Friday, December 28, 2012

Too busy with clients to post to my blog~By Mike Moran

Most of you know that I do career coaching, mostly for technical and marketing executives. I had an interesting conversation recently during one such coaching session, when my client expressed a deep need to publicize her expertise but lamented her inability to maintain her blog. She gave me an entirely believable and reasonable reason for her lack of recent posts: “I am too busy with my clients to post.”But while believable and reasonable, my client wasn’t thinking clearly about her choices. First off, nobody actually has any more time than anyone else. We each get 24 hours in the day and we all get to choose how to use them. So, if a blog post is really more important in the long run than spending an extra hour on client work, you should be able to make that happen.
But, as a consultant myself, I totally understand the calculation that billable time is almost always more important than non-billable time, so I can sympathize with always prioritizing client work over blogging. What my client needed was a way to blog more efficiently.
So, I started by asking her a question about how much time blogging takes: “Which takes more time, the actual writing or the process of coming up with the idea?” She thought a minute, concluding that coming up with the idea was the tough part. She said she could write post in 30 minutes or less once she had a solid idea, but she had writer’s block when she had to write a post with no idea.
What she needed was a new process for coming up with ideas. So, I gave her one suggestion for a new process, that she write down every good question a client asks her. Answering each question is a potential blog post. In fact, when she is spending the most time with clients is when she should be surrounded with ideas for posts. The problem isn’t the lack of ideas, but rather that she hasn’t organized herself to write down those ideas when they are most plentiful.
Once you have a system for capturing ideas, the blog posts are far easier to do. It usually isn’t lack of time that prevents blogging, but our understandable avoidance of that excruciating pain of trying to come up with an idea from nothing. Most people don’t generate ideas on demand, while they sit and contemplate.
If you’ve been struggling to maintain your blog, perhaps this system might work for you. It works for me. That’s how I got this post. I wrote down my client’s question when she asked it, weeks ago. Then today, when I needed to write, I went through my list of ideas and this one seemed the one I could knock out most comfortably.


READ MORE :

Thursday, December 27, 2012

Predictions for B2B digital marketing in 2013~By Ruth Stevens

It’s that time of the year when observers can’t resist making predictions about developments on the horizon. I hereby take up that tradition, offering up four random prognostications for where B2B digital marketing is headed in 2013. My topics include Facebook, content marketing, personal branding, and data hygiene—certainly an eclectic mix. I encourage readers to add their own.
Facebook is ready, at last, for the B2B prime time
It took a while, but Facebook marketing is now ready for mainstream B2B, in support of branding, lead generation, and customer relationship marketing goals for enterprises of all sizes. There are several reasons for this—FB’s universality being one of them. But the critical driver is the recent arrival of the Facebook Exchange (FBX) ad platform, which will allow banner ad bidding and retargeting to specific individuals, based on data matching.
So, while I used to argue that Facebook should be at the bottom of a B2B marketer’s to-do list, I am revising my view for 2013. Talking to my pals at Edmund Optics, where I serve on the board of directors, I am hearing confirmation of these developments. Edmund’s target is audience is optical engineers, and others interested in science and technology. Years ago, I would have advised them to ignore FB and focus on more targeted social networks.
But now, EO has turned its Facebook page into an effective environment for engaging these guys, with weekly “Geeky Friday” offers, and the enormously popular Zombie Apocalypse Survival Guide at Halloween, where engineers were invited to design zombie blasting tools using Edmund products. Facebook is now a top referring source for EO’s website, up 60% from last year. I stand corrected.
More and better content
B2B marketers were early to the content marketing game. In fact, I would argue that B2B has been a leading force in this area, in recognition of the importance of prospect education and thought leadership in the complex selling process. B2B marketers will continue to excel at creating valuable materials—digital, paper-based, video, you name it—to attract prospects and deepen relationships.
How do I know this? A new study from the Content Marketing Institute and MarketingProfs, which says that 54% of B2B marketers plan to increase their content marketing budgets in 2013. Their biggest content challenge for next year? Ironically, it’s producing enough content.
Personal branding as a way of life
Business people and consumers alike are realizing that their online personas have a growing impact on both their everyday lives and their professional careers. Rather than letting their personal brands evolve organically, individuals will make more proactive efforts to build and manage their images online, benefiting from the guidance of an emerging community of personal brand experts like William Arruda and Kirsten Dixson. This means establishing a unique brand positioning, and developing a set of active and consistent messaging across Internet media, especially social networks, to explain who they are and what are their capabilities. Personal branding is no longer just for celebrities or the self-employed; with the rise of social media, it is for everyone.
Renewed interest in data hygiene
Whenever I give a seminar on B2B marketing, I ask attendees to take out their business cards and look at them carefully. Then, I say, “Raise your hand if anything on the card is new in the last 12 months.” Invariably, 30% of the hands go up.
The high rate of change in B2B—whether moving to a different a company, a new title, even a new mail stop—is obvious. But only recently has it begun to sink in that addressing people incorrectly, or campaigning with undeliverable mail or email addresses, not only wastes marketing dollars, but also means lost business opportunity. So enough about big data. The focus in 2013 will be clean data.
And if you want some tips on how to keep your B2B data clean, have a look at my white paper, “Our Data is a Mess! How to Clean Up Your Marketing Database.”
So, those are my predictions. I hope readers will add some of their own. What do you think we’ll be seeing in B2B digital marketing in 2013?

