Archive for the ‘keywording’ Category

Cycling: Search, Demographic and Search Trends (Part 1 of 2)

Posted on March 10th, 2010 in Analytics, SEO, keywording, lookstat, stats | No Comments »

cycling_couple_1.jpg

Bicycle riding was number 5 on our list of fastest growing leisure activities and was ranked number 6 in terms of total participants. This post, which will be part of a two part series focuses on:

  • Demographic Trends
  • Search Trends
  • Top Search Keywords

The second post will focus on stock photography trends and data and will link back to this one.

2007 Participation by Gender

cycling_by_gender.png

Source: Statistical Abstract of the United States

2007 Participation by Age

cycling_by_age.png

Source: Statistical Abstract of the United States

As you can see from the above data, cycling is evenly balanced across gender and generally skews lower in terms of participation by age (76% of participants are 44 or younger).

Best Selling Bike Types (from our earlier post: Cycling – Interesting Industry Stats)

2008_share_by_units_sold.png

Why People Ride (from our earlier post: Cycling – Interesting Industry Stats)

why_people_ride.png

The major conclusions from the demographic data are:

  • Cycling is evenly balanced across genders and skews younger
  • Mountain-bike styled bikes (including the hybrid category) are the most common type of bike sold
  • Youth bikes are important and the 7-11 age group is the largest single participant category
  • The vast majority of people cycle for recreation first and fitness second
  • Based on the local maxima in the age chart at the low end and in the middle, I would guess that families cycling together is a viable shoot concept

Search Trends

Pinning down search trends isn’t easy because some of the terms have very specific meanings. For example, a search for cycling skews heavily towards the sport of cycling and the keywords around it are focused on racing while searches for ‘bicycle’ tend of focus on bike and bike parts purchasing. In this section, I’m going to show a composite chart to give you a sense for relative search volumes and trends.

cycling_trends_google_insights.jpg

As you can see from the screenshot of Google Insights Data for ‘bicycle’, ‘cycling’ & ‘bike riding’, There’s a steady seasonal climb in interest from January to July and a fairly symmetric decline from July through the end of the year. The red line in the chart above is the search trends for ‘cycling’ and it peaks in the first week of July after being generally flat throughout the year. This coincides perfectly with the Tour de France. Although the scale dampens the effect slightly, there is a 50% increase in searches related to ‘cycling’ in the peak week when compared to the week immediately before it.

I also decided to take a look at searches for road bikes vs. mountain bikes to cross-check the demographic data and the results are entirely consistent. In the USA, mountain bikes are searched for 1.7x more often than road bikes are and this is virtually identical to the data from the National Bicycle Dealers Association. (Also, this isn’t just a US phenomenon – the results are the same when looking at worldwide search trends.)

road_vs_mountain.jpg

Top Search Keywords

As I mentioned above, it can be challenging to identify the best keywords across all types of bicycle related shoots since they are so different. To get some sense of aggregate importance, I put in a range of terms and then sorted the results from the adwords keyword tool by search volume. The top 20 results are in the table below:

top_keywords_cycling.jpg

Conclusions

  • Most americans cycle for recreation & fitness – make sure these concepts are featured in both your images & your keywords
  • The fact that cycling is popular with kids and mid-age adults and that its primarily about recreation suggests that cycling is a popular family activity and this is a concept worth exploring for lifestyle shoots.
  • The most popular bike type worldwide is the mountain bike, by almost 2:1. This doesn’t mean that road bikes are not important, but if you’re shooting cycling it’s important to be aware of the relative popularity.
  • Cycling as a term is closely tied to the sport, but it should be part of your image keywords anyway
  • If you’re shooting racing & roadies, then make sure you get your images online before the Tour! From a stock image perspective, 2-3 months before the event is the time to upload
  • It’s important to use different variations when keywording your images for stock & SEO. This is somewhat moot for iStock exclusives given the CV, but still important for Titles & Descriptions given their importance to SEO

Microstock for RM & RF Photographers – A Free Guide from LookStat

Posted on February 24th, 2010 in General, keywording, lookstat, microstock | 3 Comments »

We have been working hard over the past few weeks on a free 35-page guide for RM & RF stock photographers who are interested in microstock. Microstock is a growing part of the stock photography market and it’s important to stay informed about it, especially in light of the convergence taking place between micro & RF.

