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Google’s strength is offering value, engaging customers

by Kevin Stirtz

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Google’s strength is offering value, engaging customers Google’s strength is offering value, engaging customers

In the last 24 hours, the ‘net has been abuzz with Google’s admission that their SEO is not as good as it could be.  Some see this as a sign that Google “ain’t all that”. Others see it as a reason to question the value of SEO. Regardless of what you make of Google’s SEO revelation, I see some lessons here for all of us.

1. Openness and honesty are cool. (And they make a difference.)

By telling the world they’re not perfect Google becomes more genuine. And they’ll attract more people to them. No one likes an arrogant “know-it-all”. We generally prefer to work with people (and organizations) who are honest and a little humble. Admitting a weakness is about as honest and humble as it gets. Kudos to Google to showing us they are not perfect.

2. Offering value is more important than SEO

Google didn’t get to be the #1 web company in the world by catering to the technical rules of SEO. They did it by offering people value. Think of all the products and services they offer:

  • Internet search
  • Web based email
  • Online office applications
  • Online calendar
  • Online task manager
  • Online contact manager
  • Mapping tools

And these are just a few. It wasn’t too many years ago that we had to pay hundreds of dollars for the equivalent of these. Google offers them free. In fact, most of Google’s customers never pay Google a penny. Only a tiny fraction of their customers actually pay for their services.

Yet they keep churning our new products faster than Darren Rowse writes new blog posts. They not only offer value. They have helped redefine the value relationship with their customers. (See Chris Anderson’s book “Free” for more on this.)

3. Engaging your customers helps you offer more value

Google gets customer engagement. They have become masters at getting their users customers involved in the development, testing and improvement of their products.  They don’t brag about it with expensive ads. They just do it. And they do it well because they get customers very involved, they listen and they act on what they hear.

Now that Google has announced their SEO shortcomings, no doubt they will turn things around. But maybe they don’t need to. Google has been plenty successful without the benefit of SEO.

Maybe SEO just isn’t that important.

Okay, I won’t go that far. But I will say that if most of your focus is SEO then you’re missing the boat. You’re far less likely to attract and keep the customers you want. A better plan is to be like Google and focus on creating value for your customers first.

Other articles you might like:

How to Exceed Your Customer’s Expectations

Customer Service Training 101

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Categories: All News Technology

This article was written by:

Kevin Stirtz - who has written 621 posts on AmazingServiceGuy.com.

Kevin Stirtz is the Amazing Service Guy, a speaker and trainer who helps organizations of all kinds deliver Amazing Customer Service. His recent book: "More Loyal Customers" has won 5 star reviews at Amazon.com. Kevin lives in the Twin Cities (Minneapolis & St. Paul). More at: author's website.

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One Response to “Google’s strength is offering value, engaging customers”

  1. shaun sayers says:

    I’ve never been completely convinced about Google’s motives and ethics. The truth is that, in general, competition drives standards upwards, and Google, for me, is just too strong

    The principle of “power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely” could well apply. Talk to any web developer and it would not be long before they start complaining that Google sets the specifications for SEO to suit itself (then keeps them secret) and makes everyone else’s job that much harder

    Their motto “don’t be evil” for me lacks a definition of what Google considers to be “evil” because right now we’re all just guessing

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