Friday, November 13, 2015

Some tips to improve the discoverability of your business on internet

Now that you have an internet business up and running, it is time to work on the most important thing – internet marketing. It is your internet marketing strategy that is going to make you win or lose against your competitors. There might be thousands of other companies selling the same stuff as you. People have thousands of places to choose from to buy stuff and subscribe to services. In order for you to be different and become more discoverable, you need a sound internet marketing strategy. Here are some aspects of a strong internet marketing strategy:

SEO

SEO stands for search engine optimization and it remains one of the most important online marketing strategies for any business to be discoverable. SEO techniques are employed in order to make a website's ranking better on search engines. This is done by making the website search engine friendly. To make a website search engine friendly, search engine optimization professionals have to work on your business relevant keywords, spread your business related content on the internet, make your website rich with "sensible" use of the keywords, do a thorough quality link building endeavor etc. There are black hat SEO techniques that you would like to stay away from.

PPC

PPC stands for pay per click. This is the type of marketing where you have to pay the search engine for hosting your link in the search results. You have to pay the search engine every time an online visitor clicks on the link that the search engine is featuring separately on its search result pages. You will have to bid for certain keywords in order to have your website selected for a certain keyword. There are SERP softwares that can help you greatly in knowing the most productive keywords for your website.

Social Media Marketing

Social media marketing is currently the most powerful type of internet marketing. In this type of marketing you will create business pages on various social networking pages. You will then run these pages in such a way that more and more people join the page and become your followers. You can communicate with these people through interesting posts, answering their questions, launching promotional campaigns, etc. Hiring a social media marketing firm to perform these tasks is highly recommended in this particular scenario because there is much more to be handled in social media marketing than one can think of.

Web Directory Listing

While search engines have become the primary source for people to look for businesses, they are not the all and everything of internet. To have a sound marketing strategy you will have to have your business listed in online web directory listings. These websites, such as www.1websdirectory.com, www.acewebdirectory.com, etc. provide list of websites in categories and mostly connect visitors to the homepage of your website. They rely on customer feedbacks and reviews. They can be paid or unpaid – most of them are unpaid. Local and business specific web directories are your best bet to become discoverable on the internet.


Source: Some tips to improve the discoverability of your business on internet

Thursday, November 12, 2015

How to Rank Better With User Experience Marketing

Search engines no longer depend on matching keywords on web pages. The most recent changes involve a move toward understanding concepts. Thus, SEO strategies that begin with keyword research are ranking strategies for algorithms that no longer exist.

This article will show how far away from keywords search engines have gone and how that has impacted longstanding SEO practices. I will then show how User Experience Marketing fits into a more realistic SEO strategy that adapts to modern search engine algorithms.

No Strings Attached

In 2012, Google announced a move away from strings and toward understanding things was at the heart of the Knowledge Graph. The Knowledge Graph itself was intended to improve the "next generation" of search.

That next generation of search was introduced in 2013 with the Hummingbird update. Consequently, top ranked websites don't always feature the keywords used to find them. If keywords matter less and concepts matter more, this must certainly impact how we do on-page SEO.

The question nobody is asking is this: If Google has moved away from matching search queries to keywords on a web page, why do we continue to worry about keywords on web pages?

And most importantly, how does one optimize a site for a search engine that is examining more than just keywords? But there is always more. Google is also using user experience-type metrics to judge websites.

Things couldn't be more fun, right?

Are Keyword-Based Strategies Obsolete?

You can argue that "classic" SEO is becoming obsolete. What's not debatable is Google has shifted the metrics of ranking away from simple text relevance to ranking metrics related to knowledge, plus search query rewriting in order to give the most accurate result, regardless if the search keywords are on the web page. Rather than matching keywords to keywords, Google is understanding words in terms of people, places, and things.

How Search Engines Can go Beyond Keywords

Worthy of consideration is information retrieval research that shows how to present search results that do not feature the keyword phrases on the web page. The way it does this is through a process called query reformulation (PDF research paper). This is how query reformulation works: Search queries sometimes can be vague or contain too many meanings.

With query reformulation, a search engine can refine the original search query in order to interpret it better, in order to expand its search for the best web page by including more sites than the initial group that contains all the keyword phrases in a search query. The research paper uses the example search query "becoming a doctor" as being vague and suggests reformulating it as "becoming an oral surgeon" may produce more successful results.

