Archive for June, 2010

Published by parMaster on 30 Jun 2010

3 Essential Small Business Search Marketing Trends

search marketing trends“Qualified”, “showing intent to buy”, “high conversion rate” and many other phrases are used to describe search engine marketing.  As a $16 billion industry, Search Marketing including SEO (search engine optimization) and PPC ads (pay per click) represent a substantial opportunity for small businesses to connect with customers at the moment they are looking for products and services to buy.

Even though Search Marketing presents an attractive opportunity to grow online sales, many businesses are too busy running their companies to stay on top of future trends. To that end, here are three search marketing trends worth paying attention to:

1.  Online & Offline Marketing Integration - Forrester Research estimates $917 billion worth of retail sales in 2009 were “Web-influenced” in contrast to $155 billion of consumer goods sold online in the same year.  Small businesses must pay attention to customer search online influencing offline purchases as well as the influence of the in-store experience on searching and purchasing online.

2.  Mobile Device and Local Search – Companies must recognize consumer trends towards mobile search with the proliferation of smart phones. The web experience has definitively extended beyond the personal computer to mobile devices such as iPhones, Blackberries and iPads.  Marketers must understand their customers’ use of mobile search and what the marketing opportunities are.

Companies that serve customers in specific regions or with geographically specific needs must be present in local search results, map results and specific geo-location queries. Segmenting potential customers through geo targeting with paid search advertisements will help focus the right ads on the right customers.

3.  Social Media Advertising – Savvy small business marketers are increasingly realizing that the opportunity to reach customers extends beyond traditional paid search into the booming social media space. Having surpassed Google as the most visited website for the week ending March 13, 2010 and with over 400 million registered users, Facebook offers a significant audience that shouldn’t be ignored.  Social networks like Facebook can provide online marketers hyper-targeted advertising opportunities that can tap into new customer segments and serve as a complement to other paid search programs.

Whether it’s incorporating online and offline influences with search marketing, diversifying PPC advertising networks, leveraging local and mobile search marketing or extending advertising programs to include social media, small business marketers that capitalize on these trends will gain a competitive advantage. Of course, if they hire an online marketing agency like TopRank Marketing, that advantage may come even faster.

This post was excerpted from my article that was originally published on American Express OPEN Forum. Be sure to visit 5 Search Engine Marketing Trends That Impact Your Business for the other 2 trends.


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© Online Marketing Blog, 2010. | 3 Essential Small Business Search Marketing Trends | http://www.toprankblog.com

Published by parMaster on 30 Jun 2010

Advanced SEO Course in Dublin this coming July 7-8

There’s an old saying – “the longer you leave it, the harder it gets“. Well it’s been a very long time now, and s time ticks on it does get harder and harder to return to my blog. So I suppose I should apologise for starting back with a post about a forthcoming course I’m instructing. Sorry!

Advanced SEO Course

I’ll be instructing an Advanced SEO Course for the Digital Marketing Institute this coming week, on Wednesday and Thursday 7-8 of July. The course is the first of its kind here in Ireland (to the best of my knowledge, but I’ll be very happy to be corrected), in that it will cover advanced SEO and is targeted at established SEO folk. It will take place in the Radisson BLU, Golden Lane, Dublin 8.

What Will We Cover?

I’m working on the content, but I’ll likely focus on advanced on-site SEO, with some time set aside to look at Conversion Rate Optimisation. My co-instructor John Ring will take the reigns for the first morning, and I’ll be instructing for the first afternoon and all of the second day (I hope I wont bore the attendess to death mind…).

Small Group, Lots of Interaction

I expect the group to be no more than 8-10 students, so we should get tonnes of interaction, and be able to take time out to address issues and questions that the students have. With a small group like this you can never know where things might lead, but my overall focus will be on sending attendees away with knowledge they can apply to their own sites which will generate tangible returns.

Places Still Available

I haven’t checked-in in a few days, but there were still a couple of places available. I realise the course is not cheap, but I’m working on delivering value for the price. If you’re interested please call the DMI at 01 271 1888. You can also contact them via their website.