The guide provides an overview of what microstock is and how to get started. It also contains profiles of the top sites, details on their application process, and a submission checklist which covers the latest requirements for creating accounts and uploading and submitting images.

We wrote this to answer a lot of the questions we hear about microstock, especially from established stock photographers interested in adding another revenue stream to their portfolios. I hope you’ll find it a useful and helpful reference.

I know a some of you will know most of this information cold, but hopefully you know someone else that would find it useful. Please help me spread the word about this by tweeting about the guide or sharing it on Facebook.

Thank you for your help and support. As always your comments and feedback are greatly appreciated.

Walking: Stock Photography Trends (Part 2 of 2)

Posted on February 20th, 2010 in Analytics, SEO, keywording, lookstat, microstock, stats | 5 Comments »

About This Post

This is the second post in a two-post series about Walking for exercise. The first post focused on general search & demographic trends. This post is focused on stock photography trends relating to walking for exercise.
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Stock Photography Trends for ‘Walking for Exercise’
In order to isolate images around walking for exercise, I decided to look at the search results for ‘exercise walking’ as opposed to just walking. As a test, I also tried searching for ‘walking exercise’ and got back exactly the same number of results in the same order so it appears that search term order is not significant. This was true across all sites.
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If you just search for ‘walking’, you get an order of magnitude more images returned, but this because walking is an activity commonly photographed in a range of stock image categories. For the purposes of this discussion, exercise and walking are most relevant.
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Number of Images in Search Results for ‘exercise walking’
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The chart above shows the number of results obtained when searching for the terms ‘exercise walking’ on each of the sites listed. The biggest takeaway here was that iStock & Shutterstock returned almost the same number of results and that Getty actually had more images in that category than Fotolia. The normal pattern is that Shutterstock has by far the most results, followed by Dreamstime & Fotolia with iStock and then Getty & Corbis with the fewest images. I’m not sure what’s behind this, but this may be some art direction at work.
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Links to Default Stock Site Search Results for ‘exercise walking’
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Bestsellers
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The top result for the search on istock is an active senior woman which lines up well with our conclusions from the first post on ‘walking’. Most of the rest of the first page contains more lifestyle and relaxation oriented walking shots as opposed to walking for exercise. In fact, there is only one image on the first page which shows an older woman walking for exercise.
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An Image That Sells Well on Multiple Sites
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The image above is on the first page of iStock, Dreamstime & Fotolia when you search for ‘exercise walking’ and order the searches by downloads. Interestingly enough, this covers walking, but also hits assisted-living concepts and multi-generational concepts. As a stock image, it definitely spans a range of potential search terms and is well chosen and executed. The image has been downloaded over 1,000 times at iStock (where it is ranked #7) and over 700 times at Fotolia (where it is ranked #1).
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One point to note is that the title chosen was ‘One Step At a Time’ – I think this image could have seen more traffic if the title had been something like ‘Granddaughter helping Grandmother with Walker’ – less interesting to read, but more keyword dense. As I’ve written about before, titles matter a great deal in keywording.
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Conclusions from Part 2
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  • There does appear to be a relative lack of imagery around the sweet spot of the demographics for walking for exercise. It is probably worth testing this topic the next time you do a shoot involving seniors.
  • I saw no shots for walking seniors on white for this topic and that is somewhat surprising to me. This is another area that is probably worth exploring further.
  • Finding ways to cover a range of search terms can help broaden the potential uses for an image. Worth considering, but just be careful that you don’t compromise how well your image illustrates each individual concept.
Conclusions from Part 1 (for reference)
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  • Walking for exercise is the top leisure activity in the USA in terms of participation with close to 100 million people taking part in 2008!
  • Demographically speaking, the participants skew older & female; the top age segment is 45-64 years old.
  • Walking shoes represent the top footwear category in the USA and the demographics (not surprisingly) map closely with walkers.
  • ‘Walking shoes’ should be part of your keywording strategy since they are a high volume search query
  • Top related keywords are: “exercise, weight loss, calories, walking shoes”

