Looking at location-based services

Most every one of these devices can provide its location to services in which users choose to participate, allowing them to tell their friends where they are, what businesses they frequent, and how those businesses perform. For example, a retail store might offer discounts to entice customers to let their friends know where they’re shopping and how good the store is.

But not all location-based services (LBS)—or their mobile apps—are created equal.

What follows is a look at the background and differing approaches of four major social media platforms that provide LBS, with a special eye to what it all means for businesses that are looking to connect to customers. Two of the four networks, Foursquare and Google Latitude, are completely location-based; the other two, Facebook and Yelp, are social networks that have incorporated location-based services into their existing infrastructures.

The story of Facebook is—and there’s an irony alert here—far from being liked. While Facebook has done a pretty good job of monetizing advertising, social mechanics and user-contributed content, it has pretty much fumbled the LBS ball to date.

Many industry analysts and pundits thought that when Facebook launched its Facebook Places service in August of 2010, it would spell doom for Foursquare. With check-ins and the capability to see which friends were nearby, Places was meant to give mobile Facebook users power to track and be tracked by the popular social media site’s members. It would also give local advertisers (and by extension, Facebook) access to a lot of hyper-local customers—literally, people who were just down the street.

But Facebook Places completely failed to take off, to the extent that just a year after its launch, Places was essentially deactivated. Facebook still retains some LBS functionality: mobile users can opt to attach their location to their status updates and check in at business locations. But business participation in Facebook’s check-in program is minimal; a quick survey of Chicago check-in deals yielded just five hits.

Altimeter Group mobile analyst Chris Silva sees the pullback not as a failure of the Places tool, but rather a retreat on the part of Facebook from a faltering mobile strategy. in February, Facebook’s own pre-IPO S-1 filing all but admitted the flaw, which Silva pointed out on his blog.

“Sounds like a problem—the biggest-news IPO in Silicon Valley is essentially admitting it’s concerned with its prospects for monetizing mobile users,” Silva wrote.

Today, Silva is convinced that Facebook must and will turn itself back to the mobile environment. “Their next step is inherently mobile,” Silva emphasizes.

For now, however, mobile is taking a back seat. Facebook’s “focus is on the ads right now,” explains Shon Christy, founder and president of Christy Creative, LLC, a midwestern social media marketing firm, “particularly ads that are part of Facebook’s Reach Generator ad packaging program.” The Reach Generator program, launched by Facebook at the end of February, enables participants to promote posts from their pages and pay via an ongoing payment plan, rather than per-click.

Still, Facebook can’t be counted out completely out yet as an LBS player, for two reasons.

First, in late 2011, Facebook announced that it had hired pretty much all of the developers and engineers from Gowalla, an LBS-based social media platform that focused on social-network city guides using members’ photos and descriptions. Facebook did one of its famous acqui-hires—instead of buying the company outright, it picked up the talent but left the technology and the service alone. as a result, Gowalla ended up shuttering on March 12, 2012.

Second, Facebook has rolled out its new Timeline feature to users, a chronological tool which has become its default interface. The Facebook location-sharing tool enables users to assign location information to events, images and statuses throughout their Timeline “history.” as a result, location will become much more a part of the user’s story, interwoven with all the other properties of Facebook posts.

With the Gowalla brain trust on board, it is not unreasonable to expect more location-oriented functions to appear within Facebook as the Timeline continues to roll out. Mobile users might want to keep an eye out.

Foursquare was one of the first to exploit the notion of location-based check-ins in 2009—an idea that other services have tried to reproduce, to varied success. With Foursquare, a person’s location is important only as a way to find friends and compete in geographic-based gaming.

The basic idea of Foursquare is likely the most familiar of all the LBS tools: Users check in with their mobile devices at venues and are awarded points for checking in. Check in enough times at a venue (which can be a business, concert or event) and you can be awarded a badge from Foursquare, or become “Mayor” of that venue until someone comes along and bumps you out of that spot.

Most members use the service in one of two ways: They can either compete for badges and points without necessarily revealing their locations, or broadcast their locations in the hopes that nearby friends will see the updated status online and join them at that venue. even this is not binary: Many users game and socialize in blended efforts that suit them.

Christy highlights this gamification as a major reason why Foursquare is often the centerpiece of a social media strategy for his retail and restaurant clients. “As a society, we’re just competitive,” Christy says.

From a user perspective, Foursquare clearly has an impressive base: At the end of 2011, there were a reported 15 million Foursquare users. this strength is enhanced by tight integration with Facebook (which also neatly solves Facebook’s immediate lack of a native LBS).

For businesses, the social/geo/gaming aspect of Foursquare is very easy to plug into. Mayors can be awarded small gifts for their titles: Free coffee or a certain percentage off for that day’s purchases are very common. Businesses can also create longer-term promotions that involve more user participation, or branded “tip” lists for Foursquare users that reward checking in at certain venues or purchasing items from businesses.

According to Silva, Foursquare has all but wrapped up the LBS space. “They are doing the best job so far in monetizing location services,” Silva explains, going on to describe a recent Foursquare/American Express partnership program that enables an instant discount for patrons who check in at participating vendors. For vendors, this is a painless way to upsell, Silva adds, while customers experience a seamless discount, since the transaction takes place on their American Express card.

Recently, Foursquare has enabled user tip lists that let participants recommend (or not) any given venue and give their own advice on what’s good or bad about the venue. this has been seen by some analysts as a foray into Yelp’s social recommendations.

“If you’re scoring at home, Foursquare claims to have “tens of millions” of tips,” wrote marketing and SEO expert Matt McGee on his blog in January. “Yelp has somewhere around 22-23 million reviews, as I understand, and Google has somewhere in the neighborhood of 13-15 million reviews and ratings combined… I’d say that the game is on in local search.”

Foursquare also has a list capability that was implemented last August. A list lets a Foursquare user build a group of businesses that they prefer to frequent, such as “my favorite restaurants” or “10 great independent bookstores.” By sharing these lists with friends, Foursquare users can share their interests and favorites in larger chunks of information.

But end-users aren’t the only ones that can benefit from lists. Businesses can also create branded compilations that can bring customers directly into their door, as well as deliver their brand in other ways.

Foursquare is clearly the one to beat in this space.

Compared to Facebook and the other LBSes, Latitude’s story seems more like a confusing labyrinth.

It was originally built by the same folks who created the Dodgeball geo-location service, which Google bought in 2005. (Eventually, the two Dodgeball founders left Google under less-than-ideal circumstances.) one of the Dodgeball creators, Dennis Crowley, would go on to found Foursquare after Google halted Dodgeball in 2009 and replaced it with Latitude.

The Google Latitude service is an add-on to Google Maps that allows mobile phone users to let specified Google account members know where they are. The location can appear on, say, Google Plus as a status update, or can be viewed on an iGoogle homepage in case a loved one wants to see where you are at any given moment. The service also features automated check-ins and departures, and deals. Android users of Google Latitude recently got the ability to see a check-ins leaderboard, which let them see other users who are checking in at that particular business.

Google far and away has the best and broadest reach of any of its LBS competitors to get advertising connected with geolocation.

There are a lot of compelling pieces here, pieces that would seem to be perfect for a success story. so what’s the problem?

“Latitude was one of those things Google said ‘Hey, we think this is something important, and we ought to have it out there,’” Christy says. But, he continues, they’ve done basically little else.

Silva agrees, seeing Latitude as one part of the giant Google Services machine. “Latitude is one asset that will make other assets better,” Silva says. “It will probably be a super power for another Google application.”

These are similar to the problems Facebook Places experienced when that service was initially launched: The service was released, it had big potential and then no one knew what to do with it. Unlike Facebook’s pull-back-and-regroup effort now underway, it doesn’t appear that Google is doing anything but pushing Latitude forward and hoping that the general rise in Google services adoption will drive more people into Latitude use.

Yelp has simultaneously delighted and angered businesses by enabling customers to immediately review service and products from local businesses, right from their mobile devices.

