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You’ll walk away with a structured way to evaluate strategic fit, content readiness, and revenue impact before reallocating budget or rewriting your roadmap.
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You’ll walk away with a structured way to evaluate strategic fit, content readiness, and revenue impact before reallocating budget or rewriting your roadmap.
You’ll walk away with a structured way to evaluate strategic fit, content readiness, and revenue impact before reallocating budget or rewriting your roadmap.
Marketing leaders are turning to zero- and first-party data to replace guesswork with intent-driven strategies that align with real customer needs.
There’s an interesting paradox currently occurring in the realm of marketing. Marketers have more tools and data at their fingertips, yet despite this influx of information, marketing leaders also somehow have less clarity than ever before.
Over the past decade, Google’s algorithms and privacy regulations have significantly shifted traditional SEO best practices. SEO has evolved from a precise science to more of a trust discipline, where marketers must infuse credibility and authority into their content to improve visibility.
The new opportunity at hand isn’t scraping more consumer behavior but rather listening to it in a new manner. By diving deeper into zero-party data, information customers willingly share, and first-party data, behavior observed directly on your own channels, chief marketing officers can shape their SEO strategies around real human intent.
Search success will be contingent on whether brands understand their audience well enough to create relevant, authentic, and trustworthy content at every step of the customer journey, not just when an algorithm prompts them to.
Zero-party data is marketing’s cleanest and clearest source of truth. It uncovers the information customers want you to have. It unveils their preferences, motivations, and needs through methods like surveys, quizzes, chatbots, and more.
First-party data shows what users do. Zero-party data shows you why they did what they did. When paired together, both forms of data bridge the gap between analytics and empathy.
For example, a retail brand might ask site visitors in a post-purchase survey, “What is most likely to motivate you to make a purchase?” The choices the site visitor can choose between are price, sustainability, or convenience. Now, consider if nearly half of those respondents chose “sustainability.”
This insight shouldn’t fall into a void, but rather should be acted upon quickly. It’s not a trend but rather a clear signal. The content and SEO teams can now focus on creating content around “eco-friendly shopping” and other relevant sustainability topics, while communications teams can align messaging around the same topic. In turn, seamless collaboration and alignment take place.
Traditional SEO honed in on what people typed into the search bar. Zero-party data reveals what people mean when they’re searching for a business, product, or service. Algorithms are increasingly rewarding intent satisfaction when evaluating content. When your content addresses and is built on declared motivations, like why someone is looking for your specific solution, you’re aligned with the future of search.
The issue isn’t that CMOs aren’t collecting data; it’s the struggle with turning it into action that drives meaningful change.
An intent-based SEO strategy has three phases, which we will discuss next (capture, interpret, and activate).
Customers aren’t going to hand over information if they don’t see a clear value in doing so. To encourage this, marketers must highlight a mutual benefit in the information exchange. A few methods include:
Each of the aforementioned information exchanges becomes a declared-intent breadcrumb. Users have granted your business permission to act on their feedback and are much more actionable than cookie trails alone.
Collecting information from myriad channels can make it difficult to determine where they should focus their attention first. To dissect and pull out the insights that matter most from unstructured and structured feedback, CMOs should invest in qualitative analysis tools. Tools like text analytics, for example, can make it easy for CMOs and CX teams alike to mine for common themes.
Customer Data Platforms (CDPs), can also help you create audiences and segments to deliver more personalized content that resonates with customers. This might look like a retail marketing manager only receiving newsletters, ebooks, or blogs that are related to the retail industry and trends.
These types of thematic content pillars can help inform supporting search queries, schema markup, content priorities, and more.
In this phase, you’ll set your plans into action. First, connect declared intent to keyword intent. For example, if customers talk about “security peace of mind,” this gives you clear insight into what they’re interested in learning more about and how your company can help. You could create content that explicitly speaks to “how we secure your personal data.”
On the other hand, if they’re talking about “easy to implement,” it may be beneficial for you to provide explainer-type content, such as a short video or an FAQ page (with FAQ schema), to address “how to integrate [product name]” searches.
Zero-party data helps move the needle with SEO efforts; from a guessing game to an action engine, producing content that doesn’t just satisfy search algorithms, but also the people behind the search, too.
To build an insight-to-action culture, CMOs should encourage teams to share qualitative learnings regularly, whether through a cadence of weekly meetings, via email, or a combination of the two. Customer experience teams should make Voice of Customer insights loud and clear to help inform SEO and content briefs.
It’s also important to highlight and reward cross-functional wins to showcase how working together helps drive growth. This might look like an SEO strategy that was informed by CX feedback or a case study that solves a pressing challenge clients typically face, informed by online reputation feedback.
CMOs can install a regular “intent feedback loop” to operationalize the data your company receives and act upon that data. This might look like:
This type of feedback framework helps organizations embed customers’ preferences and desires directly into the content published, helping your business create the content that actually connects with your target audience.
Measuring what matters most is integral to assess the impact of zero-party data analysis efforts. Alongside other SEO metrics, the following can gain a holistic view of your SEO performance:
Engagement quality is a true testament of attention. Meanwhile, volume, while great to have, is somewhat meaningless if you have an abundance of unqualified leads. Instead, look at:
Marketers must track growth in high-intent and branded queries, as these are most often the terms that someone who is on the verge of buying will use when searching for your business. If you’re showing up for phrases customers typically use when at the decision-making stage, such as “State Farm compared vs. Geico car insurance,” this indicates deeper resonance.
Loyalty metrics, while not a metric SEOs track, can correlate with how well your SEO program is working. Reframing SEO performance as a reflection of customer understanding helps CMOs dig a layer deeper, past solely tactics, and understand deeper-rooted customer emotions that could be preventing your business from scaling. Look at:
We may be in the age of AI, but the future is human. Yes, AI can generate a keyword-optimized blog in a matter of seconds, but human touch is where the real value is. And human-informed data will be your business’s ultimate differentiator.
Zero- and first-party data reveal pertinent insights that elevate organizations when this data is acted upon. It unlocks insights into why people search and not just what they search for. It also uncovers where in the sales journey customers are getting stuck and blockers for purchasing.
Moving forward, to fuel your SEO efforts:
When marketing leaders take consumer feedback to heart, they bridge the gap between traffic and trust, building stronger relationships that lead to more purchases, repeat customers, and improved brand experiences.
More Resources:
Featured Image: Anton Vierietin/Shutterstock
Chelsea Alves is a results-driven content marketing leader with extensive experience in digital marketing, content strategy, artificial intelligence, and SEO.
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