortly$FREE-$119100-unlimited14 DaysCloud-based, Desktop/Mobile Access; API Access; Cloud Storage; 30-90 Day storage; Auto sync data
Vend$129+Unlimited14 DaysCloud-based, Custom receipts, in-store register, barcode scanner, cash management, auto reordering
Cin7$375-$1245UnlimitedGuided DemoCloud, based 24/7 support, automation, CRM, POS integrations, Warehouse Management, Payment Portal
AccredoNot SpecifiedNot SpecifiedDemo VersionInvoicing, reporting, automation, sales tracking
Ostendo$1500 (Year);$300 renewalUnlimited30 DaysStock takes, allows negative stock, unlimited supplier catalogues, multi-currency and tax rates
Infusion$35-$85Unlimited30 DaysKitset pricing, print barcodes, product catalogues, integrated cashbook
SAM | OrionNot SpecifiedNot SpecifiedGuided DemoMultiple currencies, full sales and costing analysis, vehicle industry special features

Inventory Management Systems in more detail

Want to know more about inventory management systems? We cover some more of the basics about these systems and go into more detail about each of them in the above table in our article Best Inventory Management for Selling Products Online.

3. Choosing the right payment gateway

If you decide to sell products on your site, protecting sensitive customer information is one of the most important things that you can do. While website maintenance can protect some of your customer details, financial information should never be in a position to be compromised, and using a decent payment gateway makes sure hackers and data thieves shall not pass through.

There are many different payment gateways to choose from, each with different upfront and per-transaction costs. But there’s more to consider than simply cost. Some offer better service or incentives, while others aim to provide the service for the lowest cost, but have minimal customer support or extras. To help with your decision, take a look at a quick comparison of some of the best payment gateways in NZ.

Payment Gateways Comparison

NameSetup FeeMonthly FeeTransaction FeeTransfer Speed Extras
PayPal$0$03.4% + $0.45 per transactionUsually within minutes (To your own PayPal Account, not bank)Online invoices and Mobile Payments included; lower rates with more sales, invoices and estimates, subscription payments
Windcave$150$30$0.30 + 2.8% per transactionOvernightAutomated Phone Payments; Batch Processing, in-store terminal, Account2Account
Stripe$0$02.9% + $0.30 per transaction4 Business DaysReal-time reporting; Pay as you go; Multiple Payment Methods accepted; Anti-Fraud tools
Paystation$99-$149$19-$14975-500 free transactions, then $0.32-$0.45 depending on planVaries (Based on Bank)15 supported currencies, batch processing, cashflow reporting, Customer Support, API Integration, onboarding,
Cybercom Pay$99+GST$0 (If using CyberCom Pay Online)2.85%, 1.29% for NZ CharitiesSame Day before 6PMSubscriptions, Mini CRM, Mobile App, 12 currencies with no exchange fees
Paymark Click$125$25$0.20+OvernightOnline EFTPOS, business insights, API Integration, 24/7 local support
Worldline$45$252.8% + $0.30 per transaction3 Business DaysCustomisable checkout, API Integration, 24/7 local support, Subscription payments, batch processing
Flo2Cash$200$30From 3.4% per transaction2-4 Business DaysCustomisable checkout, API Integration, Batch Processing, Subscription Payments, Direct Bank Transfer, Phone and PDF payment options

More about payment gateways

Payment gateways can be confusing at first glance. Why exactly do you need one and what are the benefits? We cover how payment gateways work and more information about the ones we listed above in the article Best Payment Gateways for Selling Online.

4. Building the website

Once you decide to sell products online and have chosen an e-commerce platform, you need to build the website. As we mentioned above, you need to decide if you want to build the site on your own or have someone do it for you. Depending on your chosen e-commerce platform, building it on your own may not be the best choice. Platforms like Squarespace and Shopify focus on simplicity and ease of use. In contrast, WordPress offers greater versatility, but you’ll trade some user-friendliness to get it.. While this makes it more challenging for a standard user, a professional web developer has many more options with this route.

