John Andrews is a Competitive Webmaster and Search Engine Optimization Consultant in Seattle, Washington. This is John Andrews blog on issues of interest to the SEO community and competitive webmasters. Want to know more?

johnon.com  Competitive Webmastering & SEO
September 17th, 2006 by john andrews

Where are the Public Relations Firms?

Michael Gray on Long Island notes that a Google search for “spinach” produces not one crafted public relations effort, despite almost a week of breaking news about e-coli contaminations of spinach, advisories to destroy purchased bagged spinach, and concern about the image of organic foods and farmers following this public health threat. A “spinach” query produces ads for buying spinach, ads for news on the spinach problem which don’t actually go to news about the spinach problem, and an ad from Dole for “the latest on packaged spinach” which, sadly, also doesn’t go directly to the proper landing page but the home page, where a box that promises information on “Dole bagged spinach” competes with a Flash animation (with music) or the goodness of vegetables and fruits, and a talking , animated Curious George. Michael does a good job of explaining his findings on ThreadWatch, the search marketing blog.

Nasty Spinach

I would add that there is not one competitor ad either. I would like to see “Afraid of Spinach? Try Kale” from the Kale Marketers Cooperative, or perhaps “Thought Organic was Clean? Think Again.” from the GMO industry. Why not? With all those searches for “spinach” following the news, why not utilize the opportunity for public education?

As of today, the one organic farm most damaged by the early press coverage, states on it’s web site that not only has nothing from their farm been identified as contaminated, but that every instance of contamination checked by the FDA so far has been non-organic spinach:

At this point in the investigation, all of the manufacturing codes taken from spinach packaging retained by patients are from packages of conventional (non-organic) spinach.

Wow. You’d think they’d spend a few bucks on ads like “Contaminated spinach not organic” or something.

Maybe the California Raisin people could buy ads for “Raisin’s have more iron than Spinach“, because some portion of spinach lovers erroneously attribute iron to spinach (it has some, but not really all that much). Or how about “Dirty Spinach? It’s probably from Mexico” from the Minute Men Civil Defense Corps. They would all work.

But no, nobody is minding the business. Except Google, of course. Correct landing page or not, erroneous message or not, mis-placed advertising message or simply sloppy keyword selection, it doesn’t matter. The advertiser gets charged, and Google gets paid. Per click.
Topical Tags:
★★ Click to Share!    Digg this     Create a del.icio.us Bookmark     Add to Newsvine

Competitive Webmaster

Wonder how to be more competitive at some aspect of the web? Submit your thoughts.

SEO Secret

Not Post Secret

Click HERE



about


John Andrews is a mobile web professional and competitive search engine optimzer (SEO). He's been quietly earning top rank for websites since 1997. About John

navigation

blogroll

categories

comments policy

archives

credits

Recent Posts: ★ Ted Leonsis’ Crazy Ideas, Revisited ★ Affiliate Summit Las Vegas - Free Pass ★ Affiliate Link Bashing and The Self-defeating Marketing community ★ Canon 5D Mark II in the hands of..imagers? ★ Canon 5D Mark II DigitalSLR w/HD Video ★ SEOs Do Your Homework ★ It’s Good Content, but is it “real”? Do you care? ★ Yahoo GLUE Mashup ★ “Just Make Good Content” is Bullsh*t ★ Reminder: Set Your Clocks and Check Your SSL Certificates ★ Google has Priorities, just like my 8 year old ★ Google’s Brand Arrogance & Typo Domains Revisited ★ It seems EVERYONE is stuffing your local Flash storage… ★ Reputation Management Domains : SEO Online Reputation Web sites ★ Live Blogging T.R.A.F.F.I.C. East, New York ★ Canon 5DMkII debuts with 1080p pro video ★ New York Times trashes AOL Brand ★ Hacking the Nike+ iPod sensor interface ★ Google’s Figured Out Better Ways to Know About You ★ Breeding Bad Domain Names ★ Google Chrome Bait ‘n Switch? ★ Google Chrome and Your Privacy ★ I’m Going to Work for Google ★ What is Google Hiding? 403 Forbidden: “your query looks similar to automated requests” ★ The Platform is Not the Message, Mark Cuban. 

Subscribe

☆ about

John Andrews is a mobile web professional and competitive search engine optimzer (SEO). He's been quietly earning top rank for websites since 1997. About John

☆ navigation

  • John Andrews and Competitive Webmastering
  • E-mail Contact Form
  • What does Creativity have to do with SEO?
  • How to Kill Someone Else's AdSense Account: 10 Steps
  • Invitation to Twitter Followers
  • ...unrelated: another good movie "Clean" with Maggie Cheung
  • ...unrelated: My Hundred Dollar Mouse
  • Competitive Thinking
  • Free SEO for NYPHP PHP Talk Members
  • Smart People
  • Disclosure Statement
  • Google Sponsored SPAM
  • Blog Post ideas
  • X-Cart SEO: How to SEO the X Cart Shopping Cart
  • IncrediBill.blogspot.com
  • the nastiest bloke in seo
  • Seattle Domainers Conference
  • Import large file into MySQL : use SOURCE command
  • Vanetine's Day Gift Ideas: Chocolate Fragrance!
  • ☆ blogroll

  • Bellingham SEO
  • Hans Cave Diving in Mexico
  • Healthcare Search Marketing
  • John Andrews
  • John Andrews SEO
  • Mixminion
  • PrivateBloggingWiki
  • Privoxy
  • SEO Quiz
  • SMX Search Marketing Expo
  • T.R.A.F.F.I.C. East 2007
  • TOR
  • ☆ categories

    Competition (37)
    Competitive Intelligence (14)
    Competitive Webmastering (412)
    Webmasters to Watch (4)
    domainers (47)
    Oprah (1)
    photography (1)
    Privacy (10)
    Public Relations (164)
    SEO (304)
    Client vs. SEO (2)
    Link Building (2)
    Search Engines vs. SEO (1)
    SEO SECRETS (9)
    SEO vs. SEO (1)
    ThreadWatch Watching (5)
    Silliness (22)
    society (7)
    Uncategorized (21)

    ☆ archives

  • December 2008
  • November 2008
  • October 2008
  • September 2008
  • August 2008
  • July 2008
  • June 2008
  • May 2008
  • April 2008
  • March 2008
  • February 2008
  • January 2008
  • December 2007
  • November 2007
  • October 2007
  • September 2007
  • August 2007
  • July 2007
  • June 2007
  • May 2007
  • April 2007
  • March 2007
  • February 2007
  • January 2007
  • December 2006
  • November 2006
  • October 2006
  • September 2006
  • August 2006
  • July 2006