Sunday, March 30, 2008

Search Engine Optimization Goes Local

Many brick and mortar companies that are catering to their local clientel find it hard to optimize their website for local markets despite targeting the best keywords. Quite naturally this is not a surprising matter as many of them, although efficient in running their off line businesses, typically stumble over two critical blocks.

Stumbling Blocks and SEO for Local Markets

When local businesses set to do SEO for local markets, many of them invariably ignore the need to think rationally because they are advised by SEO experts to target the big three search engine users and sometimes get confused and tackle this feat on a global level resulting in global traffic. The direct fall out of this step is exposing your business offers, products or services to the world at large only to dilute all other local online SEO efforts. If your product is not global you are in trouble.

So here is the stumbling block number one.

1. Not using localized target keywords, however good they are, will leave your new websites way down the SERP's locally. Actual localized keywords you should be targeting in which will bring you a steady stream of natural traffic.

The second block where you might probably stumble, especially if you are new to web and optimization is wrongfully assuming internet marketing techniques as something radically different and for removed from the earthly- worldly affairs that we all do by trial and errors over and again. The crux of the matter here is SEO for local markets is only a small part of larger marketing exercises, with certain twists, to get exposure with local locations.

Here is the second stumbling point in SEO for local markets.

2. SEO for local markets is not a marketing technique but a sophisticated local technique of optimizing websites on a local basis. Obviously, the one who knows the pulse of the market is not the SEO expert but can contribute his knowledge to SEO expert.

So, What Is Actually SEO For Local Markets?

Let me dash you through steps involved in SEO for local markets in short.

1. Localize your target keywords. This includes prefixing or suffixing local terms, names, and names of areas, cities or zip codes with target keywords. Example: "remodeling contractors Orange County", not "remodeling contractors".

2. Submit to local search engines (find one, if you don't know already), directories and web based yellow pages.

3. Display your mailing address with street address and zip code. Once your site is indexed, these words gain prominence as a part of content.

4. Submit to local listing sections of Yahoo and DMOZ which is in addition to generalized listing.

5. Don't leave out general SEO techniques because you want to SEO for local markets which the power of link building which can be done globally as there might not be enough local sites to beat you competition.

6. Get on the local maps of Google, Yahoo, as this generally puts you on front of the local search engines.

7. Exchange links and banners with local businesses as the local traffic exchange will bring you new business. Avoid changing banners or links with competitors but exchange them with businesses that will complement you. Verify their traffic so it's an almost even exchange.

Dominating local SEO can be done fairly easily, you just have to either hire a professional with a proven track record or take time to learn local SEO. The main concern is to be patient as it takes at least 3 months to start seeing results.

About the Author: Michael S. Francis the author is a seasoned local SEO expert. Michael S. Francis is the owner of www.seovida.com a Local Business SEO company.

Thursday, March 27, 2008

Is Your Marketing Telling A Story

Today's post is taken from a recent article by Scott Schwertly... the art of storytelling. If your marketing isn't telling a story, then it's not doing what it was intended to.

Were you bored with your last keynote speaker? Did they motivate and change lives? Perhaps, they ended lives. That’s why you need to tell stories. You have probably heard the quote: “Tell me a fact and I’ll remember it. Tell the truth and I’ll believe it. Tell me a story and I’ll put it in my heart forever.” Stories are an incredible tool that is often abused in our culture today. Unfortunately, presenters don’t know how to tell or use stories to their advantage. As presenters, here is our biggest challenge: telling an epic story – a story that will surprise, delight, and most importantly – will be memorable. The greatest lessons come from Hollywood.

The Story Club

In John Hughes’ classic, The Breakfast Club, he highlights five high school students, all from different backgrounds, who come together only to discover they have a lot more in common than they imagined. The same holds true with storytelling. There are many styles, all with a lot in common. In fact, the great Hollywood screenwriter Robert McKee illustrates that there are 25 types of stories. Don’t get overwhelmed. I have narrowed it down to three to help you, the presenter. Below are my recommendations the next time you build a presentation introduction.

The Rockstar

Think about the classic hero story- a man or woman is given a challenge and then often turns away only to embrace it and save the world. That’s the Rockstar – the hero that everyone cheers for with tenacious excitement. You can probably think of a few of these Rockstars with little effort – Rocky Balboa, Louis Skolnick of Lambda Lambda Lambda, and Elle Woods.

The Maverick


Mavericks are those stories of individuals who literally change the world. They are the dreamers who stand up against all odds to impact lives, to make a difference, to change the world. This list of individuals includes names like
MLK, JFK, Mother Teresa, and Ghandi. They are the rulebreakers – the men and women who changed this planet.

The She
rlock

This is the classic problem/solution approach. Typically containing two characters, this approach is ideal for business presentations. Think Disney. Better yet, how about the Fighting Rancho Carne Toros and the East Compton Clovers from "Bring It On." One team competed the right way – hard work and diligence. The other did it the wrong way – hiring a choreographer to learn “Spirit Fingers” and a secondhand routine to the once popular “Get Ready for This” by 2Unlimited.

SuperGood: Make Your Story McLovin

Here are three R's that I have created that illustrate how you can make your next presentation SuperGood. Using these approaches will even make Fogell stand out from a crowd.

