jueves, 31 de mayo de 2012

Capturing The Value Of Social Media Using Google Analytics

Measuring the value of social media has been a challenge for marketers. And with good reason: it’s hard to understand exactly what is happening in an environment where activity occurs both on and off your website. Since social media is often an upper funnel player in a shopper’s journey, it's not always easy to determine which social channels actually drive value for your business and which tactics are most effective.

But as the social industry matures, marketers and web analysts need true outcome-oriented reports. After all, although social is growing in popularity, brand websites - not social networks - remain the place where people most often purchase or convert. 

That’s why we’re releasing a new set of Social reports within Google Analytics. The new reports bridge the gap between social media and the business metrics you care about - allowing you to better measure the full value of the social channel for your business. We wanted to help you with 3 things:
  • Identify the full value of traffic coming from social sites and measure how they lead to direct conversions or assist in future conversions 
  • Understand social activities happening both on and off of your site to help you optimize user engagement and increase social key performance indicators (KPIs)
  • Make better, more efficient data-driven decisions in your social media marketing programs

The Social reports allow you to analyze all of this information together and see a more complete picture of social impact than often used today. Here are a couple of the things you can do with our new reports:

Overview Report: see social performance at a glance and its impact on conversions


The Overview report allows you to see at a glance how much conversion value is generated from your social channels. The Social Value visualization compares the number and monetary value of all your goal completions against those that resulted from social referrals - both as last interaction, and assisted.

A visit from a social referral may result in conversion immediately or it may assist in a conversion that occurs later on. Referrals that lead to conversions immediately are labeled as Last Interaction Social Conversion. If a referral from a social source doesn’t immediately generate a conversion, but the visitor returns later and converts, the referral is included as an Assisted Social Conversion. 

Conversions Report: which goals are being impacted by social media

With the Conversions report, marketers can now measure the value of each individual social channel by seeing the conversion rates of each social network and the monetary value they drive to your business.

For example, you can see the effect that social content (i.e. a new video you created) had on conversions. Look at the time graph to see whether Goal Completions via Social Referral peaked after the content was published. Remember that you need to define goals and goal values in order to see data in this report, so tailor it to the things that matter to your business. Networks with a higher assisted / last interaction conversions ratio provide greater assisted conversions.

Social Sources - find out how visitors from different sources behave


The Social Sources report shows engagement and conversion metrics for each social network so you can see how people are interacting with your content and whether it’s leading to a desired outcome.

For example, if you run social campaigns that promote specific products, you can see via the Social Visitor Flow whether visitors from each social network entered your site through these product pages and whether they continued on to other parts of the site or whether they exited.  

Social Plugins: find the content that’s good enough to share



If you publish content, you'll want to know which articles are most commonly shared or recommended, and on which social networks they're being shared.

Agencia 365, Argentina

viernes, 25 de mayo de 2012

How Search, Social Media and Content Accelerate Your Business

#1 Target Your Traffic Through Keyword Research

Keywords play a powerful role in a content marketing strategy. They are the basic means of communication between searcher and search engine, representing the searcher’s voice and interest. Here’s how to brainstorm for relevant keywords and phrases:

What are the key terms that you identify with your industry?
Do your products come in different styles or colors?
Do you have model numbers or serial numbers that someone might search for?
Would your product or service be categorized differently by region, or even by country? For example, one searcher might search “auto insurance” and another might search “car insurance.”
Consider your products or services by components. For example, if you sell playground equipment, what are the components of the playground equipment that you sell: swing set, slide, monkey bars, etc.?
From your market research, determine what kinds of questions people are asking about your industry. Do these questions give you new insight into how your products are being seen that you hadn’t considered before?

Remember, the main idea in brainstorming for keywords and phrases is to think like a searcher and put yourself in his or her shoes.

#2: Content Must be Maintained to be Successful

Content needs constant maintenance to be successful. You can’t ignore maintenance. Your content represents your brand and your expertise—your ability to meet the needs of your customers. Whether online or offline, the content you publish needs to be kept up to date in order to remain relevant, timely and accurate.

Here are some common content issues that creep up when maintenance is neglected:

  • Old, inaccurate or irrelevant content
  • Broken links within the content
  • Policy changes that may affect content
  • Inconsistency with branding style
  • Inaccurate or missing meta-descriptions

To begin monitoring your existing content assets, you will need to do a content audit, which involves using a simple Excel spreadsheet to take inventory.

In the end you want to keep content that:

  • Is relevant, timely and useful.
  • Meets your organizational goals.
  • Adds value to your customers’ experience.

#3: Proper use of Links to Optimize Content

The way that you handle links is a significant part of search engine optimization. The most important thing is to make it clear where a link will take your visitors—don’t surprise them. Using ambiguous or generic words such as “click here” as anchor text, is a less effective linking strategy than using clear and definitive words.

