Tips for Bulls-Eye Blogging: Getting Your Content Found

Dianna Kersey: Information ArchitectDianna Kersey: Information Architect

Since the beginning of time, humans have been searching for ways to communicate.  From sign language to cave drawings to paintings, humans have been trying to tell their stories.

In fact, we humans have protected, copied and preserved the written word since its inception.  From Dead Sea scrolls to naval captain’s logs to newspapers to the blogs written by the world’s 70 million bloggers, people have been (and continue to be) obsessed with communicating what is important to them.

So, you say you are clean out of parchment, your hammer and chisel are dull and you don’t own a printing press?  How about we move into the 21st century and we learn how to communicate with not only other humans, but search engines as well, so those other humans can find the words on your blog that express what’s important to you.

So let’s start with the basics….

Loading the Rifle:  What is a Blog?  Here is a short video to explain:



There are 8 types of blogs that can be a part of how you choose to communicate what’s important to you.

Here are examples of each kind:

1.    Linkblog – Social bookmarking, such as del.icio.us
2.    Moblog – sending pictures from a camera phone or mobile device, e.g., Flickr
3.    Podcast – audio recording in MP3 through RSS feed – iTunes
4.    Videoblog/Vlog – video recording in MP4 through RSS feed – YouTube
5.    Microblog – short text message, popular with mobile users, e.g., Twitter
6.    Miniblog/reblog – content is mostly from a third party in a post versus creating original material,  e.g., stumbleupon
7.    Liveblog – covers a live event, such as a sporting event or press conference.  Engadget is an example.
8.    Blog – A collection that can include all of the above.

Once you choose which format is inspiring to you, it’s time to bring it to life and be found on the social web. When choosing a blog strategy, first you will want to choose a blog platform (such as WordPress or Blogger) and create a themed look and feel appropriate to what you want to talk about and what you feel will appeal to the type of audience interested in your same topic.

Now that you have a blog hosted and up and running…. now what?  You need great content. Period.  Your content must be interesting, informative, educational, or inspiring in a way that compels your readers to engage with you.  Most important, be creative and have fun with the voice of who you are.

Rand Fishkin from SEOmoz has written a great article that details 21 tactics to increase blog traffic, but we are going to cover just a few highlights.

Talking to Humans: Taking Aim at Your TargetTake Aim at Your Target

Here are a few items to help keep your content fun, inviting and engaging to your audience:
-    Great content – first and foremost.
-    Link to your sources and data information. Don’t be afraid to link to resources valuable to your readers.
-    Invite guest bloggers to be featured on your blog.
-    Interview influential people who address the topic covered by your blog.
-    Use rich media – e.g., video, charts, images, graphs, podcasts, bullets, etc….
-    Use community sharing software such as ShareThis or Tweetmeme to allow visitors to share your content easily with others through Twitter and Facebook and many other bookmarking  platforms throughout the web.

Talking to Search Engines: Bulls-eye

Okay, so you have great content. Check.  Now it’s time to be found in the search engines and share your content with readers.  You have to socially broaden your footprint on the web and get your content out to communities that are interested in what you have to say.

How do you do that?

Here are some simple tips to help search engines identify and “read” your content and properly index it so that a person searching on the topic that you posted about can find your blog. By using these plug-ins (or many others like these), you can help tell the search engines what your posts are about.

-    Use a SEF (search engine friendly) plug-in, such as headspace2, to insert title tags, smart URLs and descriptions into your posts to help search engines index the posts for the right keywords.
-    Tag your content with keywords relevant to what that post is about.
-    Make it easy for someone to subscribe to you with RSS feeds or subscribe with email.
-    Use an interactive WYSWYG word processing plug-in, such as Tiny MCE Advanced, which allows you include images, video and a myriad of other functionality to make your content engaging.

You’ll be loaded for bear if do your research, choose the type of blog that’s right for what you want to communicate, educate yourself on your chosen topic, learn from other bloggers, create a community by broadening your web footprint, and use the 21st century tools to help humans using search engines find your blog content when they search on the keywords that are most relevant to it.

Good luck!

