| From the Editor: |
Dear Readers
Wow! What a response we've had to Search Engine Wiki so far. We are blown away by all the terrific feedback we've had and the number of mentions the site received in the media and the blogosphere. Thank you! In case you missed it, here is the official launch press release .
As can be expected with a BETA launch, we've had a few bugs, but we think we've got those ironed out now, so if you haven't yet created a free editor account at Search Engine Wiki, please do so now. We welcome new visitors and contributors.
Apart from launching the Wiki, I've been busy moving my Ask Kalena blog to a new WordPress template and it's own domain at Ask-Kalena.com. What do you think? Speaking of the blog, November saw a record number of questions submitted to me and I've featured some of them in this issue.
This month's feature article is also the result of answering webmaster questions for the past three years. Although each question I receive is unique, the same kind of themes tend to crop up in relation to search engine marketing myth and legend. So I thought I'd write an article that addresses the Top 10 myths in the industry once and for all!
For those of you who have been considering taking one of our Search Engine College courses but haven't yet gotten around to it, what are you waiting for? Don't make me send you to the principal's office! LOL. But seriously, scroll to the bottom of this newsletter for a little incentive to enroll before the end of 2007.
Well I've waffled on too much already and my Virtual Assistant Sarah will probably tell me that I've taken up too much space on this intro so I'll finish up.
Enjoy this issue and remember to visit the Ask Kalena blog to check out my daily answers to frequently asked search engine questions. Got a question of your own? Press the big green button on the bottom right to send me your question and you might see it featured here next month.
Until next year - wishing you a safe and joyous holiday season...
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| Feature Article: | |
10 Search Engine Marketing Myths Debunked
By Kalena Jordan
In this article, I'm going to try and debunk a few myths floating around the Internet about what's required to get your site visible in search engines. Here goes:
Myth 1 - You need to buy a domain with keywords in it
I'm sure you've seen them, domains like: www.paris-hilton-pink-diamond-dog-collars.com. For some weird reason, webmasters seem to think that they need to have a keyword-stuffed domain to do well in the search engines, the more hyphens the better. Well it just isn't true.
In fact, Google spam evangelist Matt Cutts is known for warning against using over-stuffed keyword domains. If you have a look at one of the last sentences of this post of his he talks about possibly attracting Google's attention with keyword-filled domains and gives an (excessive) example. Could he be hinting that using ultra-keyworded domains may trip a filter of some kind? I think so.
Myth 2 - You need to submit your site to 1000 search engines and directories
Ok, I don't know who started this silly rumor but it's NEVER been true. Latest figures from Nielsen/NetRatings show that over 95% of the search market share is dominated by the top 5 search engines: Google, Yahoo, MSN/Live Search, AOL and Ask. As long as your site is found in these engines, you can rest assured you've covered the main bases. Despite this, I still get emails offering to submit my sites to the "most popular" 1000 search engines.
Myth 3 - You need to stuff keywords into as many areas of your site as possible
I like to think this rumor was started by the same idiot who started 1). It's correct that search engines actively seek to match your site content with search queries, but stuffing the same keywords over and over into your site code via visible or invisible text DOES NOT automatically make your site relevant for searches containing those keywords. It's more likely to trip spam filters and earn your site a ranking suppression. In fact, you might as well hold up a big red flag to Googlebot that says "COME AND GET ME"
Myth 4 - Your site has to be flat HTML
Wrong again. A few years ago, search engines had difficulty indexing sites that were built using dynamically-generated pages or pages with multiple parameters in their URLs. So the recommendation by SEO experts at the time was to use flat HTML pages or convert existing pages into HTML and/or use mod_rewrite to convert dynamic URLs into flat ones. However the search engines have all become better at indexing dynamic site content now and also provide a universal sitemap protocol to enable webmasters to ensure all their pages are submitted and indexed.
