Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Niche Organic Search Can Dominate for Quality Lead Generation

Long-tail search SERP home-runs can be achieved, if you know your target market language. 

I've just achieved one of those relatively rare, enjoyable SEO events where some of my niche technical service webpages dominate the top three organic search spots for one key search term, out of over 3,200,000 indexed pages... along with the number two spot on Adwords. Rarely, some of my webpages even achieved the top four organic SERP results, a "grand slam", beating out millions of other indexed pages.

SEO Niche is Nice:
How did I do this? Long-tail search exploitation is the main answer. Finding service niches and exploiting them. Often, just creating a new, cross-indexed, market-niche, sub-category webpage with relevant content will do the job nicely for top SEO results.

Niche Content Benefits SEO.
Focusing on location is another powerful way to differentiate a webpage and catapult it to the top of the SERPS. With proper research and reflection, this sort of niche long-tail SEO success can be duplicated many times. You'll get less visitors to these niche pages, but visitor quality will be higher. For business-to-business technical web marketing, I'll take quality visitors over quantity any day.

Can I rest on my laurels? Never. SEO is a lead generation contest that never ends.

For every SEO victory, there is another SEO challenge. For example, while building overwhelming success with one long-tail search term, another location-specific search term gave me "good" results, but the page I really expected to be top-ranked is not listed on page one, yet. OK, so is it time to think, analyze and take action? It is a newer page, but to ensure that new page ranks in the top results, I must monitor for it, and if results in a few weeks are not satisfactory I'll have to work on optimizing that new page.
Winning at SEO takes skill, analytical ability, productivity, a search-friendly website, patience, work, and persistence. 

Saturday, November 10, 2012

The History of Search Engine Marketing

The Birth and Evolution of the Search Engine Industry Infographic.

If you are fascinated by and are a fanatic for search engine marketing, which I am, this "history of search" infographic is notable, interesting and entertaining. Markus Allen, the Editor and Publisher of a high quality Search Engine Marketing (SEM) information-rich website called "Search Engine Marketing Roundup", has produced a comprehensive historical overview of the evolution of search, from ancient historical times in 1994 to 2011. From Lycos and Webcrawler to Yahoo and Overture, to Bing and... oh yeah... the elephant in the search engine marketing room..... Google. An update for 2012, with all the anti-spammer algorithm changes made by Matt Cutts et al at Google, is awaited and will be very interesting.

Google algorithm factors
Source: Search Engine Journal | Embed this on your own website (FREE)

Friday, November 9, 2012

SEO Tactics Beyond Content Marketing

Content Marketing Rules. No surprise! I am a huge supporter of Content Marketing driving SEO and lead generation. Great content provides a big competitive advantage in search engine marketing and lead generation in general. With 10 years of laser-like focus on web content marketing + SEO, I usually overwhelm and essentially crush my global and local competition. Yes, Content Marketing really works.
But there are alternative tactics which should not be overlooked. Rand Fishkin with SEOMOZ has produced an informative video on this very topic. Rand is saying don't forget to use all the proven web marketing tools for SEO and web marketing. For those ambushed link-builders burned by the Google Penguin and Panda anti-spam updates, this presentation offers viable alternatives.

See Rand's profile at SEOMOZ. He is CEO + Co-founder of SEOMOZ.

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

How to Set Goals for Your Marketing - Matt Bailey

"How to Set Goals for Your Marketing", by Matt Bailey.
Marketing expert Matt Bailey explains how to set marketing goals - by identifying revenue-producing actions and the segments and personas needed to accomplish those goals. "By measuring motivation and revenue, you can better measure success." He gave a similar message during SESSF 2012. This is an excellent presentation.

See Matt Bailey's presentation at:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NEWoxE5CLAw&feature=share&list=PL981F1D7041031039

Saturday, October 6, 2012

Is Saying SEO is Dead... Dead?

Search Engine Optimization (SEO) is not Dead. But don't get too complacent.

SEO extinction doom and gloom tends to come out of hiding whenever Google makes notable changes to its search algorithm. As Google is a quasi-monopoly in search, these dire alarms should be looked at and evaluated. The changes made by Google primarily focus on filtering out spammers and improving SERP quality. Big changes like Panda and Penguin can crush black and grey hat SEO efforts. But white hat SEO rarely is adversely affected. So use white hat tactics. In other words, if you conduct your SEO efforts with your target market needs, website usability, and original content relevancy as top of mind, then you'll have a good chance to succeed with organic search optimization for Google, Bing, Blekko, and other search sites.
The Death of SEO?
Here lie the ancient ruins of SEO,
destroyed by barbarian pandas, penguins,
and SERPs.

Search Engine Land has produced a humorous infographic detailing the failed predictions of SEO disaster and SEO death over the years. Folks have been predicting the death of SEO for as long as SEO became an acronym for search engine optimization.

As someone who has been successfully conducting and managing B-to-B web marketing SEO for over 10 years, I find this infographic amusing and entertaining. We've heard urgent 'SEO is Dead' warnings before, I just didn't realize that SEO downfall predictors have been at this for so long. This infographic pulls all the SEO doom and gloom prognosticators together in one handy guide.

To see this infographic please visit: "The Death Of SEO, Failed Predictions Over The Years"

For anyone who has been at SEO for a few years, predictions that the SEO sky is falling can have a déjà vu feeling. Like other apocalyptic predictions of death and destruction (zombie invasion, thermo-nuclear war, magnetic pole reversal, peak oil, mega-quakes, killer asteroids, alien invasion, supernovas, super-bug pandemics, evil super-computers, mega-solar storms, etc.) this one has not happened, just yet. Given enough time, like a Monte-Carlo probability simulation, the unthinkable could happen, SEO could be squashed like a bug one day. So in this regard we shouldn't mock SEO death predictors, but monitor their early-warning chatter. One day, they could get it right.

Alternatives to Google Analytics 'Not Provided' Organic Search Keywords: Google Closes The Curtain on Organic Keyword Research.

