December SEM Resource of the Month

Sunday, December 31st, 2006 by admin

Seth Godin’s Permission Marketing: Strangers into Friends into Customers is a true classic and the SEM resource of the month. The book was first published in 1999 and it shows no signs of dating.

By focusing on turning strangers into friends, and friends into customers, Seth Godin breaks from the norm of ‘Interruption Marketing’ that we have become so used to both online and off. He shares some great concepts for blogging and business in general.

“By talking only to volunteers, Permission Marketing guarantees that consumers pay more attention to the marketing message,” he writes. “It serves both customers and marketers in a symbiotic exchange.”

R.I.P MSN Small Business Directory

Monday, December 18th, 2006 by admin

Today, I tried to submit a client’s site to MSN Small Business Directory.

Step 1.

All looks well…

http://sbd.bcentral.com/addsite.aspx

Step 2.

…until a random picture of a woman appears and….

Sign Up & Get Your Small Business Listed Today!

As of November 15, 2006 Microsoft will no longer accept new sign-ups for select Microsoft Online Small Business Services.

Alas, another Directory beats the dust. Anyhow, there are far more creative and worthwhile link building opportunities available these days!

Update - as one small business directory dies, another matures and fills the vacant gap – checkout the UK Small Business Directory.

The Cheaters Guide for Integrating Google AdWords & Analytics. Part 2: AdWords Referral URLS that say more than just Google!

Thursday, December 14th, 2006 by admin

Possibly, the second most frustrating experience (solution to most annoying) with Google AdWords & Analytics for me, is that referrals from the Content Network only show up as Google[cpc] and nothing more. What’s the big secret? Why isn’t this data more revealing? Well I can’t tell you why, but I can tell you how!

Yes, that’s how you too can get a taste of this mysterious data that Google seems to be stashing away from Joe Public. Again, I must thank the chaps at GA-Experts for their hard work in proving they truly are market leaders in the field of anything related to Google Analytics.

Let’s See a Quick Example

The GA-Expert’s referral data filter displays not only the Pay per Click source, but the website that shows your sponsored ad.

google, www.tripadvisor.com[cpc]
ysm, www2.nuseek.com[ppc]
msuk, search.msn.co.uk[ppc]

And the Filter

Simply follow the steps that have been kindly supplied by GA-Experts:

1) Create a new profile that is a copy of your existing one.
IMPORTANT: This filter should be ringfenced in its own profile, as you only want this filter applied to PPC referrals.

2) Add a filter to show only PPC referrals in this profile. This screenshot shows how.

3) Add the filter that shows the Search & Content Network referrer, as per this screenshot.

4) Wait for the data. All referral reports will now show the exact PPC referrer.

What does this mean?

An obvious use of this data is to exclude certain sites from your Pay per Click campaigns that are not performing and not providing a satisfactory ROI. This can be done for the Google Content Network Network, but I do not think this is currently available with Google Search Network and with Yahoo.

Another great benefit is if you have or plan to setup an affiliate program. We all know PPC can be a great keyword research tool for SEO, but did you know it can be a really useful for scouting potential affiliates as well? Website owners who have AdSense on their site are obviously commercially aware and Google has categorised such sites as being relevant to your site too.

By setting up Goals in Google Analytics and applying the above filter it is easy to see which websites from the Google Content Network are performing well. You can then review and anticipate if such sites will provide better ROI and greater Net Return as part as part of your affiliate campaign or remain as part of your Google Content Network. This has certainly helped wanders for one of my clients!

Wikipedia: Free Tools for Bloggers & Publishers

Tuesday, December 12th, 2006 by admin

Wikipedia or Wikia are following suite with Google, by offering lots of cool free online ools. Although Wikia’s collection are very different and the ads tools allows advertises to keep 100% of the Ad Revenue.

Wikia , the commercial branch of Wikipedia, has launched a range of free tools for bloggers and publishers that want to build collaborative features into their sites.

The service, called OpenServing, will offer free software, content and hosting to its subscribers, who can also keep all of the advertising revenues they generate from the apps they develop. E-consultancy blurb

I am sure we will here lots more about this in due course, but doesn’t it look exciting!

openingserving

The Cheaters Guide for Integrating Google AdWords & Analytics. Part 1: Getting the most out of your Keywords!

Saturday, December 9th, 2006 by admin

Google Analytics rocks, but the single most annoying thing about it is its inability to provide the exact search phrase that a visitor enters in a search engine through PPC. Instead Google AdWords & Analytics only reports the keyword/phrase that you bid on.

