Showing posts with label search engine optimisation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label search engine optimisation. Show all posts
Tuesday, September 30, 2014
Quote of the Day !!
Analytics is hard work but what does not kill you, makes you stronger !
Labels:
acquisition,
AdWords,
affiliate,
bid,
CPA,
CPC,
cpm,
display,
email marketing,
google displays network,
PPC,
remarketing,
search engine optimisation,
SEM,
Social media marketing,
YouTube
Saturday, February 08, 2014
Ben Norman's SEO: Day 5 - Link Building
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Thursday, February 06, 2014
Ben Norman: Day 4 - Optimisation & on page factors.
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Wednesday, February 05, 2014
Ben Norman's SEO Course: Day 3 - Website Analysis & Competition
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Tuesday, February 04, 2014
The Astronaut, the Rock Star, and Your Content Strategy.
The Astronaut, the Rock Star, and Your Content Strategy
20 million views … and counting.
I remember the first time I saw it. Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield, then commander of the International Space station, had taken his guitar into space. He posted a simple but powerful video of himself performing David Bowie’s classic “Space Oddity” — in space.
As far as I’m concerned, this pretty well cemented his position as coolest dude there has ever been. I mean, Canadian plus astronaut plus Bowie? That’s the trifecta of cool right there.
(Plus he juggles. In space.)
Like a lot of people, I assumed that Hadfield had an amazing innate understanding of what worked and didn’t work as content. He had been posting neat and interesting content to the web for months —- great tweets and YouTube videos on funny, everyday aspects of life in space.
They were memorable, they were highly shareable, and they paved the way for that 20-million view bombshell.
So imagine how surprised I was when I read Hadfield’s biography — and found out that when he was getting started, he was actually sort of an idiot about content.
But he knew where to go for help … the kind of help that you might benefit from as well.
Enter the entreproducer
Hadfield was on Twitter fairly early on … but (by his own admission) his content was pretty bad.It was boring. It was dry. It wasn’t well suited to the medium.
Fortunately for us, Hadfield’s son Evan is really smart about content. He helped his dad understand what kind of content was worth posting — and would get people talking.
It isn’t so much teaching him how to use it, as teaching him how to use it properly. And the lessons continue even today. There is a difference between tweeting and tweeting in a way that people can respond to and enjoy properly. ~Evan HadfieldEvan continued to work with his dad on how to make his content more remarkable — up to and including suggesting the Space Oddities cover, and working on securing the rights and getting the video edited.
Chris Hadfield is arguably the most effective promoter for space travel since human beings first landed on the moon. But he couldn’t have done it without his behind-the-scenes help — the “entreproducer” who understood how to make it rain.
In other words, Evan was the one in charge of guiding his dad’s presence and keeping the Seriously Cool factor cranked up to 11.
This is the role a professional content strategist or new breed copywriter can play for you.
You might have amazing abilities. Maybe you’re the equivalent of a space station commander in their field.
But that doesn’t mean you understand anything about what makes content memorable.
It’s possible you’ll still be the one who writes at least some of the words. (It was Chris Hadfield who actually wrote all of the tweets; Evan just provided the guidance and took care of a lot of housekeeping tasks.)
The words matter, but the strategy matters even more.
- Understanding what the audience wants.
- Understanding how different formats work together.
- Understanding what makes content shareable.
- Understanding how content creates the overarching message you want.
- Understanding how to drive the behavior you need, whether it’s a sale, an email opt-in, or international support for the planet’s patchwork of space programs.
Keep the world’s coolest person in mind when you’re looking for a writer for your website. What you need is someone who knows how to make you remarkable and memorable.
Image by NASA [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons
Monday, February 03, 2014
Content is King (Web Content)
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About the Author: Craig Bailey
I've been involved in IT and web development for more than 20 years. I love analysing data, drinking good coffee, listening to heavy metal and practicing karate.
Content is King by Bill Gates
If you can find a Microsoft link could you please let me know. For now, I am adding the essay in it’s entirety here (as I will be referring to it in a future post).
This essay is copyright © 2001 Microsoft Corporation. All Rights Reserved.Content Is King – Bill Gates (1/3/1996)
Content is where I expect much of the real money will be made on the Internet, just as it was in broadcasting.
The television revolution that began half a century ago spawned a number of industries, including the manufacturing of TV sets, but the long-term winners were those who used the medium to deliver information and entertainment.
When it comes to an interactive network such as the Internet, the definition of “content” becomes very wide. For example, computer software is a form of content-an extremely important one, and the one that for Microsoft will remain by far the most important.