READ MORE:

Saturday, November 10, 2012

Five Digital Media Marketing Lessons in Sandy’s Eye ~ BY Diane Thieke

I have a stock answer whenever I’m asked why I’m good at PR: “It’s all about the relationships.” In PR, your success or failure is 90% driven by the types of relationships that you have with the media. Cultivating those relationships takes up a fair amount of your time and represents one of the greatest intangibles, which is what makes PR so hard to quantify. Digital media marketing, especially the social side, is not much different. It’s all about the relationships – with your customers.

Over the last several days, digital media has been playing a big role in keeping large parts of New Jersey and New York informed about Hurricane Sandy, power outages and the status of friends, family, and vacation homes. The digital communications efforts of utility companies and state and local governments have played a critical role in keeping communities apprised. Not surprisingly, some organizations did this really, really well; while others, not so much. Here are some lessons from the storm and its aftermath.
Lesson #1: Even when the power is out, people can still use digital media on smartphones.
I don’t know of anyone who went without a battery charge for more than a night during this crisis. Interestingly, even the folks I know who rarely use social media were relying heavily on Facebook and Twitter for updates. This included tracking the status of family and friends, finding temporary refuge, identifying closed roads, locating open gas stations, getting information on where to donate, and keeping tabs on when their neighborhood would come back onto the power grid.
Lesson #2: Happy customers are informed customers.
One Facebook friend said it best (full disclosure, she works for a major media organization): Someone actually said “no information is better than misinformation.” Really? If information from trusted sources is handily available, it actually cuts down on misinformation and rumors. Just saying. Or, as I like to say in another stock phrase, I abhor a vacuum.
Public Service Gas & Electric (PSE&G), which has 2.2 million customers in New Jersey, had as many as 1.7 million without power after the storm. During the day, the company is answering questions and providing updates via Twitter, and every evening it is sending an email update to all customers. It’s also using its Web site to keep residents up-to-date on the status of power in each community. A PDF document shows the number and percentage of homes in each community that are without power, along with estimates of when it will be restored.
Such detail and attention to communication – as well as swift progress in getting homes back on the grid – has kept PSE&G criticism at bay.
Lesson #3: Use every available digital communications vehicle.
Thousands of people are displaced in New Jersey, and many towns either destroyed or still without power. With a presidential election on the horizon, state and local governments scrambled to accommodate all voters by setting up additional options for voting, as well as alternate polling locations. In the “best use of mobile technology” category, the state established an SMS system for those who lost homes – and therefore sample ballots. Finding your polling place was as easy as sending a text message with your address to 877877. Immediately, you’d get a response that told you where you should go to vote.
Lesson #4: Say it in your update – don’t make people click away.
My local township has a Facebook page, but rather than use it as a way to build conversation, it simply posts announcements. Unfortunately, it posts only the link to the announcement. The effect is disconcerting. “Alert. {link url}” is not helpful communication. Since it doesn’t tell me what the news is, I’m forced to click away. If I’ve got a slow or slippery connection – as was the case during the hurricane and after – I may not be able to link through at all. That’s trouble if the message is about contaminated and undrinkable water. Always provide the news in the post or update itself. Links should be additive – not the whole message.
Lesson # 5: Have a conversation, build a better relationship.
Newark mayor Cory Booker is known nationally for his Twitter engagement and boots-on-the-ground response to questions on his feed. But I’ve been particularly impressed by the Facebook page of the West Windsor Police Department. They’ve routinely posted updates throughout the crisis, answered questions, and followed up on every problem or inquiry. Their residents got the information they needed quickly and efficiently. What’s more, there is true dialogue on the page, with the department responding to individual comments. And judging from the number of “thank yous” and “great jobs,” they’ve been very successful in building a strong relationship with their community.
Those are my five lessons–you might have more and I would love to hear them below–but suffice it to say that we are all learning lessons every time a real-world crisis shows off how much we rely on social media and other digital channels.

