Blog

  • The Art of War for the SEO

    Sun Tzu wrote the handbook for how to achieve success in war in the 6th century BCE, and nothing has taken its place since. He established rules of battle that are still used to this day. Why am I writing about the Art of War in a blog belonging to an SEO company? Well, because the strategies used for one can also be used for the other. Follow these rules and your business can be well on its way to winning the game of global domination.

    Australia’s the key to the whole game.

     

    “The art of war is of vital importance to the State. It is a matter of life and death, a road either to safety or to ruin. Hence it is a subject of inquiry, which can on no account be neglected.”

     

    OK sure, SEO isn’t of vital importance to the state, nor is it a matter of life and death. It’s called a metaphor, alright? In this technology-based society, to ignore Internet marketing is to ensure failure. The most popular method of finding businesses- or any information, for that matter- is through Google. As stated by Sun Tzu, this cannot be neglected. If you’re buried underneath your competition, it’ll likely lead to your business’s ruin.

     

    “He who knows when he can fight and when he cannot will be victorious.”

     

    What Sun Tzu is essentially saying is that it is pointless to fight a losing battle. It wastes your resources, which you’ll need in the long run. Now, I’m not saying that you shouldn’t try to take on your competition. I’m saying to pick your battles wisely. This is where thorough keyword research comes in. Find out how many people are searching for targeted search phrases, and then find where your competition ranks for them.  If they rank number 1 for a really high-ranking keyword, it may be more beneficial to attack them using slightly lower ranking keywords; ones that you can take more easily. From there, you can start slowly overtaking them on the larger ones as your site gains more trust in the eyes of Google. It may be a slow process, but it’s better than losing before you begin.

    “The general who wins the battle makes many calculations in his temple before the battle is fought. The general who loses makes but few calculations beforehand.”

    Strategy is everything in SEO. Don’t just go into it blindly with your guns blazing. For every new client we receive, we have a detailed strategy that we employ to ensure a quick and fast climb in rankings. Keywords, optimization, metadata, internal/external linking, and directories are all necessary for a successful campaign. However, all of this means nothing if you are missing a well-organized plan of attack.

     

    “Management of many is the same as management of few. It is a matter of organization.”

     

    It doesn’t matter how many strategies you have if you aren’t organized in your application. Same goes with your number of clients. If your strategy is well organized and followed, number isn’t an issue. It becomes a simple matter of execution. Don’t become too comfortable in this process, though. New strategies always arise and adaptation is just as necessary as organization.

     

    “Opportunities multiply as they are seized.”

     

    The more you adapt to new opportunities, the longer you’ll last. SEO is an ever-evolving practice and Google is constantly changing their algorithms. The more you stay on top of these changes, the more new strategies you’ll end up learning.  When new opportunities arise, it is imperative not to neglect them.

    “One cannot afford to neglect opportunity.”

     

    We’re living in some tough times and businesses are struggling left and right. If you know your competition is one of these businesses, exploit this knowledge. If you can afford to, run some specials that will draw more customers away from them, and use SEO- specifically pay-per-click- to bring them to you. It sounds cruel, but your success hinges on the failures of others.

     

    “Secret operations are essential in war; upon them the army relies to make its every move.”

     

    This tip is more for us more than it is for you. We enjoy educating our clients and readers to some of the ins and outs of SEO, but we don’t want to give away all of our secrets. That could be the difference between a thriving SEO company and a dead one.

    Special thanks to blogger extraordinaire, Anthony Coleman, for the great concept of this blog.

     

     

     

     

     

  • To blog, or not to blog

    On Tuesday our paid search manager, Anthony Coleman wrote an excellent blog: “What small Business can learn from Comics”. In two days of publication we have seen over 700 visits to his blog post, making it the most popular blog in Search Influence History. I feel we may have a competition on our hands now. Using his search marketing expertise and his love for comic books, Anthony wrote a blog explaining why Marvel Entertainment has a much stronger internet marketing campaign than their competitor DC Comics. His educational and entertaining blog was retweeted by Marvel and then picked up on their Facebook page, thus making it the most popular blog in Search Influence history.

    Why was Anthony’s blog so popular? He chose a topic he is genuinely interested in and wrote about it. This blog post was fun for him to write which translated to an enjoyable read for followers. As seen by Anthony’s blog, taking the time to write a well rounded blog can bring new visitors to your site and help keep your existing visitors engaged in your product or service.