Repeat

Stories have always existed, will always be around, and they will be repeated over and over again. This is because they contain nuggets of wisdom that people cherish, crave to hear, and be reminded of on a daily, weekly, month, or annual basis. Think about it. There are really no new stories. They are just retold by different people in different ways. Just look around you… Frodo, Luke Skywalker, William Wallace - all of these heroes faced the same challenges. Their stories just a have a different twist or storyline. Thus, stories will always exist. Period.

Not only are stories repeated but great stories contain repetition.

Most SNL fans remember Chris Farley’s infamous character, Matt Foley: the motivational speaker who lived in a van down by the river. The script is a perfect example of the beauty of repetition.

Well, you'll have plenty of time to live in a van down by the river when you're..[ tries to be clever ] ..living in a van down by the river! Now, you kids are probably asking yourself, "Hey, Matt, how can we get back on the right track?!" Well, as I see it, there is only one solution! And that is for me to get my gear, move it on into here, 'cause I'm gonna bunk with you, buddy! We're gonna be buddies! We're gonna be pals![ picks Brian up ] We're gonna wrassle around! [ puts Brian down ] Ol' Matt's gonna be your shadow! [motions] Here's Matt, here's you! There's Matt, there's you! [ trips and falls flat on the coffee table, sending it crashing to the floor ] Whoops-a-daisy! [ stands up ] We're gonna have to clean that up later! Me and my buddies! My pals! My amigos! I'm gonna go get my gear! [ heads for the door ]

Such a simple a script, but the concept of friends, buddies, and down by the river are what make it
so memorable.


Reveal


When exiting a local grocery store one evening, I saw a great bumper sticker on a car parked next to mine. It simply stated: "The shortest distance between two people is a story." That's powerful stuff!

Remember these two items the next time you start constructing a story. This is an approach that is encouraged by CEO of Parade magazine, Walter Anderson. Great stories are built off these main principles. Your story needs to have:

1) Tension - You need to create a problem. There needs to be some type of dramatic hook.

2) Discovery - This is the reason why you are telling the story. What is everything leading up to?

In essence, it’s all about the power of the anecdote – leading from one point to the next. Keep in mind,the best anecdotes are the most simple.

It’s amazingly captivating. The story builds from one point to the next. It doesn’t hurt that the character of Buddy is easy to love. After all, he would like to do nothing more than build snow angels for two hours and then snuggle.

Good news! We are all storytellers. You have stories. Your parents have stories. Your grandparents have stories. Your company even has a story. You should have plenty to write about, so what are you waiting for? Don’t be a cotton-headed ninnymuggins! Start writing. Maybe one day you’ll have book published about your own story just like Buddy the Elf.

Revamp

Storytelling produces results. It will change and grow your business. Here is the bottom line. (Highlight this or write it down somewhere. It’s the heart of this article):

Stories create emotions. Emotions create motivation. Motivation creates action. Action creates results.

Repeat. Reveal. Revamp. These three R's will change the way you look at storytelling and your presentations moving forward.

So what are you waiting for? Go tell a story or suffer the consequences for procrastinating. Here’s a great quote from Stewie from Family Guy to help light
your fire:

Stewie: “How you uh, how you comin' on that [story] you're working on? Huh? Gotta a big, uh, big stack of papers there? Gotta, gotta nice litte story you're working on there? Your big novel you've been working on for 3 years? Huh? Gotta, gotta compelling protaganist? Yeah? Gotta obstacle for him to overcome? Huh? Gotta story brewing there? Working on, working on that for quite some time? Huh? (voice getting higher pitched) Yea, talking about that 3 years ago. Been working on that the whole time? Nice little narrative? Beginning, middle, and end? Some friends become enemies, some enemies become friends? At the end your main character is richer from the experience? Yeah? Yeah? (voice returns to normal) No, no, you deserve some time off.”

Be different than your competition. For starters, begin today. Second, go tell an epic story with your next presentation.


About the Author:
Scott Schwertly is an epic storyteller. Scott works with a wide spectrum of clients that includes Fortune 100 companies, Silicon Valley start-ups, and various other organizations throughout the world. Scott is also the author of an awarding-winning blog – PresentationRevolution: Revolutionizing Presentations Through Storytelling - as well as a Top 100 ChangeThis.com manifesto. Scott has a B.A. in Communications and an M.B.A. from Harding University. Today, Scott owns and operates Ethos3 Communications at http://www.ethos3.com.


Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Landing page optimization: Testing your way to higher profits

In this recent article from DM News, SiteTuners.com's Tim Ash reinforces one of the most important concepts in Marketing... testing. Not only is testing valuable in terms of optimizing conversions, but it can also keep your costs in check...

In the online marketing world, a lot of time and resources are spent driving traffic to a Web site or landing page. You analyze campaign performance with almost religious fervor in order to extract the last penny of revenue and profit possible from each Internet visitor. But all of your hard work comes down to the few precious moments that the Internet visitors spend on your landing page.

Even though you spend obscene amounts of money to buy traffic, the effort that you devote to the landing pages to which it is sent is negligible. Worse yet, you assume that the quality of the landing page cannot be changed. You turn all of the other knobs and dials at your disposal and continue to neglect the biggest profit driver under your control — the conversion efficiency of the landing page. This neglect costs huge amounts of money on an ongoing basis.