READ MORE:



  • dianethieke-photo
  • DianeThieke
  • Diane S. Thieke is the founder of Simply Talk Media, a PR, marketing, and social media consultancy. With more than 25 years in digital media, she works with clients to develop their digital communications strategies and stay ahead of the changes in both social and traditional media.
    Previously, Diane led public relations and marketing teams at Dow Jones & Co. She began her career as an editor at Dow Jones’s first online service (now called Factiva), before becoming its first competitive intelligence manager. An early adopter and tech enthusiast, she launched Factiva’s first online community and its first blogging policy.
    She holds a B.A. in journalism and English writing from Rider University, and a M.S. in Communications Management from Syracuse University’s Newhouse School. Diane lives in New Jersey with her husband, two sons, and three ruling kittens. Even in her spare time, Diane is glued to her electronic devices, being social and devouring news and trends happening in the world, in technology. She blogs at Simply Talk Media and tweets at @thiekeds


  • Thursday, November 8, 2012

    Portraits that Prop~by Alex Smith



    As a photographer, how many times have you had your portrait taken. There is nothing more uncomfortable and awkward than sitting in front of a camera trying to evoke a natural smile or a true, heart felt expression. Let’s be honest, the experience of having your portrait taken can be down right terrifying, yet we aspire to have our subjects pose and emote in an organic and subtle way that transcends and captures the embodiment of our subjects personality. Simple right?
    The reality is that the camera makes our subjects self-conscious and hyper aware of their appearance, with an overall fear of not capturing a single image that meets their approval. I mean, how many of us truly look in the mirror each morning thinking, “Wow, I am looking fantastically, good today?” Most of the time, all we can see are the imperfections and bothersome nuances that melt away and stifle the perception of our own esthetic. So how does one capture a nice, natural portrait?
    I have read many articles and blog posts concerning this topic. Many focus on trying to relax your subject either through gentle conversation and personal connection or simply by breaking out some wine as a medicament to treat the inhibitions created by the shoot. The truth is that there is no easy recipe to help overcome this problem. No matter whether you are shooting a model, family member, or even a close friend, the camera is still the giant 400 pound gorilla in the room that everyone knows is there regardless of any distractions. So what can we do?
    Aside from normal social graces and pre-planning for the shoot, I have one simple method that surprisingly works almost every time. PROPS! It is amazing what magic can happen when you give your subject something else to interact with while you are shooting. Cuts right through some of those awkwardly, silent moments when both you and the subject know things are not working yet no one wants to admit it. Yes, we all experience these gratingly, uncomfortable situations.
    So what kind of props am I talking about? All and any kinds. They can be silly, beautiful, interesting or even surprisingly strange. These can be fresh flowers, a costume, a masquerade mask, a piece of interesting fabric, a hat, a pet, a piece of fruit, sports equipment, a music instrument, a lawn mower, oven mitts, or even an original, mint in box, Darth Vader action figure from Star Wars. The reality is that any item that has some meaning to the subject or that they can relate to will work and don’t be afraid to go way outside the box into the realm of the disturbingly obscure or insanely cliche. It is amazing how a simple prop can break the ice and give the subject something with which to interact, allowing you to capture a few true emotive moments when they have forgotten about the camera, shed some of the self conscious inhibitions and helped you create a beautifully expressive portrait.