Take the Marketing 2.0 Challenge

Marketing 2.0 Are you up for the challenge? Marketing 2.0 is a mindset. It’s all about Inbound Marketing! Think like a publisher and a collaborator.  The two pillars are content marketing and relationship building. Social media is a communication channel, not a magic wand. But, without a strategy you’ll fail!

The questions in the Marketing 2.0 Challenge are designed to challenge and inspire you. After you review them add your comments below and engage with your peers around the world who are invited to participate in this conversation. When adding a comment preface it with Q#. For example, Q3 for question 3.

Let’s get started…

Q1. What is your Inbound Marketing strategy?

Your Inbound Marketing strategy should uniquely comprise of online and offline strategies that engage your target customers through content and relationship building so that they will be attracted to your business. Tactics may include SEO, SEM, blogging, social networking and other forms of engaging content that produces trust and appeal to your target buyer.

Q2. What are the staffing implications of an Inbound Marketing strategy?

The staffing implications of your Inbound Marketing strategy are huge. Staff must have a mindset for Inbound Marketing. Applying the outdated style of shouting at customers doesn’t work in the new Marketing 2.0 model. Your staff must think like publishers and collaborators.

Q3. How do you manage social media in your business?

Manage social media in your business first by listening and engaging in relevant communities. Develop a strategy and assign social media platforms to staff according to strengths and interests. If necessary get outside help but always maintain an authentic and human voice in social media.

Q4. What is your content marketing strategy?

Your content marketing strategy should be unique to your business. Produce and re-purpose content that meets the criteria of the three E’s; educate, enlighten, entertain. Your content marketing strategy should never end. Content marketing is an ongoing process. Share content on and offline with your community.

Q5. How much emphasis do you place on building relationships online?

The emphasis of building relationships online is an important factor. It comes back to the mindset. Building relationships online with relevant people builds trust and strengthens your brand. Relationships create fans, loyalty and spreads the word about your content your products and your people, all of which produces positive results.

Q6. How do you measure results of your Inbound Marketing strategy?

To measure Inbound Marketing results start by setting goals. Create a baseline picture of “today.” Over time measure the results of your inbound marketing activities. Frequently measure details such as subscriptions, company mentions, referring traffic, sentiment of your brand and of course, progress on your goals.

Q7. What are the risks of an Inbound Marketing strategy?

There are risks in an Inbound Marketing strategy. The biggest risk is not doing it and falling behind your competition. Another big risk is applying yesterday’s mindset to it. This is Marketing 2.0. Avoid doing it the same way you did it in 1.0. Think like a publisher and build relationships and you’ll minimize all risks.

Q8. What are the roles of SEO and SEM in your Inbound Marketing strategy?

Use best practices to develop a sound SEO strategy. Similarly use SEM best practices to avoid over spending. Create landing pages around very specific themes. Test different versions of your landing pages. Measure everything to determine what works and cut non performing keywords and landing pages.

Q9. How do you integrate offline marketing with online marketing in your business?

Integrate offline marketing with online marketing by creating content that can be used in both media channels. The same principles apply. Take this blog post as an example. It is also available as a physical booklet. But the most value you’ll get from it is the user generated conversation on all these questions below.

Q10. What is your Inbound Marketing strategy if your customers don’t spend a lot of time online?

If your customers don’t spend a lot of time online your Inbound Marketing strategy is exactly the same in mindset. The tactics will differ through offline media. You should still aim to educate, enlighten and entertain with your content and be trustworthy and attractive to your community. You can think like a publisher and collaborator offline as well as online.

Add your comments below. Remember to precede each comment with the question number.

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Content Marketing: “This stuff really works!”

Last week I had a quick trip to Cambridge, MA for a guest appearance on HubSpot TV. During my visit I sat down with Andrew Davis, Chief Strategy Officer of Tippingpoint Labs. A conversation with Andrew (Drew) is never boring. The location we picked was a Starbucks around the corner from the MIT campus which added to the charm of the experience.

Tippingpoint Labs is a “digital content creation” shop.

“We create valuable content: video, audio, presentations, photos, podcasts, wiki contributions, articles, stories. We believe in perpetual production: creating high-quality, relevant content to a well-defined audience. We move quickly to adjust and refine your content to build a relationship with your audience.”

