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August 29, 2008

Why Blogs are Important to Internet Marketing

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Blogging are widespread now in the internet and almost everyone who is online owns a blog. The power of internet is undeniably strong and it’s taking everyone to go online. Many things have been successful brought about by the internet and many ideas were created out of its features. The internet is evolving and so is the blogging phenomenon. The power of blogs that allows millions of people to easily publish their ideas also take more and more companies to enter in the world of blogging.

Big and small companies have realized the benefits of blogging to their businesses. Whatever goals they may have, most of them rely to making blogs. Small businesses often struggle to get visitors and in reaching people interested in their field of business. Starting a blog is a good start of making your product well-known to the consuming public.

Blogs may be classified according to its content or to the purpose of a blogger why he started a blog. They can be called as personal blogs, which refer to blogs that talks about the blogger himself. More than that, as people realize they can do more with blogs, it can also be classified as photoblogs, moblogs, vblogs, podcast blogs and business blogs. But whatever your blog is classified, more importantly, your goals are achieved.

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August 28, 2008

More Web Site Traffic - How To Be On Top Of The Search Engines To Get More Traffic

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Research shows that users entering a particular search term into a search engine look at the first few pages before they decide to choose the best among the ones they see. So of course you have to design a site that is rich in content and a good layout works wonders too but what is important is getting it right up there with the high players and I am going to give you some tricks that these sites employ to get there by generating more website traffic.

Article Marketing:


Article Marketing is the best way to get more one way, inbound links to your site. Start to write some quality articles that have the appropriate keywords that cater to your industry and distribute these articles to all the high traffic article directories.

How does this benefit you? It is all about the exposure! Every time a webmaster adopts your article for his site or blog they are also carrying forward your link that is embedded into your article or maybe a user reads it and upholstery cleaning by your knowledge and clicks the link to visit you. The more hits you have per day, the more popularity you get with search engines.

Freebie Offers:

Who does not like freebies? Offer freebies and discounts on your products to your customers to attract them to your site. The freebie doesn’t have to cost you a fortune, simply compile an e-book about your products and give this away as a freebie furniture cleaning chicago can also offer a trail version of your product (say if you are selling business software bundles) to your customers as a try-and-buy offer.

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August 27, 2008

How I Use Long Tail Keyword Marketing For Highly Targeted Website Traffic

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Who doesn’t want website traffic?  Or more precisely who doesn’t want massive amounts of highly targeted website traffic?  Seems to me that if you raise your hand to either of these questions your reason for being on the web has nothing to do with success. 

Here are 4 ways to receive your visitors.

* Long tail keyword marketing

* Submissions to article directories

* Running a blog & website in tandem

* Using social networking & social blogging

In and of themselves any of the above suggestions can produce high volumes of targeted visitors to your website.  Given that being the case, and it is, what do you think would happen if you merged all four areas together as a marketing system for your website?  This is exactly what people discover when they visit SEO-And-Beyond.com.

That being said, lets talk about generating proper long tail keywords to build your website upon by breaking down how I discovered what keyword phrase I would use for today.

First, I chose a topic.

* Keywords

Then I went to Google and entered the following with brackets.

* “Keywords”

Which produced the following results on the right and side of the blue bar residing near the top of the page.

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August 26, 2008

Master of My Domaining: 10 Things I’ve Learned About Domaining Since I Jumped Into The Pool

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It’s been a little over nine months since I started the SEO - Domainer Lovefest (if you think you preceded me, you can take credit for it on your own blog!) and John Andrews left me a comment the other day asking for a SITREP on my escapades. The following is a brain dump of what I’ve learned over the last year or so of taking domaining seriously.

In no particular order…

1.  .com FTW!

