Tech News Daily: SEO TIPS
Showing posts with label SEO TIPS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SEO TIPS. Show all posts

Thursday, November 21, 2013

How To Increase Traffic To Your Blog Using Your RSS Feed: Part Two

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By Steve Shaw

In last week’s post, the first part of a tutorial on increasing traffic to your blog using your RSS feed, I showed you how to submit your RSS feed to RSS/blog directories, along with what I consider to be the top 15 RSS directories.

This week, I’ll be showing you a second way to put your RSS feed to work promoting and building visibility for your site. Again, it’s very easy to set up, only takes a few minutes, and once done works for you on auto-pilot on an ongoing basis … a.k.a. worth doing!

Presuming you’re on Twitter, this involves adding your RSS feed to software called Hootsuite … so that every time your blog is updated with a new post, your Twitter feed is automatically updated too.

Of course, the same information is not restricted to just the RSS feed of your blog – if you publish videos on YouTube regularly for example, they provide you with a RSS feed you can plug into this too. Other services or websites where you publish regularly will also likely provide you with a RSS feed you can use.

1. Sign Up With Hootsuite (It’s Free!)

Go to Hootsuite and sign up for an account – they do have paid options available which you may find useful at some point in the future, but you don’t need a paid account for this tutorial.

2. Add Your Twitter Account

Currently, in the second part of their sign up process, you can add your Twitter account:

Add Your Twitter Account

After clicking the Twitter button as shown above, a new window pops up allowing you to then authorize Hootsuite to use your Twitter account.

Once done, you’re then all set to start using Hootsuite.

3. Add Your Blog’s RSS Feed To Hootsuite

Now you need to simply add your RSS feed to Hootsuite – from the menu on the left-hand side of the screen, go to Settings > RSS/Atom as shown:

Add Your Blog’s RSS Feed To Hootsuite

Click the ‘+’ button to add a new feed:

Add RSS feed

Now you need to copy the URL of your blog’s RSS feed to your clipboard ready for pasting into Hootsuite. Assuming you have a WordPress blog, your feed will be at /feed, for example http://yourblog.com/feed – make sure it’s accessible and correct, and then paste it into Hootsuite in the Feed URL field:

feed url

You’ll see various other fields available which you’ll need to set accordingly:

  • Network to send feed items to … Select your Twitter account that you just added
  • Check this feed for new posts every Unless you publish your blog more frequently, leave this set at 24 hours
  • When new posts are found, send up to Of course it’s personal preference, but for most purposes you’ll want to leave the 1 post at a time option set
  • Include text from post in messages (checkbox) – Leaving this checked will mean Hootsuite will ‘fill’ the Tweet with text from your post, presuming your title hasn’t already used up the available characters (personally, I’m leaving this unchecked)
  • Prepend text to each message … Something like [New Blog Post] can help differentiate these tweets from others you may make and can be more ‘user friendly’ for your followers
  • URL shortener for links … Up to you, but personally I’m leaving the ow.ly option preset

Click the Save Feed button and you’re done!

Now every time you post something new on your blog, you’ll automatically be keeping your Twitter followers updated too, attracting click-throughs to your blog (including from new audiences via Retweets), and helping to build positive search engine signals for your site.

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How To Increase Traffic To Your Blog Using Your RSS Feed

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Did you know there’s a really simple way to start growing traffic to your blog (or other sites) right now that’s free, and that most people are currently under-utilizing, if using at all?

RSS (“Really Simple Syndication“) is a common form of XML that allows your content to be distributed far and wide, and attracts links and traffic back to your site. 
You can also pick up subscribers who subscribe to your feed through RSS reader software, and are then immediately notified as soon as you publish new content (you’ll notice our own RSS Subscribe to Feed button in the right-hand margin).

As with any other aspect of content marketing, to get the real benefit of RSS, you firstly need to ensure your content has the right level of quality in order to attract attention in the first place and provide real interest and value to your readers. Get that right, and the rest falls into place naturally …

The good news is that if you’re following my content tree methodology, and have a blog post as the root of the rest of your content, an RSS feed is automatically built into WordPress (which you’ll find at /feed on your blog, eg. http://yourblog.com/feed). That means you can get started with this immediately …

However, RSS feeds aren’t just restricted to WordPress – you can create one for any type of website where you are adding new content regularly. Sites like YouTube, Facebook and Hubspot all provide individualized RSS feeds that you can use to further syndicate your content and promote your business.

So let’s look at the first of two free but powerful ways to get your RSS feed out there right now and working hard for your business … it’s information you can take advantage of immediately.

Submit Your Feed To RSS/Blog Directories

The following represents what I consider the current top 15 RSS directories you should submit your RSS feeds to. I’ve added notes where appropriate, along with current Alexa and Google PR information.

Registration is mostly required for these sites in order to submit your feed, but I’ve added an appropriate note to the sites where you don’t need to register. 


Technorati

Alexa: 1,609
Google PR: 8

After registering and logging in, click through to your profile (click your username on the menu bar) and then go to the My claimed blogs section, and click to start a blog claim. 


Blogdigger

Alexa: 20,144
Google PR: 6

No registration required. 


Feedage

Alexa: 8,444
Google PR: 6

After registering, confirm your account before submitting a feed


Feedcat

Alexa: 28,772
Google PR: 6 


Plazoo

Alexa: 25,944
Google PR: 6

No registration required. 


RSS Network

Alexa: 35,482
Google PR: 6

No registration required. 


Ice Rocket

Alexa: 15,376
Google PR: 6

Requests your blog’s URL rather than RSS feed – after adding, add http://rpc.icerocket.com:10080 to Settings > Writing > Update Services (in your WordPress dashboard) to ensure they are pinged each time you publish a new post. 


