Category: News

  • Influencer Spotlight: Gabrielle Benedetto

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    Native New Orleanian, Gabrielle Benedetto has been working on the Search Influence account management team for over a year and a half. When she isn’t at the office, you can probably catch her running around New Orleans training for her next big race or enjoying time with friends and family.

    As an Account Manager what do you find yourself doing on an average day?  

    As all members of the account management team, my goal everyday is to make sure my clients are happy! Regardless of how simple a client’s question may be, my job is to make sure they feel confident about their SEO campaign and they understand what our team is doing to improve their online presence.

    Many of the accounts I work on have very niche markets. I make it a point to spend quality time with each client so I can get a better understanding of their marketing goals to insure we are running a great campaign.

    What would you say is your specialty and what do you enjoy most about it?

    I’m one of the few members of the account management team who works on site audits. This is basically a report run on an entire site that analyzes everything from internal links, HTML coding, optimized content, site navigation, and even off-site marketing. I really enjoy working on these as it provides me with a pretty deep understanding of how the site is currently optimized and shines light on opportunities to improve.

    Many client come to me saying “I have a user friendly site and provide visitors with unique content about my business, but I just can’t seem to increase my rankings.” In presenting a site audit, this allows me to spend time with the client and not only show them what areas of their site need improvement but how my team can address each issue.

    You’ve had a great deal of experience working with a wide range of clients, from local business to some national companies.  After working with and analyzing their websites, you’ve discovered some funky stuff along the way.  Any easy tips out there for an average Joe looking to improve their site?

    Ah great question! I have three rules: make it natural, make it pretty, make it search engine friendly. This may be a little easier said than done, but that’s where Search Influence comes into play.

    When optimizing or looking for ways to improve your site, you can’t go wrong if you follow these three rules.  

    1) Make it natural: Although sites with all the bells and whistles can be really nice to look at, they don’t always work properly. When optimizing a site, do what comes natural. This applies to something simple like making sure the content on your site reads naturally and is well optimized for your keywords. You could even take a more technical approach with this in making sure that you’re setting up an easy-to-use navigation and structure for your site.

    2) Make it pretty: I think we have all visited a site that wasn’t organized well and looked unattractive. Having a site that isn’t organized properly or comes across as ugly or outdated is immediately going to make you think of the “s” word… spammy. Having an updated, attractive, and welcoming site allows for a better user experience and also allows for your site to be seen as a little more trustworthy when compared to some of your competitors.

    3) Make it search-engine friendly: So you now have a site that just looks stunning! Your site is organized properly, attractive to visitors, and reads and functions naturally to the human eye. Regardless of how good it looks, if the search engine spiders can’t access your site’s information, no one will be able to visit your site. Make sure all content, pictures, pages, and URLs (just to name a few) are accessible to the search engines.

    If you could give advice to a new client starting up their first SEO campaign, what would you say?

    SEO is a marathon, not a sprint.  I have many clients who come to me with larger-than-life goals for their campaign. While the competitive streak in me is eager to accept a challenge, I always want to make sure realistic goals and expectations are set properly. If you want to rank on page one tomorrow, launch a paid search campaign. If you want to build strength, trust, and authority to your site, run a properly optimized SEO campaign. Results traditionally aren’t immediate, but SEO is a great way to naturally increase your search presence.  Once we lay the foundation and the campaign starts to pick up speed, we can see the rankings “increase to infinity and beyond” as one of my clients put it.

    What’s your favorite thing about working at Search Influence?  Anything in particular you could live without?

    Something that makes Search Influence different than other companies is our staff and work space. Our office is full of monitors, MacBooks Airs, and extremely talented young professionals plugged in and focused on their work. Our staff is not only talented, but energetic and brings so much personality to this company. The team is constantly looking for ways to improve day-to-day internal processes, deliverables to increase the success of our clients’ campaigns, as well as our overall brand.

    SI has a finite amount of candy at the office. There is a love/hate relationship between the team members and the candy supply. I’m trying to quit, but candy is always in the office taunting me.  There are brief periods when the candy supply is low. I secretly enjoy this time without candy, but everyone else in the office starts shaking and needs their candy fix. I think I could live without the candy in the office, but I might miss the constant battle to cut down the candy.  Strange enough, this bonds us a little. But let’s quickly move on to the next question before someone yells at me for speaking out against our candy supply.

