As the United States struggles to deal with the coronavirus pandemic, it goes without saying that it is topic 1, 2, and 3 in the country.
According to Google Trends, on March 21 people were ten times more likely to search for coronavirus terms than the usually dominant Trump-related terms. You can see an analysis of coronavirus-related searches on Google here.
Social media analytics firm Sprinklr saw similar behavior on social media. On March 11,Sprinklr observed a record 20 million mentions of the coronavirus on social media. To put that into context there were 2 million mentions of Donald Trump on that same day.
Given how coronavirus is dominating our national conversation and the fact so many people are quarantined at home, I wanted to see how the coronavirus was impacting the website traffic of our Brick Factory clients. After reviewing data for over fifty sites, traffic patterns fell into two general categories:
Very few sites saw their traffic unaffected by the coronavirus. Traffic either went up a lot or down a lot.
Organizations who have nothing to do with coronavirus
For clients that have nothing to do with coronavirus, we have generally seen drops in traffic of between 20-40% over the last week. Organic and paid search are generally the primary source of traffic for these sites. It tracks that a drop in interest in anything except the coronavirus is going to lead to a drop in traffic from search.
Following are examples of drops we have seen for a few of the sites we manage:
Organizations with some relationship to coronavirus
We don’t really work with any clients that are on the front lines of the fight against the coronavirus. However we do have some clients that are tangentially involved or can provide a diversion. These clients have seen their traffic increase.
What should organizations do?
I think the path forward for organizations is pretty straightforward.
If you have coronavirus-related information that is of value or you can help people take their mind of the crisis, put that content front and center.
If your organization has nothing to do with the coronavirus, you need to keep plugging away with the understanding that your traffic is going to be lower for a while. You should trust that the traffic will come back once some level of normalcy is restored.
Hopefully this will happen sooner than later.
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