URL Fan

Alexa: 93,467
Google PR: 5

As well as adding your feed, add http://rpc.urlfan.com/ping to Settings > Writing > Update Services to ensure they are pinged each time you publish a new post. 


RSS Micro


Alexa: 33,864
Google PR: 5

Gave an odd error on trying to submit, but might have been a temporary issue. 


Codango

Alexa: 32,759
Google PR: 5

No registration required. 


BlogRollCenter

Alexa: 35,164
Google PR: 5 


Feedgy

Alexa: 40,157
Google PR: 4

No registration required.


NewsIsFree

Alexa: 84,132
Google PR: 4

After registering, click Feeds on top, then Add Feeds in the left-hand margin, though submission didn’t actually work when I tried it, just came back with ‘Nothing found’ error – possibly a temporary issue. 


FeedSee

Alexa: 28,028
Google PR: 2

No registration required. 


FeedListing

Alexa: 28,073
Google PR: Unavailable

No registration required.

I’d recommend to simply spend an hour or so (it shouldn’t take more than 4 or 5 minutes on average per site) submitting your blog’s feed to each of the sites above … it’s work you only need to do once, but stand to benefit from for a long time to come.

Any sites I’ve missed or any suggestions? Let me know below …

In my next post, we’ll look at the second way to increase traffic to your blog using your RSS feed(s), taking full advantage of what RSS offers in order to promote your business and raise your online visibility on auto-pilot.


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Monday, November 19, 2012

Create and use file robots.txt

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Here is a guide to create and use a robots.txt file to the website, so that search engines index your website content.

Create and use file robots.txt



What's the robots.txt file? That is a structured text file, when the spider (bot, crawler) of the SE (Search Engine) on the website to collect data will robots.txt file to see the instructions in this file.

Robots.txt can define each different bot the different SE can go to the website or in areas of the website?

Some types of SE bots: Googlebot (Google), Googlebot-Image (Google), Yandex (Russia SE)​​, Bingbot (Bing) / Yahoo Slurp (Yahoo) ...

The common syntax of robots.txt file:

User-agent: bot object is accepted
Disallow / Allow: URL you want to block / allow

*: Represent all

For example: User-agent: * (That means accepting all kinds of bots.)

Lock the entire site
Disallow: /

Block 1 folder and everything in it
Disallow: / wp-admin /

Block 1 page
Disallow: / private_file.html

Remove first image from Google Images
User-agent: Googlebot-Image
Disallow: / images / sexy.jpg

Remove all pictures from Google Images:
User-agent: Googlebot-Image
Disallow: /

Block 1 file any, for example. Gif
User-agent: Googlebot
Disallow: / *. Gif $

Create and use file robots.txt

Things to avoid in the robots.txt file

Is case sensitive.
Do not write balances, lack of white.
Do not insert any character other than the command syntax.
Each command should be on one line.
How to create and where to place the robots.txt file

Use notepad or any other program to create the file, then rename the file robots.txt.
Located in the root directory of the website. (http://yoursite.com/robots.txt)



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Saturday, November 10, 2012

Can an iPad Mini Make Great Customer Service?

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Techcrunch thinks an iPad Mini will make your customer service better. It won’t.

ipad mini


The iPad mini is now available and Apple fanatics are treating it as the invention of the year. It’s not. Don’t get me wrong, I’m an Apple user. I use it at work, at home, I own an iPad, iPhone, and am writing this on a Macbook Air. I love my technology, just ask my family. But Techcrunch writer Darrell Etherington, recently shared that the iPad mini somehow will deliver huge potential for the customer service industry.

It has a lot of potential to be an even more impressive player…The iPad mini’s big brother has done a good job of making headway in businesses and customer service, but the iPad mini has a strong chance to help drive those accomplishments even further.

It won’t.

Unless you already get the definition of customer service and are creating a great customer experience.

If your customer service is bad, just adding an iPad Mini proves you don’t know what you’re doing.

Like actors on a stage, technology can’t replace the human element of customer service. Behind it all, humans have to deliver emotionally-connecting words and actions. Even if you’re an online-only organization, at some point in your process, humans have to determine the right words, processes, and deliverables. You need to optimize technology to make a great customer experience. Technology can’t do that for you. Saying it will is like saying that a stage, lighting, and props make a broadway play. It doesn’t.

The role of technology in the customer service experience

Technology is effective at ENHANCING or SCALING the experience. Technology is a FRAMEWORK for the experience, not the experience itself. It’s a VEHICLE to deliver the experience, not the EXPERIENCE ITSELF.

Technology is a component. Remember it when you’re planning your experience, like Richard Branson, CEO of Virgin, does with his 7 steps for customer service.

 
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Friday, September 9, 2011

Why Most Online Businesses Fail

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The Business Failure Curve

Tech News Why Most Online Businesses FailThe failure curve for small business has been rather predictible. In fact, in a NYT article Scott Shane compared the survival curves from 1977-1988 & 1989-2000. They roughly mirrored each other! Less than 1/2 of small businesses live to see the age of 5.

But the cost of failure has dropped as technology & communications costs have dropped to almost nothing. Starting a web business is virtually free!

  • Registering a new domains only costs $8.
  • Starter hosting can be had for a few Dollars a month.
  • Wordpress is free to install on your server.
  • 99designs allows you to pick a logo for as little as $99.
  • ThemeForest lets you pick premium themes for as little as $20, and there are thousands of free themes to chose from as well.

All these deflationary pressures that lower risk & the need for start up capital should make it easier to be successful, right?

Not in my opinion.

Because it is easier to start it is also easier to fail. There is more competition today than ever. And tomorrow will be more competitive than today is.

If an updated curve appears from, say, 2005-2016 my guess would be that the failure rate is even higher.

