10 SEO Mistakes Even The Pros Make.

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SEO mistakes

After being involved in SEO for over half a decade, I’ve seen my fair share of search engine algorithm updates. Like many industries, change is the only constant in the SEO industry, however over the years I’ve also seen my fair share of search engine optimization companies fail to stay up to date with the latest strategies in the SEO world. These companies quickly aggravate their client base and many of them end up closing up shop.

Even experts can miss the ball from time to time, however with the latest rounds of Google updates over the last 18 months, even seasoned veterans are making mistakes with how they approach SEO in 2013. Here are the 10 most common mistakes I hear of from new clients that even some of the “pros” in the SEO industry are making, and more importantly how to avoid them:

1) Ignoring Google Announcements

Okay, I’ll be the first to admit that Google isn’t exactly “friendly” with SEO companies when it comes to announcing changes to their algorithm. I understand this — there are hundreds of thousands of people out there who would unethically spam search engines if they knew exactly what they were looking for. But if you know how to read between the lines, a good SEO can gather quite a bit of information from the announcements Google puts out on their webspam and webmaster blogs.

I often hear of SEO companies that don’t even know these sites exist, which to me is absolutely terrifying as they are the first place most good SEOs turn to learn more about Google updates.

2) Building Keyword Rich Links

In 2008, you could build 10,000 links all with the same anchor text, for example “car insurance”, and rank for the keyword “car insurance” very easily. Today, if you build 100 links all with the same anchor text, for example “car insurance”, you probably won’t ever rank for the keyword “car insurance” for as long as Google exists.

The reality is keyword rich anchor text is important, however it’s also important to know how to use it. In my opinion, it should be used extremely sparingly and only with high quality links. Gone are the days of building endless amounts of junk anchor text links to rank for a given term. But unfortunately many SEO companies, and especially low end and outsourced SEO companies, are late to the parade on this one and still build clients hundreds even thousands of keyword rich links. Just a few weeks ago we took on a new client who sent us an alarming report from her last SEO company showing thousands of these links, and not surprisingly they don’t rank for any of those terms anymore. SEO today requires more caution and attention to detail than it did years ago.

3) Building Too Many Links

Last week I was speaking with a new client who wanted to go from 0-100 in a few months. They wanted to have a mid 5-figure per month budget to be extremely aggressive in growing a new business through organic traffic. I had to slow them down, as building too many links especially to a new site and in too short of a time period is a red flag these days to search engines.

These days it isn’t about building tens of thousands of links to outrank competitors, rather what I’ve experienced is it’s more important to build quality links over a long period of time. It seems as if slow and steady really does win the SEO race these days. Search engine algorithms are getting smarter and smarter by the day, so it’s important to understand what they want at any given point in time to not only try to rank for your given terms, but to also make sure you aren’t penalized and aren’t throwing money out the window. In this case, we actually turned away revenue and recommended to this client to start out on a different route with us to protect their investment.

4) Not Updating Your Website

Let’s be honest, websites in 2013 are a heck of a lot more sophisticated than they were just a few years ago. And if your company has a website that is outdated, not only will it show when your visitors come to the site, but it will also show to search engines. Aside from the look and layout of the site, it’s important to keep your coding up to date and fully compliant. Beyond that, search engines have been reading content for nearly 2 years now looking for duplicate content, thin content, and spammy content. If your site hasn’t been updated (both aesthetically and content wise) then it definitely needs to be updated.

Many SEO companies only offer SEO, they don’t know the first thing about web design or how web design actually impacts SEO. It’s important to make sure that your SEO company in 2013 isn’t just well versed in SEO, but understands how nearly every element of online marketing (SEO, web design, PPC, email marketing, etc.) work together to deliver the best ROI possible.

5) Having Junk Content On Your Site

Two years ago I would encourage our clients to blog whenever possible, or if they had the budget we would have our content writers blog on their behalf. Back then, I was happy with websites just having updated content, regardless of whether it was 200 words, 500 words, or 1,000 words long and regardless of the quality of the content. Back then, if you actually had content on your blog you were light years ahead of other websites.

Today, everyone sees the importance of blogging, and it’s no longer enough just to put content on your blog. Let’s look at a site like About.com or eHow. These sites have millions of pages of content with millions of links and millions of visitors, so they can get away with putting up mediocre content. However as a small business, you can’t get by with putting out this same quality of content. You have to write quality content that is engaging which will not only engage your visitors, but it will also attract referral traffic and natural links.