Myth 5 - You have to swap links with as many sites as possible
I'd like to strap whoever started this story to a couch and make them watch re-runs of The Golden Girls for a whole year. Because this is probably the most persistent and frustrating myth there is about search engine marketing and it's one of my pet peeves. I am bombarded daily with emails from webmasters who tell me it's "...extremely valuable to swap links to boost your Google PageRank" or who tell me I should form 3 way reciprocal link partnerships because it "...will help boost the link popularity of our sites in a way that is undetectable to Google". Excuse my French, but that's Bollocks!
Reciprocal links are pretty much worthless for search engine value these days. In-bound one way links from high quality sites are much more valuable from a search engine relevancy perspective. If you are going to seek out reciprocal links, for heaven's sake, swap links with sites that offer related or complementary content to yours! What's the point offering your site visitors a link if it doesn't relate to what they are seeking on your own site? Don't seek out links based on perceived search engine value. Swap links because they offer traffic to your site or valuable resources to visitors of your own site. If you base your linking strategy on search engines alone, you'll end up with a Free For All link farm that search engine staff will mock as they slap a ranking penalty on it.
Myth 6 - You have to buy an existing domain to be successful
This myth started shortly after Google began "sandboxing" new sites for a period of time before releasing them into the main index. The phenomenon became known as the aging delay. Webmasters were stumped when they couldn't find their pages listed for any keywords in Google for months at a time and when learning of the sandbox effect, some decided that purchasing an existing domain could help them avoid the sandbox altogether.
A similar rumor suggested that purchasing a domain with a high Google PageRank would automatically transfer the PageRank and traffic to any new site built on the existing domain. Neither of these assumptions is true. Hindsight has shown us that the sandbox does not actually exist, merely that Google has become a little more picky about which sites to feature in their main index versus the supplemental index and older, better linked sites have a better chance than brand new ones with no link reputation. As for purchasing existing domains, this can actually backfire on webmasters because Google's latest algorithm looks closely at domain registration details and if a domain has changed hands too many times or has had dodgy content in the past, it could attract suppression filters until the newest version of the site has built up some trust-rank.
Myth 7 - You only need to optimize your
META Tags
Back in 1996 when I first began optimizing web sites, nobody knew anything about SEO and so even slight changes to a web site meant you could outrank your competitors. Simply optimizing the title tag of a page could bring on a Top 5 position in the SERPS. Adding keyword-rich META Description and META Keywords tags too pretty much guaranteed you a top spot. Now it's a completely different story. Most search engines don't even support the META Keywords Tag anymore and Danny Sullivan recently determined that Google's never supported it.
You have to offer search engines more than optimized title and
META tags if you want your pages ranked highly for related search queries. You need to optimize the copy on your pages, reduce code bloat, provide a logical navigation structure, have good link popularity, update your site regularly, have sticky content and make sure your site code validates, amongst other things. Despite this, many webmasters assume that if they add an optimized title and
META tag to every page, their job is done. Not so! You've got to think bigger than that.
Myth 8 - Any traffic is good traffic
I received an email recently from an online ad agency that had developed what they thought was a knockout SEO tool that they wanted me to review. It was basically a membership site designed to generate traffic via a voting and points system where you earn points for visiting sites and receiving visitors from the same network. As I explained to them, the concept merely builds false traffic and fake link popularity, which goes against practically everything in Google's webmaster guidelines. It is also very open to manipulation and is, in my opinion, operating on flawed logic.
This mutual optimization idea has been tried before. It doesn't work because it only attracts the most aggressive clickers and the whole thing turns into a competition between 2 or 3 lazy webmasters who think traffic at any cost/quality is the way to run an online business. It's not. Unqualified traffic that's unlikely to convert to sales or sign-ups is only wasting valuable bandwidth and hosting resources. Visitors that disappear from your site a few seconds after they arrive skew your site metrics and send a message to search engines that your site is not worth visiting. You want traffic from qualified leads, loyal repeat visitors and new visitors via highly targeted search queries.
Myth 9 - If you're not found in Google, you're screwed I said it recently and I'll say it again: Google is NOT the Internet. There are plenty of ways to market your web site online, so you shouldn't become discouraged if you can't seem to crack good results in Google. I know of plenty of sites that receive more referrals from Yahoo and MSN than Google and that's the way they like it. Bento Yum is proof that an e-commerce site doesn't need Google (or any of the 4 main search engines) to survive. Until very recently, Jennifer Laycock deliberately blocked search engine robots from the site to prove that an online business can thrive via word of mouth and social media buzz alone.