Why?

Online we are moving away from the economics of scarcity to the economics of abundance.

It means it is easier to start a business at lower cost.

Which lowers the perceived risk.

But distractions are plentyful.

And one thing is scarce online.

Growing scarcer daily.

Attention.

Competition

There are no public stats on how many SEOs are millionaires, but if you asked me to guess I would put the number in the thousands rather than the 100s. And some of the ones that are quite profitable heavily reinvest in growth. If you are starting out today you are behind them in terms of:

  • rankings
  • data
  • capital & cash flow
  • experience
  • relationships
  • network effects
  • etc.

Every day you sit on the sidelines is another day the leaders have to accumulate resources.

Worse yet the sea of competition grows daily. This website has over 500,000 registered users. If this website was a city, it would be one of the 50 largest cities in the United States.

Amongst this sea of competition, the biggest risk you have when starting a new website is not some new Google penalty, but rather perpetual obscurity.

In the search game the top few win the spoils.

Tech News Why Most Online Businesses Fail

There isn't much difference between page 3 and page 300: both are effectively invisible.

Dumb Luck / Accidental Success

My first profitable website was one where I was too clever (and perhaps too stupid?) for my own good.

In early 2003 I registered the domain name 1emallway.com. It was supposed to be a clever spin on being a street address and an online address. It was also intentionally broad because being naive and greedy I thought I could make money using affiliate links for "everything." ;)

I thought I was brillant and original. But, as it turns out, I was 0 for 2.

The only reason that site ever made any mone was because a.) I was a bad speller & b.) the search engines were not very sophisticated about correcting spelling errors. I misspelled the name of an online casino and was one of only a few webmasters who had done so, landing me numerous multi-thousand Dollar checks for being fairly incompetent.

Today search engines are *much* better at correcting misspellings. Google also promotes sending users on a guided path with their Google Instant, which tries to complete your search query for you. Further, gambling is a much more saturated market & online gambling is now illegal in the United States.

Failure vs Learning Lessons

Only through gaining experience do you learn humility & to accept how little you know. And that keeps you learning.

That 1emallway wasn't anything with lasting potential, but I kept learning. Later on in 2003 I went to an SEO conference and heard the term "search marketing" and it was promoted as being what was going to become "the" phrase for our young industry. So I registered searchmarketing.info and search-marketing.info.

Unaware of branding (or that the .info domain extension would soon largely become associated with spam due to years of 99 cent registration specials) I chose the hyphenated domain over the non-hyphenated domain.

As if that wasn't bad enough, I chose RegisterFly as my domain registrar. They later became famous for charging you for renewing your domain names without actually doing so, and rather 'investing' in liposuction & hookers.

Here is a typical complaint highlighting their customer experience:

I am a single mom of two. My husband left me with nothing five years ago, instead of giving up which I felt like doing I started my own company and have been sucessful for five years, supported my children FOR Five YEARS ON MY OWN. Registerfly has single handedly destroyed my business. Today I lost my last large client. They all walked due to what they say Is MY fault. I can not renew, transfer or host thier domains. These are million dollar companies that are well known and now the names have expired. I am now being sued by them. Well goodbye house, goodbye car, goodbye life! Thank RegisterFly.

10 Rules For Success

Those were pretty bad errors, but I was able to recover from them because I was a voracious reader & got involved with some communities that made a difference. The SearchGuild site that I cut my teeth on back then is no longer around, but there are a lot of other great sources to learn from today. Part of the reason we work so hard on this site is to pass it forward. :)

The keys to success, IMHO are...

  • avoid debt whenever possible
  • pick a market you can win
  • pick honest mentors
  • create your own value systems
  • work longer, harder & faster than the other guy, and try to connect with others
  • value your time
  • if something is working keep investing in it until the returns begin to diminish
  • fully invest early profits into growing quicker & learning faster
  • track what you are doing
  • do not let excuses prevent you from getting something done today

Lets go over these real quick!

Avoid Debt

Debt is a claim on your future labor, with interest. If lending rates are low debt can be a seductive force because you don't have to pay for it until "later," but you don't know what will happen down the road. Markets shift in uncertain ways. This is true both within your market & the broader economy.

When I got started online I got a job that I didn't want so that I would be able to fund my online education. Further, when I was doing ok online I moved into a mobile home so my monthly living costs were under $500. This enabled me to take risks that would not have been reasonable if I had more debt and a higher living expense. And I kept living well below my income from then on, as it allowed me to take greater risks & invest faster into growth.

If we learned nothing from the trillions of Dollars of losses, destroyed retirement accounts, and massive currency debasement caused by every flavor of financial fraud in the book (appraisal fraud, mortgage fraud, securities fraud, rating fraud, foreclosure fraud, etc.) coupled with the failure of market regulation, big bailouts & the lack of jailtime for the banking class, we should learn this at a minimum:bankers are not to be trusted.

It doesn't matter if a banker is honest.  Gresham's dynamic will drive honest folks under as the people committing fraud keep buying political influence & marketshare.

  • Bad money drives good money out of the market.
  • A bank that doesn't commit accounting fraud to show extra growth & boost their share price gets bought out by a more corrupt bank ran by individuals willing to commit fraud to get ahead.
  • Cheap Chinese milk with melamine in it makes real milk less profitable (or unprofitable) to create.

Once you go into debt you are handing over control of your life to someone else. Fear of not being able to pay your debts will prevent you from taking profitable risks (and may force you to take some bad ones).

Carl Sandburg said it best in The People, Yes "and in the best, you never know whats coming next, even if it's hokum ... Anything can happen in this sweepstakes. Around the corner might be prosperity or the worst depression yet."

