The search term 'mortgage calculator' was queried 74,000 times, accounting for 11% of all searches made for the sector.
The greenlight sector
REPORT PRODUCT FOCUS Borrowing Savings & Investments Banking
An exclusive snapshot of the online Search landscape
MAR 2016
IGNITE DIGITAL GROWTH
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INTRODUCTION
to Sector Reports At Greenlight, we pride ourselves on being thought leaders within the Search industry. Utilising our unique data aggregation and visualisation platform, OneHydra, we are able to track, record and analyse consumer search behaviour in any given market vertical, which in turn leads to the creation of our industry renowned Sector Reports. Our reports have been providing brands with comprehensive insights into the Search industry for ten years now. Each report gives an indication of the size of the potential online audience based on a wide range of keywords and examines the most visible websites and advertisers based on their share of visibility in the Natural Search listings on Google Australia. We hope you enjoy reading this report and should you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact us at
[email protected].
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Report Overview Executive Summary This report profiles search behaviour for the online Retail Banking sector. It analyses which websites, advertisers and brands were most visible in the Google Australia Natural Search listings, when consumers searched for Retail Banking-related terms. In our analysis we established that:
In March, 666,120 searches were made by consumers searching for Retail Banking-related terms on Google Australia.
Queries for borrowing keywords accounted for 86% of all searches made for the sector.
The search term 'mortgage calculator' was queried 74,000 times, accounting for 11% of all searches made for the sector.
nab.com.au was the most visible website in the Natural Search listings, achieving a 61% share of voice.
Percentage breakdown of searches made for each subsector:
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March Overview In March 2016, 666,120 searches were made for Retail Banking-related terms. The graphs below show a breakdown of the number of searches made for each of the subsectors analysed in this report, as well as an overview of the total number of searches made for the online Retail Banking market in the past 12 months. Number of searches by subsector At a glance In March, 666,120 searches were made for retail banking keywords. Searches for borrowing keywords were most popular, accounting for 86% of all searches made for the sector.
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Natural Search Retail Banking: Overall 666,120 searches In March 2016, 666,120 searches were made by consumers searching for Retail Banking-related keywords. The league table below shows which websites were most visible in the Natural Search listings on Google Australia for the 474 keywords analysed. Top 10 search terms: Overview: In March, the keyword ‘mortgage calculator’ was queried 74,000 times, accounting for 11% of all searches made for Retail Banking-related keywords. nab.com.au was the most visible website, achieving a 61% share of voice through ranking for 348 keywords, including the search terms ‘loan calculator’ and ‘loan repayment calculator’.
The 20 most visible websites:
commbank.com.au attained a 52% share of voice through ranking for 332 keywords, including the search terms ‘personal loan’ and ‘loan’.
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Retail Banking: Banking 37,430 searches In March 2016, 37,430 searches were made by consumers searching for banking-related keywords. The league table below shows which websites were most visible in the Natural Search listings on Google Australia for the 47 keywords analysed. Top 10 search terms: Overview: In March, the keyword ‘internet banking’ was queried 8,100 times, accounting for 22% of all searches made for Banking-related keywords. commbank.com.au was the most visible website, achieving a 72% share of voice through ranking for 41 keywords, including the search terms ‘overdraft’ and ‘bank statement’. nab.com.au attained a 63% share of
The 20 most visible websites:
voice through ranking for 35 keywords, including the search terms ‘internet banking’ and ‘free bank account’.
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Natural Search Retail Banking: Borrowing 572,570 searches In March 2016, 572,570 searches were made by consumers searching for borrowing-related keywords. The league table below shows which websites were most visible in the Natural Search listings on Google Australia for the 325 keywords analysed. Top 10 search terms: Overview: In March, the keyword ‘mortgage calculator’ was queried 74,000 times, accounting for 13% of all searches made for Borrowing-related keywords. nab.com.au was the most visible website, achieving a 63% share of voice through ranking for 239 keywords, including the search terms ‘loan calculator’ and ‘loan repayment calculator’.
The 20 most visible websites:
westpac.com.au attained a 55% share of voice through ranking for 235 keywords, including the search terms ‘mortgage repayments’ and ‘mortgage repayments calculator’.
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Retail Banking: Savings & Investments 56,120 searches In March 2016, 56,120 searches were made by consumers searching for savings & investments-related keywords. The league table below shows which websites were most visible in the Natural Search listings on Google Australia for the 102 keywords analysed. Top 10 search terms: Overview: In March, the keyword ‘high interest savings account’ was queried 5,400 times, accounting for 10% of all searches made for Savings & Investments-related keywords. infochoice.com.au was the most visible website, achieving a 66% share of voice through ranking for 74 keywords, including the search terms ‘high interest savings account’ and ‘best savings account’.
