Monday, April 30, 2012

Blog Security: Use Your Blog to Achieve Success




Job security is an oxymoron. Feeling secure in a job is old fashioned. "Get a good job and hang onto it" is no longer the way to succeed. Companies are disappearing. Businesses are closing. Stores are shutting down. The storm is starting to hit Peoria.

Your only security is in your expertise, education, and experience. What are you good at? What problems can you solve? What do you have a lot of knowledge about? What value can you provide? What talent do you have to an amazing degree of perfection?

Use your blog to showcase your skills and accomplishments. Prove you can do a job by displaying your talents online. Share your expertise in your blog posts. Make your blog act as super resume, mega portfolio -- a grandiose exhibit that demonstrates what you know and what you can do.

Looking for a job is old school. Proving you can do the job is the new way.

Your blog will be your weapon against obscurity and poverty. Your frequently updated blog is where you show the world what makes you special -- how you accomplish goals and achieve results.

But a poorly designed blog sends out a bad message. There are many ways to mess up. If your blog is not effective, you've shot yourself in the foot.

If you need help with blog design, content, and strategy, contact me.

steven [dot] streight [at] gmail [dot] com



Source: http://pluperfecter.blogspot.com/2012/04/blog-security-use-your-blog-to-achieve.html

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Essential SEO Settings for Every New WordPress Blog

This guest post is by Karol K of ThemeFuse. Some bloggers, designers, and WordPress developers have a kind of love-hate relationship with SEO. I know—some people tend to be overly focused on everything SEO-related, and they just keep blasting us with the next “crucial” SEO advice every day. On the other hand, some people tend [...]

Originally at: Blog Tips at ProBlogger
DMS_468x60_LS_banner4.gif

Essential SEO Settings for Every New WordPress Blog

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ProbloggerHelpingBloggersEarnMoney/~3/H4xjFJ9C8pQ/

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Sunday, April 29, 2012

My Top Converting Best Affiliate Programs To Make You A Lot Of Money

 
My Top Converting Best Affiliate Programs To Make Money
Here is a list of my three best affiliate programs to earn money online as an affiliate marketer.
* Affiliate marketing is referring other people’s products, or services in exchange for an affiliate commission. Affiliate marketing is a multi – Billion dollar a year business model, and business [...]

Source: http://jaysonlinereviews.com/http:/jaysonlinereviews.com/top-converting-affiliate-programs-lot-money/

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Smart Ways To Up Your SEO Game

Are you looking for quick, white hat ways to up your SEO game? The following are smart strategies for getting noticed on google and other search engines. Keyword Strategy – Monopolize A Niche To establish yourself, you need to find a niche that isn’t flooded yet. For example, if your website is a photo booth [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/WebsudasaBlog/~3/o8MDVOyTepI/

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Saturday, April 28, 2012

The Next Galaxy Teaser website gets an update!

Samsung Mobile is all set to show the next GALAXY series device on May 3rd in London. The entire buzz on the Internet is expecting the Samsung Galaxy S III to be revealed – however, it still is a mystery on its own. Last week, Samsung came up with a weird-looking domain name & a [...]

Read full article here > The Next Galaxy Teaser website gets an update! written by


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/techzoom/kzCz/~3/PFrJiWD0Vf0/

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Facebook for Artist

Everybody and their Mom is on Facebook these days, and why shouldn’t they be? It’s a great way to connect to your friends and family. It is also a very powerful marketing tool for businesses and for marketing art. Facebook Timeline has been catching a lot of flack, but it’s a fantastic tool for artists [...]

Source: http://www.stellarmediamarketing.com/social-media/facebook-for-artist/

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Friday, April 27, 2012

How Serious Is Facebook About Search?

An article in BusinessWeek suggests that Facebook is planning a deeper push into search. Will that be limited to improving search for the site — or will it be something more comprehensive? It’s clear that Facebook needs better internal search. Right now the search function at the top of the page is not very useful. Improving Facebook [...]

Source: http://www.legalsearchmarketing.com/general-search-engine-news/how-serious-is-facebook-about-search/

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Infrared Heater - Monday Market of the Week

With the cold months still lingering in most areas of the northern hemisphere, and with regions that are cold all-year-round, an infrared heater seems like an ideal commodity in one’s home.

Using the SaleHoo Research Lab let us check if an infrared heater is indeed a profitable niche to invest in.

Sell-through Rate: Did you really find a hot niche?

Sell through rate is an indicator of a product’s potential or chance of selling in the market. Ideally you should consider products with at least 50% sell through rate.

According to the SaleHoo Research Lab infrared heaters have a sell through rate of 53.51%.

Median End Price: Is there enough room for profit?

The median end price for infrared heaters as of January is $154.12 which means sellers who are selling infrared heaters definitely have a decent profit potential, seeing that one of our featured suppliers has an Optimus H5210 Heater Infrared Quartz Radiant 400w heater for only $25.74!

Note: Median end prices on eBay can be ambiguous because the median end price is for all listings for infrared heaters can include bulk listings that sell two or more infrared heaters in a single listing which can skew data.

Total Listings, Total Bids and Total Sellers: How viable is your market?

I was overwhelmed when I saw the number of total bids placed for infrared heaters – Imagine 52,683 bids on just 6481 listings!There is obviously a good amount of demand for this product!

There are currently 6,481 listings on eBay by only 1,980 sellers which shows that there is definitely room for more sellers.

Data Trends: Are sellers hitting their target?

As of January 2nd,  infrared heater sellers hit an all time high with recorded total revenue of $54,650.04. Based on the graph above sales are above $15,000.00 on most days.

Clearly infrared heater sellers are making a fairly decent income not to mention profit on eBay!

Going beyond eBay: How popular are infrared heaters online?

By doing a quick keyword search on Traffic Travis, our very own free SEO software, we can check if people beyond eBay are actually searching for infrared heaters. Want to check how sought after your product is? Download your very own copy Of Traffic Travis by visiting www.traffictravis.com and take it for a spin!

What do these numbers mean?

When I ran the keyword infrared heater, I was a bit surprised to see that there are actually more searches both globally and in the US for ‘infrared heaters’ compared to ‘infrared heater’. But getting higher search volumes is not always a guarantee that your product will sell well. For all you know the searches could have been done by other competitors who are also trying to rank for their keyword.

Although there are only 6,600 searches globally and 4,400 searches within the US, infrared heaters still have a promising market.

Remember that you can direct traffic to your site or online store through search engine optimization. Learn how you can get more website traffic to your listing or online store by checking out our mini-course on search engine optimization.

