Posts Tagged ‘SEO’

Search Engine Marketing – Jargon Buster

Friday, August 20th, 2010

The Serious/Not Serious Series on Jargon:

YOU CANNOT BE SERIOUS:

Successful Search Engine Marketing (SEM) involves you being the cyber equivalent of an obnoxious child. The type who always takes the teacher a shiny apple, sits at the front in class and shoots their eager hand up at every opportunity squealing, “Me, Miss, pick me!”

It’s about getting noticed. Of course in cyberspace nobody can hear you screaming, “I’m the best and I must be at the front of the line!” so you have to find other ways to get seen.

If Google is the mother pedagogue in our hypothetical SERPS school, then other search engines like Yahoo!* are sort of like supply teachers. We don’t know them as well as we know Mistress Google, we don’t always trust that they know what they’re doing either, but we must please them all the same. It’s worth buying an extra apple from time to time.

Mistress Google doesn’t always expect A* work from her pupils. Sometimes all you need to do is suck up a bit more and make yourself known to her. She likes to keep an eye on her charges. When it’s head count time will yours be the high visibility noggin that gets included? It will if you’re on stilts and donning a psychedelic plumed hat.

How will being teacher’s pet affect your relationships with your online peers? Oh, they’ll probably flick bits of saliva-sodden paper at you, shove your head down the toilet at lunch times and stick ‘Kick Me’ notices on your back. Oh well. Popularity doesn’t always mean being popular.

Note: * Can’t recall the names of the other search engines/supply teachers – though there are vaguely disturbing recollections of one of them drinking hooch under the desk and another being asked to leave after an embarrassing incident in Pet’s Club that startled a stick insect and several guinea pigs.

SERIOUSLY:

SEM (aka Search Engine Marketing) is a type of marketing where you promote your website by increasing its visibility in the SERPS (Search Engine Results Pages). The purpose of using SEM is to ensure that your website is visible in the search results when a user enters a query relevant to your business  in the search box.

Sometimes SEM is used to describe paid placements only. The ads on the right hand side of the search results page are examples of paid placements. These are usually CPC (Cost Per Click) ads but you can also purchase them as CPI (Cost Per Impression). With CPC ads, you as the advertiser only pay when a user clicks through on the ad. With CPI ads, you pay based on the number of times the particular ad is shown.

The SEM term actually extends beyond paid placements as it also includes SEO (Search Engine Optimization). As mentioned in a previous post SEO involves increasing the chances that your website will show high up in the unpaid search results. Users are more likely to click through to the unpaid search results as they have, to some extent, developed a certain blindness to PPC (“Pay per Click”) ads.

Other Resources:

There’s a  post over at Interleado’s blog which provides an insightful  analysis of SEO v PPC marketing strategies. As mentioned above, both SEO (unpaid Search Marketing) and PPC (paid search marketing) fall under the heading of Search Engine Marketing. Bill Egan extols the benefits of investing in SEO and he stresses the importance of investing in fresh engaging content as part of your SEO strategy. The Interleado blog is quite technical at times. However, it is well-written and very clear.

Other Jargon Buster Articles:

Attraction Marketing;  Buzz Marketing;  Content MarketingContent Strategy;  Duplicate Content;  Fresh ContentInterruption MarketingLinkerati;  PageRankPermission Marketing; SEO;  SERPS;  The CloudUser Experience

Welcome to The Wittery Blog (aka The Witty Writer Marketplace)

You’re in the right place if you’re looking for Witty Freelance Writers to add zest to your business content. (Simply click here,  click the Register button [remembering to wipe your feet first] and give us some info about you. We don’t do spam (can’t stand the taste). There’s even a limited free trial where you can post your project for free.)

Witty Freelance Writer with a burning desire to join the wit mob? Click here, remove your shoes and then come through to the application form (you can’t miss it. It says “Apply”)

If you’d prefer to follow the scenic route instead, start off at the home page. See you soon.


User Experience – Jargon Buster

Wednesday, July 7th, 2010

The Serious/Not Serious Series on Jargon

YOU CANNOT BE SERIOUS:

We give our guests a great user experience. We want them to like it so much that they want to come back, and guess what? Most of them love it and we have our “regulars”. Here is our “Recipe for Success” :

The San Quentin Guide to Providing a Good User Experience.

Make It Easy To Get In

It sure is easy to get in here. Johnny Cash comes here all the time, singing to our guests. He even stayed overnight in Bubba’s cell. He said that he got the inspiration for his song “Ring of Fire” from his visit here. I think it was because of the habañero chilli soup.

Make It Easy To Stay

Our guests here don’t want to leave. Once they get in, we just can’t get them out. Take “Mad Mick” Murphy from Dublin. Please take him because we don’t want him. He shows up drunk before breakfast, starts fighting and upsetting the other guests. We tried getting him to sober up but then he got sad and started singing about Ireland. Twenty four of our guests escaped that night to get away from him, and they were happy before that.

Make Sure Your Visitors Remember You and Come Back

Rob “Razor” Capone will never leave. He signed up for 25 years, but wants more. He says the premises are great, and he can get apple pies “just like mamma used to make” for $4. Nobody has the heart to tell him that for just $5 he can get apple pies just like mamma thought she used to make.

Our User Experience is second to none. Yes, San Quentin is one 4-star Prison.

SERIOUSLY:

You want some candy. You see a store nearby. You walk into the store. The floor is dirty and the store is badly lit. The products are scattered all over the place in no particular order. There’s no signage.  You can’t  find your way around.  You can’t find the candy. You ask the sales assistant. He’s not very helpful and tells you to find the candy yourself. How would this experience make you feel?