I asked Drew to give me an example of how they create content and “move the needle” for their clients. He gave the example of a client called Breville, an Australian maker of kitchen products including coffee makers and blenders. This is a crowded market segment with aggressive advertisers.

Drew and I share a passion for “marketing 2.0” strategies which are anchored in engaging your target community through great content and building authentic relationships. Drew explained how Tippingpoint Labs engaged influential blogs such as the Coffee Geek and Single Serve Coffee to become aware of Breville and to review their products.

Product Launch Through the Blogosphere

When Breville launches new products or announces strategic partnerships such as the one with Keurig in March 2007 pertaining to a new single serve gourmet home brewer, influential blogs such as Single Serve Coffee are engaged. These blogs cover the coffee market and enjoy a loyal following. Essentially, these blogs are the new media and channel of communication for manufacturers like Breville.

Online Brand Value

Drew points out that to measure the value of branded content on the web, Tippingpoint Labs tracks popularity of brands online and correlates them to sales figures using tools such as Google Insights. As relevant topics grow in popularity such as “coffee makers” so does the popularity of Breville, and the sales figures reflect it. Below is a chart showing how the conversation between Breville and Delonghi brand espresso machines is shaping the market.

Breville Google Insights

Below is a short interview with Drew. We closed this interview with a profound statement: “This stuff really works!”

Marketing 2.0: My New Social Media Marketing Book 

 
icon for podpress  Marketing 2.0 Social Media Book Release [23:26m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (1695)


Marketing 2.0 This podcast provides an introduction and overview of my new book, Marketing 2.0: Bridging the Gap between Seller and Buyers through Social Media Marketing, now available on Amazon.

Background

I wrote the book between late 2008 and early/mid 2009. My motivation came primarily from my experience running my inbound marketing agency, Find and Convert. We work mostly with small and medium size businesses (SMBs). Our clients are mostly niche companies. During the course of running my agency I have met many businesses who have not yet embraced social media marketing. I realized there is a gap between the seller and the buyer in today’s digital economy. Today’s buyer doesn’t want to be engaged the same way that sellers have engaged them for many years. This book sets out to help SMB business executives think of marketing 2.0 as a mindset.

Foreword

Inbound Marketing GuyThe foreword was written by Mike Volpe, V.P. Inbound Marketing at HubSpot.  Mike mentions that he and I met online and exchanged a lot of content before we met in person. He speaks about inbound marketing as being the new way for businesses to engage buyers and convert them to customers. When he researched me, he found all of my content on the web where he could get to know me and my value proposition and to begin to build a relationship with me. By the time he shook my hand the first time we met, he felt he knew me. He says he had a connection with me. This is exactly how buyers want to feel when they do business with a company.

Testimonials

I am fortunate to go to print with two terrific testimonials on the back cover. Joe Pulizzi, CEO of Junta42 and co-author of Get Content, Get Customers and Gary Katz, CEO of Marketing Operations Partners. Both Joe and Gary are outstanding marketers who were gracious enough to provide testimonials on the back cover.

Chapter Summaries

Following are some of the chapter topics and summaries. For a complete listing of the chapters visit the book table of contents.

Buyers Want to Consume Seller’s Content

Business executives should set out to produce great content, all kinds of content and present it to buyers so they can engage with you on their terms so they can begin to build a relationship with you online.

When buyers seek out new product vendors they have these two habits (hint: the same as you):

1. They search online. They may start at a search engine, but as they click around they find content across the web in blogs, forums, videos, photos, articles, white papers, directories, webinars, slide presentations, etc. None of these aforementioned locations may necessarily be your website.

2. They ask for referrals. They are influenced by other people’s opinions even if they don’t know them.

Content Marketing & Relationship Building

Outbound marketing doesn’t work anymore…In the near future the decades-old form of interruptive marketing will become obsolete. Buyers can already filter out the seller’s outbound marketing tactics. It’s only a matter of time before outbound marketing as we know it today is totally obsolete.

Significance of 2.0

In my book I provide insight into the significance of “2.0.” I provide other examples of major leaps from 1.0 to 2.0. Some of the examples I provide include:

  • World 1.0 was flat. World 2.0 obsoleted a flat world when it was discovered the world was round.
  • Software 1.0 was installed from from a disc or tape.  Software 2.0 is not installed. It’s accessed from the web and paid by subscription.
  • Music 1.0 was purchased physically on a vinyl or CD format. Music 2.0 is downloaded from iTunes and other music sharing sites.