Trusted infrared heater wholesale suppliers

Infrared heater supplier #1

They are the nation's leading distributor of consumer electronics, custom installation, mobile audio/video and appliance connection supplies delivering superior service to its customers for more than 26 years. They accept major credit cards - Visa, MasterCard, American Express and Discover, as well as PayPal, cashier’s checks or money orders as forms of payment.

View their SaleHoo listing (requires SaleHoo account)

Infrared heater supplier #2

Offering premium quality products at competitive wholesale pricing, they also provide blind drop shipping services. They accept credit cards – American Express, MasterCard, Visa and Discover, as well as PayPal, checks, money orders, cash orders, and wire transfers. International orders are also accepted.

View their SaleHoo listing (requires SaleHoo account)

Infrared heater supplier #3

They are a comprehensive Chinese marketplace which acts as a platform for international buyers to purchase from various Chinese manufacturers and suppliers. They provide one of the broadest ranges of merchandise you'll find on any web based wholesaler site.

They offer a quick-and-easy online purchasing process in addition to offering all of their clients a dedicated and knowledgeable customer service team. Their tried and tested Trust Marketing and Escrow payment process guarantee a safe and secure purchasing environment. They truly take out the hassle of international trade by providing easy and convenient product sourcing options, secure payment and worldwide shipping.

View their SaleHoo listing (requires SaleHoo account)

To access our list of infrared heaters wholesale suppliers and take advantage of SaleHoo’s Research Lab mentioned above, sign up as a SaleHoo member now. 

Inside you will get access to over 8000 suppliers, comprehensive training to help you find the best products to sell online and access to our members only forum full of tips and secrets from other members (including eBay Powersellers) to help you make money online. Join SaleHoo today

See you next Monday!

-------------------------------------------

Disclaimer: The information published here is strictly for informational purposes. All above product items are only suggestions for possible products which will sell favorably, and should be used as a guide only. At the time of writing, all above products were researched using methods recommend by SaleHoo and found to be potentially profitable for sellers. All sellers are encouraged to conduct their own market and product research.

Source: http://www.salehoo.com/blog/wholesale-infrared-heater

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Thursday, April 26, 2012

Rent Or Buy Video Games Online And Make Affiliate Cash At The Same Time?

Rent Or Buy Video Games Online @ Make Affiliate Cash At Same Time?
Register for GameFly™ Game Rentals – Start for Free!
Redbox put a lot of your local mom and pop video rental places out of business because it all boils down to price, and convenience in the end.
Customers want a great price, and convenience. If [...]

Source: http://jaysonlinereviews.com/http:/jaysonlinereviews.com/rent-or-buy-video-games-online-make-affiliate-cash-at-same-time/

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Content Locking Ads

Consumer Search Insights.

Google recently launched a consumer insights survey product, which quizes users for access to premium content.

How do users get access to these poll questions? Google locks premium content behind them, likeso:

Google has long stated that "cloaking is bad" and that it was deceptive & users didn't like it. Earlier this year Google also rolled out an algorithm to penalize sites that were too ad heavy:

We’ve heard complaints from users that if they click on a result and it’s difficult to find the actual content, they aren’t happy with the experience. Rather than scrolling down the page past a slew of ads, users want to see content right away. So sites that don’t have much content “above-the-fold” can be affected by this change. If you click on a website and the part of the website you see first either doesn’t have a lot of visible content above-the-fold or dedicates a large fraction of the site’s initial screen real estate to ads, that’s not a very good user experience.

Also recall that the second version of the Panda update encouraged users to block sites & many programmers blocked Experts-exchange due to disliking their scroll cloaking. That in turn caused Experts-exchange to get hit & see a nose dive in traffic.

Between the above & seeing how implementation of this quiz technology works, I had to ask:
How do you feel about ads that lock content behind poll questions like this one?

Response Vote
Hate them. A total waste of time 63.7% (+3.3 / -3.4)
I am indifferent 30.8% (+3.3 / -3.1)
I love them. These are fun 5.5% (+2.5 / -1.7)

There isn't a huge split between men & women. Men hate them a bit more, but they also like them a bit more...they are just less indifferent.

Vote Men (811) Women (409)
Hate them. A total waste of time 66.1% (+3.4 / -3.6) 61.5% (+5.4 / -5.7)
I am indifferent 27.2% (+3.4 / -3.2) 34.2% (+5.6 / -5.2)
I love them. These are fun 6.7% (+2.3 / -1.7) 4.3% (+5.1 / -2.4)

Young people & old people tend to like such quizes more than people in the middle. My guess is this is because older people are a bit lonely & younger people do not value their time as much and presume it is more important that they voice their opinions on trivial matters. People just before their retirement (who have recently been hosed by the financial markets) tend not to like these polls as much & same with people in their mid 30s to mid 40s, who are likely short on time trying to balance career, family & finances.

Vote 18-24 year-olds (359) 25-34 year-olds (267) 35-44 year-olds (151) 45-54 year-olds (200) 55-64 year-olds (158) 65+ year-olds (83)
Hate them. A total waste of time 62.1% (+4.9 / -5.2) 62.6% (+6.0 / -6.4) 69.4% (+6.9 / -7.9) 64.5% (+6.5 / -7.1) 68.3% (+6.3 / -7.1) 62.3% (+10.2 / -11.4)
I am indifferent 28.9% (+4.9 / -4.5) 32.1% (+6.2 / -5.6) 24.0% (+7.6 / -6.2) 30.8% (+7.0 / -6.2) 28.4% (+6.9 / -6.0) 28.7% (+11.3 / -9.1)
I love them. These are fun 8.9% (+3.4 / -2.5) 5.3% (+3.7 / -2.2) 6.6% (+5.3 / -3.0) 4.7% (+3.7 / -2.1) 3.3% (+4.4 / -1.9) 9.0% (+9.7 / -4.9)

People out west tend to be more indifferent. Like, whatever man. This may or may not have something to do with California's marijuana laws. ;)

vote The US Midwest (280) The US Northeast (331) The US South (363) The US West (246)
Hate them. A total waste of time 65.2% (+5.6 / -6.0) 69.0% (+6.2 / -7.0) 65.6% (+5.9 / -6.4) 55.6% (+7.2 / -7.5)
I am indifferent 29.7% (+5.9 / -5.3) 25.6% (+6.8 / -5.8) 28.7% (+6.2 / -5.5) 38.7% (+7.4 / -6.9)
I love them. These are fun 5.1% (+4.5 / -2.4) 5.4% (+5.9 / -2.9) 5.7% (+4.8 / -2.7) 5.6% (+7.4 / -3.3)

