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Web Design, Website Development and Internet Marketing - One Page Expert Guides


  • 4 Ways Authorship Markup Enhances SEO - 09-05-2012
    Written by: Crispin Sheridan

    When it comes to hunting for reliable sources, credibility is vital to how useful (or useless) a source may be. The same goes for sources on the Internet. But, as most of us know, identifying credibility on the web can be tough. Google wants to make it easier with authorship markup.

    The relatively new project, which officially started being supported by Google in June 2011 and is still in its beta stage, sounds familiar. It allows websites to publicly connect individual authors to their respective content across the web by adding the rel=author tag to content.

    "We hope to use this information - and any information - as a ranking signal at Google," Othar Hansson said in an official Google video discussing authorship markup between him and Matt Cutts. "...we'd want to get information on the credibility of authors, from all kinds of sources, and eventually we'll use that in ranking."

    Google will use this information "to help people find content from great authors in search results," according to its official Webmaster Central Blog.

    Pages using authorship markup are represented by a rich snippet in search results. Visually, the rich snippet link offers much more. In addition to the standard search results we see every day, rich snippets offer additional intertwined information that separates it from non-rich results.

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    The top search result shown above is a rich snippet. It offers standard search-result information plus rich media like Bas van den Bald's picture as he was the author, a link to the author's Google+ profile, structured data from Google+ (in gray), and links to more work by the author.

    But what does authorship markup mean for search engine optimization? Here are four ways authorship will serve SEO:

    1. Authentic, credible, trustworthy sites will be easier to find. Think about it: current standard search rankings are pretty anonymous. Those of us searching for something specific don't really know how to differentiate which results are more useful - or authentic, credible, and trustworthy - other than whatever shows up at the top of the of the first search engine results page (SERP) is expected to be most useful. Sometimes that is the case, but not always.

    2. Websites will be on a more level playing field. Authorship markup allows low-ranking sites with original content (oftentimes overlooked because the content has been recreated on different, higher-ranking sites) to rank higher on SERPs because of factors we addressed in the above bullet. Authorship offers another algorithm element to better serve search and it will be noticeable in instances where useful but low-ranking sites show up high on SERPs.

    3. Search is becoming more social. By combining both social search and regular search, Google is tying a reputation to an individual, not just a specific site or company. This is making search more social than ever before. Many will say this is a shameless way to make authors join Google+, and they're probably right. But it also places a name, face, and reputation on results. Now, that's social!

    4. The addition of another algorithm influencer takes weight off others.
    Authorship markup allows Google to further modernize its algorithm to keep pace with the natural progressions in the changes in the way people expect search to work. This is not ideal for businesses that have thrived off of maintaining the status quo of SEO, but it is good for the humans using Google. No longer are big sites able to sit back and expect to show up at the top because of who they are. Changes and new functionality such as the authorship tag are sure to continue and it's critical for search marketers to continue adapting along with it.

    A SearchMetrics study published in late April 2012 illustrates that approximately 17 percent of search queries included at least a single instance of authorship markup within the first 100 search results. A million keywords were analyzed and more than 170,000 of them offered rich snippets somewhere on the first 10 SERPs.

    Authorship markup, now on the cusp of being a year old, is clearly having an effect on search. And it's only going to increase. Curators of the web need to be mindful of the effects rel=author has, and use it to better serve search across the web. Have you already implemented the authorship tags on your site? If so, have you seen any gains in visibility, clicks, and conversions?

    See the full story at: www.clickz.com

    For more information about seo firm and seo services, just visit us at www.7strategy.com


  • Do Your Site Visitors Push Your Buttons? - 03-05-2012
    Written by: Tim Ash

    Many a parent has angrily warned their children "Don't push my buttons!" and of course what they are implying is that the children know exactly what to do to create a certain response, or reaction, from Mom or Dad. When you think about it, isn't it funny that an expression that has been around for generations is so applicable to web design and conversion optimization today? Most landing pages include a button as part of the main call to action. So the question is: do your visitors know exactly what to do? Are your buttons so clear that it leaves no doubt in the visitor's mind as to what will happen when it's clicked?

    Here are some guidelines you can keep in mind when creating buttons that beg to be pushed.

    First, Prioritize

    Ideally you should have a single, clear call-to-action button on your page. If you have more than one, you need to create a visual hierarchy so that their importance is clear to your web visitor. One way to do that is to change the color or size of the non-primary buttons to something visually less interesting (make those buttons duller and smaller).


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    If you have two side-by-side buttons, remember that the one on the right is by convention considered the default one (most likely to be clicked on). You may consider demoting some of your secondary buttons to text links.

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    Experiment With Format

    The exact format of the button matters. Experiment with a wide range of button shape parameters to see what works best. Possible changes to the button include:

    ? Shape (amount of rounding and corner "radiasing," or having them remain square)
    ? Dimensionality (drop shadows and curves)
    ? Color (contrasting and ideally unique on the page)
    ? Visual embellishments (adding small triangles or chevrons to indicate action)
    ? Size (try radically smaller or larger versions)

    Be Specific and Manage Expectations

    Buttons should accurately describe the intended action. Make sure that the button describes exactly what will happen when it is clicked. For example, many e-commerce sites mistakenly put "Buy It Now!" buttons next to products when the actual action is "Add to Cart."

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    Another common mistake is to use the label "Order Now" when you really mean "Proceed to Checkout." This causes unnecessary stress and anxiety for visitors as they try to figure out the threat or opportunity presented by your button. It is always best to remove the hesitation and assure them that taking the next step is a small and safe action.

    Use unambiguous standard language for all button labels. Do not try to be funny or cute. The attempt will often be lost on the audience, especially when you consider the international nature of Internet traffic. Most people from other cultures who are non-native speakers will find it difficult to process and understand unfamiliar button labels.

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    Label From the Perspective of Your Visitors

    Button text should always be written from the perspective of your visitors and address their intentions and desires. In many cases you should try to complete the thought in the mind of the visitor: "I want to..." Appropriate examples of possible completions for this sentence include "Download the Whitepaper," "Start My Free Trial," "Get Details," or "Select This Plan." This formulation is unlikely to work with commonly seen button text such as "Submit," "Create Account," or "Reset."

    15.jpg16.jpg17.jpgRemember, good usability is all about matching and managing visitors' expectations. The last place you want to fail in this task is on your buttons. And while there are some general best practices like those outlined above, the only way you'll know what works best for your audience is to test it. Never assume that a button style that works on a competitor's site will work on yours. Test button color, shape, design/styling, label, position, and size. Because, unlike Mom, you really do want your buttons pushed.

    See the full story at: www.clickz.com

    For more information about web design companies and web site designers, just visit us at www.7strategy.com







  • Google Semantic Search and SEO - 21-04-2012
    Written by: Ron Jones

    Keywords have always been the foundation of any SEO campaign even with the latest algorithm updates like Panda and Search, plus Your World. With these new changes, the basic principles of SEO are still valid by having relevant targeted keywords in title tags, headings, and landing page content. However Google is always looking at new ways to provide searchers with a better, more relevant experience.

    According to a recent article from The Wall Street Journal, Google announced plans to raise the bar even more by moving to a semantic search technology, which, according to Amit Singhal from Google, will take the experience to a higher level:

    "Google Inc. GOOG is giving its tried-and-true Web-search formula a makeover as it tries to fix the shortcomings of today's technology and maintain its dominant market share.

