4 Ways To Use Google Brand Links To Your Advantage

You may have heard Google is rolling out “Brand Links” suggestions for a ton of generic keyword searches.
So far I have heard a ton of whining about how this is going to kill mom and pop shops (again!). Where others see despair I see opportunity. Here are 4 ways to use Google brand links to your advantage.
SEO/Link Building
- Search Google for as many generic terms that relate to your products as possible.
- Write down all the various brands that show up.
- Sort your list between brands you carry and your competition.
For the brands that you do carry make sure to check your search engine rankings. Concentrate your link building efforts on your brand pages that are lagging in the search engine. Maybe do a contest giveaway for brand x. That always nets some good links.
Also make sure you take a look at your on page optimization. Could you internally link to that brand page more? Are your internal links to that brand keyword rich? Would a new title tag be more effective than the one you have?
Content Creation
I know some of you are thinking…but I only sell MY brand not my competitor’s brand and this new Google feature is going to kill my organic traffic. First, the longer you complain and envision the sky is falling, the longer you put off doing something about it. Second, although generic searches can yield a lot of traffic they rarely offer high conversions. These searches represent someone at the start of the buying cycle, not the end.
A simple solution would be to create a landing page for each of these competing brands and compare your widget to their widget. Be honest and show the pros and the cons and why you think you come out ahead. If you do not want to host a review on your own site then leverage the domain authority of a site like squidoo and do reviews of brand X and compare it yours.
Drive some links to these review pages and you can get them ranking in no time. Especially by leveraging web 2.0 sites like squidoo if your domain is not an established authority.
As a customer gets closer to the end of the buying cycle they start doing brand searches and comparing widgets. By positioning your site to rank on the various brand searches Google is suggesting, you will keep yourself in front of the customer and do some positive branding of your own. This will be huge for your site if you do it right.
PPC
I tend to skip biding on generic traffic like “laptops” because it converts poorly and is usually bid up too high by people with “broad match” turned on. Google brand links gives you an opportunity to gobble up some quality traffic by bidding on their suggested brands.
Again, you don’t have to sell that brand to put up a PPC ad for it. You will have to test but from my previous experience you are likely to see a nice ROI on those branded searches.
Also, getting your ad there now before everyone else figures it out can help you to establish your click through rate and account history for that keyword, which is huge for adwords.
Research
Looking to expand your product offerings? Take a good look at all the brands Google is suggesting in your niche because that is where you know additional traffic is going to be headed. I have seen some rather small brands showing up for high volume search queries. Jump in and start carrying that brand and establish your site before your competition does.
I also find these links extremely helpful when researching a new product. Simply do a generic search and Google shows you some popular brands. You can quickly build a list of who you would want to start out carrying or who you would need to beat in that sector.
I hope this sheds some light on the possibilities this new feature brings. While everyone else is complaining, take action and get a leg up on them!
If you have additional ideas please post them in the comments.








Hi,
Thanks for posting your valuable comments on “Google Brand Links” at http://www.toprankseoblog.com/2010/05/google-brand-promotion-new-serp-feautre.html
I did read your article, you did a good research on this topic…. I liked it how you explained the things.
Cheer’s
.-= Afzal Khan´s last blog ..Google Brand Promotion – New SERP Feature to heavily promote Brands =-.
I think in a competitive industries, bidding on longer phrases and less competitive keywords just make more sense.
.-= Al Sefati´s last blog ..Need for Speed =-.
Great tips! I’ll be sure to share them.
A couple of years ago I ventured onto Squidoo and I thought it was since dead. It was refreshing to see a reference to it here.
Ken
You are so right. People sometimes tend to miss the fact that Google itself is a great resource for SEO research. This particular post proves this point once again.
.-= Dharne´s last blog ..How HTML5 transforms offline web application use and browsing =-.
Yes, I tried Squidoo as well which worked great for some projects, however depending on the countries (especially Germany) many directories or Social Media sites ( such as wong) are nofollow now. This is very annoying!
Also at the last SMX the did point out that good ALT tags are almost more important than H1! Tried and tested, it works!
Best,
inka
While a lot of webmasters haven’t enjoyed the changes Google has been making since Aprilish, the brands have definitely been happy. Those brand suggestions you see above were actually sending forth a lot of high quality traffic, good enough to even slown down PPC for a few of my clients.
The roll out of Brand Links is another sign that Google is making it easier for traditional “offline” players to rank higher in the SERPs. Prior to that, Google’s 2009 “Brand update” lifted their position in organic results. Affiliate sites and generic retailers could find it harder to target brand terms through SEO alone in the medium to long-term. Stephan