Walking: Search & Demographic Trends (Part 1 of 2)

Posted on February 16th, 2010 in Analytics, General, SEO, keywording, lookstat, microstock | 5 Comments »

Walking for exercise was the most popular activity in terms of number of participants and was in the top ten when it came to year over year growth on our list of top leisure activities. Given an aging population, and a tough economy, it’s not surprising that walking is a popular leisure activity. To provide some context, in 2008, there were 96.6 million people who participated in ‘walking’ compared to ‘golf’ which had 25.5 million participants. Also, the number of walkers in 2008 was 11% higher than it was in 2007 which saw 89.9 million participants.

This will be a two part series. In this post, I’m going to look at:

  • Demographic & Gender Trends for Walking in the USA
  • Footwear Spending by Category
  • Walking Shoe Purchasers by Age & Gender
  • Top Search Keywords

The second post will focus on stock photography related to ‘walking’ and will link back to this one.

Participation by Gender

Source: NSGA, Statistical Abstract of the USA

Participation by Age

Source: NSGA, Statistical Abstract of the USA

Walking as a means of exercise clearly skews older (49% of participants 45 or older) and female (62.5% female). This data is also supported by the footwear spending data as you’ll see below.

Footwear Spending by Type of Shoe

Walking shoes accounted for 33% of the $12.5 billion dollars spent on footwear in 2007 (data for 2008 were projected to be similar and 2009 data are not available yet but if anything, I’d expect this to be more pronounced.)

Walking shoe Purchasers by Gender & Age

Digging into the walking shoe purchasers show that the same trends apply as the overall participation in walking. 45-64 is the biggest age group and the percentage of female users is identical to the percentage of female walkers.

Search Trends for Walking & Walking Shoes

The chart below shows data from Google Insights for ‘exercise walking’ and ‘walking shoes’ from 2008 to 2010.

There isn’t much seasonality, but ‘walking shoes’ are searched for 5 times more often than ‘exercise walking.’ This surprised me initially, but intuitively it makes sense that people would be searching for ‘walking shoes’ as opposed to for ‘exercise walking.’ The same caveats as those in our comments on running shoes apply – be careful of trademarked designs & logos.

Top Searches Related to ‘Exercise Walking’

Conclusions

  • Walking for exercise is the top leisure activity in the USA in terms of participation with close to 100 million people taking part in 2008!
  • Demographically speaking, the participants skew older & female; the top age segment is 45-64 years old.
  • Walking shoes represent the top footwear category in the USA and the demographics (not surprisingly) map closely with walkers.
  • ‘Walking shoes’ should be part of your keywording strategy since they are a high volume search query
  • Top related keywords are: “exercise, weight loss, calories, walking shoes”

I think the demographic trends around walking are fairly clear. This lines up well with general demand for imagery around ‘active seniors’ and this is something I’ll dive into in more detail in the second part of this post. Stay tuned and comments and feedback are always appreciated!

Yoga: Search & Stock Photography Trends (Part 2 of 2)

Posted on February 9th, 2010 in Analytics, General, SEO, keywording, lookstat, stats | 2 Comments »

About This Post

This is the second post in a two-post series about Yoga. The first post focused on general search and demographic trends while this post will focus on the following items:

  • Stock Photography Trends
  • Snapshot of Search Results from Major Sites
  • Best Selling Yoga Concepts on Microstock

Stock Searches for Yoga

We conducted a search for yoga on a range of stock sites and Flickr to get a feel for the number of results.

Number of Search Results for Yoga

As you can see Corbis & Getty have roughly 10,000 images for this search term, istock has 14,374 results which the remaining three microstock sites have roughly double the result count of iStock.

Intuitively, this result makes sense since the you would expect Corbis & Getty to have the fewest images and the larger microstock sites to have the most, with iStock somewhere in between. (This is in contrast to the ‘Running’ data where Getty, Istock & Fotolia all had roughly the same number of images.)

Note: Flickr, as usual dominated with over 270,000 results.