Saturday, September 29, 2012

SEO Ranking Factors as a Periodic Table

Search Engine Land has produced a very useful "Periodic Table" for search engine optimization ranking factors. This is a great at-a-glance graphic which can help anyone involved with SEO the opportunities, dangers, and housekeeping required to produce and maintain superior SERPs in the face of tough and determined competition. It's also fun to look at and impress your coworkers when you post it on a wall.

”Search
See the article on this SEO infographic at http://searchengineland.com/seotable. You can download the .pdf version here, and look at the complete graphic.

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

How to do Keyword Research - Infograph

Keyword Research Process Infographics.
Here is a good, simple graphic showing the major steps in keyword research for organic and paid search engine marketing.
Keyword Research Infographic
From: Promodo.com
Learn more about keyword research at:
http://searchengineland.com/infographic-how-to-do-keyword-research-for-seo-134202

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Geo-location and local search video: Bruce Clay discusses at SES San Francisco 2012

Bruce Clay is the owner of Bruce Clay, Inc. a well known internet marketing company. Mr. Clay is another valuable and informative speaker at SES events, and he was once again enlightening and thought-provoking at SES San Francisco 2012. In this interview, Bruce focuses on local search, Google's plans, and what changes to local search are likely over the next 18 months. A great video which reminds us that local search is very important - - and should not be overlooked.

Big Data Marketing Video interview of Bryan Eisenberg at SES San Francisco 2012

Here is a great video interview of Bryan Eisenberg on Big Data and Search Engine Marketing at Moscone Center in San Francisco during SES 2012. Mr. Eisenberg had just given an excellent presentation on Big Data during SES SF 2012, which I made sure to attend!

Here is the video interview of Bryan Eisenberg discussing Big Data:



Learn more about Big Data and search engine marketing at: Fun With Big Data @ SES San Francisco 2012

Sunday, September 2, 2012

SEO Diagnostics @ SES San Francisco 2012

Search Engine Optimization (SEO) Diagnostics for the Skilled Search Mechanic

Speaker: Chris Boggs, SES Advisory Board; Director, Rosetta

This session at Search Engine Strategies San Francisco 2012 was one of the most valuable strategic guidance presentations during the entire SEO knowledge-packed week, which is saying a lot, as all the SEO presentations were top-shelf in terms of quality and value. Chris covered mission-critical steps anyone can take to help understand the true situation when confronted with poor or mediocre SEO. He then shows a path forward to fix problems and exploit opportunities on a prioritized basis.

First SEO Diagnosis Steps:
  • Confirm the SEO problem exists
  • Look at the log data
  • Look at the analytics data
Second SEO Diagnosis Steps:
  • Begin Assessment
  • Look at off-site promotion
  • Look at on-site promotion
  • Look at website's technical status
Ask yourself: 
  • Is the content still worthy? Unique? Up-to-date? 
  • What are the competitors doing?
  • Does your snippet still work for a keyword?
  • Is the right webpage ranking high? 
Links:
  • Review your linking strategy, as the Google Penguin updates are punishing low-original content sites and spammy sites which have heavily relied upon link-building for SERP rankings.
  • Black-hat Negative SEO - - beware of competitors buying links to YOUR site to hurt you.
  • Is your anchor text over-optimized, so that Penguin is punishing your site?
Social Media:
  • If you're having SEO problems reviewing your social media activities will be valuable. Are you exploiting this growing area of search behavior? Are your competitors busy with social media postings and content? Evaluate your relative positioning with Social compared to your competition, and take steps.
Intelligent SEO Diagnosis will help
your SERPs stand out in the crowd.
After diagnosing and taking action - - Go BACK and RE-MEASURE. "Things change rapidly with SEO."

Chris Boggs emphasized that putting a priority on potential actions to take is crucial.... there is never going to be enough time, investment or knowledge to do it all. So our priorities for diagnosis and action must focus on the most lucrative fixes - those fixes we think which will generate the most profit at the end of the day. He stressed that SEO managers should be in 'diagnostic mode all the time' to get the most out of your efforts.

Chris stressed the 'sweet-spot' is when you are working on PROACTIVE fixes, not REACTIVE ones. Proactive actions include analysis of a new competitor, review of algorithm updates, catching market or industry shifts, and 'cleaning your own rifle' - - making sure your SEO campaigns are clean, efficient, and effective. Reactive fixes are similar to panic-driven actions - - scrambling to repair sudden losses in traffic, conversions, phone calls, email, etc. Better to avoid having to implememt damage control in the first place, with proactive diagnostic methodologies.
Common SEO problems may be caused by our own people. Serious problems can occur from our IT making changes  to pages which can hinder search engine bots (robots.txt), for example. Other SEO problems can originate from issues as simple as not using best practice for H1 and H2 titles. Your existing CMS system may be lousy, or inadvertently set-up to hurt your SEO efforts. Constantly  "check with your IT team!" is Chris' advice.
New competitors, or reinvigorated competitors, can cause SEO problems. "Check your competitive neighborhood". Use analytical tools to drill-down, analyze, and see those important "Uh Oh" moments.
Chris listed a number of useful SEO tools he likes, including Bright Edge, Google Webmaster Tools, URI Valet, Majestic, Raven, and SEOMOZ.
At the end, Chris emphasized that the best SEO diagnosis and fix is good content. "Content is still King". Links will still have place in SEO, though deliberate at-scale link-building campaigns are losing value thanks to Penguin. Chris stressed don't ignore social media. Matt Cutts from Google himself pointed in a direction where Google will search deeper and rank social media content more highly than in the past. This all points to having great, original content on  your website as a prime proactive step which can be taken to improve your SEO and SERPs.
My other take on this presentation and many others at SES is that we should learn to exploit Big Data (analytics) as much as possible. Conducting SEO campaigns without factual website analytics knowledge to help guide us is similar to driving a car with just one eye open, a lot can be missed!

Sunday, August 26, 2012

Life after Google Penguin - Pretty Good!