Any of the other services mentioned here can let you review a business, but for Yelp it’s the reason for existing. “Yelp is all about the peer reviews,” Christy says.

Yelp is interesting because it straddles two platforms. Desktop users can use Yelp as a pure “where-am-I-going-to-eat-tonight?” research assistant, making it more of a local search tool than a true LBS. But on mobile, it’s an LBS through and through. Smartphone users get results close to where they are, while the Monocle feature enables users to hold up a camera-equipped device and see augmented reality overlays about the restaurants and businesses that are in front of them.

Businesses have had, until recently, one official way to interact with Yelp: Buying yellow-page style advertising on the Yelp site. this can be a bit dicey, though, because sometimes ads will appear next to negative reviews, which can negate the positive effects of the ad itself and waste a business’ money.

In fact, there have been accusations that Yelp’s reviews weren’t reliable—that, for example, businesses “astroturf” their entries by encouraging or even paying people to post positive reviews. Yelp CEO Jeremy Stoppelman countered these allegations in an October 2011 blog entry in which he writes, “We work hard to keep that trust by protecting the integrity of our review content, and use a number of methods to prevent shill or otherwise unreliable reviews from misleading consumers and harming businesses.”

These bumps aside, Yelp has done very well in the business information space of LBS, inspiring a number of similar competitors. Yelp’s ease of use and sheer number of businesses listed makes it an invaluable source of information, particularly for travelers new in town. Yelp’s mobile client is easy to use and fast.

Lately, in an attempt to position itself more against Foursquare, Yelp has introduced check-ins for businesses, with very familiar-sounding gaming aspects: Users can become barons, lords, kings and queens of businesses, neighborhoods and cities, respectively. They can also see which businesses their friends have visited.

Silva sees some potential in Yelp moving forward, but he does not believe that Yelp has the chops to take Foursquare head-on, as it seems to be doing.

“They need to focus on the things in their service that are unique, like Monocle,” Silva explains. “They should be improving on this AR [augmented reality] service and using it to help leaders like Foursquare augment their services.”

Yelp has also added the capability for businesses to offer check-in offers to loyal customers—again, very much like Foursquare. “It will be interesting to see how this particular feature plays out. we could see statistically more positive reviews from Yelp users (because they are getting loyalty rewards), or more upset businesses that are angry they are getting negative reviews even though they are giving out loyalty rewards,” Christy says.

There are other, less well-known location-based services for mobile devices out there. here are a few that definitely bear watching:

Banjo: Banjo is a “social discovery” app designed to bridge the gap between different social media networks. It was designed by founder Damian Patton, who was in Logan Airport tweeting while a friend he had not seen in years was just feet away on Foursquare, and they didn’t realize it. Banjo coordinates location information from the various social networks and lets you know where friends are no matter what social network they’re using.

Highlight: A recent media darling of the SXSW conference, Highlight lets you know when you are physically near those people with whom you share a second-level connection, such as your brother’s best friend, or a business associate’s co-worker. It can even share locations for those who have similar interests or even live in the same hometown—nice to know when traveling far from home.

Neer: Neer refines LBS down to the very personal level. you set it up for a close circle of family and friends and the app will inform you when that person is near or leaving a given location. A spouse could configure it to automatically send a note to their partner when they’re leaving work, for example. It can also be configured to ping you with geo-oriented reminders, like when you’re near the grocery story and need to buy milk.

Unsocial: A Foursquare for professionals, Unsocial uses your LinkedIn account along with keywords to help you connect with other professionals in your immediate area. once you’ve found somebody whom you think you can do business with (or just exchange professional gossip), you can message them to see if they want to talk and/or meet. you can also find out what events are happening in your area.

Waze: Labeled as a “social driving app,” Waze is an LBS that can passively identify problems on a given route (sudden slow traffic indicates a traffic jam). With just a few taps, the app can also deliver more detailed information, such as road hazards and accident locations. Don’t worry, typing is disabled while the vehicle is in motion.

Location-based services can have a lot or a little to offer businesses, but all of them should be watched, because ultimately connecting customers to merchants is what any LBS has to do. And beyond the desktop, pure-play start-ups are figuring how to combine where you are into unique offerings designed to deliver real value and new customers wherever those customers may be.

The LBS game is still rapidly maturing, and as more smartphones penetrate the market, businesses would do well to consider their best LBS strategy, so they can find the customers that are seeking to find them.

Office Suites PLUS Adds to Marketing Team

“I look forward to the new and exciting ideas that Vicky and Brad will bring to our Company.

Lexington, KY (PRWEB) April 26, 2012

Office Suites PLUS, named to the inc. 5000 list of fastest growing companies and the ninth largest office suite provider in the world, has named Vicky Thompson as Marketing and Communications Specialist and Brad Roark as SEO and SEM Specialist.

Thompson joins the company with over seven years of direct marketing experience, including social media, graphic design and public relations. She holds Bachelor’s degrees in Agricultural Communications and Journalism, both from the University of Kentucky.

“With social media and technology playing such an important role in the economy and businesses, I hope to bring a new twist to the marketing needs for Office Suites PLUS,” says Thompson.

Roark has over six years of experience in web site development, including search engine optimization and social media, where he has worked on both local and national Internet marketing campaigns.

“I am excited about improving on an already strong brand through online marketing,” says Roark.

President and CEO James C. Baughman, Jr. believes the addition of these two employees to Office Suites PLUS will provide the Company with the tools it needs to set itself apart from other competitors. “I look forward to the new and exciting ideas that Vicky and Brad will bring to our Company.”

About Office Suites PLUS: Headquartered in Lexington, Kentucky, Office Suites PLUS provides companies of all sizes a wide range of workspace solutions. whether through full-time office space, virtual office packages or administrative services, Office Suites PLUS provides the image, convenience and support that allow companies to focus on their business – not their office space. The Company has expanded its presence to over 30 locations in nine states. Additional information is available at officesuitesplus.com, facebook.com/officesuitesplus.com, or on Twitter @ospworkspace.

SEO Miracle and Costumes Megastore Partner to Promote Halloween Costumes 2012

Halloween costumes 2012 are already looking for their buyers. SEO Miracle and Costumes Megastore decided to offer Halloween costumes on sale for all early buyers.

Miami, FL (PRWEB) May 14, 2012

Halloween costumes are worn on Halloween, a festival which comes in October and represents a joy for both, children and adults. Halloween costumes usually reflect people’s thoughts and desires. one of the main things on Halloween is to go with the most interesting and original costume that no one else has.

Costumes Megastore is a store that specializes in Halloween costumes 2012, and they offer a variety of Halloween costumes for kids, teens and adults. They decided to partner with SEO Miracle, one of the leading SEO companies in the United States, in order to promote Halloween costumes for 2012.

Joshua Hood, CEO and a co-founder of SEO Miracle, expressed his satisfaction with this partnership, “Costumes Megastore is one of the largest retail stores that sells Halloween costumes and their line ‘If you can imagine it, we have it’ promises us a lot. We are hired to promote their Halloween costumes for 2012 and since the festival is celebrated across the United States traditionally, demands for an extra costume will be present.”

Costumes Megastore allows a person to order a Halloween costume online 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. The highest sale is recorded in kids department, in the baby costumes category. Costumes Megastore also offers theme costumes from 20s, 50s, 70s and 80s along with animal, bug, classic, scary costumes and lots of others. all buyers will also be able to find costumes and party supplies on sale.

Joshua also added, “We take this project as serious as any other we had before, and will use our proven strategy in promoting Costumes Megastore’s items online, and allow them to make big sales and create a database of solid, steady customers that will keep coming back every year.”

If you would like to check out this season’s Halloween costumes, visit Costumes Megastore website costumesmegastore.com, place an order online or call their phone number at (800) 387-0336.