    Tell us a little more about your life growing up around The Big Easy.  In your free time, what do you do for fun?

    I am New Orleans through and through. Although we may be called the “Big Easy” there are always events going on in this town. Between races, social events, restaurant openings, or fundraisers there’s always something to do down here.

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    In a perfect world, left to your own devices, what would you be doing all day?

    When I’m not at the office I’m probably at one of the events mentioned above.  Yet, subconsciously I’m still working, networking, and meeting new people.  Since a lot of people aren’t extremely familiar with SEO or Internet marketing for that matter, I’m always explaining how Search Influence helps companies all over the country promote their business and increase their search presence. I never leave the house without a stack of business cards.

    One last hard hitting question —- If you could identify yourself with one designer brand what would it be and why?

    That’s easy, DVF (Dianne Von Furstenburg)! Her line is classic, professional, and fashion forward. She’s been rocking it for decades and still vogue — just one of my own aspirations!

  • Influencer Spotlight: Annette Golemi

    Annette Golemi

    What do running, LSU tigers, and New Orleans cuisine have in common? They are all beloved by SI’s PR/Marketing Associate, Annette Golemi! Born in the Chicago suburb of Park Ridge, Annette moved to Mandeville, LA when she was only 6 months old. From then on, New Orleans and Southeast Louisiana held a special place in her heart. With much love for the area and its food, people, and sports, it was no surprise to Annette’s family when she moved to Baton Rouge to attend LSU. “I bleed purple and gold,” said Annette of her beloved alma mater.

    After graduating from LSU with a bachelors degree in public relations, Annette moved to Austin, TX, where she began an internship with a local PR firm. Shortly after, she was offered a position at a different local PR agency where she worked for over a year. It was at this point family, food, and fantastic job opportunities called her back to New Orleans, where she then began work at SI.

    As a PR/Marketing Associate, Annette’s day to day activities revolve around building the Search Influence brand as a nationally recognized and premiere Internet marketing company. Annette truly excels at her job with her fantastic ability to connect and engage with those around her. When asked about her favorite part about working at SI, Annette replied, “I absolutely love our company culture. I feel so privileged to work with such intelligent, well-versed, and hard working colleagues that truly work as a team. I am always so pleased to know that if I ever need help with a project, I can reach out to any of my team members and receive a positive attitude along with helpful results.”

    Influencer Spotlight

    When she’s not building up the Search Influence brand, Annette loves trying new local restaurants. “I keep a running list on my cell phone of restaurants I hear people talking about or places I learn about from Eater NOLA.” Also an avid runner, Annette enjoys the outdoors, especially the running paths in Audubon Park.

    We are thrilled to have such a wonderful team member in Annette and look forward growing as a company with her and through her hard work!

  • Influencer Spotlight: Joe Romito

    Joe Romito

    With both a B.A. and an M.A. concentrating in English, 24-year-old Joe Romito may first appear like one of many students with the same popular degree, if it was not for one distinguishing feature: comic books.

    A Philadelphia native, Romito attended the University of Pennsylvania, deciding to combine a minor in classic Greek and Roman literature with a focus in graphic novels.

    Although the combination was unique, Romito was not deterred when programs were scarce as he got ready to pursue a graduate degree. “Nobody really picked me up for a Master’s degree,” he said. “Initially, I was going to get my Ph.D, but I highly specialized in graphic literature, which is kind of a hard sell for universities right now.”

    However, after graduation, Romito decided to move to New Orleans instead. His girlfriend was attending law school at Tulane at the time, so it made sense for the couple to move closer together. “I had no job,” he said, “and I said, ‘Screw it,’ and packed up all my stuff and got in my car and drove down here.”

    Thankfully, Romito found a professor at the University of Chicago that specialized in comic book literature named Hillary Chute. “I thought, if she could do it, this might be a viable option,” he said. “In the end I wanted to teach about graphic novels, comic strips, graphic comic books, the whole medium.”

    After receiving his Master’s, Romito ended up moving back to New Orleans and after a brief employment at a local restaurant, Romito decided to pursue a career that better suited his academic goals. “I was tired of being a dishwasher,” he said. “I was a dishwasher at Delachaise, and one day I thought, ‘Maybe a master’s degree student should not be here washing dishes.’ It was a little ridiculous, if thats all I was going to do.”

    At the time, Romito was also freelance writing for Search Influence, and I decided to apply for an in-house position. He has now been a full-time IMA with the company for nearly 6 months and seems to much enjoy his new career choice.