    Small business owners are experts at running their business. There is nobody in the world that is going to know more about your business than you. So write about it! Why? Not only will it help your search engine rankings, but it can put your business in front of new clients. A well maintained blog will show your customers that you are an expert at what you do and that you are keeping up with the latest and greatest in your industry.

    By writing fresh content on your site you are giving your business the opportunity to be distributed and found by others. When you write about something you are passionate about chances are somebody else shares the same passion. In case of comics, thousands of people share this interest. When faced with the question to blog or not to blog, find something you are genuinely interested in and relate it to what you do.

    Coming from a family of small business owners, I know most small business owners have an opinion about everything. Let the world hear yours in the form of a blog! After you have written a blog, share it with everyone you know. With social media outlets there is no limit to where your blog might end up. So sit down and let the world hear your voice. You never know, it might get picked up Marvel Entertainment.

    Special thanks to Brian Hillegas for the great image!

  • What Small Businesses Can Learn From Comics

    Man of Steel Vs. God of Thunder, You Do the Math.
    Man of Steel Vs. God of Thunder, You Do the Math

    Along with being a search marketing expert (that’s right, I said it), I am a huge fanboy (that means I like comic books A LOT). Very rarely do my two worlds meet but recently there was an article posted about the social media battle of rival comic companies Marvel Entertainment and DC (Time Warner) and I could not resist responding and explaining to how small businesses can win at social media. Despite my unending love for DC Comics, Marvel Entertainment does far better jobs at internet marketing. This post will explain how you can make your small business’s internet presence “marvelous”. 


    Why Marvel Wins at Fan Interaction

    Dinosaur in a Dinner > A man in a batsuit
    It's a Dinosaur in a Dinner Jacket

    When you compare the Twitter and Facebook accounts of Marvel and DC, you can notice that Marvel has a larger and more active fanbase. Why I would love to say this is because Marvel has more interesting characters (frankly a red t-rex with a dinner jacket trumps a sociopathic underwear pervert with a bat fetish IMO), but the truth is Marvel makes an effort at interacting with their fans. This is something I tell clients over and over, replies are key to gaining and sustaining fans. The more you reply the more successful and active your followers will be. Though there may not be any measurable ROI in tweets, you can increase your brand awareness locally, as well as, have a have a group of individuals who you can promote specials and discounts immediately.

    Why Marvel Wins at Site Design
    Around the turn of the century, there was a stark increase in light-weight, interactive business sites. The age of minimalism is over and businesses like Marvel know this – people like when content is interesting. And what is more interesting than promoting new products, specials offers, and general business information? I am not saying your site should be a Trapster’s sticky cesspool (if you don’t get the reference, its not important), but it should reflect what you are promoting current and updated often. Marvel Entertainment does a fantastic job of promoting their different business lines on their homepage in an easy and interesting way. The easier and more interesting, the longer visitors stay. Visitors who stay are visitors who will buy.

    Marvel's Homepage Services Their Product Lines
    Marvel's Homepage Services Their Various Product Lines

    Why Marvel Wins at SEO
    SEO is the backbone of success for any business and obtaining high ranking on new phrases related to your business is key to dominating search results. Marvel has done so with the emerging digital comics market. Not only are they the first and second Google positions on the phrase “digital comics”, the Amazon.com result mentions them by name. Digital comics is a market which has high ROI than the standard print format, so dominating these position in organic search gives Marvel an advantage. Another astonishing fact, DC Comics’ site doesn’t appear anywhere in the first two pages of search results. Applying this methodology to other industries is simple, research new technology and developments, create landing pages and start optimizing before competitors are even aware of the potential.

    Marvel Comics Digital Comics
    Marvel Dominates "Digital Comics" Results

    As internet marketing becomes more and more important to small businesses, SEO and social media will continue to mutate. However, being active with fans, having well thought out site design, and great positioning on emerging search phrases, will always be important to growth. So the next time you start questioning the value have having an internet presence, remember you can either be the Invisible Woman in the room or you pull a Dr. Doom and dominate the web for your small business.

    Superman Vs Thor Image From Wizard Universe

    Devil Dinosaur image from Weekly Crisis

  • Place Page Reviews are Now Separated

    Cobbler making shoes, but not for his kids Tonight, I was logged into the Place Page account for my husbands’ business adding a Coupon.  I haven’t looked around his Place Page in a while, and I was trying to see what I have missed in the months since I last logged in.  (Just as the cobbler’s children go without shoes, the Place Page accounts most personal to me tend to get ignored.  And that is not my husband in the picture.  That is a cobbler.)