    Over the next few months, Google's search engine will begin spitting out more than a list of blue Web links. It will also present more facts and direct answers to queries at the top of the search-results page."

    While this sounds like a new direction, Google and other search engines have been trying to provide search results based on intent for some time with location-based search, universal search, and other methods.

    What Is Semantic Search?

    Semantic search is the process of understanding the meaning of keywords people use and matching it to their intent. Before semantic search, the results could not differentiate between individual phrases like "Saturn" the planet and the automobile brand "Saturn." With semantic search, artificial intelligence is used to understand the actual meaning of words, the relationship between multiple word phrases, and the searcher's intent. Armed with this approach, search engines can provide more relevant search results, thus offering a better user experience.

    Knowledge Graph


    According to Google, it provides good search results only if there are landing pages that include keywords from the search query. Google doesn't really understand the query but attempts to match the keywords from the query. Google can answer questions like "How tall is Mount Everest?" However it cannot seem to go beyond simple facts. Notice the answer to the question is now built into the search engine results page (SERP) as "best guess" and that it is based on information from other sites.


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    To overcome this dependency, Google is building "a huge knowledge graph of interconnected entities and their attributes." This graph is a database of structured information that is pulled from the web. As it grows with more and more entities, it will help to understand searchers' queries and provide answers to more complex questions.

    This knowledge graph will be the support system for Google's semantic search efforts and will help Google to answer questions itself, instead of relying on other websites.

    Semantic Search and SEO

    So you may ask yourself what this means to the future of SEO. One thing to consider is that you will not only be competing with others for ranking in the SERPs but also Google since it will pull its results from its own source and not from other websites.

    Another aspect is the emphasis you put on keyword research. You not only have to understand the meaning and context around your keywords, you also need to develop specific content around those words that match the right intent. Most people place a lot of emphasis around keyword search volume. That only shows how often the keyword is searched on but doesn't provide any insight into the context or intent of what the searcher might be looking for. You will need to look at other factors to help you gather that insight.

    To help you better understand what a person means when they use a keyword you should frame the keyword into a question that breaks down several options on what the intent is. For instance, if someone searches for "mountain bike," what they are trying to answer might be:

    ? What is a mountain bike?
    ? Where can I get a mountain bike?
    ? What are the different brands/models of mountain bikes?
    ? How can I compare different mountain bikes?
    ? How can I fix a mountain bike?

    I could go on and on but I am at least getting closer to understanding what the intent might be. So to do SEO in the semantic search world you need to go beyond just keyword popularity, you need to answer the question: what is the searcher's intent?

    As you conduct your keyword research you should weigh keyword factors other than just search volume. You can look at relevance, competition, intent modeling, persona mapping, etc., which will add more dimension to your keywords.

    Also, social media is a great tool for placing context to keywords. With many social media tools you can type in a search term and get a list of tweets and posts that are part of a conversation. Seeing the keyword used in a conversation will give you some better insight on intent.

    As semantic search evolves more in the future it will become more and more important to focus on picking the right keywords based on user intent and mapping them to relevant content.

    See the full story at: www.clickz.com

    For more information about seo firm and seo services, just visit us at www.7strategy.com


  • Web Content Development 101 - 13-02-2012
    Written by Ron Jones

    Content development is the lifeblood of your website. In today's world, if you don't have good quality content on your website or blog you will get passed up for someone else who does. Not only does it need to be good, it has to be relevant and up to date. Especially if you have a blog.

    Web Content Development and Relevancy

    One of the most important principles to understand is the relevancy of your content to your website or blog. Posting content to your site that isn't relevant will only confuse your audience and then push them away.

    They probably found you through a search engine or a link from another site. These visitors have an expectation on what they are going to see based on keywords they see. Once they get to your site, will your content deliver on their expectation? If your content is relevant, then it should.

    The Purpose of Content Development

    Remember, your website has a purpose to advance the goals of your business. So as you are developing content, keep that in mind that if you are trying to increase sales, then make sure your content supports that sentiment to not only visit your site but help them in the conversion process.

    Content Development Process

    If you don't have a content development process, then get one. It will make life a lot easier if you develop a method for gathering, organizing, and deploying content for your site. I recommend the following steps:

    1. Brainstorm
    2. Organize and filter
    3. Design and develop
    4. Deploy
    5. Measure and maintain

    Brainstorming is mainly a right brain function and can be difficult if you are more of an analytical thinker (left brain). Develop some loose objectives that you can live by so you have some parameters as you search for good content. Have a place to put all of your ideas, whether they be good or bad. Don't discount any ideas or concepts yet; let the creativity flow.

    If you are running any SEO, PPC, or other marketing campaigns, you should have started with keyword research. Look at your targeted keywords and work on developing concepts and ideas around those keywords. This will help to insure you center your attention on content that will help you draw the right kind of traffic to your site.

    Organize and filter
    the ideas and concepts you came up with and switch brain hemispheres (to the left) and move these concepts into logical buckets or themes. Filter any ideas or concepts that don't match up to your targeted keywords or goals for your website and discard them. Think in terms of your target audience. What will they want to read, see, or hear to compel them to stay a while?

    Design and develop your concepts into working prototypes. Pretty straightforward here; just put your plans into action, whether it be simply writing copy or developing supporting graphics to help illustrate your ideas.

    Deploy all of your hard work. Again, pretty simple. Remember to test and doublecheck your work for accuracy. One aspect of pushing out new content is to let the world know about it. So make sure you have mechanisms to tell the world you have something new for them. You might use social media tools like Facebook or Twitter. Maybe you will trigger your RSS feeds so they can be aggregated to the masses.

    Measure and maintain
    your new content. After a few days, check your analytics to see what effect your content had on your site traffic. What is your bounce rate to the page? Consider this step a crucial one because this is where you will learn what resonates with your audience and what doesn't. This will help you in the future as you develop new content.

    Again, make sure you stay focused on your site's goals as you develop your content. If you are developing content that doesn't meet your goals, as cool as it may seem, it will not further your business goals, and in some cases may steer you off course.

    See the full story at: www.clickz.com

    For more information about seo services and internet marketing company, just visit us at www.7strategy.com

  • Key Tips for Better Website Usability - 28-01-2012
    Written by Ron Jones

    So you have a great website that is loaded with great content but is it not converting and most of your visitors leave your site within the first 60 seconds. If this is the situation you are in, you might have a site that isn't friendly enough to your users. In other words, it isn't easy to navigate and find information within your site. As you can see from the chart below, the more problems you have with usability, the more you will see your visitors slip away.






    1.jpgWebsite usability is a common concept among web designers. Successful designers understand the interaction with the site's users and then develop a site around that understanding to provide a compelling user experience. Have you ever been to a website that seemed to anticipate what you were looking for and provided you easy access to that information? This is a site that integrated usability best practices into the development of their site.

    It is generally known that people visit your website with a specific task in mind. If they can't find a path that leads them to a solution within the first few seconds, they will leave just as quickly. So what can you do to fortify your website and fix usability issues you might have? I have compiled a list of tips and resources to help you enhance your site's usability.