Comparison of Search Results for Yoga

We did a quick comparison of the default search results returned when you do a search for ‘yoga’ on all of the sites listed above. Links to all the searches are provided below and a screenshot of the results for iStock & Getty are shown below.

iStock (Best Match – ‘yoga’)

istock_yoga_results

Getty Images (Default search – ‘yoga’)

getty_yoga_results

I find the iStock results more compelling than those on Getty but I’m guessing that image buyers who license images from Getty aren’t doing so from the website. (It’ll be interesting to see how this evolves over time.)

Links to Results from Other sites:

Best Selling Stock Images on Microstock

As Ellen Boughn suggested in her comment to part 1 of the Yoga series, there are two main settings for yoga stock photos. Nature and  yoga studios. There is also the ‘business person doing yoga’ theme but that isn’t downloaded as often.

Best Selling Yoga Photos on iStock

As you can see from the screenshot of most downloaded yoga photos on iStock shown above, outdoor (beach and idyllic nature) yoga images account for fifteen out of the top twenty-eight results (54%).

However, if you add up the downloads (using the lower bound of the range supplied by istock) the nature images account for 22,500 of the 35,300 downloads generated by the 28 images above. This is roughly 64%

If you eliminate the top selling image, which generated 6,300+ downloads, then then nature images account for 56% of the total downloads.

This is too small an edge to be meaningful for a sample of this size. (We’ll look at this more definitively in the future.)

Conclusions from Part 2

  • Getty & Corbis have far fewer images for Yoga than the microstock sites do.
  • There is an even mix of nature & yoga school/studio images in the best-sellers at iStock.
  • There are no images of older people doing yoga which may be an opportunity if you recall from part 1 that over 30% were 45 or older.
  • Although ‘bikram/hot yoga’ was popular from a search standpoint, it wasn’t as prevalent in stock results. This may be because sweat doesn’t sell, but it’s probably a concept worth exploring

Conclusions from Part 1 (for reference)

  • Yoga searches peak in January.
  • Bikram/hot yoga is by far the most searched for form of yoga (15x more popular than the next highest term which was: ‘hatha yoga’.
  • ‘Mats’ , ‘fitness’ , ‘classes’ are all in the top 10 in terms of keywords. Don’t ignore them on your images.
  • Women outnumber men by roughly 6 to 1 in terms of yoga participation.
  • The peak age segment is 25-34, but there are plenty of older (45+ particpants) as well.

Yoga: Search & Stock Photography Trends (Part 1 of 2)

Posted on February 9th, 2010 in Analytics, General, SEO, keywording, lookstat, microstock | 4 Comments »

yoga_class

About This Post
Yoga was ranked #2 in the data on our fastest growing recreational activities post. I’m breaking this profile into 2 parts for brevity’s sake. This post will cover the following:

  • General Search Trends
  • Popular Forms of Yoga
  • Top Search Keywords
  • Demographics of Particpants

Part 2 will cover stock photography search results and trends and will link to this one.

General Search Trends – 2004 – Present; USA

google_insights_yoga

The chart above shows Google Insights for Search data  for ‘yoga’ from 2004 to the present day for the USA. There is a clear upward trend which you can see if you connect the peaks of the chart. In addition, like a lot of fitness-related terms (see our post on ‘weight loss’), there is a peak in January (resolutions anyone?) but a relatively steady volume of interest throughout the year.

Popular Forms of Yoga

yoga_types

The above chart shows Google Insights data for 2009 – Present for some popular forms of yoga. If you consider that Bikram & Hot yoga are thought of as the same thing then Bikram accounts for 84% of the above searches in Jan 2010.

Top 10 Search Keywords

Using the Google Adwords Keyword Tool, I ran a quick search on yoga and sorted the results by global monthly search volume. The Top 10 are plotted below:

top10_keywords_yoga

Participant Demographics

According to the Statistical Abstract  of the United States, there were 10.7 million yoga participants in 2007. In the charts below, the data are broken out by gender & age.

2007 Participation by Gender

part_by_gender

As anyone who has ever set foot in a yoga studio will attest to, the data above are not surprising. It would be interesting to track this breakdown over time and see how it is changing.