If you ever plan on selling a domain name, either developed or undeveloped, the value of a .com is almost always worth the investment premium. For over a decade, .com has been so heavily branded that it’s the first thing in people’s minds and it can support its own economy of type-in traffic that has made many, many domain name investors rich.  .Net’s and .Org’s seem to be selling for 15% of a .com…at best.
2.  .net or .org DOES = .com for SEO’s

If you are not primarily concerned with managing the exit strategy of your web asset, an exact match .net or .org is a great way to develop virtual real estate in very competitive search queries.  Point a couple trusted links at widget.org and you’ve got yourself a widget audience coming from the search engines.
3.  Exact Match Domain Names are Uber Defensible

Audience defensibility (aka, “Defensible Traffic“) is something I take very seriously. There are a million ways for you to get bumped out of your SERP by a competitor, but [exactmatch].com/.net/.org is your version of The Alamo. Just ask Zillow

4.  An Audience is Harder To Develop Than A Brand, So Go Generic

If you are going to start a new business or launch an external campaign, do everything you can to buy the best, most appropriate premium domain name. Trust me, if you want to sell widgets or be in a widget service industry, widget.com is going to be a strategic asset and competitive advantage.

Widgetizzle.com might sound more brandable, but I’d rather have a lower cost of traffic, more defensibility of my audience, and the other 7,600 audience building advantages of a premium generic domain name than have to leverage off “brand equity” and the 18 dudes who use my site.

5.  Unlike Fantasy Football Running Backs, All The Good Ones AREN’T Taken

Most people think that it’s impossible to find and register a virgin premium domain name. Wrong!

Since you’ve read this far, I’ll share one of my fishing spots for you. I know I’m not the only one fishing there, but it hasn’t yet been super-automated by too many guys, so you can mine it. Track all the new Wikipedia pages that are being generated. There’s a thousand pounds of shit to sift through, but you will find emerging topics that haven’t had their premium.com registered yet.Thank me later.

All that said, virgin domain name registrations may only make up 5% of my portfolio.  It’s definitely not the path of least resistance, but you should always try to get the jump where you can.

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August 22, 2008

When Keyword Research and Search Data Deceives

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As search engine optimization (SEO) professionals, we obsess with search data from a wide variety of resources. Which one is best for our clients? Which keyword research tool reveals the most accurate search behaviors when rebuilding a site’s information architecture? Does our web analytics data validate our keyword research?

And, more importantly, did these tools provide your most desired information? Some answers might surprise you.

Keyword research data

I love keyword research tools. I use all of them because I can discover core keyword phrases, which are commonly used across all of the commercial web search engines. And I can also tailor ads and landing pages to searchers who typically use a single, targeted search engine (and it isn’t always Google, as one might imagine).

However, keyword research tools are not a substitute for a knowledgeable and intuitive search engine marketer. All too often, website owners and even experienced search engine optimization professionals launch into a site’s information architecture without gauging user response. As good SEO professionals, we should understand when it is appropriate to implement keywords into a site’s information architecture: when keyword usage overwhelms users, and when keyword usage needs to be more apparent.

This situation occurred recently when I was performing some usability tests on a client site’s revised information architecture. This particular client website is being delivered in multiple languages. We were testing American English, British English, and French. Therefore, the test participants were American, British, and French.

All of the keyword research tools showed the word "student" or "students" (in French, "étudiant" or "étudiants") as a possible target. The appearance of this word in both keyword research data and in the site’s web analytics data led my client to believe that we should make this area a main category.

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August 21, 2008

3 Domain Typo Generators

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Last week Rand posted a brilliant linkbuilding tip that involved taking SEO advantage of mistyped/ misspelled domains. Putting aside black / white hat discussion, I am giving the list of domain typo generators for your advantage:

1. DomainTools Domain Typo Generator offers a variety of options:

  • TLD view” shows the list of domain typos and a top level domain map with registration status (available, available (previously registered), registered (active website), registered (parked or redirected), registered (no website), on-hold (generic), on-hold (redemption period), on-hold (pending delete):
  • Domain Typo generator: TLD view

     

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August 20, 2008

‘Use keyword tools for better SEO’

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Well-researched keywords can make all the difference between success and failure when it comes to search engine optimisation (SEO), according to marketing consultant Damon Segal.

The expert said on realbusiness.co.uk that keyword research can be made easier with the help of applications such as WordTracker and Google Hot Trends.

This can do much to ensure businesses do not miss out on potential custom by focusing on one key term when they should be optimising their websites for another, Mr Segal stated.

