Replay: Live with Search Engine Land season wrap-up—COVID and marketing disruption

Search Engine Land editors take a look back at the disruptions over the past few months, how marketers have adapted to the changes, and what the future may hold.

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Since March, Live with Search Engine Land has provided marketers with an informal way to step outside their organizations and get a feel for the pulse of their industry as it navigates COVID, social justice movements, data regulation and algorithm updates.

Some of the insights shared by our dozens of panelists helped to explain trends or disseminate practical advice, both of which will be crucial to marketers as we move past these first six months of marketing disruption. While we all would like to maintain high hopes moving forward, the lessons we’ve learned during this period can help us prepare and build a foundation for success as the world continues to grapple with these extraordinary circumstances.

To recap the insights our panelists have shared, Search Engine Land’s Editor-in-chief, Ginny Marvin, hosted a special season wrap-up of Live with Search Engine Land, featuring fellow Search Engine Land editors Barry Schwartz, Greg Sterling and myself, George Nguyen.

COVID quick stats

Marvin set the tone of the session by laying down a timeline of events to illustrate the stranglehold effect that the coronavirus placed on economic activity.

On the opposite end, CPG and some other sectors saw growth as people turned to e-commerce: Target said they had 5 million new online shoppers; about 40% of those shoppers picked up products in-store. And, Shopify saw a 47% revenue increase YoY for Q1 2020.

Looking into the future, US e-commerce sales are expected to increase by 18% this year, according to eMarketer. That would put e-commerce at 14.5% of total retail sales; removing fuel and auto purchases puts that figure closer to 20%. However, this growth will not offset the loss of physical retail sales, which is expected to drop by 10.5%.

RELATED: E-commerce explodes: 45% growth in Q2

Takeaways from marketing experts during COVID

Prioritize your marketing momentum. Brands that can continue to run ads and other marketing campaigns should do so — that was the consensus during our digital commerce session of Live with Search Engine Land.

“What we found is that brands that go dark during recession, depression or even crisis-type periods have a very difficult time climbing back up the mountain once things begin to normalize,” Tony Verre, VP of e-commerce at Integer Group, said. Businesses that refine their marketing strategies when resources are tight, instead of stopping them altogether, are more likely to succeed during and after a recession, studies have shown.

Rethink your supply and fulfillment chain. Brands may opt to cut back on their marketing to save desperately needed resources, but they may also have no other choice: The pandemic’s disruption extended to supply chains, and businesses that may have been able to continue advertising may not have had inventory to sell, forcing them to halt their ads.

As an example, Marvin shared an anecdote about an Amazon seller she had spoken to: The seller stocked up on inventory in case her manufacturer were to abruptly shut down. Shortly thereafter, Amazon stopped taking non-essential items, “Suddenly, she had nowhere to ship it,” Marvin said.

Instead of resigning to her predicament and pausing her business, she was able to locate a warehouse that made auto parts, but do their own fulfillment through Amazon. She then made a deal with them to distribute her orders.

“You saw businesses being flexible in ways that, if you’d asked them two months ago if they could have pivoted their business model and fulfillment chain in two weeks [might have seemed impossible],” Marvin said.

Maintain your brand marketing efforts. Some organizations diverted more resources to their performance marketing campaigns, leaving their brand marketing efforts with the scraps.

“Suddenly during this time, we had everybody more or less saying the same things about the coronavirus,” said Sterling, pointing out the generic messaging that audiences quickly grew weary of. “It speaks to what differentiates marketers in a period like this . . . ultimately, I think brand is the differentiator in the end.”

Like a deer staring down a set of headlights, unexpected circumstances can paralyze unprepared brands. Build out processes that enable your organization to publish messaging that’s timely and aligned with what your audience expects to distinguish your brand from the competition.

RELATED: Content marketing in times of disruption — What brands need to consider to produce timely content and stay relevant during market upheavals

What the SERP can look like. As COVID cases proliferated throughout the US, people turned to search engines for the latest news and data — some of it, potentially lifesaving. 

In response, Bing created a COVID tracker, revamped its search results page and added a CDC self-checker chatbot to help users determine whether they should seek medical help.

Google overhauled its coronavirus-related search results pages, adding a navigation tab that enables searchers to filter their results for more specific information, sections for common questions, local and national resources, and at-a-glance statistics for the nation and the geographic region of the user.

While the search results pages for coronavirus-related queries were created under special circumstances and are atypical of the results we commonly see, it provides us a glimpse of the direction that search engines could be headed towards as they implement features that resolve more of users’ searches without them having to actually click through on a listing.

We at Search Engine Land hope this series of live discussions, presentations, tutorials and meetups will help everyone stay sharp and up to date on tactics and best practices. We’ll be taking a break for a few weeks and start season two of Live with Search Engine Land in mid-September. Season two will focus on innovative marketing and we have a lot of exciting new topics lined up.

If you have an idea for a session or would like to join a panel, email [email protected] or fill out the pitch form here.


Contributing authors are invited to create content for Search Engine Land and are chosen for their expertise and contribution to the search community. Our contributors work under the oversight of the editorial staff and contributions are checked for quality and relevance to our readers. The opinions they express are their own.


About the author

George Nguyen
Contributor
George Nguyen is the Director of SEO Editorial at Wix, where he manages the Wix SEO Learning Hub. His career is focused on disseminating best practices and reducing misinformation in search. George formerly served as an editor for Search Engine Land, covering organic and paid search.

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