For the original version on PRWeb visit: prweb.com/releases/prwebhalloween-costumes/2012/prweb9502288.htm

Is There A Need For Lawyer SEO?

lawyer seoTrust is undoubtedly the most important factor that people look for in a lawyer. that is probably why, even in the age of the internet, people often ask friends and family members for reference. But where do people go when they have no one to turn to? the internet of course! this is especially true of cases that involve personal injury, wrongful dismissal, family law and criminal charges. if you are a lawyer who is looking to tap potential business through the internet, how do you get people to trust you? this is precisely where Online Marketing Search Engine Professionals can help you.

What services can a lawyer using SEO expect?

Establishing an online presence is more than establishing a website. it begins with an understanding of the keywords that are relevant to your legal practice niche and design your content in such a manner that can be understood by human readers, and by search engine bots.

    • Suggesting the right domain name
    • Search Engine Optimized Website
    • Well designed website that meets the business objective
    • Use appropriate page titles, headings, formats etc.

Lawyer SEO marketers can establish your presence on search engines by posting information about your legal practice on online directories, press releases and social media sites.

There’s another arena where SEO would be of immense help to lawyers. Trust is a major factor that determines a choice of a lawyer. Unfortunately, lawyers, businesses can become vulnerable to less than ideal comments from people who vent on the internet and often to talk ill about them. Victims of such witch-hunting practices can use best practices SEO strategies to clear their name.

Blogs are another great source to attract potential clients. the blogs needs to contain articles that provide information through self help books, relevant articles about the legal practice FAQ’s and then ease of access to the law firm through well tuned marketing. when searchers now look for resources on the internet those pages are found in the search results. Lawyers often write blogs about common grievances and issues that are targeted to help common readers. if the solution offered is convincing enough, they seek the services of these lawyer bloggers.

Another common practice is to offer free initial consultation.  when the lawyer’s initial advice is convincing and it is good fit for both the client and lawyer those legal services are hired.

There are several other benefits when a lawyer uses SEO marketing. some of them include:

    • Affordability: when compared to conventional advertising and marketing techniques, SEO is indeed affordable. the money that you spend on a tiny advertisement on yellow pages can be well spent on a comprehensive SEO strategy where you can register your presence in more than 100 online directories. you can even create Facebook, Twitter, and Google + and other social media accounts which makes yourself available to prospective clients. thus, SEO is all about being consistent with ongoing content creation, off page SEO with social media linking to ultimately have high returns of many prospective clients.
    • Out of Sight, out of mind: Lawyers are busy professionals. it can get very difficult to connect with people and share expertise. Social media channels such as Facebook, Twitter, YouTube can not only influence Return on Investment for lawyer SEO, but also provide ‘Return on Influence’ which is more powerful.

Find out where your legal firm ranks with SEO with our Free Instant Report

Peak to Peak Marketing are SEO specialists in Law Firms SEO Marketing. Law firm SEO is one of our niche service areas. We have the video and other articles on Lawyer SEO to help provide information on how your legal firm can take advantage of Search Engine Optimization for marketing and lead generation.

liz9106 » Blog Archive » Affordable SEO Hosting Plans and Servers

SEO Hosting Plan is along the same lines of the service provider’s duty in order to make sure the buyer receives the very best value for money services. a Hosting Approach contains Multiple Class C IP, web server, CPU, computer space, bandwidth and other important components called to that particular prepare. It talks about the performance of the SEO hosting strength of the package deal and estimated results of that will plan too.

The Virtual private server takes care of adequately partitioning your physical machine and help each to act on the best. Even when all the Personal Servers share the common resources like, drive space, storage, bandwidth, good old ram and the Pc, they work in perfect synch without trouble. seo hosting web design The resources are shared in similar so the effectiveness is really quite remarkable, as the bandwidth is never below the required range along with server uptime is at their best.

SEO hosting may bring a lot of benefits in terms of added in features including footfall number check ups, updates associated with actual brand-new upgrades when it comes to software together with hard ware. Occasionally these things are certainly not considered through the clients. Thus as a SEO hosting assistance you should consider creating a balance in between what is basically good for this clients, due to the fact sometimes irrelevant information is usually sent to this clients regarding new updates.

Customer care for that reason is very essential from the viewpoint of the internet host because it tell the host what exactly and how your client feels about the service.

a Virtual Private Server is a portioned section of a physical server made through a method named since software reducing. The server acts correctly as a devoted server and supplies great VPS hosting services to the particular webmaster’s category of websites.

seo hosting asics If you utilize GoDaddy, it will be under Host Summary. All you’ve got to do is definitely “add” the 2 hosting titles, your host brands will be termed “ns1 and “nsEvery single host name should have to point to the actual IP you want ones domain to possibly be on.

Next, often the SEO specialists are unethical in terms of their own choice. they don’t judge wonderfully before that they hire a services. so, they can not understand the causes of the swindle sites. they just do not judge diverse services prior to getting. they make his or her decision rashly as well as ultimately fall under the lure of the fraud sites.

There are numerous more Class C We.P hosting will offer, but it won’t be able to obtain these kind of results, offering services to those who need it the majority of. for starters, if you are a webmaster that is new to the industry of SEO provider, you should first know the way the organization will be able to increase your evaluations S.Age.R.S. If ever there was a need to get better results total the major search engines, you will end up pleased to realize that you can now benefit from the Internet and ultimately get the benefits you need.

a great SEO host always has plans in place for all types of clients; from leading companies to brand-new and forthcoming ones. Thus as a consumer you should be thinking about a service service provider that has this in place to help keep you; the client care free in terms of serviceability troubles faced in the period frame with the subscribed services.

this entry was posted on May 13, 2012 at 8:04 pm and is filed under Journal . You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

Unprecedented Guaranteed SEO Services Announced By NorthStarSEO, LLC

Posted by on may 14, 2012 in Future Of Affiliate Marketing | 86940 commentshttp%3A%2F%2Fkimmonuotio.com%2Ffuture-of-affiliate-marketing%2Funprecedented-guaranteed-seo-services-announced-by-northstarseo-llc%2FUnprecedented+Guaranteed+SEO+Services+Announced+By+NorthStarSEO%2C+LLC2012-05-13+22%3A32%3A57http%3A%2F%2Fkimmonuotio.com%2Ffuture-of-affiliate-marketing%2Funprecedented-guaranteed-seo-services-announced-by-northstarseo-llc%2F

Minneapolis MN (PRWEB) April 30, 2012

NorthStar SEO, LLC continues to help numerous small business owners drastically improve their businesses overall online presence in 2012. the services that they offer at NorthStar SEO, LLC are not just your run of the mill SEO services that take months to deliver the higher website rankings which are always promised. NorthStar SEO, LLC is different and is so confident in their local SEO services that they have just announced their new SEO guarantee.

The key to the success of the local seo services offered by NorthStar SEO, LLC is the two men who started this Minneapolis SEO company, Travis Van Slooten and James Dreesen. Combined, these highly successful Internet marketing professionals have more than eight years of experience driving targeted traffic to websites and converting that traffic into new customers, clients, and leads. their commitment is now to Northstar SEO, LLC a company they both founded in 2011 to Help Local Businesses t more new customers and clients through local search engine optimization.

As more consumers continue to turn to the Internet for information many business owners do not realize what a difference a properly optimized website can make for increasing the sheer volume of new phone calls and leads that they could see on a daily basis. however business owners continue to shy away from the idea of paying for monthly SEO service that they do not fully understand. To combat this Travis Van Slooten and James Dreesen have launched a new SEO guarantee to help potential clients who are hesitant for any reason about how effective local search engine optimization could be for their business. This new SEO guarantee states that clients will not pay a dime for their search engine optimization services until their website reaches the first page of Googles search results.

We are extremely confident in our SEO team and are excited to announce this new SEO guarantee to help small business owners actually see the types of results and exposure NorthStar SEO, LLC can help get them online, says Van Slooten. there are very few SEO companies who would offer such guaranteed SEO services and gladly forgo payment until they actually provided real results. the internet can be a very unpredictable marketplace, especially when there are both national and local businesses all actively competing for a place on the first page of search engine results, says Dreesen, but we are so confident in our local SEO services that we are willing to take on the risk of showing our clients results first before starting their monthly billing.

