Author: Paula Keller French

  • Will Scott Speaking at SMX Advanced June 8-9

    Next week’s SMX Advanced Conference in Seattle is sure to prove itself a valuable experience for all in attendance. On June 8 and 9, some of the brightest minds in search marketing will gather in Seattle for a conference that has come to be know as a must-attend for those interested in gathering high level actionable information to apply to their strategies.

    Will Scott Speaking at SMX Advanced, June 8-9

    Will Scott will be speaking on two panels at the two day conference. On the 8th he’ll be joining Marty Weintraub and Lisa Williams on “Opening The Contracts Kimono: Translating Your Pricing Model To Legal Agreement,” to speak on search marketing contracts, who will be defining the overall scope of contracts, and discussing making them performance-based, respectively. Will will discuss the liability aspect of contracts from the perspective of a search marketer who is actively updating and optimizing clients’ sites. This panel will be especially valuable for search marketing consultants and owners of search marketing companies.

    Will is also part of a group of search marketers who have taken the initiative to conduct the first ever Foursquare advertiser sentiment survey! The exciting results of this first-of-its kind survey will be presented during the SEO & Vertical Search Track at “Location Services: The New Local Search?” on June 9.

    This panel will be moderated by Greg Sterling, Founding Principle of Sterling Marketing Intelligence and the other speakers are to include Vince Blackham, Michael Martin, Mat Siltala, and Dylan Swift. More information about the Foursquare Advertiser Survey can be found on our blog, including profiles on the great companies that took part in making it happen!

    Both of these panels will be must-sees next week in Seattle. For more information on SMX Advanced, visit their website. Will looks forward to meeting you at the conference!

  • Top 10 for the Weekend

    1. Why Local Businesses Can No Longer Ignore Foursquare

    For some reason businesses are hesitant to jump on the social media bandwagon. It’ll never make sense to me because even if you don’t believe in its power, your customers do!  By simply adding a little prize for the mayor or a special for just checking in, you are almost guaranteed loyal repeat customers looking to catch a deal. It’s a game for these people! Make your business the board!

    Top 10 for the Weekend: May 28, 2010 Wordle

    2. The Rise of SMB Reputation Management

    With the rise of social media, small businesses are now able to get their name out there as effectively as the big chains, and for a much smaller price than they’re paying for their marketing too! Check out this blog post for a huge list of SMB reputation management services.

    3. Citysearch Plans Reputation Mgt Offering

    In keeping with SMB reputation management, Citysearch is now offering a fixed-fee service through CityGrid. Check out this blog post and the interview mentioned in it for more information.

    4. Yellowbot Offers Reputation Tool Too

    We’re just crazy about small business reputation management here at Search Influence, so here’s another post about yet another service, this time offered by YellowBot! These blog posts are a fantastic resource in helping decide which service- if not ALL of them- is right for your business.

    5. Google Maps: New Guidelines for Dealing with Multiple Listings & Duplicate Listing Removal

    As much as we love Google Maps here, we don’t hesitate to call attention to its faults. This post gives a few tips on how to check for – and delete – duplicate listings for your business. We had to learn the hard way about the penalties they impose for duplicate listings. Save yourself the headache and check out this blog about duplicate content and how to rectify the problem before it’s too late!

    6. It’s MayDay for Yellow Pages Sites

    An early-May change in Google’s algorithm affects the way massive websites are indexed. While this probably doesn’t affect your site directly, it may affect a site that you’re listed on, a site on which you may be counting for a quality link. If you have a basic listing on a large directory site, the page on which you’re listed may not be viewed as authoritative by Google. In that case, you could then speak with the advertising department of the site and look into options about getting an enhanced listing with unique, rich content that is more likely to be indexed, viewed highly by Google and give a strong link back to your site.

    7. Google Algo Changes Drop ‘The Other Shoe’

    This post from Greg Sterling references the same update to the Google algorithm as Andrew Shotland’s does above, but makes the point that directories with content-rich listings will prevail over directories with simple listings of phone numbers and addresses.