He went on to advise marketers to consider utilising popular misspellings and added: "If someone offers to optimise your website, asks you for the keywords but doesn’t come back to you with suggestions for most-searched keywords – be suspicious.

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August 14, 2008

Turning Web clicks into purchases

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(Fortune Small Business) — Dear FSB: I have a statistics counter for my Web site oceansofchange.net and although people visit, they are not browsing or purchasing. I am on a very limited budget and am concerned that the layout and text are the problem, yet I don’t know how to improve them. Your suggestions are greatly welcomed and appreciated.

- Karen Burke, owner, Oceans of Change

Dear Karen: Our experts agree: Your site is a bore. The absence of colors, features and high-quality photos leaves a lot to be desired, so it’s hardly a surprise that the people who make it to you accessories retail site don’t stick around.

"When I arrive on the site, I first see a lot of white," says Geeta Punjabi of Raleigh, N.C., Web marketing firm 123Triad. "There is generally too much space on the pages. On the homepage, there is a big scroll, but if it were organized better, it could all fit in one view."

The key to keeping viewers on a Web site is interactivity. The first interactive link on your page takes viewers off of your pages to the Web site of Newport Life magazine (which, by the way, is a site that doesn’t load correctly.) And if they don’t click that link, vistors are left looking at credit card logos, even though you haven’t shown them any merchandise yet - not a great way to build user trust.

"The credit cards are a distraction," says Ryan Menzer, president of FireThread Studios in Glenville, N.Y. "Instead, on the homepage, you should Flash-rotate your bestsellers so that the users can start to see items right away. That will draw them in so that they won’t leave as quickly."

Menzer adds that the grainy photos on the top right corner of your homepage give the page a rigid, boxy feel - they’re not crisp enough to entice the audience to search for more. If you don’t have the technical chops or budget to integrate Adobe (ADBE)’s Flash, you may want to try a scoll-through gallery of merchandise photos.

As for your color scheme, our experts aren’t crazy about the purple.

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August 13, 2008

SEO Toolbox Tips

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If you’ve been working in the search engine optimization (SEO) field for any measure of time, then you know you have to be prepared to help fix any number of search-related breakdowns. To deal with and resolve most structural, contextual, or interlinked issues, you must have your toolbox at the ready to help diagnose the issues, formulate a plan, and make the repairs.

Most SEO toolboxes have some type of crawl simulator in them, a Lynx viewer, assorted keyword density checkers, header checkers, link auditors, and text analysis instruments — just to name a few. Yet at the end of the day, one of your most valuable tools usually turns out to be your fundamental SEO knowledge.

Producing high-quality natural search results is not getting any easier. Web site constructs are more complex than ever. Consistently producing great content is more challenging. The social sphere is ever changing. And link-building rules and regulations are in a constant state of flux. It’s very easy to get lost in the clatter searching for real signals through the noise.

Consequently, updating and refreshing your SEO toolbox requires a continual flow of information to keep up with the job’s demands. Keeping your SEO toolbox well organized and current has never been more challenging.

How do you know who to read and determine what information is important to your natural search knowledge base? Better yet, how can you make the time practice, let alone play in a sandbox?

Start by hunting down pertinent search engine blogs. It’s important to regularly read and review search engine blog posts from the official Google, Yahoo, and Microsoft Live Search sources, among others if your specialty is social media.

It’s relatively easy to organize blog-based informational resources with a RSS aggregator. My aggregator of choice is Netvibes, because it really does help me organize my digital life. But this is your SEO toolbox, so use the tool that suits your needs and you’ll capture nuggets of knowledge to perform your SEO work better.

Not all blog posts are particularly helpful, but a recent post on the official Google Webmaster Central Blog certainly caught my eye. It helped connect the dots around some key observations that folks in the industry have been touching on for quite some time. Namely the idea of preserving crawl equity and Google’s stance on finding search results in its search results.

Google Webmaster Tools has been notifying Webmasters of crawl issues for quite some time. Now, Google’s notifying Webmasters when they find "infinite space" in a Web site. To Google, infinite space consists of "very large numbers of links that usually provide little or no new content for Googlebot to index."