    Use Keyword Phrases That Your Audience Is Searching On

    One of the first things site visitors look for are some visual clues that help them feel they have landed on a site that will help them solve their problem. Keyword research can be a formidable tool to help you understand which search phrases your target audience is using to find you.

    Armed with your researched and targeted keywords, you should make sure they are prominently placed on the landing page. This will help your visitors feel they have landed on the right page. For instance, if a person searched on the phrase "budget cruise ships 2011" and landed on a page that had a heading "Your Guide to Budget Cruise Ship Vacations for 2011," do you think they will linger? Of course, because they will quickly recognize the same keyword they used in their search and feel comfortable spending more time looking around.

    Consistent and Intuitive Site Navigation

    People are impatient and hate learning new things. Look at your site navigation and see if it follows a normal browsing design. Sometimes we try to be too clever with our navigation to show off our creativity at the expense of good usability, which then confuses our visitors and keeps them from the content they are looking for.




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    I remember a few years ago renting a car and as I pulled up to the gate to check out, I couldn't find the button to roll down the window. Finally I had to open the door to communicate with the security person who was checking me out. They pointed out that the button for the window was on the middle console near the armrest. Who puts the window button there? Some people may ask the same kind of question when they get to your website. If you follow a normal navigational structure, people will intuitively know how to find information on your site. Try to get too creative and you may just be creating a barrier between your audience and the information they seek.

    Here are some navigational elements to consider:

    ? Menus. Put menus where people expect them (either horizontally at the top or vertically on the left). Also, keep them in the same place on all pages.
    ? Main menu options. Limit the options for the main menu to no more than six. Too many options can confuse visitors. Make them simple and to the point.
    ? Home page. Should be a portal with limited information that can quickly point your users to the information they seek. There is no need to overload the home page with extra information about each topic of your site.
    ? Secondary content. Privacy policy, shopping carts, and sign-in should be separate from the main menu but still easy to find.
    ? User-friendly buttons. Should be ultra-easy to find and very meaningful to the visitor. It should help them quickly identify where they need to go.

    These are just some of the basics. However, there are many more nuances that you should consider. I would suggest taking a look at Dr. Pete's page on Strategic Web Usability for some more great ideas.

    Optimized Content Strategy

    Content as you know is really what visitors are after in the first place. Your focus should be on mapping this content to your site structure to make it easy to find. Again, your home page isn't the place to put all of your content. It's the directory that contains simple and clear messages that lead the way to elaborate subpage content.



    3.jpg Again, with keyword research, you can identify the most popular search terms, which also represent popular content. Then you can segment this content into meaningful categories. These categories represent subpages that you can populate with rich, quality content. For more information, you can see this column on "Steps to Building a Successful Site Architecture".

    There are many aspects to building a site that is easy to navigate and provides compelling content that is easy to find. Things like site load time and forms that are easy to fill out.

    See the full story at: www.clickz.com

    For more information about website design company and web development company, just visit us at www.7strategy.com





  • Death of the Website as a Marketing Tool? - 13-01-2012
    Written by: Gregg Stewart

    Small and large brands today often ask about the company website's relevance and importance. At one time, the website served as the foundation of all online marketing efforts. With the rise in importance of social platforms like Facebook, some now wonder: how important is the company website? Since Google Place Pages now dominate the top search positions, many also question whether they should abandon their SEO efforts aimed at elevating search positions for the website.

    The website's role has changed - and it hinges on what stage of the purchase process, where and when, a consumer enters a site. Today, directional navigation and conversion optimization have become important. Customers and prospects take many differing paths to purchase, so a diversified, distributed, and integrated approach must be developed to maximize lead and sales volume.



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    For example, a consumer who has already decided she wants to purchase a widget from Acme Widgets may navigate to the site simply to find the closest location and store hours; we'd assign her to the "purchase" stage of the funnel. The most important thing for people like her is the store locator, access to local location pages, or Google Places. However, a consumer looking to compare Acme Widgets' new "left-handed smoke shifter" to Spacely Sprockets' "smoke diverter" is in the "comparison" stage and needs access to detailed product information, purchaser reviews, or shopping engines like NexTag. Now you start to see the pattern. The consumer's information needs have not changed; it is where the consumer is accessing the information that is important and more diversified.

    The lesson? Now, more than ever, websites must become vessels of content that can be distributed across numerous platforms so that consumers working through the purchase process can access the information where they are seeking a personalized solution.

    Building a Full Funnel Marketing Plan


    Begin with an audit of all marketing and media vehicles that you are using. Much like building an editorial or messaging calendar, map your customers' information needs and label them by which stage in the sales/purchase process they cover. This exercise can be tricky because many marketing vehicles do not solely cover one purpose. For example, display advertising can be used as a top-of-the-funnel vehicle, serving to build "awareness" for your brand or business and retargeting can serve as a direct response "purchase" vehicle. In these cases, break down individual campaigns and discretely assign them to their main or primary purpose.

    Once the campaigns and marketing elements are mapped, identify areas where you do not have content that addresses a particular stage in the purchase process. Keep in mind that each stage of the purchase process is important and works in an integrated fashion. I've had major national brands that were spending millions of marketing dollars on branding and "awareness" campaigns question why direct response vehicles like search and e-commerce shopping programs decreased in effectiveness when they paused their branding spending. It's difficult to assign a one-to-one relationship to the various funnel activities; e.g., a dollar in "branding" spend results in x dollars in purchases. All elements have an impact (positive or negative) and need to be stitched together in a comprehensive marketing plan and measurement program. Once this task is completed, you can get better insight into assigning attribution weights to the various elements. Now armed with your "funnel stage" audit, you can identify gaps and develop or redevelop content to cover these holes.

    Back to your website. Understanding that consumers will access your site via numerous connections (paid listings, promotions, social platforms, etc.) and that these connections are now assigned to differing stages in the purchase process - are they joined to the correct website content based on their stage? One missed opportunity we see from most advertisers is the common practice of linking most or all content to the home page of their website, regardless of the specificity of the inbound link. In search marketing campaigns, the correct practice is "deep linking" or aligning landing content to the explicit keyword purpose or intent. For example, land a consumer in the e-commerce section if a keyword is combined with "buy" as part of the string or in the comparison section if the keyword string where "Brand A vs. Brand B."


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    Now back to your funnel audit, is your content in all the places where consumers seek out the differing purchase stage content? Having the website content tuned is good, but you need to ensure that you take a distributed approach so the content also exists where consumers are interacting with it. Conduct an advertising, business profile, and listing reach audit to make sure you have prioritized their most popular access points and that the content is aligned to their purchase stage. An example here is that a business profile of a comparison directory such as Yelp should contain lower funnel comparison and perhaps pricing information and be joined directly to purchase points (telephone, online purchase form, etc.) versus your Chamber of Commerce listing, which should contain more generalized content about your brand, years in business, etc., to establish credibility.

    So is the website dead as a marketing method? No, but a website is not the sole content location that consumers use when making purchase decisions. A diversified, distributed, and integrated plan that takes advantage of the entire purchase funnel is the best way to go. Full funnel marketing is hard and detail oriented. But once its lessons are unlocked, the spoils of cost-effective sales leads are the reward.

