Like everyone associated with the Web and internet marketing, I’ve kept a close eye on what Google is doing. Although I haven’t had to adjust my online marketing strategy too much with regard to Google’s changes, I’m beginning to see that with all these changes, relying on Google to bring me business is becoming a risky endeavor at best.

Photo credit: Sarah8000
Photo credit: Sarah8000

A quick glance at my own Google Analytics showed that for 2013, 88% of traffic from new visits came from search.

That’s when I sat up and said, “Wait a minute, what if Google changes the game and what I’m doing no longer works? Even worse, what if Google goes away?”

That fear isn’t as far-fetched as it sounds. Google’s Matt Cutts stated in his PubCon 2013 keynote that Google’s mission is to organize the world’s information. He added, “The words ‘search engine’ do not appear in our mission statement.”

TINSTAAFL (There’s no such thing as a free lunch)

Relying on Google to send you business is like being a seagull waiting for the nice old lady to come by on her daily walk. She reaches into her plastic shopping bag and pulls out old bread crusts — flinging them into the air. The seagulls cry and dive for the crusts.

The seagulls come to rely on the old lady. She’s like clockwork. Each day she comes with her crusts, and each day the seagulls gobble them down.

One day the lady doesn’t come by. She died.

The seagulls now have to find another food source.

For the seagull, this may be relatively easy. They have an entire ocean. And, maybe another old lady will come by with her bread crusts.

But for owners of small businesses who have come to rely on Google and its free lunch in the form of search traffic, it’s heart attack city.

The party is over.

Real conversation

Prospect: “We’ve been number one on Google for years. Now we’re slipping. And traffic is down. Way down.”

Me: “When was the last time you updated your website?”

Prospect: [silence]

Me: “You still there?”

Prospect: “Yes. I’m trying to remember. Maybe back in 2008 or something like that.”

Matt Cutts: “Companies with older websites have to adapt or die.” [source]

Life before Google

I started thinking back to when Google didn’t exist. My marketing assets consisted of my e-newsletter database (I started off with 75 subscribers — woohoo!) and my Website — to which I spent a great deal of time and effort driving traffic.

  • I was active in three different organizations and attended networking functions regularly in order to meet people. I used to hand out free reports and things.
  • I spoke at these organizations whenever they asked. At the end, I’d give people a free report in exchange for signing up for my newsletter.
  • I developed reports and things and then would pitch my colleagues to either post the report in their e-newsletters or have me write an article for their newsletter. I’d then include a link back to the report and my own e-newsletter.
  • I sent out direct mail letters promoting my free reports, my newsletter, and my services.
  • I sent out a print newsletter.
  • I wrote articles for industry publications.
  • I advertised.
  • I took people out to lunch.

Most of these tactics worked. The stuff that didn’t work, I eliminated. Once Google came on the scene, and then social media, I stopped doing many of the tactics on which I had come to rely.

Google made it too easy. Create some content, optimize it, and watch traffic and inquiries roll in. I could do this in my sleep.

Traditional marketing is the new black

In a podcast I did with Ed Gandia, “Understanding the New SEO Rules and How to Use Them to Your Advantage,” I found myself saying that Google is now rewarding companies who practice good marketing — that is, companies who understand that effective marketing is all about giving customers the information they need to do business with you.

However, I think we need to take this a step further. Instead of relying Google, I think it’s time we all started relying on our own marketing smarts. Google, I’m sad to say, has made us all lazy.

Just the other day, I found myself making a list of how to reach my target audience — without using the Internet. I actually had to think about that — and I have to admit, it hurt my brain. It took awhile, but I came up with 20 different items.

In fact, just as I wrote the last paragraph, an account rep from Staples called. The company is upgrading me to Premier Gold for the Staples Reward program. I ended up having a very nice conservation with the account rep — something that would have never happened on social media or email.

I learned that I could get a 10% discount by using Staples’ Copy & Print Center versus VistaPrint and that I would get $2 every time I brought back a toner cartridge (normally, I just mail them to HP).

His call is a great example of how to do really good marketing. (Hint: Use your existing database; reward existing customers.)

The one constant that I’ve seen since I started my business in 1998 is this: Everything changes.

Maybe it’s a little far-fetched to say that Google will go away or that search will no longer exist as we know it.

But then again, I’m sure Digital Equipment Corporation, Alta Vista, MySpace, and a long list of other companies that no longer exist thought the same thing about their companies / services / products.

What do you think?

Do we marketers rely too much on Google?

Do we have an “entitlement” mentality when it comes to search?

Have you begun thinking about changes you need to make to your marketing strategy in light of all the changes taking place across search and social media?