The guaranteed SEO services that are now being offered by NorthStar SEO, LLC include their companies overall values of maintaining high quality customer service and communication combined with maintaining a high level of honesty. there are no black hat tactics that are used when NorthStar SEO, LLC performs their guaranteed SEO services for a client, just time tested methods that will simply help improve a websites rankings. now with their SEO guarantee, free SEO analysis, and affordable pricing starting at $ 399 per month, there is no reason small business owners should shy away from contacting them today.

About NorthStar SEO, LLC:

Located in Minneapolis, Minnesota this SEO and Internet marketing company specializes in providing small business owners with more targeted traffic through the art of search engine optimization.

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Link Building A-Z Guide – Definitions & Terms

When those of us in search marketing talk and write about link building, we tend to use terms that we think are very commonly understood. we bandy around phrases like “CTR on page 1 of the SERPs is better than on page 2″ and “god help me if my content gets deindexed.”

However, for the new guys and gals out there (and that includes people who are both learning about building links and clients who seek link services) this link building guide will help define and explain some of the more common link building terms, from a to Z.

A – Anchor Text, AC Rank, Actual PageRank

Anchor text

The content inside of the anchor element ( < a>anchor text < /a>) and is designed to give you an idea of what the content you are pointing to is about. the anchor element contains an href attribute where the target of the link is designated. the anchor element is, many times, called an anchor tag.

AC Rank

Majestic SEO’s measure of a page’s importance, on a scale of 0 to 10. It can be considered an alternative to Google’s PageRank and is used in various link tool programs. the AC Rank stands for a Citation Rank.

The Actual PageRank

Google’s value for your page, and it’s not what you see on a tool or your toolbar, as that isn’t updated frequently enough to reflect the true value.

B – Backlink Profile, Blog Network, Bing, Blekko, Bait

Backlink profile

A term used to describe the links coming into a site from sources other than the site itself.

Blog networks

Exactly what they sound like: networked blogs. their importance in link building has recently been compromised as several high-profile and large networks (e.g., BuildMyRank) have been devalued.

Bing

The most popular alternative to Google’s search engine at the current time, owned by Microsoft.

Blekko

Also a great alternative to Google and prides itself on being a spam-free search engine. It has some great features that can help you when link building.

Bait [link bait]

Content that is specifically designed in order to naturally attract links.

C – Conversion, CTR, Content

Conversion

A term used to describe an event where a user performs a certain action that is valuable to you as a site owner. some webmasters view a contact email as a conversion, for example, while others simply view an actual sale as one.

CTR [click through rate]

A term associated with PPC but becoming more popular in the general SEO vernacular as some speculate that it may become more important in ranking. Your CTR is the number of times your listing is shown (triggered by a search and referred to as impressions with PPC) divided by the number of times it’s clicked upon, calculated as a percentage.

Content

The subject matter, in text and images, of your site and its pages. Content is also used to describe anything that your brand produces, whether it’s a guest post on another site, an article that you distribute, a press release, or an infographic.

D – Deep Link Ratio, Directories, Drain Rank, Deindexed

Deep link ratio

The percentage of links that go to your subpages vs. just your home page. Many different views abound about what number is ideal.

Directories

One of the most consistent ways that people have built links throughout the years. there are paid and free versions, directories that accept all submissions and many that are quite picky about what they’ll accept, and while they have fallen out of fashion somewhat recently, they are still a valid source of traffic.

Drain rank

This refers to the idea that linking out to other sites drains your PageRank. 

Deindexed

Refers to being thrown out of a search engine and removed from their database.

E – External Link, Equity

External links

Links that go from your site to someone else’s site. some people nofollow them in order to prevent them from receiving any link juice.

Equity

The group of links pointing to your site at a point in time.

F – Followed Link, Footer Link, Footprint

Followed links

Links that are allowed to send link juice to their targets. For ranking purposes, these are the kind of links that you want. a link without a rel=nofollow is a followed link.

Footer links

Links that appear in the footer of a site, generally on every page. these were originally so abused that many SEOs now consider a footer link to be very poor. however, there are still legitimate footer links.

Footprints

Ways of identifying patterns that you’re using to build links. For example, if 75 percent of your links come from non-U.S.-hosted sites and are all on blogrolls, that’s a big footprint. a “natural” backlink profile should not have many obvious footprints due to its organic nature, therefore having easily identifiable footprints is a potential bad sign for your site. however, you can have a good footprint too (such as if you had a lot of great and authoritative links from respected news sources because your site was constantly being cited there.)

G – Google, Guest Posting, Graph

Google

So powerful, it’s now a verb. no matter what anyone says, almost all of us market to what Google wants.

Guest posting

A popular way of building links and creating new content. Many sites actively recruit for new guest posters and some are amenable to the idea when contacted. the whole idea of a guest post is to raise exposure for a brand on another site, but it’s quickly becoming a spammy and abused method. however, when done correctly, guest posts can bring you some fantastic traffic.

Link graph

Generally speaking, the link graph is a representation of links for sites. It can be thought of as being the “normal” for a niche of sites but may also refer to links for a certain market sector/keyword/locality/etc. You can use a link graph for competitive research to define what everyone else is doing and see where you stand in relation to that. a complicated thing to define, as it’s not a discrete concept. 

Href, Hashtag, Hidden Link

href

An HTML attribute that lists the target of a link. An example is < a href=”w3schools.com”>Visit W3Schools < /a>.

Hashtags

Widely used on social network platforms in order to associate a tweet/comment with something. they begin with #. On Twitter, hashtags are used to help trend certain ideas. For link building purposes, hashtag searches on Twitter are useful for finding good potential link targets.

Hidden link

A link that is intentionally coded in order to not appear as a link. It can be hidden using a text color that is the same as the background, placed inside an irrelevant image, font size 0, etc. these are viewed as manipulative and deceptive and can cause Google to remove your site from their index.

I – Image Link, Internal Link, Inbound Link

Image link

An image that is linked to a target. Image links are part of a natural link profile and can pass link juice, but they do not include anchor text as regular text links do. instead, they use an alt text (which is also used by screenreaders) to give information about the link target.

Internal Link

A link from one page of your site to another page on your site.

Inbound links

Links coming to your site from a site other than your own. the anchor text of an inbound link supposedly tells the search engines what your page is about, thus helping you rank for that term.

J – Juice

Juice

A term used to describe the benefit received from a link, also referred to as link juice.

K – Keyword

Keywords

Words or phrases for which you want to rank in the search engines. they should be present in your copy and in links pointing to your site.

L – Link Profile

Link profile

The collective group of sites that link to you.

M – MozRank

MozRank

A method of measuring the link popularity of a webpage by SEO software provider SEOMoz. Becoming a more important metric by the day, almost akin to PageRank.

N – Nofollowed Link

nofollowed link

These are indicated by placing a rel=”nofollow” into the link code. a nofollow is designed to tell Google that the link should not pass value to the target. Nofollows are also used internally for PageRank sculpting and to indicate that a link is sponsored/paid. Nofollow links are not good for ranking purposes but they can be good for traffic.

O – Outbound Linking

Outbound linking

The practice of linking from your site to another. Many people nofollow these links in an effort to conserve link juice, but that practice is becoming a bit more frowned upon recently.

P – PageRank, Panda, Penguin, Paid Links

PageRank

Google’s measure of a page’s importance. There’s a difference in what you can see as your PageRank and what Google thinks it is.

Panda

A Google algorithm update that can make grown men cry. It first struck fear into our hearts in February 2011 and was an effort to force higher quality sites higher up in the SERPs. after the first update, we’ve seen several more. There’s way, way too much to go into here but you can read all the SEW articles about it here.

Penguin

A new search algorithm designed to detect, and boot out, spam. Like Panda, it made us cry and several sites were “accidentally” affected by it, so badly that there’s actually a form to fill out if you think you’re one of those accidental cases. Again, there’s too much to go into so read about it here.

