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Upcoming Internet Marketing Seminar in St. Louis MO

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

speaking at upcoming internet marketing event in St. Louis MOI’ll be speaking at the upcoming Look at Me Internet Marketing Seminar in St. Louis on June 11.  I’ll be talking about SEO and how it can help your business create new streams of revenue.

This seminar is the first of it’s kind in the Saint Louis area, and was created for the purpose of helping businesses find new ways to wade through the recession.  It is for St. Louis area business execs, includes a nice lunch and a networking event afterwords.

The event is currently looking for other speakers on various subjects such as PPC, landing pages, and more.  Check it out and maybe you’ll learn something!

SEO Seminar – New Venue Needed

Thursday, February 19th, 2009

Last night’s seminar titled Marketing Your Business Website was a success. We had a wide variety of attendees, from a real estate agent, to a wildlife removal guy to a landscaper.

I really enjoy teaching at these events, and am now reaching a saturation point where the current venue is too small.  Every one of my seminars are now packed – and there’s a waiting list just as long.  So I’m looking to expand a bit, as well as perhaps move to a more central area near Kirkwood or West County/Clayton.

I’d love to partner up with a restaurant that could cater an event, perhaps in exchange for a large room with seating for up to 50.

If you can help me with a place (preferably with wireless broadband), I’ll bring the people.  Contact me and let’s work out a deal.

Current upcoming seminars (sorry they are full, but you can get on the waiting list in case there are cancellations)

Marketing Your Business Website – Feb 25
Social Media for Business – Feb 26

St Louis – Upcoming Free SEO Seminar

Tuesday, February 3rd, 2009

If you’re in the Saint Louis area, or will be in the area around mid February, make sure you sign up for my free seminar on Marketing Your Business Website.  This will probably be the last time I do this seminar for free.  Seating is limited so don’t wait!

They Still Don’t Get It

Wednesday, December 17th, 2008

Yesterday I offered 449 entrepreneurs in the Saint Louis area an opportunity to promote their business, show off their subject-matter-expertness and even get a free link back to their business website.  I offered all of this for free, in exchange for a simple article (in which they could also promote their business).

The offer went straight to all 449 InBoxes, so I can safety assume that at least 85% of them were delivered successfully.  In fact, meetup.com probably has bounce measures in place to weed out the false members, so it’s possible that 100% of the members received my offer.

Yet not one took me up on it.

Not one of 449 entrepreneurs took advantage of a great marketing opportunity.  Why?  Could it be because they thought they’d be helping my client and not themselves? Perhaps.  Could it be because they didn’t understand what I was asking for? Perhaps.

But I think the answer is quite simple.  Small business owners still don’t understand the power of marketing on the Internet.  Not even close.

Two years ago I was hired by a local retail mattress store.  They had a website that wasn’t the greatest, and they were paying AT&T an outageous amount of money for traffic and marketing.  Yet their website wasn’t selling a damn thing.  It wasn’t generating leads, it wasn’t producing revenue, it was simply a train wreck.

It wasn’t necessarily their fault.  As with most SMB owners, when a big company like AT&T comes in, they may be overwhelmed with the statistics that are thrown at them.  They are promised ‘online marketing’ and ‘traffic’ with great generality and glazing over of details.  What kind of marketing? What kind of traffic?  They don’t know to ask, and they don’t even know what answer is the correct one.

On top of this, SMB owners aren’t web designers.  They are given archaic tools and expected to produce a customer-friendly website.  They aren’t given guidance, they aren’t even told how to create a simple contact form.  So it’s no wonder the money goes down the drain.  And most SMBs don’t exactly have money to just throw down the marketing drain.

Shortly after I was hired, we started rebuilding their entire website.  They weened off the phone book ads one at a time, canceled AT&T’s “marketing” and put all their efforts into the web.  It’s a good thing, too, as the business was slowly going downhill.  Downhill to the point that had they not made this bold move, they’d probably be out of business today.  (And this isn’t just me bragging, you can ask Doug yourself)

Once we launched the newly designed site, a (not so) amazing thing happened.  They started ranking.  They started getting quality traffic.  People started calling.  Customers started asking for prices and delivery.  Their website was actually generating a decent ROI.

Over time, you’ll learn that one of the best things you can do for a website is to provide new and relevant content often.  Search engines love the content, and if it’s on target with your industry, you’ll start to see rankings for long tail searches you never thought would bring you traffic (and sales!).  Providing this content gets more and more difficult over time, as you start to run out of things to say.