The 20 most visible websites:
canstar.com.au attained a 54% share of voice through ranking for 76 keywords, including the search terms ‘best interest rates’ and ‘savings account comparison’.
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ARTICLE
THE MOBILE MAJORITY BEA PATMAN, HEAD OF SEO
SEO loves its tropes; if we’re not insisting for the thousandth time that ‘content is king’, we’re predicting that next year really will be ‘the year of mobile’. We’ve become so accustomed to heralding in each new year with this particular forecast that it feels a bit strange to be calling an end to the tradition. But do so I must, because here’s the thing – I think The Year of Mobile just happened. Retail Banking Sector Report
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The most visible websites and advertisers on Google Australia
Perhaps the biggest piece of evidence for this is
I think that this consistent focus on mobile experience
‘Mobilegeddon’; the delightfully melodramatic
has been responsible for stimulating a somewhat
nickname given to Google’s mobile-friendly update
subtler transition in the way that brands treat their
in April 2015. It’s rare that industry news makes
mobile propositions, too. For the past few years we’ve
mainstream headlines but this update was widely
been in what some are calling a ‘land grab’ phase,
covered in the press – not least because of the headline-
which has seen brands rush to stake a position in front
friendly epithet, but also because it was a rare instance
of a mobile audience, often compromising on quality in
in which the update was announced in advance by
favour of getting to market faster. This was the era of
Google. The apocalyptic name belied what was actually
clunky mobile sites, confusing redirects, inconsistent
a fairly low-key initial impact, but more than anything
functionality and lots of strange and unhelpful
this update marked the beginning of a major sea change
apps – all contributing to a poor user experience on
in the significance of mobile performance to organic
mobile. 2015 was the first time that we really began
search success.
to see brands recognising that mobile was actually
There’s no great mystery behind the intense focus that Google placed on mobile performance in 2015. The
an incredibly fertile ground in which to develop meaningful, enhanced experiences for their customers.
number of searches made on mobile devices surpassed
These kind of experiences range from the simple,
that of desktops worldwide, meaning that mobile
such as creating adaptive or responsive mobile-first
users became the majority that brands should seek to
websites, to ambitious projects such as the use of
satisfy. One of the more interesting consequences of
iBeacons at airports to facilitate a smooth, mobile-
this transition has been an almost unprecedented level
only journey from ticket purchase to check-in. Beacon
of transparency from Google about what best practice
technology is a particularly interesting field of
should look like. It provides a mobile-friendly testing
opportunity for brands that have a physical touchpoint
tool with which webmasters can assess their pages
with their customers, because of its ability to drive
against specific design criteria, as well as a dedicated
offline behaviours at highly specific locations and
mobile test within the PageSpeed Insights tool. In
moments in time. If you were a wine producer, for
October 2015, Google announced support for the
example, you might be able to use a supermarket’s
Accelerated Mobile Pages project (AMP) – a project
beacon technology to promote an offer on your
which utilises existing web technologies within a new
products via a push notification at the exact moment a
open source framework, designed to help brands create
potential customer was browsing the aisle.
much lighter webpages. AMP enables sites to observe best practice by managing the size, order and rendering of page elements, making it much simpler to adhere to Google’s PageSpeed guidelines.
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Developments in Mobile and App Search Optimisation
Overcoming the App Threshold
to include all Android apps by 2014 and then to include
This end of the mobile experience spectrum is still highly theoretical, however, because of the heavy onus on customers to facilitate this kind of communication – most commonly by engaging with an app. Whilst modern consumers are increasingly comfortable with sharing personal data if there is a reasonable value exchange
Chrome on iOS, then finally Safari, in 2015. The early Android results only turned up apps already installed on the device, but now relevant non-installed app results are returned too. This part is key – it’s here that apps can overcome the app threshold by getting in front of a new audience and ultimately drive brand engagement.
on offer, asking them to engage with an app to do so is
Customer engagement isn’t the only incentive for
still a tall order. Elle magazine’s Shop Now offering is
developing and optimising apps. In April 2015, Google
an excellent example of how this technology can work
stated that an indexed app counts as a ranking factor
successfully, with push notifications to opted-in users
for a brand’s overall performance, saying “if your app
having driven some half a million store visits in 2015.
is indexed, Google will use the content within your app
The value exchange is key though, because brands must
as a signal in ranking, not just your web content.” A
overcome a downward trend in app engagement if they
further ranking boost for apps using the Google App
are to succeed in garnering interactions.
