Sunday, May 30, 2010

How to Use LinkedIn for Marketing & SEO: 20 Resources


LinkedIn has been around for ages but finally the service matures. LinkedIn has gained critical mass and positions itself as an alternative or addition for both Facebook and Twitter. I’ve been on LinkedIn for several years but until recently I wasn’t serious about my LinkedIn presence. While I’m wary of social media and networking by now I will nevertheless use LinkedIn in a strategic way from now on.
At first I present you this LinkedIn marketing and SEO resources list. As a follow up I will write a post on how I do optimize my LinkedIn profile. Also take note that this list doesn’t not contain the typical LinkedIn SEO advice pieces where SEO is solely meant as Google SEO. In SEO 2.0 we deal with search holistically. Thus LinkedIn is treated as just another search “engine”.
How to Use LinkedIn & LinkedIn Profile Optimization
LinkedIn Marketing & Use Cases
Using Specific LinkedIn Features
Take note that I didn’t add all LinkedIn resources I know but selected them very carefully of the course of several months. There are not that many serious LinkedIn marketing resources out there. Most LinkedIn SEO posts are just short and often outdated tidbits. So it took me considerable research to pick these resources.
Do you want to know more about me? Well, you can view my LinkedIn profile. In case you want to connect with me make sure to tell me why. I don’t just collect “friends” for the sake of numbers.
Last but not least consider reading my social media hopping post on how you shouldn’t waste your time with social media and networking but use is to propel your business to new heights instead. I will explain how a balanced social media strategy should be implemented in a future post. You can’t abandon social media as a business person but you can’t work for social sites as a user generated content slave for free either.
source: seo2.0

Search Engine Optimization - 5 More Tips


There are so many different aspects to Search Engine Optimization from the technical stuff, to content, to words. Here are some more common aspects.

1 Blog in folder. Have a blog attached to your main site. Put it into a folder like this: mainsite.com/blog which will allow the links and traffic you get to the blog to be associated with your main site. If you put it as a sub-domain as in: blog.mainsite.com, the blog will be seen as a separate website by Google(TM).

2 Sane URLs. You have seen them, haven't you? URLs which look as if they're maths from a space probe mission. For example, website.com/?=3and9&?46. This is made up but I'm sure there are far more complicated ones to be easily found. Instead of all that use a redirect system or somehow convert to a plain URL.

3 Anchor your images. Give your images an ALT text so search engines can read them easier and you'll get better ranking for doing so.

4 Keywords. You need to do a full keyword research for your website to ensure you know what you're aiming at in developing content. If not, you may end up writing and producing lots of material but none of it relevant to what you're trying to achieve and not relevant to the people you're trying to reach. Then, this will affect your traffic and opt-in list. Try to use the best tools you can afford so you're drilling down into your market and seeing it from different perspectives.

5 Backlinks weakened. If you have two pages with the same content on them, such as http and a www pages, then backlinks could end up on either of them So, besides duplicate content, you'll have weakened your linking power.

source: ezinearticles.

The Latest SEO Trends


So what SEO techniques are you using? Are you using the latest techniques and are you aware the latest SEO trends? Do you have any idea what direction the search marketing industry is going? Unfortunately to keep up you must work hard to be educated on the latest direction the industry is moving.

All the big forces and even some of newest players are taking the industry in a new direction and if you are not keeping up the picture will become dull. What is becoming a major change in how people communicate on the internet?

The train has left the station did you get on board? The changes taking place are so fast you may only be aware of the SEO methods you use just don't work as well as they have in the past. The old methods of directing your customer via emotions to make a purchase just is not working like it used to. The direction we are moving today some of the old guys just may remember. The new business model today is moving in the direction of trust before a purchase is made.
Some may remember that a customer's trust had to be earned instead of assumed to insure getting a sale.

If you are keeping up with the game a new area that has left the station is the mobile search technology. We are headed for a huge growth in this area get onboard for huge opportunity.
Search marketing is moving in the direction of location based searches. Have you taken note of late that even Twitter has done the job of giving the axe to the old fashion spammy business model to prepare for location marketing that is coming. You can see this change coming at us very fast by the new phones hitting the market. Just look the new phones that know your exact location and the technology even knows all the places you are close to.
The location game is growing in leaps and bounds with all the things that can be done with the information. If you are following along you may already see this with Facebook and Twitter building their location marketing options. The train has left the station in the direction of location based marketing for the industry.