    Then I saw some newness .. what’s this? … The reviews are separated out.  Check it out on this Place Page …

    Denver Dentistry – Dr. Guy Grabiak, DMD, FAGD
    3190 S Wadsworth Blvd, Suite #300, Lakewood, CO 80227
    (303) 988-6118

    Place Page Reviews Separated
    Reviews cached from sources around the internet are categorized under “Reviews from around the web” while Google reviews are segregated into their own special area, “Reviews by Google users.”

    Reviews from around the web

    Reviews from Google Users

    I had to ask a few Search Influence dedicated employees still working and available on chat tonight, “have you seen this?  Is this new?”  The resounding response was a confirmation that it is indeed a new development.

    Paula Keller
    gives feedback that she saw this earlier today, so perhaps this is the first day for the evolution of this separation.

    What does this mean?  I’m not sure what it means.  But there is definitely more transparency on reviews and the sources of those.

    And it’s interesting that Google puts “Reviews from around the web” above their own.   They want browsers and searchers to read the other reviews before those that Google gathered.  Perhaps, it’s a nod to the Google reviews having a tendency for attracting inauthentic reviews?

    Digging around, I can see those businesses that have ALL of their reviews from Google and none from other sources.  Suspicious behavior.  This guy has 22 reviews, everyone of them great, and everyone of them from Google users.

    all 22 reviews from Google Users

    Oooo! And this is cool.  It very clearly indicates how many reviews are being pulled from these web sources right in the source Title.  David Mihm found the New Place Page Reviews Format earlier today andhe points out the little flavicon on the review sources:

    82 reviews from 1 source!

    This newness is curious and interesting.  Just when we’ve decided that reviews are always important but maybe not as strong a factor as they once were, Google shakes it up for us.

    Thanks to hans s for his very cool medieval cobbler image.

  • Recent IAB Study Proves Advantages of Online Marketing

    The Internet Advertising Bureau (IAB) has released the results for their 2010 Half- Year study on Internet Advertising Revenue.

    Not surprising to many is that Internet Marketing Revenues for the 1st half of 2010 alone totaled $12.13 billion dollars – an 11.3% increase over the same period in 2009.  If that number is surprising, it’s likely you haven’t yet had your eyes opened to the wonder that is Internet Marketing.

    Obviously I’d be a champion for all businesses to hop on the online marketing train, but my beliefs are founded in the great results I’ve seen in my time working within the field, as well as the benefits that online marketing offers, particularly compared to traditional forms of advertising.

    The main benefit, in my opinion,  is that you can measure the true effectiveness of your online marketing campaigns. Through the use of phone call tracking numbers and contact forms, you can see the source of your leads, which allows you to measure which aspects of your online marketing mix are most effective. Given strong internal processes, this data also allows you to track leads and potential customers all the way through the close of the sale, giving you your true return on investment figure.  This brings up the importance of making use of the technology available to assist business owners with tracking leads, or even simply using a spreadsheet if you can maintain the data.

    For example, say you receive 20 leads over a period of time from source A, and 10 from source B. Many marketing managers or small business owners might view source A as more valuable. However, if you have strong systems in place that track the sales process from the submission of a form or a call to the close of the sale, you might see that 30% of leads from source B become actual customers (3) while only 10% of leads become customers from source A (2).

    The benefits of tracking are evident in the IAB study as they report that “the most prevalent pricing model since 2006” is performance-based pricing. The effectiveness of tracking can also fall into the hands of your online marketing agency, as many use leads to prove their value. They may also be willing to work with you to compare your new customers to incoming leads in order to further prove a real-life ROI.

    Additional benefits of online advertising include, but are certainly not limited to, the ability to target as well as the cost effectiveness of many programs available. Many online campaigns have a relatively low cost of entry. With search engine optimization and pay-per-click ads, since the magic is in the text, once your site is built there’s no hefty graphic design costs compared to print.

    Advantages of Online Marketing

    According to the IAB study, retail is the leading purchaser of online advertising. Small to medium businesses need not be intimidated by the large share of the market for which their industry accounts, as yet another benefit of online marketing is that small businesses can compete with larger businesses in the online realm.