When possible, we recommend having an expert build your site. They simply have the experience and skills to ensure the site functions properly. Your site will also be up and running faster. Some website building companies also include ongoing updates like adding products or optimising for SEO. Of course the more services you choose to include, the more the site will cost. We go over basic website costs and what causes them to increase in more detail in our article How much does a website cost?

Having a professional build the site isn’t for everyone. For some, the initial investment is simply too high. Others like full control of all content on the site. If you aren’t sure which option is best for you, our article When should I hire a professional to build my website may help.

5. Product description, images, and videos

This part of the process is where many people trip up. Depending on the number of items you plan to sell, it can frankly be overwhelming to create the content for it. If you are a reseller with thousands of products for instance, how can you possibly take the time to write out a description and upload high-quality, relevant product images for each of them? Doing this for all products might seem like an endless task. Even some of the major retailers in New Zealand have trouble doing this for every product!

How to handle large inventories to sell products online

There are a few ways to overcome a large inventory to sell products online. One is by using a growth-driven design philosophy. With a traditional website building process, you’d build every page and add every product before making the site live. Then every couple of years or so, you’d do a major site upgrade such as changing the entire design.

With a growth-driven philosophy, you start out by publishing a functional website and continually improve it over time. You might start out with a limited stock of your most popular products and add more over time. This will allow people to buy online sooner, then you add more products when you can. With this method, each product can have an excellent, thorough description and high-quality images. You can even add a video demonstration when applicable too, as product demo videos are the most effective way to convince people to purchase. You can find out more about growth-driven design in our article How Growth-Driven Website Design Works.

Another option is that some inventory management systems allow you to import this information directly from suppliers. This can greatly simplify the process, especially when you have a massive inventory. While this ensures that your product information is accurate and added quickly, it will also make it the same as any of your competitors that do the same thing.

Professional content creators

Finally, you can have professional content creators help do this step for you. Professional copywriters can help give you compelling, unique descriptions and combined with product photography can help you have a consistent look, tone, and feel for your products. For some of your best products, a product demonstration video can be extremely powerful. You can also have some of your products updated by content creators while others are imported automatically.

No matter which method you decide to do, having a solid product inventory to accompany your website launch will help your customers make informed decisions and increase your sales percentages too!

6. How to handle shipping

Shipping can be extremely complicated. As a store owner, you have to do a lot of planning to make sure everything goes smoothly. New Zealand makes this even more challenging with different rates depending on the island and rural vs urban delivery. Because of this, some e-commerce sites in urban centres choose to avoid shipping altogether. However, this also greatly limits your reach to people nearby. Plus, most people expect home delivery when buying online these days.

If you do decide to have products ship, there are several things to sort out. Among these are choosing a courier company (or companies), product packaging and labelling, emails and tracking information that goes to customers, and of course the price.

Finding the sweet spot for shipping might take some time. You may not get it right when you launch the site and might need to adjust it to cover your costs. Or if it’s too high, you may need to lower it to entice customers to choose you. Many studies show that free shipping is best incentive a customer can get. But a business owner, that may not be practical or even possible if you want to make a profit.

Because shipping is so complicated, we go into it in much more detail in our article Ecommerce shipping solutions for selling online.

7. Customising the checkout process

Nobody likes long, convoluted checkout processes. Unfortunately, this is the default option for some website templates. If you have a customisable website, however, you can change this.

Ideally, you want your site to be as easy as possible to use. What makes the site easy depends on the type of customers you have and how they use your site. For instance, having something like Apple Pay on an individual product so a customer can buy a single product and complete an order on the product page might make sense. Or having an option to make an account where customers can reorder the same products with a few clicks might increase sales.

Including special business pricing or the option to pay by invoice might be ideal for B2B businesses instead. There are limitless features you could add, but choosing which ones you should add depends on who is using your site and how they are using it.