Paid links

Refers to links that are bought and placed on a website, with the intention of helping the buyer’s website rank better. when not indicated as such, are a violation of Google’s guidelines and are a risky tactic. Paid links can be problematic both for the site selling them and for the webmaster buying them as both practices can get you penalized. if a link has been purchased, it should be indicated as such with a nofollow according to Google.

Q – Query

Query

Simply a question that you ask a search engine or a database, whether or not it’s in the form of a question. we refer to queries in terms of how many times someone searches for a keyphrase, and in manners related to seeing where you rank in an engine.

R – Rel, Robots, Redirects, Rot, Rank

Rel

An element that gives the role of a link. Current uses critical for link building are to say whether a link should be followed (the default) or nofollowed (rel=nofollow).

Robots

Search engine bots, but robots can be slang for the robots.txt file, which gives instructions to engines about what to do with your site. if you don’t want certain pages to be indexed, you block them in the robots file. there are also meta robots tags ( < META NAME=”ROBOTS” CONTENT=”NOINDEX, NOFOLLOW”>) a robots.txt file is also found at url.com/robots.txt.

Rot

A term used to describe what happens when there are links pointing to pages that are no longer available and not properly redirected or handled.

Rank

Where you show up on the SERPs.

S – Sitewides, Social Signals, SERPs, Spam

Sitewide links

Links that are on every page of a site. You commonly see them in sidebars and footers, and while they once were a pretty easy way to get good rankings quickly, they’re no longer viewed so positively. You do tend to find them in almost any backlink profile though, as they are part of a natural profile.

Social signals

Signs that your site/post/article is doing well socially, on the main social network platforms. Social signals are thought to be an ever-increasing method of measuring importance in the search engines and may become a bigger part of algorithms.

SERPs

The pages Google, Bing, and others show you after you’ve performed a search.

Spam

Jokingly referred to as being “sites positioned above mine”, but is defined as being anything that clutters the web and makes for a poor user experience. Spam links are considered to be links that are irrelevant and low-quality but pursued simply to improve rankings.

T – Twitter, Toolbar Pagerank (TBPR)

Twitter

A social media platform where users communicate through 140 characters or less. It’s becoming more and more useful for finding good information as it happens.

Toolbar PageRank [TBPR]

The number from 0 to 10 that you can see that reflects the most recently updated idea of how important your site is to Google. It is not Google’s true value of your site.

U – Underline, Unnatural Link Warnings

Underline

To signify most links, the linked keywords will be underlined. Links are commonly coded with underlining; style manipulations that do not underline a link can be considered to be a hidden link.

Unnatural link warnings 

Like lice, nobody wants to see them. they are messages received in Google’s Webmaster Tools that indicate that some potentially unnatural links have been detected for your site.

V – Velocity

Velocity

Your link growth speed. It can be measured with Link Research Tools.

W – Webmaster Tools

Webmaster Tools

Google’s free platform that you can use to keep an eye on your site in Google’s eyes. It can be a first line of defense when you notice any negative changes with rankings and traffic.

X – Xenu

Xenu’s Link Sleuth 

One of those old-school things that anyone who’s been involved in SEO for more than a few years probably loves. Xenu’s Link Sleuth identifies broken links on sites.

Y – Yahoo

Yahoo

The other search engine. Many link builders will refer to being listed in the Yahoo Directory, which used to be one of those things that we all recommended. Today, Bing provides the search results you see on Yahoo.

Z – Zzzzz

Zzzzz

Sleep, which you definitely need if you’re going to link build. It’s tiring work!

SES Toronto 2012 is June 11-13. Register before may 11 and save up to $300!

SEO Sweat Equity: Advice for Do-It-Yourself Business Owners

SEO tips for DIY business owners

As you go through your work week, and if you’re present on the web, you’ve most likely been given dozens of promotions by SEO (search engine optimization) experts who guarantee to raise you up the search engine rankings if not get you to the top of the first page on Bing. some are great, some awful, and the charges for this product vary from a couple hundred bucks to thousands per month.

If you’re an entrepreneur or small business owner with a modest budget for specious results, at best, prior to contracting anybody there are a few steps you can do by yourself that are the things that the specialists do.

The Name is the Game

Pick your website domain name with prudence. every site owner has keywords that they desire to be found on; describing either material, service, geographical sector, or something else that internet visitors may be trying to find. If you can, put your keyword in your name. If it’s Mexican travel tours, then Mexicantraveltours.com is an extremely SEO’d domain name. for SEO San Diego, it might be SEOSanDiego.com. You get the picture.

This isn’t always possible for a company. for example, a consulting organization named Smith and Jones Consultants doesn’t lend itself to this, and key wording Smith or Jones might not be especially useful. the domain SmithandJonesConsulting.com is appropriate in that the company name is included the title, so don’t exclude that.

What you can do here is have an independent blog, a great SEO technique, on a domain name using key phrases. If Smith and Jones happen to be Six Sigma specialists for producers, a blog site named and domain-titled sixsigmaconsulting.com (if obtainable) will get great title-driven SEO returns.

Investigate Keywords

This is a 3-step technique:

  1. Create a list of the top 10 key phrases that describe your webpage (see I said page and not website; every page decision should follow this exercise, with the homepage obviously for the whole business). These are 2-3 word key phrases (NEVER single words) that summarize what you do and what the visitor can expect.
  2. Visit the Google Adwords selection instrument and enter those in, individually. see what comes up. try to find the best 5 alternative keywords that get the most monthly searches and have the least competitors than what you entered in as your key phrases. If what you began with is listed with them, bypass step 3. You have a key phrase to utilize on your webpage(s).
  3. Make a business judgment on the greatest keyword phrase between your first key phrase and the 5 other phrases by how effectively it illustrates your webpage and subject matter as well as interest in the worldwide web amongst consumers. You now have your key phrase.

…rinse and repeat.

Keyword Anchors

Anchor tags are the words you write in your website AND on other sites that lead to your page that are hyperlinked to get on or, if linking externally, away your site. You commonly see this written as click here or read more here. These hyperlinks are overlooking a beneficial SEO chance.

Rather, make the links meaningful phrases that are lined up with the destination landing website. If your website has to do with fantasy baseball, rather than writing click here in your material, say “learn more about Fantasy Baseball” with those words linked.

Key Phrase Positioning

Write first for your reader and secondarily for search portals, STILL if you select good, relevant and descriptive keywords, they ought to be easy to weave into your page copy organically. they could even be alt tags for graphic images, in video clip summaries, and other add-ins or widgets on the webpage. A key place for key phrase description is in Titles, Headings and Subtitles visible on the site. A second high-SEO position is in the body copy of your first text paragraph. be vigilant to use them naturally without duplicating them too many times in a manufactured way, lest you would like to be put in search engine prison and possibly prohibited.

Meta Optimization

It’s incredible how many websites I have visited that have no meta tag info on the sites. every HTML page ought to contain the following meta details behind the scenes (not directly evident on your page):

  1. Header – usually found at the top of your page source code, this shows up in the top tab on most web browsers after your website is loaded. keep it descriptive and key phrase abundant in 60 key strokes or fewer.
  2. Description – This is what is displayed beside your page title in search returns. You have 160 characters to present a persuasive story and include in your primary key phrases. Envision writing a great Tweet and having 20 characters left over.
  3. Keywords – Comma delimited tags in your source code primarily for search engine food. Don’t put more than 10 keywords per page or you’ll weaken what your website is about in the eyes of Google, Yahoo and Bing. Many in the SEO world recommend just 3-5.

Many site development platforms like WordPress make including these tags very easy for non-web developers using plug-ins such as the All in one SEO pack.

So go ahead and keep your dollars while taking control of your search engine optimization success. If you do these 5 simple things and put in the sweat equity for dollars, your webpage will be off to a terrific SEO start, delivering traffic, leads and sales opportunities that bring the profits to invest in the next step of SEO performance.