Words Have Multiple Meanings

It's common for words to have multiple meanings. For that reason, Google uses geographic signals, previous search signals, and statistical signals in order to identify the most popular reasons users search for a phrase and then display results based on that research. This is often referred to as identifying user intent. But in plain English what this is really about is recognizing search queries can be too vague or completely off the mark. To compensate for this, search engines understand a particular query can be answered by a similar and better composed query. The classic example is, what does a search user mean when they type the word, Jaguar? Do they mean the car, the football team or the animal? This is what underlies Google's focus on user intent, which is part of what Google announced in an official blog post in 2012, a move away from strings (simple keyword pattern matching) and pressing forward to understanding things.

This, too, is another way Google has stepped away from simple keyword matching. It forces site publishers to think about why site visitors are using specific keywords, their intent, and then craft the content to fit that user experience.

Classic SEO

Beyond the Knowledge Graph

This focus away from strings goes beyond the Knowledge Graph. The official Google blog post noted this was leading toward a different kind of search engine:

"This is a critical first step towards building the next generation of search, which taps into the collective intelligence of the web and understands the world a bit more like people do."

Considering many of the sites in the Google search results no longer feature all the keywords used in the search query, is it possible that keyword based search has already been replaced?

And if that's true, is it possible that 'classic' SEO, the strategy based on building websites around keyword research, should also be modified or even replaced?

Crafting Content Around the User Experience

Publishers who build sites around keywords face an uphill struggle obtaining links, and since links remain an important ranking factor it makes sense that the SEO strategy works together with obtaining links. And this is where user experience marketing shines. Nobody links to a keyword based site because they feel good about it. Keyword based sites feel sterile because they are optimized for keywords, not people. Which tends to make it more difficult to promote. Pages built around the user experience generate enthusiasm, which in turn encourages sharing.

Users Share Experiences, Not Links

Perhaps the best kind of link is the kind created because of a positive experience (learning, utility, usefulness, fun). Scientific research has discovered that experiences motivate sharing, and positive experiences are shared the most. Those aren't links users are sharing. Users share experiences. Hyperlinks are the sharing of an experience. It is experiences (not keywords) publishers must focus on in order to cultivate links and recommendations that will in turn power better ranking.

How to Cultivate Experiences

The most enthusiastic links are recommendations. There is a certain amount of emotion invested in recommending a site. The inspirations for emotional investment are generally rooted in usefulness. Popularly linked sites helps users accomplish things such as make them feel like the person they aspire to be (wealthy, smart, fashionable, expert, etc.). Those are the motivations behind a site visitor attaching themselves to your brand, and that kind of link will turn into a better ranking.

In my experiences evaluating why a web page won't perform well, the leading reason is because the web page was created around keyword phrases instead of focusing on what problem the page is solving for a specific kind of site visitor. The problem being solved is what should guide the publisher as to the words used in the title tag and the page heading. Building a web page in this manner makes it easier to outreach and build links, which in turn will make it easier to rank.

In an interview with Peachpit Press, branding expert Marty Neumeier, author of The Brand Flip advises this:

"…customers are not focused on products, but meaning. They choose products to build their identities. The question they ask is: If I select this product, what does that make me? Customers no longer buy brands. They join brands."

Devoting time to the user experience is not pie-in-the-sky. It is a pragmatic approach because imbuing site visitors with a feeling of ownership and emotional resonance is a sure way to encourage more sales, more links, and more traffic. And that's why we optimize, right? To make more money.

User Experience is Important to Google

It is abundantly clear that Google cares about the user experience on the sites it ranks. In 2012, Google released the Page Layout Algorithm. This algorithm checks if there are too many ads and if the content can be easily found. This algorithm was created to explicitly deal with the user experience issue. Here is what the official announcement said:

" …we've heard complaints from users that if they click on a result and it's difficult to find the actual content, they aren't happy with the experience. …If you click on a website and the part of the website you see first either doesn't have a lot of visible content above-the-fold or dedicates a large fraction of the site's initial screen real estate to ads, that's not a very good user experience. Such sites may not rank as highly going forward."