Technology and Social Drivers

We didn’t get to marketing 2.0 overnight. There are many technology and social drivers that have evolved us to where we are now. People under 35 in the workforce are accustomed to using the social web. In time as the workforce ages the marketing 2.0 mindset will be commonplace. At this moment in history, there is still a transition underway.

Developing Communities and Engaging Conversations

Buyers are in control. Sellers must understand this to engage buyers successfully. Buyer perception is what counts. Buyers want to engage with sellers through authentic converstations, not sales pitches. Buyers want to engage through communities where people help each other. The role of the brand has evolved from marketer to collaborator.

Developing a Social Media Strategy

I provide SMBs guidelines to develop a social media marketing strategy. I call it “old school meets new school.” There is research required to devleop an effective SMM plan.

Think Like a Publisher: Content Marketing

A big aspect of Marketing 2.0 is the mindset of thinking like a publisher. Sellers should strive to produce relevant content for buyers so they will engage with your content.

Lifecycle of Interaction

There are four stages in the lifecycle of interacting with community on the web. Sellers must understand these stages in order to understand how to engage people based on the stage they are in.

Measuring Results

Measuring results in a marketing 2.0 strategy is not the same as in years past. First, it is possible. But, the methods and the metrics are different. Some web analytics apply. Sentiment monitoring also comes into play. Measuring qualitative and quantitative results are both important.

Risks of Social Media Marketing

There are many risks in a marketing 2.0 strategy. Though I list more than ten risks in my book, the biggest one is what I refer to as social media abstinence. Understanding the risks will minimize mistakes and minimize failures.

Benefits of Social Media Marketing

There are many benefits to a marketing 2.0 strategy. This chapter outlines the many benefits and how to reap the rewards. One such benefit is the opportunity to build a strong brand even if you compete with a large conglomerate who has a huge budget. The social web levels the playing field.

Staffing Implications.

There are many staffing implications to consider in your marketing 2.0 strategy. This chapter discusses how social media marketing impacts your current staff and possibly future staff. The decisions you make to staff your marketing 2.0 strategy may be different than in years past.

Social Web Platforms

I devoted individual chapters to SEO, blogging, social networking, Twitter, podcasting, video and photos. Each of these is discussed in the context that they are enablers and tools.  None of these alone is the answer.  They enable us to create content and build relationships. Of course, SEO is not a platform. I discuss the role your content on the social web can contribute to your SEO results.

Marketing Operations:

Gary Katz, CEO of Marketing Operations Partners contributed a chapter on marketing operations. Gary explains how to make the marketing department a profit center, not a cost center.

Case Studies

My favorite section of the book is the case study section near the end of the book. I researched and wrote about real world examples of SMBs and solopreneurs who are succeeding with marketing 2.0 and their learning process. Each is learning and each is succeeding. I think you’ll find the diversity of industries and approaches very interesting and inspiring.

It’s About Content and Relationships

In the final chapter, I reiterate a key point I stressed throughout the book. The new mindset of marketing 2.0 is to engage buyers through great content and to build relationships with them. This mindset is a process. The old style of marketing is on its way out. Marketing on the social web can be integrated with offline marketing using the same principles of content and relationship building.

Resources

I put together a list of good books, blogs and podcasts on social media marketing. You’ll find plenty of great resources to further your education and insights into marketing 2.0.

Bernie Borges Live at Your Events

I enjoy speaking on Internet marketing topics at industry conferences and private events. Anyone interested in bringing me in to speak can contact me.

Special Offer

At the end of the podcast,  I offer a free copy of my book. But, you must listen to the podcast to learn how you can get a free copy. No gimmicks. No form to fill out. My offer is a free copy of my book. Listen to the podcast to learn how to get it. Click to play above, or visit iTunes and search for it by my name or by “inbound marketing,” or “social media marketing.”