    8. Effective Online Marketing Messages: How to Pace Yourself

    This one comes straight from Search Influence’s own Nick Fidanza. A few weeks ago he wrote a comical blog post about when online marketing messages are ineffective, with the promise of a follow up on how to avoid the outcomes mentioned in the first post. While we could go on for days about how to properly send out online marketing messages, we decided to keep it simple this time. Check out these 4 guidelines to plan out and pace your messages.

    9. Google Lists Top 1,000 Sites On The Web & Then Lets You Advertise On Them

    This Search Engine Land post mentions brand-new-yesterday features available to online advertisers in Google Adwords. These features are thanks to advertisers and users like you who have allowed Google to be privy your site’s analytics data and/or your personal searching and website viewing activity.

    10. Evil Conversion: When Optimization Goes too Far

    That’s right, we agree – there is such thing as too much optimization. Sandra Niehaus provides three vivid examples of consumer purchase experiences that, through over optimization, could end up causing the customer to navigate away from the site before converting or worse, turning the customer away for good.

  • Top 10 for the Weekend

    Once again we’ve collected some handy links that we thought you’d find enjoyable and useful. Have a look and maybe you’ll get some ideas for what to do on Monday when the clients and customers start calling…

    1. GoogleSpeak – “We currently do not support the location” = Banished?

    As much as we love Google Maps… it’s got a long way to go until it’s a fully reliable business tool. It works perfectly for many, but some businesses end up with a problem-laden listing or market and just can’t seem to get it straightened out. If you’re a small business struggling to get your business details out there, you are not alone! Stay tuned for future posts on how to manage it!

    2. ComScore: Now 30% Browsing Mobile Web

    ComScore’s finding that approximately 75 million people are surfing the web on their mobile phones proves the importance of the tool mentioned in the link above. With the Maps application available for all Andriod, Blackberry, iPhone, Palm, and Windows Mobile, that means it’s available to 97% of smartphone users as of February 2010.

    3. Facebook Posied to Enter the LBS Game

    From the company who only first turned a profit just over 6 months ago, comes another reason why their long-awaited IPO is going to have investors running to Wall Street when it finally comes up. If you haven’t heard of LBS, or “location based service,” you certainly will soon, and you’re probably already using one: Google Maps, Foursquare, and soon 400 million people will be using one: Facebook. It seems they’ll be integrating advertising like no other into their location-based status updates that will roll out later this month.

    4. Three for Thursday

    Mobile seems to be the hot topic this week… Tom Martin details three mobile services or overall ideas that will help some daily tasks just a bit easier: ordering and paying for your lunch via your mobile, the location-based app answer to Craigslist’s “Missed Connections,” (too bad I’m not single), and a possible solution to trying to schedule a call with a potential client on your boss’s jam-packed schedule, which has proven itself a challenge lately.

    5. Buying Yelp Reviews is BAD for Business

    There’s been a lot of talk about proper social media use these days. Yelp seems to usually be at the center of such discussions. This blog by fellow Search Influencer Amy Arnold shows the varying degrees of small businesses’ attempts to “buy” reviews and if you should or shouldn’t do it.

    6. How to Use Facebook for Business and Marketing

    What would a collection of internet marketing posts be without a mention of how to create a fabulous Facebook Page that everyone will want to visit?? Tamar Weinberg explains here how while the typical Facebook user really is on there only for personal use, it is possible to sneak a little marketing in here and there.

    7. Linkbait: The Most Linked to Articles

    Trying to get links back to your site or blog? Often even the most well constructed posts don’t get all the linking attention they deserve. The SEO Doctor shares some research he found about some of the most linked-to blogs AND shares the golden resources and tools he used to conduct it.

    8. Is your blog chasing numbers or dollars?

    Your blog may be attracting readers, but is it attracting them in such a way that they want to buy your product of service? Mack Collier points out something we’ve probably all committed as SEOs. Sorry, potential customers, we’ll be sure to dial down the use of the search lingo!

    We’re not the only ones who love to share the knowledge we come across. See below for Matt McGee’s round up of the best posts in April, and Search Engine Land’s SearchCap, a daily collection of posts.