But how are you to know in advance which landing page element will or won't perform better? You actually have access to thousands of conversion experts and are interacting with them daily. But you have mostly ignored their advice to date. The real experts on the design of your landing pages are your Web site visitors.

Landing page optimization can be viewed as a giant online marketing laboratory where your experimental subjects voluntarily participate in your tests without being asked. Their very actions (or inactions) expose them, and allow you to improve your appeal to a similar population of people. Through testing of alternative landing page designs, you can determine what your audience actually responds to best.

Web sites have three desirable properties — high data rates, accurate tracking and easy content changes — that can be used to test your landing page's effectiveness.

Many Web sites have significant traffic rates, so the supply of test subjects is ample. A relatively steady and large stream of visitors allows you to use statistics to find and verify the validity of the best landing page designs. The best versions are proven winners. Unlike previous designs, they are no longer based solely on subjective opinions of the highest paid person in the room.

Web analytics software supports the accurate tracking and recording of every interaction with your Web site. Although Web analytics software is not perfect, it provides a standard of data collection accuracy that is almost unheard of in any other marketing medium.

Internet technology offers the ability to easily swap or modify the content that a particular Web site visitor sees. The content can be customized based on the source of the traffic, the specific capabilities of the visitor's computer or Web browser software, their behavior during the particular visit or their past history of interactions with your site.

Landing page optimization is part art and part science. It requires many diverse skills including design, usability, copywriting, psychology, statistics and project management. But the payoffs from a disciplined landing page testing program are simply too great. Ignore this critical activity at your own peril.

About the Author Tim Ash is the president of SiteTuners.com and author of “Landing Page Optimization: The Definitive Guide to Testing and Tuning for Conversions

Monday, March 24, 2008

Product Review: The Webmaster's Book of Secrets

Many of you know that I have published a variety of helpful marketing and SEO tools during my career. Recently, one of my colleagues asked if I could publish their review of the popular ebook, The Webmaster's Book of Secrets. Well, here it is...

"The Webmaster's Book of Secrets combines the latest SEO information with the knowledge and experience of top webmaster's. This downloadable ebook is packed with helpful information and advice that works.

Whether you are new to Internet marketing, or an experienced veteran, the tips and techniques revealed are guaranteed to improve your search engine ranking on the world's largest search engine - Google, as well as other leading search engines like Yahoo! and MSN.

The book itself is divided into two main sections. The first section covers the all-important aspect of search engine optimization referred to as on-page optimization. Simply said, the book tells you everything you need to do on your website to ensure that Google and other search engines can quickly and easily categorize and place your content. Applying these techniques alone have provided tremendous benefit to websites looking to improve rankings. Coupled with the techniques provided in the second section, off-page optimization, this is a must-have guide.

In part two of this book, off-page optimization, the author reveals the most effective techniques for achieving top Google rankings. These proven methods are easy to follow and many can begin to be implemented within 24 hours of reading the book. Even traditional techniques like directory submission are thoroughly explained and reviewed. Many short cuts are given that save hours (even days) of your time.

All of the success stories associated with The Webmaster's Book of Secrets are true. After applying many of the techniques in the guide, my website jumped many positions towards the #1 ranking on Google for at least three of my most important keywords.

About the Author
Steve Carrington is an Information Technology Professional with diverse experience spanning many industries.

Saturday, March 22, 2008

Increase Web Traffic Through Ad Testing and Optimization

Are your ads the best they can be?

Ad testing(a/b testing) lets you experiment with multiple ads at the same time to find out which ones work best. When using popular pay per click providers like Google, better-performing ads will display more often.

How Do You Benefit?

  • Improve ad group performance because better performing ads, based on click-through rate, will serve more often (if Ad Optimization is turned on, which is the default setting)
  • Save time by automatically displaying the best performing ads
  • Save money because ads with higher click-through rates may score higher in the quality index, and this may lead to higher placement at a lower cost
  • Find out which messages, promotions, and geographical locations test better, and apply this learning to other marketing tactics
  • Test different versions of your landing page URLs.

How to Create New Ads
To create a new ad in Google Adwords:

  1. Go to your intended ad group page or create a new ad group
  2. Click on the +Create New Ad button
  3. Enter a title, description, destination URL and display URL
  4. Review and approve ad

Tips for Using Ad Testing

  • Develop a strategy. Have a goal in mind. For example, test an offer of 20 percent savings against an offer of $40 off any purchase over $200 to see which positioning your customers find more appealing.
  • Plan out your ad testing schedule. This helps organizes your ad testing objectives and gives your ads enough time to display so that results are statistically significant.
  • Create ads with unique messages. Don't test messages that are too similar - say, an ad that offers "great prices" against one that promises "low prices."
  • Choose keywords for each ad group carefully. Grouping similar and relevant keywords will make it easier to create ads, and may improve your ad's quality and placement.

Use these tips and strategies for improving the effectiveness of your ads. Improving ad performance takes daily monitoring and persistence. If you're not checking your campaigns daily, you could be losing money.


Friday, March 21, 2008

Recently, I conducted an online search and found a number of search results pointing to PDF's. If you're not already familiar with Adobe's Portable Delivery Format, its a common document type that preserves all of a documents original formatting. Believe it or not, if you create your own PDF's in the form of online documents or whitepapers, there is a way to optimize them for search engines.