2007 Participation by Age Group

part_by_age

The peak age group is 25-34 but there is strong participation in the older bands as well. Over 30% of participants were 45 or older.

Conclusions

Couple at gym

  • Yoga searches peak in January.
  • Bikram/hot yoga is by far the most searched for form of yoga (15x more popular than the next highest term which was: ‘hatha yoga’.
  • ‘Mats’ , ‘fitness’ , ‘classes’ are all in the top 10 in terms of keywords. Don’t ignore them on your images.
  • Women outnumber men by roughly 6 to 1 in terms of yoga participation.
  • The peak age segment is 25-34, but there are plenty of older (45+ particpants) as well.

Other Posts in This Series

Top 10 Leisure Activities in the USA

Posted on January 31st, 2010 in Analytics, General, SEO, keywording, lookstat | 5 Comments »

Summer is just around the corner, from a shoot planning perspective.

Since the time to begin uploading seasonal images seems to be 2-3 months ahead of an event (see our Thanksgiving & Easter posts) and shoots need to happen well before that, we will be profiling the top leisure activities in the USA early. Similar to our hunting post, I’ll be looking at search trends and highlighting the best-selling stock images associated with those activities.

When deciding to post a list of the top activities, the metric you choose to rank on is important. I’ve included the fastest growing as well as those with the highest number of participants in this post. (We looked at the top activities based on consumer spending last week.)

Fastest Growing Leisure Activities in the USA

The chart below shows the ten fastest growing leisure activities in the USA, measured by the % increase in participation from 2007 to 2008 (2009 data is not yet available.) These data are from the National Sporting Goods Association.

Fastest Growing Leisure Activities in the USA

Since growth rates by themselves aren’t meaningful, I’ve included a data table which lists the number of participants and the number added from 2007 to 2008. The data are ranked by growth rate and the top activities in terms of participation are highlighted in bold.

Fastest Growing Leisure Activities in the USA

  • Running didn’t surprise me much since it’s so easy to get started.
  • I was a little surprised by the popularity of ‘exercising with equipment’ especially as it is not the same as ‘working out at a club/gym’ as you can see from the table below.
  • Snowboarding grew a lot, but off a small base.
  • Even though baseball may be ‘America’s pastime,’ soccer had more participants.
  • Yoga was bigger and grew faster than baseball or soccer.

Top 10 Leisure Activities Based on Number of Participants in 2008

Top 10 Leisure Activities Based on Number of Participants

  • I didn’t expect bowling or fishing to be that high on the list (probably my own biases at work.)
  • I think age segmentation will be important. For example, I expect the participation in walking to skew older. (I’ll try and address this aspect in the individual sport profiles.)

Stay Tuned (And Share What You’re Interested In)

Over the next few weeks we’ll be publishing activity profiles regularly. I’ll be focusing on the fastest-growing list but will leave out winter sports for now since they won’t be of much use from a shoot planning perspective. (If you’d like to see them anyway, let me know.)

As always, if there’s a specific topic you’d like to see covered, please let me know and I’ll see if we can work it in.

Hunting: Search Trends and Stock Searches

Posted on January 28th, 2010 in Analytics, General, SEO, keywording, lookstat, microstock | 2 Comments »

After my surprising discovery that hunting was the sport with the highest per participant spend in the USA, I decided that a quick snapshot of the activity and the search results for ‘hunting’ on stock photography and image websites was in order.

Google Insights for ‘Hunting’

To get a sense for seasonality, I checked Google Insights for Search for hunting search trends from 2008 to the present.

Google Insights for Hunting

There’s a clear seasonal trend that starts in July and peaks in November. From a stock perspective, 2-3 months is the lead time so April/May is when you want to be uploading hunting related images.

Global Monthly Search Volume (in Millions) for ‘Hunting’ via the Adwords Query Tool

Hunting searches...

As you can see from the chart above, ‘deer hunting’ as a group of two terms (hunting deer & deer hunting) accounts for 2 million monthly searches. Taken together, these two terms are almost three times larger than the search term immediately below them. It’s also instructive to look at the related keywords.