Finally

Given that I’ve written on my blog for the first time in many months, I’d like to keep going. If there are any topics of interest to you I’d love to hear from about them. I’ve been toying with writing a very in-depth post about geotargeting and localisation, as this is one area I’ve been working a lot, and there seems to be a vacuum online when it comes to finding reliable info about this topic. Anyhows, any and all ideas are welcome.

Have thoughts on this post? Head over and leave a comment on the blog: Advanced SEO Course in Dublin this coming July 7-8
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Want to read more?

  1. Website Architecture – Digital Marketing Institute
  2. Free SEO Course
  3. Search Marketing World 2007, ShareIT Cork, and A Few Other Pieces of Irish SEO News

Published by parMaster on 30 Jun 2010

Best Words To Share On Facebook

In a HubSpot webinar today I learned something rather interesting. If you want your Facebook status updates to be shared and spread as wide as possible there are certain words you can use in your updates to make that more likely to happen. I’ve never thought of this before, but the list is interesting. From best to least best (all of these are good):

  • Facebook
  • Why
  • Most
  • World
  • How
  • Health
  • Bill
  • Big
  • Says
  • Best
  • Video
  • You
  • Apple
  • Media
  • Top
  • First
  • Obama

By contrast, the worst words to use in your Facebook status updates are anything related to Twitter, iPhone or geek and tech-related words. In essence, Facebook has more of a mainstream audience whereas Twitter has more of a tech- and geek-oriented audience.

Here’s my takeaway: It is no longer a question of either/or with Twitter and Facebook. If you have a geek or tech oriented audience or sub-audience within your niche then there is a place for you on Twitter. But you have a completely different and viable audience on Facebook.

I also learned that if you use the word video in your update then your status update is more likely to be shared. Do the same on Twitter and it likely will not be shared. Now what can you do with that information?

Published by parMaster on 29 Jun 2010

10 Reasons Why Your Analytics Are Failing & 13 Tools To Help

Fail Whale AnalyticsWeb Analytics are a key indicator to the health and performance of any website, but online marketers often get lost in the complexities and details, forgetting how important analytics actually are and why.

Analytics can provide a wealth of information but marketers often look at high level indicators such as: top content, bounce rates, entrance sources and keywords without tying it all together. In most cases, there is a tremendous amount of insight that can be used to make smarter marketing decisions, but most companies barley scratch the surface. At the OMS Minneapolis event last week  Adam Proehl gave an excellent presentation on analytics failures and successes. I’ve taken my notes from that presentation and combined them with my own opinions to create this list.

10 reasons why your web analytics are failing:

You speak numbers to non-number people.

wha wha whaIt takes a numbers person to dig though large amounts of analytics data, figure things out, and draw conclusions. However, most people aren’t “numbers” people.

Many marketers like charts and clear, action orientated data. Charts are good, numbers in red and green help, and so does simplification. Don’t present tabular data just because it make sense to you. Try and think about who you’re presenting the information to and how they like to consume information. Some people like tables, others like graphs. As online marketers make an effort to understand the audience on the web they’re trying to reach, so should they understand the internal audiences that they report results to.

The statistics are fuzzy.

Michael JordanIt’s easy to combine different pieces of data and come out with a great conclusion, even if they don’t go together.

For example, did you know that Michael Jordan and I have a combined total of 6 NBA championships?

While that statement is true, the conclusion is a bit skewed. Yes, Michale’s 6 plus my 0 do equal 6, the fact is that that I didn’t do any of the work for those championships, but I’m still getting the credit as I was included in the statement.

In analytics it’s important to break out the data so that it makes sense, not just so it looks good. It’s easy to combine two pieces of information in ways that make things look really good, but in reality, is something being hidden?

The averages are flawed.

Averages are great unless there is a major spike or dip. Then they have a tendency to skew the data a bit too much.

Analytics Chart

Based on the graph above, you could say that we’re averaging 1652 people from StumbleUpon a day. But in reality, most days there were less than 50. The big spike just screwed up the average.  As quickly as that spike came, it can also disappear and making decisions based on the daily average isn’t a best practice.

Sometimes things just don’t work.