Google Experiences Your Pages

It used to be Google was only interested in your text. Not anymore. Google requires publishers to give them access to their CSS and JS files so  they can render your site the same way a user does. That's an examination of the user experience. Part of it is to identify mobile friendly sites and part of it is to look for spammers. But other things, such as excessive ads above the fold and interstitials that cover over content are explicitly about user experience.

Is There a User Experience Algorithm?

Search engine algorithms have increasingly leaned on user experience metrics to evaluate user satisfaction. The most obvious example of Google's preference for sites with a good user experience was the 2012 rollout of the Page Layout Algorithm. The most recent instance of Google's preference for sites with a good user experience was updating its mobile algorithm to prefer mobile friendly sites (April 2015) and most recently this news, Google to Penalize Sites That Prompt You to Download Their App. Here is an excerpt from Google's Webmaster Central announcement of the update to the Page Layout Algorithm:

"If you click on a website and the part of the website you see first either doesn't have a lot of visible content above-the-fold or dedicates a large fraction of the site's initial screen real estate to ads, that's not a very good user experience. Such sites may not rank as highly going forward."

There are no signs of an actual user experience algorithm. However, there is evidence that the user experience of a site visitor may play a role in testing the success of scaled algorithms. While user experience metrics may not directly affect your rankings, showing search results likely to lead to good user experiences are baked into the algorithms.

User Experience Algorithm

User experience marketing for top ranks

Whether or not you believe building sites around keyword phrases has lost a degree of importance in today's search algorithms, I think we can still agree delivering a good user experience is useful. I asked Katy Katz, Content Director at Inturact, about her approach to content and she offered,

"Positive user experience boils down to whether the website fulfills the need that the consumer was searching for in the first place."

I couldn't agree more. Regardless of whether the content is in the context of a B2B or B2C e-commerce, if one steps back and honestly asks what problem the content is solving, many opportunities for improving the performance of that content will present itself. Sometimes the answer will be the content is not solving a problem. In that case, take time to think of the problem you want to solve and reposition the content so it addresses the problem.

Here are some general tactics for achieving better user experience metrics.

Outreach Campaign Feedback

I have been practicing and refining the art of promotional outreach in one form or another since 1999. An important lesson I've learned is feedback is critical to improving your site and the promotion of it. There are two kinds of feedback: implicit and explicit. Implicit feedback is a quiet no, the negative non-response. That means your outreach was unsuccessful for unknown reasons.

Believe it or not, this is good feedback. The problem could be your outreach or the content. Explicit feedback is when someone takes the time to tell you why your outreach failed. This is gold because now you can identify whether the problem was the outreach or the content. Here are three examples of the kinds of content related feedback I find useful:

  • The content was too commercialThis means the content lacked utility, a useful quality. Solving this problem involves rewriting the page so it has more utility.
  • What's in it for me?Content, even product pages or about pages, should be written from the perspective of answering the site visitor's question: What's in it for me?

    – What's in it for me? We make it easy to reorganize your company, identify where to save money, and increase productivity– What's in it for me? Your children will love this furniture and they will be safe from harmful chemicals-What's in it for me? This food is healthy and a portion of the profits supports your favorite charity

  • The content lacked tribal queuesSometimes people look for what I call Tribal Affinity. People tend to think of themselves as belonging to a group and they tend to trust fellow members of that group. My concept of Tribal Affinity is a technique where you leave visual queues on a web page that subtly signals your membership in that tribe. Thus, if you are outreaching to industry professionals, a badge indicating membership in an association, advocacy group, or participation in a related charity is a subtle signal that you belong to the same tribe and share Tribal Affinity. Tribal Affinity is a critical aspect of the user experience. It signals you and the site visitor belong together, that you are trusted and authoritative.
  • Dwell Time

    Keeping site visitors on your site long enough to perform the desired action (clicking a link, buying a product, becoming a lead, etc.) is critical. Site visitors who immediately click back to the search engines are an "implicit signal" to the search engines that your site did not deliver. While this might not directly affect your rankings in the short-term, in the long-term it is possible if this is happening enough times across the web that an algorithm update may identify the problem and negatively affect your rankings.

    Remember, CTR is not a ranking factor; CTR is used as a quality control metric to judge the success of an algorithm. Thus, if you identify a problem with dwell time then it will benefit you to identify what is affecting the user experience, to conduct your own quality control. Apart from search traffic, it's simply a good practice and a no-brainer to keep visitors on your site long enough to perform the action you want them to make.

    How to Keep Visitors on Your Site Longer
  • Don't burden or chase away the site visitor with too many ads
  • Make your content easily viewable from the top of the fold
  • Make your content easy to scan
  • Offer related articles at key points where visitors tend to become disinterested
  • Encourage messaging opt-ins
  • Post-Transaction Experience

    Successful entrepreneur Justin Sanger pointed out that everyone knows about the sales funnel but less well-known is the funnel that opens up after the sale. He calls this upside down funnel the Post-Transaction Funnel. The post-transaction funnel represents all the things you can do to send the signal back to the search engines that the site visitors had a good experience at your website. This activity includes:

  • Encouraging social sharing
  • Cultivating good reviews
  • Encouraging word of mouth referrals
  • Cultivating relationships with non-competitors in your space
  • I believe it is a good practice to consider the post-transaction funnel because those are the kinds of activities that tend to cultivate more sales. Post-transaction marketing is something to consider outside of the Classic SEO box.

    Joining Your Experience

    Not every site can host a community and there are serious caveats for hosting a community, such as controlling the quality of the user-generated content (UGC) and the initial investment of time moderating the community to cultivate a positive troll-free atmosphere. But what are the alternatives, Twitter and Facebook? Those platforms are someone else's brand, they provide no recourse against trolls, and there is little to zero control over how your brand is portrayed.

    If the goal is to foster good experiences, hosting your own community may be the appropriate solution. It works for sites like TripAdvisor, Amazon, Walmart, and Cabela's. All those sites are useful because they have a strong community providing shopping research support. Community builds loyalty and transforms the site from merely a place to shop to a destination for discovery and learning. And this goes back to what branding expert Marty Neumeier said, "Customers no longer buy brands. They join brands."

    User Experience Marketing

    It is important to recognize the foundation of a successful website is the user experience. Even a successful PPC landing page is founded on the principle of a quality end-to-end user experience, from the layout, ease of data delivery to convenience. User experience marketing is about moving beyond simple keyword phrases and integrating a content strategy that involves understanding what a page means to the user — because that is how the search engines are increasingly understanding and ranking web pages. When evaluating a page in the context of user experience, good questions to ask are:

  • What user intent is the content satisfying?
  • What task or goal is the content helping the site visitor accomplish?
  • While relevance is still king, User Experience has become an increasingly important component of which pages are shown in the search results. Add to this the important role it plays in cultivating traffic independent of search, and the importance of a user-experience based foundation is clear.

    Image Credits

    Featured Image: Image credit: Olarty | Shutterstock.com (manipulated by Roger Montti)In-post Photos: Image credit: Olarty | Shutterstock.com (manipulated by Roger Montti)


    Source: How to Rank Better With User Experience Marketing

    Wednesday, November 11, 2015

    7 Things That Keep Marketers From Doing Marketing

    2015-11-11-1447275473-4078964-6875893248_07146d1191_z.jpg

    Image from birgerking via Flickr

    Everyone seems to think marketers spend a majority of their days pondering their next big campaigns. The truth? Marketing is hard. The life of a marketer is far from glamorous.

    Marketers analyze data, conceptualize campaigns, craft copy and content, design creatives, generate reports, study the competition and test different ideas. But a vast majority of marketers rarely find a few quiet hours to tackle their real responsibilities. Often, things pop up that derail them from being able to focus on the most fun and most impactful parts of their jobs.

    The seven deadly distractions marketers face?

    Burdensome meetings

    At Bain & Company, Michael C. Mankins and his colleagues analyzed the Microsoft Outlook calend ars of workers at a large organization to understand how employees utilized their time. From the study, the consultants "found that people there spent 300,000 hours a year just supporting the weekly executive committee meeting."

    Meetings can be an unnecessary burden for professionals. Simply scheduling and organizing them can be soul-sucking exercises. Attendance, similarly, causes a lot of issues.