Are you Onboard Yet?

You do not have to look very hard to see all the mobile phone new additions the mobile application has already blasted off with the new applications. The major search industry is no longer just providing results for laptops and kids home and business computers. The search capability is now following you everywhere on the planet. You can download and application from your phone for many businesses to improve your visit experience for more efficiency.

Today's Marketing Strategy is Trust

Not really a new concept just one that has long been forgotten. Internet marketers that are not putting in the time to learn the changes in the industry will quickly be left behind. Trust will be the key to driving sales in the not too distant future online trust will be the answer to many companies success in getting the sale.
The ever changing industry of search engine marketing is moving at lightning speed to the future. The new technologies are descending on us almost every single day. The strange part is it is not going to slow down for you to catch up. The changes in SEO techniques are going to come faster and faster as time goes by.

One Way Back Links - Quality vs Quantity - Who Wins?


On-page optimization is an important part of your SEO strategy. Even more important is the Off-page optimization of your site to meet the requirements of the major Search Engine's criteria to gain top ranking positions in their search results. Specifically, this article deals with Links on other sites linking back to your website. Just to clarify, each back-link to your site counts as a popularity vote in the eyes of the Search Engines. The more popular your site is, generally equates to how highly the Search Engines will rank your site for your chosen keywords. What will come to light here is that "Quality" out performs "Quantity" when embarking on your link building campaign.

Let's start by taking an example of a true posting on a Newsgroup I read recently. The frustrated Poster went on to explain that he had over 200 sites linking back to his website. Even with this amount, his pages were not showing in the top 100 in any of the major Search Engines for his chosen "keywords". What annoyed him even more was, when he analyzed the website in #1 position for the same keyword search, he observed that the site only had 21 links! When I analyzed both sets of links, the answer was very plain to see. Out of the 200+ links to the Posters website, most were of poor quality and didn't score a positive vote with the Search Engines. Needless to say, when I analyzed the 20 or so links back to the site holding #1 position, most of the links were good quality, positive votes for that site. So the conclusion in this case is that Quality definitely out-performed Quantity.

So the obvious question is: What criteria makes a good quality Link? The answer to this is that it must pass a Quality Control check to meet, as Google describes it to be a NATURAL Link. The check off list for quality is as follows:

1. Run a test to make sure the Links Page your link will be on is indexed by the Search Engines. Make sure there are no Robots.txt preventing it from being indexed.

2. Ideally the Links Page will have a Google PR ranking at least equal to your site.

3. If the Links Page has no PR ranking, check that it hasn't been banned by the Search Engines. Linking to a banned site can seriously damage your page ranking or even get YOUR site banned too!

4. Check there is a direct Text/Anchor Link from the sites Home page to their Links Page. This will be sufficient if the Links Page has no PR as mentioned in 2. above. Taking note that the Home page has a PR ranking at least equal to your site.

5. When you supply the text for your link, make sure your Primary Keywords are used in the Link/Anchor part of the text. Check this after the website owner has placed your Link on his Links Page.

6. Make sure there is no more than 25 outbound links from the Links Page. Over this amount will water down the value of the links on the page.

7. Don't go mad and try to place a thousand links in one day (not that it will be possible if done correctly - which is by using MANUAL submission). A sudden big increase in Links back to your site in a short space of time can be seen as Spam by the Search Engines and you know what will happen next!

There are other factors that could be discussed but, by keeping to just the seven items listed above - with no compromise, then you will be establishing Quality Links back to your website. I'll tell you now, finding links with all these seven qualities is not an easy task. It's going to take a lot of searching and a lot of hours to find that unique handful which will most definitely help in achieving the top ranking positions in the Search Engines you desire for your website.
Another good tip: Go to the major Search Engines like Google, Yahoo! and MSN. Click on their Help button, find the information on URL Submission and read carefully. They will tell you exactly what they are looking for from your website to get indexed with them. Obey - and you never know, one day you'll look and find your site in #1 position. Believe me, it's a great feeling of satisfaction when it happens.