Rural people tend to like such polls more than others. Perhaps it has to do with a greater longing for connection due to being more isolated?

vote Urban areas (608) Rural areas (117) Suburban areas (477)
Hate them. A total waste of time 62.6% (+4.6 / -4.9) 53.6% (+10.1 / -10.4) 63.8% (+4.8 / -5.1)
I am indifferent 32.2% (+4.8 / -4.4) 37.5% (+10.4 / -9.3) 29.1% (+5.0 / -4.6)
I love them. These are fun 5.2% (+4.4 / -2.5) 8.9% (+9.5 / -4.8) 7.2% (+5.2 / -3.1)

There aren't any conclusive bits based on income. Wealthier people appear to be more indifferent, however the sampling error on that is huge due to the small sample size.

vote People earning $0-24K (151) People earning $25-49K (670) People earning $50-74K (303) People earning $75-99K (77) People earning $100-149K (20) People earning $150K+
Hate them. A total waste of time 69.0% (+7.7 / -8.9) 62.1% (+4.4 / -4.6) 69.7% (+5.5 / -6.1) 69.7% (+9.1 / -10.9) 53.8% (+19.3 / -20.5) Insufficient data
I am indifferent 26.0% (+8.5 / -7.0) 32.6% (+4.6 / -4.3) 23.6% (+5.8 / -5.0) 26.0% (+11.1 / -8.7) 41.7% (+20.6 / -18.1) Insufficient data
I love them. These are fun 5.0% (+6.8 / -3.0) 5.3% (+4.0 / -2.4) 6.7% (+5.7 / -3.2) 4.3% (+11.8 / -3.3) 4.4% (+27.1 / -4.0) Insufficient data

So, ultimately, Google was right that users hate excessive ads & cloaking. But the one thing users hate more than either of those is paying for content. ;)

Some of the traditional publishing businesses are dying on the vine & this is certainly a great experiment to try to generate incremental revenues.

...but...

How does Google's definition of cloaking square with the above? If publishers (or a competing ad network) do the same thing without Google, would it be considered spam?

Categories: 

Source: http://www.seobook.com/content-locking-ads

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Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Salehoo Review

Salehoo.com Review Urgent Message That You Must See Before You Order Any Dropshipping Membership.

If your looking for a reputable dropshipper to earn some extra money with Salehoo should be on the top of your to do list. Find out my whole experience with Salehoo and why you should seriously consider them if your seriously thinking [...]

Source: http://jaysonlinereviews.com/http:/jaysonlinereviews.com/salehoo-review-2/

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6 Changes Every SEO Should Make BEFORE the Over-Optimization Penalty Hits - Whiteboard Friday

Posted by randfish

Having overly optimized web pages could soon get your websites in some hot water with Google and their search results. It has recently been announced that Google will start to penalize websites that engage in over-optimization practices.

In this week's Whiteboard Friday, we will be covering some changes that you should be making to your SEO practices in order to avoid this type of penalization.

We hope you enjoy and don't forget to leave comments below! Happy Friday Everyone!



Video Transcription

Howdy SEOmoz fans. Welcome to another addition of Whiteboard Friday. This week we've been hearing a lot of chatter in the SEO blogosphere and on Twitter and on the forums about this new potential Google penalty that's coming down the line around over-optimization. Now, one of Google's representatives mentioned at a conference, South by Southwest, down in Austin, Texas, about a month ago actually, that Google would be looking into penalizing over-optimized websites and folks who have engaged in over-
the-top SEO.

There's been a lot of speculation around when that's coming out, whether that's coming out. There are a few things happening, actually, this week and last night about, "Hey is this already something we're seeing?" Seer Interactive, right, Wil Reynolds' fantastic SEO company out of Philadelphia had this penalty, and people were wondering whether that was related to this. Not really sure.

But before this penalty hits, for goodness sake, SEO folks, let's make these changes to our websites because we could be in real trouble if we don't impact these things beforehand. I think these are some of the most likely candidates to be hit by Google's over-optimization penalty, some of the most likely patterns they're going to try and match against in this upcoming change. So let's talk through them.

Number one, your titles need to be authentic. They need to sound real. They need to sound like a human being wrote them that was not intending necessarily simply to rank for phrase after phrase. I'll give you a good example. Bad: web design services, web design firm space brand name, whatever your brand name is, web design. What does it sound like? It sounds like all you're trying to do is rank for keywords, not show off your brand name, especially if this is your home page or those kinds of things. You're repeating keywords three times. Web design is in this title three times. Think about whether a normal human being would read that title and think, oh yeah, that sounds legitimate. No, they'd think to themselves there's something fishy here, something spammy, something's wrong, something manipulative. Try instead, probably equally effective, if not more, brand name web design Portland Spiffiest Design Services. Now look, I've got the word "design services," which you wanted to get in here. I've got the city where you are that you're trying to target, got brand name web design, right, sort of branding myself as the product and the keyword. Much, much better.

Try and look through your sites and see if this is a potential issue. I've seen tons of sites where SEO folks have just gone overboard again and again. Don't get me wrong. I used to do this too. One of the crappiest things about this is, even if your rank, your click through rates go down. So you can rank in position two or three and be getting less than the people below you, because people don't think that these are legitimate titles and they perceive them to be manipulative, especially if you're targeting more higher end, savvy or sophisticated technology customers.

Number two, manipulative internal links. I see this a lot on side bars, inside of content, where people have taken all of the instances of a particular word or repeated it throughout the side bar or in the footer, those kinds of things, and are pointing with exact match anchors to the same page over and over again. Now, we all know as SEOs that the first anchor text link counts and only one on the page is going to pass that value. Linking repeatedly to the same page with the same anchor is not helpful for SEO, and it makes our sites look really spammy and manipulative and questionable to someone who's browsing it. Why would we want to hurt our conversion rates like this, and why would we want to point out to the engines that, hey, over here, I'm trying to manipulate you? What are you thinking? This is crazy.

Instead, go with logical, useful, change it up when you're linking to pages, maybe a couple of times, in some spaces. You have a blog post and it mentions a page on your site that you want people to actually go to and that you think is useful in context. Great, link over there. Fine, use the anchor text. Maybe use a modified version of the anchor text, a little longer, a little shorter, a little more natural sounding, and you're going to get these same results, but you're going to do it in a much more effective way. You're not going to be at risk of whatever is happening with this over-optimization penalty.