Proper use of links means more visibility and success. Image source: iStockPhoto

Here are some link tips:

A link’s color should be different from the main text—most people expect it to be blue and underlined, so you might want to keep that in mind as you set up your style sheet.
The words that you highlight (anchor text) should be a good clue to the content that you’re linking to. Try not to send your visitor to a page that they’re not expecting.
Broken links look sloppy and give the impression that you’ve forgotten about the page. Both users and search engines frown upon broken links.
Search engines want to see links in your content, and internal links are the easiest way to accomplish that. Internal links are clues to your website’s relevance.
When using internal links, avoid generic anchor text such as “Want to read more? Click here.” Again, search engines want to see relevance in the anchor text. To ensure relevance, make sure that the anchor text for those links matches the title of the page it links to, whether it’s a page on your site or a page on another website.
Above all, links should direct users to a page that is relevant to the content that they are currently engaging. Directing users away from the topic at hand is a surefire way to lose their attention.

#4: Use Social Media to Promote Content—the Right Way

The greatest value of social media is that it’s social. You have the opportunity toengage and interact with potential customers by adding a sense of familiarity and comfort to your brand image.

The Motor Lodge in Prescott, AZ is a great example of a small business doing this on Facebook. They’ve generated a following of about 1,600 fans on their page, and are keeping them engaged with updates about life at the hotel (even though most of their followers aren’t immediately looking to spend the night in Prescott).

Their success comes first from a quality website that demonstrates who they are, is appealing to visitors and is easily navigable.

The Motor Lodge has a visually attractive website that shows off their brand's personality.

Second, they consistently post interesting content on Facebook, such as stories about their resident cat Shadow, and invitations for fans to “come to our place for a good shower.” Their updates treat followers as friends and even more importantly, the down-to-earth posts encourage comments and interaction.

Third, their updates aren’t necessarily about them, but rather offer reasons to come to Prescott, AZ. These kinds of updates don’t sound like advertising, but for last-minute getaways, this quaint little town will be on the radar of most of their fans, and they’ll have a reason to stay at the lodge!

You can do this too by building relationships on Facebook so that when you have some content to promote, you have an audience that’s ready to receive it.

jueves, 24 de mayo de 2012

Google+ : put your entire blog post into Google+

Here are 6 steps to share your post on Google+:

1. Use Google+ as your brand page.

First, get on Google+ and sign in as your brand page. You just need to click on the gray arrow near your head in the upper-right corner and you’re fine.

choose google plus page

As with Facebook, you will first want to share your blog through your Google+ brand page.

2. Paste in the complete URL before putting anything else in.

When you are using Google+ as your page, put in your blog’s URL before you put in anything else. Google+ will grab images from the first web link it identifies.

paste link first

Paste your blog link in first to ensure the update ultimately links to your blog.

You can use the gray left and right arrows on the image to choose which image is shown with the update.

3. Grab the entire text of your blog post.

Now go back to the tab with your blog post and grab the entire text. Paste that into the Google+ update above the URL you already put in there.

Then go back and copy the blog post title and paste that on top of all of the text.

There are two reasons for doing this. First, you’ve already invested the time in using specific keywords in your blog posts to help Google and other search engines classify your site. Why wouldn’t you reuse them here in Google+?

Second, most people like to consume information from within the social media platform. Few Google+ readers are actually going to click on a link and read your blog post. So make it easier for them by including the entire text here.

Google+ shows readers only the first section, but they can easily click on “read more” to see the rest.

grab post text

Put the entire text of your blog post over on Google+.

4. Use Google+ formatting.

Now that your entire blog post text is in your Google+ update, format it a bit to make it easier to read. Here is how to format text in Google+:

  • Bold words or phrases by putting “*” on either side of the text you want to make bold.
  • Italicize words or phrases by putting “_” on either side of the text you want to make italicized.
  • Strikethrough words or phrases by putting “-” on either side of the text you want to have a line through.

Formatting text makes it both easier to read and makes it look more like the blog post on your site.

paste and format

Make your update easier to read by using Google+ formatting options.

5. Share with your page’s circles.

Now you choose whom to share your update with. Since Google+ makes it a bit challenging for pages to get followers, it’s probably a good idea to share it with everyone you can.

choose circle and share

Choose the circles you'll share your blog post with.

6. Reshare as a person.

As with Facebook, you’ll now want to go back to your personal profile on Google+. You’ll see the blog post in your stream. Simply click “share” to share it with the circles you find appropriate.

Google+ does a great job of including text from your page’s update, so there’s no need to add much more yourself.

page post in personal stream

Share your Google+ brand page update in your personal stream.