    “It’s just weirdly comfortable,” he said. “I don’t feel stressed out. I feel like if I was in one of those TV offices with the cubicles I would just feel bad. I like the open air feel. I think it really makes you feel like a team, opposed to if everyone was stuck in cubicles and had to pop over the top like meerkats every time they needed to talk to someone.”

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    Romito has certainly taken advantage of the sense of community at the company, organizing  game nights with his fellow employees. “When I first got here, I played my favorite game, which is “Find the Nerd,” he said. “Whenever I’m in a new social situation, I don’t tone myself down at all. I just max out on how nerdy I am around other people, and I’ve found in like 99% of situations, someone responds with the nerdiest thing that they do back at me. And I’m like, ‘Ok, I found a nerd.’”

    Romito found that the majority of the web developers in the office were interested in role playing games, so he decided to begin an inter-office game of “Dungeons and Dragons.”

    About 7 people are involved in the game, including Romito’s girlfriend, who is also a freelance writer for Search Influence. “Every Sunday we meet up at my place and play “Dungeons and Dragons,” and drink beer, and hang out,” he said.

    As far as pursuing his interest in comic books, Romito has not given up on the dream, he said.

    In his free time, Romito plays around with ideas for sci-fi fantasy novels, novellas, and short stories. He also has a number of “art friends,” he said, so would have no trouble enlisting the help of an illustrator if he ever decided to seriously move forward with a project.

    “I’m terrible at drawing,” he said. “I took drawing courses in college, and got good enough to know how bad I am. It was like, ‘Now I know enough to know this sucks.’ However, if I could ever get words on paper enough to actually say, ‘Hey, I got an actual, solid idea, do you want to get in on this project?’ I know I would be able to write it, and I would be able to get someone to do the illustrations.”

    As for now, Romito remains a humble IMA for Search Influence. But look for him to accomplish great things in the world of science fiction in the near future.

  • Confusion Is Next Part 4

    Confusion Is Next: A 4-part Look at Music SEO In A New Era Of The Music Industry

    Part 4 – Same As It Ever Was?

    There is much already written about how and why we use schema and microformats for SEO purposes, but most discussions of this practice tend to revolve primarily around address/contact information and compilation of online reviews. Schema, in essence, just more clearly isolates exactly what a search engine should extract from a site, page or – most importantly for this particular discussion – media item. Our own Doug Thomas offered a fascinating look at the basics of how schema can be used for many different purposes in a post last year. I want to make it clear that I can only speculate as to the actual direct contribution of schema to Internet radio. It feels pretty safe to assume that as this market becomes increasingly competitive, however, the more descriptive information there is associating an artist’s material with other more firmly established artists and genres across the internet, the more likely a musician is to reach a wider audience.

    The important distinction to make is for microdata’s use in the presentation of music is in regard to the desired function of the information being processed. When listing a business address or embedding a video testimonial or compiling reviews for a company’s online ranking, the most important content that needs to be targeted for extraction from the formatting is basic information about the business, its location and its purported quality according to consumers. The goal is to get a search engine to pull a relatively simple assessment of an item or page of content that points as directly as possible to the business or source website. As we discussed in Part 2, this is not necessarily the focus for musical work.

    As you can see, between the schema properties available for the CreativeWork classification and the MusicRecording classification, there is a great deal of information that can be provided to a search engine for any function. Obviously, the data provided through schema should include standard title, album and technical information. What I think could be of increasingly great importance to aspiring new artists, however, are the more relative and subjective microformatting properties available within the CreativeWork schema. A handy way to think about this is as a contemporary substitute for the “Recommended If You Like…” stickers that came on CD’s for radio and promotional performances back when CD’s were still actually real things people used.

    “Genre” is obviously a key component that should probably be used with as much specificity as possible without descending into comically pompous territory. “Pop” is probably not specific enough to help anyone, but some exceedingly overwrought and ultimately marginalizing mega-description like  “Neo Nerdcore Post-Synth-Wave” wouldn’t really tell anyone anything either (unless that’s an actual thing, in which case, sorry. I’m getting old).

