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Archive for April, 2009

What’s new with social media with Chris Bennett @ SMX West 2009 third of three parts

Friday, April 24th, 2009

Please enjoy these notes from the SMX West session “What’s new with social media” with Chris Bennett.
Note: Not intended as final copy.

Chris Bennett of 97thFloor.com

Some sites to keep an eye on:

  • Tip’d
  • Kirtsy
  • Sphinn
  • Digg: lots more traction lately

Focus on niche sites related to your site

Links, branding, promotion = have a goal before you get into social media because your goal will dictate where to go

Start with research
By url:  Digg, pick website and search to see how comes up
Keyword: reddit, see what’s showing up by that keyword
Sort by top or historically, recently rated

See what’s working, what’s working in your industry

Niche sites: top 10 social networking sites for women (kirtsy)

Send you authoritative links

Digg isn’t the only option

Good content will get you some visitors. Watch up & coming feature!! The “Linkerati” is

Infographics: work really well

Creating really good content can do a lot and can make up for junky site

—> Social Media for Firefox

  • Tool to build strong sm accounts
  • Use to track and find content
  • Free!


Build a good account on Stumble and wait for ppl to pick it up

Twitter
Great launch pad, good post will spread it
Have to have really good content, ask ppl to retweet, comment

Create great content, which can generate thousands of hits

If you’re working in an industry that isn’t there yet, get ahead of everyone

Twitter.com/chrisbennett

Best stuff in social media is current events, talk about something that’s going on, do a little research about it

“15 most expensive divorces”
“Al Gore vs the Hummer”
sell screws “100 ways to screw someone”

use social media to boost organic search, builds links for keywords

Linkerati will get you exposure

People misunderstand the benefits: it’s not about the direct traffic from Digg

It’s just a viability platform: get yourself in front of people who will want to link to you

Social media is a tool for SEO

Learn and understand, participate in a way that creates value

Twitter: people will follow you when follow them

Easytweets: suggests who you should follow based on what you’re interested in
Keywords, automatic tweets

MrTweet.net: follow it and it will direct message to you who you should be following

Bbgeeks.com: search twitter for ppl with blackberry problems, offer free support

Get ppl to do your link-building for you

Be helpful; social media is an extension of customer service

Delicious: whole networking section, have groups and participate to get content much more visible

Roboforms: helps get you registered

After get traction, email the person who linked to you and thank them, get repeated links, watch links, reach out to them, thank them & connect

Never automate submission, titletag most important

What’s new with social media with Gab Goldenberg @ SMX West 2009 second of three parts

Thursday, April 23rd, 2009

The following is intended to be notes and is not intended as final copy. Comments and further conversation are welcome!

What’s new with social media with Gab Goldenberg @ SMX West 2009

Gab Goldenberg

http://seoroi.com/

Distribution for writers: once just start, how to build a following

Seth Godin
Wrote for Fast Company for 5 years
Malcolm Gladwell
Wrote and still does for New Yorker
Robert Scoble
Filmed for Microsoft

Producing guest content (blogs, articles) for other people: builds on itself with relationships, snow balls

Portals 2.0
Outsourcing content, can get distribution through them RSS readers
Some feeds are recommended, some by default,
GET ON to These lists

Start Pages
Personalized portal pages, set up account, pick what content you want to see
They also have default options

Browser Toolbars
SEO Book toolbar: bring high-quality traffic

Blog aggregators
Targeted, permission marketing

Advertising content Dos & Don’ts

Read: Dan Zarella blog: DanZarella.com

Video banners: if content is video, ad with video

Text message opt-in lists, get to the text savvy, young

Quantcast linerati demographics
Can target facebook with age, gender, etc

RSS feed advertising

Community ads: YouTube can advertise self, can buy way to the top

Whitepaper or post sponsorship B2B audience

WordPress plugin admin panel links (internal link building, add keyword to pages you choose. 97% of top thousand keywords link Wikipedia)

What’s new with social media with Brent Csutoras @ SMX West 2009, first of three parts

Wednesday, April 22nd, 2009

The following are notes from an SMX 2009 session. Notes are not intended as final copy.
Enjoy and please feel free to comment!