    Top Industries of Online Advertising:

    1.     Retail

    2.     Telecom companies

    3.     Leisure Travel

    4.     Financial Services

    5.     Automotive

    6.     Computing advertisers

    7.     Consumer Packaged Goods and Food Products

    8.     Entertainment

    9.     Pharma and Healthcare

    10. Media

    The IAB also reports that the largest portion of revenue is spent on search-related advertising. Search related advertising can be the most effective and bring in more quality leads than display advertising because your products and services are being shown to individuals who are seeking what you are selling (if you target your ads appropriately).

    All things considered, online marketing can certainly work for you, but many times, when done incorrectly, advertisers and small business owners don’t see the value because they don’t have enough information to either a) conduct it effectively or efficiently or b) to even know if they are. In this case, advertisers, both small and large, should reach to a seasoned Internet marketing firm with the skills and experience to help you and your business utilize this ever-growing segment of the advertising world.

    View the full report here.

    Thanks to vizzzual-dot-com for the photo!

  • Facebook Groups- Old feature, new announcement

    Yesterday afternoon, Facebook head Mark Zuckerberg announced a “simpler way to communicate with the whole family” by upgrading the long forgotten Groups feature. While what used to be Groups became Pages as Facebook became more of a marketing platform than something for giddy college students to waste time on, the Groups feature languished as a poor “early adopter” penalty — a ploy used by far too many technology companies.

    The new Groups — Different then the old Groups?

    So, instead of Facebook being used for a bunch of unconnected people with similar interests, Groups has been reimagined as a way for smaller groups of people with real personal connections like “your family, your soccer team, your book club.” Members of a group, invited by the owner and other members, will be able to chat with each other in a group chat room that won’t be visible on your wall unless you want it to.

    …But that’s about all that Groups offers. Sure, like anything else with Facebook, you’ll receive spam an email whenever someone posts (though you can turn this feature off). The other real innovation—an email address that posts to the group—is more related to the second announcement in Zuckerberg’s blog than anything that changes the way the features work now.

    The site now lets you export “a copy of the information you’ve put on Facebook,” letting you see your account, photos, and wall posts. While the blog post claimed it’d be ready today and this shows it, my account hasn’t been upgraded yet.

    Facebook still isn’t quite sure what users might do with this feature except use it to backup files, but combining it with an ability to influence users while away from Facebook might open doors for new avenues for trying to market to- and interact with- users.

    Where's my new feature?
  • Professional SEO: Are You Bringing the Right Traffic to Your Customers?

    As I was watching college football on Saturday, a commercial for a new show on ABC grabbed my attention. Detroit 1-8-7 is new series on ABC about the homicide detectives in Detroit, one of the most violent cities in the U.S. On the surface this sounds like your typical dramatic detective show that we have seen done a hundred times before. There is just one problem with the show; it’s Title!

    1-8-7 is a common police code for homicide reports; unfortunately the writers at ABC failed to realize the police code for homicide in Detroit is 3-2-8.

    OOPS!

    Getting the right information from the beginning is also important as an SEO professional. There are many SEO companies who fail to take the time to research and understand the clients they represent.

    Just last week, I was on a call with a business owner whose previous SEO company did not understand his business. His previous SEO company was optimizing for terms like “cheap”and inexpensive.  He was ranking for these terms, but was not seeing an improvement in sales. Why? His service was based on quality not price.

    The ultimate goal of an SEO company should not be to increase unwanted traffic to the customer’s site; the ultimate goal of a professional SEO organization should be conversions. As an SEO organization are you bringing the kind of traffic that will convert to sales? These are questions that should be asked by any SEO professional.

    Understanding the business represented is imperative as an SEO professional. Obtaining the correct information about a city before airing a TV show is also imperative. Somebody should inform ABC!

    Probably this guy…

  • Foursquare Survey Contest Winner Announced

    We’d like to congratulate the winner, chosen at random, from our respondents to the first-ever Foursquare advertiser study.

    Urban Ecology Center Header Image
    Environmental Education Programs – The Urban Ecology Center

    In order to be completely fair, we picked the entry at the halfway point (#65 of 130 respondents). And the lucky winner was Jeff McAvoy of the Urban Ecology Center.

    Urban Ecology Center Social Media Widget Picture
    Social Media Widget

    The Urban Ecology Center offers Environmental Education Programs for Milwaukee residents in two Milwaukee County parks. These guys are clearly very social media savvy with a presence on Twitter, Facebook, Foursquare, LinkedIn and an email list.