How to Use Google Webmaster Tools for SEO Inspiration


Ever since Google Webmaster Tools added the so called “search queries” data I’ve become a huge fan of them. I’ve listed the 10 Google SEO tools everybody should use in the past but to be honest I focus on three of them right now Google Insights, Google Analytics and Google Webmaster Tools for SEO inspiration. The wealth of information GWB offers is like a goldmine.
The tool-set has grown over the years steadily but I was neglecting it. By now there are numerous ways to use Google Webmaster Tools for SEO. Again I will focus on three of them here and explain how to use GWB for
  1. Keyword Research
  2. Link Building
  3. CRO/Conversion Rate Optimization

In case you haven’t used Google Webmaster Tools yet at all I strongly advise you to read this excellent intdroductory series by Search Engine Guide.

Keyword Research
While Google offer several outstanding keyword research tools, Google Webmaster Tools enable you to find out keywords that really matter for your actual site. Hugo Guzman has written a good post on how to find your most valuable keywords using it.
The idea is to seek out the low hanging fruit of keywords already ranking on the verge of top 5 and to push them higher via low level SEO to get a high ROI. This is a really neat concept. Usually I’d focus on the big earners, high traffic keywords and important queries. Probably everybody else does as well so by focusing on these “almost there” terms you save time an money not fighting that many competing websites.
Link Building 
I’m often surprised at which of my pages get the links and where from when checking “Links to your site”. Even orphaned pages (that have no connection to my main website) get inbound links. Also it’s amazing to find out that sites you have never got any significant traffic from link to you. These are often crappy scraper sites and other automated set ups but sometimes you’ll find a gem.
Then you can target these sites to get even more links. For example you can discover who links to you on Tumblr and then follow these users. While repeat links from the same do not count as much as from new ones there is only a finite number of places in a given industry so there is no problem with getting links from the site again and again. Especially authority sites that link more that once to you are a great asset.
You’ll discover these links by using other link tools be it paid ones or Yahoo Site Explorer but often you get too many links, mostly nofollowed ones via these tools to find the good or great ones.
.
CRO/Conversion Rate Optimization
You can find out your best and worst converting keywords. The first step of a conversion is converting a searcher to a visitor. You fail already here in most cases and it’s quite surprising which keywords and phrases get the highest CTR (click through rates). For instance we have a 100% CTR on the query [rss meta]. The searchers end up on a tiny post from 2006.
In contrast our huge resources lists often get quite low CTR. Does it mean that we should write dozens of microblogging like posts instead of one gigantic list? The 100% CTR is no anomaly, it’s just the most striking example.
Also we rank high for [seo services uk] and similar queries but the CTR is disappointing. It seems that we need landing page optimization as our competitors target the query directly in their titles and have extra pages for it. At SEOptimise users land on the homepage and don’t find the term “SEO services” immediately.
How do you use Google Webmaster Tools? Does it inspire you to take concrete steps? Do you optimize your websites based on GWT data? I often check Google Insights, Google Analytics and Google Webmaster Tools for SEO inspiration. Whenever I need some input on what to write about I check what’s popular already and don’t rely solely on my imagination. I can check popular items on Topsy, Delicious or elsewhere but Google offers me much more accurate data for my niche and particular site..
source: seoptimise

Twitter Monopoly for Stream Ads: What Does it Mean for Business?