Indexing API was announced in September 2015, as the API allows Google to gather additional insights into how
A Nielsen study from 2015 illustrates the app “threshold” that consumers have reached in recent years. Whilst the average time spent using apps per person per month (hh:mm) continues to increase year on year, the number of apps consumers are actually engaging with is in decline. This data might come as something of a surprise to anyone who’s been following
your app is being engaged with. And if all that wasn’t incentive enough to make app optimisation a priority, 2015 also saw advancements for Google Now on Tap and Apple’s Spotlight Search that enable both to surface deep content from installed apps – provided, of course, that it’s properly optimised.
industry news over the past year; why has there been
I talked earlier about the way in which mobile experience
so much buzz about app optimisation and indexation
has taken a big step beyond the wild west ‘land grab’ it
if demand is actually waning? Well, I believe that the
had been when brands first started rushing to market
advances Google’s made in app indexing during 2015
with mobile sites, and I believe that the steps that search
are precisely what’s required in order to overcome this
engines are taking to index app content are making a
threshold. We’ll begin to see this trend reverse as new
significant contribution to this. The more content that
or forgotten apps become significantly easier to surface
can be indexed, the broader and richer a consumer’s
and interact with.
online experience can be and the more potential there is
At this stage it’s worth including a whistle-stop summary of how app indexing has evolved since it was introduced in 2013. Initially only available to a small selection of
for delivering real life value. The Year of Mobile might not have been the futuristic phenomenon many were expecting, but it certainly laid exciting foundations.
Android apps when it launched, app indexing expanded
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T: +61 2 8317 6651
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Case study / SEM
Rapha The Client Rapha is a global sportswear and lifestyle brand focused on road bicycle racing, clothing and accessories.
The Objectives Reduce cost-per-clicks (CPCs) Reduce cost-per-actions (CPAs) Improve conversion rates (CVR) Improve return on ad spend (ROAS)
The Strategy New ad copy and sitelinks were created using local knowledge to optimise campaign performance This involved geotargeting and adapting campaigns based on user behaviour, as well as updating phrase matches to meet local habits. We revised keyword groupings and used unique, effective copy in line with Rapha’s brand guidelines, with the aim of improving CTR and increasing qualified traffic. We updated ad copies and promotions to only show which were most relevant and further promoted best performing categories to create a tailored campaign across a large market.
THE RESULTS THREE MONTHS AFTER TAKING ON THE ACCOUNT, GREENLIGHT HAVE SUCCESSFULLY ACHIEVED SOME GREAT YEAR- ON -YEAR RESULTS:
About this report How this report was created
Disclaimer:
Greenlight’s Research & Insights team collected 474 Retail Banking-related terms queried by online consumers. The keyword set was then uploaded to Greenlight’s OneHydra platform, which collected volumes for the associated keywords. OneHydra then analysed which websites and advertisers appeared for the keywords analysed and from there, ranked websites and advertisers based on their share of visibility in the Natural Search listings space on Google Australia.
The information provided in this report is for information only and should not be relied upon to enter into any business transaction or to make any commercial decision. Whilst Greenlight has made every effort to ensure the accuracy of this report, Greenlight cannot accept any liability for any error or inaccuracy found within this document and no warranty is provided regarding its completeness or its suitability for any purpose. The content of the report is the copyright of Greenlight Digital Limited. The reader may use and circulate the report within its own business organisation. However, it is not permitted to exploit, distribute, sell or otherwise make use of the report for commercial gain. It is permitted to reproduce extracts of the report for public interest, provided that the publisher credits Greenlight as the source of the work.
All data displayed in this report is based on a wide range of keywords, and therefore aims to provide readers with a generic overview of the online Retail Banking sector in March 2016. Due to targeting or language settings, occasionally foreign domains may appear across natural and paid search results. These domains appear in our reports just as they would for a search containing the related keywords.
Bespoke Sector Reports
Get in touch
If you can’t find a report which analyses the online industry you are interested in or if you want to analyse a specific keyword set, get in touch and find out more about Greenlight’s bespoke reports. Greenlight currently creates bespoke reports for a wide range of online brands, providing Marketing teams with the insights they need to make informed decisions about their online strategies in Australia and abroad.
Contact Owen Browne Business Development Director (AU) T: +61 2 8317 6651 Email:
[email protected]
Download free reports Greenlight’s Research & Insights team produce Sector Reports analysing 8 different online industries. To view and download all FREE reports, visit
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