Now, my client still has plenty of content ammunition.  But he also knows that there are things that he doesn’t know, that are related to his industry, but he doesn’t know.  And these things are just what I was asking other SMB owners to write about.  But they didn’t.  Why?

The other huge part of getting more traffic to your website is links.  And in particular, links from industry-related websites are great ways to improve your over SERP rankings.  So writing an article for another website, that is willing to link back to yours, is an awesome opportunity.  One that 449 St. Louis entrepreneurs missed.

How You Can Tell You Work for a Company That Doesn’t Care About You

Friday, December 12th, 2008

Received this email from a friend today… poor guy

All -

This is a reminder that employees are expected to report to work if our facility remains open.  (Our building always remains open during inclement weather).  If you cannot or choose not to report to work due to hazardous weather conditions or a comparable emergency situation, you should notify your manager.  Employees should record missed time to either vacation or leave without pay.

Please exercise your usual good judgment.

Thanks,

JOHN (removed)
Business Office Manager

Seminar Shout Outs

Wednesday, November 19th, 2008

Today was my last SEO seminar for the year, and I wanted to thank all of the people that attended.  We had a great time and the reviews were all positive.

I’d like to give a shout out to Larry over at Diversified Packaging, Jeanette at Crafts by You, and Chris at Home Furniture Savings.

Were you at the seminar? Let me know and I’d be glad to throw ya a free link =)

Highly Targeted Niche Website for Sale (Saint Louis Area)

Thursday, October 16th, 2008

For nearly 5 years I’ve run a website called Arnold Talk here in my home town of Arnold, Missouri.  The website has gone from a forum to a complete community website that promotes local events and has a very active forum.  The site gets well over a half million hits every month, all from very targeted traffic (Arnold residents).

I’ve had a horribly difficult time getting advertisers, therefore I’ve financed the entire thing (minus a scattered donation here and there) and now I must stop.  As my business continues to grow, I’ve got to start cutting out some of the things that are not part of my core focus.

Therefore I’m going to shut down this hugely popular website.  That is, if no one offers me some buck$ to buy it.

Hyperlocal websites are getting really popular nowadays.  This is probably the entirely wrong time to close down this site, especially with the amount of traffic that it gets month after month.  But I’m no ad salesman and can’t even generate a decent income to make the site worth keeping.  Traffic or not.

Interested in buying it? Here’s the link.  Make me an offer (by Oct 31).

SEO is Dead in St. Louis

Tuesday, September 30th, 2008

There’s a very huge untapped SEO market in St. Louis. It’s sitting just under the surface, waiting to boil over. Can you find it?

Every time a potential client from the Saint Louis area calls me, I’m honestly baffled by the lack of SEO – both on their part and that of their competitors.

I was recently approached by a local manufacturer of a certain product. They asked me to do an SEO audit on their website and I was blown away by the potential that they had online. There are NO other local businesses building their website in any search engine-friendly way. Most of their competitors (and you’d know their names if I said them) have very archaic websites, some still with splash pages and graphic-based navigation on most sites. It’s pathetic. This smaller business has a huge advantage if they start SEOing their site now.

Nearly two years ago I met a nice guy who’s Dad owns a retail business in the St Louis area. He had taken one of my free classes I teach at the local library on online marketing. He and his dad hired me to rebuild their website in a more SEO-friendly manner, and in early October 2007 we launched their new site. By November they were receiving more traffic than they’d ever had before, and then the record months started. This (literally) Dad-and-son shop has now had ten record months of sales – and they are not afraid to admit most of this is attributed to their local SEO efforts. These guys are outranking some big chain stores for moderate to high-priced products.

Even an industry like real estate is mostly untapped. Sure, the real estate market isn’t exactly teeming with extra funds for marketing efforts, but that’s just the point. This down economy is the best time to get strongly positioned online for ‘real estate town‘. And when the market swings around (and we all know it will), some real estate agent is going to be so damn busy they won’t know what hit them. Why are no real estate agents in Saint Louis doing SEO?

One last thought – perhaps the reason no Saint Louis business is really putting money into online efforts is because they think there is a big lack of people (customers) online in the local area. They couldn’t be more wrong.

