Practices
Friday Funday: SEO as a tactic, owning social media, and new spy tools
Hello America! (as the late Bernie Mac used to say)
Its that time of the week again, and I wanted to be sure I added some better stuff this week after having to rush out the door last week. In this week’s column I wanted to address the definition of SEO, what employees need to know about their social media, and a sweet search engine for researching your competition.
The Definition of SEO
I am currently working with a client who is looking to improve her business’s bottom line and we have had some good conversations as to what I do. A number of my clients have been approached by SEO firms all telling them the same thing, and they want to know how what I do is different from what these companies do. Bottom line: Dark Horse Communications is a marketing business that uses online mediums to help its clients. DHC uses SEO as a tactic to help increase traffic to sites, but understands that it is one of a variety of tactics to help improve web results. SEO is the optimization of a website to be found by search engines for specific items, whether they are keywords, media, etc. While I think SEO is important, a more important concept is SEM, or search engine marketing. SEM is the tactic of using search engines to reach your intended audiences through various means. One use might be through targeting search engines by demographics, another by specific keywords your audience uses.
Let’s create an example. I would like my website to get traffic for the keyword “Chicago Small Business Marketing.” Making a page with that specific URL, using the keyword on that page, and including the keyword in the title are all ways to optimize the site. Finding others relevant keywords, creating owned media for that keyword, and advertising on Chicago Business Search Engines are tactics of search engine marketing. SEO is internally focused while SEM focuses on the internet around your site.
Who’s Line is it Anyways?
Recently a colleague of mine lost her job, and the incident was notable to me for another reason than she was my girlfriend. The company she worked for does not have a string social media strategy of any sorts, and before she was terminated they asked her to delete all of her Facebook contacts that were clients at the clinic. I don’t want to get into particulars, but the event points out the need to have a clear understanding of who the social media belongs to when you work for a company. In this case Courtney’s page was used to promote services and engage with clients; as an independent contractor she was responsible for her page alone. When she was signing her termination agreement the company asked that she not make any mentions of her new employment for up to 12 months on any social media channels. When working for any company or client where there is co-hosted social media marketing like there was in this case, everyone must know who owns what before moving forward.
New Tool of the Week
Blekko.com offers sweet ways to look up your competitors back links and only requires a free e-mail signup. The best part is the way they score referring sites; instead of a logarithmic page rank scale like Google’s, they score sites on a variety of factors that are more useful for research. Another cool thing of Blekko.com’s SEO features is that they will look at your “neighborhood” so you can see how you are “living” next to.
That’s all this week. I won’t be posting next week as I will be home in Kansas City for some political events. Have a good one!
Friday Funday!
Friday again, and this post is a little late in coming today. What with downloading World of Warcraft onto a new machine (I know, I know), listening to Jack White’s Love Interruption, and waiting patiently on my invite from Gentlemint, its been a busy day. With that in mind, I wanted to share a free tip and explain my latest business purchase.
WHAT EVERY FACEBOOK PAGE SHOULD HAVE
Businesses need to have a Facebook page for several obvious reasons, but it’s easy for owners and marketers at small businesses to neglect these pages. Sure, you can be posting relevant content, asking questions to heavy users, and sharing other stuff along, but small businesses have a good way of pulling us away from social media tasks and into other important jobs. It’s important to communicate with your fans through multiple mediums since they might miss something in one place but find it in another. While Facebook still has 450 million DAILY users, many more use e-mail and use it on a daily basis. In 2009, there were 1.4 BILLION e-mail users alone.
What does this mean? Your business needs to have an e-mail capture system on its Facebook page, and preferably as the landing tab to increase e-mail acquisitions. But how do you do this?
That’s where the free tip comes in today. AWeber is an e-mail management system that has a Facebook App that allows you to create a capture form for e-mails and add it to a list. In addition to that, you can also grab other information and add it to intelligence projects. For example, I created a form on the Dark Horse Facebook page that includes 2 drop down boxes that record user ratings on different service aspects. This form allows me to not only grab e-mails, but also gather customer comments at the same time!
The monthly fee for AWeber is $19 per month for up to 500 users. This is well worth the investment. As for other services, I do not know if they have Facebook Apps but I am sure they are out there, For anyone wanting to incorporate my suggestions, there are several online tutorials from the AWeber folks themselves that will walk you through them without issue.
The other thing I wanted to talk a bit about today was the continuing importance of multimedia across social media channels and promotions. For a small business, pictures are an easy of showing your true product, service, culture, etc. while giving your fans the tools to help spread the word. Evergreen social media marketing always considers the next emerging site and/or technology, and the more I pay attention, the more new sites that seem to cater to multimedia pop up. Tout offers 15 second videos while several other microblog sites are designed solely for pictures; the trend is towards multimedia and away from text. Twitter itself is changing towards this trend.
Which leads me back to my latest purchase. Best Buy tempted me again, and this time I splurged on digital camera and memory card. $300, and the ability to hold over 5k pictures, later I can help owners with events by taping and taking HD pics and vids. This a second camera that I use, and now offers me a chance to take second perspective pictures. If it gives me the chance to have 300 unique back links that help drive traffic and community, cool.
All right, Im dozing off here, so it’s off to bed. Have a good one and enjoy the weekend!