Welcome back to the weekly Twitter column. The biggest and saddest Twitter news this week was another blow to the Twitter app developer community: Twitter banned all third party stream ads to monopolize advertising for it’s own “featured tweets” ad platform.
While on the one hand, it’s understandable, Google doesn’t allow competing services to sell ads in search results either, on the other hand this a typical measure to stifle competition we all love to hate.
Twitter is biting the hand that feeds them. 
One reason while Twitter has grown so fast is that it allowed third parties to add all kinds of functionality to it. While some of them charge users most people don’t pay for Twitter apps and thus many of the software developers rely on advertising. Now their business models are dead over night. Even Twitter clients can’t advertise in their streams or timelines.
Any display of tweets is a stream btw. so it doesn’t matter whether it’s the main Twitter timeline, a list or a search, displaying ads there is forbidden from now on.
Exempt from this new ruling are only ads outside the timeline/stream and privately inserted ads or sponsored tweets, like when you tweet an affiliate links. This is still better than Tumblr e.g which forbids all kinds of affiliate links on its services but it’s basically killing of some software. So the Twitter software business is basically a high risk endeavor now.
  • Access to tweets has been limited repeatedly.
  • Apps can get banned for all kinds of breaches of the TOS like the Pluggio client has been a few weeks ago for automating too much. Twitter doesn’t want users to unfollow more than a few people at once.
  • Now you can’t make money by advertising on Twitter. What comes next?
Business relations rely on trust. How can you trust a company that stabs it’s developer community in the back again and again? I don’t think solely about the developers here. For everyone doing business on Twitter or via Twitter right now: This is the last call to back up your Twitter assets. Like Ning Twitter might decide one day that it wants to sell your Twitter followers or tweets back to you.
For SEOs and marketers the measures by Twitter are also bad news more often now. First they made the “bio” links nofollow, later they crippled all links in your Twitter stream to name the most obvious changes.
Even the average users get annoyed repeatedly. Just last week Twitter decided to block old school “RT” retweets from searches. Any day a change imposed by Twitter might crush your business model. Use Twitter to the max while the party lasts. Be prepared to leave when the party is over.
Other platforms become more and more important these days, both LinkedIn and Facebook for example. Last but not least platform independent business models are gaining foothold again in the highly volatile social media arena. I consider renaming my column to social media weekly. What do you think? Has Twitter jumped the shark?
source: seoptimise

SEO and Social Media Questions Answered

How do I get links into my site?

An age old question that has left many site owners confused and frustrated. Google is pretty finicky about what links they do and don’t count towards your link popularity. They are looking for quality long term links into your site that really show that your site is popular. Tons of link exchanges and too many links acquired too quickly are a bit of a red flag for Google.

Although we all want it to happen overnight, your very best bet with linking is to realize that it does take some time and the best way to get links is to put quality content out there that people can link to.

How do you do that?

Write a great article and post it on your Blog, syndicate it to your Facebook Fan page, syndicate it to article directories, submit your RSS feed to various directories, Tweet your content (and ask for RTs), email your content to your mailing list. You want to push your content out there any way you can think of. Just remember people will only link to it if it’s good stuff – so the key to your linking success is to write great content. Make sure you have a system in place to syndicate the content out to as many places as possible.

What social media do I really need to participate in?

Twitter is a must. Twitter drives traffic, helps spread content, creates relationships, creates amazing networking opportunities, it allows you to participate in real time search and helps you get links into your site and so much more. Your prospective clients are using Twitter. Can you afford for them not to find you there?

Facebook is a no-brainer. Every business needs a Fan Page. You may choose not to have a personal profile that you actively update but your business needs a Fan Page no matter what. Fan Pages are a great way to get exposure, drive traffic to your site and capture leads. What most people are missing when they create a Fan Page is that there is so much more to a GOOD Fan Page than just a Wall and some photos. You need custom tabs created to get maximum exposure. You need to pull your Blog feed into your page. If you don’t know how to create a killer Fan Page, contact me for details.

Some stats you need to know about Facebook:

* Facebook has 400 Million Global Users (and growing)
* Facebook has 100 Million U.S. Users: Facebook is strong worldwide (Canada has the highest penetration rate), but almost 1/3 of all Facebook users are in the U.S.
* The average Facebook User Spends 55 Minutes Per Day
* Real-time Search Is Important: Facebook is now making most content available publicly (unless you adjust your privacy settings). This has tremendous implications for search engine optimization and reputation management. You need to be on top of real-time search – today.

A recent study (The Sysomos study) found a strong correlation between amount of content (notes, links, photos, videos and custom pages/tabs) and number of fans.

If you are looking to really grow your Fan base, you need something more than a standard Fan page.

Stay tuned as I answer more questions. Please don’t forget to leave your comments on my Blog. Share your thoughts and ask any questions you have.


To Your Success,

source: ecombuffet

SEO Questions & Answers

Time for more common SEO questions…

1.    What is more important – content or links?

I love this question!  My response is: why is it one or the other? If both are important to the engines (and they are!), focus on both!

I will say that the engines fluctuate a lot in what links they will credit your site with. You may see Google crediting you with 200 links one day and only 20 a week later.  People try to manipulate the engines through linking and Google has gotten pretty good at weeding out links they don’t think should count.

But good content has never been devalued – it’s always been important to the engines.

So my suggestion is to start with good, clean, search engine friendly code and then build your site with strong content that uses your keywords well and then focus on building quality links.