    Read more:

    Sunday, November 4, 2012

    Five top tips to starting a successful business~By Richard Branson


    As LinkedIn is a business that started in a living room, much like Virgin began in a basement, I thought my first blog on the site should be about how to simply start a successful business. Here are five top tips I’ve picked up over the years.

    1. Listen more than you talk

    We have two ears and one mouth, using them in proportion is not a bad idea! To be a good leader you have to be a great listener. Brilliant ideas can spring from the most unlikely places, so you should always keep your ears open for some shrewd advice. This can mean following online comments as closely as board meeting notes, or asking the frontline staff for their opinions as often as the CEOs. Get out there, listen to people, draw people out and learn from them.

    2. Keep it simple

    You have to do something radically different to stand out in business. But nobody ever said different has to be complex. There are thousands of simple business solutions to problems out there, just waiting to be solved by the next big thing in business. Maintain a focus upon innovation, but don’t try to reinvent the wheel. A simple change for the better is far more effective than five complicated changes for the worse.

    3. Take pride in your work

    Last week I enjoyed my favourite night of the year, the Virgin Stars of the Year Awards, where we celebrated some of those people who have gone the extra mile for us around the Virgin world. With so many different companies, nationalities and personalities represented under one roof, it was interesting to see what qualities they all have in common. One was pride in their work, and in the company they represent. Remember your staff are your biggest brand advocates, and focusing on helping them take pride will shine through in how they treat your customers.

    4. Have fun, success will follow

    If you aren’t having fun, you are doing it wrong. If you feel like getting up in the morning to work on your business is a chore, then it's time to try something else. If you are having a good time, there is a far greater chance a positive, innovative atmosphere will be nurtured and your business will fluorish. A smile and a joke can go a long way, so be quick to see the lighter side of life.

    5. Rip it up and start again

    If you are an entrepreneur and your first venture isn’t a success, welcome to the club! Every successful businessperson has experienced a few failures along the way – the important thing is how you learn from them. Don’t allow yourself to get disheartened by a setback or two, instead dust yourself off and work out what went wrong. Then you can find the positives, analyse where you can improve, rip it up and start again.
     