Most folks working in the search industry for a while understand the idea of infinite space. The classic example Google provides in the blog post includes virtual calendars that add URL after URL ad infinitum. That certainly will burn some serious crawl time. And if Google only crawls 10 percent of your Web site on each visit, it’s expensive crawl time distracting the spiders from more interesting content within your site.

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August 11, 2008

7 Things You Can Do Today to Make Google Fall Head Over Heels in Love with Your Small Business Webs

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Creating your own small business website can be a scary thing to do.

Creating your own small business website can be a scary thing to do. It requires some planning to get it right and make Google sit up and take notice of your site at first glance. Small business website search engine optimization (SEO) is one of the keys, but all too often, astute business people leave the creation of their websites up to a family member or a friend who happens to know something about it. This is strange, for they wouldn’t dream of letting the same people build their bricks and mortar store or office.

Of course, getting an expert who fully understands small business SEO to build your website is not likely to come cheap, but it may be the best solution if you are starting out from scratch. However, this article is aimed at those small businesses that already have a website, but are disappointed at how poorly it performs. If you’re frustrated because your website appears on page 42 of the Google search results, and no one is visiting your website, here are 7 things you can do to quickly improve your results.
 
1. Create an Effective Website Title Tag, Description Meta Tag, and Keywords Meta Tag

The most important part of any website page (in the eyes of the search engines) is the title tag. The title is enclosed between the opening title tag: <title> and the closing title tag: </title>. It is located in the head section of an HTML document, or web page. You should use your page’s main keyword in your title. Try to use your main keyword near the beginning of your title, and perhaps again near the end. But always strive to make your title readable, and not obviously keyword stuffed. 

Your description tag plays an important role in SEO for your local small business. This tag is used by most of the search engines in their listings, so you need to spend some time getting this right. The description tag looks like this: <Meta Name="Description" Content="Your description goes here"> and it is also found in the head section of your web page.

Something brief such as, "Acme Incorporated, Makers of Blue Widgets," gets the message across, but you could do much better. Try to list benefits rather than features, and use your main keyword in your description as well. Keep your description reasonably brief, but not too short.  Something like, "Acme, Inc., Makers of the Strongest, Most Powerful and Affordable Widgets on the Planet" is better. 

Like a headline for an ad or sales flyer, your description may take time to develop.  Start with a list of all of the benefits your product or service offers and then try to write 20 different descriptions for your site based on those benefits.  Test your descriptions by reading them to your customers, employees or others familiar with your business.  You’ll find out which description resonates most strongly with your potential prospects - and that’s good for the search engines and for your sales.

The keywords tag, again found in the head section of your web pages, looks like this: <Meta Name="Keywords" Content="Your keyword phrases go here separated by commas">. The keywords you choose for your page are important, because they tell the search engines what should be found on the page.  Google and all the other search engines present search results based on relevancy – how relevant your web pages are to the keywords and phrases your prospects are searching for.

Keep your keyword phrases to less than seven and don’t repeat the same words. For example, if you have two keyword phrases, which are, "blue widgets" and "bright blue widgets," you should only include unique words after including the first "blue widgets" keyword.

Curious to know what your Title, Description, Meta and Keyword tags currently look like?  Here’s a simple tip – just go to any page of your website, then click on "View Source" or "View Page Source" from the "View" menu.  There you’ll be able to see exactly what your tags are telling Google when they crawl your site.

2. Optimize Your Website Copy

Your website copy consists of the words on every page of your site. Try to make it interesting and informative. One simple way to arrange your articles, or informative pages, is to use a simple three-step format. Begin with an introductory paragraph that tells your visitor what you are going to tell them. Then in the next two or three paragraphs, tell them. Finally, wind up the article by telling them what you just told them.

This may seem overly simple, but it works. Speak to your website audience as you would to a seven-year-old child. Don’t patronize them, but lay it out clearly in simple steps using straightforward language that anyone can understand.

When writing your copy for each of your pages, make sure to focus on one or two keywords per page.  If you are selling widgets in all colors and you also sell thingamajigs, then widgets should be on one page and thingamajigs on another.  Keep it simple for your customers and the search engines by focusing on one idea per page and your customers will thank you for it, and Google will thank you too.

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