Likewise, Google seems to be looking at the length of content these days. I rarely see 300 word posts ranking on page 1 anymore unless they are on an extremely strong domain. Rather I’m seeing more and more articles and posts in the 1,000 to 2,000 word range ranking on page 1 of results. In 2013 and beyond, it’s not going to just be about content but it’s going to be about quality content.

6) Not Building Any Links

I was speaking with a few owners of small SEO companies who say they are no longer building links for their clients as it’s just too risky and they don’t see the value anymore, rather they are focused on a content-only strategy. While I agree content is extremely important, any good SEO will still tell you the importance of quality links built right. Google is still looking at links and in my opinion will continue looking at links for years to come, so it’s important to still build links to your website from quality sources.

The problem becomes building quality links is labor intensive, time intensive, costly, and requires skill, things many SEO companies are lacking. It’s critical to ensure you’re building links to your website from the right sources.

7) Focusing On A Narrow Goal

If you had to shoot a bullseye on a target, would you rather do it with a single shot rifle or with a shotgun that spreads dozens of pellets? The more you throw at the target, the greater the chance of hitting a bullseye. Many SEO companies focus so narrowly on ranking a few keywords, that they miss the big puzzle. These days SEO is risky. Doing one thing wrong can cause a site to stop ranking for a given keyword. Rather than focus narrowly on a few keywords, it’s important that you focus on a set of keywords that consist of long tail terms, competitive terms, and even other marketing strategies.

For example, to incorporate diversity into our campaigns we assist clients with remarketing campaigns, pay per click campaigns, email marketing campaigns, social media campaigns, content writing, and other online marketing strategies. While SEO is still the best way to get traffic in my opinion, it’s also important to broaden your goal to make sure you’re engaged in a diverse campaign to protect the investments of your clients.

8) Still Engaging In On-Page Spam

Last week I saw the site of an SEO agency whose footer had over 100 different “terms” they were trying to rank for linking to various doorway pages on the site. A few weeks ago I saw a new site using cloaking to try and trick search engines. SEO companies are still engaging in these black-hat strategies to try and game search engines, and to be honest after digging around a bit it isn’t working at all for them as they weren’t ranking for any of the terms.

I’m not sure if the person behind this just doesn’t want to accept that search engines know how to detect this these days or they’re just too ignorant to understand it, but the reality is on-page spam is one of the surest ways these days to see a dramatic drop in organic traffic. More important than making sure you aren’t engaged in spam linking is to ensure your site isn’t trying to spam search engines.

9) Tracking The Wrong Metrics

Rankings, bounce rate, organic traffic, referral traffic, rank change, time on site, new visitor percentage — these are all key metrics in any online marketing campaign that a good SEO company will track. Want to know the one metric a great SEO company will strive to improve? ROI. At the end of the day, who cares if you have 10 visitors on your site or 10,000 visitors, what it really comes down to is are you seeing a good ROI from your investment?

It’s important to make sure your SEO company is helping you make money. Whether it’s through conversion optimization, page one rankings, helping with site compliance issues, or anything in between, make sure your SEO company is working for you to help you with your business. It amazes me at how many small businesses pay an SEO company each month and have no idea what they are doing. We have clients who prefer to only receive updates quarterly, but the majority of our clients receive monthly updates from us and many clients speak with us on a weekly and sometimes even daily basis. Make sure ROI is the key number involved in your SEO campaign, and even if that metric is difficult to track in your industry make sure you have at least a rough idea of it.

10) Not Reaching Out For Assistance

SEO is complex. Extremely complex these days. Over the last 6 months, I’ve spoken to dozens of owners of other quality SEO companies and have even hired one or two for unique situations to get a second opinion. I’ll be the first to admit I don’t know everything when it comes to SEO, and to be honest there isn’t anyone out there that knows everything about SEO. And just when you figure everything out, something changes and you’re back to square one.

Make sure your SEO company doesn’t have ego issues — and I mean that seriously. When we face a situation that is unique or we think we just need a second opinion, we never hesitate to reach out to our friends and associates in the industry to get a second set of eyes. Any true professional will do this, and it’s important to make sure your SEO company isn’t afraid to reach out for assistance.

Author: Brendan Egan

Courtesy of www.simpleseogroup.com

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10 SEO Mistakes Even The Pros Make.


7 Simple Content Marketing Tricks That Will Earn You SEO Treats.

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Seo Target - Science and Technology - Great Clipart for Presentations ...

SEO is dead. How many times have you heard this lately? Probably more times than you care to think about; but guess what? The truth is, SEO as we know it is dead. Long live content marketing!