    See the full story at: www.clickz.com

    For more information about seo services and internet marketing company, just visit us at www.7strategy.com



  • 5 Steps to Building a Successful Site Architecture - 05-01-2012
    Written by: Ron Jones

    I have come across many website development projects that seem to focus too much on the visual aspects of their website before they put any thought into the structure and information flow. By just inserting information design, sometimes called information architecture at the beginning of your process, you can dramatically change your website's performance. The benefits of a successful site architecture will not only increase visitor engagement but it will help you attract more of the right visitors. This process will also lead to higher conversions.

    Step 1 - Identify Keywords

    This first step of identifying high-performing keywords is essential if you wish to drive the right traffic to your site. Take the time to perform a thorough keyword research study from the beginning. It's a given that you will be using branded keywords on your site, but more importantly look for keywords that your target audience might use to find you. Use a couple of keyword research tools like Keyword Discovery, WordStream, or Wordtracker, along with the Google Keyword Tool to help you gather data on each keyword. Some things to look for and determine are:

    Relevancy. How relevant are the keywords to your business and do you have (or will have) relevant content on your site for that keyword?

    Specific or long-tail keywords. Very specific search phrases will attract people who are toward the end of their buying cycle and who are ready to convert. For instance, if someone uses the search query "laser printer," that would suggest they are beginning their research process and haven't decided on one yet. On the other hand, if they search using the term "HP Laserjet PRO P1102," that would suggest they know what they want and are ready to buy.

    Competition.
    Find out how competitive the keywords are. Highly competitive keywords will be harder to rank for and may cost more to use.

    Search volume. Keywords that have a high search volume represent a popular search term that many people are likely to use. Compare similar terms and see which is the most popular.

    As you go through a keyword research study, you will learn more about potential visitors, what they might be looking for, and their wants and needs.


    Step 2 - Map the Keyword Space


    Categories will emerge from the keyword research, identifying different subsets of your products or services, or information that your potential customers would find useful. Those keyword groupings or categories will help you in identifying relevant pages of content you will want to build into your structure.

    As you map the keywords you plan to use to relevant landing pages, you create a fluid connection to content that your visitors are likely to be looking for. It also helps you to perform a kind of gap analysis to identify subpages you might have missed.


    Step 3 - Develop Your Site Architecture


    The next step is to build out the architecture of your site. Most people refer to this as building a site map. A site map is basically a hierarchical representation of your site and all of its levels and pages. As you mapped your keywords into logical categories, you have already started this process. Continue to build out the rest of the site structure and make sure you include all of the information your target audience and each persona may be searching for.

    Richard Baxter presents some very interesting arguments about how deep your site map should go. He makes a case that a flatter site architecture will be best for usability since it will take less clicks to get to the deepest level. A very good tip to consider as you build out the structure of your site.

    Step 4 - Wireframe Prototyping

    Now that you have a solid structure that outlines your site's content that is mapped to relevant keywords, you should start to develop your wireframe for each page. A wireframe is a simple representation of the content and navigation for a page on your site. It is not a sitemap. It takes each page on the sitemap and blocks out the placement of content and navigation as seen below.

    If you wish to take this a step further, then you can convert your wireframe into a "clickable prototype," which is a website that incorporates the wireframe with clickable navigation and links to get a feel for how the website will behave and operate.

    This is a good best practice, especially for large sites to work out the information flow and usability issues. You can even conduct user testing with a clickable prototype to learn where the problem areas might be before you start programming and coding the site. There are many tools to help you with this process. One that I have used is ProtoShare. It allows you to develop a sitemap, wireframe, and clickable prototype in the cloud and allow your team to work on these elements in an online collaborative environment.

    Step 5 - Content Development


    The final step is to build into the wireframe the actual content for each page. To bring this full circle, you should make sure the content uses the keywords that you have mapped for each page. Use the keywords in the body copy, text links, video and image tags, etc. This is all a part of SEObest practices. But, more importantly, it bridges the searcher expectation to relevant content on your site. So when your visitors arrive they will feel they have landed at the right place. As a result, you will find that you have more engaged visitors that will be more likely to convert.

    Once this process is done, you should plan to add a visual skin to the site that is in harmony with your logo and other branding elements. A mistake many people make is to begin their process with the visual elements first as they design their home page. It is best to look at your site holistically and work out the information flow ahead of time.

    I have used this simple process over the past 12 years with a tremendous amount of success. It will help you get into the minds of your audience and anticipate their needs. When they finally land on your site, they will feel right at home since you have taken the time to lay out the information just for them. They will reward you with higher conversions, lower bounce rates, and undoubtedly word-of-mouth praise through social media channels. A win-win for all involved.

    See the full story at: www.clickz.com

    For more information about seo services, web development companyand website design company, just visit us at www.7strategy.com

  • Website Optimization - The Role of Page Goals - 22-12-2011
    Written by Neil Mason

    "Why do you have a website?" I love that question; it tends to focus the mind. Any time you develop measurement frameworks for digital channels, you must be focused. Digital platforms, like websites, often have multiple stakeholders with different goals. There's always a danger that overall objectives may not be clear. And if the objectives are not clear, then success is next to impossible to measure.

    It's challenging to developing good key performance indicators (KPIs). It's easy enough to come up with the right metrics, but clarifying robust objectives is more difficult. It's also easier for e-commerce sites to develop KPIs with strong objectives.

    But most sites don't sell stuff. So why do they exist? They exist for good reasons and those reasons must be expressed in clear and definitive terms. That's the hard part. So, make objectives clear and measurable, describe what "good looks like," and select appropriate metrics that measure outputs and outcomes. So once that is done, is that the end of the story? Not really, it's just the beginning.

    Once overall site goals are in place and KPIs have been defined, the next question is: which sections of the site are working well and which ones aren't? If we don't know the answer to this, then how can we focus our efforts properly on site optimization? This is why we need not just site goals but page goals as well. A page goal defines what that page is trying to achieve. It answers the question, "Why does this page exist?"

    Stating clearly why a page exists and outlining its objectives is a very useful exercise, particularly when you are designing a page. Page goals help you focus what the page is trying to achieve and feed directly into the development of the information architecture of the page - for example, at wireframe stage. Page goals are particularly useful in circumstances when there are multiple stakeholders all trying to get a piece of the action on a page; without page goals, you can end up with pages that don't work particularly well for the business or website visitor.

    In the same way as for defining overall site goals, page goals should be as clear and precise as possible. Something like, "To help users achieve their goals" doesn't really cut it. Which users? Which goals? In what way? It has to be clearly defined. Once it's been clearly defined, then a measurement framework can be developed for each page that describes how the page's success can be assessed. Once the measurement framework has been developed, then measurement systems can be configured to include the right kind of metrics in the right kind of way. With page level measurement frameworks, consider the context of the page itself. How do people get to the page? How far is it into a customer journey?

    Consider the classic product page on an e-commerce site. A product page has a tough job. The primary purpose of a product page is generally to persuade a website visitor to add a product to the basket. To do this it needs to provide all the information required in a clear and concise way. To measure the success of the product, you could look at metrics such as the add-to-basket rate. You could also measure the effectiveness of different components or tools on the page in terms of how they influence the add-to-basket rate. But often a product page on an e-commerce site is also the landing page. Often it's the first page that a visitor sees on a site. For them it's also the home page. So, the product page also has the goal of building trust and consideration for new visitors. It doesn't just have to persuade the potential customer to buy the product; it has to persuade the customer to buy it from you. By identifying these additional page goals, you also identify the need to measure success using additional metrics, such as the bounce rate for new visitors.