About the Author: Karl Walinskas is the CEO of Smart Company Growth, a business development firm that helps small to mid-size professional service firms build competitive advantage in an online world of sameness. His Smart Blog covers leadership, business communication, sales & service, online marketing and virtual business, and was recently named by Buyerzone as one of the top 20 Business Blogs of 2011. He is the author of Getting Connected through Exceptional Leadership, has been a featured expert for Inc.com with articles published in Selling Power, America Online,and Site Pro News to name a few, and blogs frequently for Rank my Website, a top San Diego SEO Services firm.

Image: Stuart Miles

Backtrack SEO – The Most Important SEO Course To Come Out In Years!

My name is Jack Humphrey and I have a story to tell you about search engine optimization, tracking Mountain Lions, and the key to my search engine success over the last 12 years online.

You’re probably wondering if I’m serious or crazy talking about Bears and Mountain Lions and SEO at the same time.I learned about wildife tracking in the mountains of Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, and Northern Mexico from some of the greatest trackers of our time.

And what I learned, tracking wildlife in remote wilderness areas of North and South America, I brought to the internet. Google and I started on the web at the same time. We’ve grown up together. And it was a match made in heaven.

Google was the first engine to use any kind of sophistcated algorithm to rank sites based on the number of links pointing to those sites from others. think of links like the tracks a bear leaves as it stalks its prey. A tracker sees both in pretty much the exact same way.

My tracking senses were honed on backtracking successful "kills" in the wild to find out how wildlife lived and succeeded in caring for themselves and their offspring. It was only natural for me, when I got on the web and figured out what Google was doing, to start tracking successful sites and then backtrack their links to figure out how to match their rankings and even beat them!

Oddly, the same exact principles for tracking Bears in the wild applied to what Google was doing with its rankings.

(And you might be very surprised what the top sites on the web in tons of different niches share in common!) Hint: It wasn’t in the last blog post or SEO course you’ve read!

I’ve done my own special brand of SEO pretty much the same way the entire time I’ve been online. For over a decade I’ve been building successful products, a major brand, and a multi-million dollar company with my partners and staff, based on the basic principles I brought to the web from the far reaches of some of the wildest places on the planet.

And I’ve never told anyone publicly exactly how I’ve always ranked for practically anything I want in any niche I want…

The "Backtrack SEO" method was born 12 years ago, but it has never been taught outside my mastermind groups. I’ve decided that I’ve kept this method from the public for long enough!

The way I do SEO is completely different from any SEO training on the market today. For one, it’s a lot easier than SEO experts would have you believe. Second, it is my firm belief the SEO should not stress you out or take too much valuable time away from all the other work you must do to make money online with your site, products, or service.

Seriously, think about that for a minute. then realize that you’ve finally found what you’ve been looking for the entire time you’ve been trying to figure out this "free traffic" thing with SEO.

There’s no sweeter traffic than organic, free traffic we get from the engines. We’ve played around with paid traffic over the years, but the business my partners and I have built has been built almost completely with organic, free traffic we get from the engines.

To date, very little SEO training has been released that doesn’t drive normal, non-geeks nearly insane with complexity and massive learning curves. It’s time for you to learn SEO tactics that are easy, reliable, and most important, totally guaranteed to work!

Guess what? we don’t really care how engines work! we just want to get in the top 10 for as many keywords as possible so our sites will profit! right??

Most people simply cannot believe I can teach them how to rank for hundreds, even thousands of keywords (that actually send them traffic every single month) using dead simple tactics that don’t take a brain the size of a planet to understand!

SEO simply has to be easy. Easy to learn and easy to implement and manage. You don’t have time to become an SEO expert. You just want the rankings without the Masters degree in search engine optimization!

It is not a keyword list you use to get ranked in the engines with your content, exactly. It is actually more important than that!

I will share these keywords with you, along with my unusual approach to SEO, the pholosophy behind what I do to rank all day long for practically anything I want, in any niche I go into, and show you live step-by-step examples of my method in action.

In just a couple of hours you will have the entire method down pat, and you can start implementing the Backtrack SEO method extremely fast!

You’ll write your content a bit differently and boost the effectiveness of it in the engines with simple tactics, but not by adding hours of work. You’ll actually save a ton of time doing your SEO the way I do!

Hint: SEO is as much about certain quality factors in your content as the links pointing to it. Let me reiterate that point: What people say about your site, your content, and your product and/or service around the web is a big-time SEO factor most people do not take into account.

I’m not talking about getting a bunch of manufactured, artificial social media links and bookmarks here. I’m talking about real reactions from people you do not pay or incentivize in any way to talk about your site in key places that Google respects and watches like a hawk!

I will show you how to get people talking about your content on social sites and on other blogs without you having to chase them down or do labor-intensive, fruitless "push" marketing in social circles.

You do have a handful of SEO experts who are willing to spill the beans on what they know. the problem is, many… Read more…

33 Common Online Struggles from Last Week’s Experiment

Last week I asked, “What do you struggle with online?”

The point of that post was two-fold. One, to inte&#114&#97&#99t with you on an individual level. Two, to better &#117&#110&#100erstand how I can help you with your website right&#32&#110&#111w.

All of your struggles seem to fall into one of &#115&#105&#120 categories: setting up your website, creating con&#116&#101&#110t, getting traffic, converting traffic, making mon&#101&#121&#44 or remaining true to foundations of internet succ&#101&#115&#115.

With that, here are 33 common online struggles a&#110&#100&#32my best advice for handling each.

Most of you seemed to have your sites set up,&#32&#115&#101lf-hosted, and otherwise running properly, which i&#115&#32&#103reat. there are still a few common problems that I&#32&#115&#97w.

1. who is this site for and why does it exist?

&#73&#102&#32the homepage doesn’t answer this question immedi&#97&#116&#101ly, people are likely to leave.  Communicate this&#32&#119&#105th your logo, tagline, header area, or featured ar&#101&#97&#46

Michael answers these two questions with his 5-wo&#114&#100&#32tagline, “How Pros make Money Online.”

2. Crea&#116&#105&#110g a Custom Blog Design

If you haven’t at least u&#112&#103&#114aded to a premium theme, I would start there. Spen&#100&#32&#3650-$100 and your site will look drastically better&#46&#32&#77ichael started Income Diary with a $70 WooThemes t&#101&#109&#112late. within a few months, he paid someone to upda&#116&#101&#32it.

Custom blog designs start at $1,000 and run up&#32&#116&#111 $100,000 or more.

3. Cleaning Up the Blog Design

&#73&#102&#32you have a logo or an opt-in box, make sure it mat&#99&#104&#101s the colors in the design. if you include post im&#97&#103&#101s, make sure they’re all exactly the same size (&#104&#101&#114e it’s 345 pixels by 180 pixels). if you start a&#100&#100&#105ng widgets to the sidebar/footer, make sure you ca&#110&#32&#97nswer the question, “how does this improve the s&#105&#116&#101 for my readers?”

Simply using colors that match&#32&#105&#115 a great start. you can find matching color scheme&#115&#32&#119ith ColorSchemeGenerator.com.

 4. Blog Excerpts v&#115&#46&#32Full Articles

All major news sites and big-time bl&#111&#103&#115, with the exception of a few, feature post excerp&#116&#115&#32on the homepage. they do this to make their conten&#116&#32&#109ore consumable and to help people find what they??&#153&#114&#101 looking for. plus, it makes the scroll bar smalle&#114&#46

&#10

To enable homepage post excerpts within WordPress,&#32&#112&#117t the Read More tag at the end of your excerpt.

S&#111&#109&#101 premium themes automatically create and show post&#32&#101&#120cerpts on your blog page.

5. Choosing from a Sea o&#102&#32&#80lugins

Before you start adding every five-star plu&#103&#105&#110 that might improve your site, you need to underst&#97&#110&#100 that plugins are little pieces of software. Once &#121&#111&#117 install more than 5-10 of them, there’s a good &#99&#104&#97nce that they’ll conflict with one another, whic&#104&#32&#99ould crash your site.