Since Google+ still makes it difficult for pages to get followers, you probably have a larger following on your personal profile. Using this technique allows your blog and your Google+ brand page to be exposed to more people.

Note: Always remember to choose “public” in addition to any circles you share with.

choose circle and share

Share with the appropriate circles and add an interesting heading.

Your blog post now appears in your personal stream.

post in personal stream

Now your post is available to all of Google+ in your personal stream.

Google+ Marketing in Argentina by Agencia365

martes, 22 de mayo de 2012

After The Penguin Update: 7 Achievable Steps For Great SEO

1. Understand your link profile

This is essential knowledge post Penguin. The biggest risk factors are a combination of lots of low quality links with targeted anchor text. There seems to be some evidence that there is a new 60% threshold for matching anchor text but don't forget about the future, I recommend at most 2 rankings focused anchor texts out of 10. The key metrics I look at for this are:

  • Anchor text distribution
  • The link type distribution (for example, article, comment, directory, etc.)
  • Domain Authority and Page Authority distributions

The goal here is to find out what is currently going on and where you should be going. Compare your site with the examples below.

Tools for this:

For anchor text Open Site Explorer gives you an immediate snapshot of what's going on while MajesticSEO and Excel can be better at digging into some of the really spammy links.

Distilled Anchor Text

Natural anchor text profile

Great Excel templates for DA/PA analysis

Balsamiq Link Profile

Natural Domain Authority profile

For link type analysis I use Link Detective but it seems to be down at the moment (please come back!).


Link Detective

UNNATURAL link type profile

2. Learn what makes a good link

Great links:

  • Come from respected brands, sites, people and organizations
  • Exist on pages that lots of other sites link to
  • Provide value to the user
  • Are within the content of the page
  • Aren't replicated many times over on the linking site

Those are lofty requirements but there is a lot of evidence that these high value links are really the main drivers of a domain's link authority. At the 1:00 mark Matt Cutts talks about how many links are actually ignored by Google:

That's not to say there isn't wiggle room but the direction of the future is quite clear, you have no control over how Google or Bing values your links and there's plenty of evidence that sometimes they get it wrong. The beauty of getting great links is that they aren't just helping you rank, they are VALUABLE assets for your business SEO value aside. At Distilled this was one of the primary ways we built our business, it's powerful stuff.

3. Map out your crawl path

This is a simple goal but it can be very difficult for larger sites. If it's really complex and hard to figure out then it's going to be hard for Google to crawl. There are few bigger wins in SEO than getting content that wasn't previously being indexed out there working for you.

Crawl Path


Sitemaps unfortunately can only help you so much in terms of getting things indexed. Furthermore, putting the pages that are the most important higher up in the crawl path lets you prioritize which pages get passed the most link authority.

4. Know about every page type and noindex the low value ones

I have never consulted on a website that didn't have duplicate or thin content somewhere. The real issue here is not that duplicate content always causes problems or a penalty but rather if you don't understand the structure of your website you don't know what *could* be wrong. Certainty is a powerful thing, knowing that you can confidently invest in your website is very important.

So how do you do it?

A great place to start is to use Google to break apart the different sections of your site:

  1. Start with a site search in Google site search
  2. Now add on to the search removing one folder or subdomain at a time Subtracting from site search
  3. Compare this number you get to the amount of pages you expect in that section and dig deeper if the number seems high

Note: The number of indexed pages that Google features here can be extremely inaccurate; the core idea is to reveal areas for further investigation. As you go through these searches go deeper into the results with inflated numbers. Duplicate and thin content will often show up after the first 100 results.

5. Almost never change your URLs

It's extremely common to change URLs, reasons like new design, new content management systems, new software, new apps... But this does serious damage and even if you manage it perfectly the 301 redirects cut a small portion of the value of EVERY single link to the page. And no one handles it perfectly. One of my favorite pieces of software Balsamiq has several thousand links and 500+ linking root domains pointed at 404s and blank pages. Balsamiq is so awesome they rank their head terms anyway but until you are Balsamiq cool you might need those links.

Balsamiq links

If you are worried that you have really bad URLs that could be causing problems Dr. Pete has already done a comprehensive analysis of when you should consider changing them. And then you only do it once.