Global Monthly Volume (in Millions) – Related Keywords (via Adwords Query Tool)

It’s useful to look at not just the term itself, but also related terms:

hunting_related_searches

Clearly, ‘rifles’ and ‘outdoors’ are where the action is. One point to note – given that ‘rifle’ is so much more prevalent than ‘rifles’ you may want to consider using the singular form in your title and description. This is because of the fact that those two IPTC fields become the Page Title which is important for SEO.

Show me the Searches

I decided to search a handful of stock photo sites and order the results by downloads (where possible) to see what turned up.

iStockphoto search for ‘hunting’

istock

Fotolia Search for ‘Hunting’

fotolia

Dreamstime Search for ‘Hunting’

dreamstime

I found it fascinating that both Dreamstime & Fotolia had business shots in their top search results. The keywords in question were related to ‘job hunting.’ I checked a couple of other USA based sites and they all had recreational hunting related imagery on their top search results. I would guess that this is a reflection of a cultural difference. Another interesting thing is that the most download image from Fotolia & Dreamstime is the same one (but almost 6 times as many downloads on Fotolia than on Dreamstime.)

Conclusions & Impact on Stock Shoots

  • Hunting, outdoors, rifles, deer – these are your top terms in the USA (for your title & description, ‘rifle’ may be better than ‘rifles’)
  • The growth in search volume begins in June. As a result, you should start uploading in March/April
  • Don’t fixate on the meaning of a term that’s most familiar or you might miss other interpretations e.g. ‘house-hunting’ or ‘job-hunting.’

The IPTC Fields That Matter for Search

Posted on January 26th, 2010 in keywording, lookstat, microstock | 3 Comments »

Which of Title, Description & Keywords matter for search? The short answer is:

“All of them”

Here’s why.

IPTC for Top 4 sites

As you can see from the table above, all of the fields have a role to play in either the Page Title or a site’s search. As a result, so you need to make sure that they all contain the top keywords for your image.

Page Title Tag
This is the sentence that shows in the top of your browser when viewing a web page. If you view the source of a web page, it is the <Title> element

Browser Title Screenshot

The  Page Title Tag is the most important on-page factor from a search crawler’s perspective. As a result, the words in your title tag are crucial for searches on Google and other search engines. Three of the four sites above use the IPTC title for their browser title tag and Shutterstock uses the description. So, regardless of what you think of them, those fields matter a lot. Even though iStock, Shutterstock and Fotolia ignore everything but the keywords in their search results, the fact that Google cares means you need to care.

Oh, one more thing – Dreamstime and Fotolia both have a character limit and truncate inputs. So, the bottom line? You have 50 characters in which to be relevant. Put your most important terms up front.

On-site Search
As you can see from the table, the microstock sites use some or all of the meta data fields in their search algorithms. I think we are all sold on the value of keywords, even for on-site search but Title & Description also have an important role to play. In fact, at Dreamstime, I think an exact match on title gets you the highest placement in search results (even above keywords.) I was able to get searches to return for words that only existed in the IPTC Title.

Talk is Cheap – Show Me the Searches!
All this becomes very clear with a few examples. I did a search on istock for ‘friendship’ and I picked the image highlighted below.

iStock Search Results

The title tag for this image is: “Two Women having Fun Outdoor (XXXL).” If you search google images for “two women fun outdoors”, this image is the second result. (This is a good thing.)

googleimagersults2

If you search iStock for “two women fun outdoors” the image is nowhere to be seen. While it has ‘fun’ in its keywords, it doesn’t have “two women.” And if you search for images on Google with keywords like ‘friendship’ you are not going to find that image.

Conclusions

  • Title, Description & Keywords should all contain relevant terms
  • Your page titles matter more than you think – for on site & for Google search; don’t ignore them
  • You have 50 characters for the title – make them count; put important keywords first

As part of our Back Office Services, we pay attention to these items. You should too.