I sincerely hope my book is a valuable resource to you. I look forward to getting your comments through my blog or the various ways you can contact me:

Twitter: http://twitter.com/berniebay
LinkedIn: http://linkedin.com/in/bernieborges
Facebook: http://profile.to/bernieborges
Facebook Fan Page: http://companies.to/findandconvert/

What if Thomas Jefferson was a Blogger?

Every Independence Day I read the Declaration of Independence. I don’t tire of it. Each year I get goose bumps as I read it. The clarity of voice in our founding fathers in the historical document is simply amazing.

Thomas JeffersonThis year I got to thinking, what if Thomas Jefferson and the founding fathers had the opportunity to blog? What if the Internet had been invented in the 18th century. Rather than Thomas Jefferson distributing the scroll of paper (after Congress approved it August 2, 1776) announcing the independence of the 13 colonies, he (and many others) would’ve blogged about becoming independent from mother England.

And, what if the Declaration of Independence was drafted as a document in Google docs shared by the committee of five who drafted it: John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, Robert Livingston, Roger Sherman and Thomas Jefferson.  Jefferson is credited with the authorship of the famous declaration document which was “inked” into an official scroll document to be distributed throughout the land and delivered to mother England by ship. Signing Declaration of Independence

I don’t need to be reminded of how fortunate we are to have the technologies we have at our fingertips. Reading this historical document on July 4th every year serves to remind me how blessed I am to be an American and how lucky I am to be alive during this time.

Our military men and women serving us bravely in far away lands communicate with their families with webcams across the Internet. The citizens of Iran have been communicating with the world using mobile devices, Twitter, Facebook and blogs. The Iranian authorities have been unable to completely prevent citizen journalists from essentially playing the role of uncensored media to the world.

Similarly, some business executives have not yet awakened to the capabilities available to their customers, employees and competitors using these commonplace technologies.

Just like long haired ponytails were the popular culture for men during the time of our founding fathers, the modern day popular culture is for people to “tweet” their sentiments about your new product announcement, or your decision to layoff 20% of our your workforce, or merge with your largest competitor, or (fill in the blank). Whether your company is public requiring disclosure of every substantial event, or private, the current culture is that everything is public on the social web.

The Internet makes this possible. The culture of transparency makes this popular.

Does your CEO resist this culture? Does your chief marketing executive resist this culture? Does your chief sales executive resist this culture? Does your chief financial officer resist this culture? Does your chief people officer resist this culture?

Are You Swimming Upstream?

salmon swimming upstreamYou know the cliche “swimming upstream.” What image do you get when you hear that cliche? My visual is a salmon swimming fiercely against a river current. They do it yearly to spawn but you can’t help but wonder why they do it. Only a few make it. The odds are so against them. Why not “swim with the current” and get there faster?

That’s the question I ask when I encounter business executives who resist the new social web. These are the executives who know social networking is here to stay but think it’s a waste of time for them and their employees.

In my book, Marketing 2.0, I refer to this as social media abstinence. I suggest it’s the biggest risk in business today.

Business executives who abstain from engaging their buyers on the web where their buyers want to be engaged are risking their future. If their employees get it, it’s only a matter of time before they seek employment elsewhere, or worse yet their competitors will engage their customers in the culture of the social web and capture market share.

If Thomas Jefferson had access to the Internet I don’t think he would’ve abstained from using it to write and distribute the Declaration of Independence ahead of time. I bet it would’ve gone viral. Don’t you?

@berniebay

Do You Have a Blog Strategy?

 
icon for podpress  Standard Podcast [17:26m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (2994)

This podcast elaborates on a blog post about blogging strategies

We start with a plug for the annual Tech Jam party hosted by TBTF – a party with a purpose to support the TBTF Foundation!

At Find and Convert, we frequently get asked by our clients about business blogging strategies.  “Should we have a blog?  How would a blog benefit our business and our SEO strategy?”

Sidenote: Podcasting has its roots in blogs.  The first podcasts were posted (and many still are) on blogs.

The real question is what is your social media strategy?  A blog is a component of a social media strategy.  Social media is not rocket science.  It is any web platform where communities of like minded people go, they subscribe, they contribute thoughts and user generated content.  They “socialize” online! The collective influence of communities in social media is very powerful.

When considering a blog within a social media strategy, a business should first consider what they want to accomplish.  Do they have subject matter experts, thought leaders AND the available resources who can be committed to a blog? 