But the broad opportunities for most companies involve supplying information or entertainment. No company is too small to participate.
One of the exciting things about the Internet is that anyone with a PC and a modem can publish whatever content they can create. In a sense, the Internet is the multimedia equivalent of the photocopier. It allows material to be duplicated at low cost, no matter the size of the audience.
The Internet also allows information to be distributed worldwide at basically zero marginal cost to the publisher. Opportunities are remarkable, and many companies are laying plans to create content for the Internet.
For example, the television network NBC and Microsoft recently agreed to enter the interactive news business together. Our companies will jointly own a cable news network, MSNBC, and an interactive news service on the Internet. NBC will maintain editorial control over the joint venture.
I expect societies will see intense competition-and ample failure as well as success-in all categories of popular content-not just software and news, but also games, entertainment, sports programming, directories, classified advertising, and on-line communities devoted to major interests.
Printed magazines have readerships that share common interests. It’s easy to imagine these communities being served by electronic online editions.
But to be successful online, a magazine can’t just take what it has in print and move it to the electronic realm. There isn’t enough depth or interactivity in print content to overcome the drawbacks of the online medium.
If people are to be expected to put up with turning on a computer to read a screen, they must be rewarded with deep and extremely up-to-date information that they can explore at will. They need to have audio, and possibly video. They need an opportunity for personal involvement that goes far beyond that offered through the letters-to-the-editor pages of print magazines.
A question on many minds is how often the same company that serves an interest group in print will succeed in serving it online. Even the very future of certain printed magazines is called into question by the Internet.
For example, the Internet is already revolutionizing the exchange of specialized scientific information. Printed scientific journals tend to have small circulations, making them high-priced. University libraries are a big part of the market. It’s been an awkward, slow, expensive way to distribute information to a specialized audience, but there hasn’t been an alternative.
Now some researchers are beginning to use the Internet to publish scientific findings. The practice challenges the future of some venerable printed journals.
Over time, the breadth of information on the Internet will be enormous, which will make it compelling. Although the gold rush atmosphere today is primarily confined to the United States, I expect it to sweep the world as communications costs come down and a critical mass of localized content becomes available in different countries.
For the Internet to thrive, content providers must be paid for their work. The long-term prospects are good, but I expect a lot of disappointment in the short-term as content companies struggle to make money through advertising or subscriptions. It isn’t working yet, and it may not for some time.
So far, at least, most of the money and effort put into interactive publishing is little more than a labor of love, or an effort to help promote products sold in the non-electronic world. Often these efforts are based on the belief that over time someone will figure out how to get revenue.
In the long run, advertising is promising. An advantage of interactive advertising is that an initial message needs only to attract attention rather than convey much information. A user can click on the ad to get additional information-and an advertiser can measure whether people are doing so.
But today the amount of subscription revenue or advertising revenue realized on the Internet is near zero-maybe $20 million or $30 million in total. Advertisers are always a little reluctant about a new medium, and the Internet is certainly new and different.
Some reluctance on the part of advertisers may be justified, because many Internet users are less-than-thrilled about seeing advertising. One reason is that many advertisers use big images that take a long time to download across a telephone dial-up connection. A magazine ad takes up space too, but a reader can flip a printed page rapidly.
As connections to the Internet get faster, the annoyance of waiting for an advertisement to load will diminish and then disappear. But that’s a few years off.
Some content companies are experimenting with subscriptions, often with the lure of some free content. It’s tricky, though, because as soon as an electronic community charges a subscription, the number of people who visit the site drops dramatically, reducing the value proposition to advertisers.
A major reason paying for content doesn’t work very well yet is that it’s not practical to charge small amounts. The cost and hassle of electronic transactions makes it impractical to charge less than a fairly high subscription rate.
But within a year the mechanisms will be in place that allow content providers to charge just a cent or a few cents for information. If you decide to visit a page that costs a nickel, you won’t be writing a check or getting a bill in the mail for a nickel. You’ll just click on what you want, knowing you’ll be charged a nickel on an aggregated basis.
This technology will liberate publishers to charge small amounts of money, in the hope of attracting wide audiences.
Those who succeed will propel the Internet forward as a marketplace of ideas, experiences, and products-a marketplace of content.
Read more: http://www.craigbailey.net/content-is-king-by-bill-gates/#ixzz2sHJmljgz
Ben Norman's 7 Day Search Engine Optimization Course.
Ben Norman's SEO Made Easy Range | |||||||||
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Tuesday, November 12, 2013
Mucho más que SEO para ser el primero en Google.