With Google’s Panda and Penguin updates, web-spam got a jab to the face and left hook to the jaw in an effort to improve the quality of search results. SEO is no longer about spinning an article out to as many content farms as possible, or getting as many links as you can afford to buy, or overstuffing your content with keywords. The focus is on producing engaging, informative content. Quality, not quantity.

Content marketing and SEO is a marriage made in marketing heaven. Creating a continuous stream of quality content such as blog posts, white papers, guides, and even visual content like videos and images will feed the hungry search engine beasts – helping to keep you on top of search results. But did you know there are tricks you can do with your existing content that can earn you some sweet SEO treats? Here are 7 simple content marketing tricks you can start using right away to get an SEO boost:

1. Update your text content with visual content. Add fun images to your blog posts optimized with alt text. Got videos? Embed a relevant video into a blog post (for an example, check out what we did with one of our webinar announcements after the webinar occurred). Embed slides from a presentation into a post or the body of related sales copy. This will not only enhance your text content, but give search engines additional content from your website to index – which means more possible traffic!

2. Re-imagine your existing content into new formats. How many different ways can you combine the ingredients of one recipe to make something completely different? Look at your blog posts, white papers, or even your sales brochures (online and printed) and think about ways you can repurpose that content into different forms – such as an EBook, infographic, or video.

3. Break long-form content into fun-size pieces. We live in a mobile world, where we take our content to go. Make it easy to digest by breaking longer content into smaller, bite-sized chunks. Create a series of videos from a single, hour-long webinar; or post partial chapters of your latest EBook in a series of blog posts.

4. Curate content into “best-of” pieces to attract links. You’ve seen those posts listing the “best of” something, right? These are easy to put together, and can attract links if your list is particularly useful, or even from those websites you’re linking to. Try an end-of-week post with all the best stories of the week in your industry or topic-area, or put together one big, comprehensive list of tools, resources or people.

5. Create optimized landing pages for each of your content downloads. Are any of your content assets downloadable (i.e. white papers, checklists, infographics, etc.)? Make sure each of those assets has its own keyword-optimized landing page so they too can be indexed and found easily in search engines.

6. Publish your content on other platforms. Different content will work well on different platforms. For instance, images get 20 times more interactivity on Facebook than plain ol’ text posts. Content doesn’t have to be long-form or time-intensive to create, nor does it have to live on your blog or website. Experiment with posting images (such as memes or your own photos) just on Facebook, Instagram, Pinterest or Google+ to get your fans and followers engaged – and yes, it IS indexable (bonus)!

7. Get back on the Google+ bandwagon. Many people are convinced Google+ is a ghost town and isn’t worth the time. But Google+ has several SEO benefits that make it worth reconsideration. One benefit is that +1s on your Google+ posts influence search results, since they’re like endorsements from your network and a social signal that will raise your ranking on Google when searchers are logged in on Google.

Author: Kari Rippetoe

Courtesy of www.blog.search-mojo.com

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7 Simple Content Marketing Tricks That Will Earn You SEO Treats.


Three Questions to Measuring Social ROI.

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SEO | Search Engine Optimization | Santa Barbara Marketing | Santa ...

When it comes to measuring social media programs, everyone wants to know the same thing: How do I calculate the ROI of my program? In order to answer this question, you must take into account more than the simple (gain-investment)/investment equation. Simply put, you will need to look at more than just dollars invested in a program to accurately calculate the return on a social program. If you’re struggling with how to measure social ROI, start by asking yourself these three questions:

1. Are your conversations compelling enough to create engagement?

2. Who is engaged within your social media channels?

3. Are your social media efforts producing desired results?

Measuring Engagement

Is the conversation compelling? Content that you place on blogs and social channels has value far beyond moving a customer through a funnel. Before beginning to measure conversions, start by measuring the engagement levels of each of your social channels to determine if your content is compelling enough to generate buzz. It is social media after all—if your posts aren’t being discussed, then there’s no chance that they will drive awareness around a topic or product.

Google Analytics (especially social analytics), Facebook insights, YouTube insights, comments, shares and bit.ly analytics are all easy-to-use free tools that can help you start to measure engagement levels of your social channels.

Audience Insights

Without the right people seeing your content, a social program will never be successful. When you’re looking to measure the ROI of a social effort, it’s important to not only measure “what’s” important, but “who’s” important as well. Use tools, such as: Crowdbooster (Twitter) and analyze your Facebook posts and YouTube and blog comments to segment users into user groups based in their engagement levels. Generating a lot of followers doesn’t necessarily translate to a successful social media program.

