Archive for June, 2009

Grow an Active Network

Friday, June 26th, 2009

by Jonathan Marshall

It’s not necessarily the number, but more about what you can do with it. This clearly applies to more than just social media. It doesn’t matter if you drive 10000 customers come to your store if no one buys anything. Who cares how many people follow you on Twitter if you can’t get them to engage with you. How do you grow an active network? It Starts With Being Helpful, and this will get you far in the social networks. If you can insert yourself, or point out the kinds of people who you know can help others, that’s a great way to start cultivating an active network. We all respond well to someone who is quick to help, it’s natural. These are all things I have learned and have worked well in all of my social communities:

Be There

Both on and offline, the person who gets the most out of a network is the person who is actively tapping it. You might not always be able to contribute, but how often can you be absent from a network before it no longer “remembers” you?

Visit with your network and contribute on a regular basis. Understand the difference between “contributing” and “leaving a message.”

Touch As Many as Possible

One way to keep a network vibrant and response is to touch everyone you can. Talk to them. Absorb some of what they’re working on or inquire about their passions. The more you can contribute to others, the more likely you will be building reciprocal relationships. This is the whole point of social networks in the first place.

Talk About Them

If you’re communicating in some kind of “one to many” way with your network, make it peppered with stories about them. In our Trust Agents community, Julien and I look for what our group members have shared on their own Facebook networks, and we pull in the occasional related piece. Because we’re asking people to participate in our community, we make sure to keep the chairs turned in so that we interact instead of pontificate and preach from the pulpit.

Deliver Value Back

Try to maintain a 1:1 contribution ratio. Every time you ask your network for something, try and give something back in return. The more you can leverage the contributions of your network such that they serve you and return a value, the better things work. This takes time and sometimes your feedback and contributions might not seem as helpful as the responses you have received from your network, but you still need to contribute regardless. Can you deliver value back for the value you asked?

Active Networks are Your Capital

You probably do know the difference between being connected to a network of sorts versus participating in an active network of like-minded people who share disparate but compatible goals. In the first case, you feel great until you need something. In the second case, you know that people have your back and that you can deliver as much help as possible until the time when you, yourself, might have to call on the network. Invest and you’ll see a return. Start an account without much interest and just like anything else – you’ll get back only what you put in.

Quick and Easy SEO 101

Thursday, June 25th, 2009

by Jonathan Marshall

In an effort to help online marketers increase their understanding of search engine marketing, I want to highlight some fundamental areas. These are the core concepts surrounding search engine marketing.

Content
Starting off with arguably the most important part of SEO. If you are creating a website or working on a site you’ve already created, the content is one of the crucial factors for successful search engine marketing. The pages you create should provide valuable information that references very specific terms and concepts that are specific to your website.

Titles and Meta Tags
In the early days of search engine optimization, marketers thought that meta-tags were the primary way to attract search engine traffic. Meta-tags are HTML tags that help describe the document they are located within. Today, while the meta-tags are important, we know that search engines also look at a site’s content, internal links, and link popularity.

Keyword Market Analysis
A Keyword Market is the total number of unique searches on the Internet that are relevant to your website. A Keyword Market is defined by the top-level or root keyword that is generally most relevant to your business. Top-level keywords may contain thousands of vertical keyword markets. Market analysis also helps determine if your key words are shared by other competitors, and if they are, what you can do to differentiate yourself from them.

Link Popularity
The number of outside websites that link to your website is another contributing factor that help search engines calculate your relevancy for a specific search term. Link popularity and gaining new links from outside websites to your website are two determining factors that can improve search engine rankings.

Link Structure
As the Internet has become more popular, websites have turned to new technologies like dynamic HTML, Flash and well designed graphics to improve the user experience. Good navigation through your website is key. Search engines use the links within your website to crawl and index the pages those links direct the user to.

Complex Sites and URL’s
As websites have grown larger and more complex, companies have begun using dynamic publishing systems to help them manage sites that contain hundreds or thousands of web pages. Popular programs by companies like Microsoft turn a website into a database driven application capable of publishing and managing large amounts of content.

Link Submissions
These search engines and directories provide a free submissions page where you can submit your website and a few pages of your website to be included in their results. Make sure that you read the search engine’s submission guidelines and not submit your website unnecessarily or excessively, because it can be removed completely for a number of things listed in the guidelines.

All of these concepts are taught in San Diego seo training seminars by SEO experts.