What’s new with social media
www.brentcsutoras.com

What’s changed and how to start marketing in them

Reddit

  • When logged in, you select which groups you want to be in, front page determines your dashboard
  • Auto show you top 10 most popular Reddits at any given time
  • Track which are the top 10 on the front page and get into those categories
  • Cool feature: you can control your subdomain
  • Gadgets: pop subreddit, you can create your own and
  • Market your own reddit, will grow virally


Digg

  • Not much has changed or will change for a while
  • Recommend content, based on history, what you’ve voted on, friends voted on
  • Have to be profitable due to funding this year

With all social sites right now, harder for people to get by with weak tactics, spamming and not knowing what you’re doing. They will ban domains and users, not something to throw at an intern.

Can’t get yourself killed in the space even before it get to full potential

StumbleUpon

  • Whole new system based on content with categories, recommended stories, have a popup toolbar
  • Gives content related upon other
  • Pay attention more to tags and how to get noticed
  • Look for Beta group and can see new stuff
  • Can be great jump-off to get into digg and reddit


StumbleUpon partner program: can’t use it unless corporate: lots of traffic exposure
May eventually open up to everyone

Buzz

Will feature third-party sites, only featuring high-level sites right now

Wykop
Polish social media site: lead to referrals on digg
If have language abilities, look to those foreign social media site to build traffic

How to Use Social Media to Attract More Customers HubSpot webinar

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009

The following is intended to be notes, not final copy. Comments are welcome; please enjoy!

Special guest presenter: Brent Leary, co-founder and Partner of CRM Essentials and recognized expert in the field of social CRM (Customer Relationship Management).

http://www.hubspot.com/marketing-webinars/social-media-crm/

Spending more time on facebook and twitter than email

93% of Americans say companies should have a ocila media presencse

56% say they feel more connected to and better served by companies that interact with them in social media environment

Social CRM, it isn’t just a software program to utilize

Automation

  • creating content is crucial
  • then make it easy for others to distribute content via Twitter, Digg, etc.
  • tubemogul: create video and help distribute and track your viewership


Analysis

  • Conversation management
  • Have to respond quickly and accurately to what’s going on CoTweet : have more than 1 person on twitter, see aggregate of tweets about company, can then assign               to employees to follow-up
  • Favotter: track who’s tweeting, recommending (free)
  • Retweet: Tracks who’s spreading the good word (free)
  • Twittalyzer: figure out what the tweeter is all about (free)
  • Salesforce can Tweet from within
  • Radiant 6 social media monitoring: dashboard (fee), help build w right kind of ppl
  • Slideshar.net: drives traffic


Now have to create interesting content

How do you prove SM?
Have to look at it more creatively
Look at hits, create landing pages

Local businesses: need to create searchable content, make it so they can find regardless of where they are

It’s all about what the searchers are looking for

Web 2.0 tools mixed with Marketing 101 speak will get you shut out, quickly

Listen and make sense to others, just a different way of thinking than marketing

Boston Marketing Learning Group: The Power of Email Marketing Presented by Constant Contact

Monday, April 13th, 2009

The following notes are highlight’s from Boston Marketing Learning Group’s “The Power of Email Marketing Presented by Constant Contact” from 4/9/09 with speaker Zach Barron. Comments welcome!

DMA survey: Email marketing got best ROI $57  Second-best ROI was SEO @ $29

Have to have strategy = goals, measurement, tweaking

These products allow tools to adjust strategy

Easier than print: Ask for email address, look like a larger organization

Same response direct mail costs 20x more than email marketing

Email only works when it’s done right. People only open email from people they know and trust

Offer options for types of communication and how often want to receive
    What’s going to be inside
    How often will see it

Limitations to email services (yahoo, gmail, etc)

  •     Limit # of emails sent at 1 time
  •     No formatting control
  •     List break up more susceptible to filters
  •     No cohesive branding
  •     no tracking and results reporting


Email svs providers

  •     Provide easy to use templates
  •     Reinforce brand ID
  •     Email addressed to recipient only
  •     Manage lists – adding new subscribers etc


Make a connection 
nurture connections to form a relationship → invest in relationship

Write down how you come into contact with customers, write down a list of ways to get ppls’ email
   
CC (Constant Contact) will help build in email signup into website

How many entry points on your website → have signup on multiple locations
    Have 3 services, Google brings searchers to 1 of 3 diff landing pages

Ask for permission to add to email campaign when exchanging biz cards

Average, it takes 7 touches for a sale to happen

It’s 6-7 times more expensive to replace a current customer
Repeat customers spend 67% more
After 10 purchases, a customer has already referred up to 7 people

Creating a winning strategy

Set objectives

  •     motivate purchases
  •     enhance awareness
  •     interact w customers
  •     boost event attendance
  •     drive website traffic
  •     nonprofit donations


Then determine

  •     what info to collect
  •     communication type
  •     frequency
  •     measure success

Types of permission

  •     Explicit: ask, opted-in, signup (this is best)
  •     Implicit: ppl know you, just not expecting to be added to an email (not best pract)
    • Implicit: remind ppl at the top why they’re getting the email, include unsubscribe @ TOP


Tips

  • Don’t buy/rent lists or crawl directories, gets you blacklisted
  • Better to send monthly or biweekly than quarterly
  • Tell ppl how often they’ll get emails from the beginning
  • Gather your contacts’ interests
    • Talk to them about what they want to talk about
    • Let people select what they want to hear about
    • Collect names to personalize emails (better actions)
    • Be careful if form is too complicated = high abandonment
    • Try to run surveys to see what people are interested in


Nick Stamoulis, SEO firm
    39,000 member list
    6-9 month sales cycle
    newsletters, info, educate customers
    better to work with educated customer
    2 weekly newsletters, link back to daily blog
    network of Internet marketing blogs
    150 new ppl/day are opting in

Goal is promote self as expert, not too much about promotions

How to get signups

  • Offer free 20 minute phone consultation
  • Encourage customers to spread the word
  • Internal contest to get employees to ask for emails
  • Collect emails everywhere
  • Businesses and organization to cross-promote with


Ways to segment

  •     Industry, category, usage
  •     Region, sales rep
  •     Interest levels

Newsletters: sharing your expertise, monthly quarterly

Promotions: biweekly/monthly, focus on promo/limited content, 2-6 coupons

Announcements/invitations: event-driven, promo or educational w targeted msg
                Surveys, new products, special events

How often to send

  • Create master sched
  • Include freq on sign-up
  • Coordinate timing: You can train ppl to expect email at certain day/time
  • Newsletters: monthly/quarterly
  • Announcements/event invites: as needed


When to send

  • When is your audience most likely to read it?
  • Day/time week: Monday is bad day, best times Tue/Wed 10a-3p
  • Test/test/test: can look to see what time ppl opened


Most important part: Subject lines and from lines

From line
    Use a name the recipient will recognize
        Include co name or brand (which one or both)
        Clearer better
    Shorter the better
    Be consistent: you’re training people

DoubleClick: 60% say from-line determines whether will delete

Subject line
    Keep short & simple
        3 seconds or less
        5-8 words, 30-40 characters, def no more than 50 b/c cuts off
    Use a specific benefit
    Capitalize and punctuate carefully


Needs to provide incentive to open


Don’ts  
 

  •     Be careful not to use words that get filtered
  •          Free, guarantee, spam, credit card
  •     All CAPS letters, whether or not part of your brand
  •     Excessive punctuation, includes … ellipsis
  •     “click here”
  •     symbols, including $
  •     not using a from address
  •     misleading subject lines


Exercise for subject lines, do after campaign done

  •     Will from line resonate well with audience
  •     If not revise it, so it will resonate
  •     Come up with 2 alternative subject lines


Creating compelling content

  •     Design: HTML or text or both best read by all email clients
  •     Don’t be too image-heavy in the top 40% of email servers strip them out
  •     Can you digest content sans images?


Provide relevant, valuable info

  • Clear and concise
  • Appropriate graphics
  • Include call to action: are they tied to links, make it obvious what they need to take action
  • Create sense of urgency


It’s about how you’re helpful, not about you

Trade useful info for attention

Tip: Michael Katz Blue Penguin newsletter: tips for better email newsletters

Content exercise

  •     Top 5 ? customers ask
  •     Interesting arts you’ve read
  •     Most interesting customers you helped in past 6 months
  •     What made them interesting
  •     What problems will your customers encounter the next year
  •     What will you do to solve these problems


Before you send

  •     Be prepared to handle requests and questions
  •     Use appropriate graphics and use of white space
  •     Proof read everything carefully
  •     Check to make sure links work
  •     Preview and test by sending to yourself

    
Evaluate campaign results

What gets tracked

  •     Number sent
  •     Bounced messages & why
  •     Delivery rate
  •     Opens
  •     Clicks for every link
  •     Forwards
  •     Unsubscribes
  •     Spam complaints


19% email gets blocked, but with Constant Contact it’s only 3%

Why does email bounce. Clean list of bad addresses

  •     email no longer valid: ave consumer changes email every 9 months
  •     server malfunction
  •     mailbox full
  •     email blocked

What influences open rate?

  •     From/subject line
  •     Delivery day/time 10% drop is worth investigating, 2% over last 10 mailings
  •     List overuse, age, quality

Steady open rate = success

What were they interested in? Follow up with offer for that

Whatever action is called for will happen within 48 hours

SEMPO Boston Hosts Google Universal Search Event

Thursday, April 9th, 2009

The following are notes from last night’s event. These are not final text, just merely notes to inform those who were not able to join the “sold-out” crowd (event was free with tasty eats provided by Google) or a refresher for those who were.

SEMPO Boston Hosts Google Universal Search @ Google, Cambridge MA 4/8/09

Speaker: Frances Haugen

Organizing the world’s information with a simple premise: Google will do its best to give the best possible answers

Info takes lots of forms: images, blogs, books

Google seeks to

  • Provide comprehensiveness
  • Continue to focus on: What is the users’ intent
  • Retain relevance
  • Run every query against every index
    •         Show results only after looking @ all the data
    •         Blend results into single ranked list

    
What’s next

  •     Looking to make search more accessible for non-native English-speakers
  •     Improve relevance
  •     More parallel searches (When have misspelling, results for corrected also avail)
  •     Expand more context (multiple refined searches, apply older queries to new ones)


Help users explore

  •     More variety in result types more often
  •     One main list w links for refinement
  •     Keep list quick and easy to read

What does it mean for Search Engine Marketing (SEM)?

  •     Usual guidelines still apply
  •     Webmasters are central to Google’s mission


SEMs should take advantage of prominent new verticals    

  •     Google video sitemap
  •     High-quality well-captioned images
  •     Update local searches


Discussion

Why choose one thing over another?
Google has insights of volume to study the patterns of what people click on

Google has people are trained to evaluate: Is this actually better?

Every time Google launches a ranking refinement: It’s done carefully and remains conscious about what people think is actually better.

Regardless of who generates the answers, Google is committed to making sure best possible answers are provided.

Tip: Regular-expressions.info: search pattern language tool

Google AdWords with Speaker: Michael Briggs, VP Search Strategies @ Website Publicity, hosted by Boston SEO Internet Marketing Networking Group

Tuesday, April 7th, 2009

Highlights from last night’s Boston SEO Internet Marketing Networking Group (4/6/09)

Please note this information is provided as a glimpse into this group and topics covered. These are just notes and are not intended to represent final text. Comments, clarifications and other discussions are welcome.

For more information on this meetup: www.meetup.com/BostonSEO/calendar/9671609/?a=cr1p_grp

Speaker: Michael Briggs, VP Search Strategies @ Website Publicity

Google AdWords

slides available @ websitepublicity.com/meetup

2 points to lower cost: reduce clicks or reduce cost of each click

Reduce clicks: block clicks that don’t convert, max converting traffic

Use conversion tracking or analytics to achieve this

Broad match

  •     Allows Google to perform matches
  •     Pro: better than a human
  •     Con: Will get worthless clicks
  •     Best for: Looking for additional ad groupings & refine the results


Use the right match type   

  •     Use phrases
  •     Bid higher on phrase match: keep general terms on broad match and monitor
  •     Bid lower — use to harvest new terms
  •     Add phrase match negatives, not broad negatives
  •     Create new ad groups


Where to put money

  •     ID best converting ad groups
  •     Ensure they have 100% impression share
  •     Don’t spread money too thinly


When launch campaign

  • Look for themes in your ad groups
  • Add text that speaks specifically to each group
  • Start w 10-25 keywords per ad group max
  • Adjust for optimal timing: bid more for active day of week/time of day

Improve quality score

  •     Comes from click-thru rate (only scores on exact match)
  •     Relevance and landing page search to keyword and search query relevance
  •     Page load time, privacy policy have miniscule impact

Too many keywords will overwhelm your quality score

  • Really need targeted landing page
  • Make sure ad text meets searchers’ expectations


Adgroup guides

  •     Central theme 10-25 keywords
  •     Ad groups for individual products and services
  •     Don’t mix keyword themes


Anything 7 and above is good
If can’t pull it up, ditch it
Trim out the no-clicks, “death by 1,000 paper cuts”

Add text continually

  • With offers, savings, discounts
  • Don’t throw away the winner or bid against it
  • Track conversions
  • Don’t let Google optimize your ads for you


Discussion afterward focused on:

1. Paid vs organic search
    Organic is 3x more effective than paid
    Can control paid side better, can generally convert those better

2.  Jim Manning of Jungle Jim’s balloon artist (junglejimboston.com): Resources for just starting a site?
    Lots of voices for don’t read too much just write and be true to self
    Some responses advocate be sure you understand your customer
    My 2 cents: Check out David Meerman Scott’s books

David Meerman Scott’s World Wide Rave webinar with HubSpot

Thursday, April 2nd, 2009

I’ve been toting along David Meerman Scott’s The New Rules of Marketing & PR” since October, reading whenever I get a chance and underlining sections for easy reference. The one-line take-home: Understand buyer personas really well: What are their problems; how can help them?

People don’t want to be sold to, they want to be conversed with. The author advises: You don’t need hard-core, expensive marketing and public relations anymore. If you can’t do it yourself, hire a journalist who understands how to communicate with — not to sell to — consumers.

I was thrilled to hear about his new book “World Wide Rave: Creating Triggers that Get Millions of People to Spread Your Ideas and Share Your Stories” in a HubSpot webinar with the author.

Here are a couple highlights:

You no longer have to pay for attention, get people to share your ideas for you

You want to trigger “word of mouse”

Rules

1. Nobody cares about products but you

2. No coercion required

3. Lose control – let people share, allow people to do/say what they want
Ex: email metrics report, when could download w/o email, the report took off

4.  Point the world to your doorstep
Tempt people into saying, how can I learn more

5. Play nice
Don’t evoke anger, you’ll get it

Create a WWRave

Tweet, ask bloggers to plug you

http://www.amazon.com/World-Wide-Rave-Creating-Triggers/dp/0470395001/ref=pd_bbs_sr_2?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1238636887&sr=8-2

http://www.davidmeermanscott.com/

http://www.amazon.com/New-Rules-Marketing-PR-Podcasting/dp/0470379286/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1238636887&sr=8-1