What follows are some tips on how to improve your PDF file's placement on search engines. These tips come from MarketingSherpa's article, How to Optimize Your PDFs to Increase Search Traffic: 10 Steps.

1. Optimize the text: Simply apply the same rich keywords that you would for an HTML file. This means your white paper should contain many of the phrases that folks search on when looking for a solution to their problems.

2. Add metadata: This means you should manually insert keywords and descriptions of the document using Adobe Acrobat. This can be done by accessing document properties. MarketingSherpa adds, "You can also enter other keywords here, but don't put in misleading phrases. That ‘black hat' SEO tactic can get you penalized by most search engines.

3. Add links:
Links inside PDF files are crawled by search engines. MarketingSherpa adds:

Be creative with adding links. Acrobat allows you to insert links in PDFs, so customers can click to view more information about a product or click to add it to a shopping cart. This step turns the PDF into a landing page and you can define its intended conversion however you want. You can also add links to your homepage or other parts of your site to gain the SEO benefits of internal linking.

4. Create a document footer: Include your business contact information and website. This helps folks easily find you when your great paper goes viral.

5. Establish external links: To get your PDF indexed by search engines and increase it's popularity, link to your PDF from your website or blog. Additionally, let others know that you are offering a PDF of value and invite them to link directly to the document. This builds link popularity and helps to improve search rankings.

It's not just web pages that show up in search results. In fact, search engines are crawling all types of documents that can be found online. Optimize your documents to ensure that website browsers know who you are and can reach you.

Thursday, March 20, 2008

Optimize Your Email Unsubscribes

With very specific requirements around the opt out process, many companies have put into place a basic (hassle-free) opt-out link in all of their communications. However, not all individuals wish to opt-out of everything. According to a recent article from SilverPop, they recommend that you follow these best practices:

Make it Easy to Opt Out
Purists will argue for a one-click unsubscribe, but the reality is that many subscribers might simply want to change the nature of the relationship, not end it.

If someone truly wants to leave your list, however, make it quick and easy. Don't hide the unsubscribe link in your email, and don't use some euphemism on the link that the subscriber wouldn't recognize immediately. Making the opt-out process difficult will result only in more spam complaints and potential delivery problems.

Provide Alternatives to Opting Out
When users do click on the unsubscribe link, direct them to a combination preference center/unsubscribe page. Again, don't obfuscate the unsubscribe language or process, but do make it clear that they can choose to do something besides opt out.

Your subscribers' needs and interests change over time. Maybe they don't have time to read your daily emails and would be happier with a weekly digest. Perhaps they just need to change their email address, prefer RSS feeds or a text version they can read on their BlackBerry or cell phones. If you don't offer them some choice in how to make your emails more relevant and valuable to them, you could lose the ability to communicate with them forever.

Here are reasons why subscribers might click your unsubscribe link, with alternatives you can offer to retain the relationship:

  • Email address change: Many subscribers simply want to change their email address. If you don't make this easy, they'll be forced to opt out and resubscribe. You could lose them entirely this way.
  • Frequency: The average consumer receives roughly 300 email messages a week. That might not seem like a lot to people who work in email, but it's a lot for the consumer. If you are a retailer, for example, and send two or three emails per week, consider offering subscribers alternative frequencies such as once per week or month.
  • Channel: Sure, we're all about email, but there are so many more channels available to marketers. As appropriate, offer alternatives to email communications such as an RSS feed or direct mail.
  • Interests/Preferences: Subscribers change. They might switch from downhill skiing to snowboarding, change jobs or need to shop for school clothes now instead of baby toys. If possible, pre-populate their existing profile or preferences and make it simple to modify.
  • Format: As more people adopt the BlackBerry and similar mobile devices, some of your subscribers might prefer to receive rich-text versions of your email rather than HTML. They'll get tired of looking at mangled HTML emails with lines of HTML code rather than text. Be sure to offer that option.
  • Alternative Emails: If you publish multiple newsletters, allow subscribers to uncheck the box next to the newsletter they no longer want and check another that now fits their needs.

Leave on Good Terms/Solicit Feedback
It is vital to give your subscribers a good opt-out experience. While they might no longer receive your emails, they might continue to patronize your business now or in the future. Thank them as they unsubscribe and tell them you are sorry to see them go. Most of all, make the entire process simple and pleasant.

Lastly, use the opportunity to uncover why they are unsubscribing. This allows them to be heard, but also it gives you data points about why people are leaving your list. A simple comments field will work, but better yet is a drop-down or check box of the most common reasons plus a comments field. This way, you can more easily aggregate common reasons, yet still capture individual feedback.

The key then is to act on this feedback so you can improve your program and minimize list churn.

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Doing Business Online: Part II

Based on the interview I conducted last week, I'm happy to publish Part II where I answer additional questions about doing business online - essential for anyone thinking about running their own online business.

Q: What did you learn from this first web business?

A: Businesses don't run by themselves. Yes, over time, your business builds a base and it’s much easier to operate, but it takes constant vigilance.

Q: What web businesses do you run now?

A: I run a couple of blogs (The Marketing Blog, The Good Marketing Tips Blog), and have created one of the Internet's most popular ebooks on Search Engine Optimization at www.webmastersbookofsecrets.com in addition to my original and primary website, MarketingScoop.com.