Just because we don’t have the population numbers of towns like San Francisco and New York doesn’t mean we don’t exist. Saint Louis is strong with bloggers, business leaders and online searchers. These people buy your products and will tell others about them.

The recent InterPlay festival – while it isn’t yet rivalling festivals like SXSW – will soon be a major event based in the Saint Louis area. There are some very active bloggers who like to talk about your products.

There is so much potential for local industry leaders to move into online but no one is doing it. I see it a lot and I’m still blown away by it. If you own a local St Louis business, no matter how small, you’re missing a golden opportunity to steal business from your larger competitors.

Bloggers Need to (at least) Understand SEO

Friday, September 12th, 2008

Tonight I had the pleasure of speaking with Jaelithe Judy, the writer who will be moderating the upcoming SEO panel that I’ll be sitting on (along with Ellen Gooch) next week.  She has great charisma and I can tell this is going to be a fun session.  Since we are expecting a crowd of mostly personal, professional and corporate bloggers, the session will focus around that audience.  Without giving away all the topics we’ll discuss, here is a “10,000ft view” of what is to come.

  • How understanding SEO basics can increase your readership numbers
  • Why sploggers want to steal your content (and how it can affect your bottom line)
  • Why businesses are hiring full-time bloggers
  • What the long tail is (and how knowing what it is can increase your blogs revenue)
  • Some of the latest changes Google has made and how they can affect your rankings

Oh, we’ve got lots more, including a nice list of resources that will help our audience get more traffic, more effectively promote their blog, or make more money from their website.  And we’ll be taking questions from the audience!

The panel will be just one of many Interactive sessions to attend this week in St. Louis at the Play:StL festival. Some of the other sessions (some of which sound pretty cool to me) include Cyberbullying, Business and Social Media, and even one on the dreaded CSS (yukk!)

Get a wristband for the festival at a host of local places, and half your money will go to LiveFeed.  If you come the SEO panel, please take a moment to introduce yourself, I’d love to meet you!

SEO Seminar Yesterday

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

Yesterday was my first seminar of the fall 2008 season.  I may end up doing another, I’m not sure.

I’ve been teaching Internet Marketing now for 4 years. Originally the size of the seminars/class were packed out, but now they are waning.  I was teaching one every month, now it looks like maybe 4 a year.

I think part of the problem is perceived value.  The seminars are free, and therefore not much value is passed on.  I bet if I charged $50 for the seminar, people would be more likely to come.  Problem is, I can’t do that as a library volunteer, since its a library sponsored class.  I’d have to find another venue, which means costs for me.

I received only good feedback from the class, which is always nice, but I often wonder what happens after the people leave the class.  Are they simply overwhelmed by the volume of information they got, and don’t know where to start?  Are they overwhelmed to the point that they just say ‘forget about that’ because its so time-intensive?  Or do they simply file this in the ‘I need to do this stuff’ category, and probably never do.

I was asked about my fees, which are comparable to most local SEO firms, probably a little cheaper.  However, as usual, the fees are received with an “Oh wow” or “Oh my gosh” kind of tone.  This probably goes back to the classes being free.  The people that do show up are not those that are apt to spend a lot on their business marketing.

It’s a bummer, really.  There are so many local businesses that could use SEO to their distinct advantage.  I’m continually very surprised by the lack of big businesses that are doing this, giving small businesses in the area a HUGE opportunity to profit, but they don’t see it.

A local furniture store owner, however, has seen it.  He hired me late in 2006 after attending one of these seminars, and has seen record months for nearly a year now.  Record months, month after month!  They are on track to a record year, and they’ve been in business for over 20 years.  They attribute this to SEO, no bones about it.  They’ve dropped their YellowBook ad size significantly, they’ve added some more ‘hip’ products (like organic mattresses – who knew?) and they’ve ramped up their SEO spending.  They are outranking some big furniture stores in the area, and even nationally.  They’ve started drop-shipping some items because of their sudden national exposure.  All these things have resulted in their best year ever, even with the economy in the dumps!  Why don’t other businesses get it?

I implore everyone who has taken my class to take advantage of the information I’ve given you.  I don’t care if you hire me, but use the techniques I’ve shown you and watch your business grow.  It’s really that easy.

As for upcoming seminars, I will be on an SEO panel for an upcoming blogging convention in St. Louis in September, and I may do another free SEO seminar in October.  It may be my last.