    Saturday, October 27, 2012

    The Top 75 Websites For Your Career~By Jacquelyn Smith





    Jacquelyn Smith

    Jacquelyn Smith, Forbes Staff
    The Best and Worst Cities for Jobs This Fall 
           
                  
    In early August, Forbes Leadership put out a call for nominations for our inaugural list of the best career websites, largely inspired by ForbesWoman’s annual list of Top 100 Websites For Women. We endeavored to assemble a comprehensive guide to smart and engaging sites. To accomplish this we challenged you, our readers, to submit your picks for the best online destinations for interns, job seekers, business owners, established professionals, retirees, and anyone else looking to launch, improve, advance, or change his or her career.
    We received a wealth of comments, emails and tweets with your choices–about 1,500 of them, naming roughly 700 different websites. To taper the list down to 75, my colleague Susan Adams and I combed through the stack and hand-picked the sites we thought our readers would find most compelling and useful for things like job listings, facts and figures, and career insights and guidance.
    Susan has written an accompanying post with our picks for the ten best sites from our list of 75. She reminds readers that while there are some great resources on the web, they shouldn’t spend too much time on the Internet scouring listings, reading career advice or blasting out their résumé. Especially for those in job search mode, it’s better to spend time researching companies, networking and meeting people face to face.
    Our full list of the Top 75 Websites For Your Career is not a ranking and there are no winners or losers; it’s simply a compilation of nominated sites that we believe deserve some special recognition. The list includes blogs, job aggregators and boards, personal career coaching pages, and traditional media outlets’ career sites that could be useful to those in traditional 9 to 5 office jobs, Federal workers, work-from-home professionals, entrepreneurs, college students and retirees.
    Here’s our first-ever list of the Top 75 Websites For Your Career (in alphabetical order):
    About.com/Careers
    Owned by The New York Times, About.com offers a wealth of free information for job seekers and those looking to advance their careers, including articles about everything from how to get along with your boss to questions not to ask an employer during an interview. About.com also links to other sites focused on specific careers like advertising or criminology, that have articles on topics like copywriting or the day in the life of a police officer. Users can also read up on the history of various fields, find a list of schools where they can study for a particular degree, or peruse an article on the most popular jobs in a given field. The site links to job listings powered by Indeed.com. Job search and employment expert Alison Doyle has been About.com’s job search guide since 1998.
    Betts Recruiting
    This is the site for Betts Recruiting, which searches for talent for the business side of venture capital-backed startups in New York City and Silicon Valley. The focus is on sales, marketing and business development staff from the junior level through vice president.
    Big Interview
    Co-founded by career coach Pamela Skillings, who used to work in human resources at Citigroup, Morgan Stanley and MasterCard International, Big Interview offers online interviewing tutorials where users pay $197 for a package of three installments. Users can prep for industry-specific interviews like pharmaceutical sales or advertising. The prep involves an on-screen interviewer asking questions like, “tell me about yourself,” and “why are you interested in this position?” The user then records her answer and watches it back onscreen. The site offers numerous tips for different stages of the interview process (sample answer, in part: “I love managing teams and solving customer problems.”)
    Blogging4Jobs
    Blogging4Jobs.com is an online workplace resource for managers, leaders, human resources, and recruiting professionals. They take their audience to “uncomfortable, yet necessary,” places exposing them to the realities of the workplace without the “corporate sugar coating.” The site was launched in 2007 with a goal of helping job seekers learn the unwritten rules of job searching. The site has since expanded to offer insights into the world of work from a corporate and operations no-nonsense point of view.
    Boomer Job Tips
    Boomer Job Tops offers ideas, hints, tips and how-to’s for the growing baby boomer population to help them find a job, win an interview or move their career forward. The site has hundreds of articles from experts in the career area on résumés, interviews, strategy and tactics with a “boomer focus.”
    CareerBliss.com
    CareerBliss is all about helping people lead happier lives by finding happiness in the workplace. The job information-hub offers free resources, like its “happiness assessment” developed by experts, a database of 6.5 million salaries, 600,000 company reviews, and 3 million job listings. Using its large database of reviews and survey results, the site regularly releases lists like, “The Happiest For Working Dads” and “The Happiest Companies to Work For.”

    READ MORE:

    Thursday, October 25, 2012

    Don’t Let Social Media Drive You—Learn How To Drive Social Media By Social Maximizer


