iOS 9 is not going to kill the ad industry, but it will change the way you optimize to be found. This and other sensational thoughts and headlines have been bombarding my inbox for the last week or so. I’ve been around long enough now to have a knack for filtering out what is noise and what I need to take note of and this was certainly something my nose said I needed to take a look at. So here’s what you need to know and do now.
Back in August Apple announced a new feature to its developer ecosystem:
“The new Safari release brings Content Blocking Safari Extensions to iOS. Content Blocking gives your extensions a fast and efficient way to block cookies, images, resources, pop-ups, and other content.”
Why? It wants users to have a much faster and better user experience. If the user experience is better with Apple and Safari, users will use Apple and Safari.
Once upon a time there were search engines like AltaVista and Hotbot. Then a small startup called Google came along with a better user experience and better results. The rest is history. So there’s a pretty big precedent for what offering users a better faster search experience can do for a business.
Do Users Really Want To Block Ads?
Yep. Some do, but that number hasn’t been increasing.
Ad blocking is a thing, but it hasn’t been causing sleepless nights for the ad tech industry or Google.
Ads Will Be Selectively Blocked By A Few
The market leader in ad blocking is the aptly named Adblock Plus. They allow you to block ads via browser plugins and via their own browser if you’re using a mobile device.
So what’s the demand for the leading ad blocking browser?
The search volume for “adblock browser” is small at 720 searches a month. The number of downloads of the browser from Google Play is less than 50,000.
Again, I’m not seeing a stampede of consumer demand for this tech.
What’s more interesting is what they block, or more specifically, what their user base has moved them toward blocking. It’s all the ads you’d expect. The annoying popups and banner ads. It’s not AdWords when you search using Google.
So my conclusion here is some people will choose to block ads, but the status quo at this point will remain relatively stable.
However, then I started to look further.
The BIGGER News: The Birth Of App Search Optimization
There’s no doubt that mobile searches are on the rise. In fact, there are now more searches on a mobile than on desktop.
What’s often overlooked though is most of the time we spend on our mobile devices is inside apps. In fact, Forrester think this is as high as 85 percent.
Then I found another part to the recent part to the Apple release that is not getting much airplay.
Apple says:
“Search in iOS 9 gives users great new ways to access information inside of your app, even when it isn’t installed. When you make your content searchable, users can access activities and content deep within your app through Spotlight and Safari search results, Handoff, and Siri suggestions. Using APIs related to search, you decide what content gets indexed, what information to show in search results, and where the user is redirected after tapping a result from your app or website.”
They are also providing ways of creating a more seamless user experience by also indexing and connecting web content. According to Apple:
“If some or all of your app’s content is also available on your website, you can use web markup to give users access to your content in search results. Using web markup lets the Applebot web crawler index your content in Apple’s server-side index, which makes it available to all iOS users in Spotlight and Safari search results.”
This means that searching via Safari and Siri is going to change and the results they serve might be dictated by Apple and how you optimize your apps and web content for Apple, not for Google.
This means that not only is the search experience going to change, how we think about the optimizing to be found and the subsequent user experience is also going to change.
This might see the convergence of SEO and app store optimization. Something that’s been slowly happening under the surface for a while now. And the birth of app search optimization.
The User Is King For Apple & Google
At the same time as the iOS 9 developments a client came to my team asking for insight into recent ranking drops that were impacting the business. These ranking drops had been gradual since mid July.
When looking at potential causes experience pointed to the things that Google’s Panda 4.2 update was continuing to impact. Content quality. And more specifically in this example perhaps not satisfying this Google quality requirement:
“Some Low quality pages are unsatisfying because they have a small amount of main content for the purpose of the page. For example, imagine an encyclopedia article with just a few paragraphs on a very broad topic such as World War II. Important: An unsatisfying amount of main content is a sufficient reason to give a page a Low quality rating.”
It’s widely believed by the SEO community that factors like click-through rates from SERPs and engagement are now part of Google’s algorithm, a black box calculation that has always been focused on giving searchers the best content on the web for a particular query. These are the latest in a series of what are great ranking factors from the perspective of the searcher and the industry.
The common thread for all of these and future developments: the user – regardless of device, browser, or application – will increasingly be served with what companies like Google and Apple hope is the best user experience. They hope to continue to earn your loyalty and eyeballs by doing this. As it’s those eyeballs that they are world class at turning into hard cash.
What Should You Do Now?
If you’re in charge of marketing for any company that relies on digital, you should focus on the following:
- Know the mediums and devices people are using, or want to use, to engage with your company, products, and services. This means understanding responsive and adaptive website design and app creation, and how to thread them together to make a seamless user experience.
- Make SEO, app store optimization, and app search optimization a big priority.
- Set the bar even higher on content. Know what users want to find (this means world-class keyword research) and aspire to provide them with the best content on the web that satisfies it. With the best being defined by characteristics like a high level of expertise, authority, and trustworthiness.
- Measure the success of your content in engagement, not just rankings, visits, and conversion paths.
- Leverage your superior content to use all the media channels available to get that demand to your content and nurture them through their purchase journey, as they move between channels, devices, and mediums through-time. This will include AdWords, display, and performance media. All of these media are still critical to ensuring you’re there in the moment.
- Make sure you’ve got the best product or service in your market. Why? Because CTR, engagement, and reputation will increasingly dictate what gets found.
Want to learn more about mobile search? Download our free ebook Mobile SEO Now.
Do you have any other concerns following the iOS 9 announcements?