Pick a Market You Can Win

In my earlier 1emallway example (I cringe every type I type it out or think about it) I was virtually guaranteed failure because my ambition far exceeded my talent or budget. After a month of playing online how exactly was I going to be the king of ecommerce (with no marketing budget to boot)? :)

Even within the small market of "SEO" there are people focused on positioning as local SEO experts, international SEO experts, SEO experts for a specific type of business (like real estate), link building experts, SEO experts leveraging public relations, etc. If a market is too competitive you can always go tighter. My angle off the start was to be one of the first SEOs leverage blogging and to use that platform to push an ebook. The idea of selling an ebook had 3 benefits:

  • since SEO books were seen as commodities the domain name was available for only $8, while still being short and memorable
  • since the field of SEO constantly changes, the idea was to sell an ebook at a premium on the basis that people got updates and it was more current than print books
  • each update not only helped customers, but acted as free marketing for our brand, since our customers would often mention the updates

The idea of "using a blog" isn't particularly unique today, as there are 10,000's of blogs covering SEO. But the idea was unique back then, and there are equivalent angles and ideas you can use today.

Smaller markets are easier to rank it (since they have less competition), cost less to rank in (since they have less competition), and it is easier to create relevant partnerships. The person who sells custom bowling gloves can partner with bowling ball manufacturers, sports stores, etc. Whereas the person who wants to own the category of "sports" is going to need to have deep pockets to spend on marketing.

You don't want to go to such a small niche that there no market though. Rather, one should look forways to create a complimentary position.

Pick Honest Mentors

One could have a long & convoluted set of filters, but on this front mine is pretty simple.

  • If you hear phrases like "make money online" "business in a box" "silver bullet" "automated wealth generation" "pure content" etc. then they are likely optimizing their sales pitch to rip off desperate newbies. Many of those folks come up with a scammy sales angle and then make a half assed product based around the sales pitch.
    • Originally the video to the right was about a "product" the FTC fined Frank Kern for, but they complained & got it removed from YouTube.
    • We replaced it with an even better video, about a "rock bottom blueprint" that is for "anyone." It promotes a real estate investment strategy that has allegedlybeen profitable for 13+ years, even through the bubble period AND the real estate crash.
  • Anyone who suggests you take on debt to work with them is likely knowingly selling you down the river. Here is a typical boiler room sales script [PDF] which includes tips like: "Find more pain if needed spend time here (everyone has pain it’s your job to find it)."
  • Anyone who relies heavily on launch sequences with false scarcity is likely knowingly selling you down the river.
  • If a person only shares "information" when they are selling something they are likely just salesman, rather than a mentor.
  • Rely on your own experience. If someone says something that matches your own experiences then it is likely safe to trust them more. If multiple people that have earnedyour trust recommend something, then it is probably a safe bet.

Pick the wrong mentors is an easy way to wind up broke (or worse).

Here is a video of Ellery Bennett promoting how rich, successful & happy he was. But he was trying the sell the dream and was getting sucked dry by other "sell a dream" marketers.

Within 2 years of that video being released tragedy struck as he had over a half million Dollars of debt, his wife filed for divorce, and he murdered her.

Create Your Own Value Systems

"It is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends upon his not understanding it." - Upton Sinclair

Existing value systems are created to support the business models of established businesses. As Eric Schmidt says, lobbyists write the laws. Google later announced they hired A DOZEN new lobbying firms!

From a practical standpoint this has a couple fundamental business points to consider.

  • To create success your narrative often has to be counter to whatever the existing market believes. Excite.com turned down buying Google for under $1 million. Google was a success at search largely because everyone else was trying to pump pageviews to sell banner ads &viewed search as a loss leader. I was able to buy the domain name SeoBook.com in 2003 for $8 precisely because others failed to appreciate its value. The concept of a book about SEO seemed like a bad idea to many because search keeps changing.
  • If you are successful with the creation of your own value systems it will piss some people off. This is because many established competitors will fear you. When I got started online there were attack threads created where I had to defend myself against the attacks of a dozen industry 'experts' who joined together to try to topple me. Another SEO who wrote an ebook told me they experience the exact same thing.
  • Many people are afraid to look/be/act different. I think this is a mistake. Being inauthentic wears thin on your self esteem and makes you feel fake. Other people like you are attracted to what makes you unique, and those are the people who are most likely to help spread your marketing message for you. A mentor once told me "I think the best brands, the best sites have a large portion of their founders personality in them. Never be afraid to be yourself, after all there are 1/2 billion people on the www, not all of them have to agree with you. Concentrate on the ones that share your views, concentrate on making their experience the very best it can be, the rest forget them. Or to put it another way, the best sites say - this is what we do, this is how we do it, if you don't like it go somewhere else."
Longer / Harder / Faster + Connecting

There are 3 big benefits of starting off from scratch:

  • You do not have a lot of things that you "have to do" everyday, like customer service for hundreds or thousands of people.
  • You are hungry & are willing to do things others are not willing to do.
  • Lack of experience means that you might be naive enough to set ambitious goals that you would have never made after you knew more.

Through deeply focusing on specific areas you are interested in, you can do a month of learning in a couple days. As long as you express your own voice & push hard on doing what you are good at eventually someone will notice. However don't wait for the market to take notice on its own. You need to reach out and connect with others, participate amongst the people you want to know and be known by. A good quote from Abraham Lincoln: "Public sentiment is everything. With public sentiment, nothing can fail. Without it, nothing can succeed."

Keep in mind that no matter what you do, some of it will not be fun. After all, the reason people typically pay you is because they are asking you to do something they do not want to do. That said, people are generally more likely to buy from people they empathize with.