FailThere are lots of things that can go wrong with the analytics from a website and that has to be taken into account. The tracking code could be implemented incorrectly, maybe some special tagging was setup improperly, there could be issues with site architecture or maybe there are just things that are out of our control.

Analytics isn’t perfect and the reporting is never going to be 100% accurate, but that doesn’t necessarily mean that the numbers are wrong.

The important thing is to fix the issues you can and work with the numbers you have.

You don’t understand the customer.

UserWhy are people visiting our site? What are they doing while they are here? What stage of the buying cycle are they in?

Thinking that you know your customers is one thing, but you really need to watch their behavior and see what they are actually doing.

Maybe visitors are focused on research or maybe they can’t find what they’re looking for when they get to your site. These are things analytics can tell you if you look and once you know what your customer is doing, you can modify your site to fulfill their needs.

You don’t connect the conversion dots.

Connect The DotsGetting visitors to the site is one step. The next step is making sure you have content that is going to satisfy their need. As stated above, analytics can help with this, but once prospects fill out the contact form, what happens next?

How many decisions are made by looking at top level analytics alone? Someone has to tie leads back to the website to determine what is working and what isn’t.

For example, in a B2B situation, a whitepaper download may be bringing in lots of leads, but none are qualified. Maybe there is a CTA (call to action) form that is bringing in few leads, but they convert very well. Analytics can’t tell you what happens with a lead after filling out a form, and connecting that data is very important.

You don’t dig deep enough.

Magnifying GlassLooking at one metric in analytics and making a decision seems like a good idea unless you’re not seeing the whole picture.

A good example would be bounce rates to a landing page. Just because the bounce rates are high, doesn’t necessarily mean it’s bad. You need to dig into the data and find out the conversion rate as well.  Changing a landing page because the bounce rate is higher than normal but that also has a higher than normal conversion rate may result in lost sales.

You don’t tie in outside data.

External DataMarketers should be looking at other online and offline marketing efforts and tie them into web analytics wherever they can.  Ideally, an online marketing program should track different sources for different outcomes such as: people from Twitter to conversion, knowing which conversions came from email campaigns and what offsite marketing tactics are working.

You don’t take the time.

TimeAnalytics isn’t easy. It’s not something anyone can do in an hour a day (except maybe those that read this book of course). If website marketers really want to get valuable information out of analytics, they need to invest time and resources into talent that can make that happen.

Analytics can seem complex and yes, it takes time and talent to make sense of them, but in the end analytics can paint a picture of how users are interacting with a site, what the user behavior is, and point out ways to make your site more successful and profitable.

Bonus: 13 analytics tools to help you out.

  • ShareThis – Social sharing button that can tie data into Goggle Analytics.
  • Snip and Tag – Firefox extension that allows you to easily copy a URL and tag it with Google Analytics code.
  • GA? – Firefox extension that quickly shows if Google Analytics is installed on the page or not.
  • Better Google Analytics – Firefox extension that enhances Google Analytics.
  • Enhanced Google Analytics – Another Firefox extension that enhances Google Analytics.
  • Twitalyzer – Analytics for social relationships.
  • Bit.ly – URL shortening with analytics.
  • Google URL Builder – A way of tagging URLs with Google Analytics code so they can be tracked on external sites.
  • Excellent Analytics – Microsoft Excel plugin to pull Google Analytics data directly into Excel.
  • Site Scan GA – Scans a website to find out what pages have analytics installed and which ones don’t.
  • Web Analytics Solution Profiler/Debugger (WASP) – Firefox plugin that debugs analytics.
  • Crazy Egg – Heat mapping tools that allow you to visually understand user behavior.
  • ClickTail – Heat mapping tools that also track where uses are when they bail on a form.

What are some of your favorite web analytics tools?


Email Newsletter Gain a competitive advantage by subscribing to the
TopRank® Online Marketing Newsletter.

© Online Marketing Blog, 2010. | 10 Reasons Why Your Analytics Are Failing & 13 Tools To Help | http://www.toprankblog.com

Published by parMaster on 29 Jun 2010

New item added to the gallery: Project Fedena


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