How has your SEO life been faring after Google’s Penguin update?

Mr. Milind Mody, CEO at eBrandz, has posted an excellent question on Linked-in today regarding search engine marketing and the Penguin Google search updates which have shaken up the SEO industry.

His question is straightforward:
"How has your Life been after Google’s Penguin Update? – Diagnose, Recover, Rebuild"

My answer is essentially: No Worries. (Good) Content is (Still) King

Here is my extended answer, posted on Linked-in:

Matt Cutts +  Google + Penquin =
SERP Pain & Suffering for Some.
I can discuss B-to-B search engine marketing, I realize B-to-C is a different matter. The SERP rankings for the B-to-B businesses that I cover are excellent, and even 'dominate' many important search results. I've been enjoying this happy state of affairs for years now. I focus on the target customers first and try to provide relevant + concise + precise long-tail content, apply suitable internal cross-linking, use niche social media and other 'white hat' best practices.
I do not engage in link-buying, nor spend time on link-building campaigns. I trim extraneous content to enhance the pages for both the reader and Google. I ignore artificial techniques attempting to 'game' the system in a useless attempt to acquire inbound links. I don't need them!
Penguin, Panda, Farmer and the rest of the Google anti-spam updates have cleaned up the SERPs and have benefited my content focused pages and my SERP results. I try to stay on a virtuous path regarding SEO... this approach has brought significant benefits to our search engine marketing and lead generation results.

Learn more about the Penguin SEO anti-spam updates:

Thursday, August 23, 2012

Ten Tips For Maximizing Your iPhone and iPad

Great tips for using your iPad and iPhone:

WSJ's Katherine Boehret has produced an excellent video with some great tips to enhance your ability to use iPhones and iPads. Recommended viewing for anyone who owns an iPhone or iPad.

Sunday, August 19, 2012

Paid Search Marketing Wisdom @ SES San Francisco 2012

Pay Per Click Analytics Marketing Tips at SES San Francisco 2012

I attended as many PPC focused sessions at SESSF 2012 as I could. The presentation by Steve Latham and Crispin Sheridan was a motivating, and useful addition to the full day of PPC training I had earlier in the week. See Fun With Adwords @ SES San Francisco 2012 for more details on Monday's two 1/2 day classes devoted exclusively to PPC.

Paid Search Analytics and Multi-Touch Attribution Analysis
Moderator: Andrew Goodman, SES Advisory Board; President, Page Zero Media
Speakers:
Steve Latham, Founder and CEO, Encore Media Metrics
Crispin Sheridan, SES Advisory Board; Sr. Director Search Marketing Strategy, SAP
Make Adwords work smarter for you.
There were good strategic key points and take-aways in this informative session. Some suggestions may seem obvious to someone familar with Adwords, but these points go deep and require going beyond the routine.... using drill-down efforts to really benefit from gained knowledge and insight. These suggestions can have subtle and important implications in the success of your PPC campaigns.

A good rule of thumb is to never get complacent with your PPC campaigns. Ignorance is not bliss with PPC, it is merely just another way for Google to make more money off your Adwords account!
  • Paid Search is much faster than any other marketing channels. Exploit this advantage.
  • Paid Search provides a sense of urgency, on a constant basis.
  • Paid Search provides a form of inexpensive market research. 
  • Start your PPC campaigns with actions, then apply and study the analytics.
  • PPC Factors and Measurements to look at:
    CPA (cost per action), ROAS (return on ad spend), CTR, Conversion Rates, Ad Quality Score, Match Type, Ad Text.
  • Bid Management Tools can be useful. Try automated tools for routine work. Monitor!
  • Inaccurate bids are some of the biggest costs in PPC today.
  • The Quality Score is connected to search intent. A poor quality score score can be a warning of misguided notions about potential client behavior.
There are 7 suggested areas ripe for PPC Campaign Improvement:
1. CTR and Conversion:
  • Ad Content makes a big difference. 
  • Test your ads often. Don't rest. Try A B tests. Use Ad extensions. 
  • Conversion Rates can be misleading if the volume is low. Don't assume!
  • Understand and use setting filters and negative search terms.
2. CTR on Keywords:
  • "Sculpt" your campaigns. Remove or move poor quality score keywords. Filter. Use negative search terms to weed out wasteful clicks. Focused keywords "tend" to perform better than broad search.
  • Get the keywords closer in intent to your ads.
  • Get more granular in your campaigns and ad groups.
  • Conversion Rate is an important quality factor, but what if the search term is generating quality first time visitors who are researching, in discovery mode, and don't convert on the first click? It is very important to use analytical data to track actual behavior over time before slashing low conversion rate keywords.
3. Bad Segments:
  • Are there differences between device behavior? PC versus Tablet versus Mobile? Apple versus PC?
  • Are time zone settings, geography and language campaigns in need of dire attention?
  • Adwords 'teems with waste' - - find and prune.
4. Attribution and Analytics:
5. Steady and Constant Account Adjustment and Expansion:
  • Always look at adding new products, services, offerings. 
  • Capture trends and opportunities before your competition have time to think about it or react.
  • Target category leadership.
  • Try using Display Ads, Geography and Language settings. 
  • Never stop experimenting. 
6. Reshape your Adwords accounts to pursue 'high intent keywords'.
7. Be proactive. Less reactive.
  • Over time, you'll be spending much more of your PPC time working on opportunities than fixing problems.

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Search Stars Summit @ SES San Francisco 2012

Google + Search Engine Land + Pubcon = Matt Cutts, Danny Sullivan and Brett Tabke in Surprise Panel Discussion at SES San Francisco 2012.

This was a don't miss event at SES San Francisco, and once again drives home the point that SESSF is a highly recommended conference to attend if you want the latest developments in Search Engine Marketing.