If you are an AdWords marketer and are with me this far, I am sure you share the sadness I feel :( . If not, don’t worry, read on and I will share the sadness, but also the shining bright light to AdWords keyword happiness! :)

Ok, an example perhaps?

Sure – by default, a broad match for a keyword or keyphrase is used in AdWords.

So, Let’s say I bid on the term ‘Google Analytics’ with a broad match in AdWords and a visitor enters ‘The Cheaters Guide for Integrating Google AdWords & Analytics’ into a search engine.

Providing I had bid enough and the Quality Score for the keyphrase was also high enough, the ad would show – but up until now, the only data that AdWords or Analytics would provide about the search keyphrase are the keywords that I bid on and not the exact words that the searcher entered.

This is ok for an exact match, but what can you learn about the search behaviour for a broad or phrase match? Very little! I originally thought Google had selectively chosen to exclude this data for commercial reasons in an attempt increase its ever expanding money pockets.

Fear Not…

The guys from GA-Analytics have been busy formulating a filter to solve this exact problem. In fact, I have found it very useful for Yahoo & MSN PPC campaigns too.

It turns out that Google is not being quite the scrooge I first thought. But they certainly don’t make it easy! Luckily the GA-Analytics boys do:

1) Create two filters as per the images here:

Override Bid Term 1 & Override Bid Term 2

2) Create a new profile for your existing site. This keeps the detailed keyword data in a separate profile. You can apply this filter to your main profile(s) if you prefer, but a separate profile allows for continuity and top level reporting in your main profile with keyword detail available as required.

3) Apply the two filters to the new profile, in the order Override Bid Term 1 *then* Override Bid Term 2

What does this mean?

This awesome extra bit of detail can help in the refinement of your Google AdWords campaigns. It can really boost your long tail keywords strategies. The long term concept focuses on a smaller volume of searchers for more specific niche terms.

Long tail keywords are often less competitive and have the potential to have a really high conversion rate for your products and services. Oftentimes, the more keywords a searcher users, the closer they are in the ‘buying search process’ – wohoo, real them in baby!

It can also be used to identify keywords that are not relevant and do not convert for your product or services. You can build up a list of negative keywords for all or some of your campaigns.

I really love this filter. Remember though, filters can be used to include or exclude data. For this reason I would make sure you make a duplicate analytics profile when applying a new filter, until you get your bearings and are sure you haven’t filtered out any useful data!

Want an Alternative to Google Traffic? Try Social Media Marketing (SMM)

Sunday, December 3rd, 2006 by admin

A Beginners Guide to Social Media Marketing

Social Media Optimisation (SMO) is creating quite a buzz as an alternative to traditional SEM or as Lee Odden puts it, a ‘traffic alternative to Google‘. The concept was first defined by Rohit Bhargava and has recently been coined into Social Media Marketing (SMM) by SeoMoz.

Although widely accepted as SMO in the SEM world, I am with SeoMoz that SMM is a far more suitable and self explanatory acronym. SMM describes the relatively new SEM strategy that enables others to easily comment on, tag, link and eventually share or bookmark an article or post on a social networking site, such as del.icio.us or digg.

Examples of SMM

There are a variety of social websites that can assist in bringing more inbound links, traffic and exposure for your brand and website. Digg, Technorati, StumbleUpon, Squidoo and Wikipedia are all capable of generating oodles of inbound links. SeoMoz provides quite a substantial list, detailing 25 of their most valuable sites that will help with your SMMing.

Like any successful SEO campaign, the key to SMM is having valuable content that people want to link to, discuss and share.

SMM, a new SEO link building technique for Web 2.0?

Web 2.0 has provided search engine marketers or social media marketers with a wide array of one way link building opportunities. The emergence and popularity of social networking sites, such as Digg and del.licio.us, has made social bookmarking and social news sites perhaps as important as the more traditional link building methods, such as press releases, directory & article submission – I would say perhaps even more so, with endless opportunities to lay down some ever so valuable linkbait.

Aaron Wall of SEOBOOK.com and the founder of the term (I think?) linkbait, has recently expanded his views on various linkbaiting opportunities that will no doubt help with SEO & link building efforts for the web 2.0. Cheers Aaron.

Ok enough rambling and back to the question, is SMM a new SEO link building technique for Web 2.0? I think the answer is kind of. SMM certainly shares some similarities to SEO, but also many differences. SEO focuses its attention on getting traffic from search engines, whilst SMM from social networking sites, making it a great alternative to Google.

I really do like Danny Sullivan’s simple definition: ‘SMO: it’s like SEO, for social sites‘. He then asks the question, ‘how SMO friendly is your site’? A question I think many search engine marketers are now asking too!