A more modern version of Abe's message comes from Radiohead's Meeting People is Easy DVD: "If you have been rejected many times in your life, then one more rejection isn't going to make much difference. If you're rejected, don't automatically assume it's your fault. The other person may have several reasons for not doing what you are asking her to do: none of it may have anything to do with you. Perhaps the person is busy or not feeling well or genuinely not interested in spending time with you. Rejections are part of everyday life. Don't let them bother you. Keep reaching out to others. When you begin to receive positive responses then you are on the right track. It's all a matter of numbers. Count the positive responses and forget about the rejections."

(Under)Value then (Over)Value Your Time

The biggest risk to new online businesses is perpetual obscurity.

And the web can be a lonely place for a new entrepreneur.

Off the start I think it helps to under-value your time & try to reach out and help as many people as you possibly can. That can be wasteful, but even so it will give you the feedback and interaction and momentum and confidence needed to keep doing better. It will also help you find what you are good at & where you should focus.

However, if you do a good job of it then over time you will create more demand than you can possibly accomodate. At that point you need to use economic principals to help balance supply & demand. Allow people to pay for access while limiting access to those who have not paid.

Further, once you have enough capital to use it as a tool, it can make sense to hire others to help out with various aspects of your business. No matter how good you are there is a limit to how much you can do by yourself, and working with others should allow you to create greater profits.

After you get to a certain level of success, sometimes it also helps to have a couple different businesses and a couple different revenue streams. Doing so lowers your overall risk profile & forces you to value your time, as if you are selling it at below market rates the other businesses will do better.

Reinvest Until it Stops Working

Most investors under-perform the stock market because they are clouded by their emotions & make irrational decissions. Those who succeed might also lose money on most their trades. The key to success is riding winners until they stop working. Sophisticated stock traders use trailing stop losses to force them out of trades while locking in most of their profits.

Likewise with marketing, it can feel like you need to stop doing x because you have already done it before. However, rather than trying to guestimate when it stops working, you are better off reinvesting until the returns stop coming in: ride the entire growth cycle.

Many value systems spread then die. Many markets are born then die as they are replaced by more efficient technology. Likewise many marketing techniques spread and then die.

"On a long enough timeline, the survival rate for everyone drops to zero" - Tyler Durden.

Fully Invest Early Profits into Growing Quicker & Learning Faster

One of the paradoxical tricks of the web is that almost everything is available for free.

But some things are only made available for free by valuing your time at nothing.

If I could take my current knowledge back to 2003 I might not end up being a billionaire, but I would certainly have made hundreds of millions. But opportunity and time head in one direction, so take advantage of whatever advantages you have and fully leverage them TODAY. :D

If someone can help you save a week or a month or a year of your life that has exceptional value. Likewise, if a software program saves you a few hours a week it is valuable. And if a professional service makes you look more credible then it can be a cheap investment into your longterm growth.

  • our first web design was a free template
  • next came a $99 logo & me hacking away at the CSS of the free template to color match the minimalistic theme to match the logo's colors
  • our next site design cost $1,500
  • our most recent design was around $7,000

Each of the above choices was both rational and appropriate given our resources & scale at the time. If you have nothing then you sorta have to make due with what you have, but as you gain resources it makes sense to reinvest.

Track What You are Doing

If you are not using web analytics you are flying blind.

It might seem like you are being altruistic & only want to do what you are interested in to decide that you do not need to track, but if you track how you are performing you learn what the market cares about and what it wants. You can bake this into virtually every aspect of your business:

  • We use web analytics to track conversions
  • Our blog posts have comments on them, as does our monthly newsletter.
  • If customers decide to cancel with us we send them a survey to ask how we can make the service better.
Do Not Let Excuses Deter You

If you wait until you are perfect before you start you will never get started, precisely because as you learn more you apppreciate how little you know.

You do not need to be a Michael Jordan to be successful. When I look back at my early work I am anything but impressed by it, but if I would have waited until I know what I know now I never would have had the chance to learn so much & gain so much experience.

Every day make a list of things to do, and every day make sure you scratch off at least 1 item.

Is There Any Opportunity Left Today?

It is easy for a person reading this to say "well you only got where you were today because you got lucky." I would be hard pressed to disagree with that. But since I got into search, many "experts" who were at the top of the game have fallen off the cliff.

The good news is that successful people get complacent. Stuck in their ways. Which is why business has a water cycle to it.

People claimed the death of SEO in 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, and 2002.

In 2003 I got started online and in the field of SEO, and people claimed that the Google Florida update would kill SEO. I took that as an opportunity to learn, to explore, to write, to gain exposure, and to gain marketshare.

Blogging was new back then, and it was another piece of my "dumb luck" strategy. I noticed that people who wrote blogs were getting a disproportionate share of inbound links. Rather than complain about it I said "hey I can do that too!"

I was paying attention to how the web was changing & leveraging new channels and new technologies to catch up, so maybe some of the luck wasn't so dumb after all.

In the years since there has been a major claim of SEO dying every year. And yet when you consider how awful the US economy is in 2010, you would think it was just the opposite if you were talking to other SEO experts who might "only" grow their profits 20% or 30% this year.

The web is changing today, as it was when I got in the game. If you work hard to learn about the web every day and leverage new channels + new techniques the odds are pretty good that you will stumble into your own "dumb luck."

Cheers,
Aaron Wall

From seobook.com

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Sunday, September 4, 2011

Email Advertising Ideas - The E-Mail Promoting Best Practices

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If you want to use some email marketing ideas that will make your campaign a lot more successful, then read this article. This will give you some ideas about some e-mail advertising finest practices for having bigger possibilities of earning more funds on the web.


email-advertisingThe main aim of e-mail promoting is to reach the prospective buyers and introduce the products or services sold within the business. It can also be used as a means of producing a follow up on the previous product offers that the customers received in their emails.