The big surprise on Tuesday afternoon was that Matt Cutts would participate the next morning. The surprises kept coming when Danny Sullivan joined him on stage, followed by Brett Tabke. You knew this was going to be an interesting session.
Mike Grehan, Matt Cutts, Danny Sullivan, Brett Tabke.
Matt Cutts is Google's chief manager guarding search results from spammers and spammy websites trying to 'game' the system. Essentially Mr. Cutts and his team protect and enhance Google SERP value and relevancy for the end-user. Matt is head of Google's "Spam Fighter Team", a team of employees located across the world. The team has been renamed, from "Search Quality" to "Search Knowledge", reflecting the expanding mission for more quality information, more relevancy, and less spam. Matt's team also manages releases of PANDA, PENGUIN, and other seemingly non-threatening search engine update animals which wreak deadly havoc on the website rankings of sites employing black-hat or spammy SEO techniques.

Matt Cutts' comments today revealed a bit more about thinking and intentions at Google for search.
I took furious notes, and hopefully captured some of these thoughts with some semblance of accuracy:
  • Symantec Search is expanding.
  • Knowledge Graph is being used more and more.
  • Beta: Individual Gmail accounts can be included in personal search results, and are being displayed in an experimental phase with limited users. 
  • Social Media will be used "a lot more" in the "long term" for organic search rankings.
  • Links ranking will still be a factor of measuring site popularity.
  • Panda: Monthly updates continuing. The updates are now routine and incremental changes.
  • Penguin: More "jolting" updates are coming for spammy websites.
  • "If you build a quality website, you will have nothing to worry about."
  • "Original Content is Best."
  • Duplicate content within a website with original content is not penalized so much, if needed. But avoid too much boilerplate repetition. 
  • However, duplicate content associated with affiliate websites is of a lower quality and is subject to penalty.
  • Social Signals: Facebook is only partially open to search-bots and crawling. Twitter has blocked Google from crawling. Social is a fluid space which is evolving quickly.
  • Expect more transparency from Google over time regarding communication, warnings, and alerts to webmasters.
  • "Do SEO." "But do SEO well." Avoid Spam Tactics. "Google doesn't hate SEO!"
  • To rank well in organic search, look at the value you are adding. Simple copy and paste link affiliates add no value.
  • Google users expectations rise each year. They expect more and more. We need to give them that quality experience or we'll be surpassed. 
  • Matt make a good joke about the danger of a potential voice enabled search tool being created by another firm, a firm which names that search tool "SIRI". This brought a good laugh from the large audience. SIRI shows that Google cannot stand still.
  • Q&A: "Is Google transitioning from Search to Content?"  Cutts: "We're trying to get the knowledge out there." The Knowledge Graph was cited as an example of enhancing results for users.
  • Matt indicated that Google has indexed over 30 Trillion URLs.
  • Google now handles over 100 Billion searches a month.
  • Even with these astounding numbers, Google has only indexed or can access only a portion of the world's internet space.
  • Google+ was discussed. Cutts said "Don't jump to conclusions about Google+" and search engine rankings. "We don't put a lot of weight on this quite yet."
  • Cutts emphasized that Google must stay unbiased on search results. Google does not favor its own products or services in organic search, such as phones and travel. "Google has a strong commitment to search neutrality. Like Switzerland. There is no boost for Google properties."
There was a huge amount of web activity today from this historic summit on blogs, twitter, websites, etc. To learn more detail, and get some different opinions or perceptions on this panel discussion, please visit these postings:

See videos of this historic SES meeting:
Related news articles on this historic panel:
Regarding PANDA, PENGUIN, FARMER, and other Google updates:

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Fun With Big Data @ SES San Francisco 2012

Big Data and Analytics

Search Engine Strategies covers a wide range of important topics to web marketers, which is why I find great value in attending this conference. Today, the first day of the official three day conference was especially valuable for me by focusing on one big topic: Big Data.

Opening Keynote address by Google's Avinash Kanshik. 
It was hard to avoid Big Data and its related sibling, Web Analytics today at SES.
Big Data is everywhere.

Avinash Kaushik Keynote Speech:
The opening keynote address at SES San Francisco was by Avinash Kaushik, Digital Marketing Evangelist at Google. In Avinash's enthusiastic, entertaining and informative speech he revealed hard facts, trends and tools regarding social media strategies, data, data visualization, and more. He stressed analytics as a powerful tool to understand what is going on in your website, and shared some excellent data driven visualization sources, including http://d3js.org/. Avinash stressed that one should understand ultimate behavior before taking action, citing a common mistake of 'killing off' many generic search terms because they do not convert on the first visit.... when in fact they are often a crucial first step in the sales cycle. Understand the data behind the activity before doing something you'll regret later!

Mr. Kaushik addressed Social Media measurement. Social Media, he said, is permanently changing Marketing, but slowly. Successful social media should add value to the lives of the audience. Post and tweet outward, link to outside sources. "Interrupt the audience at the point of need. Then fulfill that need!". Tell your audience something new and useful. Tweeting about recent promotion of a VP in your company does not pass this test. Avinash's ideas on how to measure social media data can be found at Best Social Media Metrics: Conversation, Amplification, Applause, Economic Value. He also shared an interesting social measurement tool at: http://www.truesocialmetrics.com/.

Big Data: What Marketers Need to Know:

Speaker: Bryan Eisenberg, SES Advisory Board, www.bryaneisenberg.com
"The Money is in the Data". Brian drives this point home over and over again with real world examples of how companies are generating more success, revenue and profits by seeking to understand the huge mountains of data they own, and then exploiting that data. Amazon is a key example of how a company exploits the data it owns for success. Some key points from Mr. Eisenberg:

  • We are surrounded by data. Today the world produces more data in 2 days than was previously produced from 2003 going back all the way into ancient history. 190,000 additional data scientists will be needed in the next 3 years.
  • Big Data = Complex Data. 
  • Understanding Big Data takes People, Processes, and Tools.
  • The process for understanding Big Data requires planning, improving, measuring, then repeating.
  • Important Big Data Tools come in several flavors: Analytical Tools, Predictive Analytics Tools, Data Driven Tools, and Adaptive Learning and Optimization Tools.
  • There is significant latent value in the piles of web visitor data your analytics tool is sitting on. There are new tools and companies out there which can help you understand and then leverage this data.
  • Bryan is a member of the Digital Analytics Association
  • The blog to the DAA organization is at: http://waablog.webanalyticsassociation.org/

Introduction to Analytics:

Speaker: Matthew Bailey, SES Advisory Board; President of Site Logic Marketing
Matt Bailey is an expert on Google Analytics, and just as importantly an expert on how to apply the vast amount of big data produced to practical and effective use for superior website performance and financial results.