Search Overload Syndrome – Are you keeping pace with today’s Search?

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009

by Jonathan Marshall

Chris Crum of WebProNews wrote an interesting article about the introduction of Microsoft’s search engine Bing and the role it will play in SEO Strategies alongside Facebook and Twitter. Search is changing, and Chris describes this new search environment today. The idea behind Bing’s category search is delivering more specific search results so people can get exactly what they want. Bing’s TV spots show conversations between people that are overloaded from bad search results, and even in every-day conversations – the dialogue represents the horrors of poor search results. The people have “search overload syndrome,” and display the ridiculous process that many of us go through every day when trying to track down specific information online.

The More Things Change…

Google is traditionally the main area of focus when it comes to search engine optimization. With the search engine giant so far ahead of the game in terms of search market share, it’s not hard to understand why.

Search is changing though, and there are always new elements coming into play. Since social media has come into its own, more opportunities and questions have come along with it. Now Microsoft is going for Google’s throat with a new search engine and an aggressive marketing campaign. What this means for the future of search market share is yet to be determined, but there’s no denying Bing is capturing some attention, and that means there are people searching with it. Altered your SEO strategy for Bing? Tell us why.

SEO for Bing

Microsoft’s stance on search engine optimization really doesn’t appear to be all that different from Google’s. You’re not going to get the same results on both Google and Bing in many cases, but that is after all why the two can co-exist. The real difference is in how the results are presented, and not as much in how the two determine quality and relevancy.

How To Get More From Your E-Marketing Campaigns

Bing and Google have separate algorithms, but both like quality, relevant links and good content, as opposed to deception and spam. Bing in fact, hasn’t really changed much (from Live Search) in terms of crawling.

“There have been no major changes to the MSNBot crawler during the upgrade to Bing,” Microsoft says in a Bing white paper for webmasters (pdf). “However, the Bing team is continuously refining and improving our crawling and indexing abilities. Note that the bot name hasn’t changed. It will still show up in the web server access logs as MSNBog.”

Sidenote: Webmasters will want to acknowledge that Microsoft has increased the size limit of sitemaps from 10,000 URLs to 50,000. Google is also now supporting up to 50,000 “child sitemaps” of sitemaps index files.

Like I was saying, the biggest difference between the two search engines is in the presentation. Bing of course separates (some) results into categories. This has worried some search marketers, but Microsoft says good SEO will work just as well with this set up. Bing also has the explore pane (navigational menu on the left-hand side of search results), which corresponds with the categories in the SERPs. In some ways, this is similar to Google’s recent addition of “search options.”

I discussed what Google’s search options would mean for SEO here. Basically, I just broke it down section by section, and you could do the same thing with Bing I think. Look at the keyword phrases you want to rank for, and see how Bing breaks it up. Let’s say “cell phones” for example. Bing gives you categories like shopping, brands, buying guide, providers, accessories, images, videos, and local.

This tells me that you want to play up the appropriate categories on your site, so that it shows up in the relevant categories on Bing. If you sell accessories, place emphasize that, and you’ll probably have a better shot ending up in that category. With Bing, it’s not about getting to the top of the SERP. It’s about getting to the top of the right part of the SERP. I’ll let you in on a little secret. Having quality and relevant (to that part of the SERP) content is the best thing you can do. Incidentally, this will probably help your cause in Google (and other search engines) at the same time.

“Ultimately, SEO is still SEO. Regardless of what kind of San Diego SEO consultation you have. Bing doesn’t change that. Bing’s new user interface design simply adds new opportunities to searchers to find what the information they want more quickly and easily, and that benefits webmasters who have taken the time to work on the quality of their content and website design,” says Microsoft.

Curious About What Bing Looks for in Links?

Rick DeJarnette of Bing Webmaster Center recently posted a pair of blog posts looking at what makes some links good and some bad. You may find some of these things familiar:

- “If you don’t feel you can endorse the quality of the content at another site, you shouldn’t be linking to them.”

- Don’t seek links from sites whose content isn’t worthy of your endorsement.

- Links to and from your site should be relevant to your site (or at least the page you’re linking from/to)

- Focus on quality, not quantity. Few highly relevant links are better than a bunch of crap links

- Avoid “bad neighborhoods” like dedicated domains or IP ranges that do nothing but set up meaningless link exchanges.

- Avoid hidden text

What changes have you made to your SEO practices as a result of Bing’s release? Twitter? Facebook?