    There’s a growing voice out there on the Internet that seems to be screaming “social media marketing now!” at the top of its lungs, sending business after business reeling headfirst into the online world of social media marketing. The problem with this is that many people take the same approach to social media as they do with their regular marketing strategies, meaning there’s a whole lot of incompetence floating around out there. And with more and more people jumping in without looking, the sea of unexceptional content online makes it hard for your business to stand out.
    Social-Media-Marketing-Strategy
    So, here are three simple ways that you can make social media work for you, allowing you to work smarter, not harder.
    Tip # 1: Find Your Niche and Dig Into It
    Find-your-NicheThe Internet is awash with industries that don’t have a clear mission statement, let alone something deeper that really lets their customers know what they stand for. They have a skeleton of an idea of who they are but without any flesh and substance, they quickly sink to the bottom of the internet ocean along with all of the other indistinguishable companies out there.
    What makes you stand out from your competitors? Who is your target audience? How do I know this product/service is for me? Why do I need you in my life?
    These four questions need to be answered immediately without having to ask when potential customers see your brand on social media. Don’t be afraid to really come out and tell people what you’re about, to really define your company.
    Once you do this, you can begin to build your fan base on people who think alike, sharing your company’s views, ideals and interests.
    Tip #2: Define Who You Aren't Define-who-you-are
    The social media world is awash with companies who are probably already following that first tip, so now that you are too, what’s going to bring you to the top of the next heap? Well, this is where you define who you aren't: your competition. Don’t be afraid to throw a few elbows here; this is the Internet, people like a strong position as it allows them to rally behind it.
    You've probably seen commercials with taste tests for soda, or the one with the Pepsi and Coca-Cola delivery guys drinking a soda, depicting one as lazy or secretly drinking the “enemy” company’s soft drink. It’s clear to consumers which product they are choosing over, not just which product they are choosing. This helps to build your brand recognition by reinforcing that even if they've never tried your product or service, when given the choice between yours and your “enemy’s,” the choice is clear every time: yours.
    You see the same thing with Apple, whose enemies aren't only IBM or Samsung, but non-innovation. The enemy of television?Exercise.Of exercise equipment?Junk food. Make your company’s position stand firm and you’ll stand out head and shoulders above the rest.
    Tip #3: Focus Where It Counts
    FocusAnother reason people tend to get lost in the world of social media marketing is because everything is so new and there’s so much to learn and do, it can all become overwhelming. A lot of the people I talk to remind me of chickens running around with their heads cut off, just plugging every available ounce of energy into each outlet, exhausting themselves. And then, when there are no results, the end picture is often full of rage and early exits from the social media landscape.
    The fix?Slow down…do less with what you have. Stand back and take a quick assessment of what isn't working for you. Perhaps your website doesn't have that many hits because it needs to be optimized or you need better bloggers. Maybe your email marketing doesn't get a lot response; start in these areas. They are proven money makers.
    Next, look at what is working for you. What is giving you the highest return on investment, sometimes surprisingly? Are you getting a lot of Facebook likes and thus traffic to your site? Spend a little time there building up a report with your Facebook fans. Perhaps Twitter?
    Find out what’s working for you and stay on top of it. You don’t need to have a million social media outlets, just one or two that work well. Simply make sure that you’re standing out in these areas and plug away; don’t go crazy!
    Overall, you want to create a great experience for your customers so think like one. When you do, you’ll be working smarter, not harder.