Some of the many key points made by Matt:

  • Customize analytics to work for You.
  • STOP pushing out meaningless data every month in your reports. Break the habit.
  • Avoid repetitive 'copy and paste' analytics reporting.
  • Go beyond- - into real data which can be actionable. Build content and measure intent.
  • Ask questions: Where did the visitor come from? What did they see? How did they react?
  • Set Goals, Segment, Define Conversions. Then Measure! Ask "Are we meeting business goals?"
  • Goals can be simply stated: What makes me $, What will make me $, What could make me $.
  • You define what is a conversion. 
  • Dig deeper to get beyond superficial measurements, such as bounce rate. A high bounce rate may in fact be a good thing and suggests an opportunity to exploit. Understand the data.
  • Unique visitors are actually unique devices such as computers, phones, tablets... not 100% people. Therefore this metric is not dependable.
  • Build Context with Keywords. Put the Keywords into Buckets and sub-Buckets to Segment and analyze.
  • Value: What is the value of a lead? Value by Keyword? Value by Landing Page?
  • Value is the missing metric you must supply. "Visitors who searched for ____ are worth ____ $$$".
  • Don't forget to data-mine  your internal search engine's data.
  • Keyword ranking reports are good if Context is understood.
  • Keyword analysis - look at value, not rank alone.
  • There was a lot more big data and analytics wisdom given, I just couldn't write it all down!


Matt Bailey has a stellar business-centric focus on data and analytics, along with his skills in web design, SEO, and usability. I hired him as a consultant during a key exploratory phase of our next generation website project. Mr. Bailey has an excellent book I strongly suggest to anyone conducting web marketing of any kind: "Internet Marketing: An Hour a Day".


Monday, August 13, 2012

Fun With Adwords @ SES San Francisco 2012

Adwords Deep Dive.

I've just finished an intense full day of Adwords training: "Advanced Keyword Research & Management" and "Mastering the Google Display Network" at Search Engine Strategies in San Francisco, courtesy of ClickZ.

Search Engine Strategies 2012
Adwords is a complex system that is stuffed with a complex, diverse range of tools, data, and options which can be overlooked and under-utilized due to time restraints and/or a simple lack of awareness. These classes shed light on the array of options available in Adwords.
The ClickZ Adword classes today were focused, in-depth and extremely useful. Applying the techniques, tactics, strategies, technologies, analytics, lessons and options learned today can transform paid search campaigns.
Paid Search is a vital tool to help drive in business, quality leads, and market awareness. It should never replace organic search success, but PPC does a great job in  complementing it. Direct Search ads and Display Network ads are important tools in a proper search engine marketing kit. I've been using Adwords since 2003, but I'm not ashamed to say I learned quite a bit of useful information today!

Adword experts Bill Hunt and Joseph Kerschbaum put on the classes today:

Advanced Keyword Research & Management

Bill Hunt
SES Advisory Board; President, Back Azimuth Consulting @billhunt
Summary: 
Don't assume your search campaigns are 'optimized'. Most likely, they aren't. There is always room for improvement. Bill Hunt spent 4 hours showing how adword campaigns can be improved, even transformed.... and how lucrative new business opportunities can be discovered. Bill shows there is huge potential for improving your current campaigns.... generating more leads, more intelligently, and quite possibly at lower cost. It didn't matter if attendees were rookies or grizzled Adwords veterans, this was an extremely useful class. I recommend Bill's class to anyone touching an Adwords account.

Mastering the Google Display Network

Joseph Kerschbaum
Vice President, Clix Marketing @joekerschbaum
Summary:
Display Ads with Google have been evolving. Joseph shows that the lower expectations and poor perceptions of Display Ads from a few years ago is now unjustified. Joseph guided the class through the improvements and innovations in display options, tracking, exclusions, remarketing, etc. He also dived into tactics and strategies with Display Ads. Joseph makes it easy to understand that the 2012 Google Adwords Display Network is not your Father's old clunky Google Content Network. Thank God. Thanks to Joseph, a new appreciation for Google Display Ads is possible. Display Ads is a resource which should not be overlooked, nor under-managed. For anyone ready to take a serious look at Google Display Ads, Joseph provided an exceptionally informative and eye-opening class today.

My impression of today's events at SES:
There was so much valuable, useful information presented today by both gentlemen that it is impossible to provide an outline here without writing a small book - - in outline form. Based on the wealth of Adwords and Paid Search marketing information received today, I'm confident a rapid payback and positive ROI will quickly result from today's classes  - - even if only a few of the many ideas, tactics, and suggestions they presented are used.

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Internet Marketing: An Hour a Day by Matt Bailey

I'm endorsing an excellent internet marketing book. 
There is a vast ocean of web marketing publications out there promising wisdom and success, but only a precious few provide real tangible guidance and practical how-to details. As busy marketeers, our time is very limited. Time, in fact, is money. The challenge is to find and read only those web marketing books worthy of our time.

I've found an excellent web marketing guide which will help you, no matter your experience and knowledge base.
Matt Bailey is a recognized authority on web marketing. His expertise helped guide my company to make some very wise decisions a few years ago, decisions which have propelled us to unprecedented success in web marketing and lead generation.
Internet Marketing: An Hour a Day
Your Guide to Web Marketing Success.
Matt's approach takes his years of proven experience and expertise and applys it for practical, tangible, results.Matt's book "Internet Marketing: An Hour a Day" fits this useful philosophy precisely.