Many companies start and stop a blog because they don’t get instant results.  One reason is they don’t commit the resources to the blog.  I sometimes visit a blog and see the last post was three months ago.  That blog instantly has NO credibility!

Where do you start?  Start by being a “listener” first.  Before a business starts a blog, they should visit other blogs where their community hangs out.  Read about what they’re talking about.  Get involved in those conversations with any frequency that suits your comfort.  You can gain really valuable insights from other blogs.  People can be talking about your company, your products, your competitors and even your employees.  They may be talking about issues your company addresses well but they don’t know that you do.  That’s an opportunity!

What should businesses blog about?  Most companies should blog about what they are capable of blogging about!  Begin by finding the person who has the interest in writing and the knowledge (authority) to write.  If a business has more than one person who likes to write, divide up the roles on the blog.  It’s ok to have more than one person “hosting” a blog.  They should be able to write in a blogging style.  Write conversational, not as corporate speak.  Always write relevant content!

Mistakes to avoid? One big mistake is not being transparent.  Don’t be someone you are not.  Be honest with your community.  If you use a screen name, be real behind the screen name.  No smoke and mirrors.  Your community will eventually find out and trash you.  Don’t underestimate the power of the online community.

How often should we blog?  No one answer.  Just be consistent.  Not too infrequent.  I blog about once per week.  Each business blog is unique.  As long as the content is relevant and of interest to your audience.

What’s the benefit to my SEO strategy? Blog content is an effective way to add content to your website if your blog is connected to your website.  If your blog is standalone you can link back to your website with relevant anchored keywords.  Blog content is an effective way to add content because many businesses struggle with adding fresh content on their website.  The link value of your content is what counts the most in your SEO strategy in the long run.

What’s your blog strategy?  Is it in the context of a social media strategy? 

 

Do You Need a Blog Strategy?

One of the most common questions we get from B2B clients is “how can a blog help my SEO strategy?”  Follow up discussions include questions like, “What would we blog about?”  “How often do we need to blog?” 

This usually leads to a discussion around blogging strategy and social media strategy.  I point out that a blog may or may not be the right social media strategy for a B2B marketer.  I try to get the point across that a blog really should be part of a bigger strategy.  Some are reporting that B2B blogging is on the decline.

A big mistake to avoid is to start a blog just because it seems like a good idea.  A social media strategy should focus on the most effective ways to foster multi-levels of communication among the communities of people in your market place. 

There are many social media strategy avenues available and blogging is just one of them.

If a blog is a desired part of your social media strategy it’s important to have a well defined goal for the blog, along with a commitment of resources to the blog. 

Let’s look at each of these questions:
How can a blog help my SEO strategy?
Depending on your objective(s) it may provide several benefits.  One of them is if you don’t have a good blog and most of your competitors do, then you are possibly disadvantaged.  But, if you don’t have the resources to start a blog, even this reason isn’t a good one.  Find other ways to compete.  A good blog most often benefits a business by providing a friendly platform for your communities to gain insights into your company or industry that are not otherwise available.  A good blog will also provide link value for your SEO strategy.

What would we blog about?
You can blog about a lot of things.  What are the issues facing your industry?  What are the issues facing your customers?  What are some ideas you have (that aren’t confidential) that you want to express? Think in terms of product, environment and customer.  Write about things your community will have interest in and invite them into the conversation.

How often do we need to blog?
Often enough to show consistency. We blog about once per week. The frequency should be determined partly by your blogging resources and by the activity that takes place on your blog. But, if you start a blog with frequent posts, then it tails off to very infrequent blogging, you are likely to lose your audience.  Show consistency and listen to your audience.  You may need to blog more often if that’s the feedback you get from your blogging audience.

Don’t be surprised if your audience doesn’t join the conversation.  Depending on the size of your company and the size of your community, your blog may not generate a lot of conversation.  But, if it is well read, it can create another face to your business that can give you an edge, not easily duplicated eleswhere.

What are your thoughts on blogging?
Bernie

Web 2.0 for B2B Marketers

Last week I gave an updated presentation on “What B2B Marketers Need to Know About Web 2.0.” The venue was TechSelect in Las Vegas (a private conference put on by TechData). The audience was VARs and Systems Integrators who purchase products through TechData. I presented once each on Friday and Saturday.

