SearchLove is a two-day conference arranged by Distilled. Each year it brings together some of the world’s leading thinkers in online marketing. The gathering takes place in the UK as well as the US, and we attended the 2018 edition in London to learn more about search. In this sum up we present you a selection of highlights and key takeaways from the speakers within SEO.
‘The two-tiered SERP: Ranking for the most competitive terms’
Tom Capper, London Consulting Team Lead, Distilled

Tom Capper talked about ranking for a head term. You know that high-volume keyword that your boss really cares about. A lot of times it’s difficult to answer his question: “Why aren’t we first for [head term]?!”.
Tom had an interesting theory: What if head terms are no longer about ranking factors? What if Google has so much data now, and they have become so data-driven – using data from their own search results – that ranking factors are no longer a helpful model for these most lucrative positions?
To explore this topic he presented three pieces of evidence and explained the ‘how’ and ‘why’ from Google’s perspective. He also talked about the implications and how you can win in this new game.
One of Tom’s main points was that Google has changed a lot over the years. And continues to do so. Alone in 2017, Google ran 31,584 side-by-side experiments with its quality raters and subsequently launched 2,453 search changes (source). But a lot of SEO’s are still focused on old updates.
Tom tested the hypothesis ‘The higher you rank, the less “ranking factors” matter’ with his own studies focusing on links. His analysis found this to be true: The higher you rank, the less important links are (as a ranking factor). Links are less import in top 10, and in top 1-5, they lose their importance even more. Head terms are no longer about ranking factors. Just look at the fluctuation on the SERP for a big fat keyword like “mother’s day flowers”:

No big changes were done over this period of time. The only thing changed was that many more people started searching for this term around here.
SERPs change when they become high volume!
Also, a lot of formerly commercial keywords are increasingly dominated by informational content. And this is not because Google reordered some ranking factors. It is because of intent. Google is re-assessing intents for established keywords.
For head terms in the top of SERPs, Google might be measuring metrics like:
- Pogo-sticking (don’t look at bounce rate, use event tracking)
- Time to SERP interaction
– and these should be the KPIs you should focus on.
And for that reason, you might want to reevaluate your:
- Price
- Aesthetics
- Short-sighted interstitials
– as they might influence the above metrics that Google might be measuring your site on.
What can we do about that?
Tom pointed out that the fundamentals still work. You need to have your basic SEO in order. What you could optimize more on are things like:
- Ask users to compare your site to competitors
- Change the sorting (in your webshop) and see if less users leave the site
- Remove pop-ups
- Page speed
- Add USPs to page titles
- Brand awareness
- Intent
Tom’s key takeaways were:

‘10 Conversation Changing Visuals’
Wil Reynolds, Founder, Seer Interactive

Wil Reynolds is well known for breaking down the silos between SEO and Paid Search, and using big data tools to look at search. One of his main tools is PowerBI, and he urges all SEOs to use it in their work. You can check out his video about the topic on YouTube.
Wil initially stated, that his presentation was not for everybody. If you had not gone through the process of creating a relationship between your paid and organic data, you probably would not get much out of it. Except knowing that it was possible.
If you are not using PowerBI or integrating SEO with PPC, you might want to start with his presentation from Learn Inbound 2017 and/or check out his slides from from SearchLove 2017.
In his presentation at SearchLove 2018, Wil went through 10 data visualizations that gives greater insights, and had examples from both local search, e-commerce, B2B and, B2C, PPC or SEO.

To sum up, big data has helped Wil’s company change conversations with clients, prioritize workloads, get things done faster and win in SEO.
His main points being:
