Archive

Archive for May, 2010

Easily Build A 5-Figures Internet Business

May 31st, 2010 No comments

Are you prepared to keep up with Twitter, Membership sites, Facebook, CPA programs, StumbleUpon, Xanga, Digg, and 99 other tweaks out there on the Internet?

By 7 o’clock tomorrow morning your email box would have another dozens more things that you “need to focus on” in order to build a profitable Internet business.

Click To Discover How To Make Money Online Today

Most of this stuff is not even worthy of your attention.

You might already have good SEO, a blog, banner ads and whatever else, and that’s fine.

But these are bells and whistles unless you start implementing this one simple, easy yet powerful principle…

This is the CORE imperative of every 5-figures information based Internet business!

The secret is to FOCUS on this core, do so and you’ve the power to transform your Internet business into a stable and highly lucrative cash cow almost instantly!

So what is this CORE element to a 5-figures Internet business?

It’s dead simple.

Two words describe it all – Irresistible Offers!

It’s about presenting to your potential customers an irresistible offer!

An irresistible offer is the starting point of all great business success!

Think about it. You can have all the latest techniques in traffic generation, social media but if your offer doesn’t stick with your visitors, you’ll hardly make a dime online!

If you’re focusing on everything else except presenting an irresistible offer to your potential customers right at the start, you’re leaving all kinds of money – LOTS of money – on the table.

Now… you don’t have to beat yourself up yet for this simple concept escapes a lot of marketers out there.

The encouraging news is that there’s this new, bestselling program today, “Authority Job Killer” that details the entire process of building a 5-figures Internet business starting with the irresistible offer!

Besides the Irresistible Offer profit principle, the authors revealed another two incredibly cash generating ideas that will generate thousands of dollars of income online for you without any inside knowledge or special skills.

To learn more about Authority Job Killer and how you can build a 5-figures Internet business on autopilot in the next 90 days, visit the link below:

Click To Find Out How You Can Build A 5 Figure Business Today

Monster SEO: Interview with Matt Evans of

May 31st, 2010 No comments


Spotlight on Search Interview with Matt Evans of Monster.com

monster SEOThere simply is no substitute for well rounded experience over a period of time to give a search marketer perspective and the skills to handle a variety of problems. Add to that “sink or swim” SEO training and you have a guy like Matt Evans, SEO Manager at Monster.com. In this interview, Matt is generous with sharing his experiences working agency side and in-house, insights toward code SEO, the new Google design, social media, advice for marketers that want to enter the Search Engine Marketing field and how SEO is a lot like Rugby.

You’ve worked both on the agency side and now as an in-house SEO Manager for Monster.com. Can you share a bit about that journey and what are some of the big differences between working on the client side vs. agency? What do you like most about working in Search?

Previous to Monster I was with a search agency for 6 years. In those 6 years I saw both the organization and the industry grow tremendously despite the bubble burst of the early 2000s. At a time when friends were jumping from job to job it was very easy to stick around because I believed in the services we provided and the future of the search marketing industry. I believed whole-heartedly (and still do) that search is the best way to build an audience, connect with customers, and drive business online. I think the best part of working in Search is the vibrancy of the industry, the smart people, and the value that we can bring to our organizations.

One of the biggest differences in client side versus agency is being very involved in the software development life cycle. On the agency side of things you typically provide recommendations to clients, they take them off to their Product people or Engineers and most work happens behind the curtain. Being an in-house SEO means being involved in a project from concept to release – and all the “fun” in between. Sometimes it’s fun, sometimes it’s tedious, but it’s all a very good learning experience. If I was ever to go back agency side it’s the type of experience which would give me a huge advantage in dealing with clients.

Another major difference between agency and in-house is the feeling of ownership you have over your site/s. Because you’re completely invested in one site, you feel so much more accomplished when SEO enhancements are released.

What in your past work and education experience best prepared you for your journey as a Search Engine Marketer? What advice do you have for budding SEMs to make themselves more valuable and empowered to motivate change?

My initial year or so at the agency was by far the best experience in terms of preparing me for the diverse journey as an SEM. In 2000-2001 SEM was still the wild, wild west. For some perspective, we were still submitting pages to Lycos and HotBot, doorway pages were a legitimate and successful tactic, and GoTo.com was the only paid search engine of note. The company was still small and resources were non-existent, so account managers did EVERYTHING for their clients – from keyword research, to copywriting, to directory submissions, to project management. You learned real quick that you needed to focus your energy on the tasks that were going to get you results fast. Getting results fast was even more important back then because your clients were less likely to understand the nature of search, the fluctuations, and how long it takes for content to be indexed and ranked. As a result, much of our time was spent educating the client, which forced me to learn on the fly.

I would urge budding SEMs to think less about tactics and think more about strategies. The tactics will flow from those strategies naturally and you’ll have a much easier time selling executives a strategy rather than trying to explain to them why 301 redirects, XML sitemaps, and verification meta tags are necessary. They don’t care! The strategy should take into account how search traffic will drive bottom line results, because that’s what they care about. It’s also essential for SEMs to understand the value of a search referral to their business. For instance, at Monster we measure the value of organic referrals by equating them to the cost savings driving the equivalent qualified traffic through paid search or online media buys.

Ultimately, SEMs should be trying to get away from the perception that we’re one trick ponies. Aim to create a perception in your organization that you’re a well-rounded business person rather than an niche expert in the “dark arts of SEO.” Understand the parts of the business that intersect with search – PR, offline marketing, usability, etc. Too many times SEO experts are pigeonholed and viewed as only a small part of the business when many time the impact they can have on a business is much greater than any other person in the organization. Just ask the businesses who have had their site banned from Google to understand how important SEMs are!

What tips do you have for reporting SEO performance within an organization? What KPIs do you pay attention to? What overall performance goals are most important? Any tips on reporting that agencies give their clients?

The key to reporting in an organization is to provide tiered reporting based on your audience. The reporting that me and my SEO team review is far more detailed than the dashboard that the SVPs see. Also, we provide more specific reporting for our ecommerce team, Content team, and Product Managers. It’s important to get feedback from all these groups too so that you’re providing data that is interesting and actionable and you’re not wasting your time reporting on useless data.

At Monster the KPIs we pay attention to around SEO are pretty typical: visits, UVs, page views per visit, time on site, referrals by engine, and referrals by keyword phrase. The SEO team is mainly measured on the amount of overall traffic we drive, however, in order to prove our traffic is valuable and targeted we also track the number of job searches, job views, applies, new accounts, and new resume uploads that result from SEO traffic.

Agencies need to focus less on month to month comparisons and look at year over year. Seasonality is usually a large factor in search trends, so comparing MoM trends provides little insight into actual performance. For Monster, January is our biggest month for search traffic due to New Year’s resolutions to find a new job. December tends to be one of our lowest months due to the holidays. Comparing December to January may look great in the chart, but to get a real understanding on SEO success you need to look at year over year most of the time.

How important is ongoing & proactive SEO vs triage? What do you think companies should be paying attention to on an ongoing basis to achieve, maintain and improve their SEO performance?

I need to balance between both triage and proactive strategic planning due to the speed at which the industry changes and the size of a company like Monster. Try as I might to be aware of all changes that happen to the site in a given release, it’s just not humanly possible to know everything. Also, since our site is so large it takes a while to figure out how search engine algorithm changes affect us. Much of my time is spent understanding how these changes might have affected our SEO performance. Monster is a global organization and has many, many priorities and a very competitive development roadmap. As a result I need to also be proactive and be thinking about what we need to launch 6-12 months down the line in order to hit our goals. It makes it busy, but very interesting.

Companies need to leverage the webmaster tools offered by Google, Yahoo, and Bing in order to maintain and improve their SEO performance. Beyond SEO, these tools give a company valuable information about how your site performs for users (which includes search engine spiders). Google especially has been adding a lot of great tools to their console to improve SEO performance and we’ve been trying to spread the word throughout our organization about the kinds of information that can be mined. As a result we have Product Managers in all the countries reaching out to the SEO team with problems they’ve found and it really creates a great sense of teamwork.

There’s some debate about the future interplay between code level SEO, structured data and sitemaps versus page content and social media. How do you see SEO evolving technically in the next 2-3 years?

Ultimately, because links are still so important to search engine algorithms I think that content and social media will continue to be king when it comes to SEO. Great content will always lead to more links and social is just the latest channel to distribute those links. However, I believe the number of technical levers search engines will provide to SEOs in order to improve and tweak how their site appears in search results will continue to grow. I think search engines need all the help they can get in crawling, indexing, and presenting the best results to searchers and giving more control to webmasters is one way to go about it. I predict we’ll see many more announcements from the engines supporting new technical innovations like we’ve seen in the past with canonical tags, XML sitemaps, rel=”nofollow”, and RDFa tags.

What are your thoughts on the new third column Google design? Do you see any SEO opportunities that weren’t there before? Are you planning on or doing anything differently? What are your top 3 signals of SEO influence?

As a power searcher I don’t find the third column design nearly as offensive as some users do. I see it as redundant navigation that’s aimed at luring the average searcher into exploring Google’s different engines before going back up to the search box and modifying their query, which they tend to do. I’ve found it useful when I’m trying to understand what type of content exist out there on a given topic.

I wouldn’t say there are new opportunities, but I think the opportunities that have always been there are magnified. If blended search results didn’t convince you that a universal search strategy is important, the new left hand navigation should.

There are new plans to change our strategy. We’re already on a path to improve our PR SEO and our Social Media presence to correspond with the emphasis the engines have put on real time search. We’ve built out a strong team in those areas and the SEO team regularly partners with them on initiatives.

What SEO (and/or PPC) tools would you recommend to an in-house marketer that wears a SEO hat among others? Do you have any SEO project management tools that you like?

They absolutely need to use Google Webmaster Tools if nothing at all. The data provided is just too valuable. I also am a big fan of the SEO Book toolbar for Firefox. It’s a great tool for a quick snapshot of what’s going on with a page.

What resources do you use to stay current? (Blogs, conferences, newsletters, books) What role do direct observation, testing and networking play for you in staying current?

I find Search Engine Land’s SearchCap newsletter the best source of news for the industry. It compiles all the best blogs and forum threads in one daily email. As for books, Search Engine Marketing, Inc. is my bible.  It sits on my bookshelf and I pull it down from time to time to refresh my memory on certain topics. The forecasting/modeling information is invaluable for those SEOs who are continuously asked to quantify the opportunity of an enhancement or new content.

If you were to compare SEO to a sport, which would you pick and why?

There is no question on this one – Rugby. I’ve played many team sports in my life – baseball, soccer, basketball, dodge ball – but none of them comes close to the ultimate team sport of Rugby. I played for 4 years in college and 5 years after and you learn pretty quickly that a team’s success is completely dependent on execution by all 15 players on the pitch (that’s a field for the uninitiated!). The backs can’t score tries if they don’t receive the ball from the scrum half, and the scrum half can distribute the ball unless the forwards ruck and secure the ball.

Everyone depends on each other to do their job. SEO is much the same way. The SEO can’t drive traffic to the site if the UX folks don’t design the architecture of the site right, or if the developers don’t code the page correctly, or the copywriters don’t use the proper keyword phrases in the copy. You are dependent on others within your organization to execute properly, and with a large, global organization like Monster, this is what makes the job difficult. It’s also what makes projects that much sweeter when we are successful!

Thanks Matt!

Matt Evans is SEO Manager for Monster.com, the premier global employment solution for job seekers with a presence in over 50 countries.


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

© Online Marketing Blog, 2010. |
Monster SEO: Interview with Matt Evans of Monster.com | http://www.toprankblog.com

Categories: Automated Entries Tags:

Ways To Make Money With eBay

May 30th, 2010 No comments

You have may as well have heard of people who have made lots of money just by selling stuff on eBay. I am not saying that it can not be possible but it is only a few. So many people who have made and they are still making pretty good money by selling on eBay, but then, not all of them made that kind of money overnight. Almost all the successful eBay sellers have one thing in common, they actually worked hard to be successful.

When it comes to selling on eBay, there are no experiments to be made. It is very easy, simple and convenient that a 17 year old as of today makes sufficient money to offset her college expenses. eBay do not need you to learn about these tactics as that will mean giving some lead. It is now very arduous to run a successful business on eBay, as its sales slows down and fees increase. You can become a profitable eBay seller if you know what you are doing and pick products you enjoy selling.

Moreover, this will surly brand your identity on eBay to your potential buyers. Once your business on eBay starts thriving, you may need help supervising your listings so that you can work on other areas of expanding your business and additionally enjoy a balanced work. To enjoy doing business on eBay, sellers need to spend their money wisely, purchase goods that will sell at a lower price, advertise those goods dynamically and build a well rounded business relationship.

To sell on eBay, you have to dedicate several hours and lot of perseverance and motivation into building top achievements and it does not materialize over night. It does happen by working hard especially on marketing of your listed products. They build serious customer relationship. They all know that eBay is much like a little town with a well performing scuttle butt. Be informed that most booming eBay sellers take advantage of the buzz that eBay provides. ebay does not make a huge deal out of these reports but they are right there for all to see and most importantly, they are all free.

These reports are from those already selling on eBay and therefore they are free. Though, you might be required to pay a small fee on some of them. Almost all of the lucrative eBay sellers do make use of eBay free consultation services that eBay provides towards all aspect of sales. These buzz session are done one on one by telephone with marketing and sales professionals who work for eBay and who have great knowledge about tactics of marketing on eBay.

They provide answers to questions and they are also able to offer expert advice at no cost. The truth is that, eBay do want those sellers doing business with them to be profitable. And the more successful they are, the more profitable eBay becomes. The moment you grasp how to sell on eBay and you have a very sound understanding of the eBay Community, you will have so much business ideas. Obtain business cards, fliers, letterhead and envelopes. These are some of the few marketing tools you may need to brand your business on eBay and also offline.

eBay

Money Making MP3 Download Amazon-Ebay-Adsense Site Sale Money Making MP3 Download Amazon-Ebay-Adsense Site Sale
$145.00

Money Making Women Apparel Amazon-Ebay-Adsense Site Money Making Women Apparel Amazon-Ebay-Adsense Site
$145.00

Money Making Bedding & Bath Amazon-Ebay-Adsense Site Money Making Bedding & Bath Amazon-Ebay-Adsense Site
$145.00

Money Making Computer Hardware Amazon-Ebay-Adsense Site Money Making Computer Hardware Amazon-Ebay-Adsense Site
$125.00

Money Making Photography Amazon-Ebay-Adsense Site Sale Money Making Photography Amazon-Ebay-Adsense Site Sale
$145.00

HOW TO MAKE MAKING MONEY ON EBAY SELLING HOW TO MAKE MAKING MONEY ON EBAY SELLING
$9.99

Money Making Car Care Amazon-Ebay-Adsense Site 4 Sale Money Making Car Care Amazon-Ebay-Adsense Site 4 Sale
$145.00

eBay PowerSeller Success How-To for making Money ebook eBay PowerSeller Success How-To for making Money ebook
$0.20

~ Secrets for Making $150 Cash Money a Day eBay ebook ~ ~ Secrets for Making $150 Cash Money a Day eBay ebook ~
$1.50

Svetils's Guide to making money on Ebay + calculator Svetils's Guide to making money on Ebay + calculator
$39.95

Svetils's Guide to making money on Ebay + calculator Svetils's Guide to making money on Ebay + calculator
$39.95

Internet eBay Auction Secrets 2 DVD MONEY MAKING SET Internet eBay Auction Secrets 2 DVD MONEY MAKING SET
$19.95

Mining Gold From eBay - MONEY MAKING Mining Gold From eBay - MONEY MAKING
$2.00

ADD eBay MULTIPLE PICS FOR FREE - MONEY MAKING ADD eBay MULTIPLE PICS FOR FREE - MONEY MAKING
$2.00

The Unofficial Guide to Making Money on eBay (Unofficia The Unofficial Guide to Making Money on eBay (Unofficia
$9.95

~ Secrets for Making $150 Cash Money a Day eBay ebook ~ ~ Secrets for Making $150 Cash Money a Day eBay ebook ~
$1.50

How-To Guide 4 Making $150 Cash Money a Day eBay ebook! How-To Guide 4 Making $150 Cash Money a Day eBay ebook!
$1.75

Making Money on Ebay for Dummies (Pocket Edition - 200 Making Money on Ebay for Dummies (Pocket Edition - 200
$13.31

SECRETS TO MAKING MONEY WITH EBAY SECRETS TO MAKING MONEY WITH EBAY
$1.99

The Unofficial Guide to Making Money on eBay The Unofficial Guide to Making Money on eBay
$1.50

Making Money on Ebay for Dummies  Pocket Edition - 2009 Making Money on Ebay for Dummies Pocket Edition - 2009
$5.99

How-To Guide 4 Making $150 Cash Money a Day eBay ebook! How-To Guide 4 Making $150 Cash Money a Day eBay ebook!
$1.75

HOW TO MAKE MAKING MONEY ON EBAY SELLING HOW TO MAKE MAKING MONEY ON EBAY SELLING
$9.99

HOW TO MAKE MAKING MONEY ON EBAY SELLING HOW TO MAKE MAKING MONEY ON EBAY SELLING
$9.99

EBAY SALE-MONEY MAKING GUIDE BOOK+DVD-START A FOOD BIZ! EBAY SALE-MONEY MAKING GUIDE BOOK+DVD-START A FOOD BIZ!
$39.59

The Australian Guide To Making Money on Ebay EBook 2010 The Australian Guide To Making Money on Ebay EBook 2010
$4.57

MAKE $123K ON EBAY MONTHLY - UNLIMITED MONEY MAKING - MAKE $123K ON EBAY MONTHLY - UNLIMITED MONEY MAKING -
$9.95

MAKE $123K ON EBAY MONTHLY - UNLIMITED MONEY MAKING - MAKE $123K ON EBAY MONTHLY - UNLIMITED MONEY MAKING -
$9.95

The Unofficial Guide to Making Money on eBay The Unofficial Guide to Making Money on eBay
$8.30

The Unofficial Guide to Making Money on Ebay(2006) The Unofficial Guide to Making Money on Ebay(2006)
$9.49

MAKE MONEY MAKING RICH !! HOME BUSINESS EBAY HOW TO ** MAKE MONEY MAKING RICH !! HOME BUSINESS EBAY HOW TO **
$37.00

MONEY MAKING MADNESS eBay  Book Signed by LYNN DRALLE MONEY MAKING MADNESS eBay Book Signed by LYNN DRALLE
$7.99

Money Making Women Apparel Amazon-Ebay-Adsense Site Money Making Women Apparel Amazon-Ebay-Adsense Site
$150.86

Money Making Pet Supply Amazon-Ebay-Adsense Site 4 Sale Money Making Pet Supply Amazon-Ebay-Adsense Site 4 Sale
$150.86

Money Making Plant & Planting Amazon-Ebay-Adsense Site Money Making Plant & Planting Amazon-Ebay-Adsense Site
$150.86

A SAHM's Guide to Making Extra Money on Ebay HOW TO A SAHM's Guide to Making Extra Money on Ebay HOW TO
$5.00

SECRETS TO MAKING MONEY WITH EBAY SECRETS TO MAKING MONEY WITH EBAY
$1.99

SECRETS TO MAKING MONEY WITH EBAY SECRETS TO MAKING MONEY WITH EBAY
$1.99

INTERNET EBAY AUCTION SECRETS 2 DVD MONEY MAKING SET INTERNET EBAY AUCTION SECRETS 2 DVD MONEY MAKING SET
$19.95

The Unofficial Guide to Making Money on eBay NEW The Unofficial Guide to Making Money on eBay NEW
$21.93

Amazon

Make Money on Ebay with Out Selling Make Money on Ebay with Out Selling
$9.99

This One Idea Can Change Your Whole Future... I don't sell a single THING! My Ebay fees are just virtually non-existent whenever I use this method. I have almost NO competition - most people don't see the hidden money just waiting for them on Ebay, or if they do they keep very quiet about it. In fact most people probably know nothing about this system - this is a different way of working...
How to Make Money with YouTube: Earn Cash, Market Yourself, Reach Your Customers, and Grow Your Business on the World's Most Popular Video-Sharing Site (How to Make . . .) How to Make Money with YouTube: Earn Cash, Market Yourself, Reach Your Customers, and Grow Your Business on the World's Most Popular Video-Sharing Site (How to Make . . .)
$12.17

“How Can I Profit from YouTube®?” Ever since its creation in 2005 the video-sharing phenomenon has been newsworthy not only for videos: users were making media appearances about how they parlayed their hobbies into six-figure incomes, but they’ve been tight-lipped when it comes to their secrets. Luckily, e-commerce experts Brad and Debra Schepp have written this complete g...
How to Make Money Online with eBay, Yahoo!, and Google How to Make Money Online with eBay, Yahoo!, and Google
$8.00

Groundbreaking strategies for reaching millions of customers online and boosting traffic, sales, and profits This full-color, seminar-in-a-book presents a proven plan for maximizing your online profits by leveraging the top three services: eBay, Yahoo! and Google. You’ll learn to: expand an existing eBay business to reach millions of targeted buyers; Open a Yahoo! ...
Ebay Crusher Ebay Crusher
$8.99

Why Ebay Crusher?Really? No selling?The ebay crusher method shows you step by step how to crush eBay competitions in a short time. This guide will teach you how to earn money on eBay, help you build wealth with eBay fast....

Overstock

The Ebay Business Handbook (Paperback) The Ebay Business Handbook (Paperback)
$18.69

Description not available.
Ebay?s Secrets Revealed Ebay?s Secrets Revealed
$22.23

For those who already operate on eBay, Blacharski, a writer and online entrepreneur, explains how to promote an eBay store and make more money from online auctions. Topics covered include email campaigns, inventory, payments, accounting and taxes, prev...
How to Sell Anything on Ebay ... and Make a Fortune How to Sell Anything on Ebay ... and Make a Fortune
$16.51

The ultimate guide to making a killing on eBay, now bigger and better than everThe bestselling guide that helped establish author Dennis Prince as the world`s number one authority on eBay is completely updated and revised to reflec...
How To Sell Antiques And Collectibles On Ebay . . . And Make A Fortune! How To Sell Antiques And Collectibles On Ebay . . . And Make A Fortune!
$11.41

Description not available.
Amazon Top Seller Secrets (Paperback) Amazon Top Seller Secrets (Paperback)
$16.31

If you`re running an online business, you may have noticed that there is a new phenomenon hitting the world of the Internet marketplace. PowerSellers who have made a fortune on eBay are moving their merchandise over to Amazon in droves. After all, the ...

Social Media Marketing Best Practices from Best

May 28th, 2010 No comments

Adam Singer, Paul Isakson, Brad Smith @ IMS Minneapolis

Social Media  advice is cheap and for the most part, you get what you pay for.  Best practices social media marketing based on experience, well, that’s another thing entirely.

The Social Media Best Practices session at IMS Minneapolis earlier this week gave attendees access to first hand insights from the likes of: Brad Smith from Best Buy, Adam Singer from TopRank Online Marketing, Paul Isakson from Thinkers & Makers (formerly of Space150) and Bryan Person, founder of Social Media Breakfast.

Brad Smith, Director, Interactive Marketing & Emerging Media from Best Buy opened things up talking about a “new marketing reality”. Customers are out there, but they’re bombarded with messages. Customers are not listening to us (marketers & advertisers) anymore. Social media is all about communicating.  Customers are listening to each other instead and tuning out marketing messages.

Each company’s journey in social media is different. If your social media consultant starts the meeting with suggestions about starting a Twitter account, leave the room. Treat social media like any other major undertaking with planning, understanding the marketplace, goals and objectives.

Tenents that support Best Buy Social Media Marketing:

  • Deliver
  • Blow you away
  • Never leave you hanging
  • Make a difference
  • Make sure you know all we know

Brad makes the distinction of social media tools and the behaviors we seek to engage and influence. “I don’t use facebook, I participate. It’s a two way thing.  You’re not half way into social media. When you’re in you’re in.”

Best Buy’s Social Media Marketing Mission:

To connect customers and employees with the Best Buy brand and each other through the right tools platforms and collaboration delivered when, where and how they want.

The focus is on the customer, not the company. “It’s not about what Best Buy wants customers to do, it’s about giving people the tools to connect with each other and employees whenever and however they want.”

Best Buy Social Media Guidelines:

  • (Essentially don’t be stupid)
  • Listen
  • Be findable, think distributed
  • It’s about people
  • Enable creation
  • Make it social
  • Listen some more
  • Be authentic
  • Be transparent
  • Keep it simple
  • Make a commitment

Best Buy and Twitter – @Twelpforce
The thing that makes it work is that they didn’t start with a “Twitter strategy”. It was born of a customer need. Best Buy simply leveraged an asset they knew they had with a customer need. Customers needed advice and there are 150,000 Best Buy employees world wide that are already being helpful. Twitter proved to be an effective platform for that. 2,500 employees are signed up to work as part of @Twelpforce.

Best Buy is also active with Community ForumBest Buy IdeaX, a Facebook Fan page and other channels.

When Best Buy started their social journey with Facebook, Brad says they were overzealous and promoted commercial messages to the community. The community responded, “not to do that”. Customers want access to the brand, advice, tips exclusive access that others don’t get.

Best Buy Learnings From Their Social Media Experience:

  • Listen first, talk second
  • Its OK to fail
  • The same social mores apply online as offline
  • Customers don’t care about channels
  • We have to be ready ro respond
  • Customers will tell us and everyone else where our organization is broken. And expect a fix
  • People are forgiving

Overall Best Buy is treating their social media experience as a journey and have learned the importance of listening instead of pushing.  It’s an impressive example, not only of a very large brand finding value in a humble and transparent, customer focused social media effort, but one of true Minnesota ingenuity when it comes to new technology and marketplace innovation.

I did miss some of the bulleted items above because the presentation went by very quickly. If access to the PowerPoint presentations is made available, I’ll link to it from this post.

I’ll be adding observations on the presentations from Adam Singer and Paul Isakson separately.


© Online Marketing Blog, 2010. |
Social Media Marketing Best Practices from Best Buy |
One comment | http://www.toprankblog.com

Categories: Automated Entries Tags:

Online Marketing Summit Minneapolis 2010

May 27th, 2010 No comments

In conjunction with ClickZ, OMS has launched its 2010 23-City Tour from Seattle to New York and is coming to Minneapolis June 25th.  OMS had an event in the Twin Cities last year at about the same time and provided a great mix of education and networking opportunity for internet marketers of all types.

Best practices in Social Media, Search, Email, Analytics, Demand Generation and Website Strategy are planned for each OMS event. Aaron Kahlow and the OMS team have assembled a great group of thought-leaders, authors, world-class brand marketers and leading online practitioners from companies like: Kodak, REI, DuPont, Wharton, Google AdWords and of course, TopRank Online Marketing, to share their experiences and successes from the front lines of internet marketing.

At last year’s OMS Minneapolis event, I presented on “Making a Case for Social Media Marketing“. This year  I will be presenting on what I believe to be the most important trend that combines the best of SEO, Social Media and Online PR:  Content Marketing Optimization.

Here are the details of that session:

Content Marketing Optimization: Online marketing is increasingly competitive and brand marketers world-wide are seeking real advantages that will improve the efficiency and impact of their Social Media and SEO efforts. This session provides unique insight into content based optimization strategies and processes as well as tactics for the sourcing, creation and promotion of optimized content on the social web.

It’s not that often that the Twin Cities gets outside marketing conferences and OMS has really perfected their ability to offer a mix of national and local expertise.  Each OMS event includes:

  • A Social Media Training Workshop and Breakfast offered by the Online Marketing Institute in association with Wharton Interactive Media Initiative
  • Networking opportunities with industry experts and hundreds of peers in sales-free environment
  • Panels and sessions covering basics to advanced tactics

You can get more information about OMS Minneapolis from their site and you can also drop a comment below. I am happy to answer any questions.

Content MarketingIncidentally, I will be giving away our new 50+ page guide to Content Marketing Optimization at the event, so be sure you register and plan to attend.  The guide offers several case studies, trends, insights and of course:

I. Content Marketing Optimization Goals
II. Search and Social Media Keyword Research
III. Buyer Personas & Buying Cycle
IV. Understand the Search Engine Results Page (SERP) Landscape
V. Inventory and Assess Current Digital Assets
VI. Define Editorial Guide For New Content
VII. Map Keywords to Current Assets, Content and Future Editorial
VIII. Operationalize Content Optimization with Current Processes
IX. Develop & Optimize Off-Page Digital Assets
X. Develop Channels of Distribution for Digital Media Promotion
XI. Implement search marketing, Web Analytics & Social Media Monitoring Tools

This extremely detailed guide will only be offered to attendees of OMS Minneapolis weeks before it’s available to TopRank Marketing Newsletter subscribers.


© Online Marketing Blog, 2010. |
Online Marketing Summit Minneapolis 2010 |
No comment | http://www.toprankblog.com

Categories: Automated Entries Tags:

Website Affiliate Marketing Online In 3 Steps

May 26th, 2010 No comments

In this economic climate many people are looking at ways that they can supplement thier income and one way is affiliate marketing on the internet, not easy but if you do your research you can soon be on your way to making a profit, read on to find if this option will suit you.

Categories: Automated Entries Tags:

Best Practices In SEO And Marketing: IMS MN 2010

May 26th, 2010 No comments

At the recent Minneapolis Integrated Marketing Summit, TopRank Online Marketing CEO Lee Odden moderated an exciting panel of a diverse group of SEO professionals:

  • Alex Bennert – Chief Search Strategist at The Wall Street Journal
  • Brian Kleisner – Search Engine Marketing Manager for FindLaw
  • Bill Leake – CEO of Apogee Results

The focus of the panel was on search engine optimization best practices, and panelists discussed everything from leveraging web analytics for decision making to how to scale efforts and many topics in between.  Following is a summary of each presenter’s top points:

Alex Bennert – Chief Search Strategist at The Wall Street Journal

Alex spoke on the important of using data to make decisions, including leveraging sources such as Google webmaster tools.  The information provided in webmaster tools has grown significantly since they have implemented it.

Her favorite addition is the “breaking data” feature, which tells you all of your top keywords driving traffic to the site.  You can use this to see terms that gain a high volume of impressions but a low volume of clicks.  From this, you’ll know that the page can be optimized better to potentially get more clicks.

And it doesn’t even have to be on page or changing keywords.  Sometimes, just testing changes in meta description can help gain additional clicks.  It’s something we have control over and can see near immediate results for changes.  Leverage meta descriptions for clicks, and to help promote your brand and spread key messages.

Have you given access of webmaster tools to members of your team?  You should consider this so they can act on data.

Additionally, branded searches and navigational queries are extremely valuable for a brand and should not be discounted.  At the WSJ, hundreds of thousands see our search result monthly from brand terms.

Alex then proceeded to speak on sitemaps.  She noted, if you have a large enterprise level site with frequent information that’s added/deleted, a sitemap is vital.  That’s because you don’t have to wait for search engines to re-crawl your site, you’re providing it to them in a format they’ll immediately get.  At the Wall Street Journal, we organize our sitemaps into specific types of content – i.e. stock queries, articles, etc.  Then we can see immediately when problems crop up.

In terms of getting “old school” reporters to create additional content, like to help them see the value of SEO by showing examples of their own content.  For example, I find a headline they wrote and show them how not at all findable in search, whereas others are easily findable.  By showing examples, Alex is able to be persuasive and help reporters create SEO friendly content.

Brian Kleisner – Search Engine Marketing Manager for FindLaw

Brian spoke on the balance between search, and how search interacts with usability.

“Arriving from search is to enter the unknown:”

1.  The searcher’s expectation for what they think they’ll find must be met.

2.  Information must be presented to enable a decision or make choices.

3.  The next steps must be clear.

4. The entire experience must feel safe, secure, authentic and believable.

Usability and search both share common concerns:

  • Findable
  • Credibility
  • Usable/useful
  • Valuable/desirable
  • Offering choice

Addressing this, Brian went on to cite several SEO tips:

SEO Tip #1:  Use a keyword oriented tagline with the “Who” and “What answered.

SEO Tip #2:  Use content to answer the questions naturally making sure to include the appropriate keyword.  For example:

  • Where is your company located?
  • When is the next release for “keyword”?
  • Why are you an expert on “keyword”?

Asking these questions helps generate fresh content, better defines anchor text, provides new ideas for navigation text link labels and increases understandability for humans, search and those using assistive technology to interact with your website.

SEO Tip #3:  Consider local SEO

Local search has special rules for SEO:

  • Claim your listings on the search engines and beyond (Yelp, CitySearch, etc.)
  • Be consistent, use the same address and phone number across the web.
  • Monitor and manage you and your competitor’s reputation.

Bill Leake – CEO of Apogee Results

Bill spoke about integration opportunities between Search and other marketing tactics.

He started by speaking at a high level, and that “more arrows are generally good.”  Marketing works best when it works together.  As we talk about ways to improve search, remember it is just another piece of marketing.

Start by defining what you really want from your marketing efforts and create a key objective.

Bill then shared integrated tactics that will improve ROI of search.

1.  Integrate paid media and “earned media” for better results.

2.  Consider event and name driven paid and natural search.

  • Leverage a national events and names for dirt cheap search traffic.

3.  House list/direct mail tie-ins:  integrate online marketing with more traditional focused direct marketing (think online mail-merge).

4.  Create a more integrated search – use PPC traffic with your web analytics and your lead forms for list building and enhances lead generation.  Leverage services such as

  • DemandBase
  • Jigsaw
  • Other list building via web traffic

Most B2B terms are not looked at “for fun” they are looked at due to pain points on the part of the searcher.

5.  Improve spending by using down-funnel data.

One client was spending 110K per month with well understood and optimized CPL metrics.  They started doing PPC optimization using human scrubbed lead data (not web forms).  Results:  43% shift in PPC spend allocation, 31% software sales uplift.

6.  Choose keywords on conversion metrics, not on search/reach/volume metrics.  If you have paid search data, use that to determine what the money keywords are.


© Online Marketing Blog, 2010. |
Best Practices In SEO And Marketing: IMS MN 2010 |
No comment | http://www.toprankblog.com

Categories: Automated Entries Tags:

Enterprise SEO Interview with Scott Skurnick of

May 25th, 2010 No comments


Spotlight on Search Interview with Scott Skurnick of Edmunds.com

Scott SkurnickFor every SEO guru speaking at a conference, there are 10 or 20 more SEO experts you might not have heard of, making things happen in amazing ways. Scott Skurnick has worked in the search marketing industry as long as anyone I know on the conference speaking circuit and has a tremendous amount of experience and expertise to share.

In this interview, Scott shares his journey to become Executive Director of Search Engine Optimization and User Insights at Edmunds.com, his take on social media and SEO, scalability of SEO, tips on audits, best practices, tools and more.

You’re a long time consumer products search marketer, having worked at companies like Circuit City, OfficeMax and currently with Edmunds.com. What made you decide to work in the search marketing industry and what do you like best about it?

Actually I got my start with search marketing in Mexico City when I was working in the Tequila industry. I had worked for Jose Cuervo for a number of years and then went to work for their main competitor at the time which was Tequila Sauza. When I launched the first brand websites back in 1995 I became obsessed with Tequila Sauza being the number one result in Yahoo and Alta Vista for the query “tequila”. Of course that wasn’t a very hard task because there weren’t a lot of tequila related sites but the whole concept of search engines intrigued me.

The thing that I like the most about our industry is the fact that it is ever-changing and there are no “absolute” answers. The end goal is the same for everyone in SEO in that we want to generate both traffic and some kind of conversion. What differs is how we reach that goal. Everyone’s SEO recipe is a little different and who’s to say that their approach is any better than someone else’s. What’s not to like about this?

What job skills and career advice can you offer to Search Marketers that want to work in-house vs working at an agency? Do you think it’s reasonable for companies to expect SEMs to be advanced at both SEO & PPC? And Social?

There are a couple of necessary skills that most people don’t speak of. I won’t get into the debate of whether or not we should be able to write code because I think it depends on the situation. The list of skills and qualities I feel are necessary for a successful in-house SEO are:

  • Must be highly analytical
  • Understand how the different parts of an organization work
  • Have Great negotiating skills
  • Be likeable and never bite the hand that feeds you (developers and writers)
  • Be curious and never think you know everything
  • Be humble. You have to be able to admit your mistakes, we all make them especially working in SEO
  • Most importantly, you have to have thick skin. You will always have your doubters and people who want to see you fail because they don’t believe in SEO.

While I feel it is vital that an in-house SEO understand both Paid Search and Social, depending on the size of the company it may not be realistic for one person to manage all 3 areas. All 3 are highly specialized and changing very quickly. More importantly, you can easily ruin a company by committing errors in any of these 3 and errors usually occur when there is a lack of understanding or knowledge. At my current company we have separate teams handling PPC, SEO and Social and this seems to work the best. Of course we all interact and share information but at the end of the day we have an expert for each channel.

Speaking of social, what are some of the ways you’ve made SEO content more social at Edmunds.com? What are some of the immediate opportunities within the social web to advance SEO goals?

When we talk about Social Media at Edmunds, we are really talking about Forums, Facebook, Twitter and YouTube. Edmunds has been running an online automotive community (forums) since 1996 which is, for the most part, based on SEO best practices. As far as Facebook and Twitter are concerned, our editorial and PR teams are directly involved. While we do engage in some auto-tweets, the majority of what we put out there has an original voice to it. We also actively engage with people who are discussing our brand or the automotive market in general.

The biggest Social Media opportunity for us is brand promotion and audience engagement. Our content travels very well. Not only do we review almost every vehicle imaginable, but we also have a data department that is responsible for coming up with industry sales forecasts and results. When we issue a sales forecast or summary, this information is immediately picked up and re-tweeted or shared via Facebook.

Many agency marketers say quality SEO cannot scale because working with many different types of web sites and companies is unpredictable. Do you think that’s true for in-house SEO?

I couldn’t disagree more. Since 1995 I’ve worked as an in-house online marketer with tequila, office supplies, consumer electronics and automobiles. I view myself as product agnostic. For me it is all about the marketing channel. Of course every industry and website presents a different set of challenges but I’ve always followed the same SEO blueprint. The SEO blueprint changes due to the elastic nature of our industry but I’m going to apply pretty much the same strategy regardless of the product I’m trying to promote. Some sites may require more effort when it comes to link building while others may need better editorial content but at the end of the day the basic SEO infrastructure is very similar.

What are some of the common obstacles with large retailer web sites when it comes to SEO? What makes a successful large site SEO program so successful?

Enemy #1 is the CMS. Most large retail sites use shiny and expensive out of the box systems which are great for everything but SEO. From dynamic parameters in url strings (no not just 1 or 2) to duplicate title and description tags across hundreds or thousands of pages, most CMS’s just don’t know how to handle SEO. Add in code bloat and duplicate pages across multiple categories and there is enough to keep any SEO busy for years. The other big issue is unique content. Too many large retail sites don’t put in the effort to write unique and appealing product descriptions so their Sony Plasma TV description is the same as hundreds of others across the web.

As far as what makes a large site SEO program a success, this is very cliché but I dare any in-house SEO to disagree. It comes down to education and compromise. Until everyone in the organization has a very basic understanding of SEO, you will have a hard time getting a SEO project to succeed. The developers need to understand why you are asking them to change the code and the writers need to understand why you are asking them to change their titles. You never ever want to mandate change because this will only make you enemies. You also have to understand that sometimes SEO has to take a backseat to a more important goal. There are few instances where SEO and usability or SEO and development conflict with each other but when they do, you need to choose what’s best for the company. Never ever let your ego get in the way.

Let’s say a friend shows you his new retail product web site and asks you to do a SEO audit. What are 4-5 things you would look for?

Any audit starts with a simple question; are you willing to go under the hood and make potentially large scale changes…If the answer is yes then:

  1. Need to understand the CMS / Shopping Cart solution and see if it’s flexible.
  2. I’m checking urls, most retail web sites use too many dynamic parameters
  3. I’m making sure a product only lives in one department / category. If it doesn’t I’m using the canonical tag (worst case scenario) or convincing him to change his categorization.
  4. Making sure his product descriptions are unique and in-depth. Too many ecommerce sites use canned descriptions.
  5. Making sure he is letting his customers review the products. You can say what you want about the now defunct Circuit City on the store side, but the web site had by far the most comprehensive customer product reviews on the web and these generated considerable SE traffic.

What are your favorite web based SEO and social media marketing tools?

For SEO:  Bruce Clay Toolset, SEOmoz Pro Tools, Xenu, Majestic SEO, Ranking Manager and Wordtracker. For Social Media: Co-tweet, Klout and wefollow. I also set up a really nice reputation management dashboard based on a post from aimClear a while back.

What role does social media optimization play in an overall SEO program? Do you think it’s worth optimizing content for search within social media sites like Facebook or MySpace?

Social media is important in that we want to let people consume our content wherever they feel comfortable. We try and optimize the content for the channel but not necessarily for search engines. We don’t create special content hoping to create a temporary lift from social media and we definitely don’t promote all our content via social channels. The worst thing a brand can do is abuse Twitter or Facebook. Our users can smell a “hyped” story from a mile away.

Staying on top of best practices in general and specifically for what’s most important to the web sites you’re working on can be a challenge. What do you do to stay current? What blogs do you read? Do you have favorite conferences, books, forums or newsletters?

I easily spend the first hour of every morning going over my analytics and reading up on the latest SEO news. As far as the sites I visit, they include: Search Engine Land, Michael Gray’s Blog, WebmasterWorld, WebProNews, MediaPost, paidContent.org and the IAB. I also love 1938media.com, it keeps me grounded. I don’t really go to a lot of conferences but I have been attending PubCon since 2005 and SMX Advanced since it started. PubCon is great because there is something for everyone and SMX Advanced is one of the few conferences where experienced SEO’s can learn something. The one conference I would love to attend but haven’t been able to yet is the Search & Social Spring Summit.

Thank you Scott!

Scott has been working in online marketing since 1995 in industries ranging from Tequila to Automobiles. He’s an avid Packers and Soccer fan and live in Redondo Beach, CA with his wife and two girls. You can find him on TwitterLinkedIn and working hard on SEO at Edmunds.

Spotlight on Search is an interview series that shines a light on search marketing professionals to learn more about the nature of their work, differences in SEO amongst categories of web sites and of course, SEO tips, tactics and useful tools. We do not take PR firm pitch suggestions or solicitations for these interviews. They are by request from TopRank Online Marketing Blog editorial staff only.


© Online Marketing Blog, 2010. |
Enterprise SEO Interview with Scott Skurnick of Edmunds.com |
No comment | http://www.toprankblog.com

Categories: Automated Entries Tags:

Free Pass: Integrated Marketing Summit

May 24th, 2010 No comments

Congratulations to Bonnie Harris on winning the free pass to IMS MSP!

Tomorrow the Integrated Marketing Summit in Minneapolis kicks off with a mix of educational sessions and learning opportunities that run the gamut of online marketing topics. The event includes a keynote from Chad Mitchell of Forrester Research as well as sessions on multi-channel marketing, social media, social CRM, search marketing and mobile.

I will be moderating a search marketing Best Practices panel at 2:45pm with Bill Leake of Apogee Results, Alex Bennert of The Wall Street Journal and Brian Kleisner from FindLaw.  Adam Singer of TopRank Online Marketing @toprank will be presenting on a social media panel at 4pm with Bryan Person, founder of Social Media Breakfast, Brad Smith, Director of Interactive Marketing and Emerging Media for Best Buy, and Paul Isakson, Co Founder of Thinkers and Makers.

We’re able to give one free pass to this event

Event Details:

Integrated Marketing Summit
Hilton Minneapolis (map)
5/25/10 from 8am-5pm.

I know it’s short notice, but if you can break away from the office for a day, be sure you leave a comment below with your Twitter handle or some other way to contact you ASAP. Creative comments are given preference. Deadline is 2pm today 5/24/10. If your comment is picked, you will be notified by 3:30pm today (or earlier).

The full agenda for the IMS event can be found here.


© Online Marketing Blog, 2010. |
Free Pass: Integrated Marketing Summit Minneapolis |
5 comments | http://www.toprankblog.com

Categories: Automated Entries Tags:

BIGLIST SEO Blog Reviews 052410

May 24th, 2010 No comments

BIGLIST SEO Blogs

It’s time for a new update to the BIGLIST review of SEO blogs. I started with a list of 15 new blogs in a queue for this update and four made the cut. Once a new blog hits our radar, we watch it for a few weeks before reviewing. Broken links, neglecting to post (far too many one trick pony SEO blogs out there) or design that makes content difficult to consume are all reasons not to be included. This update includes a mix of individual and agency blogs, all primarily focused on SEO.

Stay on Search - This update of the BIGLIST gives design recognition to Mark Thompson for his Stay on Search Blog. Besides offering a consistent post format with images and template, Mark blogs a lot of how-to and tips posts along with a much better than average effort at being truly useful. Great design plus great content = a blog worth subscribing to.

Maile Ohye: Love & Technology – A smart sense of humor and informal insights into various Google and webmaster topics makes this personal blog by Google employee Maile Ohye worth a BIGLIST inclusion.

AgentSEO Blog – Written by Jacob Stoops, this web site/blog provides personal entries on SEO with a side of SEO and plenty of SEO after that. Actually, the AgentSEO blog contains a very smart structure of content including video, useful resources, smooth display of Twitter, RSS options and Facebook plus an obvious but not offensive call to action. The bottom navigation is very different than most blogs and so far, that seems like a good thing.

Epiphany Digital Marketing Blog – This UK agency offers a mix of internet marketing posts from agency staffers on search, social and industry topics.  Many of the posts go into detail about insights, testing and general observations from solving digital marketing problems.

Did your SEO or SEM blog make the cut? Share the good news with your readers using the badge and link from the badges page.


© Online Marketing Blog, 2010. |
BIGLIST SEO Blog Reviews 052410 |
3 comments | http://www.toprankblog.com

Categories: Automated Entries Tags:

Powered by Yahoo! Answers