The only plugins that are ab&#115&#111&#108utely necessary are Akismet, Google XML Sitemaps, &#67&#111&#110tact Form 7 (free) or Gravity Forms (premium), and&#32&#87&#111rdPress SEO by Yoast (unless your theme has SEO op&#116&#105&#111ns built-in).

After getting your &#115&#105&#116e set up, the next step is writing content. All of&#32&#117&#115 can improve on this.

6. Writing Well

Writing is l&#105&#107&#101 painting. anyone can pick up a paintbrush and mak&#101&#32&#97 few strokes, but it’s immediately obvious when &#121&#111&#117 can’t do it well.

Simply writing content withou&#116&#32&#115pelling or grammar mistakes doesn’t make it good&#46

&#10

&#73f you don’t have a command of the English langua&#103&#101&#44 you have three options: become a better at writin&#103&#32&#105n English, hire a writer, or write in your native &#108&#97&#110guage. Even those of us who speak primarily Englis&#104&#32&#110eed to work on this, a lot.

7. creating Exceptiona&#108&#32&#67ontent

Exceptional content talks about things that&#32&#112&#101ople are actually interested in. It educates and e&#110&#116&#101rtains. most importantly, it uniquely solves a pro&#98&#108&#101m.

If you tell me that your content is exceptional&#44&#32&#121et you’re not seeing the results, your content i&#115&#110’t exception&#97&#108&#46

8. Crafting Headlines

The headline is the most im&#112&#111&#114tant part of your post. if it’s bad, no one will&#32&#110&#111tice it, click it, or read it.

To write better hea&#100&#108&#105nes, make sure they are keyword-focused, benefit-d&#114&#105&#118en, and power-word ridden. In the eight hours I sp&#101&#110&#116 on your sites, I saw less than a handful of good &#104&#101&#97dlines.

9. Writing Audience-Focused Content

People&#32&#101&#120pect blogs to be flooded with useful information t&#104&#97&#116 benefits the audience more than it documents the &#98&#108&#111gger’s life.

If you want to build an audience, f&#111&#99&#117s on the audience.

10. Finding Motivation to Write&#32&#67&#111nsistently

When you put a lot of work into somethi&#110&#103&#32and don’t experience results right away, it’s &#100&#101&#109oralizing. you question why you’re doing all of &#116&#104&#105s if no one is paying attention.

Two things. One, &#121&#111&#117’re definitely doing something wrong and you jus&#116&#32&#110eed to figure out how to fix it. Two, this is the &#105&#110&#116ernet’s way of filtering the good from the bad. &#73&#102&#32it was easy, everyone would do it.

The people who &#102&#105&#110d success online, without exception, dedicate year&#115&#32&#116o figuring out the internet before they finally cr&#97&#99&#107 the formula.

11. Writing with a Busy Schedule

I??&#153&#108&#108 admit I haven’t found a good solution for this &#101&#105&#116her. The posts I write here take 6-8 hours. if you&#32&#104&#97ve a full-time job, an attention-hungry kid, and a&#32&#108&#105terally hungry family, I know it’s hard to find &#116&#104&#101 time to write even once a week.

You have three op&#116&#105&#111ns. One, write higher quality, less often. Two, fi&#110&#100&#32(probably hire) someone to create content for you.&#32&#84&#104ree, find a way to accept and filter user-generate&#100&#32&#99ontent.

12. User-Generated Content

If you can figu&#114&#101&#32out how to accept user-generated content and maint&#97&#105&#110 a high-level of quality, you’re golden.

Again, &#116&#119&#111 things. One, tell your users exactly what you wan&#116&#32&#116hem to submit. Two, make the submission process as&#32&#115&#109ooth as possible.

If you use Gravity Forms, you ca&#110&#32&#99reate a form that saves their submission as a draf&#116&#32&#105n your “Posts” section of WordPress.

Getting traffic was the most common struggle o&#110&#108&#105ne. over half of you mentioned that you wanted mor&#101&#32&#116raffic.

13. Ranking for the right Keywords

If you &#119&#97&#110t your site to rank for the right keywords, you ne&#101&#100&#32to create exceptional content for that keyword. Ei&#116&#104&#101r that, or you’re going to be paying for traffic&#46

&#10&#494. Building Backlinks

I’ve been running blogs si&#110&#99&#101 2008 and I’ve never implemented a formal link-b&#117&#105&#108ding campaign. yet, between my two largest sites, &#73&#32&#103et 18,500 search visits per month which accounts f&#111&#114&#3256% of my traffic.

Backlinks are important, but no&#116&#32&#97s important as creating exceptional content. Links&#32&#99&#111me naturally.

I think the larger problem is that p&#101&#111&#112le would rather focus on building backlinks than c&#114&#101&#97ting exceptional content.

15. Optimizing Blog Post&#115&#10

&#78one of you mentioned that you struggle with optimi&#122&#105&#110g blog posts, but I saw that this was an underlyin&#103&#32&#112roblem to why you’re not getting traffic.

To hel&#112&#32&#121ou with that, here are 10 SEO Blog Post Publishing&#32&#83&#116eps that most Bloggers Forget and 10 Blog Post Mar&#107&#101&#116ing Steps to take Immediately after you Publish.

1&#54&#46&#32Encouraging People to Share your Content

If you’&#114&#101&#32not creating content worth sharing, people aren’&#116&#32&#103oing to share it.

Again, it all comes back to crea&#116&#105&#110g exceptional content. if you’re doing that, the&#121&#226&#128?ll find a way to share it.

17. Boosting Page View&#115&#32&#98y Keeping People on your Site

To boost engagement,&#32&#103&#101t people to consume as much of your content as pos&#115&#105&#98le. if I read seven blog posts on any one site, th&#101&#110&#32I’ll probably become a regular reader.

To increa&#115&#101&#32the likelihood of somebody staying on your site, a&#100&#100&#32a Related Posts area to your blog post footer. For&#32&#116&#104is, I use the Similar Posts plugin.

Once you get people to your site, focus on encou&#114&#97&#103ing them to do something. It could be to subscribe&#44&#32&#116o buy, or even just to comment.

18. creating an Op&#116&#45&#73n Bonus

To create your opt-in bonus, the first ste&#112&#32&#105s figuring out what readers want. if they have a s&#112&#101&#99ific set of problems that you can help them with, &#119&#114&#105te an ebook, create a video series, or set up an a&#117&#116&#111-responder.

The software-as-a-service equivalent i&#115&#32&#97 free trial. very few sites find success without f&#105&#114&#115t giving something away for free.

19. Getting More&#32&#69&#109ail Subscribers

The first step in getting more ema&#105&#108&#32subscribers is to give them a great reason to subs&#99&#114&#105be, oftentimes with an opt-in bonus.

Once you have&#32&#97&#32compelling reason for getting someone to subscribe&#44&#32&#116hen it’s as simple as constantly reminding them &#116&#111&#32do so in a way that communicates the benefit of su&#98&#115&#99ribing.

20. Positioning your Opt-Ins

The most popu&#108&#97&#114 places to put opt-ins are in the header, at the t&#111&#112&#32of the sidebar, at the bottom of the post, and in &#116&#104&#101 footer. of course, Popup Domination works so well&#32&#98&#101cause it makes the opt-in front-and-center.

One lo&#99&#97&#116ion that IncomeDiary.com used to utilize and is be&#103&#105&#110ning to pick up steam on other sites is above the &#99&#111&#110tent and sidebars on the homepage.

21. Designing Y&#111&#117&#114 Opt-Ins

Using the Aweber/MailChimp-generated opt-&#105&#110&#32templates is a good start, but they don’t fit in&#32&#119&#105th the rest of your design. It looks sloppy and ma&#107&#101&#115 people think that your bonus/newsletter is subpar&#46

&#10

&#73f you know HTML and CSS, you can strip out the aut&#111&#45&#103enerated styling and style them however you want. &#69&#120&#112laining this in more detail is outside the scope o&#102&#32&#116his article, but if you need help, drop a comment &#97&#110&#100 I’ll see what I can do.