    More intriguing, though, are CreativeWork schema parameters like “audience,” “discussionURL,” “isBasedOnURL,” “reviews” or “typicalAgeRange.” These all seem to provide great opportunities to associate a band or musician’s work with something a listener might actively search for, either on a standard search engine or on an internet radio provider. Again, I can provide no certain evidence that any of this will lead to any direct boost in profile on any music-centric site at this moment. I can say, however, that using schema is a really simple and effective way for descriptive information about a work or its creator(s) to be transmitted and received. Simple and effective is generally considered good for business, so it shouldn’t seem outlandish for schema or some similar style of microdata-driven assessment of material to be used in the development of new music dispersal services.

    Furthermore, if there’s one thing we DO know, it’s that schema is utilized very effectively already within standard organic search results. If Daisy is indeed about to usher in a new era of Internet radio that incorporates a more hands-on human element, then organic search results may suddenly become much more important for artists than they had been to this point. In short, forming clearer connections and associations for musical material through the inclusion of a few simple schema properties whenever a media item is linked or embedded by an artist just seems like a solid practice all around for artists (as well as marketers) looking for rewarding careers.

    Click here for Part 1

    Click here for Part 2

    Click here for Part 3

  • Confusion Is Next Part 3

    Confusion Is Next: A 4-part Look at Music SEO In A New Era Of The Music Industry

    Part 3 – Into The Blue Again

    Entities like Youtube, Spotify, Pandora, Soundcloud and Last.fm, alongside the usual social dispersal mechanics of Facebook and Twitter, have certainly made it easier for people to get the music they want legally at minimal (if any) cost. These sites aren’t really doing a ton for artists yet, beyond making music from performers with already existing publishing deals more easily accessible to a wider audience. A great deal of ire has been directed toward Spotify in particular for the ridiculously low royalty rates it pays out to artists. It seems silly to cast Spotify as The Problem, since distributing music without fairly compensating its creators is already what most people are going to do one way or another. It’s important to remember, however, that Spotify probably shouldn’t be viewed as a likely solution to the music industry’s current crop of problems either. Regardless, Internet radio and subscription listening services have to be viewed as, at the very least, a step in the right direction for an “industry” with basically no viable mass financial structure in place at the moment. If there is an available outlet for an artist to target, this is it. It is a market pretty clearly on the rise.

    There had long been rumblings about hip-hop legend Dr. Dre’s development of a new music streaming-focused branch of his Beats Electronics audio equipment company. The revelation last December that Nine Inch Nails creator Trent Reznor had been brought on board the project as Chief Creative Officer made the enterprise even more intriguing. Certainly, celebrity musicians attaching their names to commercial projects is not particularly novel, but the combined reputation and industry experience of these particular celebrity musicians adds a fascinating angle to the in-progress streaming service, which is (unofficially) being referred to as Daisy.

    Both Dre and Reznor have been directly and successfully involved with pretty much every angle of the music industry. Both have been wildly popular performing and recording musicians in their own right. Both are viewed as recording and production visionaries within their particular genres. Both have operated legitimately successful and well respected record labels, wherein both were known to have taken a very hands-on approach to discovering and developing their artists. Both — particularly Reznor — have been extremely candid and open-minded about the issues facing musicians in the brave new Internet-driven world of music promotion and distribution. Basically, in neither case does this feel like a pop star allowing his or her name and face to be associated with caviar-infused vodka or some such thing; it feels a bit more like something that could actually turn into a serious market force.

    Well, the March announcement that Len Blavatnik, owner of the Warner Music Group, had invested $60 million in the project means it better turn into some kind of force now. Details of the specific function and implementation of the streaming service have been kept decidedly on the down-low, but the plan has already at least won the ear of Apple CEO Tim Cook. The pitch appears to involve a more financially viable model for musicians themselves, which isn’t particularly surprising given the personnel involved. But the really intriguing part of all this is the heightened attention the Daisy platform appears to be granting to the search and recommendation features.

    Most of what we know about what Daisy is trying to do comes from a Reznor profile in The New Yorker, which is blocked by a pay wall, so I’m going to shamelessly blockquote Pitchfork, against all better judgment:

    The service “uses mathematics to offer suggestions to the listener… [but also] would present choices based partly on suggestions made by connoisseurs, making it a platform in which the machine and the human would collide more intimately.”

    Comparing Daisy to Spotify, he told The New Yorker, “Here’s sixteen million licensed pieces of music,’ they’ve said, but you’re not stumbling into anything. What’s missing is a service that adds a layer of intelligent curation.”

    “That first wave of music presentation which felt magical, the one where the songs are chosen by algorithms that know who you listened to… has begun to feel synthetic.”