How can I hitch an SMM ride, I hear you ask?

Firstly, you need to understand the Rules!

Yes, SMM/SMO has rules and a good port of call to kick things off is with Rohit Bhargava’s well publicised 5 SMO Rules of Social Media. These rules seem to have gone down well in the SEO world, with a variety of bloggers adding to the growing list. Loren Baker supplies 8 more SMO rules and Lee Odden develops the list further with 3 more of his own, to bring the tally up to 16.

Moving away from the rules for a moment, I really liked Daniel Riveong’s take on the rules and how to get SMO success. He assumes there are two underlying SMO success assumptions:

  1. The New Ruleset: If the Social Media is about ‘Engaging People’ and ‘Conversation’ why are we reading still reading [sic] just the Cluetrain Manifesto? We should be reading ‘How to Win Friends and Influence People‘ as well. Read up on it. Can you see how it applies online?
  2. The Equation: ‘engagement + authenticity x audience reach’. Logic+Marketing has covered this and so has Scott Meyer at SES San Jose.

I agree and in fact this has inspired me to order a copy of ‘How to Win Friends and Influence People’ too. Nice one Daniel! He then comes up with 5 suitable themes to throw into the mix.

The 5 Themes of Search Media Optimization (SMO)

  1. Understand, Cater, and Help Your Audience
  2. The Internet is Alive, Make Your Web Site Alive Too
  3. Treat the Audience Like People!
  4. Social Media is Not a Tool, It’s Today’s Internet Culture
  5. The Internet is More than a Webpage on a Computer, What about You?

And the Rules:

  1. Increase your linkability (Rohit’s Rules 1-5)
  2. Make tagging and bookmarking easy
  3. Reward inbound links
  4. Help your content travel – Content Diverification Beyond Web Pages
  5. Encourage the mashup – E.g. Portability of YouTube Videos on MySpace
  6. Be a User Resource, even if it doesn’t help you (By Jeremiah Owyang)
  7. Reward helpful and valuable users (By Jeremiah Owyang)
  8. Participate (By Cameron Olthuis)
  9. Know how to target your audience (By Cameron Olthuis)
  10. Create content (By Cameron Olthuis)
  11. Be real (By Cameron Olthuis)
  12. Don’t forget your roots, be humble (By Loren Baker)
  13. Don’t be afraid to try new things, stay fresh (By Loren Baker)
  14. Develop a SMO strategy (By Lee Odden)
  15. Choose your SMO tactics wisely (By Lee Odden)
  16. Make SMO part of your process and best practices (By Lee Odden)

That’s a lot of guidelines and there is a growing SMO community where bloggers like to discuss and share their views of what exactly SMO is.

The next step – Apply the Rules!

I think the rules have been discussed enough within the cummunity, so let’s have a look at how they can be applied:

  1. Blog it Up! Oftentimes we are writing excellent content, but target it more for Google, than your average Joe Bloggs (excuse the pun!). Joe Bloggs may be interested in your product or services, Google isn’t! Joe Bloggs may participate, contribute or write about your blog, Google won’t! He may even start the ball rolling in helping build up your social network, influencing influential bloggers to share and further discuss what you have to say. Know your target audience and blog for the Joe Bloggs of your community and Google will follow. Yes, you still need SEO, but why not blend it in with a nice bit of SMM?
  2. Digg it Up! Social Bookmarking/Networking sites are a great search engine alternative in attracting visitors and links. Make it easy for visitors to subscribe, digg, bookmark and share your stuff! Stuntdubl shows you how to Digg it Up!
  3. Tag it Up! Make sure your pages have relevant tags associated to it and that they have been submitted to the social bookmarking/news sites that you wish to target.

So where does this leave SMM?

SMM, as I am sure you will agree, certainly has a bright future as an alternative SEM strategy for boosting traffic, that isn’t dependant on the big ‘G’. In fact, if combined with linkbaiting it can result in loads of exposure and links and we all know Google likes links! So it’s a double whammy really, more traffic through search engines and more as an alternative.

SMM and 2007?

Britopian Marketing posted an interesting article indicating that SMO is becoming mainstream. The article points out that Ad Age has recently released a Search Marketing Fact Pack that outlines SMO as the 9th out of 12 SEO strategies for 2007.

Through spending much of my time rummaging through the various SEO/SEM blogs, on a daily or perhaps even hourly basis, I would say SMO or SMM should be in the top 5 for SEO strategies for 2007. I suppose it really comes down to how you define it. Its lethal combination with a well thought out piece of linkbait may even put it in pole position for the New Year. What are your thoughts?