You don’t want to ignore links or content but you want to focus your efforts on what will have the most impact and you want to cover all areas.  If you are writing good content, you should be putting it out there via your Blog, Facebook Fan Page and Twitter account and that should help your content spread and help you pick up links.  So although both links and content are important, I personally always come back to content as the foundation and then build from there.

2.    How do I know if I should hire an SEO Firm?

If you don’t have the rankings/exposure/traffic you need to grow your business AND you don’t have the time or knowledge to handle the work yourself, then you need to outsource the work.

If you aren’t sure if you will benefit from search engine optimization, you should contact me to schedule a consultation.  I will look at your site, determine what the issues are, take a look at how much potential traffic there is for you to tap into and go over costs and options.  There is no obligation.  Contact me at 562-592-5347 or jennifer@ecombuffet.com

So to summarize: if you think your site is lacking in rankings/exposure/traffic , you should definitely contact me.  While it’s true rankings increase over time and history matters, if your site doesn’t have a solid foundation, good content, some linking and on-page optimization then rankings won’t magically appear.

That’s all for today.  Stay tuned for future questions and answers and as always – keep sending me your questions.

source: ecombuffet

New SERPs in Google

In May 2010 Google launched their new Search Engine Results Pages (SERPs) – for the beginners who are not familiar with the terminology the SERPs are the page you see your results on after you perform a search in Google.

With the new design, Google is forcing users to notice all the options available to them.

It’s a common belief that this new layout will change how people interact with the search results and people will play with the various options now that they are more prominent.

Notice you can narrow your search for News, Images etc in the top left section.  Then you can access various search tools and then they offer “Something Different” which gives you other options that they feel are related to your search.

Tip: To be sure you come up on top when people click for the “Latest” results, you want to be sure you are updating your site regularly.

WebProNews reports that Yahoo shared when they added features to their left-hand navigation bar, engagement increased.   “We’ve been steadily adding more filtering options and relevant search suggestions to our left-hand navigation bar…and have seen engagement and click-throughs for those features double over the past seven months.”  (Source: http://www.webpronews.com/topnews/2010/05/06/yahoo-weve-got-a-left-hand-navigation-bar-too)

The Take-Away:

It is going to be very important that you evaluate the related search queries and available options for phrases you want to rank for, to make sure you do well when users engage with the various options in the new results page.

source: ecombuffet

Saturday, May 29, 2010

Google Now Lists the Top 1,000 Websites On The Web


Curious to know what are the largest websites on the web? While there are some lists around, none of them was regarded as accurate, and Google apparently wants to fix this. It just released its own Top 1000 Websites list.
As you can see below, the list shows the category of the website, its number of monthly unique visitors, page views, and whether or not the website accepts advertising.
top 1000 websites
The announcement was made on the official AdWords blog. In fact this list was developed to help advertisers target big websites that accept ads.
According to Google itself “the list excludes adult sites, ad networks, domains that don’t have publicly visible content or don’t load properly, and certain Google sites,” so keep this in mind.
Here are the blogs I spotted on the list:
  • #246 – The Huffington Post – 12 million Uniques
  • #434 – Engadget – 8,1 Million Uniques
  • #540 – Gizmodo – 6.7 Million Uniques
  • #696 – Mashable – 5.6 Million Uniques
  • #850 – TechCrunch – 4.7 Million Uniques
If these numbers are accurate they reveal some very interesting data. For example, Mashable is as big as PCWorld, one of the oldest and most established tech publications. Similarly, Engadget is as big as the Washington Post (on the web only, obviously). And The Huffington Post as big as Digg (counting uniques only, not page views).
I was hoping to see Daily Blog Tips around the last positions, but no luck…!
Update: Here is where Google says the numbers are coming from:
Traffic statistics are estimated by combining sample user data from various Google products and services and opt-in direct-measured site-centric data. In addition, site owners may opt-in direct measured Google Analytics traffic statistics to provide a more accurate measure of their site traffic. Sites that have opted-in direct measured Google Analytics data are indicated through the footnote “Google Analytics data shared by publisher”.