Number three, cruddy, link filled footers. I see this all the time still. You're just having a bunch of exact anchor links down in here that no one would actually really click and that come in lists. I often see them in light gray on light gray so that it's not particularly easy to read. Use your footer wisely. Use your footer to link to the things that people expect to find in the footer. If you really need to get anchor text on pages, find natural ways to put it in the real menu at the top, in the content itself. Don't be trying to mess around and throw footer links site wide, across things. This 2002, man. We're ten years later. It's like at least a decade past that.

Number four, text content blocks built primarily for the engines. You know how sometimes you get to a page and there's good content, usable stuff, an image, a call to action, and then weirdly there's this block of junk. It's this block of blah, blah, keyword, keyword, blah, blah, blah, keyword, keyword, blah, blah, blah. Why is that there? Why does that exist? Does that really work? Does that really trick the engines? Yeah, it tricks them into thinking that they should penalize you. Get that out of there. Rewrite that stuff, man. Seriously, this is going to cost you far more than it's going to help you. If you've got those spammy blocks of text in your pages, that have no purpose other than to get your keywords or some keyword into the text, and it's not actually helping anyone, it's not a good call to action, it's not helping your conversion rate, it will actually drive people away from you. Why are you trying to rank if not to get people to do good things on your site, and like your brand, and appreciate you and come back again and again, and tell their friends, and share it socially, and link to you? Don't be putting this stuff in here. This is dangerous for all of those reasons, and super dangerous given this over-optimization penalty that's potentially coming down the line.

Number five, back links from penalty likely sources. So this is one of the toughest ones because it's really hard to control if you've already gotten links from these places. But you can see with those 700,000 Google webmaster tools, pings that they sent everybody that said, hey, it looks like you've done some manipulative linking, and that kind of thing. Be really careful for all of these, link networks, anything that says private link network, or I have a link network and I'll place your site on it, or building up a network of sites that you then interlink to one and other. Come on. There are so many better ways to get links. You're putting a lot of time and effort and energy into building all of that stuff. You can do so many authentic things with that time. This is time terribly spent. Comment spam, especially those that are sent though automated software blasts, so you think of your XRumer or your SENuke, the article marking robot, or whatever, that's going to submit your site to tons of places or find open holes in the web where they can leave comments and link spam and that kind of stuff. Forum signature links, this is actually one where I suspect it's one of the places where Google really gets to know, hey, this guy clearly is a manipulative, black hat/gray hat SEO, because look, they're pointing to the same site where we found all the link spam from forum signatures, particularly on webmaster sorts of boards. That clearly indicates that's their site and their trying to rain for it, and all that kind of stuff. They've got a long profile, and they keep linking to all these things from their forum signatures. Just be very cautious about this. I'm not saying don't link to it, but maybe don't use your exact match anchor text or try to make it more of a branding play, try and make it more authentic feeling. Certainly participating in communities is a great thing. Just watch that.

Reciprocal lists, right, people are emailing each other back and forth and saying, "Hey, I'll put you on my list of links. You put me on yours. Oh, and we'll do it 20 times and we'll form this big reciprocal circus that's going to get all of us penalized." How great is that?

Article marking sites, I've talked about article marketing in the past. Generally when you see, hey, we're an article marketing site and we can help you rank higher, and submit your content to us and we'll link out, and the same is true for SEO focused directories, anytime you see a site that is essentially extolling the virtues of participating there, or contributing there, as being primarily related to the link and the anchor text and the page rank you're going to get, you can bet your sweet hiney that Google does not want to count that. That's exactly what they're trying to prevent, and I'd worry, whether it's this penalty or a penalty that Google makes in the future, that this is the kind of stuff that gets hit.

Last one, number six, large amounts of pages that are targeting very similar, kind of modified versions of keywords and keyword intents, with only slight variations, slight variation being the key here. So think:
used cars Seattle, used autos Seattle, pre-owned cars Seattle. Why are those three different pages? It sort of feels like keywordy, SEO-y, spam, right, and then there are pointing exact match anchors at all of these. This is the same page. You can target all three of these keywords very nicely on one page that's called Used and Pre-owned Cars/Autos in Seattle. Right, one page, good, you've got it. You've combined all of the things. You want to have that great user experience there. You don't want to have to build that three times. You're not trying to build a bunch of spammy anchor texts to each one that's pointing from each of the different ones. The used cars Seattle page has a link to the used auto Seattle's, it's sort of like, "What?" From a user perspective, "Why is that there? What is the difference between a car and an automobile exactly? I don't understand why these two exist." This kind of thing is something where I think it's a very clear pattern match that the engines can detect. Looks like they did some research and then just built a page for everything, and then they pointed links at all of them. Its manipulative, right. This is the kind of thing, also, that will get you in trouble.

So, one, one, two, three, four, five, six. Six things you should change, and even though I'm not the Count from Sesame Street, you should still pay careful attention to these, because I'm super nervous that when this penalty going to come out, there are just going to be so many webmasters and SEOs who are doing this kind of stuff, and I don't know which one Google's going to hit on this time and what they might hit on in the future. But I just want you to be okay. I want your sites to do well, and this is such bad stuff for user experience too. So please avoid it. Be careful. Good luck to you, and we'll see you again next week for another edition of Whiteboard Friday. Take care.

Video transcription by Speechpad.com


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Adobe CS6 Suite & Creative Cloud launched with tons of new features

Adobe today announced much powerful & feature-packed Creative Suite 6 and Creative Cloud. The company also confirmed plenty of new features being added in to these new software. Adobe confirms about 60% more features added in Photoshop CS6 with twice ‘Just-Do-It’ features than earlier. This is also company’s more focused software release ever in the [...]

Read full article here > Adobe CS6 Suite & Creative Cloud launched with tons of new features written by


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/techzoom/kzCz/~3/-9RR6vkDlRw/

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How to Select a Profile Avatar Picture



People often wonder what to use as their profile or avatar picture, like for Facebook, GooglePlus, and other places online. Your profile avatar picture is what identifies you. It's your opportunity to reveal who you are.

Some like to use a cartoon, brand logo of business they own, abstract image, or old high school photo. Others use a group photo, where they are standing next to a friend or sibling. Some even use a baby photo. A musician might use the image of a guitar or synthesizer.

What's my recommendation?

Use a current photo of just yourself alone. Your actual self.

Preferably a smiling face with your hair done nicely and wearing appropriate attire. No sunglasses if you're a business person, since that is interpreted as "having something to hide".

Now let me rush right into saying this is not easy for me. 99.99999% of my photos look terrible. When I smile, I tend to look goofy. I struggle a lot with my profile avatar picture. It's not easy for me to practice what I preach in this instance. In fact, I think I look a lot better in sunglasses. But that's not the best image for a business person.