    He described Daisy as being “like having your own guy when you go into the record store, who knows what you like but can also point you down some paths you wouldn’t necessarily have encountered.”

    Now, “intelligent curation” is a really intriguing but delightfully vague expression of how the team is actually going to make this work. There are no details about the procedure and regulations with regard to artist submissions or access yet, so I’m jumping a few steps ahead here. But if Daisy is gearing up for a legitimate run against Spotify and Pandora and stays true to Reznor’s word, it’s going to very quickly make some form of SEO for musicians extraordinarily important. Even if Daisy underperforms relative to its recent investment, it will likely come on the market with enough clout to make other more established Internet radio sources at least think about altering or updating their approaches.

    In the interest of keeping this a series of (hopefully) easily digestible blog posts, and not an entire book, I’m going to keep the discussion of how the current main players in Internet radio actually DO approach things a bit limited. Know that there is much to be read on the subject, however, and it’s all pretty fascinating for music and Internet buffs alike. Pandora, in particular, makes heavy use of the Music Genome Project, which I could happily read about for weeks on end. For my purposes, let’s just establish that Pandora takes into account a whole lot of really detailed technical elements of how music sounds and how it is created when generating playlist connections. Spotify Radio (and many other Internet radio platforms) work more like they are pulling from a huge encyclopedia of genre and era-specific historical reference points, as if their databases are full of every NME Top 100 list and VH1 countdown ever made.

    Both the Pandora and the Spotify approach have their strengths and weaknesses, but where both run into issues is with brand new music that hasn’t been passed through the classification funnel yet. As Internet radio continues to grow and become a greater force in exposing new music to new listeners, it stands to reason that aspiring artists will want to provide as much information as possible about their musical material in order to make it easier to include alongside other more established artists’ material.

    What really intrigues me about all of this, though, is the idea of using SEO techniques to somehow link a band’s online “associations” in such a way that it might be reflected by Daisy or Spotify playlists. No matter how many hordes of ex-college radio DJs Trent Reznor and Dr. Dre are going to hire to add the supposed human element to Daisy, there is still going to be a lot left up to automated algorithms. What this means is…oh, hello there, schema, I didn’t even see you standing over there. Perhaps we should sit down and chat a minute in Part 4.

    Click here for Part 1

    Click here for Part 2

    Click here for Part 4

  • Confusion Is Next Part 2

    Confusion Is Next: A 4-part Look at Music SEO In A New Era Of The Music Industry

    Part 2 – How Do I Work This?

    What is interesting about music SEO as a concept is that the focus isn’t really on steering traffic to a musician’s website in the same way that it would be for, say, a lawyer or dentist. With more traditional businesses, media like videos or sound files are frequently treated as neat bells and whistles that can help attract more attention to the actual service or product that business provides, as detailed on that company’s website. For a musician, these media ARE the service or product. A YouTube video for a lawyer can be strategically utilized to drive traffic back to a home destination. More and more for musicians, YouTube videos ARE the destination.

    When it comes down to it, how do you even approach optimizing a band’s website? I’ve looked for online resources, and the results have been alarmingly banal and obvious. If you have to be told by “SEO experts” to include your band name in your band’s website title and domain name, I’m just not sure what else to even tell you. Have you heard of this thing called MySpace? It’s supposed to be pretty sweet. Anyway, some sources provide theoretically legitimate guidance like implementing meta data on all of your site’s pages and maximizing external link opportunities, but think about it: who are you optimizing for?

    I signed up for a mailing list that granted me access to a 20-minute video on SEO’s importance to musicians in researching this post. In the video, the key example was a wedding band in Oakland targeting the keywords “wedding band Oakland.” That’s fine, and from there, plenty of SEO professionals will know what to do to help a local wedding band get some additional online presence. But this doesn’t do much for a new indie-electronic/neo-shoegaze/whatever-core three-piece doing all original material and who would, in different times, have viewed a modest advance from Touch And Go as a massive coup. Although I really enjoy the mental image of a lovesick college student Googling “new neo-math rock quartet Indianapolis that girl with the glasses in intro world lit would probably like,” people just don’t really use Google that way.

