March 31st, 2010

Today’s webinar, Long Tail Versus Short Tail Keywords, made me think of Indiana Jones. (No, not because of the spiders crawling all over the webpages!) In the opening credits with the sepia map in the background, the little plane traces its red line from exotic location to remote landing to middle of nowhere to the exact right spot to find the lost ark.
If Indy had used Google, he might have started by typing in “ark.” It’s a short-tail keyword, a mere three letters. After paging through a zillion pages of Noah’s ark replicas, complete with zebras and chimpanzees, he’d get a little frustrated, but instead of lashing out at his trusty laptop with his whip, he’d get more specific. He’d try typing “ark of the covenant.” His little airplane is getting closer. He still has to stop to rebut the scurrilous claims of Dr. Rene Belloq on Wikipedia, but that takes mere moments. Then he tries the long tail search for “ark of the covenant Cairo” and Google gives him a handy amulet with an address. His plane arrives and now all he has to do is beat the Nazis, survive the snakes, and rescue the girl.
Indy, like most searchers, is getting savvier in his techniques. He’ll be quicker to find the temple of doom and the holy grail. He’ll breeze right by the film versions of Doom and Monty Python and the Holy Grail. By the time he gets to looking for the crystal skull, it’s a wonder the search takes long enough to film.
Similarly, the purveyors of lost arks and the like can make themselves easier to find by optimizing for exactly the kind of long tail keywords Dr. Jones used in his research. While there are relatively few archaeologists and evil empires searching for precious relics, those who search for “ark of the covenant Cairo” are ready to buy.
Tags: Blogs, E-Commerce, eCommerce, Google, keywords, SEO, Webinar, Webmarketing123
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March 24th, 2010

That first recess at a new school can be awkward. Do the kids play the same games here? What are the unwritten rules for the swings? Do the big kids meet on the blacktop or under the trees by the fence? And, most importantly, will anyone want to play with me?
Social media marketing, for many companies, feels about as comfortable as that new playground. Some companies suddenly feel the urge to hide in the library until recess is over and the understandable, bell-regulated classroom time begins again. But hiding won’t make it go away.
The good news, as Barbara mentioned in the webinar, Social Media Marketing and ROI, is that you don’t have to jump into the middle of the playground right away. It’s a good idea, in fact, to linger at the edge of the tanbark and watch what the other kids are doing, listen to what they’re saying, and begin to play once you know where the hot lava monster lives. From a social media perspective, this means checking out what other companies are doing, soaking up the culture, and only then joining the conversations and starting your own.
It can be a challenge to companies who are used to dealing in websites, which are, as Barbara says, like resumes, clean and professional, to switch to the casual style of social media. You don’t want to play tag in your suit, so to speak, and if you try, you may not get the results you want (although the embarrassment it would cause might make an engaging blog post…). Social media requires a new level of integration between the professional and the casual, the business person and the everyday person.
School would be unbearable for even the most dedicated student without some time to play four-square. Similarly, company marketing strategies need to add social media to their mix along with their other approaches to ensure a happy, healthy outcome.
Tags: Highlights, SMM, Social Media, Webinar, Webmarketing123
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March 17th, 2010
Somewhere on the Internet, there is a run-down neighborhood cluttered with discards. Drifts of items pile up in abandoned shopping carts. CDs and sweaters and figurines and television sets spill out onto the information highway.
The neighborhood is not far from the slick shopping districts with the shiny sites. It’s a mere five clicks away, according to today’s webinar, Optimize Your eCommerce SEO and Conversion Rates.
Five clicks.
Five clicks are the difference between a forlorn abandoned shopping cart and retail heaven. If it takes more than five clicks for visitors to your site to purchase your products, they are likely to leave the stuff in the cart and walk out of your store. It’s understandable, really. In the same way that you reconsider that driving NEED for a pint of ice cream when you confront the 47 people in line at the grocery checkout, your potential customers get annoyed and cranky long before they reach the register.
Fight internet litter! Clean up the neighborhood! Save the clicks.
Tags: Blogs, Conversion Rates, E-Commerce, eCommerce, Highlights, SEO, Webinar
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March 10th, 2010
Dear Santa—
This is what I want for Christmas…
What comes next in your letter to Santa is what you want most, right? You’re not going to put the shiny red bike or the Wii with the best games or the Radio Flyer low on the list if it is what you’ve been dreaming about for months. To get exactly what you want, you have to make sure Santa knows.
Today’s webinar, Top 10 Tips in SEO for 2010, emphasized how important it is to choose the right keywords. Think of them as the keys to those perfect packages under the tree. With the right keywords, you get the red bike, not the dopey blue one and with the right keywords, you get the customers who really want your products or services.
To do this, you need to select specific keywords and put them in the right spots on your webpages. Santa won’t know to bring you what you don’t ask for, and the search engine spiders won’t rank you for keywords you don’t use.
Tags: keywords, Search, SEO
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March 3rd, 2010
At today’s webinar on The Pros and Cons of Outsourcing Your SEO, Antonio mentioned that Google’s spiders recognize “natural term language.” Humans, writing content for pages using normal language, certainly use keyword terms—you have to use terms you want to rank for—but excessive use annoys the spiders (not to mention other humans!).
In simple terms, if you wanted to feed the spiders your great new gizmo, you might write:
Welcome to Gizmoland’s website! We developed our great new gizmo with features you can use right now. Our great new gizmo does more in less time for fewer dollars. It can change your life.
Okay, so you might not write that, but great new gizmo occurs in the text in ways that feel correct, natural.
By contrast, if you write:
Welcome to Gizmoland’s website, the home of our great new gizmo. We developed our great new gizmo with features you can use for all your great new gizmo needs right this very minute at great new gizmo time. Our great new gizmo works faster! The great new gizmo does more! The great new gizmo costs less! The great new gizmo can change your life. Have I mentioned that we have a great new gizmo? Just (great new gizmo) in (great new gizmo) case (great new gizmo), let (great new gizmo) me (great new gizmo) tell (great new gizmo) you (great new gizmo) about (great new gizmo) our (great new gizmo) great new gizmo…
The spiders will run screaming as fast as their virtual eight legs will carry them, screaming, “Cheater, cheater, bug eater!” Worse, if that text made it through the spider barrier, your potential clients might actually read it, and then you’d be in real trouble.
Tags: Google spiders, Highlights, Outsourcing, SEO, Webinar
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