Why am I insisting on a real photo of your current self? Because it increases credibility, especially if you're promoting your expertise or skills, or want people to recognize you offline, in the real "meat space" world.

Trolls and cyber-bullies often use cartoon images, pirates, Hollywood stars, Einstein, and other celebrity photos or abstract images to conceal their true identity. When I see a profile photo or avatar ID that is not a current photo of the person, I immediately get suspicious. It DOES NOT mean that you're up to no good. It just makes me wary and cautious.

Plenty of nice people will disagree with me on this one. They prefer to use an icon that is not their real self. Some may fear stalkers or have other good reasons not to use their actual face.

Using a "younger you" photo, like you as a baby or high school student, may confuse people. Baby photos are especially unwise, as I myself don't want to friend or follow babies or little children on Facebook. I prefer to hang around people 18 or older in most cases.

A photo of yourself from many years ago may cause people to wonder if you're being deceptive, trying to make yourself look younger than you really are. It's not a real good policy.

I take a lot of photographs and do a lot of video filming. In almost every case when a person does NOT want their face to be public, there's probably a bad reason for their secrecy or "shyness". Not always. But frequently. I've known people who had warrants out on them, and they'd cover their face when I pointed the camera in their direction.

This is not an ironclad rule. There are exceptions. But consider what I say.

Use a current photo of yourself -- unless you have a good reason not to, for privacy or security concerns. A current photo of your real, smiling face will be considered more authentic, transparent, and honest.


Source: http://pluperfecter.blogspot.com/2012/04/how-to-select-profile-avatar-picture.html

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Why 1 Great Blog Will Earn You More Money Than 20 Shitty Blogs?

Why 1 Great Blog Will Earn You More Money Than 20 Shitty Ones?
We all know that traffic = money online right? The more money your blog receives on a daily basis, the more money your blog will usually earn from that traffic. ( As Long As It Is Quality Traffic )
So why spend all your [...]

Source: http://jaysonlinereviews.com/http:/jaysonlinereviews.com/why-1-great-blog-will-earn-you-more-money-than-20-shitty-blogs/

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Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Mobile Stats

Mobile is growing bigger and bigger every day and below are some of the recent stats about the growth of mobile.  Make sure your law firms site is in a mobile friendly format and consider setting up a Mobile App for your legal practice. Mobile Commerce and Engagement Stats 47% of consumers confirm they use [...]

Source: http://www.legalsearchmarketing.com/mobile-advertising/mobile-stats/

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Why I Only Promote 100% Commission Affiliate Products On Rapbank?

 
Why I Only Promote 100% Commission Affiliate Products On Rapbank?
For those of you reading this blog post who are not familiar with the Rapbank affiliate network, I will give you a real brief overview of Rapbank.
Rapbank is an affiliate network, that pays you instant commissions directly to your Paypal business account, after the successful sale [...]

Source: http://jaysonlinereviews.com/http:/jaysonlinereviews.com/promote-100-commission-affiliate-products-rapbank/

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Mad Magazine about politics


Finally. Political analysis I can really support. Unfair. Unbalanced. Real.

Also see the new Beta version of Mad Magazine online.

LOL


Source: http://pluperfecter.blogspot.com/2012/04/mad-magazine-about-politics.html

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Why SEO Consultants Push Brand

At SMX I gave a presentation on brand & how Google has biased the algorithms toward brands. having already seeing the bulk of my argument months prior, Bryson Meunier spoke after me and put together a presentation that used bogus statistics & was basically a smear of me. He was so over the top with his obnoxious behavior that when Danny Sullivan mentioned the next speaker after him he jokingly said "up next, Ron Paul."

I honestly thought the point of the discussion was to highlight how Google has (or hasn't) biased the algorithms, editorial policies & search interface toward brands. However, if a person speaks after you and uses bogus statistics to reach junk conclusions, you can't debunk their aggregate information until after you have looked into it some. An honest person can put what they know out there & share it publicly in advanced, a dishonest person hides behind junk research and the label of science to ram through poorly thought out trash, collecting whatever "data" confirms their own bias while ignorning the pieces of reality that don't.

  • As an example, he suggested that based on the number of employees and revenues Wikipedia is a small business. He then went on to say that since Wikipedia wasn't on Interbrand's "scientific" study that they were not a top brand. Nevermind that no countries, religions, sports, celebrities, or non-profits make the list of top "companies."
  • After IAC figured out that they were able to get away with running Ask.com as a thin scraper site, they outsourced "the algorithm" and fired many of their employees. Because they have fewer employees, Bryson considers Ask as "a mid-sized business" even though they are part of a multi-billion Dollar company and IAC is Google's #1 advertiser!
  • According to Compete's downstream traffic stats, YouTube receives about 1 in 13 search clicks from Google, but since it wasn't on Interbrand's list "who cares?" Incidentally, the folks at Interbrand do have a mention of YouTube on their top 100 brands page, but it was a suggestion that you watch their videos on YouTube. Their methodology is so suspect that Goldman Sachs and Yahoo! made the cut while YouTube didn't, even though YouTube is one of their few offsite promotional channels they promote on that very page. Their list also puts Microsoft's brand value at about double Apple's (and the list came out when Steve Jobs was still alive).
  • Bryson also claimed that since big brands are inefficient and slow moving they already have a big disadvantage so it makes sense for search engines to compensate for that. That is at best an illegitimate line of reasoning because those companies have plenty of solutions available to them & have the capital needed to buy out competitors. Even when the SERPs look independent, a lot of the listed sites are owned by large conglomorates. As an example, here is a random search from earlier today:

    Meanwhile the same idiotic logic ignores the lack of resources at small businesses. Nowhere in his presentation was a highlight of how Google favored affiliates & direct marketers until the profit margins of the direct response marketing model started to peak & then Google transitioned to promoting brands, as they wanted to keep increasing revenues and monetize more clicks.
  • Bryson also shared an example of where he got a photo sharing site 40,000 unique visitors a month as a case study of the power of white hat SEO. 40,000 monthly visits to a photo sharing site might fund a light Starbucks addiction (assuming you value your time at nothing, have no employees, ignore hosting costs and the SEO is free), but not much beyond that. If that is a success case study, that shows how much harder the ecosystem is getting to operate in as a small business.
  • He also put out a painfully fluffy "white paper" / sales letter which stated that since Wal-Mart has a page about SEO they should outrank seobook on "SEO" related queries if my theories of brand bias are correct. That misses the point entirely. I never stated that garbage content on branded sites always outperforms quality content on niche sites, but rather that a lot of smaller websites were intentionally being squeezed out of the ecosystem. Sure some small sites manage to compete, but the odds of them succeeding today are much lower than they were 3 or 4 years ago.
  • At SMX near the end of our session a question was asked about the audience composition & most people were either big brands or people working for big brands. If you go back to when I first got into SEO in 2003 the audience composition was almost entirely small publishers and independent SEOs. This squeezing out of small players is not something new to search or the web. If you look at the history of any modern communications network this cycle has repeated itself in every single medium - phone, radio, television, and the web.