6. Setup SEO monitoring

This is an often overlooked step in the process. As we talked about before if your content isn't up and indexed any SEO work is going to go to waste. Will Critchlow has already done a great job outlining how to monitor your website:

  • Watch for traffic drops with Google Analytics custom alerts
  • Monitor your uptime with services like Pingdom
  • Monitor what pages you noindex with meta tags or robots.txt (you would be shocked how often this happens)

Some more tools to help you keep an eye out for problems:

  • Dave Sottimano's traffic and rankings drop diagnosis tool
  • Google Analytics Debugger
  • The various rank tracking tools
  • SEOmoz's Google Analytics hook formats landing pages sending traffic in an easy graph

7. Embrace inbound marketing

To me inbound marketing is just a logical progression from SEO, thinking about your organic traffic in a vacuum really just doesn't make sense. Dedicate yourself to improving your website for your users and they will reward you, Balsamiq which I mentioned earlier is a perfect example of this. I guarantee you they have done little to no SEO and yet they rank first for their most important keywords and have a Domain Authority of 81. How did they do it? Less features.

balsamiq process

So what does that really mean? Balsamiq had a rigorous dedication to what their customers really wanted. That's really good marketing, smart business and intelligent product design all in one. Remember the future is all about relevance to your users, if you aren't actively seeking this you will get left behind. There is no excuse anymore there are plenty of proven examples of making seemingly boring page types fascinating and engaging.

Posted by Chris Warren

SEO en Argentina by Agencia365

sábado, 19 de mayo de 2012

Does Google+ affect on SERP's?


Google Plus is Social Networking Site. It will not affect directly but If you post quality is quite good and your post will +1 by relevant users then google will consider it on organic news and quality post. 

Google has started looking into social networks and shared content as a means of improving SERP rankings from 2010. However, popular content from Google plus, Twitter and Facebook mostly influences real-time results (as opposed to normal search engine results). 

viernes, 18 de mayo de 2012

Guide To Content Creation

It doesn’t matter whether you’re an on-site SEO consultant, a link-building specialist or an all-round ‘internet marketer’, content creation should be particularly high on your list of priorities. We’ve been hearing the phrase ‘content is king’ for years now, but given Google’s recent de-indexation of low-quality blog networks, the Panda updates and the new algorithm burning across the horizon, it seems it’s never been more true than in 2012.

It’s not difficult to understand the importance of high quality, unique and relevant content in the modern SEO industry; content of this type published on your own site can do wonders when it comes to link magnetism and social media metrics and similarly, can help you obtain extremely powerful links from high authority domains that might otherwise be out of your reach. But creating this content is easier said than done, particularly if you’re trying to compete in a crowded industry. Sure, if you’re working on behalf of a client in a fairly dull field it can be relatively easy to produce content that will attract attention, but competing in content-heavy industries like SEO, gaming and entertainment (for example) can be very, very difficult.

So how can you make creating high quality, shareable content easier? What processes can you follow to minimise the time you spend researching and thinking and maximise the time you spend creating and sharing your content?

To try and answer these questions I’ve put together the following article and infographic (a large chunk of my time working for Designbysoap is spent designing infographics) that aims to give you a structure for content creation, as well as some useful tips and tools. I hope you enjoy it and, more importantly, I hope it helps when it comes to creating high quality content for your own campaigns.

Guide To Content Creation Infographic

Click for a full size version if you'd like to print it.

Research

Typically, this is often the most time-intensive element of content creation, whilst annoyingly yielding the fewest results. I’ve spent numerous hours reading posts and analysing data that ultimately comes to nothing. Sure, it can be enjoyable and often rewarding in terms of learning about an industry, but it’s not always permissible to spend huge chunks of your time (or a clients’ for that matter) reading and searching only to end up with nothing to show for it.

Having said that, the research portion of your content creation process can often be one of the most important – delivering content based on flawed, incorrect, irrelevant or (perhaps worst of all) boring information will get you nowhere and will essentially nullify all your efforts in the latter stages.

Ultimately, you need to find out what’s popular in the area you’re working in. Your research needs to be around a topic that’s current, relevant to your industry, popular and, most importantly, likely to gain traction (whether that be via social media platforms, inbound links or attention from high profile sites).

To help you identify this kind of content, there are several excellent tools at your disposal;

Google News – helps you highlight areas of interest and current news

Google Trends – helps you hone into specific topics in any given area of interest

Google Insights – helps you discover what people are searching for around an area of interest. Great if you’re writing blog posts

Digg, Twitter, Reddit – helps you find out what’s popular with the readers, what kinds of topics are receiving the highest level of sharing

These are the platforms I turn to first, but there are plenty of others (Cracked, AllThingsNow, Bing News, Fark, etc.), all of which will add to your level of insight around any given topic. Now, these can certainly help you find up to date, reliable and current information and can be invaluable when it comes to highlighting the most popular topics, but they don’t solve the problem of minimising the time you’re spending on research.