    READ MORE

    Monday, October 22, 2012

    6 Powerful Tips for Increasing Your Blog’s Followers~ By Social Maximizer


    BlogFor every blog that succeeds and builds a solid following, you have at least a hundred blogs that end up in the graveyard. Building a high quality blog following requires both dedication over the long haul as well as an in depth understanding of what actually works and what doesn’t work in the blogging world.
    Here are six tips for building a blog following that follows your each and every post.
    Tip #1 – Stop Using “Get Traffic Quick” Tactics Content
    Stop trying to circumvent the traffic generation process. Building a solid blog following is a process that does inherently take some time.
    Tactics like gaming StumbleUpon or Reddit, writing deceptively attention catching titles and so on are not the answer to getting high quality long term traffic.
    Instead, aim to provide quality content that people will actually want to share. Create content that inspires people to come back time and again. That’ll get you more blog traffic than any quick fix solution.
    Tip #2 – Tap Your Customer Base
    Tap-your-customer-baseOne place people often neglect is their existing customer base. Often time’s people try to separate their customers from their blog.
    For example, they might only send marketing materials using email to their customer list, while they try to use their blog to attract new customers. This is counter productive.
    Your customers need to be sold just like anyone else. They need to continually be reminded of your credibility and expertise. Furthermore, by continually providing value in the form of free content, you increase the chances that they’ll buy again.
    Try and get your buyers to become readers. Let them know about your blog in your promotional emails and perhaps even in the product itself.
    Tip #3 – Narrow Down Your Audience filter-your-audience
    Does your message hit home? Do your customers feel like you’re talking to them directly?
    Many blogs try and be far, far too broad and generic. For example, a blog that’s targeting “internet marketers” is almost definitely going to get lost in the crowd.
    On the other hand, a blog that’s dedicated to helping new stay at home moms create a second stream of income could work very well.
    What is your core audience? Try and narrow your audience down to the people who would most likely relate to you. Then speak to them directly.
    Tip #4 – Do Guest Posts, Accept Guest Posts
    Guest-PostGuest posting is one of the best ways for bloggers to vouch for one another and share traffic.
    If you guest post on someone else’s site, they’re implicitly endorsing you. You’ll get your content in front of their audience, which means a lot of high quality traffic back to your website. You’ll also get a great backlink.
    By accepting guest posts, you give back to the blogging community. You add variety to your blog, so it’s not always just you writing. Other bloggers are also likely to link to their own guest posts, which means a high quality backlink as well.
    Tip #5 – Leverage Current Events and Trends
    You can get a lot of blog traffic by tapping into existing trends and things that people are already talking about right now. Leverage
    For example, the founders of Air B’n’B tapped into the election by helping people find beds near the democratic and republican conventions. A spa might tap into Valentine ’s Day by offering a couple’s tandem massage.
    Blogs can do something similar. Try to tie your blog’s content to existing events and use that to drive more traffic to your blog.
    Tip #6 – Publish Consistently
    Publish-consistentlyHaving a consistent publishing schedule is one of the most important things for a successful blog. If you get someone interested in your content, they’ll want to come back and see new content. If they come back a few times and don’t see anything new, they probably won’t return again.
    Set a publishing schedule and stick to it. Let people know what to expect from your blog. That schedule could be every day, or just a couple times a month. You don’t have to publish very often, you just have to commit to publishing consistently.

    READ MORE:

    Saturday, October 20, 2012

    Learn How to Attract More Visitors with Your Shared Web Hosting Plan~By JaguarPC Guru

    Business owners often ask how much traffic their website should be getting. The truth is there is no simple answer to this question. For example, if you run a small store in Texas and use a shared hosting plan to attract new customers, it would not be useful to compare your traffic to Amazon. Equally, there is a distinction between the traffic levels you could expect to receive on a Business-to-Business (B2B) website as opposed to those on a Business-to-Consumer (B2C) website.

    The goal of any business should not be to hit a specified traffic target. The most crucial goal is to always strive for more traffic, as long as it’s the right traffic. More qualified visitors means more conversions and, ultimately, more customers for your business.
    In a new article published by leading shared hosting provider Jaguar PC, How to Get More Customers to Your Shared Web Hosting, we share some simple guidelines for improving your traffic levels. In the article, you will learn key website elements that can send your traffic levels soaring. You will learn how quality content aids search engine optimization and referrals, and – most importantly – what you can do to convert these visitors into new customers for your business.
    Use your shared web hosting plan to attract search engines and customers alike
    Often, a business will concentrate on search engine optimization (SEO) as a major source of traffic. By optimizing a website to fit a certain keyword, webmasters think they can trick Google, Yahoo, and Bing into giving them preferential search ranks. However, search traffic must ultimately come as the result of an organic process. By creating the best website in your industry, you will increase your search engine traffic and get more hits from links and leads.
    In the latest article from JaguarPC, we discuss the importance of excellent content as a way to help you attract, retain, and convert visitors to customers. The article explains which content areas you should be concentrating on, and how shared web hosting plans give you the tools you need to launch and update this content on a regular basis.
    In addition, the shared web hosting article discusses what to do with visitors once they are on your website. After all, there is little value in generating traffic if you do not work hard to convert that traffic into customers. Read the article to learn about the applications and tools you can install on your shared hosting plan to give customers highly interactive content. Learn how highly interactive content encourages return visits, and with each returning visitor, you have another chance to convert them into a customer.
    Order an unlimited shared hosting plan from JaguarPC
    As described in JaguarPC’s latest article, there are many things you can do to increase the number of visitors coming to your website. However, these things can be time-consuming. To help you focus your attention on areas other than spending time configuring your shared hosting account, JaguarPC shared hosting offers several features that simplify the administrative side of running a website.
    Every JaguarPC shared web hosting plan includes cPanel, an advanced browser-based control panel that can be used to configure mailboxes, work with files, and alter domain settings. cPanel saves you hours of website administration every single month – time that can be spent concentrating on building your traffic.
    JaguarPC shared hosting plans also include Softaculous, an automated script installer. Using Softaculous, you can easily launch an array of applications, including content management systems that help you keep your site organized as it grows into a leading source for your industry.
    Finally, as your traffic grows, you can be assured that a JaguarPC shared hosting plan can handle the increasing resource demand. Every account is offered on state-of-the-art Supermicro hardware with generous amounts of RAM. Individual accounts also include unlimited bandwidth and disk space to guarantee that your increased traffic does not incur increased charges.
    To learn more about shared web hosting services from JaguarPC, call 1-888-338-5261 or visit jaguarpc.com.

