Archive for November, 2010

Published by parMaster on 30 Nov 2010

Why Aren’t These Article Directories On Search Marketing Standard’s List?

Search Marketing Standard, a recognized news platform for business owners who want to know more about search engine marketing, published an article with a list of article directories to target in 2011. There are 11 of them on the list. It wasn’t a bad article, but it left me wondering why certain article directories were not included on the list.

Let’s review which article directories were on the list:

  • Suite 101
  • Hub Pages
  • Self Growth
  • Article Dashboard
  • iSnare
  • Sooper Articles
  • Info Barrel
  • Article Trader
  • Article City
  • Snipsly
  • Triond

It’s not a bad list. I agree with most of these, but I finished reading the article and it left me wondering why three other article directories were not on the list:

  1. Knol Pages (http://knol.google.com/k) – Owned by Google. Unlike most traditional article directories, you can put links in the middle of your articles, which makes it a unique service.
  2. EzineArticles (http://ezinearticles.com/) – This is probably the most popular article directory online. Perhaps that is why it was left off of Search Marketing Standard’s list.
  3. Squidoo (http://www.squidoo.com/) – The brainchild of veteran online marketer Seth Godin, Squidoo is a great source of links.

When you consider that it is difficult to get accepted into the Triond inner circle of article writers, I wonder why these article directories were left out. I’d consider them good places to publish in 2011 as well.

Published by parMaster on 30 Nov 2010

Tips on Video: B2B Facebook, Social ROI & Repurposing Social Content

While traveling recently in New Zealand and a short stay in Sydney, Australia I shot a few videos offering social media marketing tips. Check them out below and you can also view many other tips videos and interviews we’ve done with search and social media marketing experts on the  TopRank Online Marketing YouTube Channel.

Tips on Social Media ROI from Sydney Australia near the famous Opera House & Sydney Harbour Bridge. Sorry about the wind, it messed with the audio a bit. I need to get a Zi8 and a microphone!

Common B2B Facebook Myths from Rangitoto Island, off Auckland, New Zealand. (From an old Army bunker near the mouth of a 600 year old volcano actually)

Tips on Repurposing Social Content from Queenstown, New Zeland on the shore of Lake Wakatipu and the Remarkables Mountain range.

Obviously I have a ways to go before making these kinds of videos really good.  Simply creating an outline script and adding a microphone and tripod would probably make a big difference vs. using a Lumix and making it up as I go.

Despite the non-existent production value, I am curious if readers of Online Marketing Blog are interested in this kind of thing.  I don’t plan on posting them all here, but will likely draw attention to one per trip and post the rest to our YouTube channel.  Is this format of any interest to you?  What do you think of video previews for a longer blog post?

Thanks for watching and reading.


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© Online Marketing Blog, 2010. | Tips on Video: B2B Facebook, Social ROI & Repurposing Social Content | http://www.toprankblog.com

Published by parMaster on 29 Nov 2010

Black Friday Sets New Online Record

Black Friday is the day after Thanksgiving. Historically, it’s the biggest shopping day of the year for brick and mortar retail stores. But online sales have been steadily increasing, and this year online buyers set a new record of $648 million. Does that mean online retail has come of age?

I don’t think so. I think it means we’ve got a long way to go. But it also means that we’ve come a long way. And I’m looking forward to seeing the Internet grow and grow.

There’s no doubt that buyers are spending more money online each year. I think there will come a day when online buying will rival real-world buying. That day is still far into the future, but if you understand that online retail is growing day by day, year by year, then you should be planning your online retail strategy. Some day will be too late.

What should small retailers be doing right now to take advantage of the online retail growth patterns? Here’s a basic starting list.

  • Build a website
  • Ensure your website is easy to navigate and offers a secure method of payment
  • Include your shopping cart is full of products
  • Encourage people to buy from you by offering coupons and discounts for online buyers
  • Promote your website and your products with articles, a blog, social media campaigns, and link building campaigns

Online retail is here and it’s growing. Black Friday is just the latest evidence of that. Now is the time to get started on your own online retail initiatives. Are you ready?

Published by parMaster on 29 Nov 2010

Which Flavor of Social Commerce is Right for You?

Social Commerce Flavors

Photo credit: timtak via Flickr

Social Commerce is a very hot topic right now with numerous blog posts, articles and even a few events focused on ecommerce and social media.

