Archive for the ‘internet marketing’ Category

Google and Micro-Hoo compete as BING and Yahoo combine

Friday, July 31st, 2009

Yahoo and Microsoft’s Bing are set to combine as one powerful search engine.

There are still a lot of questions out there…
Will this partnership create a stronger competitor for Google ?
Well, a 10 year search deal with Microsoft and yahoo is alive now, and it’s said it will better compete with Google, rather than yahoo and Bing as separate entities..

So what exactly is the deal ? It puts Microsoft in control of yahoo search and Yahoo becomes the exclusive search ad provider for Microsoft’s BING. While each company maintains their own separate sales force, and display ad business and Yahoo projects this deal will save yahoo an estimated 200 million dollars, but really puts Microsoft in control.

Last year an agreement between yahoo and Google fell after regulators proposed to block it – so how will this deal fair ?

Impact on SEO and Search marketers ? We will have to wait and see.
What about marketers, advertisers and even consumers ? What will the impact be… we’ll keep an eye out.

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SEO for interactive copywriters – Part 3

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

We have posted before about SEO for interactive copy writers and web designers, but this time we are talking about the things NOT to do for SEO Copy writing.

1. Don’t shove as many key phrases into the copy as humanly possible.

 Which pages land at the top is decided through a series of calculations far more complex than any simple ratio. When you overload copy with keyphrases you sacrifice quality and user experience. Don’t hack up sentences and stuff them un-naturally with search phrases

2. You have two audiences with SEO copywriting: the search engines and your site visitors. Balance between writing good, quality content that will keep your visitors interested, want to hare the information and keep coming back for more and keeping sure that your keyword densities are proper and pages are designed well for search engines rankings.

3. Don’t use keyphrases that don’t apply to the page. 

If you operate a site about web design, don’t try to force a search term about web development into the copy just because it pulls a lot of traffic. (A) Unless you sell, web development, it won’t be applicable. (B) Even if you manage to get the page ranked well for the phrase [web development], once the visitor clicks to your site and realizes you have nothing to do with web development, they will leave.

4. Don’t use misspellings and correct spellings on the same page.

 Sometimes we understand that misspellings will come up in search engine results but, it makes for a poor user experience for your visitors.

5. Don’t use keyphrases the exact same way every time.

 There are lots of ways to use keywords in copy, not just one. In order to sound natural, get creative with your keyphrase usage. One way is to break up phrases using punctuation or using conjugations of words. Since search engines don’t pay attention to basic punctuation marks, you can easily write something using the search term, while the punctuation such as periods and commas are omitted in the spider’s eyes.

6. Don’t use all types of search phrases for every situation.

 Long-tail keyphrases should be reserved for pages deeper in your website that get more specific than on the home page. Broader terms are typically best for a home page.

7. Don’t neglect ALT tags/image attributes.

These tags are the ones associated with images on your pages and they carry a good deal of weight especially if the image is used as a link. The ALT text counts the same as anchor text in a text-based link.

8. There’s a method to the SEO copywriting madness. The idea is not to get as many different keyphrases onto a page as possible. Rather than having 12 different search terms used only one time each, you should use two to four keyphrases (depending on the length of your copy) per page. The title, META tags, ALT tags, other coding elements and on-page copy need to support each other as far as keyphrase use goes. Your goal is to let the engines know that you have original, relevant content about a narrow topic.

 Pick two or three terms which are closely related and use them several times each along with mentioning them in your tags.

When your copy writing, web development and design follows these SEO guidelines, you’ll find your copy flows much better, is more natural-sounding and ranks higher.

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Live Search + Twitter

Sunday, July 26th, 2009

Google is working on live search and Bing already has some sort of live search — and all because of things like twitter, it seems inevitable that we will see it refined over the next 6 months.

Twitter now offers real time search! Or Search in “real time” They announced a new real-time live search widget that can be added to websites and blogs.

The new tool enables you to create a widget for your website or blog that shows real time search results for any search query you build using operators like AND, OR, and some cool location based ones like “near”.

As Twitter continues to gain in popularity, features like this are going to be great for businesses wanting to embrace social media.

Customize your search widget here http://twitter.com/goodies/widget_search

twitter_real_time_search

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Internet facts today. Including social media and online advertising

Friday, July 24th, 2009

4 facts about Social Media and Internet Marketing Today

• Twitter doubles in size every 90 days. It is estimated that there will be 50 million people by December 2009

• Facebook has 350 million users and adds 350 thousand new ones per day

• You Tube has over 75 million videos which is more than ABC, CBS, NBC and FOX Combined

• People aged 18-34 spend 40% of their free time in social media

Relying less on print ( numbers and report comes from webpronews )

The majority (92%) of advertisers are using Internet advertising in their media campaigns followed by print advertising at 88 percent, according to a new LinkedIn Research Network/Harris Poll.

At the same time, less than half are using radio advertising (46%), television advertising (46%) and mobile advertising (39%).

Among those advertisers who are using each of these types of media, there is a difference in the level of usage since last year. Three-quarters of those who use Internet advertising (74%) say they are incorporating it more often while 69 percent of those who use mobile advertising are using it more often compared to a year ago. Unsurprisingly, the largest drop is with print advertising as half (49%) of those who use it are using it less often compared to a year ago while 41 percent are using it the same amount.

Of those who use Internet advertising just 14 percent say they use it in a standalone campaign, while 54 percent say the use it in an integrated campaign with other media and 33 percent use Internet advertising in both types of campaigns equally.

Four out of five advertisers who use Internet advertising use it as a branding device (79%) and two- thirds use it to drive information gathering for an offline transaction (65%). Slightly less than three in five advertisers (58%) use Internet advertising to drive online transactions while 57 percent say the use it to promote community around their brand.

source: webpronews

With all this online advertising – we need to be creative

As advertisers, we desperately need to find creative ways to represent our brand online. We should, for the most part, rely on no-interruption based advertising and viral marketing, but when we need to place online ads – we should keep a look out at the below stats:

80% of internet users say they find ads that expand on the page and cover the content very frustrating while 79 percent say ads where they can’t find the close or skip button are frustrating. Three-quarters of consumers (76%) find Internet ads that automatically pop up very frustrating while two-thirds (66%) say ads that open if they are “moused over” are very frustrating. Three in five consumers find both animated ads that automatically start playing and ads that play music and/or have loud soundtracks to be very frustrating (60% for both).  For us to be successful, we will need to come up with more creative and engaging ways to connect with the consumers.

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