    Not every single page on a site necessarily has to have page goals, but certainly they should be in place for each different type of page or section on a site. Page goals are useful to help define what good looks like at the micro level and to ensure that your measurement frameworks are measuring the right things in the right way.

    See the full story at: www.clickz.com

    For more information about seo services, ecommerce web design and web design services, just visit us at www.7strategy.com

  • Case Study: Impact of Code Cleanup on Site Traffic. - 08-03-2011

    Today's column is going to be a case study of a web site that made great progress simply due to basic code cleanup work. What's interesting about this case study is that the things we did aren't the first things you think of when you think of SEO, yet addressing these types of things can often make a huge difference.

    The site is Work Coach Cafe. The site is a blog with regular posts on career advice and coaching.

    We got involved in the site at the end of December 2010. Because that was the holiday season, there was a natural dip in traffic, but if we look back to November it was doing about 5,000 visitors per week. When we looked closely at the site we found some structural problems:

    1. The site performance was slow, with Google Webmaster Tools showing page load times taking up to 15 seconds (slower than 92 percent of sites).

    2. A crawl of the site by Xenu's Link Sleuth revealed up 49,662 broken links.

    3. There were 743 301 redirects in place from pages that were long gone, including double redirects in some cases.

    We were concerned about site performance since Matt Cutts had identified performance as a ranking factopr in April of last year. It turned out that one of the big problems was that the site was on a low performance shared server.

    We moved the site to a different server where it continued to share space with other web sites, but in a much more controlled environment. For the record, the cost of this new server (from Pair.com) was quite a bit more, but offered a much higher performance. As you can see here, performance improved quite a bit, with average page load times in the 5 second neighborhood:

    wcc-performance.jpg

    The SEO impact of the broken links is a little harder to assess. However, given the sheer quantity, we were concerned that it could be affecting the perceived quality of the site.

    When we investigated the broken links we found that many of these were related to template specific issues, such as references to missing CSS files or images. Through a lengthy process of fixing problems and then recrawling the site we worked until all broken links were eliminated.

    We also dug into the 301 redirects. You may ask why we spent the time on this activity.

    However, there is some loss of PageRank through a 301 redirect. I asked this question in an interview with Matt Cutts ast March. Here's an excerpt from the interview:

    That's a good question, and I am not 100 percent sure about the answer. I can certainly see how there could be some loss of PageRank. I am not 100 percent sure whether the crawling and indexing team has implemented that sort of natural PageRank decay, so I will have to go and check on that specific case. (Note: in a follow on email, Matt confirmed that this is in fact the case. There is some loss of PR through a 301).

    These were basically the three steps we took. No link building campaigns were undertaken. No keyword optimization was done. More broadly, no other SEO effort was invested in the site.

    Results

    So how did we do? The results suprised even us. Here is chart showing what they were:

    wcc-visits.jpg

    In a very short period of time, traffic has scaled to about 7,000 visitors per week. This is roughly a 40% growth (and for the record about double where the site was on a year over year basis).

    Summary

    Much of this effort came down to simple web development hygiene. In developing web sites, errors have a tendency to accumulate. If you don't go back and address them, what begins as an infinitesimal impact begins to grow. Eventually, the cost becomes very, very real. Don't overlook this part of your SEO efforts. It is clearly worth the trouble.


  • Social Media Around the World: Current Trends and Future Growth. - 17-02-2011

    Witten by Michael Bonfils | 


    Social media networking sites continue to be one of the hottest commodities in the international online marketplace. Just ask the citizens of Egypt, where social networks played a major role in their recent revolution.

    It's easy to believe, considering the same type of social media revolution took place here in the U.S. back in 2008 with the presidential elections.

    As the number of people linked into these sites increases, the software applications and venues available to users expand as well. While there are several articles speaking of the demise of sites like MySpace and Friendster, it seems these reports continue to be greatly exaggerated.

    The popularity of Facebook and related gaming applications is still on the rise and will likely see even more growth in the next few years. Twitter provides instant gratification for millions around the globe, while niche networking sites are gaining market share as well.

    Even though we see these giants of social networking sites dominating the U.S. market, a look around the world reveals a much more diverse social media marketplace and plenty of opportunity.

    Brazil

    Orkut still reigns supreme in Brazil, with nearly 30 million users recorded in just one month, according to recently released statistics from data collection firm Alexa. Owned and operated by Google, Orkut was originally available only by invitation from an existing user. Today, anyone can join and link up with friends through the site.

    Twitter is also popular in Brazil, with 20 percent of Internet users reporting activity on the site.

    Mexico

    Instant messenger applications remain the most commonly used social media in Mexico, in part due to the easy portability of the software, according to Andy Atkins-Krüger's recent WebCertain Search and Social Report 2010.

    Twitter and Facebook are gaining in popularity, however, with about 50 percent of online users are now active on Facebook as well.

    Internet access is limited to just over 25 percent of the Mexican population, so the potential for growth in this largely untapped market makes it a popular target for newer social media sites.

    China

    One key to the success of Chinese social media sites like Kaixin001 and Xing is the Golden Shield Project enforced by the Chinese government. This national firewall serves as a barrier to sites like Facebook and Twitter.

    Even under these restrictions, latest Alexa figures show that over 45 percent of Internet users in China participate in some way in the social media scene, with Internet forums and blogs being a popular choice for many in the country.

    India

    With none of the constraints experienced in the Chinese social networking marketplace, Orkut and Facebook have been competing for their share of users for several years in India.

    Facebook finally gained supremacy, with 20 million users to Orkut's 19 million this past year. This is expected to increase as more social media users gravitate to Facebook's larger audience base and wider range of applications.

    Japan

    Twitter is rapidly gaining popularity in Japan, but local Japanese sites like Mixi and Gree still maintain dominance over the social media market, according to online statistics firm Socialbakers.

    Mobage-Town is also popular and is specifically designed for mobile phones. Its appeal is largely due to easy portability and providing free games on the social media platform.

    Korea

    Koreans love their busy, animation-rich sites. With an interface that evokes the video game "The Sims," Cyworld has over 20 million users in Korea and is the most popular social networking site in the country. Similar to Facebook, Cyworld can be used to promote products and services and has gained a number of new commercial users as a result.

    Russia

    Coming in at number four in total social media saturation, Russia's market is dominated by local networks, including VKontakte and Odnoklassniki. These sites are hitting more than 100 million users, according to Alexa.

    VKontakte hits the first place in market share amongst its Russian and Ukrainian social media users and offers many of the same features as Facebook along with access to video and music files. Many Russian firms utilize VKontakte for recruiting, making it a popular choice among college students and recent graduates.

    United Kingdom

    As in most English-speaking countries, Facebook is the predominant social media site for the U.K., with YouTube and Twitter running a close second and third.

    Bebo, once a major contender with college students, has fallen to less than 1 percent of the marketplace. The U.K. is second only to the United States in number of current Facebook users, according to WebCertain's Search and Social Report.