The connection between buzz, links and SEO

Monday, June 22nd, 2009

by Jonathan Marshall

Julia Batten from ClickZ wrote a great article this morning about generating buzz in social communities among your network, and then leveraging that buzz to help your link building and better your SEO efforts. When people create quality content that increases brand recognition, that is what keeps people coming back and eventually circulating your content for you. If it is interesting, people will care, and that is the long and short of it. That being said, the relationship between buzz, links and SEO is revealed:

At Search Engine Strategies Toronto, the big buzz was generating buzz and gaining a social media presence — ultimately, how to get people talking about your brand online.

Lots of discussion centered on the importance of buzz and how to build it, but more insight is always needed about how to leverage buzz for your SEO (define) efforts. How do you build buzz, use it to build link authority, and ultimately improve your search engine rankings?

Let’s explore how buzz and SEO are related.

We’ll start with the basics: the importance of external links for search rankings.

If Google sees a link to your site as a sort of “vote” for your site, and the Web site with the most votes gets to the top of the search engine results, then all other things equal, the more links you have, the better, right?

Well, not exactly. Remember, the authority and relevance of your links are equally as important, if not more so, than the number of them. So all other things equal, the more authoritative, relevant links you have, the better your chances of being visible in the search engines for your keywords.

But to get authoritative relevant links — and lots of them — you need buzz. You need to get people excited enough about your brand, product, Web site, or content to want to share it, actively, with others. And when it comes to online, what better way to generate buzz (and links!) than through the plethora of social networks and user-generated content sites?

When someone submits, shares, or promotes your content on one of these sites, they typically include a keyword-rich link to your content. As this content gets shared over and over, your site generates more inbound links. Therefore, your link authority increases over time, along with (hopefully) your organic search engine rankings.

And there you have it — the relationship between buzz, links, and SEO. If you want a more in-depth and hands-on explanation of how to gain more online exposure for your business, a San Diego SEO training seminar is what will get you there.

Now that you understand the potential benefit, it’s time to get out there and do it:

* Get “dug” (on Digg)

* Get “upvoted” (on Reddit)

* Get “propelled” to the first page (on Propeller)

* Get bookmarked (on Delicious or Furl)

* Be “tweeted” and “retweeted” (on Twitter)

* Be blogged about (on any number of blogs)

* Be “stumbled upon” (on StumbleUpon)

* Gain “fans” (on Facebook)

How do you do all that? Create amazing content.

Amazing content, designed with your target audience in mind, such as tools, video, stories, articles, tips, and guides, will naturally win you recognition on social networks, because you’ll be offering something of value that people will want to spread the word about.

But if you build amazing content that is super relevant to your target, and you still lack pick-up on social media sites, you might need to help things along.

Here are five quick and easy tips to gain online buzz (and links).

Make Sharing Easy

Include “AddThis” or “Share This” or other social media button links to your Web site content, so people can share content quickly and easily throughout their various networks.

Add an RSS feed to your site so people can opt-in to get content pushed out to them versus having to come back to your site all the time to find out what’s new.

Keep It Fresh

No one will share a site that was built in 2007 and hasn’t been updated since. Keep your content fresh, give people something new to talk about, and people will keep giving you “link love.”

Search engines like fresh content, and so do social network users.

Submit, Don’t Spam

You can submit your own content, but make sure to always follow the rules. Make sure your submission is done manually versus through mass auto-submitter software. Tag your content appropriately, following the suggested structure and user guidelines. Above all else, avoid anything sneaky — people will sniff you out.

Be an Active Participant

If you want people to take your submissions seriously, you need to build a reputation in these networks. Just like on eBay where sellers build a rep, and buyers make decisions based on this rep, you need to become a “household” name on the network. Complete your profile and make a name for yourself so that people trust what you have to say.

Don’t just submit your own stuff. Share other sites and useful resources. You’ll appear more credible and less biased. And don’t just submit — vote, comment, and share other’s content as well.

Become a Power User

Don’t make an appearance every once in a while. Be a constant presence on these sites. The amount of time and energy you invest will directly correlate with what you get back.

Build your list of friends or followers as big as you can. The bigger your network, the more chance someone will hear what you have to say and share it.

And the best way to build a large network is by — you guessed it — sharing amazing content!

By employing these tips, hopefully you’ll be well on your way to gaining increased inbound links to your Web site, which in turn, stands to improve your search engine ranking potential.