These kinds of steps can be addressed when making your business plan or when developing buyer personas. A process like a digital marketing roadmap can help you identify your actual customers and how to best reach them.

8. Testing and reviewing your site

Before you publish your site and make it live to the world, you need to make sure all the processes work as expected. For site builders, most of the functionality will be built-in. Just make sure that purchase order emails etc go to the right place and you’ll probably be good to go.

If you’ve manually connected your own inventory management and/or payment gateway systems, you’ll also want to run through various scenarios and test purchases. These systems have fake credit card details you can use to test purchases without them actually going through, so do as many as you want! Ensure that everything works as expected and all of the emails, tracking information, and everything else goes to the right person.

Once everything is all good, make your site live!

9. Updating and refining the site

The easier and more intuitive your website is to use, the more likely a potential customer is to make a purchase. A good website is like staff--and can even be your best salesperson! And like staff, a performance review can help show your website’s strengths and areas where it can improve.

Your website is an investment. While it might seem like a relief to publish it and not worry about it anymore, there’s still a lot you can do. With a data-driven approach, you review the data of your website and make changes based on what the numbers show. And with websites, there is a ton of data.

Google Analytics

With Google Analytics, you can how many people visited any page or product on your site. If you’re running Google Ads and have it connected properly you can see your cost vs revenue at a glance for all of your campaigns. Then if one isn’t performing as expected, you can adjust it until it does.

Website Audit tools

A website audit tool can help make sure your site doesn’t have errors like broken links or products with no prices. Facebook Ads has Insights to show you which ads are bringing in visitors. You can even use a tool like Hotjar that shows you an image snapshot of each page and where on the page people keep their mouse the most and what links are most clicked.

We go over these and other data-driven approaches in more detail in our article Is my website performance working for me?

Ready to get started to sell online?

It’s a bit of work up front, but having the option to sell products online can open you up to a whole new segment of the market! So once you’ve looked through everything you need to do to sell online, then what?

First, make sure you have a business plan, especially if you’re a new business that doesn’t have a customer base. We cover some other startup items in our article Selling online – Where to Start with eCommerce? From there, if you want to build the site on your own, follow the instructions from your chosen e-commerce platform. Most of them have guided tutorials to help you get started and walk you through the essentials. If you want to have a professional build a site, many marketing agencies combine website development and ongoing marketing in one place. Our article How to choose the right marketing agency for your business can help you see what to look for when searching for your team.

Start with a plan

If you’re unsure about doing any of these steps on your own or would rather have an experienced team handle getting your store ready to sell products online for you, we can help. We recommend starting out with our guided digital marketing roadmap where we cover your goals and help you make a plan on how to achieve them. We’ve helped several stores get online, from small local businesses with a few products to working with stores with massive inventories that ship throughout the country. And we can help you too! Many of our e-commerce stores have seen their sales increase over 100% in a year.

Selling online takes planning, time, effort, and funds to get started. But it helps you bring in new customers, increase sales, and provide more value to your website visitors.

Colour me Impressed! Why Colour in Design Matters

Everybody has a favourite colour, something that stands out and brings positive feelings. One theory is that individual humans perceive colour differently; so really, everyone’s favourite colour looks the same, but they call it something different (So everyone’s favourite colour is teal of course). But if we agree that most people see colour roughly the same way, we can agree that certain colours mesh while others clash. So how is colour used in design?

There’s a lot more to colour than simply matching well. Have you noticed that brands aiming to be high-end use colours like black and dark purple, while brands that want to show nature and health use greens and browns in their branding and logo? When choosing what colours to use for your brand, there’s a reason our designers don’t simply ask what your favourite colour is and translate it into hexadecimal colour code.  Like font choice, colour also has meaning. And while the subconscious feelings behind colour might not be exactly the same for everyone, in general, colours give off specific feelings and meanings that are all considered when designing your brand.