    Moreover, there’s the question of what it is you’re actually trying to optimize. It feels somehow already out of date to optimize an actual website for a band or musician. Facebook, Soundcloud and Bandcamp pages are all probably afforded much greater significance by active musicians and their fans than individual websites. Facebook is likely to be more current on listings and news and allows more direct contact (for better or worse) between musicians and fans, Soundcloud makes it easier to hear music and Bandcamp allows a musician to get something resembling a paycheck with relative ease. Getting a traditional website to do all of those things sounds like an awful lot of unnecessary trouble for an amateur garage-punk quartet.

    Basically, the focus with a musician needs to be on the music they are actually making, which – if found and digested by listeners – may or may not eventually lead to the band’s actual website. Establishing domain authority matters dramatically less than establishing connections between the artist being promoted and musical works or musicians that are already better known to most audiences. Ranking for targeted keywords is essentially meaningless; reaching listeners searching for other materials is crucial.

    In Part 3, we’ll look at how musicians are actually reaching listeners (legally) in 2013.

    Click here for Part 1

    Click here for Part 3

    Click here for Part 4

  • Confusion Is Next Part 1

    Confusion Is Next: A 4-part Look at Music SEO In A New Era of The Music Industry

    Part 1 – Well, How Did We Get Here?

    It’s hard to even discuss the impact of the Internet on the music industry in 2013 without feeling like that annoying guy in a faded Pearl Jam t-shirt still whining about the good old days when MTV actually played MUSIC, maaaaaan. It seems like all conversations about the Internet and music tend to pretty quickly veer toward creative property and ethics and the death of the record industry and piracy, which are all completely valid and occasionally  interesting ways of thinking.

    They’re also all completely moot points. The game has changed, the record industry is largely irrelevant to anyone not dead-set on Lady Gaga-level superstardom, and people are going to continue to get music for free, legally or not.

    We are where we are. There’s very little out there to encourage anyone to pursue a career in music from a financial perspective. Music listeners will increasingly start to feel the effects of this if no one is able to effectively fill the sizable void left by that same record industry we all spent the late 90’s and early 00’s actively and systematically trying to obliterate. I’m not defending the record industry here. Still, we can thank the recording industry for one-time revolutionary, now pleasantly nostalgic institutions like flexi-discs, maxi-singles, huge cardboard boxes for compact discs and the concept that musicians should be paid something – anything, no matter how shamefully miniscule – for their recorded work. It all seems so delightfully quaint now, doesn’t it?

    The problem is that the whole process of starting a band or being a musician had been predicated on the idea of being discovered and getting signed by a record label for so long that no one knows what to do now that “getting signed” is kind of an obsolete concept.  As approximately everyone with a writing job for a music or music industry magazine has written that around every 4 seconds for the last 5-15 years, the Internet has made it easier than ever before to make and share music. The problem is getting those billions of potential listeners, to whom any musician has access at any given time, to care.

    So wait, we have a crowded, Internet-centric market with more options available to Internet users than anyone knows what to do with? This sounds like exactly the kind of problem that SEO is designed to handle, right?

    Yes, it does. But thinking about how to make that actually work very quickly veers away from the beaten path of optimization and promotion techniques that might typically be applied to more traditional businesses.

    In Part 2, we’ll take a closer look at how promoting music online differs from standard SEO practices.

    Click here for Part 2

    Click here for Part 3

    Click here for Part 4

  • The Best Things in Life are Free

    Facebook Contest Reach

    In today’s ad-heavy world with million-dollar Super Bowl spots and thousand-dollar billboards, it’s easy to forget that some of the best advertising can be pretty inexpensive–like everyone’s favorite vehicle: social media!

    Recently, we strategized and implemented a sweepstakes giveaway for one of our local clients that was mainly held through Facebook. The main goals were to build Facebook fans, generate sweepstake entries, and increase brand awareness of course. There was no real cost to implement, as it was a graphic and form design that lived within the Facebook platform. The only traditional “paid” advertising we did for the contest was minor Facebook promotion.

    The results were astounding!

    In less than three weeks, the client received over 6,500 form entries. Their fan count increased an average of 1,076 likes per week during the contest—better than their average of 857 new likes per week during the 10 weeks prior to the giveaway. The contest entry form on their site received over 5,000 visits, and the sweepstakes was actually picked up by multiple giveaway sites. The Facebook page’s reach saw a definite spike when the contest was released, as illustrated below.

    Facebook Contest Reach

    Not only were we able to generate new likes, but we were also able to drive traffic to the site Considering the cost was so minimal, small businesses should consider a contest or entry giveaway as a way to honor their loyal customers and drum up new visitors.