This is where a phenomenal tool from SEOGadget comes in, that makes ingenious use of Excel and Google Docs. I hugely recommend you follow the link and save a copy of the document to your own Google Docs (when you’ve finished reading this post of course), as it will save you a massive amount of time and effort during the research stage. The tool allows you to add a search query within the excel document, after which it will pull in invaluable data from Google News, Google Insights, Twitter, Bing News, Digg and numerous other platforms. You can not only quickly and easily find out what’s hot, but you can see the most popular topics on a range of social media platforms and highlight the top and rising searches around any given topic. There’s a fair bit more to it, but I’ll leave you to discover all it has to offer - suffice it to say it’s a perfect tool for the content creation research stage.

Screenshot of the SEOGadget Content Generation Tool

Ideas

Once you’ve got a solid set of data and a firm grip on the type of information likely to be shared, you need to start brainstorming some ideas on how you’re going to present the information.

The first thing you need to decide is the angle from which you’re going to approach the information. It’s no good just re-formatting a post or piece of content that already exists (you see this a huge amount when it comes to content creation, particularly in the SEO industry), you need to add something new or interesting to what you’ve already got. Can you come at the information in a new way? Or add something new to the story? Can you produce something unique to the industry?

Essentially, you’re looking at how you’re going to present the information you’ve gathered (an in-depth blog post, a video, a static infographic, an interactive infographic, etc), how you’re going to approach the subject (informative, analytical, satirical, etc) and how you’re going to add something beneficial or attractive to the target audience (drawing new conclusions, bringing together lots of pieces of information, attempting to shock, informing, entertaining, etc).

An excellent example is SEOmoz's own Google Algorithm Change History; all of this information is available elsewhere on the internet, but by pulling it all together and keeping it up to date, they've provided a piece of content that makes life easier for readers (bringing all the information together in one place), keeps them up to date (by displaying the latest information) and provides new insight (by viewing the complete history of algorithm updates, you can see the progression Google has taken, which offers far more insight and value than a post discussing just the most recent change).

Sometimes, it’s enough to simply be first – as long as the content you’re producing is high quality. A great example from a different industry is the Angry Birds Space infographic (section included below). This was the first quality infographic to be published on the latest Angry Birds installment; a game that saw a huge amount of buzz across news platforms for reaching 10 million downloads in just three days. The infographic is not only very nicely designed, but gained a decent amount of traction. Only two days after being published, the infographic has seen over 1,000 Facebook likes:

Infographic section via PlayVille

You can also gain a decent amount of traction by focusing your content around an upcoming event - a great example is the F1 2012 Season infographic (a section of which is included below). The infographic doesn't necessarily offer anything new, but took advantage of the excitement surrounding the start of the new Formula 1 season, resulting in a very high placement for the infographic.

Infographic section via Autoblog

Another excellent idea is to try your best to involve other people in the idea (or even the research) stage; specifically, people you know have an influence in the industry you’re working in.

Let’s say you’re producing an infographic on console gaming – why not email some people from Destructoid, G4TV, Gamespot, IGN, etc. and ask them what they’d like to see in an infographic. Or give them a collection of your ideas and ask them which they think is the best – not only does this involve influencers in the early stages of your content creation, but it can help massively when it comes to placement and promotion.

If these people give you valuable insights or information, then include them in your content (in the sources section of an infographic, or via a credit link in a blog post) – you’d be amazed how much more willing people are to share things when they’re credited with a hand in the research or production.

Placement

Once you’ve gathered your information and you have an idea of the type of content you’re going to produce, you need to try and identify where the content is going to be placed.

Obviously if the content is going on your own website, then this is less of an issue, but if it’s a link-building exercise then having an idea of the kind of site you’ll be aiming for can make a big difference to how you approach the creation stage.

It can be a good idea to start your outreach before you approach the actual creation of your content, as confirming a placement beforehand will make your life much easier in terms of considering the target audience. If you know where the content is going to be placed, then you can tweak the language, style and tone you adopt throughout the piece in order to maximise your chances of appealing to their readers.

Conversely, you don’t necessarily need to have confirmed the placement location before you start work on the production stage. Often you may find it easier to convince sites to place your work once they’ve actually got something to look at, rather than trying to tempt them with just the concept. If you’re planning on completing your outreach once you’ve finished the content creation stage, then you should at least have an idea of the sort of website you’re going to be targeting. Don’t specifically aim content at one website before you contact them, as if they turn it down you may struggle to place it somewhere else.

When it comes to contacting specific websites, your best bet is to write a concise and polite email to the most relevant person at the organisation, then follow this up with a call a day or two later. Don’t be disheartened if you don’t hear back from your preferred placement, it’s still worth giving them a call just to check they’ve received your email and even if they turn it down, you’ve got a contact you can use for future pieces.

Creation

So you’ve done your research, you’ve got your content and you’ve got an idea of where you’re going to place the piece – now it’s time to actually create your content.

Giving you advice on the creation stage is a little tricky, as it will depend on what type of content you’re putting together. To overcome this, I’ll quickly cover the two most popular content types; blog posts and infographics.