Goal-based Measurement

The final piece of the ROI puzzle is to define your business objectives before you start to make sense of any data. This is a very important step that most miss. The tools that you will use to measure your goals will vary based on what those objectives are but in the general sense, this is where you will measure conversions from your social channels. Look at your different channels to see how effective each is so that you can focus on maximizing your content’s audience response on the correct social asset.

There isn’t an industry standard or benchmark on how to measure the ROI of a social media program—that’s because every social program is different. When building your ROI measurement approach, it must include social engagement levels, conversion rates and investment dollars. Your social media effectiveness is only as useful as what you implement and the three questions you need to answer.

Author: Brian Costea

Courtesy of www.comblu.com

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Three Questions to Measuring Social ROI.


Find the content in your business.

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As you may well have heard from everyone, content marketing is the new way forward. I find this a preposterous idea, not because I don’t agree that content marketing is the new way forward, but because it has always been the way forward. Content marketing is all about providing quality information and products for your customers.

Sure, there are those that have made great successes from employing low quality techniques, but these people are just modern day snake oil salesmen and whilst they may achieve instant short term successes, their business models and techniques do not have the legs to carry them through to long term sustainable success.

The interesting (or frustrating) thing about content marketing is how many people seem to be afraid of it. They don’t understand what content is, how it can generate traffic and increase their business; and they seem to believe that the creation of content entails sitting down at a desk and laboriously writing, whilst neglecting other profitable activities.

None of these things need be true. In fact, with a slight readjustment to how you think about what content is and where it comes from, creating content could very quickly become the most profitable and least wasteful activity within your business.

Realise that you already produce content (but you waste it)

You already produce valuable content in your day to day activities, regardless of what that activity is. The problem is that not only do you not realise that you are creating this content, you throw it away.

Consider a typical accountant. During the course of their normal working week they probably send a great many emails answering client questions about business taxation and accounting. Once sent, the content of those emails is not used again.

What if the accountant saved up all of these emails over time and created a ‘ten top taxation tips for small businesses”? It would only few minutes to remove any client information and make a generic document that provides valuable information.

Now consider value. If the accountant charges ?25 per hour and spends an hour creating the original email (and dispensed with it after sending), then the email has a finite value of ?25. By reusing the content of the email there is scope for the value of the content to rise infinitely.

You don’t have to be office based either. My brother in law is a bespoke, specialist carpenter and he successfully uses otherwise wasted content that he produces during the day. He does this by taking static photographs of the build process he undergoes and then creates time delay films of the event. He then posts these images to pinterest, his own website and various social media.

Author: Chris Pitt

Courtesy of www.verticalleap.co.uk

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Find the content in your business.


How to Optimize a Web Page in 7 Easy Steps.

On-page optimization is the easiest, most learnable aspect of search engine optimization. But like all “easy” things, we sometimes forget that you can still do them wrong. Easy doesn’t always mean simple. Yet, many complex tasks can be made easy with a good process.

Below I’ve outlined a solid on-page optimization process that you can apply to any web page on your site. Working through this process checklist will make SEO easier but not necessarily simpler; you still have to do the dirty work.

Step 1: Choose the core term

All SEO starts with keyword research. Before starting the optimization process for a specific page, you should have already completed some basic keyword research for the entire site. In doing so, you should have mapped each core term to specific pages of your site.

With that information, you need to decide which page to optimize “next.” I like to prioritize each of my core terms based on a few factors:

Relevance: Not every core term is as relevant as the next. Some might be slightly tangential but still can produce sales, while others are a bulls-eye. The bulls-eye gets higher priority than the others.

Importance: Some core terms represent products or services that are more important than others. Start where the money is.

Audience targeting: Core terms don’t always perform as well as they might appear. As much as is possible, determine how likely any core term will be at converting its audience.

Search volume: How often a term is search is an important factor, but it’s not the only important factor. Be sure to only consider this in relation to the others.

Step 2: Ensure the core term and page are a good match

Once you have decided which core term you want to go after, take a closer look at the core term/page relationship. You want to ensure that both are an absolutely solid match for each other.

With some sites, certain pages and core terms might be interchangeable. For example the phrases “web marketing” and “internet marketing” could easily be a good fit for the same page. What you want to be sure is that each core term is the best possible fit for any given page. You can do this by analyzing the existing content, looking to see if one fits more naturally than the other. Don’t recreate the wheel if you don’t have to; find the best fit and move forward.