Your Virtual Store

Your website is no different. It’s a virtual store. It’s vitally important that you provide a great User Experience to the visitors that cross your website’s threshold.  User Experience (UX) is all about the overall impression, satisfaction and feelings that a user gets from visiting a site. Your business success is heavily dependent on User Experience.  Do all that you can to give your visitors a positive User Experience. This will improve customer satisfaction and drive referrals and repeat business.

Chasing the User Experience

Matt Cutts (of Google) recently highlighted that “… by chasing after a good user experience, you help ensure that you and the search engines are both working in the same direction. That’s much better than you chasing the search engines, which are in turn chasing what we think is best for users.”

There are a number of elements to User Experience including functionality, design, branding and content.  It’s about the overall package. Things that you can do to improve UX include:

  • factoring in UX elements into the design,
  • ensuring site navigation is intuitive,
  • improving site speed (load times) and
  • producing relevant engaging content on an ongoing basis.

Content & User Experience:

When it comes to content, the folks at The Wittery believe that if your content makes your site visitor smile, then you have achieved something very special from a User Experience perspective.  Aim to make your content induce positive feelings in your site visitor.

Websites and the internet are full words.   Don’t let the collection of words on your website fall into the “instantly forgettable” category. When commissioning content (or when writing it yourself), always keep your reader in mind. Aim to reach into their heart, soul and mind with your content. That’s how you can distinguish yourself in your visitor’s mind and improve their User Experience. Your visitor will then be  more likely to stay longer on your site, remember you when they leave, buy from you, re-visit your site and tell others about you.

The Journey and the Destination

If SEO is about getting search engines to bring visitors to your site, then UEO* is about making sure those visitors have a good time when they get there. “Driving traffic to your homepage is important, but making the destination worthwhile is vital” according to Entrepreneur.com.

Next time visitors arrive at your site how are you going to make sure that your store is in order and that your visitors get the experience they deserve?

*UEO (or UXO) is an acronym for “User Experience Optimization”.

Other Jargon Buster Articles:

Attraction Marketing;  Buzz Marketing;  Content Strategy;  Duplicate Content; Linkerati;   PageRankSEO;  SERPS;  The Cloud

Welcome to The Wittery Blog (aka The Witty Writer Marketplace)

You’re in the right place if you’re looking for Witty Freelance Writers to add zest to your business content. (Simply click here,  click the Register button [remembering to wipe your feet first] and give us some info about you. We don’t do spam (can’t stand the taste). There’s even a limited free trial where you can post your project for free.)

Witty Freelance Writer with a burning desire to join the wit mob? Click here, remove your shoes and then come through to the application form (you can’t miss it. It says “Apply”)

If you’d prefer to follow the scenic route instead, start off at the home page. See you soon.

SEO – Jargon Buster [Search Engine Optimization]

Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010

The Serious/Not Serious Series on Jargon

YOU CANNOT BE SERIOUS:

SEO stands for “Scrabble Equality Organization”. This group was formed after the highly controversial World Scrabble final earlier this year. Trailing by 50 points to his opponent, Mr J. Smith of London, the Polish finalist Mr W. Iwillwinski scored 575 points, including his triple word score, for the word “JZCZWIZYQZZY”.

Mr Iwillwinski was incensed when the word was rejected for being a proper noun. “They cheated me,” he said after losing the final, and picked up his runner-up prize of $25, missing out on the $26 winner cheque. “The word was valid – it is my mother’s favorite flower,” he complained.  “Not only  that, but I saw it on my optician’s test chart last week,” he continued.

Such was the uproar that Scrabble World Series organizers have decided to clarify the rules. Rejecting claims of discrimination, they say that they treat all entrants equally, even the delegation of Somali pirates who stole the show, literally.

The Scrabble Equality Organization is charged with restoring the battered reputation of the sport. “This is a respectable sport and the top players are true athletes,” said Dr. Etymological, SEO Chairman. “We have a fine history of sportsmanship,” he went on. “This has really shaken our sport – it is the biggest upset since 1972, when the Italian competitor was caught eating alphabet spaghetti before a match.”

SERIOUSLY:

SEO is all about making your website attractive to search engines.  It stands for “Search Engine Optimization”. It’s the technical side of search (as opposed to the marketing side). SEO can improve your website’s positioning in organic (unpaid) search results.

It’s also about making sure that Search Engines know what your site is about and making it easy for the search engine spiders to find their way around your site. If your site is optimized for search engines, this can increase the volume and quality of traffic that you receive. It can therefore impact significantly on your bottom line.

I have grown to dislike the term “SEO”. Too many dubious SEO practitioners have given it a bad name. It has become a negative term in many people’s minds.  This is especially true when used in the context of Content.  “SEO Content” has become synonymous with poor quality, bland, keyword-stuffed content not fit for human consumption. I think it’s time for genuine, technical SEO practitioners to find themselves another name.

SEO, in its purest technical sense, remains valid (for now). As an online business, it is important that you make sure that the technical bits and pieces of your website are optimized for search engines. There is little point in having great content on your website if the search engines can’t find you, or don’t know what your site is about or can’t find their way around when they visit.

Google advises webmasters to “make pages primarily for users, not just for search engines.” Don’t overdo it on the SEO at the expense of the User Experience.  The ultimate aim of search engines is to ensure that they return quality results for search terms entered by the user. Make sure you put your user first too.

Welcome to The Wittery Blog (aka The Witty Writer Marketplace)

Other Jargon Buster Articles:

Attraction Marketing;  Buzz Marketing;  Content Strategy;  Duplicate Content; Linkerati;  PageRank;  SERPS; The CloudUser Experience