Infographics

Having produced around 100 infographics personally over the last 18 months (and overseen scores more), I consider them to be one of my main areas of expertise. One of my major pet hates when it comes to infographics is people telling me that there are ‘rules’ to infographic production – there aren’t. An infographic doesn’t have to tell a story, it doesn’t have to avoid using text at all costs, in fact it doesn’t have to do anything other than display information that is either complimented by, or portrayed via graphics. So don’t get too caught up in the non-existent infographic ‘rules’ and just focus on producing something that is engaging to your target audience.

Some topics will require more text than others, particularly if the data is qualitative rather than quantitative. A lot of people will use phrases like ‘don’t make me read’ when they’re looking at infographics, but you should give your audience more credit – people don’t mind reading, as long as the information you’re including is concise and adds something to the visuals. If you can visualise it (i.e. statistical information), then do, if you can’t then don’t worry too much about it, people will forgive you.

Try and create an immediate impact with the visuals and draw readers into your infographic as early as possible, the most obvious place to do this is with the title. It’s amazing how many people are happy to just type the title in a nice big font and then move on to the rest of the content. But if you look at some of the best infographic designers (and the most popular infographics online), you’ll see that the title is a fantastic opportunity to grab the reader with a strong, relevant visual. I’ve included a few examples below to show you what I’m talking about (please note these are just a part of the original graphic -- there is a lot more to see when you click on the link underneath each image!):

Infographic section via the Designbysoap blog

Infographic section via Volvo

Infographic section via HotelshopUK

Infographic section via Geekosystem

When it comes to visualising the data you’ve got, try and keep a consistent theme throughout the infographic, whether that’s through your choice of visualisation methods, the colours used or the style of design. If you can help it, try and avoid using too many infographic ‘cliches’ – a good example of this is using a line of six person icons to visualise a statistic like ‘60% of people use people icons in their infographics’.

Just try and be as creative as you can (which I realise isn’t really all that helpful, as it’s like saying ‘be more musically gifted’), and don’t take the lazy approach just because you’d like to get it finished.

My last point is on orientation – generally speaking, if you’re going to be placing the infographic online then you’re probably better off opting for a portrait infographic, rather than a landscape one. This is because it’s far easier to use online and usually allows you to use a longer file (people will always prefer to scroll up and down as opposed to left and right, if the web page even allows it).

Blog Posts

It seems like an obvious thing to say, but in-depth blog posts are far more likely to encourage sharing than a quick post that just skims over a topic. Long blog posts are great as long as they’re adding value to a topic – you should be informing, educating or entertaining your readers as much as you possibly can.

Include relevant, quality outbound links that are useful to your readers – if you find a good tool during your research phase, link to it. If you find a post that offers an alternative argument to what you’re saying, or adds additional information, link to it. Too many people are hesitant to link out from their blog posts, worried that it will give readers a reason to leave their page. Trust me, if you’re producing high quality content, they will come back (for example, when I’m reading blog posts and I come across a link I want to follow, I tend to open it in a new tab and then continue reading).

Again, it seems obvious, but pay attention to grammar and punctuation – it’s hard to come across as authoritative if your content is full of spelling mistakes, misplaced commas and missing capitalisations. It might sound strange, but grammatical errors can also put off people from sharing your content and you want to do everything possible to increase the likelihood of shares and links. If writing isn’t your strong point, then get someone else to proof read your articles before publishing, particularly if you’re sending them out as guest posts.

Another good tip is to try and engage your readers as early as possible in the post – the best places to do this are the title, the sub-title and the opening paragraph. There are many different ways to do this; provocation, humour, questioning, etc. just make sure you grab people as early as you can. Bear in mind it’s the title that will encourage click-through rates when it comes to blog front pages and aggregation networks such as Inbound.org. Having said this, don’t be deliberately misleading with your titles – sure it can increase click-through rates and traffic to have a title that draws attention, but if it’s erroneous then you’re far more likely to piss people off than you are to encourage sharing.

You should also try and help your readers as much as possible; something that often means not assuming knowledge on their part. Unless you’re writing for particularly high level, technical websites, it’s best not to over-use entropic language without clearly explaining yourself. If you’re writing a post full of tips, explain things to your readers – rather than just saying do this, tell them how to do it.

Another valuable tip is to try and break up the copy in particularly long articles – use sub-headings and paragraph breaks to make the article look less dense and more accessible to readers. You should also make sure you’re using images in your posts, not only do they break up long sections of text nicely, but they can often be extremely helpful, particularly in tutorials and ‘how-to’ articles (screenshots can be especially useful). When it comes to sourcing images, you should either be creating them yourself or using an online platform such as Shutterstock or Creative Commons, rather than just stealing them from other websites. Having said this, the latter is permissible in some situations, just be sure to include credit links to avoid upsetting other webmasters, and check the copyright laws in your country. Don’t forget to properly name and alt tag your images either – it’s amazing how often you see people missing this potentially valuable ranking signal.