source: dailyblogtips

10 Important Facts of Blog Promotion


Almost every blogger aims to grow their blog and reach a larger audience. Unfortunately, most new bloggers don’t know much about promoting a blog when they are just getting started. The good news is you will learn pretty quickly if you are consistently involved and working at promoting your blog. Here are ten things that I have learned to be true from my experience.
1. Building Significant Search Engine Traffic Will Take Time
New blogs generally take several months, at least, before they gain enough trust from search engines to produce any type of significant flow of traffic. If you are planning to focus on search engines as your primary source of traffic, you would be well advised to also focus on some other sources of traffic, especially in the early months.
Building a blog that is search engine-friendly is critical if you want to maximize search traffic, so take care of that from the start and focus on creating great content that others will talk about and link to.
2. Not All Traffic Is Equal
No two sources of traffic are quite the same. I get a good percentage of the traffic at my blog through social media, and I can attest to the fact that social media traffic is generally less responsive and less likely to stick around than visitors from most other sources. Focusing on stats without looking at the true results can cause a bit of an illusion. Sure, visitors are great, but are they leaving after being on the blog for 30 seconds and never returning?
Search engine traffic is highly sought after because these visitors are actively looking for what you have to offer. But other types of traffic have strong points too. Visitors who are referred from another blog will generally be more responsive since they have been recommended by someone they trust. Every source of traffic has pros and cons, so try to take these things into consideration when you are promoting your blog and analyzing the results.
3. Consistent Posting Is Key
Most bloggers need to keep publishing new posts in order to keep traffic at a certain level. Some bloggers are able to generate large amounts of search engine traffic to older posts to the point that traffic will be fairly sustained without new posts, but this is pretty rare. New posts keep subscribers coming back, they keep social media votes coming, and they keep adding new pages to search engine indexes.
Posting consistently doesn’t mean that you have to post every day, it simply means that you need to publish content on a regular basis, whatever that may be. Almost every blog that successfully draws traffic is publishing new posts with some consistency.
4. Consistent Traffic Is Almost Impossible
Although posting needs to be consistent to keep traffic levels up, that doesn’t mean that it will keep traffic levels consistent. Every blog has ups and downs and two days are rarely the same. This is a natural occurrence and it should be embraced or else it can become very frustrating. Make sure that you enjoy the times when traffic is high, and keep on plugging away to get through the slower times. Blogging would almost be boring is traffic levels didn’t fluctuate like they do.
5. Repeat Visitors Should Be the Goal
Yes, it’s great to see an impressive number of unique visitors arriving at your blog, but how many of them will be back? Repeat visitors are the lifeblood of blogs. Subscribers, of course, are most likely to keep coming back, so focusing on subscribers is typically a good thing.
Repeat visitors will not only help to improve your overall traffic flow and stats, more importantly they will be your most responsive visitors in terms of comments, social media votes, sales, and just about anything else. As they keep coming back and reading your blog, you will be earning more of their trust and your network will grow.
6. Links Help In Several Ways
Building inbound links is a priority for most bloggers, and for good reason. They drive click-through traffic from other blogs, they increase your exposure around the blogosphere, and they help to boost your search engine rankings. Link building is often prioritized because of search engine rankings, but the other factors should not be overlooked. If you blog in a competitive niche, recognition and exposure will be critical in convincing visitors that they should pay attention to you. Getting a few links from respected blogs can help with search engine traffic, but the added credibility that you get can be just as important, especially for newer bloggers.
7. Balance Is Important
Diversity in traffic will help you to avoid losing a huge percentage of your visitors if something unforeseen happens. Search engine rankings are not permanent, especially with Google being so ready and willing to penalize blogs who they feel have violated their guidelines. If you rely too heavily on search engine traffic you could find yourself losing a big portion of your traffic at any given time.
Also, social media traffic is extremely inconsistent, so just because you have been getting decent traffic doesn’t mean it will continue. The best approach is to spread things out and focus on growing traffic from several sources rather than just one. That way you will always be safe and you won’t depend on a particular source for your livelihood.
8. Smaller Sources of Traffic Shouldn’t Necessarily Be Ignored
Not all sources of traffic will send thousands of visitors, but that doesn’t mean that they are not valuable. For example, participating in forums is likely to drive some traffic to your blog, but not tons. However, those visitors can be very valuable because they have met you or learned from you through the forum and they’ll be more likely to subscribe and become a loyal reader.
Likewise, leaving comments on other blogs will bring some traffic, but it is rare that any one comment will bring a lot of visitors. Still, this traffic is valuable because many times they have clicked through due to something that you said catching their attention.
Don’t simply assume that traffic is measured only in terms of numbers. Smaller sources of traffic have been instrumental in building many successful blogs.
9. Networking Is Critical
All successful bloggers are surrounded by a strong network of other successful bloggers. This is something that I didn’t really think much about before I started blogging, but I quickly came to realize the importance of networking.
A strong network will provide you with friends and colleagues that can be a help when you need some advice, they can provide links to your blog, they can give you social media votes, they can be an inspiration and encouragement to you, and they can even wind up being your partners in future projects. Being a strong networker is all about being willing to help others and being proactive in meeting others.
10. Blog Traffic Can Be Bought for Relatively Little Money
If you are interested in getting some extra promotion or growing your blog quickly, there are a number of affordable advertising options that will drive real traffic to your blog. Pay Per Click ads can be very effective and inexpensive (depending on what words and phrases you bid on). StumbleUpon advertising is another option. You can purchase their traffic for just $0.05 per visitor. Even banner advertisements on other blogs can be relatively cheap. Running an ad for a month or more will give you exposure to a new audience and if you were to calculate a cost-per-click it is usually pretty low.
source: dailyblogtips