To be fair, I can understand why a no-name also ran SEO consultant would want to pitch himself for being up for doing SEO work for large brands. Brands generally have fatter margins, economies of scale, and large budgets. As Google tilts the algorithm toward the big brands (to where they can fall over the finish line in first place) they are the best clients to work for, since you are swimming downstream.

Why push huge boulders up the side of the mountain for crumbs when you can get paid far more to blow on a snowflake at the top of the mountain?

That is why so many SEOs fawn over trying to get brand clients. The work is high-paying, low risk, and relatively easy.

If we were ever to close up our membership site & focus primarily on SEO consulting work in more structured arrangements then absolutely we would aim at brands & help them fall over the finsh line in first place. ;)

Back when I worked with Clientside SEM we did a good number of big brand projects with some of the largest online portals & retailers. Understanding the business objectives & communicating things in a way that builds buy in from other departments is of course challenging. You need simplicity & directness without oversimplifying. But (if you work for great clients - like we did), then that is nowhere near as challenging as building a site from scratch into something that can compete for lucrative keywords. I recently stepped back from the client consulting model for a bit simply because I was pulling myself in too many directions & working too long, but Scott is still flourishing & delivering excellent results for clients.

I have nothing against the concept of branding (think of how many years I slaved building up this site & the capital I have poured into it), but I like to share the trends in the ecosystem as they are, rather than as a hack warping my view to try to pick up consulting clients. Our site would likely make far more income if we kept using the words "enterprise" "brand" "fortune 500" and then sold consulting to that target audience. In fact, a large % of our members here are fortune 500s, conglomerates, newspaper chains, magazine publishers, and so on.

It is not that brand counts for nothing (or that it should count for nothing) but anyone who claims the table isn't tilted is either ignorant, a liar, or both.

Truth has to count for something.

Disclaimer: I am not saying enterprise SEO is always easy (there are real challenges, especially with internal politics that add arbitrary constraints). And I am not saying that everyone who targets the enterprise market is a hack (there are some super talented folks out there). But the challenge of being a profitable small webmaster is much more of a struggle than ranking a site that Google is intentionally biasing their algorithms toward promoting.

Disclaimer2: I realize refuting a douchebag like Bryson Meunier is batting below my league, however as a matter of principal I won't let sleazeballs get away with taking a swipe using junk science. The word science deserves better than that.

Categories: 

Source: http://www.seobook.com/why-seo-consultants-fawn-over-brand

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My Newest Internet Marketing Strategies For 2011 What I Am Doing?

With Googles new algorithm changes article marketing has basically died in my book. The only article directory I am gonna submit too in the near future is Ehow.com. Ehow is a how to article directory that I have used in the past sparingly. The reason I like Ehow is the articles you submit are not [...]

Source: http://jaysonlinereviews.com/http:/jaysonlinereviews.com/newest-internet-marketing-strategies-2011-doing/

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Pinterest for Business

In today’s Mastering Social Business Podcast Paul and I are covering Pinterest. We will be discussing: Who is currently using Pinterest How are people using it Top brands using Pinterest How businesses can use Pinterest How to get signed up Words of Caution Helpful tips and links     Please be sure to subscribe via [...]

Source: http://www.stellarmediamarketing.com/social-media/pinterest/

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Editorial Objectivity

Consumer Search Insights.

Should search engines be able to preferentially promote their own services in their search results?

Nearly 3 in 4 people think that search engines should not be able to preferentially promote their own services.

vote All (1226)
no, results should be objective 74.1% (+3.1 / -3.4)
yes, it is their search results 25.9% (+3.4 / -3.1)

There was essentially no split between men & women.

vote Men (827) Women (399)
no, results should be objective 73.7% (+3.1 / -3.4) 74.4% (+5.2 / -6.0)
yes, it is their search results 26.3% (+3.4 / -3.1) 25.6% (+6.0 / -5.2)

Older people tend to prefer/want more editorial objectivity, whereas younger people are more fine with search engines preferentially promoting their own services. Older people tend to be more fixed in their ways & younger people are much less so.

vote 18-24 year-olds (338) 25-34 year-olds (269) 35-44 year-olds (158) 45-54 year-olds (209) 55-64 year-olds (169) 65+ year-olds (83)
no, results should be objective 65.0% (+4.9 / -5.2) 76.0% (+5.1 / -6.0) 74.0% (+6.5 / -7.7) 71.2% (+5.7 / -6.5) 71.4% (+6.5 / -7.5) 87.2% (+6.1 / -10.4)
yes, it is their search results 35.0% (+5.2 / -4.9) 24.0% (+6.0 / -5.1) 26.0% (+7.7 / -6.5) 28.8% (+6.5 / -5.7) 28.6% (+7.5 / -6.5) 12.8% (+10.4 / -6.1)

Geographically, people in the south & midwest tend to be slightly more trusting, perhaps due to the lower cost of living & less competitive markets. However, any differences here are fairly minor & are within the margin of error.

vote The US Midwest (244) The US Northeast (367) The US South (352) The US West (263)
no, results should be objective 72.2% (+6.4 / -7.4) 77.7% (+4.5 / -5.3) 72.1% (+6.0 / -6.9) 75.9% (+5.7 / -6.9)
yes, it is their search results 27.8% (+7.4 / -6.4) 22.3% (+5.3 / -4.5) 27.9% (+6.9 / -6.0) 24.1% (+6.9 / -5.7)

People who are rural tend to be slightly more accepting of Google doing as it wishes, though this is also a small sample size & well within the margin of error.

vote Urban areas (647) Rural areas (106) Suburban areas (453)
no, results should be objective 74.3% (+4.3 / -4.9) 71.9% (+8.5 / -10.5) 74.4% (+4.2 / -4.7)
yes, it is their search results 25.7% (+4.9 / -4.3) 28.1% (+10.5 / -8.5) 25.6% (+4.7 / -4.2)

There isn't a strong correlation with income on this issue either. People cared a bit more at higher income levels, but there was also a wider margin of error due to small sampling size.

vote People earning $0-24K (142) People earning $25-49K (677) People earning $50-74K (316) People earning $75-99K (75) People earning $100-149K People earning $150K+
no, results should be objective 72.0% (+7.8 / -9.4) 76.8% (+3.7 / -4.1) 68.7% (+6.1 / -6.8) 83.1% (+6.9 / -10.2) Insufficient data Insufficient data
yes, it is their search results 28.0% (+9.4 / -7.8) 23.2% (+4.1 / -3.7) 31.3% (+6.8 / -6.1) 16.9% (+10.2 / -6.9) Insufficient data Insufficient data
Categories: 

Source: http://www.seobook.com/editorial-objectivity

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Clickbank Review – Learn How To Get Started Making Money With Clickbank?