Publish

So you’ve spent hours putting together a high quality piece of content, now it’s time to get it live. Hopefully you’ll have started your outreach before putting the content together, but if you didn’t, now’s the time to start sending some emails.

I would always advocate aiming as high as you possibly can (as long as the quality of the content is good enough), as it never hurts to try. When we’re advising our link-building engineers on gaining high profile placements, we get them to put a list of five or six potential placements together, in order of domain authority, traffic or level of engagement via social media (depending on the post content and what we’re trying to achieve). From there you can start at the top and work your way down, until someone agrees to place your content.

Once a placement has been confirmed, make sure you’ve got an idea of when it will be published, so you can start sharing as soon as possible. You should also keep up a level of etiquette when you’ve posted on someone else’s website – push the content as much as you can, link to it from other posts and send as much traffic and social media engagement as humanly possible. This not only makes the link more valuable, but will encourage the administrator to publish your posts in the future. You should also keep an eye on the comments and reply to as many as you can; keep up the level of engagement and discussion and beinvolved.

Promote

It’s amazing how many times we see people produce fantastic content, and then just leave it to either reach a large audience or, more often, fall flat on its face. If you’ve gone through all the effort of researching and producing a high quality piece of content, then you should continue that effort through to the post-publishing stage.

It’s true that if your content is good enough and it’s published on a high profile platform, then it will likely achieve a high level of social media traction and natural inbound links, but that doesn’t mean you shouldn’t do your best to push it as best you can.

You should aim to utilise as many avenues as you can to promote your content, including social media, news aggregators, infographic publication sites and inbound links from other domains (particularly applicable if you or your team writes lots of related guest posts). I could include a massive list of sites you can use, but honestly it depends on the vertical in which you’re working. Instead, check out this awesome link building strategies post, this list of infographic distribution sites, this post on finding the perfect content promotion platform and this handy list of social bookmarking websites.

You should also try to reach out to influencers in the industry you’re working in, whether that be via phone, email or social media platforms. The success of this practise will depend on a variety of factors (including the content itself, the domain it’s published on, the author, the way you choose to make contact and the area of discussion), but it never hurts to try. If you made the effort of reaching out to people during your research and ideas phase as suggested, then you may find you get some great traction via some very influential people.

So that’s about it for my guide to creating good content – did I miss anything? Disagree with anything I said? Let me know in the comments below.

Post by John Pring from Designbysoap Ltd.

What is Guerrilla Marketing?

Guerilla marketing is to come up with a marketing and promotional campaign that is creative, original, affordable and most importantly east to carry out. it is done with an intent to promise your existing customers as well as prospects only what you can provide but also giving them something more than what you committed originally to them. If all of this goes well, you will be able to drive more and more customers to your business which will eventually lead you to have increased sales and grow your brand easily.

Top 5 Excellent Ways to Increase Sales With Guerrilla Marketing

If you are considering putting together an impressive and striking guerrilla marketing campaign, following are some of the vital tips that you need to be aware of. Follow them properly and you will be able to accomplish great impact.

1) Determine Your Target Market

First and foremost, you are required to know who your target market is. As a matter of fact, every single marketing or promotional campaign initiates with this information. You are required to identify who your targeted audience is so that you know what their preferences and needs are and you provide them with the required items or services. You can not simply create any marketing material you consider and blame the particular item in the end if the campaign does not turn out to be successful. For instance, if you do poster printing or business cards, you need to figure out what really attracts your customers so that you can come up with such designs that are appropriate as per their needs.

2) Find Answers To Vital Questions

It would be good on your part if you have been able to find answers to the vital questions to make sure that your campaign is effective:

  • How your services or products will help your customers?
  • What are the greatest desires or requirements of your customers?
  • What helps them make the decision?
  • How do they decide?

Finding answers to all of these questions will be helping you create a focused marketing strategy that will be encouraging people to take advantage of what you are offering them.

3) Additional Value

You need to make sure that the items or services you are offering are compelling for people to make an action all the time. Do not distribute items in the market that will not generate immediate action. If you will, you are simply going to waste your money but your time as well. It is important for you to include an appealing offer which would be helpful for you to motivate them to respond at once. Remember, the better the offer is, the better response you will get. You can have discounts, coupons or even freebies that would help you generate response immediately.

4) Get Your Brand Noticed

While you are considering guerrilla marketing, you are required to step up your campaign. You should not feel shy with your elevator speech or sales message. The focal point is to get your brand noticed right away so your marketing strategy would be effective.