Three Taboos of Social Media Marketing – What NOT to do


You have probably seen and heard many success stories of companies that have high returns on their slim advertising budgets. Marketing a business or product on social media has become popular due to its successful return on investment. Before you spend your hard-earned advertising time on social media, you’ve got to make sure you get the main pointers down on what works and what does not work.
The No. 1 social media problem is heavy marketing and advertising on social media.You may be thinking, “wait, isn’t that the point of social media marketing?” Of course your main goal when marketing on social media is getting the audience to accept your message or product. But what you need to understand, is that social media is all about making a ‘relationship.’ Sending automated friend requests and twitter follwers to a large group is not a great way of showing that you want to establish a relationship. Make a connection, offer beneficial information, comment on their websites or posted material before you start to market your products/services.
Another pointer, find the right audience for you and your message. It seems that there is a huge gap between the correct way of advertising and promoting yourself on social media and the spammy social media marketing and communication between you and your customers. Find your right audience and keep up the relationship.
Your second worst mistake, your information and interaction is non-existent. Social media marketing can really be a full-time job. Reseraching the followers you have or the facebook friends, send them material they are interested in, post material on your site that is the ‘buzz’ news. A popular site, www.popurls.com, gives you the daily ‘buzz’ on all social media networks. Find this material and ’shoutout’ to specific followers you think would be interested in the news. Comment on pictures and profiles.
The third problem, and probably the most prevalent today, is that your team just does not believe in the product. If they would rather be playing computer games than instead of helping the project, get rid of them. Social media marketing may sound easy, but it can be tiring and distracting. Stick to the mission and message of social media. Perhaps make a check list to do daily or hourly, depending on your level of interaction.
Even though Facebook, Twitter and other social media sites may have started out as strictly social networking, if companies do this correctly, social media sites can becoming driving force behind a successful marketing strategy.
source: niceblogger

Can You Use Social Media to Advance Your Career?


If you are looking to find a better paying job, make business connections, or even keep your ear open to the job market, social media may be the way to go. These days, more and more recruiters are using social media regularly to headhunt instead of the age-old practice of gathering resumes manually.
You may have guessed by now that Twitter plays a big part in the tools that recruiters use to find new job candidates. One specific Twitter user to follow is TweetaJob, which recruiters can use if they don’t already have a developed Twitter following. This lets anyone interested in the job market look for new jobs that are posted, which also helps recruiters to weed out thousands of candidates that may not be right for the job.
The main benefit to using social media as a recruiter is that it narrows the scope of the job candidates. If a job is posted on a mega website, like Monster.com, it is likely that thousands of candidates could apply. It could take weeks for an HR department to weed through all of the online resumes to find the right person for the job. When recruiters begin to use social media, they can seek out other candidates in their area of interest, and they can also post jobs in a specific niche market to be found by the right person.
Of course, there are social media websites, like Linked In, that cater to business professionals. If you are on the job search or are hoping to make network connections, Linked In is a great place to begin. This will give you the opportunity to join groups, get to know people, and build relationships with potential future colleagues.
The bottom line is that social media is the way of the future, and you don’t only have to be a Facebook addict to use it! More and more, recruiters are relying upon social media to streamline the hiring process and select the best candidate for the position.