 

Colour Coding

Colour science is a field of science that studies colours, how to apply colours through technology, and the effect of colour on thoughts and behaviour, and is even a Master’s Degree in the EU.  While the correlation between colour and its effect on moods, imagery, and behaviours isn’t concrete or the same for everyone, in general, certain colours suggest certain features for many people, and colour choice is much more involved than simply what looks cool.  So what do these colours typically represent and when is a good time to use them?

Redcolour swatches11

Red is a colour of action. It represents passion and excitement, and creates a sense of urgency. The colour red has the potential to trigger more raw, powerful emotions–but can do so for both negative and positive ones, so should be used with caution.

 

Orangecolour swatches6

A colour that ranks high for making products seem less expensive is orange. A bit more on the playful side, orange typically is suited for more fun or adventurous brands. It’s typically not ideal for formal, corporate ones. If used poorly, it can instead make a brand appear childish and immature.

 

Browncolour swatches12

Brown is earthy, the colour of tree bark in the forest and the ground beneath. It’s a solid choice for companies that want to look natural or organic. This feel is emphasised when combined with other earthy colours such as green. It’s often seen as an honest, trustworthy colour, but used badly can look dirty or unrefined.

 

Yellowcolour swatches

The colour of happiness and sunshine, yellow is youthful and vibrant. While it tends to have a lot of positive effects such as optimism and increasing sales, it’s difficult to use well due to contrast issues and being hard to read. Using a wrong shade in the wrong contest can also look unclean or smudgy.

 

Greencolour swatches4

Choose green when going for something healthy and fresh. As the colour of grass and leaves, green has gained traction as being the colour of environmental friendliness. When used properly with food, it can show vitality and healthiness… And when done wrong, make people think of unpleasantness such as mould.

 

Bluecolour swatches3

Blue is on the opposite end of the colour wheel to red, and has a calming, cool, feel. It’s often used as the colour of logic, reason, and wisdom. While it’s usually a safe choice, the conveyance of reason can make it feel cold, unfriendly, and emotionless.

 

Purplecolour swatches2

For much of history, purple has been the colour of royalty, and thus still has an air of luxury to it. And, since royalty is “more elite” than non-royal, purple brings about feeling of sophistication and superiority. But, that can also become a negative if used improperly and can be seen as over-extravagant or elitist.

 

Pinkcolour swatches7

Pink is a great choice to show caring and gentleness. It exhibits youthfulness and represents hope and is a bold choice to help a brand stand out.  But when used poorly, it’s more likely to look childish or needlessly rebellious.

 

Blackcolour swatches10

Used somewhere in a good portion fo designs, black shows power and luxury. Many high-end brands use black and white palettes to show sophistication and simplicity, that the product or service is good, plain and simple.  Like blue, black can also show coldness or even heaviness and seem domineering when used poorly.

 

Whitecolour swatches13

Often representing cleanliness and purity, white is used often by modern brands. Usually, white is the best colour for the background of a website so that attention isn’t drawn away from other elements. This means using white for branding requires using an offsetting background colour like white, and using it wrong can look boring, empty, and plain.

 

So remember that colour is complicated, and the meanings behind colour is just one of the many things our designers think about when designing your brand, website, and logo!

 

What’s in a company name?

logo-big-brandsThink of some of the biggest names in the corporate world today. Disney. Apple. Nike. Amazon. Google. They aren’t confused with competitors or companies with similar names. The names are iconic and recognised by practically anyone with an internet connection.

But it wasn’t always that way.

First, the companies started as an idea, and gradually gained fame and fortune over the years. While the connection to what they do is obvious today, some of them aren’t really related to their product or service at all. So then, does the company name really matter at all?

 

 

Every company has a story

Take a closer look at the Big 5 names above and think about what they do for a business. What’s the reason behind the name? Can you tell right away, or do you have to look it up?