But even if you can't live without Google referrals, you need to have back-up traffic channels in place. Never rely too heavily on a single source for your traffic. What if something happened tomorrow that stopped all your Google traffic? Would your site survive? It should, if you're doing your job well. Keep adding good content to your site, update and submit your sitemaps regularly, seek out high quality back links and the traffic will come.
Myth 10 - Search Engine Marketing is expensive
Not so. You can market a web site on a shoe-string budget or no budget at all! You don't need to spend thousands on SEO services or PPC advertising. Simply invest at least an hour per day learning how to optimize your web site for better search engine rankings, submitting it to relevant search engines and directories, adding fresh content, building up backward links and marketing it via social media networks such as Digg, Facebook, Del.icio.us etc. Not sure where to start? Visit webmaster forums, read search marketing related blogs and sign up for related newsletters and you will soon learn everything you need to know about marketing your web site successfully.
About the Author:
Article by Kalena Jordan, one of the first search engine optimization experts in Australia, who is well known and respected in the industry, particularly in the U.S. As well as running a daily Search Engine Advice Column, Kalena manages Search Engine College - an online training institution offering instructor-led short courses and downloadable self-study courses in Search Engine Optimization and other Search Engine Marketing subjects.
Search Industry Jobs of the Month
Got positions vacant or short term projects you'd like advertised? Sign up for a free account with the Search Engine College Jobs Board and find great candidates.
SEO Specialist
Job Title: SEO Specialist
Job Reference #: Unknown
Position Type: full time
Name of employer: TH UK
Location: Bedford, Bedfordshire, UK
Date Posted: 19 November, 2007
Position description:
TH UK, requires an SEO expert to work on several key projects in our SEO department.
We are looking to recruit an individual with previous experience of working for an Internet company or online marketing agency.
Location: Bedford, Bedfordshire, UK
Main Duties:
- Increase traffic to client websites via organic SEO techniques.
- Work closely within the SEO team to help build and evolve tailored search engine strategies that achieve the company's growth objectives.
- Carry out extensive site-wide analysis to identify and resolve technical and usability issues.
- Conduct thorough competitor analysis to expand and evolve content.
- Increase website prominence within topical web communities.
- Promote sites through strategic online link-building.
- Analyse campaign performance and devise appropriate actions for maintaining and increasing visibility.<br>
Core Skills Required:
The ideal candidate will have previous experience in online marketing (preferably SEO) and will:
- Have commercial experience, with a proven track record in SEO and link-building - must be able to demonstrate with reference to successful SEO and link-building campaigns.
- Be highly knowledgeable about natural/organic search engine optimisation tactics and how web metrics are tracked.
- Be able to analyse changes in the Google algorithm and understand how to adjust website content and structure to stay up to date. You should be current with the changes and ongoing developments affecting the major search engines, specifically Google, and understand how to re-engineer website content and structure to benefit accordingly.
- Have knowledge of how to use PR, blogging, social book marking, affiliate campaigns, and other current legitimate SEO techniques.
- Be fully aware of all SEO (Search Engine Optimisation) techniques, the latest technologies and methods.
- Be a problem solver - able to spot aberrations in trends.
- Make solid recommendations on SEO strategy and traffic growth.
- Have strong technical skills and be conceptually strong with commercial experience and a sound understanding of the search engine landscape.
- A very keen eye to detail.
- An excellent understanding of the English language.
- Software / Application Knowledge
Before applying, we would also request that you have:
Good knowledge of HTML/DHTML, CSS, JavaScript, RSS, XML and an understanding of Relational Database Systems. ASP / PHP, technology knowledge would be advantageous.