    Spain

    Recent figures also compiled by WebCertain Publishing indicate that 2010 marks the first year in which Facebook users outnumbered members of Tuenti, a popular Spanish-language social site.

    Facebook broke the crucial 10 million mark, making it the number one social media venue in Spain. Twitter is slowly gaining an audience, but is still mainly used for business purposes rather than personal micro-blogging applications.

    France

    As a leading blog site in Europe, Skyrock has long dominated the French, Belgian, and Swiss social media marketplace. It has even been chosen by a number of major political groups in France as a preferred venue for communicating with their constituencies.

    However, last year, Alexa statistics indicate that Facebook achieved top-place ranking among French media sites. This growth is expected to continue for the foreseeable future.

    Germany

    Students comprise the majority of social networking users in Germany. As a result, the most popular social media site is StudiVz, which caters specifically to this demographic.

    Facebook has faced some serious challenges in breaking into the German market, including governmental legal proceedings aimed at Facebook's privacy policies and use of collected personal data.

    The Netherlands

    Language barriers have created issues for Facebook in the Netherlands, where Dutch-language social networking site Hyves takes first place honors with more than 10 million registered users, according to the Wall Street Journal.

    Twitter is gaining ground among Internet users in the Netherlands and has been credited by a number of Dutch newspapers, including De Telegraaf, greatly influencing the 2010 elections in the country.

    United States

    With more than 133 million users in the U.S., Facebook has achieved market saturation of over 50 percent of all Internet users in the country. YouTube, MySpace, and Twitter round out the top four.

    More than 75 percent of U.S. residents have access to the Internet, so these figures are even more impressive when placed into context.

    Trends & Future Growth

    Around the world the amount of time spent online is increasing exponentially, especially among cell phone users.

    A recent study by Strategy Analytics indicates that the number of people using their cell phones to access the Internet has quadrupled in the last four years. A large portion of that increased online time is spent on social networking.

    According to data collected by Universal Mccann International Social Media Research, much of the new content available on the Internet is being produced in the Asian region, with the largest community of bloggers in the world located in China and Japan.

    Overall, video content is the fastest growing segment of the social media market. While Facebook and Twitter are expected to continue their expansion into world markets, the potential for niche social media venues remains high and the worldwide appetite for social media games and activities is expected to continue unabated in future years.

    See the full story at: www.searchenginewatch.com

    For more information about S.E.O, e-commerce website design, e-mail marketing, web site design service and website development, just visit us at www.7strategy.com 


  • PPC vs. SEO: Paid Search as Your Organic Competitor. - 17-02-2011

    Written by Alex Cohen | 

    You should be doing SEO. You probably should be doing PPC. They work well together.

    Those are basic facts of online marketing. Anyone who has been to a search conference and attended a PPC vs. SEO session knows that.

    Putting it another way: Paid search as your organic competitor.

    Paid Search as Your Organic Competitor

    To illustrate this concept, let's use the example of Norton Antivirus -- makers of PC protection software. Consider three different queries:

    1. Brand Search Query: [norton antivirus]
    2. Head Search Query: [anti virus software]
    3. Long Tail Search Query: [adware removal program]

    Brand Search Queries: [norton antivirus]

    Google Norton Antivirus

    There are two paid search competitors with seven total lines of ads, before the first organic Norton Antivirus result.

    Notice that:

    • Norton's paid listing is the most prominent result.

    • There are now sitelinks offering four targeted opportunities to capture the click (e.g. "Winter Savings -- 50% Off").

    • The paid search title that looks like an organic listing: "Norton Antivirus -- Now starts, scans and runs faster."

    • The ad title is more relevant than the corporate page title: "Symantec Downloads: AntiVirus, Anti-Spyware, Endpoint Security, Backup..."

    Head Search Query: [anti virus software]

    Google Anti Virus Software

    In this example, only two of the results above the fold are organic search, AVG Free and avast! We see the same standard results in the premium positions above the organic results with Norton Antivirus in the top position.

    Now we see image ads for the first time in the search results in the form of the Google Product Listing Ads, which appear in the top three positions on the right column. In case you were curious about how much of an effect these ads can have on which result people will choose, consider this statistic from Google:

    "We found that people are twice as likely to click on a Product Listing Ad as they are to click on a standard text ad in the same location."

    Reread that quote. Now, let's wonder, "If they click on a paid search result, will they click on an organic result?"

    Long Tail Search Queries: [online virus scan]

    Google Online Virus Scan

    By comparison, these results look pretty tame and almost antiquated. It's business as usual in both the paid and organic listings.

    No ads earn the premium position above the organic results and no new ad formats or text ad features distinguish the ads.

    Local Search and Google Boost

    Google Boost Asian Restaurant Ad

    Updates to the search results have changed the PPC vs. SEO dynamic in at least one other area: local search.

    Ads could always be displayed for search queries with a geographic intent and Google Tags made some results stand out more clearly with offers.

    What's new is the beta testing of Google Boost -- keywordless ad buys for local businesses to appear above the so-called "7 pack" of local results (and, I would presume, above Place Search).

    It prominently displays:

    • A 7 pack like result in the first position above the map, but below the PPC ad. 

    • Extra ad description not featured in other map results. 

    • A distinct blue pin on the map. 

    • An extra link for the advertiser's Google Place Page.

    Are we sensing a theme here?

    You Only Get So Much Pie

    There are a finite number of clicks that can occur when someone searches. We know that, in general, results that are more prominently displayed above the fold are most likely to get clicked.

    Searchers may click paid results or organic results. They may click both. They may flit back and forth between pages and results.

    The specifics of how people will behave aren't as important as understanding the context in which we are now marketing.

    I've always thought of Google as a publisher and each search results page simply as content they need to monetize. These changes are similar to a news site stacking on more ad slots or increasing the size of their ads.

    But, where a traditional publisher's ads don't really compete with the content, Google's ads do. Paid search ads may now draw attention away from organic listings and push natural results further down the page.

    In essence, paid listings may be getting clicks at the expense of organic listings at an increasing rate.

    At the very least, it puts more pressure to be among the top organic listings as they lose prominence in the results. It also adds important context for your SEO analysis, essentially a new set of competitors with new tactics.

    On the flip side, paid search ads now offer an increasing number of ways to advertise in the SERPs. There are more levers to pull, formats to try, and offers and messages to test. If you're weak in the organic listings, these new controls may give you an edge.

    What's clear is that SEOs must be aware of the changes in paid search results for, at least, their brand and head keywords and consider those changes in their analysis.

    For another perspective on these changes, along with great historical SERP photos, I recommend you read "A More Organic Experience."

    One final note: not every industry will be affected by these changes equally. In some cases, there are few, if any, paid competitors. For example, media and entertainment searches such as [justin bieber] or [somewhere movie] are dominated by video, image, news, and real time results among the usual organic listings.

    See the full story at: www.searchenginewatch.com

    For more information about S.E.O, e-commerce website design, e-mail marketing, web site design service and website development, just visit us at www.7strategy.com


  • Negative Reviews in Local Search: A Survival Guide for Businesses - 15-02-2011

    Written by Eric Enge | 

    Online reputation management has been a hot topic around the web for some time. This can take many forms, including:

    • Sites with negative things to say about your business showing up in the SERPs for searches on your brand name.