  • Disney is obvious because it’s simply named after founder Walt Disney. Luckily for him, he had an uncommon surname.
  • Apple doesn’t seem to have much to do with computers. While one could extrapolate that founder Steve Jobs chose the name because apples are iconic, nutritious, and healthy and he wanted his company to be the same, the actual inspiration of the name is much simpler. After visiting an apple orchard, Jobs thought that the name Apple sounded “fun, spirited, and not intimidating” and couldn’t come up with a better name that was more technical and represented computers, so went with Apple Computers.
  • Nike is two-syllables, and actually stands for something very specific. In Greek mythology, Nike is the goddess of victory. And for competitive athletes, who wouldn’t want to wear something to help them win?
  • Amazon wasn’t the company’s original name. Originally “Cadabra” (like abra-cadabra), after being misheard as “cadaver”, founder Jeff Bezos decided to come up with something less dead-sounding. The story goes that Bezos was looking for a name that started with A because website listings were in alphabetical order and came across the word Amazon, the world’s largest river. As his goal was to build the world’s largest bookstore, he adopted the name, and now, Amazon sells much, much more than just books.
  • Google was very nearly called BackRub at one point, due to the emphasis on backlinks. Then a friend suggested the word “googolplex” which is 10100 or the number 1 followed by 100 zeros. Since they wanted their search engine to be used to find every webpage, the name made sense. But only hearing the word, they misspelled it as “google” and the name stuck, and now has its own verb. You could google something on Bing. But not the other way around.

What do these names have in common?

All of those companies had very different ways at arriving at their name. Yet they all also share something in common: those names have a narrative attached to them, some kind of story or meaning. This is something you can talk about in your About page, leave it as a mystery to talk about in an in-person meeting, or let customers make a guess on their own only for the truth to come out later in your biography when you’re super famous.

 

So I can name my company whatever?

You can name your company whatever you want, but it might not be the best idea. If you want to do something abstract, go for it! But when you think about the name, remember that if you decide to change it later it will mean new branding, website redirects, awareness campaigns, and a whole lot of other headaches, which only become more complicated as your company grows. If that’s the case How do you Pick a Perfect Name and Logo for Your Company?

One thing to definitely consider is not naming your company after something you don’t do? Probably not the best idea. For instance, if you sell mobile phone accessories and you call your store Chihuahua Dentistry, people might think you do oral care for small dogs instead of selling phone cases. Remember that Steve Jobs originally called his company Apple Computers, not Apple Juicers, and didn’t drop “Computers” until decades later when he had a strong following.

Some good rules of thumb when choosing your company name include:

  1. Know your target audience. Perhaps the most important part of running a business, and relevant to your name as well. Will your audience appreciate something abstract, complicated, clever, or crass? Or are you looking for people that want something more straightforward, corporate, or formal?
  2. Keep it relevant. Whether it’s something personal to you, a clever fusion of words, or even a weird nickname you were called in primary school, your name should mean something. You’ll be hearing it nonstop, so make sure it’s something that sounds pleasant to you!
  3. Beware of soundalike words and similar companies. Don’t fall prey to coming up with a brilliant name only have it be close to something unpleasant. A brown no-sugar drink called Shyet Cola (Rhymes with diet!) might be a bit off-putting. Likewise, making energy drinks called Red Pull that “Gives you Springs” could get you in trouble.
  4. Be easy to search for. Having a strong digital presence is strongly recommended these days. But just having a website isn’t enough. It’s important that people can find you too! Try to have a name that’s easy to say and spell so people can find you. You should also try to include close variants as search targets that can direct people towards your site.
  5. Think about possible logos/visuals. Some names have clearer visuals than others. Nike simply has a checkmark. Victory? Check. Disney, on the other hand, invented a new font and includes their iconic castle behind it. Some words require more brainstorming, which tends to lead to higher logo design costs too.

Your name is part of your story and an important part of your identity. It’ll be with you from Startup to Success… Don’t take it too lightly!

9 Ways to Become a Professional Networking Professional

Networking. It’s something the experts just won’t shut up about. How do you get that dream job? Networking. With proper networking, you can get the job before it’s advertised! What comes up when you type in “best way to get new customers” into Google? Networking. Even articles about “creative ways” to get customers will mention showing off your existing customers or using your existing network. How do you have an existing network? Networking!

