How Your Business Can Win at Voice Search
Voice is the biggest change to the way
people search since the rise of mobile.
Just
a decade ago, the concept of controlling technology using just your voice was
the stuff of sci-fi. Today, it's a readily accepted part of our daily lives.
Most
consumers' first exposure to voice search came with the debut of Siri on the
iPhone in 2011. Today, Siri, Alexa, and Cortana compete for our attention, and
the booming smart speaker market features a who's who of tech competitors,
including Google (Home), Amazon (Echo), and Apple (HomePod).
Nearly one-third
of marketing leaders see voice search as the "next big
thing" in search marketing. Clearly, voice search is not a technology your
business can afford to ignore.
Businesses can
prepare for the future through digital knowledge management
Consumers
have been quick to adopt voice search, but businesses are less prepared for its
implications. In the past, when a consumer searched the Web for something such
as "best pizza near me," the list of search results included multiple
blue links on a page.
Now,
when consumers pose that question to voice-enabled services such as Google
Assistant, Siri, or Alexa, the result will often be just one answer—the one the
search service determines is the best result. That means if a business isn't
that first response, it risks not showing up at all—and losing business.
The
website, once the centerpiece of a brand, is quickly being overtaken as
third-party information sources, such as voice assistants, become more and more
intelligent. That is why brands need to go beyond traditional SEO.
That shift also means brands must ensure that the facts about
them are managed and published accurately, and that they are recognizable to
intelligent services—including voice assistants—that consumers rely on today.
When your business does that, the need for, and the delay associated with
search engine crawling, is eliminated, and you ensure your consumers receive
accurate, timely information about your business straight from the source.
Here are three steps your business can take to stay competitive
in the world of intelligent services, voice search, and AI:
- Gain control of your digital
knowledge. The
foundation of any voice search strategy is organizing and centralizing all
the public facts about people, products, and locations. Have a central
source of truth to easily make updates and maintain consistency.
Technology alone will not address that underlying need. It's also critical
to have great people—and a great process—working together.
- Actively manage your business
facts. Businesses
are dynamic, and so are the facts about them. Store relocations, seasonal
changes, special promotions, and weather-related closures imply constant
flux. That means managing a brand's knowledge isn't a one-and-done
project; it should be done on an ongoing basis.
- Integrate internal systems, and
publish your digital knowledge. Once you organize all the important facts
consumers want to know, publish them to the services customers are using.
That includes websites, voice search tools, apps, and even your own site.
Providing the most accurate, up-to-date information everywhere is crucial
to offering an excellent consumer experience.
Take a conversational
approach
The shift to voice search also means that if businesses want to
be seen as the best provider of an answer to a voice query, they need to secure
the search engine's trust with the right information presented in a coherent
way.
However, search engines don't work miracles. If content is
hidden or difficult to discover, it won't show up when people search for it. A
brand's website, videos, and other content are key to contextualizing the
public facts about a business for intelligent services... but only if those
intelligent services can find and understand them.
In addition, with the growth of conversational search (i.e.,
when consumers ask search engines questions as they would of another person),
businesses need to ask themselves, "What else can I tell prospective
customers to help them make a buying decision?"
A consumer will want to know everything, from whether a hotel
has rooms available to the average wait time at a restaurant. If a business can
make all of that information available, it is more likely to be the answer
consumers hear to their questions in voice search.
Understand the
customer journey
Businesses must understand the customer journey to thrive in
today's environment. That extends beyond having just the top search rankings
for select keywords. With voice search, contextual relevance is key. To be
successful with voice search, businesses must understand the moments of context
that exist for a person, and then meaningfully map to those moments.
For example, although a business may not come up as the first
search result when asked "What's the best sushi place in New York?"
it might be number one when asked "What's the best sushi place in SoHo in
New York?" or "What's the best sushi place that's open late?" If
a business is able to share specifics of its offerings (e.g., hours, menu
items, exact location, etc.), it will crop up in results to more-specific
queries.
Voice search now has the ability to understand a lot of context.
That means brands must understand why a consumer would choose their business
over another (such as shorter wait times, cheaper prices, more convenient
location) and make that information available.
Ultimately, a brand's ability to understand those moments of
context, meaningfully map to them, and then publish relevant digital knowledge
effectively will determine its success with voice search.
Future-proof your
business
As businesses deploy those strategies to win at voice search,
they will also find themselves far better prepared for new user interfaces
beyond voice.
Amazon, for one, is already pioneering the visual search space
with products such as Echo Look, Spot, and Show, and Google Lens lets you scan
the real world to see location-specific information. Just as with voice search,
if a visual search involves your business, you want the consumer to get
accurate information straight from you.
By managing, updating, and publishing key facts that consumers
want to the intelligent services they use, you're already taking the next step
to future-proofing your business for whatever user interfaces consumers adopt
next.
Yes, voice search is disrupting traditional search optimization
strategies, but it is also creating a huge opportunity for those ready to
future-proof their business.
After all, if you don't manage the public facts about your business, who
will? Perhaps I'd better go ask Siri.
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