5) Analyze in Terms of Results

If you have not been able to generate funds or increase sales via your initial campaign, it is time when you should switch your strategy. Look for something else that is relevant but requires less investment but would let cash flow into your business. This may require unconventional and unique tactics but they should not be anything against the norms. Guerilla marketing is not going to be a tough task for you, but you need to make sure that you are getting it all right. Once it does, you will be able to see a boost in your sales, eventually growing your brand.

Guerrilla Marketing in Argentina by Agencia 365

E-commerce: Diez claves para realizar un proyecto

1.-Conocimiento del medio y de tu cliente.


La formación en el entorno online, el conocimiento del sector y su funcionamiento, así como la familiarización con el vocabulario y su significado, son claves a la hora de emprender un negocio e-commerce. Está claro que no hay que ser experto en todo, pero entender el ámbito en el que tus productos se van a comercializar y en el que tus clientes van a adquirirlo, es clave para el éxito.


Conoce al máximo a tu cliente potencial: cuáles son sus necesidades, sus expectativas, cuál es el tono y el lenguaje en el que quieres comunicarte con él o en el que crees que él va a responder mejor. Ten en cuenta siempre que la información es poder. Aprovecha toda la información que tu cliente te proporciona (piénsalo desde el principio) podrás ofrecerle productos y servicios que estén relacionados con una compra anterior y que puedan interesarle. La integración de las comunidades virtuales como prescriptores de producto en proyectos como La Casa del Libro han sido grandes generadores de negocio.


2.-Análisis y distribución de la inversión.


Si hay algún argumento falso sobre los proyectos online es que son más económicos que los negocios tradicionales. Por lo tanto, saber de forma anticipadacon qué presupuesto contamos y dónde y cómo lo vamos a distribuir es fundamental. Hay que asignar porcentajes de la inversión a las distintas áreas: investigación, desarrollo de proyecto, publicidad y marketing online, analizar los recursos propios humanos y técnicos así como los económicos y sobre todo tener en cuenta que la inversión constante en Internet es sinónimo de mejora y que el entorno es cambiante: Lo que sale mañana ya es antiguo y que la media de tiempo para un rediseño oscila en los dos años.


3.-Define tu producto o servicio.


¿Tienes claro lo que quieres vender? ¿qué servicio vas a ofrecer? Estructura bien todas las variables.


4.-Conocimiento de la competencia y valores diferenciales.


Cuál es la diferencia de tu proyecto e-commerce respecto a la competencia: ¿precio?, ¿calidad?, ¿servicio?. Identifica bien tus valores y poténcialos en la web


5.-Crecimiento del sitio y evolución del medio.


Hay que tener en cuenta que cuando un proyecto sale a la luz en Internet ya es antiguo y hay que amoldarse cada día. Si bien en este tipo de negocios el rediseño está más o menos contemplado a dos años, hay áreas de la plataforma que tienen que estar pensados (nos hemos encontrado en muchos casos con errores como éstos) para la evolución y crecimiento del sitio como es el caso de las bases de datos.


6.-Definición de la estrategia


Define una estrategia coherente teniendo en cuenta los puntos anteriores.


7.-Imagen de producto, experiencia de uso.


Asegúrate de que la experiencia de uso de tu cliente sea “redonda” en todos los detalles, desde el primer contacto con la web. Que esta experiencia se convierta en valor para tu marca y ayude a construirla. Ofrécele una tienda fácil de usar y agradable y trata de llevar la complejidad del proceso de compra a la mínima expresión.


8.-Seguridad en las transacciones de pago.


Cuidado con esto, aquí no te recomendaríamos que fueras demasiado innovador. Analiza cuáles son las plataformas de pago más seguras en el mercado y apóyate en ellas a la hora de realizar las transacciones. Es importante pensar que un nuevo player en el mercado todavía no tiene la confianza del público ni la garantía de calidad que pueden tener otros que llevan ya años vendiendo online. Es clave ofrecer seguridad al cliente.


9.-Servicio y fidelización del cliente


Desarrolla un servicio de atención al cliente efectivo y dale visibilidad en la tienda para generar seguridad en el cliente. Lleva más allá la experiencia y deja que el servicio traspase la barrera de Internet diferenciándose en pequeños detalles como: el paquete que se entrega tras la compra o el tiempo de entrega. Posteriormente define servicios asociados a la compra o post-compra. El ROI que generan es mayor que la inversión en captación de nuevos clientes.


10.-Medición de resultados


Implementar un buen sistema de analítica web. Todo el proceso de conversión tiene que ser monitorizado pata detectar puntos negros en el embudo de conversión


Articulo Original 

Agencia 365: Marketing Online en Argentina