    • Negative suggestions showing up in Google Suggest (e.g., "your brand scam").

    • Negative reviews showing up for your business in the local search results.

    Each of the above scenarios require significantly different steps to resolve. Today we'll look at what you should do if your business has received a negative review that is hurting the business.

    For example, consider the following set of reviews shown on the Google Places page for a restaurant near where I live:

    Google Places Review

    For the record, I enjoy this restaurant and think it does an excellent job. Yet the review summary I have circled in red certainly has a different opinion.

    For many business owners this can be quite distressing to see. You think you work hard to give your customers good service and then one of them hammers you online. Your knee-jerk reaction might be to try and get the review removed by demanding that the reviewer take it down, or by contacting the site publishing the review.

    You might also reach out and challenge the reviewer, call them a knucklehead, or outline in detail why they are wrong. This is not the way you want to go, as you might end up just like this business owner who was booked for battery.

    The best strategies for dealing directly with the negative review are outlined in this excellent post by Mike Blumenthal, where a small business owner detailed his approach to dealing with negative reviews. Here are the key takeaways:

    1. Keep in mind that most of the people who will read your response are potential customers, not the person with the complaint. Put your best foot forward in showing how you deal with customer concerns.

    2. Don't write your response as soon as you see the review for the first time. Cool down. Then, as Mike says: "One suggestion we often give to our clients is to send a draft of your response to someone that doesn't work at your company. Ask them to delete anything that sounds defensive." This is great advice.

    3. Once again, from Mike's post: "Writing a short, non-defensive reply to a review that owns the issue, describes how the issue has been resolved (maybe includes an offer to fix the issue) will earn you the trust of your future customers."

    Many sites that carry business reviews will allow a business owner to respond. On Google Places you need to claim your listing before proceeding with writing a response. You can read Google's guidelines for responses here.

    This is absolutely the place to start. Just doing this can provide amazing results for you.

    If you're nice enough to the complainant, you may even be able to get them to remove their review from the source site where they placed it. If you do this, Google may eventually remove it from the Google Places page.

    This is sometimes as simple as offering them a full refund, free product, or a public apology with an offer to make good. You can see which sites allow responses by business, or removal by the original reviewer in this post.

    Of course, there are "trolls" in the world that can never be mollified and who will take every communication from you as an opportunity to escalate their anger and increase the stakes. This is almost a bigger win for you then getting the review removed.

    Just stay totally reasonable and acommodating, and soon enough other people will rise to your defense. Suddenly the entire appearance of the situation to an outsider is that the complainant is a nut job, and you strive to provide excellent service anyway. Talk about a positive message!

    Yousaf Sekander shared with me a specific case study in which his client got a unfair negative on upmystreet.com. Sekander contacted them and was able to get the review removed.

    Most sites will only let the reviewer remove the review unless there is a violation of their terms of service. I could not find the editorial policies of upmystreet.com, but I would guess that their policy is similar.

    It never hurts to ask. If the listing does get removed you're off to a great start.

    However, here's what Sekander told me about what happened next:

    My biggest challenge was that Google Places still displayed it (the bad review) even though it was taken down from upmystreet.com. I waited 4 months but the review was still there on Google Places, the worst thing was that we had reached a deadlock as we couldn't even respond to that review because it came from a third party.

    So I took the following steps:

    1. Got the client to request their customers to leave unbiased reviews on upmystreet.com.
    2. Wrote a couple of articles that quoted positive reviews from client's upmystreet.com page.
    3. Referenced (hyperlink) client's upmystreet.com page in the article as the source of reviews.
    4. Sent & published the articles on local online gazettes.
    5. Built a few links to client's upmystreet.com page.

    Within two weeks the review disappeared from client's Google Places listing.

    Another strategy is to actively cultivate positive reviews that will push the negative reviews down. Be careful how you walk the line on this one, as you don't want to slip into the realm to the spammer.

    Consider creating a process that first qualifies users who are positive about their experience with you. For those that are positive, offer them an incentive to post a review (important: make sure that the incentive is to post an objective review, not to post a positive one).

    Summary

    The web is a dynamic and ever changing place. The specific mechanics of how reviews are published and responded to will vary over time. But the concept of how you can cultivate a reputation for providing good products and services really doesn't vary with time.

    The processes outlined above are all designed to help you show the general public your best face. Back it up with what you give them when they are your customer and you are likely to have great results!

    See the full story at: www.searchenginewatch.com

    For more information about S.E.O, e-commerce website design, e-mail marketing, web site design serviceand website development, just visit us at www.7strategy.com


  • The Challenges of Measuring SEO Success, Part 3 - 04-10-2010

    By Ray "Catfish" Comstock|

    Part 1 and Part 2 of this series have covered how to measure search engine optimization (SEO) performance and why the new Google rankings data from Webmaster tools is so important to understanding that performance.

    For this article, I wanted to explain how understanding SEO performance impacts different types of businesses. Specifically, I had planned to illustrate the differences in how mom and pop style businesses, small businesses, and enterprise-level companies use this data on an ongoing basis to augment their SEO campaigns.

    As I started to analyze my initial hypothesis that there were significant differences in how these companies use this data, however, I came to the conclusion that these companies really differed because of the amount of resources available, the amount of data available, the amount of work that needs to be done (the amount of opportunity) and the amount of reporting that's needed. But the real revelation was that all of these types of businesses should have a similar strategic approach on how this data should be used to drive the ongoing SEO campaign.

    Of course, the tactics of how to then execute those strategies do differ by business type. But, fundamentally what the data is saying, and what you should do from an SEO perspective based on what the data is saying, is the same.

    So let's take a deeper dive into how businesses should use Webmaster tools search rankings, brand versus non-brand traffic, and long tail keyword performance to drive SEO beyond just understanding performance.

    Webmaster Tools Search Rankings

    The first data set we'll examine is the Webmaster tools ranking information. In addition to using rankings to gauge performance, this data set is immediately actionable.

    The first thing to do is prioritize which keywords are driving the most revenue (or conversions depending on what you're tracking). Then, identify which significant keywords have moved in the last month, both positively and negatively. After correlating those ranking changes to any changes made from an SEO perspective within the last couple of months, you hopefully have an idea of which ongoing optimization tactics (especially link building) have been effective.

    Positive trends based on SEO activities should validate those activities. No movement in rankings over a three or four month period of time might indicate that you should change tactics. A negative movement in ranking immediately requires an audit of content, link structure and technical issues to make sure that the decrease in rankings is not self-inflicted.

    Any major algorithm change announcement by search engines as well as overall keyword volume of the keywords in question should also be considered as a possible cause. This exercise is to understand the nature of the decrease and whether you can fix in the short term or if there are long term implications.

    Month-to-month trends are important to monitor from a rankings standpoint to understand how well your campaign is growing and to be aware of any negative movements as quickly as possible. Additionally, rankings in the top 30, but not in the top three, illustrate immediate opportunity. These rankings are close enough to be in the top three (which generates most of the traffic for any given phrase) that in many cases, although certainly not all, a relatively small amount of effort may be required to move your site up into the top 10 or even top three and thereby generate a lot more traffic for that keyword.