Salary range: 16-20K GBP
Closing date: Unknown
More info about the company from: [www.thuk.co.uk]
Contact: Send resumes to jobs[at]thuk.co.uk
Country Marketing Manager
Job Title: Country Marketing Manager - Google
Job Reference #: Unknown
Position Type: Full Time
Name of employer: Google
Location: Sydney, Australia
Date Posted: November 2007
Position description:
Do you love Google? Interested in learning more about one of the most cutting-edge technology companies in the world? We are looking for flexible, hardworking, experienced people, passionate about Google, to analyze, measure, position, package, and promote Google's product and business offerings in Australia.
Major responsibilities:
- Build and manage a world class team to handle all of Google marketing efforts in the region.
- Lead the development of Google's marketing plans for consumer, advertiser and publisher products in Australia, working closely with cross functional teams in the region and around the world.
- Ensure the monitoring of consumer, industry and competitive behaviour in Australia and provide local market expertise to the Google team.
- Create the Australia agency strategy, solicit and evaluate agency bids, and manage agency relationships.
- Drive the implementation of marketing campaigns including:
- Direct marketing, affiliate marketing, online/offline advertising and promotions.
- Marketing communications materials including sales collateral, merchandise, print and online advertising, email newsletters and blogs.
- Trade shows and industry events and advise where company participation or sponsorship would be appropriate.
- Standalone Google events and workshops, where appropriate.
- Co-marketing, reseller and other third party relationships.
- Ongoing retention programs for consumers, advertisers and publishers.
- Local market research.
- Effectively champion the needs of the local markets.
- Contribute pro-actively to the overall development of Google through ideas and creativity based on solid market and sector knowledge.
- Evaluate marketing opportunities and initiate programs to increase awareness and usage of Google products.
- Oversee the Australia marketing budget.
Requirements:
- MBA or masters preferred.
- Fluent in English.
- Minimum 8-10 years marketing experience in the Australia market.
- 3-5 years Internet, online services/media industry experience.
- Minimum 4 years business-to-business marketing experience.
- Strong aptitude for determining the optimal way to position products in the market.
- Understanding of the search, online advertising, or web publishing markets.
- Understanding of Google's strategic and competitive position.
- Proven ability to deliver outstanding and highly innovative marketing achievements with limited budgets.
- A proven track record of increasing awareness, product usage and revenue through well-executed marketing efforts.
- Thorough knowledge of on/offline advertising, tracking and reporting.
- Strong leadership skills.
- Entrepreneurial and thrives in fast-paced and dynamic environments.
- Motivated and creative with the ability to self-manage.
- Excellent oral and written communication skills.
- Project management skills and the ability to multitask across projects and products.
- Demonstrated excellence with agency and client relations.
- Thorough knowledge of off/online advertising planning, tracking and reporting.
- Strong aptitude for determining the optimal way to position products in the market.
- Understanding of the search, online advertising, or web publishing markets.
- Understanding of Google's strategic and competitive position.
- Team player able to work on multi-part projects with multiple teams and able to ensure that local and global project deadlines and budgets are met.
- Strong computer application skills including PowerPoint, Excel and MS Office.
Salary range: Unknown
Closing date: Unknown
More info from: [www.google.com.au]
Contact: Send resumes via online form [www.google.com]
"Talent is cheaper than table salt. What separates the talented individual from the successful one is a lot of hard work."
Stephen King
$50 Discount: Search Engine College
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2007 saw us reach the significant milestone of having students enrolled in 30 countries. Our massive growth has resulted in more work for our tutors and administrative staff and also prompted the need to hire more staff. As a result, we will be increasing the cost of our courses early in 2008.
So if you have been thinking about enrolling at Search Engine College but just haven't gotten around to it yet, December will be your last chance to enroll at our current prices. You'll have 12 months to complete your course from when you first enter our online classroom, so even if you don't think you have time to study right now, you can enroll at 2007 prices and study whenever you have time in 2008.
Not only that, but if you enroll from this page, you can snap up one of our individual certification courses for $50 off the regular retail price. What the heck, it's the holidays, right?
But this discount is only available until midnight Dec 31 and you must buy from the link above and choose the coupon code SECMEMBER from the drop-down list as instructed.
Happy Studying!