    9. Matt McGee’s April ’10: Best Search/Marketing Posts

    10. Search Engine Land’s SearchCap for May 6, 2010

  • Top 10 For the Weekend

    We’re constantly coming across interesting articles, photos, and links around here. Some are relevant to our line of work, some not so much, some are funny, some are informative. Today we’d like to share a few of the most practical and useful ones with you.

    Check out this blatant use of buying Yelp! reviews. While they aren’t directly handing out cash to each customer that gives them 5 stars or writes something positive about their salon on Yelp!, this practice still goes against the ranking site’s terms of use.

    Linking strategies change from time to time. The recent trends show a rise in content strategies such as using social media and syndication. The decline in link bait for content strategies is a strong move for the community but what happened to the outreach efforts?

    As you’ve read in many of our other posts, managing a Facebook fan page can be a tricky task. Most people just don’t know where to start. This post by the Social Media Examiner walks you step-by-step through creating a strategic plan for your fan page, just as you would any other business or marketing venture… even if it’s just on a few post-its on the wall.

    So you’re always hearing about how such-and-such company made it big in social media by using such-and-such tactic, but often times, you feel like that certain tactic isn’t quite right for you, your product, or your budget. This slideshow offers mini case studies on a number of different company’s successes and failures via social media. With a combination of these, you can hopefully evaluate what the tipping point could be for your social media tactics.

    You can never have too much advice when you are planning your social media strategy. Once again, the heart of this post from Outspoken Media lies in creating a dynamic Facebook fan page, with a focus on what you are offering your fans, ranging from specialized content to great conversation.

    Our last link for the weekend isn’t a tutorial or explanation about how to further your business, but just an interesting post regarding the changing nature of transactions in our everyday life. While the percentage of our daily transactions happening via technology is continually increasing, it’s important to remember there is still usually a human on the other end… a real person, a lot like you!

    Thanks to puptoes74, and wordle.net for the nifty images!

  • Local Business Marketing on Foursquare

    While many companies are still figuring out Facebook and Twitter as a means of local business marketing, a whole new social media is beginning to break into the mainstream. While the underlying idea is to keep you connected, just as other social media networks, foursquare takes it to the next level.

    local business marketing on foursquare

    It’s also similar to other outlets in such ways that you connect to people you know by adding them as a “friend,” but past that, this new location-based app sets itself apart by integrating the service into everyday activities, being primarily mobile-based, and serving as a “tap and go” app, with which it  doesn’t take much longer to interact than it does to send a text message to a friend letting them know where you’re having your coffee.

    Foursquare’s goal is to make you more social, not less, by encouraging users to go from place to place by way of “checking in” to each restaurant, bar, coffee shop (or even doctors’ office, store, airport) that they visit. Upon checking into a venue, a user sees who is currently the mayor (who has checked in here more than anyone else), and who recently checked in to that location. At any point in time, a user can see a list of their friends and where their friends have checked into recently, with an emphasis put on friends in your city, and pushing those in other cities to the bottom of the list. The idea behind this is that seeing where your friend in Denver is checking in doesn’t contribute to your foursquare community if you’re in Savannah.

    Users get “badges” for certain behavior such as checking into the same place three times a week (“local” badge) or going to four different venues in one night (“crunked” badge).

    Local Business Marketing through Badges

    So, what does all of this mean for your local business marketing? Some larger businesses at this point have had the opportunity to have badges related to check ins to their business added to the system. While we haven’t found if this feature will be available to small businesses in the future, we hope that it will, because badges are one of the big ways users can be encouraged to patronize and check in at YOUR business.

    For now, though, the local business marketing benefits are still great, and, most importantly, FREE! By going to foursquare.com, you can sign up your business to offer a foursquare special. So, when a user checks into a business within a block or two of your location, a “Specials Nearby” icon will pop up, on which they can click to see that your nearby business is offering a free bottle of wine on someone’s fourth check-in on foursquare, or a free pizza for the mayor. This means you get to market directly to people who shop and do business near your location already, who are already more likely to hit up your location than they are a similar business across town. Foursquare specials are also a way to reward loyal regulars. You can offer “free upgrade on every fourth check in”  or “complimentary dessert on your 10th check in.”

    local business marketing pie

    Each time an individual checks in to your business is a little free slice of marketing pie. By way of check-ins, users are telling their friends “I love the coffee at The Daily Brew!” and most of the time, users literally are telling their friends exactly what they like at a certain business by adding a comment that says something like “Iced Vanilla Latte – best in the city!” Small businesses can encourage patrons to pass the word on foursquare about a certain product by offering something to those who add a comment to their check-in or leaving a “tip” for a particular business.