Clickbank Review – How To Get Started Making Money With Clickbank?
First off let me be the first to tell you this review of Clickbank is going to be very positive for several reasons that I am going to list below.

Clickbank always pays on time


I have been a happy Clickbank affiliate for over 5 years now [...]

Source: http://jaysonlinereviews.com/http:/jaysonlinereviews.com/clickbank-review-learn-how-to-get-started-making-money-with-clickbank/

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Monday, April 23, 2012

It's SaleHoo's 7th Birthday (and our $24,444 giveaway!)

**This giveaway is now closed**

April 14th 2012 marks our 7th birthday and we are celebrating big time!

We’ve got a lot to celebrate too: After our initial launch back in 2005, SaleHoo went from an idea that my boss, Simon Slade, acted on, to being the number one choice in wholesale supplier directory for over 92,000 online retailers.

Looking back on 7 fantastic years

 Since we launched the directory, we have consistently added new suppliers from all other the world. Along with the directory itself, SaleHoo also now offers:

  • A community forum
  • A tradeshow directory
  • The SaleHoo Research Lab – our eBay market research software
  • A complete library of free eBay and online retail education
  • An online retail video training course
  • And our latest and greatest addition to SaleHoo; SaleHoo Stores, our eCommerce software that allows you to instantly build your very own webstore

SaleHoo Stores is by far our most proud achievement of the past few years. We poured 18 months of research and development, and countless man hours, into crafting the very best eCommerce software possible.

Our $24,444 giveaway

Since we launched SaleHoo Stores in September last year, we have successfully helped over 500 SaleHoo Store owners set up their very own online storefronts.

But we’re not about to stop there which is why we are giving you the chance to win one of seven Premium SaleHoo Stores packages worth $3492. That’s over $24,000 in our total prize pool!

What makes SaleHoo Stores the ultimate eCommerce solution

Here’s what makes SaleHoo Stores your ultimate system for success. SaleHoo Stores are:

  • Search engine optimized. Get your products found in Google and other search engines by buyers who are ready to spend!
  • Optimized for sales! SaleHoo Stores are built with buyers in mind. As soon as they arrive at your website, it’s easy for them to find what they want and make a purchase. No complicated or frustrating systems here
  • Simple to set up and simple to use. Not a computer whizz with “HTML” or other fancy coding ability? Not a problem! Setting up your Store literally takes minutes. Managing sales and creating listings is both streamlined and speedy
  • Free from marketplace fees! When you sell on SaleHoo Stores, there are no listing fees, listing upgrade fees or “success” fees that butcher your profit margins
  • Trustworthy! All SaleHoo Stores come with secure payment processing and display trust-inducing payment safety symbols
  • Professionally designed by experienced graphic artists. Choose from a number of website “themes” and color variations. Change them as often as you like with just 2 clicks of your mouse

Get SaleHoo Stores for $1 + Your chance to win!

Now is your chance to try SaleHoo Stores for just $1. For four days only, we are giving you the chance to try SaleHoo Stores for only one dollar. Plus, your $1 will automatically enter you into the draw to win 1 of 7 Premium SaleHoo Store packages worth $3492. The winners will be drawn and notified on April 14th 2012.

Your $1 investment will give you one month to fully inspect SaleHoo Stores. This way, you can try SaleHoo Stores by risking just one measly dollar. At the end of your trial, if you like what you see, you can keep your Store and we will bill you $27 per month, which is less than just $1 per day for your very own Store.

If you are not completely satisfied by SaleHoo Stores, and are not 100% convinced that it’s the best option for you, there is no obligation to continue and you can cancel at any time.

That’s how confident we are about SaleHoo Stores and how certain we are about what it will deliver you.

 

Share:

 

Source: http://www.salehoo.com/blog/salehoo-turns-7

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If You Aren’t Advertising Your Business on Facebook, You Should Be

Have you thought about advertising your business on Facebook? While Facebook’s use as an advertising platform still trails far behind Google and television — which represent $40 and $60 billion of the nation’s 2011 advertising spending, respectively — the company’s respectable $3.8 billion in ad spending is also seeing explosive growth. While Google and television [...]

Source: http://www.stellarmediamarketing.com/social-media/if-you-arent-advertising-your-business-on-facebook-you-should-be/

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Tracking Micro Conversions with Event Tracking for Improving SEO Campaigns

Conversions. The one metric we all know we should be focusing on, and yet it's the one thing that gets overlooked the most. So many of us focus on just one main conversion point, and forget how many other types of visitor engagement exist on our sites. These other engagement points, or less-important conversions are what experts call "micro conversions."

World-renowned analytics expert Avinash Kaushik is a strong supporter of the use of micro conversions. In his Excellent Analytics Tip series, he explains the benefits of tracking both micro and macro conversions:

3. It will force you to understand the multiple persona's on your website, trust me that in of itself is worth a million bucks. It will encourage you to segment (my favorite activity) visitors and visits and behavior and outcomes. Success will be yours.

When you understand your various visitor personas, you can create better targeted content, value-adds and better messaging overall. This will only strengthen your SEO campaign and will help guide you to improving your conversion rate and the ROI of your SEO efforts.

Event Tracking in Google Analytics

One of my favorite ways to track micro conversions is with event tracking in Google Analytics. Before I walk you through how to setup events, let's first make sure we understand the difference between events and your traditional goals in Google Analytics.

In the past, a goal in Google Analytics was when any action a visitor would take on your site that took them to a confirmation page. When the visitor reached that confirmation page, Google Analytics would count it as a goal completion.

An event, on the other hand, is when a visitor takes action on your site and there is no confirmation page. A good example of this would be when someone clicks a "Follow Me on Twitter" link on your site. It takes the visitor off of your website and makes you unable to add conversion tracking code to their destination page (because it lives on Twitter.com).

In addition to bringing us cool features like custom dashboards, the new Google Analytics also made it much easier to track events as goals. Which is what we'll be focusing on today.

Setting Up an Event

Events are much easier to setup then you might imagine. All you need to do is add a little piece of customized code to the URL a visitor will be clicking on to trigger the event, and you're halfway there. Let's start with understanding what our event tracking options are.