    Brand vs. Non-Brand Traffic

    In addition to search rankings, one of the key measurements we talk about in SEO performance is brand versus non-brand traffic levels. In other words, how much of your traffic is related to people who are looking for you specifically and how much traffic is related to people doing general searches for keywords related to your content.

    As you would expect, the amount of brand-related search activity that is available is usually correlated to how big of a business you run. Therefore, for larger businesses it's extremely important to understand your brand-related keywords, their search volume, and what your current performance is against those words. That's because brand-related traffic converts the best and is usually the result of other marketing efforts that you're already paying for.

    Additionally, the opportunity can be enormous for large brands, especially from a long tail perspective.

    For that reason (and this is where enterprise level organizations actually are a little different than smaller companies), it's necessary for websites with a lot of brand-related search activity to monitor which of their brand-related words have the most permutations and how well they rank for those permutations.

    One of my clients had a product which had a brand attached to it. The number of search referrals for the brand was around 250 a month, which didn't seem substantial. But when we added up the literally thousands of monthly permutations (many of which are too small to identify manually given how large the data set is), the amount of traffic ended up being more than 20,000 visitors monthly. This painted a much different picture about the importance of this brand-related keyword.

    Maximizing your listings around the long tail of your brand is a critical part of any SEO campaign.

    Long Tail Keyword Performance

    The previous example illustrates the importance of looking at long tail performance from a brand-related perspective. But non-brand long tail performance is also important to measure.

    This data set has the same potential as the brand-related data in terms of framing the opportunity and highlighting areas with the most potential for gain. However, unlike brand-related search, there is much more likely to be unrelated or undesirable words in a long tail list of non-brand related keywords.

    It is common in SEO to inadvertently target unrelated keywords by your optimization efforts. Therefore, it's important to understand the negative keywords that should be filtered out of long tail, non-brand related keyword lists before using that data to analyze or prioritize resources.

    Conclusion

    While the size of the business definitely impacts the size of the campaign, especially as it relates to brand-related search opportunity, the fundamental activities based on the data being measured are similar, if not the same. Some of the tactical execution is different depending on resources and scope, but ultimately we need to use this data to understand how our SEO campaign is performing and to prioritize opportunities within the campaign so that we achieve the highest possible ROI


    See the full story at: www.searchenginewatch.com

    For more information about S.E.O, e-commerce website design, e-mail marketing, web site design service and website development, just visit us at www.7strategy.com 


  • Going Global with a Custom Website Design Company - 06-09-2010
    If you are thinking about going online and providing your products and services through the net then you are making an excellent decision.  The best thing you can do is hire a custom website design company.  They can help you expand your customer base and truly go global, generate revenues you never dreamed of, and create a name for yourself around the world.

    The purpose of the World Wide Web is to go global and until recently people are finally realizing the big benefits.  The economy is hard to survive for businesses that have a local establishment.  Going online is the best option to take advantage of the globalization efforts.  A custom website design company can help you create a name and a brand for your copmpany that will be recognized by customers all over the world.  They can help you create pages in different languages that can be read in Chinese, German, Japanese, and more.  It is the best option if you really want to go global.

    A custom website design company is the best option if you want to go global.  Depending on the local economy is proving to cause businesses to fail because too many people do not have the money to spend.  You need to target the people that have the money to spend and prove to them that you are the best company to shop for online.  You need to expand your customer base in the millions.  This way, you can have many more shoppers.  A design company can help you target shoppers all over the world.


    Another excellent benefit and reason of going global is to generate more revenues.  A custom web site design company is going to help you the best they can with selling as many products on your site as possible.  They will provide many different efforts to get the word out about the business online, build a site that works well with the search engines, is appealing to the users, and much more.


    If you have a local establishment, hiring a custom web site design company to help you go global is one of the best opportunities you can take advantage of today.  This will help you expand your customer base around the world and generate more revenues while creating a name for yourself around the world.  You can be successful online and the importance is taking advantage of true globalization and what the World Wide Web really has to offer.


    Resource Box

     

    For more information about S.E.O, e-commerce web site design, e-mail marketing, web site design service and website development, just visit us at www.7strategy.com

     

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  • SEO for Global Websites: Targeting the Right Search Engine for Your Market - 04-09-2010

    By Christian Arno|

    When it comes to creating websites for foreign language markets, a few necessities are immediately obvious.

    First, the websites need to be in the native or primary language of the country you're targeting. Also, you'll need to take into account consumer behavior and culture in that country -- where's your gap in the market and what's your unique selling proposition (USP)?

    You'll also need to work out your search engine optiimization (SEO) strategy, because what's the point of spending all that time and money developing multilingual websites if they aren't ranking in the search engines?

    Where to Concentrate Your SEO Efforts

    The tricky point to consider here, though, is that while you may be well attuned to the needs and vagaries of Google, the Internet superpower isn't the dominant search engine in every country.

    You've likely heard of Baidu, the Chinese search engine, which leads Google China on searches by 52 percent to 33 percent.

    There are a few theories on why Baidu is the Google-killer in China. Some pundits believe it's due to Chinese patriotism (despite the fact that Baidu started in the U.S.). But the more likely reason is because the Chinese love to search the web for MP3s (55 percent of Baidu users are MP3 searchers). Baidu is better for illegal downloading because it's held to less strict legal standards than Western search engines.

    Among the other Google-beating local search engines, popularity is attributed to their being optimized for the alphabet and language of the country.

    For instance, Yandex succeeds in Russia (with a 64 percent market share) where Google.ru fails, largely because it's built around the Cyrillic alphabet and recognizes Russian grammar and inflection.

    Then, of course, there's Seznam, the dominant search engine in the Czech Republic. In South Korea, Naver has 70 percent of the search market (compared to Google's 2 percent). Meanwhile, the Japanese inexplicably prefer Yahoo Japan to Google.

    Naturally, then, it makes sense that you if you have a Russian website, you would want to concentrate most of your SEO efforts on Yandex, and Baidu for China, and so forth.

    Changing Your SEO Strategy for Market-Leading Search Engines

    Sadly, there isn't enough space here to outline every difference and similarity. Extensive research can be found online that goes into SEO strategies for each search engine, but the general consensus is that they all operate in largely the same way, with a few key differences.

    Baidu doesn't seem to take into account inbound links -- one of the integral parts of effective Google SEO -- so building links with Chinese websites would seem to be a waste of your time. Your money might be better spent on increasing your Baidu PPC advertising budget, as Baidu apparently doesn't take relevancy into account with PPC -- higher rankings are achieved with higher spend.

    Yandex, meanwhile, counts inbound links as relevant, and also highly rates relevant geographic location. Interestingly, Yandex will also penalize you for having spam-like roll-over and pop-up ads on your site.

    Fortunately, each search engine offers its own keyword research tools, so you're obviously far better off using the data analysis tools of the search engine you're trying to game, than, say, applying your Google China keywords to Baidu.

    With Great Effort Comes Great Possibility

    Clearly, one size doesn't fit all when it comes to SEO strategies for different countries.

    The crucial lesson here: developing SEO specific to each country's dominant search engine is just as important as creating language- and culture-specific websites in the first place. Mastering the tricks of each market's search engine is the key to success.


    See the full story at: www.searchenginewatch.com

    For more information about S.E.O, e-commerce web site design, e-mail marketing, web site design service and website development, just visit us at www.7strategy.com