    "Passive meetings are also a problem, and get more problematic as you rise in seniority," says James Rice, head of digital marketing at WikiJob. "You will be invited to meetings you can't contribute to much, as the host of the meeting would like you to be there, either for reassurance to answer potentially tricky questions." Sometimes, even courtesy invites do more harm than good. "Being in any meeting for an hour in which you contribute for five minutes is a huge waste of your time. Without irritating people too much, you want to foster a reputation for asking why you need to be in that meeting, and in many cases politely declining, or asking for the minutes."

    At times, marketers find themselves stuck in meetings with at least one person who is notorious for straying off-topic. For Robert Manigold of digital agency Code Koalas, one of his peeves is a meeting that "[changes] the context of a person's focus." Instead of tackling projects you set out to do, you spend time discussing unimportant topics and solving other people's problems.

    Constant one-off requests

    Here are a few eerily familiar situations:

  • The sales team needs you to design a new deck for an urgent, upcoming client meeting. Deadline? Tomorrow morning.
  • Engineering wants updated copy for the website. They are doing a release later that evening.
  • Finance asks for receipts for purchases you made eight months ago, preferably delivered by EOD.
  • Marketers are constantly assigned tasks that support other departments' initiatives. Though certain projects may take only fifteen minutes or half an hour to complete, these distractions keep marketers from doing any real marketing.

    Email bombardment

    Marketers spend 14 percent of their day managing email--and it is largely unproductive.

    At work, Courtney Lindbeck, director of internet marketing at Venta Marketing, tends to "get distracted by the large amount of emails that come in throughout the day." That is because clients and company management demand timely responses. "My agency has always been valued by how responsive we are to clients, but many times this 'quick response' approach is more so distracting than productive."

    Sometimes, simply picking up the phone saves more time than explaining things over a lengthy email thread. Manigold of Code Koalas knows how frustrating it can be when clients send "multiple emails on an issue that could be handled with a quick phone call."

    Excessive reporting

    Everyone loves data, but for their campaigns, marketers are the only ones that know how to accurately analyze and report on it. "One of the areas where a marketing team needs to be firm is reporting, for the simple reason that management will often ask for more and more detail on reports, even if they never act on them," notes Rice of WikiJob.

    "If you're spending the whole of Monday putting reports together, you're losing 20 percent of your week collating insight that you probably already knew was the case. Automate reports as much as possible, streamline them as much as possible, and make the case that they should be monthly rather than weekly." Leverage automation tools to extract the insights you need to be better at your job, impress your boss and 'wow' clients.

    Ideas and suggestions

    Whenever they come u p with a new idea, your colleagues start to believe they could do your job for you. As newly minted experts in marketing, they offer their most brilliant suggestions for ways to create brand fame and fortune.

    Though it is fun to entertain their ideas, many simply are not practical. Non-marketers rarely factor in budget and resource limitations when they conceive money-making schemes. After listening to their proposals, you may spend another hour dissecting why it just is not feasible.

    Persistent management check-ins

    Ronnie Deaver, marketing manager at ICT Asset Recovery, feels, "The most distracting thing in my day is upper management frequently asking for updates or 'what's new' throughout the week. This is particularly prevalent in my company because our marketing department is so young - unlike sales, we can't measure results in days and it makes people nervous." Explaining what you do to your non-marketing peers gets old quick. It almost becomes a regular exerc ise in justifying your role and salary, which can be hard to do when you only get a few hours in the day to actually complete anything marketing-related.

    Show and tell

    Well-intentioned conversations about work can have unintended consequences. Pulling someone aside for a quick chat can be detrimental to their overall productivity. "I have found trouble with my boss or other co-workers wanting to 'show me' something or go over work," shares Venta Marketing's Lindbeck.

    Many people find it hard to seamlessly jump from one thing to another; doing so is usually a painful context switch. "When distracted, it can take close to 20 minutes to get back on track," adds Lindbeck. Internally, a solution Venta Marketing's team found was "scheduling blocks of uninterrupted time followed by meetings of things we need to address that day. It helps a lot and keeps us from continually interrupting each other."

    To combat the endless distractions at work, marketers should establi sh guidelines and processes that allow their clients and colleagues to be heard but also enable marketers to focus for hours at a time and prioritize their primary workload. As a result, companies improve interdepartmental collaboration and produce better marketing.