Which IPTC Fields Matter & Why
The short answer to this is
ALL OF THEM
Here’s why. Each field has a role to play in Google search or on site search. As a result, you can’t ignore any of them.
[table]
Browser Title Tag
Three of the four sites I looked at use the IPTC title for their browser title tag. Shutterstock uses the IPTC description (potentially an interesting unique content SEO strategy.). This automatically means that you need to pay attention to your IPTC Title & Descriptions.
This is because the browser Title Tag <link> is the most important on-page factor from a search crawler’s perspective. As a result, the words in your title tag are crucial for searches on Google and other search engines.
So, even though iStock, Shutterstock and Fotolia ignore everything but the keywords in their search results, the fact that Google cares means you need to care. (Even if you don’t sell direct, Google drives traffic to stock sites.)
On-site Search
As you can see from the table, the sites use some or all of the meta data fields in their search algorithms. After experimenting with searches on Dreamstime, I think the title might actually be the most important field there. I was able to get results returned for images that had the words in the title and not the keywords.
Dreamstime and Fotolia both have a character limit and truncate inputs. So, the bottom line? You have 50 characters in which to be relevant. Put your most
Talk is Cheap – Show Me the Searches
I did a search on istock for ‘friendship’ and I picked the image highlighted below.
The title tag for this image is: “Two Women having Fun Outdoor”
If you search google images for “two women fun”, this image is the 2nd result. That is good.
If you search istock for “two women fun” the image is nowhere to be seen. While it has ‘fun’ in its keywords, it doesn’t have “two women.”
Conclusion
When keywording your images, you need to pay attention to all of the IPTC fields and you should make sure your most relevant search terms appear in your title, description and keyword. As part of our Back Office services, we make sure that we pay attention to not just microstock site performance but also SEO benefits. You should do the same

Weddings & Wedding Photographers – Search and Image Stats & Insights

Posted on December 16th, 2009 in General, SEO, keywording, lookstat, stats | 9 Comments »

I was chatting with the CEO of Nearlyweds.com, a Seattle startup that provides wedding web sites for newly engaged couples and he mentioned to me that peak wedding planning season is January – May. This is because there are a ton of engagements around New Year’s and another small spike around Valentine’s Day. I decided to dig around to see if I could come up with any useful insights for wedding photographers since they would be selected in the planning phases. While the data and the conclusions may be well known to pro wedding photographers and stock shooters, I felt they were worth sharing.

Wedding Photographers – Peak Searches Occur In January

Search Trend Data for 'Wedding Photographer'

The peak of search volume for ‘wedding photographers’ occurs in January as you can see from the Google Insight chart above. The top keywords associated with ‘wedding photographers are:

Top Search Terms Related to ‘Wedding Photographer’

Top Search Terms for Wedding Photographers

If you are a wedding photographer and you don’t yet have an SEO-friendly page that talks about the keyword terms above, you should create one immediately. Write a blog post, put up a simple about page – it doesn’t matter how simple it is, something is better than nothing.

Dresses & Cakes Rule when it comes to Image data

In addition to looking at data on ‘wedding photographers,’ I also looked at search & image trends around ‘wedding’. The main thing that jumped out at me was the importance of dresses & cakes.

Top Search Terms for 'Wedding'

Searches for wedding dresses and wedding cakes account for 47% and 33% of the top 10 searches respectively. I’m assuming that wedding photographers know this already. It’s probably worth taking into account from a microstock perspective as well.

2009 Image Search Data for ‘Wedding’

Wedding Searches in 2009

As you can see, in 2009 searches for images related to ‘wedding’ have a spike in January and then climb steadily until July. From a microstock perspective, it’s probably time to start thinking about and planning your wedding-themed shoots.

Brides are More Important than Grooms (much more important.)

Bride vs. Groom

I think we all knew this, but the spread in search volume is impressive. The Google Insights data shows roughly 5.5x more searches for brides than grooms. I’m not married, but I’m sure that this search data can be corroborated from primary sources…

Conclusions & Microstock Implications

  • Wedding Photographers – get an SEO-friendly page online ASAP. No flash, use text, use the keywords shown above and do it now!
  • Brides, Dresses, Cakes are the most searched for images
  • Jan-July is the time to be uploading your microstock images (I’ll post later on microstock data related to weddings)