Q: What were the biggest challenges in setting up and running this web business?

A:
Keeping up with it all. Sometimes you don't have enough time to focus on what's most important - your customers. Over time it does get easier to manage multiple tasks, but there are so many additional things I would like to do if only I had more time and resources.

Q: What top 3 tips would you give to somebody starting a business online?

A: All it takes is a great idea and persistence to see that dream become a reality. If you have an idea, get started, don't delay. There is plenty of free advice online on how to start and grow your very own online business. So get started, be persistent, repeat step number two (be persistent).

Q: Do you plan to start any more web businesses in the next 24 months? If so, what are the details?

A: The only other project I have going on right now is the publishing of my first book for trade distribution (B & N, Borders, Amazon.com) entitled, "SEO Made Simple: Strategies for Dominating the World's Largest Search Engine." The book will be launched in April of this year (2008) and can help anyone doing business online improve their search engine rankings on Google - the world's largest search engine. To support the book and offer readers a bonus, I'm creating a new website called myseomadesimple.com.

Q: What are you top 3 favorite reasons for running an online business?

A: Fun, Fun, and Fun. Running your own online business is very enjoyable. The flexibility is great too. You can work on it whenever, where ever you choose.

Q: Any final words?

A: Think big.

Sunday, March 16, 2008

Doing Business Online: Part I

Recently, I was interviewed by an author writing a book on Internet businesses. I found the questions asked about my website, MarketingScoop.com, to be very perceptive and helpful for those considering starting their own website or online business. Here are the questions and my responses in part 1 of a 2-part post.

Q: What was your first web business?

A: My first web business was selling affiliate based products online, earning commissions with each sale. This was really the way that I leveraged my first website, www.marketingscoop.com which was really just developed to provide free information and resources to marketers. The site still exists today and continues to generate a constant stream of visitors and revenue.

Q: When did you start this?

A: The site launched in February of 2004, but I was planning and working on the site for about ten months prior to launch.

Q: How much time did you devote to setting this up and running it?

A: Most of my time was spent on developing the site, adding content on a regular basis, and marketing the site. For me, traffic was everything and I spent the majority of my time on SEO and site usability - probably between 2 and 3 hours/day. The site also took a lot of work to initially set up and I was spending the same, about 2 - 3 hours on it each day, adding content and programming HTML. In addition to spending on average about three hours a day on SEO, I did spend a couple of hours each day reviewing affiliate products, speaking with potential partners, and responding to prospect inquiries.

Q: How much did it cost to set up and run?

A: The first site took some time to develop. And because I was starting out, I didn't have a lot of money to spend. I think when all was said and done, it cost about $15K - $18K to get the site developed, marketed, and maintained.

Q: What were the biggest challenges in setting up and running this web business?

A: The biggest challenge was the realization that I "didn't having a clue" when it came to starting my own business. When I started out, no one gave me a clear roadmap to follow (i.e. do this, don't do this). As a result, I got many things wrong and had to redo them. This cost me time and money and could have been avoided if a roadmap was provided.

Q: What happened to the web business?

A: I still own the web business, and it continues to grow. Because the site is so well established, most of the content comes from loyal users who submit valuable resources.

In addition, I'm not longer looking for great affiliate products, they come to me. By having a strong performing site that requires only a small bit of maintenance, I can focus on other endeavors while providing value to MarketingScoop.com loyalists who still value all of the free marketing resources and information the site provides.

Q: What is your background?

A: My background is in Marketing. I attended Rutgers College for Undergrad and received my Graduate degree from Northwestern University in Integrated Marketing Communications. My formal education taught me that you always need to keep the big picture in mind while learning how to manage the specific objectives needed to be successful. I've also had about 3 very powerful mentors in my life and I think this has really shaped my success.

Q: Did your background help with this web business in anyway

A: These experiences definitely shaped my online businesses and continue to serve me today. One of the most important lessons I learned is that nothing is impossible. What's capable online is a true testament to that statement. If you have an idea, the web can help you make it a reality. I also learned that to succeed online you need to put yourself in the browsers shoes and segment your market. This is so important today and something that many of the clients for whom I consult, just plain miss.

Stay tuned for part II coming soon...

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Google Site Links and How to Get Them

If you're striving for a top ranking for that very competitive keyword, you may discover that the first search result on Google lists more than one page for a particular site (often commanding the first AND second spots on search result listings). I've personally always wondered why this occurs and how I could replicate the success seen by other top ranked website.

Thanks to a recent article available through
EvanCarmichael.com, I now have an answer. Evan provides some great content on his site and I highly recommend it. I hope you enjoy this info as much as I have...

What are Google Site links?
Google Site links are a collection of links that appears below the result of a website. These additional links link to main pages of the website. They are randomly and automatically chosen by Google's algorithm.

Site links only appear for general search terms. You'll get Site links if you search for "HP" but you won't get Site links if you search for a term like "HP printer supplies". Site links show up most often for searches on brand names.

Which links does Google use for the Site links?
Google seems to use the first level links on a website for the Site links. That means that all links that are not present on the homepage of your site won't be used as Site links.

The links should be descriptive text links or image links with a descriptive image, alt attribute. JavaScript or Flash links are not considered for Site links. Google uses 2 to 8 links for the Site links of a website. Unfortunately, it's unclear how Google assigns the number of links to each website.