    Read More:

    Friday, October 19, 2012

    Google finally gives you a way to escape Negative SEO~By Mike Moran

    Image representing Google as depicted in Crunc...
    Image via CrunchBase
    Some of you might have a high opinion of SEO people. (C’mon, aren’t there a couple of you out there?) If you have that high opinion, then don’t read this story, because there a few people who are less than ethical out there. Google had an announcement this week that has been a long time coming–you can now disavow links to your site. Some of you might be asking, why would you ever want to do that? Links to your site are good, right? Well, mostly, yes. But if you had a few ethical lapses, you might want to erase those problems.
    So, if you paid for links, or you engaged in some spammy blog comments with links back to your site, this gives you a chance to wipe the slate clean. Because when Google figures out that you are cooking the links, it penalizes your site, assuming that some other links are faked, too.
    And that’s how Google is announcing this disavowal capability–if you screwed up and you can’t get rid of those links, then this tool helps you by telling Google not to count them and your penalty magically goes away.
    But I am excited about this tool not so that spammers can clean up their act, but so that victims of spammers have an escape route. The folks that I have felt most sorry for over the years are those ethical search marketers that have been attacked by so-called negative SEO (also known as Google bowling), where unethical SEOs create spammy links to your site to intentionally get you penalized.
    If you’re not perverse enough to think up such an ugly scheme, congratulations on having a conscience. I know several poor schlubs who have been attacked this way and I first begged Google to introduce this disavowal tool over four years ago. I’m not really sure why it took this long for Google to take this step–what they announced is almost uncanny in its similarity to what I outlined for them to do in March of 2008.
    But better late than never. For years, the bad guys could attack innocent marketers and there wasn’t a blessed thing to be done about it. Disavowing links is a boatload of work and it should not even be attempted by anyone less than an expert. But at least there is something that can be done. Thanks, Google, for standing up for the good guys as well as giving folks who faked their own links a chance at redemption.

    READ MORE:



  • mikemoran-photo
  • Mike Moran
  • Author of the acclaimed book on Internet marketing, Do It Wrong Quickly, on the heels of the best-selling Search Engine Marketing, Inc., Mike Moran led many initiatives on IBM's Web site for eight years, including IBM's original search marketing strategy. Mike holds an Advanced Certificate in Market Management Practice from the Royal UK Charter Institute of Marketing, is a Visiting Lecturer at the University of Virginia's Darden School of Business, and regularly teaches at Rutgers, UC Irvine, and UCLA.
    In addition to his contributions to Biznology, Mike is a regular columnist for Search Engine Guide. He also frequently keynotes conferences worldwide on digital marketing for marketers, public relations specialists, market researchers, and technologists, and serves as Chief Strategist for Converseon, a leading digital media marketing agency. Prior to joining Converseon, Mike worked for IBM for 30 years, rising to the level of Distinguished Engineer. Mike can be reached through his Web site (mikemoran.com).
  •