Matt provides an overview on the key factors involved in successful internet marketing... and then shows you how to get things done. He dives in to teach the crucial details and the practical and effective steps and actions.

Matt provides the vital "how to" needed in order to make things happen and help us WIN at internet marketing.

This is a book you should read if you are involved with Internet Marketing, at any level of experience.

I hope my competitors never read this book. That is probably the best compliment I can give to Matt Bailey and his book "Internet Marketing: An Hour a Day".

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

How does Google search work?

Matt Cutts describes the Google Search process in under eight minutes in this very educational video. Matt also provides some some interesting Google history.

How Search Works - YouTube
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BNHR6IQJGZs



Connect with Erik Holladay on Linkedin.

Search Engine Marketing is Industrial Strength Lead Generation (Or Should Be).

Thursday, May 31, 2012

The Google Search Engine Optimization Starter Guide


In the wild west of Search Engine Optimization, the range of SEO expertise, experience, competency, ability, productivity, and (yes) humility is wide and remarkable. As the number of websites worldwide continues to soar, and Google punishes spammers and poor content sites with Panda, Penguin and other dangerous virtual beast attacks, the need for good SEO knowledge, capability and practice becomes more and more important.

The Google SEO Guide: Helping with SERP
Google has a great tool to help us achieve SEO success, and possibly reach SERP "Search Engine Nirvana" where our webpages dominate our competitors. I am happy to say that many, many of the webpages I am responsible for are thriving and in a state of "SEO bliss", happily and brutally crushing most competitor webpages for key search term rankings in organic search. But this is where objective humility becomes so important. I take nothing for granted, absolutely nothing! Today's success in SEO can be tomorrow's defeat if the steps in the Google SEO guide are not followed diligently.

The Google SEO guide won't give away top secrets which automatically rank your site first for queries in Google. This is no surprise. However, following the best practices in the guide make it easier for search engines to crawl, index and understand your website and its content.

This statement from Google SEO Guide really sums up the formula for success with SEO:

"Search engine optimization is often about making small modifications to parts of your website. When viewed individually, these changes might seem like incremental improvements, but when combined with other optimizations, they could have a noticeable impact on your site's user experience and performance in organic search results." 

In other words, successful SEO takes dedication, knowledge, skill, education, work ethic, talent, desire, patience, perseverance, objective humility and more. Make sure you and your SEO team have these key attributes in abundance. Then get going!

Download the Google Search Engine Optimization Starter Guide.

Connect with Erik Holladay on Linkedin.

Monday, May 28, 2012

Young Scientist Builds a Better Search Engine



Seventeen-year-old Nicholas Schiefer is on his way to developing the next Google search engine for the social-media world. The Intel Foundation Young Scientist Award winner sits down with the WSJ to explain. This kid is obviously very intelligent, and listening to him talk about his idea reminds one of Jobs, Gates, Brin, Zuckerberg, and so many others who helped drive the highly creative and disruptive tech and internet revolution and change the world.
Be prepared for a short discussion on the Markov Chain, a mathematical system that undergoes transitions from one state to another, between a finite or countable number of possible states. Watch this space, and watch the young Mr. Nicholas Schiefer in the coming years!
Connect with Erik Holladay on Linkedin.

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Inside a Google Search Engine Meeting - Video


Google offers a real-life glimpse into a Search Engine Meeting inside the Mountain View HQ. You might recognize some of the attendees... Matt Cutts, for example. 
Lights, Camera, SERP: Google Quality Launch Review Meeting
The meeting occurred on December 1, 2011 at a weekly Google “Quality Launch Review” meeting.
Meeting participants gathered in Mountain View and joined on videoconference from Moscow, New York, Zurich, Seoul, Haifa, Tokyo, and other locations.

Obviously, Google released this video because there are no hidden, amazing, newly revealed algorithm secrets to encourage black-hat spammers and all SEO practitioners to 'game' the system. But this is still a remarkable, if transitory, lifting of the Google curtain of secrecy. I very much enjoyed watching this..... talented Google denizens coming to life.

Why do I feel like I'm a fly on the wall of a secretive Federal Reserve Open Market Committee meeting? LOL.

A very special thanks to Brandignity for bringing this to my attention!

You can watch this Google Video at:
http://insidesearch.blogspot.com/2012/03/video-search-quality-meeting-uncut.html

Connect with Erik Holladay on Linkedin.

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Monitoring Kids' Usage of Social Media

Alternative Social Media Sites enjoy growth as kids try to avoid Mom on Facebook. 

Facebook has become mainstream, going way beyond its initial avant-garde college student origins. Early adoption by other young adults was then followed by teenagers and tweeners. But now with Mom and Grandma busy posting updates, photos and playing Farmville on Facebook, the 'cool' appeal has worn off for these younger demographics... Facebook has become way too inclusive for their tastes... they don't want parents and other relatives or older adults see them doing or posting things which can get them into trouble. This short video from WSJ helps explain the current trends in tweener and teenager social media usage. Learn more at: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702303916904577377813269480788.html

Connect with Erik Holladay on Linkedin.

Friday, April 27, 2012

Negative SEO: Search Engine War By Other Means


Here is a great video to watch for any serious SEO web-marketing manager: "Negative SEO: Myths, Realities, and Precautions - Whiteboard Friday", by Rand Fishkin, CEO & co-founder of SEOmoz. A great review of some of the darker arts of black-hat SEO, and how to protect your websites from negative SEO attack.

Connect with Erik Holladay at Linkedin.

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Google Video shows 5 common mistakes in SEO - - and 6 Good Ideas



Google doesn't reveal any top secrets for SEO (why would they?), but this is great common sense and advice for everyone who is attempting to gain high organic search results on Google.

Here is the Google Webmaster Central Blog site for this very good overview SEO video. http://googlewebmastercentral.blogspot.com/2012/03/five-common-seo-mistakes-and-six-good.html

Thursday, April 19, 2012

SERP Savvy Success: Number One out of 43.3 Million Pages

Focusing on organic search optimization can pay big SERP dividends. 