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FAQ 1: What is the best way to optimize a Flash site?
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Dear Kalena... 
I've got a Web design company, and some clients ask me about SEO. One client has an all Flash designed web site. I've read about Javascript SWFObject and a DIV with search engine accessible primary content. But, is it really a good technique? Some people say it can be dangerous and penalized. What's the truth? Can you help me?
Roberto
Dear Roberto
Adobe Dreamweaver came out with some search-friendly Flash option a few years ago, but it's still pretty poor, in my opinion. If you have to use Flash, you're best off calling it from a separate (small) file to your search friendly page, which sounds like the method you mention. Nothing dodgy about that.
Better still, let the viewer decide: give them a Flash version and a flat HTML version and let them pick. Search engines will always index the flat version so your bases are covered.
Kalena
FAQ 2: Why have our most popular pages disappeared from Google?
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Dear Kalena... 
Thanks again for your help a couple of years ago. I need some more advice now and I don't even know where to start troubleshooting. About a week ago I noticed that the bulk of our most popular pages no longer seem to be on Google's radar. I'm talking about pages that used to show up in the top 10 results for typical searches in our industry. Currently, those pages don't show up AT ALL in Google's results, or Google offers a comparatively irrelevant page, like our home page or links page that might happen to have the keywords in question.
This problem is only with Google, not MSN or Yahoo. Probably began during the last 30 days. Other pages come up in Google SERPs just fine. Also, I checked our Google Webmaster Tools and everything looks OK - sitemap downloaded OK, all pages (including the problem ones) indexed. PR for the problem pages is unchanged (lackluster 2-3, but at least not lowered). The only thing I did different was to use a new sitemap a couple of weeks ago. Any ideas?
Rick
Dear Rick
I'm getting a lot of similar questions to yours at the moment and I'm convinced it is the result of a major tweak Google has made this month to their PageRank algorithm (not to be confused with the Google Toolbar PageRank green bar). Here's my reasoning:
- None of your pages show up in Google's Supplemental Index, indicating those pages haven't been removed from Google's main data-center.
- Google is currently showing 179 pages from your site as being indexed, whereas Yahoo is actually showing over 300 pages indexed, indicating that Google may be suppressing the value of some of your pages. This might clear itself up in the next indexing.
- You didn't tell me the search query that returns the rankings you are talking about, but if you were previously ranking well for those terms and you've not changed the pages, then it's probably an external cause rather than something you did to cause the ranking drops.
Google makes small tweaks to their ranking algorithm on a regular basis. Some of these tweaks involve the addition of code filters to detect and suppress code it sees as artificially influencing your page's relevancy. It may be that the new algorithm includes a new filter that has picked up something on your pages Googlebot doesn't like, for example, excessive keyword repetition or duplicate content. Many of your pages have almost identical content to each other, which could have triggered a suppression filter.
Also, you have quite a large number of backward links showing in Yahoo (over 300) but only 8 showing in Google. It may be that Google has decided many of those backlinks are not relevant and has suppressed any influence they previously had on your rankings. The reciprocal link swapping concept you use on your site and the advice you give to potential link partners is quite flawed. It will likely only attract links from very low quality sites, diluting your own site's link popularity as a result. Many of the sites listed on your links page are completely irrelevant to your site. Read my link swapping rant for more info.
Finally, keep in mind that thousands of new pages get added to the Internet every day. Chances are that some of these might be targeting the same keywords and phrases that you are. If those pages are better optimized than yours, yours will naturally be pushed down in the results.
Kalena
FAQ 3: How do you know what keywords are adequate for each page?
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Dear Kalena...  
I am just knowing your blog and I am admiring it because: first, you are a very savvy writer about the SEO subject; second, I can see that you have many readers in the FeedBurner feed; and, well, a PR of 5, not bad at all. My question is this: Many websites have no keywords in their pages. When I see the source code, nada. Of course many of these pages are really sales letters and maybe is not interesting for the owners to concern about meta tags. So, what is the best way to know which keywords are the more adequate for a certain page if I intend to use PPC as an affiliate? Thank you in advance and I would like to read your answer.