For this to become extremely effective, it's of vital importance that you have a system of gathering and storing all the emails of your target clients. Collecting these emails from your prospective customers might take a lot of time prior to you are able to gather as many address that you require. Nevertheless, whether or not you've only a few addresses in your database, here are some e-mail advertising ideas which you can use to immediately jump commence the campaign and get immediate responses form the recipients.

1 from the electronic mail advertising best practices would be to focus the content on a single message only. There might be some individuals who will give you advices that the message must be composed of a number of bits of info but doing this may not be a great idea. Note that you will find some visitors who are very particular about the coherence from the message of whatever they are reading. So, should you make the contents of your e-mail bulked with a lot of various details, then chances are, the customers will not continue reading the whole message. It ought to be straight to the point and effortless for the visitors to grasp.


An additional great practice is to make your messages more customized and personalized. At the commence of the mail, it is possible to use the customer's first name. It would make the visitors feel that the letter is truly for him or her and not one more form of spam mail. You can also write the contents in for instance way that it's as if you're talking for your customer.


The most essential thing that should be remembered when writing emails for the purpose of advertising is to contain a call to action. The mail ought to clearly point out what you want the customers to do. You can consist of links for your website where the goods are sold and make a striking statement that may motivate the readers to visit the site or the link that you're providing within the e-mail.


Since you're targeting a wide array of market, it would be extremely inconvenient to write emails individually. By saying this, it's suggested that you create a template. Upon producing this template, use colors, fonts, and other elements which will suggest professionalism. As you do this, you'll be able to build a good reputation on the web that you're an expert in handling enterprise online and that you are trustworthy. These are just some of the e-mail marketing ideas that you can use in starting your Internet promoting scheme.

From how-to-seo.blogspot.com

 

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Use the Image Viewer Interface

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image-seoWhen you do a normal Google search and then click a search result, you're sent to a web page. That's not how Google Image Search works. Instead, you're sent to an image viewer that gives you more information about the image and takes some actions on the image, as this task shows.

1. Click a Search Result


When you see an image that you want more information about or that you want to use, click the image thumbnail on the search results page.

2. Get Information About the Image


At the top of the page that appears, you find information about the image. You see a thumbnail of the image, the size of the image in pixels and kilobytes, and the URL of the web page on which the image is found. There also might be copyright information about the image. (For more information about images and copyright, see About Images and Copyright Law.

3. View the Image on Its Original Page


The bottom half of the page shows the image on the page on which it was found by Google. If you want more information about the image, it's a good idea to read through the page.

4. See the Full-Size Image


Click the See full-size image link located at the top of the image page to launch the image in its original size in a browser window.

5. Save the Image to Disk


To save the image to your computer's hard disk, right-click the image on its source web page or in the full-size browser window. From the context menu that appears, select Save Picture As. Then select the folder to which you want to save the picture and click Save to save it.

From how-to-seo.blogspot.com

 

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Sunday, August 28, 2011

Power of links. Build for the right reasons.

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From an early stage people are taught that links are important to ranking well in the search engines.  Too many people believe that its quantity over quality. Worse yet, some folks believe success lies in selling, or buying, links.  Everyone agrees getting a good link is hard work and almost everyone has a formula for what they feel will work.


Before I get into the detail in this post, I want to share a quick, recent story.  I was asked to participate in a learning event which followed a search conference earlier this year.  Everyone agreed it would be great to have Bing in the room to talk through ideas with.  And that worked really well, until the topic of link building came up.  A vote was held and I was asked to leave the room while the attendees discussed link building ideas, what worked, what didn’t, etc.  I’d have thought that would be one area you’d want the engine directly involved in. No matter, the vote was respected and Bing left the room.
The point here is that link building is a charged issue, one that makes even the starchiest of white hats squirm when thinking of discussing tactics directly with a search engine. 
Why you want links
Most people will say you want links because they help you rank better.  That’s a very over-simplified view.  While it’s true that relevant links from an already trusted website can help your own website increase in the rankings, that’s but one small part of the entire equation.  Don’t go crazy thinking “He said “small part” – links aren’t that important now?!”  What this means is links are seen in balance across the factors used to rank websites.  A URL which is brand new, but breaking a news story should still rank well.  By the traditional view of how much value links hold, such a new URL would never surface in the results because of a lack of links.  There needs to be a balance.
You want links for a few reasons:
1 – because they alert us to your website when its new, or to new content
2 – because they are a vote of confidence in your site - quality websites tend to link to other quality websites
3 – because those links can send you direct traffic
4 – because over time, they can help establish a footprint that points to your authority on a topic (think guest blogging)