Thanks to precise, concise and relevant webpage content sitting in well-designed, refreshed, and maintained websites, I've been enjoying for some years many, many high search engine results page (SERP) results for many, many key search phrases... across multiple key market, service, technical and geographic niches.

Searching for SERP.
Today was a stellar example of SERP savvy success; a Google search result run today yielded an outstanding example of just how valuable effective SEO efforts can be. For a key service search phrase (three words), this specific webpage ranks number one out of 43,300,000 other webpages indexed by Google.

The search term is rather generic, which explains the 43.3 million indexed webpages. But the term has strong business value for our lead generation efforts. Because of our quality page content and additional related content on other pages in the website, along with multiple other web factors in our control and out of our control, Google's algorithm has decided our webpage was the most relevant for that particular search. Hooray!

Now it is time to put things back into a realistic perspective. One can never gloat about SEO for long. Search Engine Marketing success can never be taken for granted. You have to walk and/or run just to keep your position. Stop good SEO and you'll slide down the rankings over time.

Last week I created a new companion webpage for the superstar webpage, and the new page has had a strong debut at #10 SERP results out of 750,000 indexed pages. This is good, but not quite SERP nirvana yet. Will time and patience bring that page-rank up in the next few weeks, or do I have to revisit that page, slightly re-engineer it, tweak it, and see what happens next?

High SERP results are only part of a total SEO lead generation effort. Ranking is just a step in the process, a vital one, but just one step of many. After you have their attention with a high SERP you need to start selling. Important webpage selling features include having well-written content which your actual potential customers, not just search engine algorithims, will understand and be favorably impressed with. Having strong niche educational, feature, benefit and call-to-action content is important. Having good website usability and navigation is another plus. There is much more to consider besides SERP success.

SEO success is great, but it is wise to always look ahead and behind - - your 'aware' competitors are trying to chase you down and pass you up.

Connect with Erik Holladay on Linkedin.

Friday, April 6, 2012

Google Adwords Approaches Infinity

Adwords Account Limits now let's you add "3 Million Keywords" to your Account.

3 Million Keywords and Counting.....
I just read Google Adwords' "Account Limits" web-page and I'm impressed. Effectively, for most marketeers and reasonably sane people, Google has reached near-infinity in terms of options available.... moving beyond mere stars and galaxies and into big-bang cosmic dust clouds when it comes to how massive you want to make your Adword campaigns.

I've been successfully managing Adwords accounts and campaigns targeting global, regional, language, and niche markets and geographies since 2003. Adwords is an extremely effective way to generate leads, advertise, and brand your services and products. Paid Search (Adwords, Bing) is one of the major pillars of Search Engine Marketing, along with (of course) Organic Search Optimization.

Newly updated information on Adwords account limits is very impressive:

AdWords account limits:
These are the limits for an AdWords account:
10,000 campaigns
20,000 ad groups per campaign
5,000 keywords per ad group
4 million active or paused ads per account
3 million keywords per account
10,000 location targets
100,000 active ad extensions per account
1.3 million references to ad extensions

Google goes on to say "Most advertisers don't reach this limit". Indeed..... I hope they are right because managing such massive accounts effectively and efficiently would require a small army to run it, along with a huge spend budget. At least now you know you'll likely never run out of keyword, campaign and ad group options with Adwords!
Learn more at Adwords Account Limits.
Learn more about using negative search terms for positive effect: Negative is Positive with Google Adwords

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Think Local for Great Organic Search Results.

Local + Generic Content SEO: New Web-page gets Google Top Ranking in less than 24 Hours.
A very successful organic search engine marketing tactic is to target local content searches for your product or service. Build relevant, precise web-pages geared towards specific locations and the business services/products you offer... then watch the leads come in. Using local search tactics is a classic form of long-tail search marketing optimization, with proven results.

Local  Search SEO can bring Big Business Benefits.
By "local", I mean a specific geographic area - - which can be as large as a state or province, and as small as a town or neighborhood. When the geographic targeting is combined with your targeted service or product, excellent search results can occur quickly.... resulting in more lucrative business enquiries for you, and less for your hapless competitors.

To give an example, I recently built a new web-page targeting a few niche technical services for a geographically targeted area - - a state in the USA, in this case. In less than 16 hours after going live, this newly minted web-page is scoring in the top 5 organically ranked web-pages listed on Google, beating out another 8 million web-pages indexed by Google per search, on average, to get these coveted positions. And the page is ranking very high for a variety of quality searches I want to be ranked on.

So quality content and geographic targeting for a new webpage resulted in top Google organic search rankings in less than 24 hours. Not all first attempts will be so successful. And even with this excellent debut, the new page is not yet ranking for other desired searches, so I'll monitor and tweak the content as needed. When it comes to successful SEO results, everything is always a work in progress!
A related topic for small business: Getting leads and promoting your business with a limited ad budget.

Connect with Erik Holladay on Linkedin.

Saturday, February 4, 2012

A Thank You Note to My Competitors (which I hope they never read)

Six Reasons to be Thankful to Your Competitors


Are you running over your 
competitors, or are they running
over you?
For success in B-to-B marketing and lead generation not only are your actions important, but what your competitors do.... or don't do.... or haven't a clue to do, make a big difference. That's why we should extend a tongue-in-cheek 'thank you' to some of our competitors. They can often make our job easier, without even knowing they are being so accommodating. We can divert 'their' quality business leads to ourselves with impunity.

However, to put this into perspective, we should never be complacent about our competition, for therein lies the road to defeat and ruin. A short list of reasons to be thankful, below, really serve as a list of dangers we all need to be aware of, for we are all capable of harming ourselves in this way.