    Keys to “Free” Promotional Success:

    • Cross promotion: Just because you’re promoting something on Facebook, doesn’t mean you shouldn’t Tweet it! Make sure you’re reaching all those fans that you’ve worked so hard to build whether that’s Google+, Instagram or whatever!
    • Reminders: Don’t just post your contest, share it with your followers, and never speak of it again. Social media users are very in the moment. If you’re not in their feed, they won’t remember you. Make sure you’re posting consistently between the contest start date and the end date.
    • Simplicity is key: We’re all lazy and private people. We don’t want to give you our home address, working hours, or business name to enter a contest. Your entry method should be simple and easy to use. K.I.S.S. – Keep It Simple, Stupid!

    For many businesses, advertising costs can add up and quickly. It’s nice to remind people of the little and easy things they can do to generate business interest and hype. Every business owner “likes” that!

  • The Changing Face of Studios

    Summer is definitely the season for block busters. But that seems to be the majority of what we get from Hollywood now. When even comedies need over-the-top special effects–shows like the This is the End or World’s End–things start feeling odd. Hollywood’s profits have been dropping steadily as the ubiquity of online streaming, both legal and illicit, has increased.

    Film is Captured Forever

    So how has that impacted film? Well we see very few dramas or interesting new ideas from the mainstream world. The foreign market is where most of the money is, and action-packed, special-effects-filled blockbusters are what sells. From well liked movies like The Avengers to critical and technical flops, like “Dragonball,” foreign markets are often a majority source for profits. Not mention that this market even dictates the way the movies are made, with studios doing anything to get the attention of big markets like China. So unless you can harness an asset and make money off the tie-ins and merchandising, like Man of Steel, (which made enough money to break even before it even premiered) your options are limited for production in the mainstream.

    Forex Money for Exchange in Currency Bank

    Alternatives exist: Much ado About Nothing was well received and produced on a ‘micro-budget.’ Crowd-funding through sites like Kickstarter has entered the world of film production. The final big funding source has yet to truly enter the fight, but it seems likely that streaming sites, like Hulu and Netflix , may start producing their own high-quality films, since they already control the most popular form of after-market consumption.

    So don’t worry–while Hollywood continues to crank out highflying, action-packed thrill rides for the world, quality films that really make an impact will still be made. The Godfathers and Lincolns of the future will still be made but will be proceeded by a Netflix logo instead of a WB.

  • Find Out ‘What’s News’ in Miami, July 11-13

    It’s that time of the year again, when media gurus convene for the annual AAN (Association of Alternative Newsmedia) convention, which is set to take over the Miami scene July 11th-13th. The 3-day convention is jammed packed with speakers discussing the latest in media and news technology, including our very own Will Scott, who will be presenting that Friday afternoon.

    AAN
    “Networking, Inspiration, Innovations, and Parties” are what you are slated to find at this year’s AAN convention.

    In a time when the digital world is constantly changing and the concept of media is continually redefined, the 36th annual AAN convention is the perfect place to catch up with the latest and greatest. Top industry leaders, publishers, editors, and community organizers will be sharing their knowledge through presentations, workshops, and exhibits. The convention’s location in Miami lends itself to vibrant culture and alternative lifestyles, undoubtedly supporting the program’s 4 promises: Networking, Inspiration, Innovations, and Parties. Come out and see for yourself.

    Miami Cover
    The 36th Annual AAN Convention in 2013 is hosted by the Miami New Times.

    What exactly IS alternative newsmedia? The AAN prides itself on being a collection of news sources that focus on local culture and art, write in an informal and narrative style of journalism, and generally report on topics that are less likely to be covered by larger news providers. Think Washington City Paper, SF Weekly, and Miami New Times.

    So if we are talking news, why is Search Influence going to be there? For one, Search Influence is helping to sponsor the event! More importantly, digital marketing is a large part online media, and many companies leverage digital media sources to advertise their services and connect to clients. Will’s session will highlight “20 Quick and Great Digital Revenue Ideas” that anyone can easily implement. Come learn more about how your business can better use online media from Will and fellow industry leaders Friday, July 12th from 4:30 to 5:45 p.m.

    Recap: AAN 36th Annual Convention | Miami, Florida | July 11-13 | Networking + Inspiration + Innovations + Parties |Search Influence’s Will Scott