Yes, you want links, but it’s not for the sole purpose of increasing rankings.  In fact, much money has been wasted in the single minded pursuit of “more links”.  More links alone won’t increase your ranking – you still need to produce quality content.
Why we want links
We want to see links mainly because they help us discover content.  They also help us understand value.  If a reputable website places a link to an article on your blog, they trust you enough to deliver a good user experience to the visitors they will send you via that link.  Getting a link in a news article on a major news website has been the demise of many a blogging server under the crush of traffic.  That’s a good problem to have, and from the engine’s point of view, you seem a credible resource if the major news source is willing to link to you.
That same “value prop” applies to links from any website.  All websites receive a ranked value.  The higher that value, the more valuable the site is deemed to be.  Bing’s version of this is called Static Rank, and while we don’t share the figures publically, they help us determine relative values between websites.
As users build links to a website or URL, we see that pattern emerge and can track the time over which links are built.  Fast growth can indicate popularity.  Normally links build in a similar fashion across all websites, with spikes potentially indicating popularity.  When we compare that data against the other signals we track, we get a truer picture of if that popularity is real or not.  Machines can build links quickly, but if we know the source of the links is a common location or service that is “less than organic”, we’ll discount the value of the links.
Where to find them
The best place to find links for your site is on sites which offer related content to your own.  This might be obvious, but if you’ve seen as many attempts to build links from unrelated sites as we have, you’d feel the need to call it out as well.  Clearly a lot of people don’t understand this yet.
Lots of people still profess their love for links from directories.  I’ll state there is nothing wrong with a link from a decent directory.  The Yahoo directory, for example, or even DMOZ – both provide the key ingredients.  The directory itself is well established and fairly trustworthy.  And they see enough users that there’s a chance you’ll get direct traffic from them.  What you shouldn’t be doing is relying on link submissions to directories to boost your rankings.  Most won’t hurt, but the real value is in listing a new website knowing when we crawl the listing we’ll see your new website.
What type of link you want
Plain old organic links.  Links built not by you, but by others, pointing to you.  If your content is unique and compelling, perfect strangers will want to share it enough that they will build links to you.  That is the essence of organic link building.  This type of link can come as a post on a website, via a social media space (which is why it pays to enable social sharing options), as resource links on other websites and from any number of other places.
And for those confused about “anchor text”, you’ll want to try to get a link that uses targeted keywords or a phrase pointed at you.  Links embedded inside content are best, but we realize this won’t always be attainable, so even a link from a “resources” section on a website will help you along.
Are reciprocal links still worthwhile
Yep.  But not because they overtly boost rankings.  Reciprocal links are a staple for starting a new website for most folks.  These types of links can bring in much needed traffic, which will then spin off organic links to you.  Think big picture when building links.  Is every inbound link you have a reciprocal link?  If yes, that pattern will be obvious and we’ll probably lessen the value of the links pointed at you.  A variable percentage of your overall inbound links being reciprocal, however, isn’t anything to panic about.  No, I can’t give you an exact number, as there are so many other factors that determine rank at play, that the actual numbers will always be highly variable.  Not to mention what’s applicable to you may not be applicable to anyone else.
We’re good as seeing patterns, so link triangles, three-way swaps, link farms and other types of auto-generated or generally engineered systems stand out to us as rather obvious .  Avoid link schemes of any kind and spend your money on paid search, etc.  Buying links often generates patterns.  Which we see and thus can easily take action on.
How many links do I need
Not as many as you may think.  Again, as with so many other areas of search optimization, there’s no exact number here.  On popular phrases with lots of query volume, to rank well will require more links from trusted, quality websites to boost your rankings.  Less popular phrases can often require many less links pointed at your site to see the same lift in rankings.  This is where a targeted link building approach can pay off for you.
Don’t forget to give some
Be generous when linking out to other websites from your own.  This enhances the user experience on your own website and as you prove to your visitors that you are a useful resource, they will not only keep coming back, but they’ll build links to you.  Everyone likes to share a winner.
If we can leave you with only a couple take-aways, it’d be these points:
1 – don’t buy links
2 – great content builds great links
3 – prove to users you are a trusted authority and links will follow
4 – social media can help grow links to you – plan for this and execute thoughtfully

In the end, don’t sweat links too much.  Investing time in building quality, unique content and wowing your visitors will go a long way to getting you the links you seek.  Many successful websites started out slowly and developed clout over time as they proved valuable to their visitors.  It was those visitors who helped build the links to the website.  It’s a virtuous cycle that starts with content.

Duane Forrester runs the public outreach side of the Webmaster program for Bing.
He is a Senior Product Manager with Bing’s Webmaster Program.  Previously, he was an inhouse SEM running the SEO program for MSN in the US & Americas. He's also the founding co-chair of SEMPO's In-House SEM Committee, was formerly on the Board of Directors for SEMPO and is the author of two books: How To Make Money With Your Blog & Turn Clicks Into Customers.
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18 things you need to know about SEO

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Let's take a look at some of the bigger ticket issues folks should focus on when optimizing their websites.  This list is not meant to cover everything, but to focus in on some of the more important aspects you should look at addressing. The first part of this list is presented in a rough order of importance based on getting work done.  