    As we speak, a $200.00 gift card is speeding to Mr. McAvoy just for taking part in our survey.

    We’d like to thank all the survey participants for helping out!

    But wait, there’s more! As it turns out, we have very little time to refresh the data for comparison for next week’s SMX East. Please, please, please, if you get our email, TAKE THE SURVEY!

    Thanks again to Jeff, everyone who took the last survey and those of you about to take the revised survey!

    (x1st10)

  • Google SEO Guide UPDATE!

    Honestly, I never even knew the original Google SEO guide existed. If I did I would have blown away the boss during my interview with my vast knowledge of the SEO world. Well, it would have been a little out of date considering it was originally released in 2008.

    On September 28, they released a new version with clues that help us better understand the updated algorithm and a glossary of terms (something desperately needed in the original). It covers everything from SEO basics to effectively promoting your site on the web. Plus you get to stare at a cute little robot with sod for hair, flowers for a right hand and missing the left one that he no doubt lost in an epic lightsaber battle with his creator.

    What I don’t get is why Google is still a slave to paper in this day and age! Wouldn’t this information benefit from- oh, I don’t know- a website? That way it could have updates regularly as opposed to a major one every two years. I’m just spit-balling here…

    I know this can be a bit overwhelming, but that’s what we’re here for! Now you can be as well informed as possible before you get frustrated and come to us to do it for you.

    Click to download the .pdf

  • Old Google Keyword Tool Gone – Oh My!

    New Google Keyword Tool vs. the Old Google Keyword Tool – that is the question, or at least it was before the legacy tool, that I kept bookmarked ever since Google started encouraging SEOs to use the “new” tool, suddenly disappeared this past Friday.  We knew the day would come. We knew we wouldn’t like it, but now we’re forced to use it.

    The biggest internal debate I’ve had with myself is which one to trust.  No doubt you’ve noticed by now the vast difference in the keyword values that it displayed. Many wonder what is the cause of this. Now that the legacy tool is gone, I am even more curious, as I previously simply ignored the other tool’s existence. After digging through blogs and forums, I finally found “Google’s Answer” to this question. AdwordsPro shares this in the Google Help Forum.

    “If you use both the previous and updated versions of the Keyword Tool to search for keywords, you may notice differences between the tools for statistics on Global Monthly Searches and Local Monthly Searches. This is because the previous version of the Keyword Tool provides search statistics based on Google.com search traffic and traffic from search partners, while the updated version of the Keyword Tool provides search statistics based on Google.com traffic only.  We’ve updated these statistics based on user feedback, and hope you find them helpful for keyword selection.”

    User feedback showed they wanted less data instead of more data? While many SEOs, myself included, tend to use Google as the tool by which we measure all, I still don’t want to ignore the other engines. In addition, as with any research, I’d rather have data coming from a larger sample than a smaller sample, so we can get a bigger piece of the pie.

    While now we don’t have the luxury of choosing which one to trust, we’re just going to have to stick with what we’ve got.

    Google Adwords Keyword tool is a hot-button topic around here at Search Influence. In fact, as I write this, I received a ping from collegue Melanie Aleman: “Is the Google AdWords tool working for you?” While I knew it was likely giving her some sort of error in this case, I thought to myself how many different ways I could take that question. No, in fact, the Google AdWords tool doesn’t seem to be working for me, but working against me.

    Another issue with the keyword tool that I have yet to even mention in this post is the disparity between numbers when you are logged in vs. logged out. Stay tuned for a post that digs deeper into this question, if we can ever get to the bottom of it, that is, as the answers posted on forums don’t quite seem to be right on the money.

    I found this question and answer in the sidebar Help section on the new keyword tool.

    “Why do search traffic statistics vary between keyword tools?

    Search Traffic Variations

    The Keyword Tool combines search data across Google.com and all affiliated search properties. Data from the tools may vary due to the ad group you’ve selected to research, or whether you’ve accessed the tools from outside of your account. Numeric data between the tools may also differ due to rounding.”

    But why…

    “Data from the tools may vary due to … whether you’ve accessed the tools from outside of your account.”

    I attempted to do a quick test to see just how different the numbers are displaying today, but currently Adwords is returning an error and I’m unable to even log in.

    So while we may have the answer to why the new tool displays different results than the old, the question remains if it’s going to be beneficial, and only time will tell.

    Thanks to Caitlinator and BenedictFrancis for the great photos!