Reasons to be Thankful to our Competition:

1. Poor Focus on Web-page Layout and Clutter:

Producing web-pages which surround and bury the core value content, the really important information a visitor is looking for, is a common practice and self-defeating. The "money content" is subdued, stifled, and trapped in a suffocating waffle of links, images, fluff and other content... the core content is diluted both for the reader and (happy days for us) search engines bots when they crawl their pages, resulting in lower organic search engine rankings.

2. Poor Web-Page Content:
Writing good concise, precise web-page content which targets a key product or service niche (or sub-niche, or sub-sub-niche) is an art and a science. We should thank competitors who launch web-pages with lousy content, especially if they are proud of the result. They just made our job a lot easier to whip them in search engine rankings. I could write a book about lousy web content on competitor webpages. In fact, many intelligent people have written books on how to improve web-page content for SEO. We should be thankful so many people appear not to have read them!

3. Poor Website Structure and Navigation:
A good webmaster is worth a lot, and should be cherished. A good webmaster who understands B-to-B and has a burning desire to rank high in organic search results is worth their weight in gold.... 24 karat investment grade. Having a mediocre or distracted webmaster can  harm a website's overall performance for lead generation. Having a mediocre or distracted webmaster plus poor content and navigation can be a disaster. There are so many things which can go right or go wrong depending upon the organization, resources, support and talent on offer.

4. Competitors behaving badly at Tradeshows and Conferences:
We should be thankful for competitors who suffer from self-defeating habits regarding trade-shows and conferences. Just a few of the event-wins (for us, not for them) are:
a. Not Being There (they skipped or overlooked a key industry event)
b. Being There but Missing in Action (Their booth is empty, delegates nowhere to be seen)
c. Being There, but Indifferent (They are deathly bored at their booth, glazed eyes, negative, non-engaging, don't mingle with attendees, reading, and are wall-flowers)
d. They brought the Wrong Message (They don't tailor their message to the event and market niche, and use a "one size fits all" approach, they brought the wrong people to the event)

5. Outsourcing Paid Search Campaigns:
Hiring an outsider to run Adwords and other paid search and content campaigns is another area for we should be very grateful to the competition. If the search targets are technical and niched, then tasked, informed and focused personnel inside the company will usually be far more nimble, proactive, knowledgeable and cost-effective and efficient than using an outside Ad Agency or consultant. Quality will be higher and wasted clicks and costs reduced by keeping this key marketing lead generation tool in-house. Another big competitive mistake we love is for them to run a one-size-fits-all ad across numerous market niches, with a landing page which is either not focused or requires the visitor make heroic efforts at navigating to a webpage which is relevant to them.
An ideal result for a competitor using Adwords, from our perspective, is for them to waste a lot of money on poorly managed campaigns and then decide it was all a mistake and completely shut the campaigns down... their new-found cost control is then applauded by their finance guys, while we, their competition, enjoy the happy competitive result of stealing their leads, paid-search marketing nirvana for us!

6. Competitors don't exploit Social Media:
If our competitors do not understand nor encourage Social Media marketing, then they aren't blogging, tweeting, posting, "liking" their company, letting others "like" and forward their web-pages, and otherwise promoting their brand, products and services to a huge potential audience. This is a big and inexpensive marketing opportunity for your company to exploit. Since your competition have left a large Social Media vacuum, fill that gap with your offerings. Linkedin, Facebook, Twitter, Blogging and more are all opportunities to get in front of your prospective clients in a positive way. If you competitor hasn't figured that out, so much the better.

These "thank you" notes to the competition also serve as a warning to our own marketing and lead generation efforts. Objectivity, modesty, vigilance, and humility always serve us well. Overconfidence, pride, arrogance, ignorance, and hubris are marketing dangers to be avoided at all costs. A question we should frequently ask ourselves: "Are WE making our competitor's jobs easier?" If so, immediate remedial action is needed.

There are many other things for which we can be grateful to our competitors. We must make sure they don't have too many reasons to be grateful to us in return.

B-to-B Web Marketing Should Help Sales People Sell

Connect with Erik Holladay on Linkedin.

Sunday, January 29, 2012

Thoughts on PANDA, FARMER and other Search Engine Creatures.

Like so many other Google algorithm changes, "PANDA" and "FARMER" caused quite a lot of intentional panic, chaos and scrambling for many search engine marketers who depend upon search engine rankings for leads and affiliate and referral business.

The intentions of Google in making these changes to their search engine ranking methodology are noble. Google wants to keep relevancy of organic search results the top priority. This focus on relevancy and perceived neutrality is the reason why users love Google as a search engine resource, and why Google blew past all of its major competitors years ago.

We search engine marketeers are always trying to beat our competitors and rank high in Google. This goal is is to be expected and is healthy if content is king. But when "spammy" websites (including websites full of links, ads, and little original relevant content) try to "game" the system by attempting to manipulate Google's search ranking algorithms to rank high in organic search result pages (SERPs), the alarm bells ring in Mountain View and Google seeks to change the rules of the SEO game to push "spammers" down or out of search engine results. Google wants quality results, pure and simple, their customers are the end-users making the search, not us marketing types seeking SEO nirvana.

What impact are "PANDA" and "FARMER" updates having on my own webpages and websites?
My experience with Google SEO updates, including PANDA and FARMER, going back to 2003, is that the impact has been beneficial or neutral to my niche B-to-B webpages.
I try to always follow the SEO content school of keeping web content concise, precise, original, and relevant to my target audience and markets, with good website navigation, etc. My focus on relevancy and precision has been working extremely well for organic search.

There is usually a lot of excited SEO marketing chatter whenever Google rolls out a publicized search algorithm update... these Google tweaks go on all the time, and many changes are made under the radar. The only people who appear to really need to be concerned about these Google updates and changes seem to be those with websites which have marginal or poor content, are 'spammy', and engage in nefarious 'black hat' practices.

Regarding Google search results overall, there is always room for improvement... but then again, all the other search engines like BING and ASK have plenty of room for improvement. Search engine rankings are dynamic and always changing. This helps make the search engine optimization game never boring and always very interesting!