Continue reading “9 Ways to Become a Professional Networking Professional”

When it comes to content, how can quality be quantified?

If you’ve ever read any marketing or SEO tips from experts, you’ll find that they nearly all of them say the same thing about written content: quality is the most important aspect. High-quality content ranks better than low-quality (obviously). And if you have to choose between quality and quantity, quality Trumps every time.

Of course, for the longest time, no one bothered to define what “high-quality” actually meant. Gibberish text full of random words strung together without punctuation was low quality. Everyone agrees on that. But what about the other side? What makes something high-quality?

What does “high-quality” mean to Google?

Quality writing is subjective. What one person deems high-quality, someone else might think is a flaming pile of sheep dung squished into a screen. Think of it like movies; some people like to watch all the big blockbusters, while others think the only good movies are foreign films that air only in small French villages for a single night.

But quality to Google is something specific.

Google says your website should provide value to visitors, whether that be through videos, resources, blog posts, or simply a way to reserve a table or order from your store. Quality written content can be difficult to gauge, but one way to help with this is through checking a few basic things on every page:

  • Have no broken links, hidden links, or hidden text (same colour as the background, for instance)
  • Don’t create multiple pages on a site with essentially the same content e.g. Home Renovations Southland and Home Renovations Invercargill where only the region name is changed.
  • Avoid having pages with little or no original content, such as pages copied verbatim from another website. You also don’t want pages with only a sentence or two.
  • Include your most important keyword in both the title and meta description.
  • Don’t use content made automatically through content robots
  • Do a spelling check for typos and read over content for grammar errors.
  • Write at an appropriate reading level for the target audience

 

Quality is about good EATing

Always being hungry for more, Google developed over 100 pages of quality guidelines in May 2019 when they had individuals start checking top search results and give them a quality rating, something they likely will attempt to automate in the next few years. Their new rating system is measured through Expertise, Authoritativeness, and Trustworthiness (EAT) guidelines. Since content is supposed to be useful and make visitors want to devour more, it should be something they can EAT and digest. So, the owner of a plumbing company with accolades, multiple certifications, and 40 years of work experience would be weighted higher than someone who once unstuck a wad of paper towels from their clogged toilet.

How can you check your EAT score?

Currently, this means that the only way to accurately judge quality by Google’s standards is to have your site pages reviewed manually through the Search Quality Rating Program… Which is unlikely to happen. However, by knowing what they’re looking for, you can be ahead of the curve once they figure out how to implement these guidelines into their search algorithm. A few best practices you can do now include:

  • Make sure that your pages have a clear purpose. A page that describes your goods and services in detail is helpful. One on your company site that has pictures of goats and talks about the 2011 Cricket World Cup Final may not be so clear.
  • Research and write content that comes from experience or is important in your field. Information should be true and accurate.
  • If the page is meant to be informative, it should provide something different than what’s already available elsewhere. It’s okay to take some elements from other pages and combine them together. But don’t take a page and copy it in slightly different wording. Although, summaries of long or complicated content can be very helpful too.
  • Have an updated About page that explains your experience and credentials? With the new EAT guidelines, information on who people are and why they have authority on a topic will likely become more important.
  • Understanding how to write a blog article for your website is important. Use keywords appropriately. Make sure that your title and description will bring users to a page that’s relevant to their search. If they search for “Best painters Invercargill” and click on a company page that seems to be about painting, but the content is all about making pavlova, then it’s deceptive and can cause a sharp drop in rankings if the discrepancy is found.

Now’s a good time to dust off those English skills

With Google’s Search Quality Rating program in the works, content quality is going to become more important than ever before. While the guidelines of high-quality content might seem over-complicated and difficult, they boil down to taking the time to write useful information that is honest, relevant, accurate, and free of spelling and grammar errors.