In many case, you'll find your own circumstances won't allow your focus and investments to match this list.  Don't sweat it.  This list represents the ideal for a freshly planned website, prior to being built out.  If your circumstances slide you in at random points in this list, don't worry about it. The point is this is a solid place to start from.  As opposed to, say... investing time in a link buying program, or in a social "liking" scheme.
Crawlability
If a crawler can’t access your content, the content won’t be indexed by search engines, nor will it be ranked. Enable and use XML sitemaps with a low error rate to build trust with search engines. Make sure your website navigation is clean and strive for a simple, search-friendly URL structure. This means the URL is keyword rich and avoids session variables or docIDs. We suggest you use robots.txt files to instruct the crawlers on how to interact with your webpage and more easily find your content.
Site Structure
Provide a site structure with strong functionality, which helps encourage link building. Linking to both trusted outside sources and internal content shows a search engine you care about users getting the best data around their query. In addition, HTML sitemaps ensure a good user experience and help search engines discover all your pages and content.
Content Hierarchy
When you plan your website’s content hierarchy, take care in aligning your content with what searchers are looking for and their intent during their journey on your URL. Basic keyword research can also help you understand how searchers are interacting with search engines, and can help craft your content strategy. Also avoid placing links and content inside rich media applications, such as Flash and Silverlight, which make it almost impossible for crawlers to find and read the content.  Just gotta have your rich media?  Not to worry.  Make sure a solid downlevel experience exists and we'll still find your content.
On-Page Factors
Follow a few simple guidelines for the area inside the code of your webpage denoted by the <head> tag. Each <title> should be short, about 65 characters, and unique to the page. Include the keyword you’re targeting for that page near the beginning of the title. The <meta description> tag can be longer and should also contain the keyword or phrase you’re targeting. All content should be unique to every page and be based on keyword research.  Don't worry about investing time discussing whether the <h1> tag outweights the value of a proper <alt> tag.  Invest your time in producing better content.  Splitting hairs doesn't move your rankings nearly as much as excellent content.
Content Production
Content is king, but not all content is fit to rule.  What the engines seek is compelling, unique content.  And while we judge what "compelling" means to a degree, what's more important is how searchers react to your content when we show your webpage to them in a search engine results page (SERP).  Your job is to create content so compelling that visitors to your site feel no need to look elsewhere to have their needs met.  The worst approach leaves you to seem "thin" in your approach.  This essentially means you aren't really providing content of value.  An example of this would be a website aggregating content from multiple sources on one page.  Such an approach amounts to little more than a links page related to the query entered.  While you may be tempted to say, "But that helps the searcher by bringing everything they need into one location", remember that that's the search engine's job.  
We bring the results back so the user can click on links to find the content.  Adding yet another layer of clicking by showcasing thin-content links pages doesn't help the search find what they seek faster.  From the SERP page to the searcher's goal, these types of pages add another click layer, making the task completion process longer, not shorter.
When you build content, ask yourself if you've answered the need the searcher expressed.  Now ask, if you've covered any related topics that come obviously to mind.  Ask yourself why your webpage stand out.  Why is your webpage better than all the rest?  What does your content bring forward that others miss?
This is why content from articles or syndication cannot stand alone and rank successfully. Unique content brings forward elements that others may miss, which is why that content outranks others targeting the same phrase.
Link Building
When you build links, work to get targeted keywords inserted into the anchor text to boost relevancy for the targeted search term. This increases a link’s perceived value to both users and search engines. Encourage links to your page by integrating social network icons which allow visitors to easily share your page. More eyes on your page can increase the odds it will be linked from an outside source. And remember that inter-linking between your own domains can look like a spam tactic. The best way to get links, though, is to provide excellent, unique content. You should avoid services which claim to be able to build you a number of organic links for a fee. 
 Often they claim things like "Get 100 organic links in 7 days for under $50!".  We can assure you the value of almost every one of those links will be pretty much zero.  Whether the link comes from a spammy website, or we simply see a repetitive pattern, we'll discount the value you were hoping to obtain from the links leaving you out money with no gains to show in the rankings.
Things we love
Beyond the items listed above, here are a few items we love to see websites doing.  While none on their own will vault you to the top of the rankings, they remain best practices you should look to engage in.  These are not in any order of priority:
  • RSS feeds - get them up and running and keep them clean.  By following your feeds, it's easier for the engine to get your latest content.  This means we see it faster, so indexing, ranking and showing in the SERPs can happen faster.  Want to really impress Bing?  Get into your Bing Webmaster account and insert your RSS feed URL into the sitemap submission flow.
  • Mark it up - check out the ideas presented at www.schema.org.  This jointly supported protocol (Bing/Yahoo/Google) enables you to "mark up" your content, essentially embedding tags into your page code to help us better understand your content.  This can range from videos to images, recipes to geolocation information. Lots of tags are supported today, so hit the schema.org site to see what's applicable for you.  Again, this helps us better understand your content, and the better we understand it, the more likely we are to be able to return you for matches to queries.
  • Wonderful UX - sites that have an excellent user experience tend to rank better.  Why?  Because people like them.  Yes, it is that simple. While you need to work on a lot of signals to be successful in search, you also need to find a balance.  Page load times are a perfect example.  Some sites take this one signal to the extreme, paring down their site to an absolute minimum hoping PLT will vault them up in the rankings.  The trouble with this approach is that by removing things from the page to speed page load times, you erode the user experience in most cases.  While machines calculate page load times in fractions of a second, humans are much more forgiving.  Stay focused on pleasing your human visitors first and foremost.  You shouldn't ignore PLT, but taking PLT from 1/2 second to 1/4 second will be largely lost on your visitors.  The engines will appreciate it, but if you had to remove content or functionality to save the 1/4 second load time, now your UX for the humans has suffered.  Balance, ...with humans first.
  • Social love - manage social or social will manage you.  That's a fact, Jack.  Plan your approach to social carefully and execute consistently.  Build your presence so that followers see you as an authority and a resource.  Again this is a balancing act, but one you can get attuned to quickly enough.  Just make sure you bring value to your followers consistently.  People like links in their inbound tweets and wall posts - don't disappoint them.  Fill your social program to the brim with value and folks will love you.  Pssst...we see all this happening and it helps us determine the sentiment surrounding your pages, products and services.  Good is good, bad is bad.  Even if you’re not active socially, you still need to monitor social spaces to understand what others are saying about you.  Are happy shoppers spreading the good word about you?  Are unhappy shoppers telling their stories to the world?  These are things you need to know.
Before we wrap up, how about a few things you should avoid?
  • Cloaking
  • Link buying
  • Like farms
  • Link farms
  • Three-way linking
  • Duplicating content
  • Auto-follows in social media
  • The thin content approach
This post is not meant to contain every topic you should be looking at when optimizing your website.  In fact, this would only be a very short subset of such a list.  Hopefully this will help folks get focused in some key areas, though.




Duane Forrester runs the public outreach side of the Webmaster program for Bing.
He is a Senior Product Manager with Bing’s Webmaster Program.  Previously, he was an inhouse SEM running the SEO program for MSN in the US & Americas. He's also the founding co-chair of SEMPO's In-House SEM Committee, was formerly on the Board of Directors for SEMPO and is the author of two books: How To Make Money With Your Blog & Turn Clicks Into Customers.

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