In both sessions I encountered many similar questions and concerns. Many people had limited knowledge of Web 2.0. Some attendees had profiles in LinkedIn, Facebook and a few in MySpace. Some were familiar with blogging, but surprisingly few. A few attendees had corporate blogs. Most were very interested in learning how to implement a blog strategy.

My advice to those interested in blogging was to start an internal blog first. Even for a small business that can include extensions of the company such as partners, suppliers, customers, etc. This is a relatively safe way to experience the dynamics of a blog. Beyond that, starting a public blog starts with studying the industry landscape to determine a sound blog strategy.

We also discussed micro blogging (Twitter), podcasting and social networking. There was very little awareness of Twitter, but we had interesting discussions around Twitter’s potential business applications.

There was particular interest in podcasting, especially as we discussed how technology buyers often rely on podcast content to help shape their opinions of products and services they consider before making a purchase decision.

We also discussed SEO at a very high level.  In particular we reviewed the growing importance of delivering content through social media platforms to help create links and to contribute to organic rankings. 

I provided up to the minute statistics on most of the topics mentioned above.  The two presentations were very interactive and were interesting and enjoyable for me to deliver.  Based on feedback I received it was informative for the attendees.

The full presentation can be accessed here.  I welcome comments.

Measuring Web 2.0 Buzz

At Find and Convert we’re all about measuring.   We provide our SEO clients detailed metrics.  You know, the usual stuff including unique visits, page-views, time on site, conversions, bounce rates, keywords, referral sources, yada, yada, yada.  I’m not trivializing it by any means.  The metrics we track for SEO and PPC are very important.

But, as more of our clients enter the brave new Web 2.0 world the question is how do we measure results?  Great question!  Not a simple answer….But, there are ways to measure results from your Web 2.0 campaigns.

If you’re blogging, you can measure RSS subscriptions.  You can measure how many others link to your blog.  Who are they?

You can measure how many social bookmarks you receive from popular sites like DIGG and StumbleUpon and how easily your social media content is found in Technorati and Del.icio.us.

You can certainly monitor and measure the comments on your blog.  You can see the tone of comments and the trends in the comments.  In fact, you may find comments to be invaluable “research.” 

Don’t overlook your web stats reports.  You can track referral sources from social media sites.  When you see social media referrals increase, that’s a trend to watch.  If you run campaigns in social media sites, track your web stats carefully to observe traffic from these sites and time spent on your site.  Make sure to have conversion strategies in place for these referral strategies so you can track them easily.

Don’t overlook tools such as Google Alerts and Yahoo Alerts.  In Google Webmaster you can track links from social sites. 

If you manage a large brand, or multiple brands there are more advance social media tracking tools.  Some of them include Andiamo, Website-Watcher, WathThatPage and Visual Sciences.

Internet Marketing strategies require planning, measuring and revising.  The methods and tools used to measure Web 2.0 results vary somewhat from measuring SEO and PPC, but not drastically.  The web analytics field is evolving.  Keep up to date and profit from the results you can measure.

Think Like a Publisher

This blogging tip is not my original idea.  I don’t even remember where I read it.  But, it really stuck with me. 

Most businesses who struggle with their blogs do so because they are not thinking about it the way a publisher thinks.  A publisher lives for content.  A publisher’s product would die without content.  So, a publisher and the staff constantly seek out content, put it into topical compartments and publish.

How often do you come across an email or an event or some activity that contains content you could use in your blog?  I’ll go out on a limb and predict – very often!  If you’re not seeing it, maybe you should enlist help. 

What may be content buried under a rock to you, may be big boulders to someone else.  I’m color blind so what others see, often I don’t see.  Get the point?

But, when it comes to content, I see it every day.  Heck, if I didn’t have a real job I could post interesting stuff to this blog 10 times a day.  But, I do…

So, the next time you’re sitting in a meeting think about something in that meeting (or something else in your day) that could be interesting to your blog readers.  You may have tripped over it many times already without realizing it.

And, if you think you don’t have time to act on these blogging opportunities, you’re probably right.  Just make the time.  Your blog readers will thank you for it.