The text that is used for the Site links can be the text that are used for the link (anchor text) on the homepage or the title of the linked page. It seems that Google prefers links that appear at the top of a web page.

How can you get Site links for your website?
Unfortunately, there is nothing certain about Google's Site links. The following factors seem to influence whether Google displays Site links or not:

1. Your website must have a stable #1 ranking for the searched keyword. Other websites don't seem to get Site links.

2. Your website must be at least 2 years old. It seems that younger websites don't get Site links.

3. The number of searches and the number of clicks that your website gets for a certain keyword seem to be considered. Keywords that aren't searched often enough don't get Site links. It also seems that your website has to get many clicks for the searched keyword.

4. The number of links that point to your website with the searched keyword as the anchor text seem to influence the creation of Site links. Site links only seem to appear for the main keywords of a website, not for all keywords for which a website is listed.

If your website meets these criteria Google might assign Sitelinks to your website for your most important keywords. Site links can be a nice addition for searches for general keywords but they usually won't appear for searches that consist of two to four words. These words are the most important keywords for website promotion and search engine optimization.

Monday, March 10, 2008

Universal Search: What It Is!

If you haven't yet heard about "universal search," you will. The concept of universal search has been talked about for at least the past 18 months and is something that I'm hearing much more about. Universal search combines all the information within its vertical engines/databases into one index to serve a single set of search engine results. In this post from Jennifer Horowitz, you'll learn more about Universal Search and what it means to you.


An example of Vertical engines/databases are Google News, Google Video, Google Images etc. What this means is when you go to www.google.com, (their most highly trafficked domain) and do a search, rather than just getting websites from their main index, you will also get results from the News, Images, Video, etc databases as well. It is a more comprehensive results page.

Google Vice President of Search Products and User Experience Marissa Mayer said the company's goal for universal search is to create "a seamless, integrated experience to get users the best answers."

Sometimes the information you are looking for is best delivered by video, or images or a news story. Currently, you would have to search each of the Vertical engines/databases to get all the information. Google is planning to integrate it into one search engine.

As a searcher this means easier access to various forms of information with only one search. It seems like a good thing, as long as the results are easily organized on the page. It could mean more scrolling to get to the different areas of results, depending how they lay it out.

What To Do and Why

Changes with the search engines can sometimes be confusing. There is a lot of information to evaluate and some decisions to be made. Before you decide anything, you need to understand what your options are.

If your site isn't already properly optimized for organic rankings, that would be the place to start. You want to make sure you have clean, search engine friendly code and a solid foundation, as well as on-page optimization. This would be the starting point, without this in place you have no hope of competing in the engines - with or without Universal Search.
If your site is already properly and aggressively optimized, then you are in good shape to build on that and benefit from Universal Search.

Since Universal Search will take information from the Verticals (like images, press releases, videos, audios, Blog postings, etc) you want to make sure that you have some exposure in each of those areas.

Imagine someone does a search for what you have to offer, and in the Universal Search results your webpage comes up. In the same search your competitor's site comes up PLUS your competitor has video, images and Blog posts as well. A searcher is more likely to click on your competitor's site since more of the total number of results that come up will belong to your competitor.

The other factor is the layout of the results page. We don't know yet how it will play out. If Google mixes all the results together (ex: videos, web pages, Blog posts, images, etc all come up intermingled) that creates one scenario. It means you aren't competing apples to apples for the top spot. It could be video in the 1st position and you are hoping to get your web pages ranked in the 1st position.

Another way of delivering the results would be to group them by category. They could líst all the Blog results, then all the video results under that, and then all the image results under that, etc.

If that is the case, you want to have something listed in each category section because if you happen to have a ranking in the last category section but nothing higher on the page, you are not likely to get a click. What you really need to do in addition to adding content and optimizing your site, is also focus on getting something in the other Verticals.

Top 5 Ways To Participate in Universal Search

1. Google Image Search: It has always been a good idea to use images on your site for illustrating your products and services. Now customers can find your site via Google Image Search. Optimize your images with descriptive, keyword-rich file names and ALT tags. Use accurate descriptions of your image files for the benefit of those who might need to view the site in text only format.

2. Google Video (beta): Use descriptive, keyword-rich file names for your video files. Also create a keyword-rich title tag, description tag, and video site map.

3. Google News: Submit your press releases for display as news, and also as a new content page on your site.

4. Google Maps: AKA Google Local - this has been included in Google search results for a while. Give your site a local presence through the Google Maps Local Business Center where local businesses can get a free basic listing to extend their reach in the SERPs.

5. Google Blog Search (beta): Use social media and Blog engines to drive traffic to the site. Submit to the Google Blog search and have your Blog help boost you in the new world of Universal Search.

With a better understanding of the options, it becomes clear that in order to boost your exposure in the search engines and get new traffic you need to be proactive in anticipation of these Universal Search changes. Don't wait until it is too late and you are scrambling to catch up.

About The Author
Jennifer Horowitz is the Director of Marketing and co-owner of EcomBuffet.com . Since 1998, her expertise in online marketíng and Search Engine Optimization (SEO) has helped clients improve revenue and achieve their business goals. Jennifer has written a downloadable book on Search Engine Optimization and has been published in many SEO and marketing publications. Jennifer can be reached at Jennifer@ecombuffet.com.


