SEO

...now browsing by category

 

SEO is Now a Team Effort

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009

I’m the proud father of four children, ages 11-17.  As an Internet Marketer, it goes without saying that there are plenty of computers around the house, and almost always a child parked in front of one at any time.
internet search
Children of this age make terrific guinea pigs.  They are awesome resources that can find things online that even a seasoned SEO expert may have a hard time finding.  Why? Because they don’t use Yahoo!, Google or MSN very much.

Want one of my kids to find something online? Most often, their first stop is YouTube.  That’s right.  Need info on a person? Forget Yahoo!’s people search, there’s Facebook.

And these kids aren’t really any different than most other teens.  Comscore’s May numbers show that YouTube searches are up 4 percent, while Google’s searches dropped 2 percent.  Yahoo is down 4 percent, and Microsoft’s sites are down as well.

What’s up? Well, YouTube as I said, as well as Facebook and Craigslist.

Still Growing, Already Dividing

SEO (that is, Search Engine Optimization) is still a pretty new industry.  There’s not a week that goes by that I have to explain what it is I do and (very generically) how I do it.  People (usually clueless business owners) are fascinated that there exists an entire world based around increasing website traffic and climbing the rankings of Google and such.  They had no idea the system could be gamed. (Yeah, I know, gamed isn’t really the right word to use here, but hopefully it gets the right idea across).

But now that there’s an increasingly younger audience to our SEO efforts, we’re starting to see more and more blog posts on things like Optimizing your Twitter profile, or How to turn your Facebook fans into sales leads.

Wait a minute: I thought my job was to optimize your website for certain terms, build links and make the user experience so that it increases conversions (ie ROI).

Now there are  Social Media consultants (or “experts”).  They help you build up your Facebook profile, tweet for you, and help you create community around your brand.  It’s a terrific idea, and one that ultimately supports a business owner’s SEO efforts, but my gosh it’s time consuming. No wonder these people are creating their own industry.

And this isn’t really the first time SEO has divided.  We’ve seem people go the way of Linkbait expert in the past, along with many other spin-offs.
SEO Team

Get to the Point, Will

Which brings me to the point of this rant:  Choose your battles. Gee, you haven’t heard that one before.  But really, how much money can the average small business owner throw at an SEO project? And then on top of that, social media, PPC, viral campaigns, linkbait and video? Forget it.

I’ll be honest with you.  There is no one person that can do all of that effectively. No way, no how. It takes a team.  Sure, that team may be all quarantined inside a single office, each doing their own little piece of the work, but there’s no way one person can promise a small business owner all of these things his/herself.

If your “marketing guy” tells you that he can do your email blasts, create videos, handle your SEO and run your PPC campaign, you’d better find out if he’s got a team behind him.

Rank High SEO Session Contest

Friday, September 25th, 2009

What You’ll Win

increase traffic and salesThree winners are going to receive an hour long one-on-one Rank High SEO Session with me, Will Hanke.  During your own private consultation, I’ll help you determine five things you can do tomorrow that will cause an increase in website traffic, and you’ll also walk away with a free SEO Audit ($199 value) that will help your website reach new targeted customers.

How to Win

Leave a comment below that explains your biggest frustration about having a website with no traffic. Did it cost you a fortune? No ROI? Don’t have time to keep up with the updates? Let us know what’s making you pull your hair out!

Contest Rules

Three winners will be selected at random on October 5th, 2009.  You will be contacted by me to schedule your session right away.

UPDATE: Between the comments below and the emailed entries I’ve received, the winners have been selected.  Congrats to those who won!

Are Bing Results Older Than My Mom?

Thursday, June 4th, 2009

This week Microsoft launched Bing – their latest attempt at search – ahead of schedule.  I’ve been playing around with it just a little bit, and have seen some interesting results.

In particular, it seems that the results that Bing is providing are about 4-6 months “behind”.  By this I mean, certain links to their results are from older page titles, ones that were changed around 5 months ago.

What does this mean?  Well, not a lot if you’ve got a nicely optimized site that has been around for a while.  But if you’ve got pages that are newer than say 5 months old, they may not be showing up correctly, or at all.

And if you have a page title or meta description that you’ve changed in the last 5 months, it may be displaying incorrectly.  It is in several instances for me, at least.

But don’t worry – I’m sure the BingBot (is that what they’ll call it?) will be around soon enough to re-digest your newer content and changes.  In the meantime, you may want to keep an eye on your visit logs to see just when it decides to finally stop by your place.

What is the Best Single Thing a SMB Can Do to Improve Organic Rankings?

Tuesday, March 31st, 2009

Times are tough. More and more business owners are coming to me (and many other SEOs) because all of the sudden their customer base has dwindled down.  Suddenly they need to be in front of customers, and the smart ones are looking to SEO for their business.

As I meet new business owners and explain what I do, I’m constantly amazed at the amount of them that have no idea what a blog is, how it works, or how it can help them.

Blogging, by far (in my opinion) is one of the best things you can do for your business. Why? I’m glad you asked.

Blogging Brings New Content to a Stale Website

Most of the business owners I meet have a website, and it’s in what I call “stale” mode.  They fell for the old If you Build it, They Will Come routine.  Wrong!

So they build a site, and sure enough, nothing much changes.  They don’t promote the site, and soon it becomes just another expense that they wish they’d never spent money on.  They soon abandon the website, and other than the URL on their business cards, it’s rarely mentioned or visited.  It turns stale.

So there’s the thing.  Search engines are infatuated with content.  They can fall in love with your website if you consistently feed them industry-related articles, thoughts, tips, whatever.

The average spider visits a stale website once every 6 weeks or so.  If the spider visits your site, and sees that nothing has changed in the past 6 weeks, they will mark you off as indexed, and will put a note in their memory to come back in six weeks to see what (if anything) has changed.

Six weeks later, nothing’s changed, so they mark you off for another 6 week visit.  Meanwhile, you’re getting little or no organic rankings because of it.

If, however, you start blogging, say once a week, suddenly there is new content.  The spider visits, sees new stuff, and decides that it will come back in four weeks instead of six.  Four weeks later, there is more content, and the spider decides to come back in two weeks.

Soon, your posts are being indexed within 48 hours or less.  Your organic rankings increase because the search engines see you as a ‘player’ in your industry.

Blogging Brings Targeted Visitors

Probably one of the immediate advantages of blogging is that it brings you targeted leads.  If you are posting ideas, products, or industry-related news, those phrases may just end up ranking for what us SEOs like to call long tail phrases.  These long tail phrases are gold.  (For more info, read this wikipedia page)

A visitor to your website, which comes from a long tail search query, is usually highly targeted and willing to buy.  They are usually looking for just what your blog post addresses, and in their minds you are immediately the subject matter expert on that topic.  You’ve highly increased your chances of a sale because of it.

Blogging Separates Your From the Competition

By posting weekly articles, tips or whatever, your audience sees your business as “being run by real people”.  This may sound like a silly thing, but in reality humans like to see a non-corporate side of a business.  Even if it’s still targeted to the business, simply putting real world anecdotes into a blog post can give your visitor that warm and fuzzy feeling about your brand.  You win.

What are You Waiting For?

If your website doesn’t have a blog, you’re missing out on one of the best customer-driving forces available today.

Related articles:

Diapers and Groceries? No! Rankings, Leads and Sales!
Tune Up Your Magnet
Get New Creative Blogging Ideas