Step 3: Research core terms for additional highly-related phrases

Rarely is the first round of keyword research the only research there is to do. Each core term can produce a list of dozens, if not hundreds (or even thousands) of related phrases. Each of these phrases should contain each word in the core term, but may also include additional, related words, varying word orders and other relevant variations.

Not every phrase in this research will be a good one and you’ll have to spend some time sorting through what is viable and what isn’t. Ultimately, you want to select only a handful of phrases that can be worked into the content. Be careful here. If you don’t select phrases that are very tightly tied together, you’ll end up pushing your content into too many directions, diluting its focus.

Step 4: Integrate keywords into the page (aka optimize the content)

The most knowledgeable person should write the initial draft of content for each page, even if they don’t write well. Then it can be passed on to a copywriter (who has a solid grasp of SEO) to take the first shot at integrating the selected keywords into the page. This helps get the keywords worked in as naturally as possible.

But with any written document, the first draft is rarely the last. After the copywriter is finished, you want to analyze the page from a slightly more technical perspective, touching on several key points:

Keyword usage: Ensure the content has a natural flow while maintaining a proper keyword balance.

Headings: Use headings that are compelling and informative, not keyword laden.

Title tag: Create a compelling, keyword rich title for the page. Don’t stuff them, but use proper sentence structure.

Description tag: Build a meta description that is compelling to the searcher and reinforces the keyword relevance of the page.

Voice: Use a consistent voice across the site. Optimized pages should not stray from the primary site voice.

Active words: Use words that do more than inform. Compel the visitor to take action.

Features & benefits: The content should not just focus on features, but the benefits that the reader will receive out of your product or service.

Skimmable: Make the document easy to skim read while giving the reader access to key selling points and links as they do so.

Calls to Action: Every optimized page should have some form of call to action. Work them both into the text as well as images.

Text Usability: Review the words of the content from the customer’s standpoint. Make sure your text gives your visitor what they need to continue down the conversion path, fixing anything that might stop that process.

Step 5: Page usability review

This is a different review than the text usability review noted above. Here we’re looking at the page as a whole, not just the content. The goal is to ensure the entirety of the page contributes to the conversion process and is able to convey its purpose visually with images and formatting. Tweak the page as necessary to ensure it provides the reader with the best possible visual representation.

This is also a good opportunity to review the page for coding issues as well, ensuring there are no potential spidering issues caused from malformed HTML. Streamline the code as much as possible to facilitate faster download times, and ensure the most relevant information loads first.

Step 6: SEO review

It may seem odd having the SEO review be so far down the list, but it’s a good idea to have them review the page as close to the finished work as possible. This gives them an opportunity to review keyword usage, balance and implementation in all the key areas of the web page, including titles, headings, body content, alt tags and more.

The SEO is free to tweak whatever is needed to give the page the best chance of moving up in the search engine rankings. They must be careful, however, not to undo the efforts of all the reviews above above.

Step 7: Final approval

Before the page goes to the client for their review, it’s good practice to send it back to the copywriter to give the page a final glance to ensure that anything changed in the reviews above still allows the page to maintain it’s integrity. Ultimately, the page has a role to fulfill and this final review is designed to make sure it doesn’t fail at that.

Last thoughts

Each process mentioned above can (and does) have a checklist of its own. Virtually all of the details for actual SEO work has been left out as the purpose here is to focus on the overall process of optimizing a page. I am a firm believer that the process is just as important as the work being done. While it’s the details that bring success, the process ensures that no details get overlooked. In this business, overlooking any detail can result in less-than-stellar performance.

Author: Stoney deGeyter

Courtesy of www.searchengineguide.com

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Microwave Recipes. Simple microwave recipes to make at home

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Blog Flipping Unleashed > Added to Subscriber List Downloads Page

Online Business ebook “Blog Flipping Unleashed” has been added to “List Subscriber Downloads” page. Ebook covers What Is Flipping?, Creating Your Blog, Creating Content, Generating Traffic To Your Blog, Selling Your Blog 24 and Transferring The Blog. (527 KB pdf)

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3 Moms Work at Home Opportunities You Must Try

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Oriental pork recipe

PERFECT for winter, try this oriental pork recipe from Annette Sym's Symply Too Good Too Be True cookbook four.

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Nachos Recipe. Illnesses and Ailments You Can Get From Nachos

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Get Paid To Take Surveys Online- Do Not Miss This

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The Escalating Recognition Of How To Grow Marijuana Indoor Cultivation

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