Friday, March 7, 2008

How To Succeed With Email Marketing

Over the years, I have found email marketing to be one of the most productive marketing tools when it comes to acquiring and retaining customers. In today's post, Matt Jackson gives his ten step plan for creating effective email marketing campaigns.

When website owners and marketers talk about online marketing, they often refer to SEO and PPC. Email marketing can sometimes be overlooked despite being one of the most powerful methods to reach potential customers and to keep existing customers coming back for more. Perhaps a factor in this is that direct email campaigns are commonly associated with spam emails, but careful list management ensures that this need not be a problem.

There are a number of stages to a successful email marketing campaign and by nailing as many as possible you can improve your results. The key to success, though, most commonly lies in the planning stage. If this is your first foray into email marketing then be prepared to treat it as a test run. The more direct email marketing campaigns you run, the more opportunity you have to optimize the process and improve your results. Here are ten of the most important steps to an effective email campaign.

1. Determine Your Ultimate Goal

This might sound obvious, but having a clear goal in mind will help to concentrate your efforts. There are many effective uses of an email marketing campaign from increasing brand awareness to pushing a new product or seasonal promotion. Each of these uses typically demands a different campaign with its own style and its own components.

Increasing traffic to your website is not usually a bottom line target. The reason for increasing traffic to a website is normally to improve sales and increase profits. In the majority of cases, it is more desirable to attain greater sales through fewer visitors, than having a site awash with visitors but with a poor conversion rate.

A prolonged and careful email marketing campaign will naturally help to improve brand awareness. Your readers will naturally remember your name and the products or services that you sell as they gain more and more exposure to your marketing emails. Similarly, as long as you produce relevant and useful emails, your potential customers will grow to trust you making it more likely that they will purchase from you now or in the future.

2. Your Opt-In Email List

There are a couple of key aspects to this section. Your opt-in list will generate better results than the use of somebody else's list. If you have taken the time and put in the effort to grow your own list, then the members of that list will already have some degree of awareness for you, your products, and your website.

Developing your own list can take time and money. To get a head start it is possible to buy or rent email lists from others. In these cases it is particularly important to pay attention to the second important factor - the list MUST be an opt-in list. Every member of that list must have opted in to receive marketing communication from you and they MUST be given adequate opportunity to opt out of future communication.

Particular care needs to be taken with your list management techniques to ensure that you are not deemed as being spam. If you purchase lists or partial lists then members that opt out need to be recorded separately. If you purchase another list that includes the same name and you subsequently email that person without their express request to be re-included in your list then you face the very real possibility of being flagged as sending spam email.

3. Establish Performance Tracking Techniques

Tracking the performance of any advertising campaign should be foremost in your mind. This is the only true method of determining its worth and is the only way you can optimize your advertising to generate the best possible results. Web analytics are an absolute must-have, and with the wealth of affordable and even free choices available today there is no reason not to have a good analytic package in place.

Tracking code can also be placed into an HTML email. You need to operate a degree of caution when implementing code into HTML emails, because it could lead to your email being blocked by over zealous spam filters. If you can use hyperlinks that include tracking code, and your analytics package includes referral data, then this can generate the majority of the information you require.

The more information you can gleam from an advertising campaign, the better. You will be using these results to fine tune future advertising campaigns, so too much information is better than too little. If in any doubt then consider using an email marketing management service to conduct the tracking on your behalf.

4. Ready Your Website

Directing visitors to your website is only a portion of the battle ahead. Once a reader clicks through the links in your email, you then need to be confident that your web pages are optimized to complete the sale. Conversion rates need to be high on the pages you direct traffic to, but you also need to target the traffic to the most appropriate pages and vice versa.

Consider the anchor text, or link text, that you will be using in your email. If you are encouraging readers to learn more about a product then don't direct them straight to the purchase page unless that page includes the inferred information. Similarly, if you have pre-sold your readers so that they are poised and ready to buy, and your CTA (Call To Action) indicates that this is the next step then you can navigate readers through to a more direct sales page.

Introducing a new product or a new concept will usually take more information than you can provide in a single marketing email. If necessary, add a page or multiple complementary pages, to your website. Direct readers to these pages so that you can combine the use of your email marketing and your optimized and informative content to really persuade and hammer the message home hard.

5. An Effective Subject Line

The subject line of your email is the first thing your readers will read, and you need to ensure that it won't be the last. Human spam filters can be just as difficult to avoid as software spam filters, even for genuine email. You should certainly avoid the use of typically spammy subject lines and opt for a more effective approach.

There are many ways to write an appealing subject line. A newsworthy subject line will often grab the attention but only works effectively in limited cases. Otherwise, try to evoke an emotive response from the reader. The strongest emotions include greed, love, and even hatred or controversy. With these latter two it is again important that you exercise appropriate caution otherwise you may alienate your readers against this and future marketing emails.

Intrigue and appeal work very well. An intriguing headline will draw your readers into the main body of the content and the subject line will have then done its job effectively. Never mislead in the subject of your email but do try to peak your reader's curiosity to the extent that they can't help but open the email and read it fully.

6. Email Body Content

Finally we reach the main body content of the email. That it's taken to point six to do so is an indication of how important the planning and preparation stages are. The subject line has hopefully driven a good portion of your list to open the email, and those readers should be intrigued enough to want to read more.