source: niceblogger

Increasing Your Website Traffic with Free Publicity


When an expert, author or small-business owner creates a website to promote his or her expertise, service, product or business, they’ll typically find generating traffic to their site is a lot harder than they expected. Websites are a great tool to engage current and potential target audiences; but if they aren’t flocking to your site, you’ll need to get the word out. That’s when PR and mainstream media placements can be invaluable.
The power of PR lies in sharing your unique expertise, knowledge and perspective with the media and the public. Being featured in print, broadcast or online media can give you priceless publicity, with results you may not have even dreamed. Take Stress Elimination and Neuroplasticity Expert Don Goewey. After giving a radio interview to promote his book Mystic Cool on 102.1 KDFC San Francisco, Don’s website MysticCool.com saw a tremendous spike in visitors — over 10,000 that morning. Don is one of my PR firm’s clients and our job is to get him out in front of his target audience. But there are ways you can get media placements and produce results like Don’s — for free — with media connection sites PitchRate.com, HARO and Reporter Connection.
Sites like PitchRate.com and Reporter Connection offer experts, authors and small-business owners an amazing opportunity to gain free publicity — and increase their website traffic — for their books, businesses and products. When you sign up for these services you’ll get daily media requests from journalists looking for sources. Find a request that fits your expertise and pitch the journalist directly. If they like what you have to offer, you can be featured as the go-to source in your expertise. Not only can it boost the number of visitors to your website, but it can also increase your credibility among your target audience.
Once you land that media placement and you find yourself in Don Goewey’s shoes —giving a radio interview that could drive 10,000 visitors to your site the same day— you’ll need to practice your sound bites, develop a clear and memorable message and most importantly, make sure the URL of your website can be remembered and easily spelled by the audience listening to the program. Don’s MysticCool.com is easy and memorable; but what if he had gone with DonJosephGoewey.com or Neuroplasticity.com? Would he have seen such a spike in traffic? Could you spell “neuroplasticity” after hearing it mentioned on the radio? Just like with everything in PR and business, being clear, concise and simple is the way to go.
source: niceblogger

Why Affiliate Marketing And Social Network Sites Are Great Internet Business Ideas


Looking for new Internet business ideas?
Wondering, How can I make my website a better affiliate site? 

The internet offers no end for affiliate marketing opportunities and social networking sites are no exception. More and more companies are establishing themselves on social sites such as Facebook and MySpace.Consider this: Don’t just think about these sites as ways to generate direct sales, but rather think of these sites as ways to generate more traffic to your site.The success of your affiliate marketing program on social networking sites is going to be determined by your ability to establish yourself within a community of individuals û a community of individuals, who for the most part, already know each other. You can’t just waltz into a community and start blatantly advertising.You have to establish trust within that community and build your reputation based on that trust. If you go in sounding like a salesperson or spamming people with ôlife-changingö products, people are not going to trust you. Companies who are the most successful on social networking sites are those who establish real relationships with the people there. To that effect, you need to put some effort into your presence on these sites and avoid using automatic responders to people’s inquiries.If you have generated enough of a fan base or a loyal following of customers, treat this with importance by responding to them personally. If they have made a suggestion, make a comment on how you intend to incorporate that suggestion. If they give you a rave review, say “Thanks!”
On social networking sites people do a lot more than just tell you they have just come home from walking their dog. They also tell you about products and services they love. Here is where you come in as an affiliate marketer. You have firsthand information about what people want and need, and more so, what they do not like. Social networking sites are a great way to get interactive feedback.
You don’t want to use these sites for strictly promotional purposes. If all you post about is how good your site is or how good your affiliate’s product is you are going to be ignored. You can use these sites to create excitement and enthusiasm about your product or services with contests or promotions û the possibilities are endless. Be creative. Do something original – something that reflects your personal style and approach to the products and services you are promoting.
If you are sharing information about products or services on social network sites, then write quality reviews û ones that offer insight into those products or services. If all you are posting is the advertisement that every other affiliate is posting then you are certainly not going to stand out. Answer all of the basic questions up front then try to generate interest. Once interest is generated and your get people asking questions, then again it is important to respond personally
Source: niceblogger