Mucho más que SEO para ser el primero en Google
¿Por qué? Porque los buscadores están totalmente fuera de control. Si tu negocio depende solo del posicionamiento en los buscadores, cualquier cambio en tu posición en Google podría significar un desastre.
Con esto en mente, es aconsejable dedicar tiempo y dinero en el posicionamiento SEO, pero igual de importante es conocer otras formas de atraer tráfico (y clientes) a tu sitio web. Nos hemos basado en esta guía y en este post para revelaros una estrategia de marketing clave para proporcionar una base sólida a largo plazo en tu negocio online. Después de leerlo descubrirás que necesitas mucho más que SEO para ser el primero en Google.
Irregularidad del posicionamiento en buscadores
Los motores de búsqueda pueden (y de hecho lo hacen) cambiar sus algoritmos de posicionamiento como y cuando quieran, lo que puede beneficiarte con un sitio alto en Google o hacerte caer de repente. ¿De verdad quieres que la rentabilidad de tu negocio no se vea afectada negativamente por algo que está totalmente fuera de tu control? Como ejemplo para conocer la irregularidad de Google en este sentido, se puede leer este post titulado “El nuevo SEO”, en el que se revela que una sola marca (Yoast, desarrollador del popular WordPress SEO plugin) está en el ranking de los cinco primeros resultados en Google para la palabra clave “WordPress SEO”.
Actualmente, el ranking de Google sitúa a Yoast en los tres primeros resultados de mi página de resultados:
Aquí es donde el autor del post “Nuevo SEO” hace su primera reflexión: Si Google favorece tanto a determinadas marcas, ¿qué posibilidades tenemos de posicionarnos? Desde hace tiempo se sabe que Google ama a las grandes marcas, pero sin duda, el hecho de que la misma marca comparta los 5 primeros resultados de Google podría ser demasiado… En este sentido, el buscador tampoco ayuda a la hora de proporcionar diversas fuentes de información (que es lo que generalmente se esfuerza en conseguir Google).
Aunque esto es solo un ejemplo, también es cierto que con una buena estrategia SEO puedes llegar a la cima de la clasificación, pero eso nunca garantiza la colocación a largo plazo.
SEO accidental
Existen otras formas de promover un sitio web que pueden ayudar al SEO, aunque no tengan nada que ver entre ambas. Los resultados pueden no ser inmediatos pero serán más estables a largo plazo.
- La estrategia se define como “SEO accidental”. La teoría es simple: si escribes un gran contenido y estableces relaciones auténticas con otras personas en el sitio web, no sólo vas a conseguir referidos directos (a través de enlaces desde otros sitios y del boca a boca), sino que con el tiempo tu página se ubicará en Google debido a la autoridad percibida por el buscador.
- Sigue tres estrategias básicas: señales sociales (es decir, construir perfiles Social Media sólidos), publicaciones de invitados y difusión.
- Tiene que haber algo más en tu interacción con los usuarios que una necesidad desesperada por atraer tráfico a tu sitio. Aunque pueda parecer simple la clave está en la ejecución: debes quitarte el sombrero de “marketing” y ponerte el de “ser humano”. Céntrate primero en dar y quita de tu cabeza cualquier pensamiento de recibir. El tráfico ya vendrá con el tiempo. Aquí te mostramos cómo hacer un plan de marketing online para tu starutp.
- Se trata de no usar las redes sociales como algo que tienes que hacer, sino disfrutando del proceso y asegurándote de que estás entregando algo que aporta beneficio y valor a tu audiencia.
- Sólo publica un post como invitado en los blogs que te interesen, produce el mejor contenido para ellos de tal forma que sea un honor publicarlo en su web.
- Sólo trata de establecer relaciones con los bloggers con los que pienses que realmente te llevarías bien en la vida real.
¿Deberías olvidarte del SEO?
Definitivamente no. En SEO lo que funciona hoy puede no funcionar mañana, pero no deja de ser necesario para cualquier empresa. Se debe coordinar con relaciones humanas en redes sociales y una estrategia de contenidos que serán las que al final te lleven al éxito y a ser el primero en Google. También recomendamos implementar una estrategia SEM para mejorar el posicionamiento de tu negocio, aquí encontrarás 10 consejos para crear tu primera campaña en Google Adwords.
¿Hace falta ser experto en todo?
Tampoco. En LanceTalent tenemos profesionales freelance que pueden proporcionarte todas estas estrategias de marketing, de presencia online y de posicionamiento SEO que necesitas para poner en marcha tu empresa. Define tu proyecto y tus necesidades en la plataforma online y pronto te llegarán ofertas de los mejores profesionales!
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