There are five fields in total that you can use to categorize your event, two of which are optional:

  • Category: The general name of the type of event you wish to track. If you'll be setting up events of a similar topic (like form submissions), you'll want to keep this consistent across all of the events you setup.
  • Action: A description of the action the visitor is taking to trigger the event. So if your category is set to "Forms", your action might be set to "Sales Inquiry".
  • Label: This is an optional field used to further describe the type of event. If you're tracking multiple forms of the same type (like contact forms), you may consider using this field to avoid any confusion with the other events.
  • Value: Suppose each micro conversion does have a monetary value of sorts for you, this is the field you'd use to track that numeric number.
  • Non-Interaction: A true/false field that you can use to prevent a visitor who completes the event and leaves your domain from being recorded as a bounce in Google Analytics

Still with me? Now here comes the fun part: building the event tracking script.

The framework of your event tracking script looks like this:

onClick="_gaq.push(['_trackEvent', 'Category', 'Action', 'Label', Value, false]);"

There are a couple of things you need to remember when you customize the various fields in the script (e.g. "Category"):

  • You must fill in the Category, Action and Non-Interaction fields
  • The Value and Non-Interaction fields do not have a single quote around around them like the others
  • If you choose to omit the Label or Value fields, also omit the single quote but not the comma that separates them from the other fields. In this example I've ommitted both fields, but not their commas:

  • onClick="_gaq.push(['_trackEvent', 'Category', 'Action',,, false]);"

  • The Non-Interaction field can only be set to true or false (remember: no quotes!)

Now that you've set up the script, you should place it within the href component of any link you are setting up. Here's an example of what it would look like:

<a href="http://twitter.com/seobook" onClick="_gaq.push(['_trackEvent', 'Category', 'Action', 'Label', Value, false]);">Follow us on Twitter!</a>

The final piece of the puzzle is adding the event as a goal in Google Analytics.

  1. Click the gear icon in the upper right corner of the Google Analytics profile you're setting up the goal in
  2. Using the sub-navigation where your Profile information is listed, select the Goals tab
  3. Choose the goal set you wish to add the event to (I like to categorize my goal sets)
  4. After you name your goal, select the Event radio button
  5. You now need to populate the event details exactly how you set them up in your script. If you omitted a field, just leave it blank

Event Tracking

You've now setup your event as a goal!

Types of SEO Micro Conversions

Now that the hard part is out of the way, let's brainstorm some micro conversions we could be tracking.

Social Engagement

You can use event tracking to track Share This links and blog comments. That way you can quickly see which content has the highest engagement so you can build more of it.

Affiliate Links and Ads

You may also wish to track when someone clicks one of your affiliate links or a banner you have on your site. This is a great opportunity to take advantage of the Value field so you can keep track of how much each of those clicks are worth (and perhaps double-check that you're getting paid the right amount).

Downloads

If your site has white papers, presentations, video, audio or any other type of file that users can download, you can easily keep track of those downloads with event tracking.

Follow Me/Like Us Links

If one of your macro conversion goals is brand awareness, you should consider adding an event whenever someone clicks a "follow me on Twitter" or "Like us on Facebook" link on your site. That way you can track back the source of those follows/likes to SEO.

Live Chats & Customer Support

Many service companies still utilize live chat to quickly address customer inquiries and problems. When someone clicks the live chat link, you can trigger an event to count it as a goal completion.

Additionally, if you use a third party customer support center, you can trigger an event whenever a user clicks the outbound links for those services.

These are just a few of the micro conversions you could be tracking on your site. While every site is different and is interested in tracking different things, hopefully this will give you a few ideas of additional conversion points you could be looking at to better understand your audience. The better we understand our visitors, the better job we can do as SEOs to attract more of them.

Categories: 

Source: http://www.seobook.com/tracking-micro-conversions-with-event-tracking

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Tell Us About Your Favorite Dashboard!

Posted by Karen Semyan

One of the recent water cooler conversations around the Mozplex has been about dashboards. The question: What makes a great dashboard? We all use these top-level reports in various apps everyday, for professional and personal reasons, and some are better than others. 

At their best, these reports can do an amazing job of making our work more efficient. You check the dashboard, review your progress, gather some insights, and know what to do next. Etta James cues up, the clouds part, sunshine beams down on your desk, and a unicorn gallops in slow motion past your office window. 

But at their worst, dashboards are lacking in useful info, cluttered, or convoluted. They amount to one more click between you and the real details you need in an app, adding to the clown-car cycle of chasing down your next actions. 

So we put the question to you...

What dashboards give you your “At Last” moment? Or are at least useful? What features on those dashboards are the most useful?  

Take moment and fill out this survey and share your thoughts.

To get you thinking about this, here are some some favorites from Mozzers, in no particular order:

WebTrends

Rand says: Beautiful UI/UX, fun to look at, colorful, bleeding edge. 
Miranda says: Clean design, interesting use of typography, and nice supporting visuals.

WebTrends sample dashboard

Mint

Courtney says: It’s super detailed and yet, I know what to do what to do at first glance. The yellow, green, red indicators show my progress and warn me when I’m approaching or over budget. Alerts at the top of the page provide insights into how I’m doing and what I can do better. Goals provide easy benchmarking. This holistic view paints the entire picture in a way that is easy to digest and suggests actions, and I love that I can dig deeper into any of these topics with a single click (or two).

Mint dashboard

New Relic

Thomas says: I get quick access to recent over-time data for the most important metric in a way that can be dissected easily. A statistical score for most important metrics, plus traffic. You can change the timeframe quickly. They provide alerts, have nice use of color, and use consistent help-hovers.

New Relic dashboard sample

GeckoBoard 

Adam says: It’s perhaps not the most beautiful dashboard, but it’s broadly customizable. There’s something to be said for a big bold dashboard that shows off your key daily metrics in big bold type.

GeckoBoard sample

AdWords

Joanna says: For me a dashboard needs to both summarize the movement of my data but also suggest a next step. I think Adwords does a solid job, but I also find that paid marketing platforms in general do a great job of surfacing the changes I should prioritize investigating. For me its all about summarizing and prioritizing...and it being pretty of course. Give me all that and I'm not going anywhere.

WordPress 

Rand says: It gets me all the info I need, and it’s customizable.

KISSInsights

Joanna says: KISSInsights has test summaries and important info, all laid out very digestibly. 



More favorites include: 

Mixpanel

Mixpanel dashboard

SimplyMeasured

Chartbeat

Please share your favorites with us!

 


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