Adding ecommerce functionality to social sites is something that I’ve wondered about for quite a while:

“What I’d like to see more of is the availability of basic ecommerce functions as plug ‘n play options with major blog software packages. Blogs are good for business, big and small and I think there’s a lot of opportunity for business and value for consumers with ecommerce blogs.” Dec 28, 2005.

Too bad I wasn’t more of an advocate for social commerce since, but then again, consumer haven’t really responded well to shopping implementations with social media sites until recently, if at all.

Overt marketing messages have not traditionally been very welcome within social channels but as more brands become involved, consumers are expecting more than being able to comment, rate and share.

When considering the question of ecommerce and social media, I think there are two fundamental approaches to consider:

Adding social media features to existing ecommerce websites.

Examples of this are abundant now, especially with the addition of Facebook Like buttons on shopping sites and the ubiquitous social news, bookmarking and Tweet this buttons. See a great pair of jeans on Levis.com? There’s a Facebook Like button there to share it with friends, to get opinions or just let them know what you found.

Other social features that have long been in place with ecommerce and shopping sites include ratings and reviews which are well entrenched in certain industries like travel & hospitality.  Adding links to social sites a company is active on is a pretty common feature for services like Google Places.

Plus servies like Groupon adds an entirely different angle to social and commerce.

Adding social features to existing commerce platforms and situations is the low hanging fruit of social commerce at the moment and studies like this one from Eventbrite show a clear revenue benefit. I suspect its something consumers are starting to expect.

When I was in a somewhat remote place last week on the South island of New Zealand, I noticed the standard “Visit us online at companysite.com” was often replaced with: “Visit us online at (followed by Facebook and Twitter icons).  I’m sure you’ve seen such signage in storefront windows in your town as well. Social connections are becoming part of expected exchanges between consumers and the brands they buy from. The opportunity for brands is, how relevant and useful (and easy) can they make these exchanges as part of the customer relationship?

Adding sharing, interaction, rating/review or even something like group buying to a web property that is already perceived as a destination for ecommerce transactions is an easier thing to do than adding ecommerce to a social media site and it’s likely perceived as more appropriate. It’s a way of showing that the brand isn’t just about selling product/services, but that its open to connecting and useful engagement too. Companies are increasingly rewiring more than their web sites for such social commerce.

Incorporating ecommerce functionality within social media websites.

Early adopters for adding ecommerce and transaction capabilities within social media sites include Brooks Brothers and 1800Flowers with storefronts and Walmart with a deals app on Facebook. Another major retailer, Target, put searchable product inventory on Facebook as part of their Club Wedd registery offering, but the actual transactions take place on the Target.com website.

It’s still early days for finding the right way to add ecommerce functionality within a communication environment that is intended to be social, not transactional.  Of the early adopters that added online stores to Facebook or their blogs, I do wonder how profitable those initiatives are at this point.

My cautious optimism about social ecommerce doesn’t mean I don’t think it’s an area that will take hold. I do, as long as merchants can make the buying experience part of the social experience.  I suspect that’s going to be different by industry and community.

What do you think?

Are social networks and media sites ready and appropriate for transactional ecommerce functionality?  How seriously should brands take the opportunity for order capture within social media sites?

From a consumer perspective, have you ever ordered something within Facebook or another social media site? If you’ve checked in out and didn’t why not? If you did, what made you comfortable and would you do it again?


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© Online Marketing Blog, 2010. | Which Flavor of Social Commerce is Right for You? | http://www.toprankblog.com

Published by parMaster on 28 Nov 2010

Are We Doomed To Market From Walled Gardens?

Tim Berners-Lee, the inventor of the World Wide Web, has written a six-page report that calls out Facebook, LinkedIn, Google, and several other large Web companies for making your data proprietary. That is, he says all your personal data is available to you from within those websites, but you can’t share it with another website – even if you wanted to.

Mr. Lee paints a grim picture. If these major players have their way, he seems to imply, then we’ll all be soon using different parts of the Web. It will be a fragmented jumble rather than a universal interlinked Web. That won’t be good.

Essentially, if what he’s saying is true then the Web could become a string of islands. You’ll exist in yours and I’ll exist in mine and the only way we could reach each other is if we pay to cross the divide, or maybe we can’t even do that. If that happens then that will certainly limit our marketing ability. We might all be able to meet in Facebook, but if we don’t follow Facebook’s rules then we’ll get kicked off. But reaching the entire world through your Website will likely not be an option.

I’m curious if anyone else is seeing what Mr. Lee is seeing. And, if so, do you see it as a good thing or a bad thing?

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