    If you don’t want to solicit tips or check-in comments, you can still use them to your advantage by going to your business’s page on foursquare and seeing what people are saying about your business, its products, its atmosphere, etc. It’s your ticket to un-biased reviews! The most important part of this is to make use of the information you discover. Even the simplest thing as someone mentioning “bring a power strip if your planning to use your laptop,” can help you make your business more comfortable for patrons that enjoy working at your business, who are most likely to become regulars, if they aren’t already.

    While foursquare’s website and this post may allude to foursquare being geared towards the food and beverage industry, it really can be used for all places of business. Think retail customers leaving tips about sales, patients leaving comments about how quickly and smoothly their visit to the doctor was, or guests talking about how helpful the concierge service at your hotel is.

    No matter who you are or what you offer, you can put foursquare to work in your local business marketing plan!

    Thanks to dpstyles and psmith for the great images.

  • The Secret of Small Business Social Media – You Must be Present to Win

    One of the questions we hear from pretty much every client is “Should we be on Facebook?” “Do I need to Twitter? Tweet? Twit?” or, if they are already on it, they ask how they can make better use of Twitter or Facebook for business purposes.

    For a small business to be successful using social media, a small business must be an active participant in and on that social media platform, whatever it may be. Since Facebook is the most widely used social media outlet with more than 400 million members, and has the greatest variety of uses, we’ll illustrate how you can use it to your advantage. It may seem we talk about Facebook a lot on here, but that’s because people are interested in it, and want to know how to approach it.

    While a plethora of techniques and ways to approach social media exist today, no one business has time to implement them all, or, if they do, their “fans” may feel bombarded and are likely to remove their fan-ship.

    First and foremost, what is important to know and always remember when deciding how to use Facebook for business is that it is a social media site. You want to avoid constant peddling of your goods and/or services and focus on offering your customers or potential customers useful and practical information in hopes that they will view you less as a company who is trying to pump up sales by taking advantage of the social platform and more as a company just talking about the things in which they and their customers are interested.

    The idea is to make your fan page a must-see for Facebook users. You can even promote specials and your page through Facebook advertisements geared toward a target demographic. Facebook advertising’s demographic targeting is like none other. Not even Google can provide the niche targeting that Facebook can simply due to the nature of the site. Facebook users voluntarily offer up a plethora of information regarding interests, age, sex, and lifestyle, all which advertisers can use to perfectly target their ads to increase ROI.

    Regularly post informational content including videos, tips, and general knowledge for the public. To increase credibility you can post links to useful articles- the information doesn’t even need to be specifically related to your business.

    Once you’ve gathered together a wide variety of information to include on your page, you can then sprinkle in some specific product information to work to increase sales. If you have videos about your company, product, or service, post them to your Facebook, but spread them out. Post pictures that depict your product or service and in the captions you should include a call to action and link to your webpage with information about that specific offering. You can also connect your page to other social media outlets such as Twitter and your blog, which will pull any updates or posts onto the Facebook page. Also – don’t forget to post updates about sales and specials – that’s the information for which some fans may ultimately be looking.

    Small Business Social Media: Facebook for Business

    Lastly, you should encourage your employees and fans to be active on the page, so that the page isn’t full of postings solely from the company. Ideally, you want current and past customers or clients to participate on the page as well! Facebook is a good social venue to use to maintain a previously cultivated relationship. The whole idea is to create a lasting relationship, and relationships start with friendly conversation.

    Image Credits:

    Eric Fisher -http://www.flickr.com/photos/walkingsf/4228014090/

    Tim Parkinson – http://www.flickr.com/photos/timparkinson/930660427/