    This post originally appeared on the iMeet® Central blog and is republished with permission.

    ****

    Danny Wong is the co-founder of Blank Label, an award-winning luxury menswear company. He is also a digital marketing consultant and freelance writer. To connect, tweet him @dannywong1190 or message him on LinkedIn.


    Source: 7 Things That Keep Marketers From Doing Marketing

    Tuesday, November 10, 2015

    Instructor of AOL Marketing "Chad Lieber" Talks About Autonomous Robots with a License to Kill

    (1888PressRelease) Breaking Down The Future of Robotics with Chad Ian Lieber.

    Chad Lieber recently talked about the rise of autonomous robots that have a license to kill. He said, "This is a frightening and grim prospect, but it is virtually guaranteed to happen."

    There are already several levels of autonomy in several weapons systems today, including patriot and cruise missiles. An example is the Aegis Combat System in naval ships, which has an autonomous mode where it uses powerful radars and computers to guide and keep track of weapons and to destroy enemy targets. Others are Samsung Techwin's remote-operated sentry bot (currently being used in the Korean DMZ) and the U.S. packbot/REDOWL system (which can be modified to take out snipers unmanned).

    According to Chad Ian, even if the U.S. and its allies stopped using drones, the Pandora's Box has already opened and there is no going back. Although drones are remotely piloted aircrafts, a confluence of events has led to the perfect conditions for rapid spread of worldwide autonomous robotic weapons.

    Chad Lieber explained that although there have been calls to halt the development of these machine-soldiers, military leaders are warming up to the idea of using robots in the place of human life. These machines are expected to exceed human capacities across several cognitive and physical domains and they are likely to develop as part of an arms' race.

    Chad Ian stated that this could be in conflict with the famous "Three Laws of Robotics" in Isaac Asimov's short story "Runaround" which has been used in most sci-fi films and books. These include robot may not injure a human being or, through inaction allow a human being to come to harm. The second and third laws are, a robot must obey orders given it by human beings except where such orders would conflict with the First Law, and a robot must protect its own existence as long as such protection does not conflict with the First or Second Law.< /p>

    About Chad Lieber & 6WSEOChad Lieber, 6W Website Marketing Coach, brings more than 15 years of online web-site publishing experience. Early in his career, he was a business reporter, covering health care, technology and other industries.

    Since 1998, Chad Ian Lieber has shaped Internet strategies for hundreds of businesses, including FedEx. He speaks at national conferences, including the American Marketing Association, Content Marketing World and Search Engine Strategies.

    Chad Lieber, who has led SEO studies, writes extensively about online marketing for WebPros and Internet Media Connection. He will present half-day SEO workshop as part of Content Marketing World in 2016.

    6WSEO is one of the top digital marketing agencies in the U.S. The New York-based company offers cost effective on-site and off-site SEO service and related services such as keyword research, reputation management, link building and PPC management for organic web marketing. The company offers customized services to clients in bespoke packages. Learn more about 6WSEO and its services on http://www.6WSEO.com/blog.

    http://www.6wim.com

    ###

    Press Release Distribution In Partnership With 1888PressRelease


    Source: Instructor of AOL Marketing "Chad Lieber" Talks About Autonomous Robots with a License to Kill

    Monday, November 9, 2015

    Enphase website redesign takes top honors

    Laptop.(Photo: Getty Images)

    Enphase Energy, a global energy technology company with headquarters in Petaluma, Calif., and Nevada-based digital marketing agency Noble Studios received the top awards for websites in the energy category from two of the most prestigious organizations in digital marketing.

    Enphase.com took home Best Energy Website honors in the annual WebAwards, presented in September by the Web Marketing Association. It also won for Best Energy site in the W3 awards, presented by the Academy of Interactive and Visual Arts, a website providing commercial and residential solar solutions to consumers.

    The site, which was designed and developed by Noble Studios, features a responsive design and represents a transformation of Enphase's web experience into one that engages and educates consumers about the benefits of its solar technology while also speaking to the needs of solar professionals. Noble Studios also performed market research and discovery prior to the redesign that provided direction on making the site focused on the needs of Enphase's customers.

    The Enphase team was pleased with the collaborative approach Noble Studios took.