22. Building a Communit&#121&#10

&#66uilding a community is a process that starts with &#101&#97&#114ning one reader at a time. get someone to read one&#32&#112&#111st. Then another, and another, and another. They??&#153&#108&#108 subscribe, open your emails, leave comments, and &#115&#104&#97re your stuff.

Then someone else will come along a&#110&#100&#32the two of them will start recognizing each other &#105&#110&#32the comments. Then another will come, and another,&#32&#97&#110d another.

But it starts with one reader reading o&#110&#101&#32post and thinking, “That was worth my time. What&#32&#101&#108se is here?”

If you’re doing ever&#121&#116&#104ing right up to this point, it’s time to cash in&#44&#32&#98ut in a way that doesn’t detract from the work y&#111&#117&#226??ve already done.

23. Ethics of making Money Onli&#110&#101&#10

It’s not wrong to start forming a business aroun&#100&#32&#104elping people with their problems. That’s what b&#117&#115&#105nesses do.

If you’re not making money nor indepe&#110&#100&#101ntly wealthy, then the only way your blog can be s&#117&#115&#116ainable is if you start selling things to your aud&#105&#101&#110ce.

I understand the hesitancy to start making mon&#101&#121&#32online because it feels like you’re exploiting t&#104&#101&#32very people that you’re trying to help. The best&#32&#119&#97y to overcome this hesitancy is to only sell them &#116&#104&#105ngs that they need.

The more niche your audience, &#116&#104&#101 more easily you’ll be able to recommend product&#115&#32&#97nd show ads that’ll fit their needs.

24. making &#65&#100&#115 More Relevant

Click-through rates depend on the r&#101&#108&#101vancy of the ads.

If you have a news-based or humo&#114&#45&#98ased site that appeals to everyone, it’s going t&#111&#32&#98e difficult to serve them relevant ads. if you foc&#117&#115&#32on building an audience of a specific type of pers&#111&#110&#44 you won’t get as much traffic, but advertisers &#119&#105&#108l pay more for that traffic because it’s targete&#100&#46

&#1025. Positioning Ads to Increase Clicks

I’m not a&#32&#102&#97n of trying to trick people into clicking your ads&#46&#32&#73t’s a short-term game that’s not worth playing&#46

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&#66ut if your ads are relevant enough to actually hel&#112&#32&#112eople, then put them in the same places you would &#112&#117&#116 your opt-ins (header, top sidebar, bottom post, f&#111&#111&#116er).

26. Focusing on Affiliate Sales

Quick rule: D&#111&#110&#226??t recommend something that you haven’t used an&#100&#32&#98enefited from using yourself.

Let’s say that you&#226&#128&#153re building an audience of people like you. if a p&#114&#111&#100uct helps you, it’ll help them. if it has an aff&#105&#108&#105ate program, sign up and recommend it. you can cre&#97&#116&#101 full-scale reviews or simply drop it into your po&#115&#116&#115 and emails when it’s relevant.

Recommend a mix &#111&#102&#32products with and without affiliate programs. That’ll show peopl&#101&#32&#116hat you’re there to help, not just to make a buc&#107&#46

&#1027. Coming up with Product Ideas

Ask your audience&#32&#119&#104at they want.

Organize information into an ebook. &#68&#101&#118elop software that helps you and package it to hel&#112&#32&#116hem. Launch a premium course to help them individu&#97&#108&#108y.

The neat thing about building an audience first&#32&#105&#115 that they’ll tell you what they want and you ha&#118&#101&#32a platform to sell it.

28. Sales Page Strategy

The&#32&#114&#117les here are constantly being rewritten.

If you cr&#101&#97&#116e something that people need and you effectively c&#111&#109&#109unicate the reasons why they need it, they will bu&#121&#32&#105t. if they don’t buy it, you made a mistake on o&#110&#101&#32of those first two things.

In terms of building a website, getting traffi&#99&#44&#32converting traffic, and making money, success is s&#105&#109&#112ly a matter of doing the right things in the right&#32&#111&#114der. It’s easy once you know how to do it.

The m&#111&#114&#101 challenging part is getting the fundamentals righ&#116&#46&#32If you don’t do these five things, you will stru&#103&#103&#108e at every other level.

29. Help People Solve Prob&#108&#101&#109s

If your website doesn’t help specific people s&#111&#108&#118e specific problems, it’s not going to get the a&#116&#116&#101ntion that it deserves. And even if it does, it’&#115&#32&#103oing to be difficult to sell things to those peopl&#101&#46

&#1030. Be Unique in a Crowded Internet

Most sites are&#32&#97&#118erage.

If you want to stick out, be different. if &#121&#111&#117 want to be remarkable, be memorable. if you want &#116&#111&#32make waves, create something that you’re proud t&#111&#32&#115how to your real-life friends.

Too many of us have&#32&#116&#101mplate-y designs, generic logos, auto-generated op&#116&#45&#105ns, and regurgitated content.

31. get P&#97&#115&#116 the Desire for Anonymity

I know that many of you &#99&#104&#111ose to be anonymous because the internet makes tha&#116&#32&#112ossible. maybe it lets you be more honest with you&#114&#32&#97dvice. or maybe you justify it with, “this site &#105&#115&#110’t about me.”

But it’s like walking into a s&#97&#108&#101s meeting with a mask on. sure, it’ll be interes&#116&#105&#110g for a few minutes, but if you never take the mas&#107&#32&#111ff, they’re going to walk out.

People buy from p&#101&#111&#112le they know, like, and trust.

32. Avoid Paralysis&#32&#102&#114om the Pursuit for Perfection

One month on the des&#105&#103&#110, two on the logo, a few months of market research&#44&#32&#97nd many, many months crafting an amazing opt-in bo&#110&#117&#115. Now, just a few weeks to write the first five bl&#111&#103&#32posts and bam! Site’s live.

I know&#44&#32&#116he gradient in the nav menu is all wrong. Just a f&#101&#119&#32weeks to fix that. Might as well re-work the foote&#114&#32&#116oo. Another month goes by.

Maybe som&#101&#116&#104ing’s wrong with my color scheme…

A year later&#46&#32&#89ou cracked the 1,000 uniques mark in the 11th mont&#104&#44&#32but your site never picked up steam like you plann&#101&#100&#32for it to.

Just get your site up, track data, and &#97&#100&#106ust your site based on feedback. Then, never stop &#105&#109&#112roving.

33. Stick with One Project

Results are goi&#110&#103&#32to take longer than you expect, especially if you?&#128&#153&#114e just getting started online.

If you move around &#102&#114&#111m shiny object to shiny object every three months,&#32&#110&#111ne of your projects are going to get the attention&#32&#116&#104at they need.

Like I said, if you have the fundame&#110&#116&#97ls right, it’s only a matter of doing the other &#50&#56&#32things in this list. It’ll take time, more time &#116&#104&#97n you want it to, but it will happen.

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&#73 learned a lot about you all last week. What you s&#116&#114&#117ggle with. What you’re doing well. What you can &#105&#109&#112rove. And I hope this post shed some light on your&#32&#99&#111mmon struggles.

For us to continue serving you, we&#32&#110&#101ed you to continue telling us how we can help.

I a&#112&#112&#114eciate the, “Awesome post, Nick! way to go. You?&#128&#153&#114e so smart (and handsome)” comments. I really do&#46

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&#66ut I’d like more of you to challenge my thoughts&#46&#32&#71ive me feedback that’s scary to give. Tell me, ?&#128&#156&#78ick, this concept is good in theory, but I’m rea&#108&#108&#121 struggling to implement it because…”

As alway&#115&#44&#32I’m looking forward to your comment.

Photo by ki&#114&#115&#116inmckee

This article courtesy of 33 Common Online&#32&#83&#116ruggles from last Week’s Experiment

Tagged as: advice, attention, auto, color, income, making-money, marketing, people, publishing, related, thoughts, time, traffic, work