Skip to main content

Which medium-sized sports agencies come recommended by UK clients?

With the 2022 World Cup under way, we take a look at which Recommended agencies offer specialist sports marketing services. Which medium-sized sports agencies come recommended by clients? / Unsplash The Drum Recommends is a free service designed by The Drum to help marketers find relevant, trusted agencies. Recommendations are based on reviews by the people best placed to judge their expertise – their clients. Every year, The Drum Recommends receives thousands of ratings from advertisers. Marketers complete a survey that scores their agency’s performance and the quality and range of their services, as well as price. In order to become recommended for a service, agencies must receive a minimum of three client ratings. Since the 2022 World Cup kicked off this week in Qatar, it’s a good moment to take a look at the Recommended agencies that have expertise in sports marketing. Below you’ll find each agency, plus its staff headcount and office locations. Would you recomme...

(Not so) scary Google updates: is it time to purge the dead content on your website?

Is low-performing content draining the life from your website? Nathan Dale of Impression explains how to identify it and bring it back to life, in light of Google’s most recent algorithm updates.

In August and September 2022, Google rolled out two major updates to its core search algorithms. First, there was the Helpful Content Update, which was completed on September 9, followed by the routine September Core Update.

It can be a spine-chilling moment when Google introduces an update outside of the routine, causing ghoulish screams amongst digital marketers (OK, maybe not quite that bad) who are concerned about what might happen to the performance of their websites.

But really, these updates aren’t so scary at all. Google’s update is intended to reward the good content you’ve been producing.

Trick, or treat?

There were two important lines from the Helpful Content Update documentation: ‘The update generates a site-wide signal. For this reason, removing unhelpful content could help the rankings of your other content.’

It has long been the view of SEO professionals that the overall quality of a website was considered by Google when it ranks individual pieces of content. You could write a great article with detailed information, examples, a how-to guide and a video thrown in for good measure. However, if the rest of your site’s content is low-res, it’s likely your article won’t perform well in search engine result pages (SERPs).

Is there zombie content lurking on your site?

Web pages with no SERP impressions, clicks or traffic are often referred to as ‘dead content’ since they seemingly have no life in them, although a more accurate term might be ‘zombie content,’ because the page is technically still alive, and search engines could therefore bump into it during a (presumably late-night) crawl.

If Google finds this content and classifies it as ‘unhelpful,’ it will take this into account when ranking your other high-quality, helpful content too. The more unhelpful content you have, the more likely Google will think that your website is providing lower overall value to its search results and users.

Taking steps to identify and remove poor-quality, unhelpful content is no longer an ‘as and when’ task to be done during a period of downtime. The Helpful Content Update means this task should now be high on your list of priorities.

There are very few (if any) websites that have 100% perfect content on every single one of their pages. While Google understands that this is an impossible standard, it would prefer to invest less time and money crawling and evaluating content only to realize that it’s as much use as a rotten pumpkin on November 1.

This is likely why it’s explicitly asking content managers to remove low-quality, unhelpful content, and rewarding sites that action this with potential overall ranking improvements.

Lack of continuity in the ownership of web content is usually the hidden monster that results in unhelpful content. As web content is inherited by new starters, passed around departments or simply left unattended, chances are you’ll find some skeletons in the closet.

How to identify unhelpful content

Identifying low-performing content is straightforward. One approach is to use Screaming Frog SEO Spider, which can either crawl your entire website, a specific directory or a list of URLs.

In Screaming Frog’s configuration menu, select API access and add your Google Analytics account. Set the segment to Organic Traffic and the date range to the last 12 months, then your traffic data will be added to the crawl. We advise looking at this over a 12-month time period to give a truer picture (eg seasonal content might not get any clicks in June, but lots in December).

Once the crawl is finished, you’ll have a list of content with the session data shown in the Analytics tab. Simply sort by lowest to highest and you’ll find the zombie content that’s haunting your website.

Exorcise dead content (bring it back to life)

Once you’ve identified the content with the lowest session data, you essentially have three choices. One: if it has the potential to be made helpful, you can update it with new and improved content. Two: consolidate any content that is useful into another page on the same topic, then remove and redirect the page. Three: remove the page entirely.

Side note: if you are considering totally removing a piece of content, you should check the ‘all users’ and ‘page views’ in Google Analytics as it is possible the page is being found in other ways.

For more information on Google algorithm updates, check out Impression’s search industry update blog series.



(Not so) scary Google updates: is it time to purge the dead content on your website?
Entertainment Flash Report

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Actor Dan Levy learns how to craft the perfect margarita in new Cointreau campaign

Want to know the secret behind creating mouthwatering margaritas? Cointreau has tapped Schitt’s Creek star Dan Levy, as well as chefs Nyesha Arrington and Sohla El-Waylly, to explain how. Since Dallas socialite Margarita Sames first created the margarita in 1948, it has become the most popular cocktail in the US, according to Cointreau. The 173-year-old brand has enlisted award-winning actor, writer and director Dan Levy to front its campaign that shows consumers how to make the drink using its orange-flavored liqueur, with the help of celebrity chefs Nyesha Arrington and Sohla El-Waylly. “Cointreau is the key ingredient in my favorite cocktails – an ice-cold margarita and a cosmo on the rocks in a tumbler – so when Cointreau approached me, it was kind of fated,” Levy said in a statement. “Having spent the spring shooting The Big Brunch alongside some of my culinary heroes, I needed to pull up my socks when it came to hospitality – so I chose to start this summer perfecting some co...

Hide The Pain Harold realizes cause of strained face in antacid ad

Hide the Pain Harold (aka András Arató) is using his famous face to front a new ad for Brazilian antacid brand Eno. In ‘Cara de Azia’ (‘Heartburn Face’), viewers see Arató emphasize that he always thought he had a normal face, but when it became a famous meme he desperately tried to change it to no avail. One day, on the set of a modeling shoot as his alias ‘Harold,’ Arató notices one of the technicians is making a face similar to his own due to heartburn. In a lightbulb moment, he realizes that perhaps acid reflux has been the source of his strained face all these years. The campaign was created by Publicis Leon. Creative directors Laura Azevedo and Ricardo Schreier said: “To have one of the biggest memes in the world in our campaign combines work and fun. The ’Cara de Azia’ campaign is not only a relief for Harold, but also for consumers. Talking about heartburn doesn’t have to be boring.” It’s not the first time Hide The Pain Harold has popped up in an ad. Last month, The Drum...

See the 2022 finalists for The Drum Awards for Digital Advertising APAC

InMobi, BBC StoryWork, Yahoo and OMD are among the nominees as we get ready to celebrate the best of the best in Asia Pacific.​ Check out the nominees of The Drum Awards for Digital Advertising APAC 2022 When creativity and technology come together effectively, digital advertising delivers – which is why The Drum Awards for Digital Advertising APAC highlights the very best digital media and technology coming out of the region. Our judging panel (which this year included experts from Nestlé, Microsoft, Deutsche Bank and Vogue India) was looking for fresh, impactful, polished and effective work. Winners will be announced at a ceremony at The Drum Labs in London ( find out how to attend in person or watch remotely ) and you can check out the full shortlist of nominations below: Adtech for Good Channel Factory InMobi and Wavemaker for Tata Consumer Products Moody’s ESG Solutions OMD New Zealand for 2degrees The Trade Desk for Volvo New Zealand Automot...