    "Our website is the most visual expression of our brand," said Greg Isetta, senior manager of digital marketing at Enphase. "The difference Noble brought to the table was depth across the board: everything from front-end research to design work to development. This was a very collaborative effort. We ended up with a stronger product because we worked so closely with Noble."

    "Noble is extraordinarily proud of our work on the all-new Enphase.com," said Michael Thomas, partner and CMO of Noble Studios. "We worked closely with the Enphase team to ensure they not only got what they wanted in a new site – but what they needed, as well. That's part of our top-down Think/Make/Measure process that allows us to share our years of experience in keeping our clients strategically focused."

    Read or Share this story: http://on.rgj.com/1iPy675


    Source: Enphase website redesign takes top honors

    Sunday, November 8, 2015

    The difference between native advertising and content marketing: what you need to know

    By Brigg Patten on 9 November, 2015

    Industry leaders and business owners may sometimes use content marketing and native advertising interchangeably. On the contrary, though, the two are completely different forms of marketing, and get different results with each. While you can use the two together to have a more comprehensive, integrated website full of quality content, there are too many differences between the two to bunch them together.

    Native advertising

    This form of digital marketing matches the function and style of whatever platform it's on, making it difficult or altogether impossible for readers to differentiate what is real content and what is just native advertising. If you take a look at just about any website, though, it can be easy to spot where they are; examples really are everywhere. Native advertising has been separated into six categories of its own, in fact.

    Example of native advertisingAn example of native advertising would be when an advertiser promotes their product on a website, but they use the same form as an article written by the staff of the website, or they get the staff member to write an article using their voice to promote the advertiser's product. If a website is writing an article about custom e-learning, then there may be some recommendation widgets at the bottom of the article recommending other custom e-learning websites around the web.

    Recommendation widgetsAt the bottom of articles, you may have seen "You might also like," "Elsewhere from around the web," or any other variation of the phrasing. Those are recommendation widgets, typically owned by a third party source, although sometimes the website itself provides recommendations of other articles on the site.

    Content marketing

    The way content marketing works is a whole different ball game. Content marketing is simply providing relevant, quality content to attract and retain customers with one of the intentions being changing their behavior or opinion on something. In short, content marketing writes articles people actually want to read, and as such, attracts people to your website.

    Search engine optimisationSomething that often falls under the umbrella of content marketing is specifically search engine optimization, or SEO. This is the process of increasing the number of visitors to a specific website by using keywords to get ranked in search engines based on those keywords.

    Example of content marketingIf a website has a store that sells tires and steering wheel covers, a great example of content marketing would be to write a variety of high-quality articles based around tires and steering wheel covers. Using keywords you think someone might search for in order to get to the information on your website is how you would get those readers to find your website.

    This works just as well in the B2B world. Say a training company has a message they want to divulge. Instead of Facebook or Twitter, they are going to want to craft content that will live better on LinkedIn or Slideshare. Here they will be able to create digestible bits of information and reach the correct market. Take this piece for example:

    Over time, using a variety of marketing techniques, proper SEO, and having quality content, your website will rank higher and higher in search engines for each keyword you continuously provide content for. While this is not the fastest route to success, some might say that it's the easiest, simply because of how simple the method for ranking is.

    There is a very obvious difference between native advertising and content marketing when comparing the two side by side. While native advertising is useful for you to promote the things you sell using other websites and ads, content marketing is useful for you to promote the things you sell right there on your website. Both are great forms of marketing, but you can't just choose one. Rather, taking advantage of both forms of marketing is the easiest and most assured way to have your business booming online in no time.

    Brigg Patten Brigg Patten writes in the business and tech spaces. He's a fan of podcasts, bokeh and smooth jazz. His time is mostly spent learning the piano and watching his Golden Retriever Julian chase a stick. More
    Source: The difference between native advertising and content marketing: what you need to know

    Saturday, November 7, 2015

    Facebook marketing socispot

    For social media marketing, internet marketers are constantly faced with challenges as platforms create hurdles that traditional internet properties (like branded websites, squeeze pages or other purpose built lead generators) don't have. Particularly, Facebook is continuously building barriers that can… Continue Reading →


    Source: Facebook marketing socispot