Research shows that the more personalized the message, the more likely it will be to succeed. Start with a personalized greeting and use a friendly, even conversational tone, throughout the message. Inform readers of what they need to know but do so informally and in as friendly a manner as is possible by email.

The email absolutely has to be grammatically and factually correct, and must not contain typos. These types of errors can be an instant turn off for readers. Run a spell check. Twice. And then check it manually and have somebody else check it again for you. At the same time check the links and ensure that they do indeed direct to the proper pages.

Include a Call To Action, or CTA, rather than just a link. A CTA is a direction that points your visitors to perform your desired action. This could be to click a link, make a purchase, or even forward the email to friends. The CTA needs to be clearly defined an, obviously, as effective and accurate as possible.

7. Hyperlinks To Your Site

The entire point (although probably not your ultimate goal) of your email is to get readers to click on links and visit your website. Include two or three links in the body of your email and make sure they are relevant without being too obvious. Lead readers to click the links rather than directly point it out and find something more effective than "click here" to use as your anchor text.

Two to three links is the ideal number. Too few links and your email won't prove effective at driving traffic, while too many links will detract from the actual content of the email. If your email is very short then offer two links, or offer three links within longer messages. Contextual links (that is, those that appear within the body of the email rather than at the end) are usually significantly more effective.

Check and double check that links work and direct to the correct page. Once you've done this, have somebody else check them too. The number of marketing emails that have failed because of broken or incorrect links is alarmingly high and this is not a trap that you want to fall into.

8. Choose The Best Time To Send Your Email

The time you send your email can have a significant impact on its effectiveness. During the night, most people's emails fill up. In a lot of cases, this can mean that your reader will be faced with tens of emails in the morning, many of them rubbish. This leaves a very real chance that they will simply ignore or delete your email without noticing who sent it, what it is about, or whether they have any interest in reading it.

Consider your target market and when they are most likely to be sat in front of their email. Those with a global market may find this more difficult because of the time difference, but otherwise bear this in mind too. Not every website or marketing email is geared towards residents from the same country.

9 . Test Email

Initially, send a test email to yourself, friends, family, or colleagues. This is more to determine that it arrives looking as expected. Once you have done this and are happy with how your email looks, you should then move on to send a second test email to a small selection of your list. This gives you ample opportunity to make any last minutes changes or tweaks according to how this small test run performs.

You might even consider sending several tests out to different groups, if you have a large enough list. This enables you to test the subject line, content, and product price, by making alterations before each test run. Be sure to test the different components separately, though, so that you can determine what needs changing and what works well.

A test email also gives you chance to check that you are set up and able to track the results and any other information you want to track. A good email marketing service will do this by default, because the test email can prove to be one of the single most effective ways to improve the performance of a one-off email shot.

10. Monitor, Optimize, And Start Again

Being careful not to send emails too frequently, you should send regular communication to your list. An unloved list will be more likely to unsubscribe and readers become most responsive after approximately seven items of communication from you. Monitor results, check bounce rates, and look for ways that your campaign could be improved.

Once you've found the best ways to improve a campaign make the improvements and begin the procedure again from the beginning. This process of monitoring, optimizing, and starting again will help to increase exposure, improve brand awareness, and generally improve results and profit levels.

Why Your List Is So Important

A list can last you a lifetime and it is possible to continue selling to the same list members over and over again. In fact, once a list member purchases from you, and presuming that everything goes smoothly during and after the sale, they will be more inclined to purchase from you in the future. You will have won their trust, gained their favor, and they can be relied upon to help you with extra sales in the future.

Look after your list and your list will look after your profits.


About the Author: Matt Jackson, founder of WebWiseWords, offers SEO copywriting and a range of other web content writing services to increase traffic and improve conversions for your website.

Monday, March 3, 2008

Quickly Build Your House List

One of the best ways to grow your business is through direct marketing. The most effective form of direct marketing is often the use of email. The key is to find a targeted list that costs little. The best performing email lists that meet the before mentioned criteria are what we marketers call a "house" list. The house list is simply a list that you acquire on your own - usually from your own website.

One of the most effective techniques I have found for acquiring email addresses is with the help of a free download. A free download can be as simple as a special report or even a checklist. If you have some content that is valuable to your target market, you can simply save it as a PDF, making it easy to download. Furthermore, you can require that individuals register by entering their name and email address in order to access the report.

If you're not experienced with creating these types of forms, don't despair. There are a variety of online tools and even instructions on creating online forms. Once the form is submitted, individuals can be redirected to a web page that includes a link to the free report. This makes the process simple and allows you to collect a large number of emails.

It's essential that you use the emails you acquire for your own purposes. Don't forget to reassure the browser that you won't sell their name to third parties. This will improve your conversion rates and keep you out of CAN-SPAM trouble.

The last step is to follow up with your prospects using an email touch program. There are a variety of tools out there that can automate the process for you. I've personally used Aweber because you don't need programming experience to implement touch program. The beauty of using such a system is that you set up your form and the rest is automated.

Once a user downloads your offer, they receive ongoing communications from you until they opt-out. Many of my purchases are a direct result of the automated emails I send. It's like having a sales person working for you 24/7. If you want to build a house list and begin generating sales, try offering a free download from your website. It's easy to do and costs little or nothing to implement.