Regards,
Jesus in Mexico
Dear Jesus
Keyword research is a tricky business. Sites that don't use keywords within their visible text and META tags may not be looking to rank well in the organic SERPs. Perhaps they are using PPC landing pages, email marketing or social media to drive traffic. Or maybe they just don't know how to optimize their pages.
Targeting keywords is a different kettle of fish for SEO and PPC. If you are researching keywords to use within your regular site pages to help the site rank in the organic search results (SEO), I recommend using services such as KeywordDiscovery and WordTracker. WordTracker actually have a 15 percent discount offer on until the end of November, so be sure to use coupon code us-annual-15 if you decide to subscribe.
If you are looking for the best keywords to use for your PPC campaigns, I would recommend that you use the Google Keyword Tool, the Overture Keyword Selector and/or the keyword suggestion tool built into Yahoo Sponsored Search. If you plan to use landing pages for your PPC campaign, you don't necessarily need to optimize them for crawlers. If the page content is very similar on each, you might want to prevent them from being indexed by search bots anyway.
No matter what keyword research tools you plan to use, start your search by compiling a seed list of keywords and phrases that you imagine your potential customers/visitors might type in to search engines. Ask your family, friends and colleagues for more keyword ideas and build up your seed list until you feel confident you have exhausted all avenues. Then start using the keyword tools. You'll be amazed at how many more keyword combinations you'll find!
Kalena
FAQ 4: How many times can I repeat a keyword before being penalized?
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Dear Kalena... 
How many times are you allowed to repeat a keyword within the H1, H2, H3... tags before you are penalized for it?
Emily
Dear Emily
Ah, this old chestnut. Pardon me for saying so, but you're logic is back-to-front. You are making the classic webmaster mistake of trying to engineer your site with search engines in mind. I know I sound like a broken record, but you should ALWAYS design for your audience first and foremost. Search engines, schmearch engines.
As for your Heading tags, there's no harm in using keywords within them, but create the headings so they make the most sense for your site visitors. Headings are ideal for breaking up the text on a page and making it easier to read. But they've got to be comfortable to read too. If you add too much keyword repetition, it will look and read very poorly. As for the keyword penalty threshold, search engines don't publish precise details of their filters but it's a no-brainer that keyword repetition will be picked up, as will excessive heading tags. Personally, I would stick with a single keyword instance per heading and no more than 2 or 3 heading tags per page.
Kalena
FAQ 5: How do we remove bad publicity about us from the top of the SERPs?
Dear Kalena... 
I have the opposite situation that most people have. What are some specific things we can do to avoid popping up at the top of search lists? We had some wrong accusations/unfair press that has since resolved. However, the articles from two years ago continue to be right there, making it difficult to grow and move forward. I truly appreciate your advice and hope you can help me. THANKS!
Karen
Dear Karen
You don't say whether the negative articles reside on your own site or on sites belonging to 3rd parties, but I'm assuming it's the latter? It's easy to stop certain pages on your own site from being shown in search results. You simply use no-index robots tags on those pages, or block those pages in your robots.txt file.
Having negative press about your company removed from the sites of others is another matter entirely. Have you written to the site owners to request the information be removed? If the negative situation has been resolved, a polite request should do the trick. If that doesn't work and the content of the articles is slanderous or untrue, you could report them to Google.
However, if the content you are concerned about is factual, there's not much you can do except try to outrank the negative content with your own content. Write some pages or blog posts about the issue, addressing it and the way it was resolved, making sure that the pages include the search keywords and phrases triggering the content you are concerned about. Hopefully your content will push the other content down the SERPs and into oblivion.
Kalena
FAQ6: Does social media marketing have a place within the media agency?
Dear Kalena... 
Just found your website today (I think from Sphinn), so I thought I'd see if you can indeed answer my big question, so here it is. Does social media marketing (SMM) have a place within the Media Agency?
As the online marketing industry continues to focus on Social media, with Social Networks getting all the buzz, should traditional media agencies venture into this field? Although I continually see a need for SEO firms to embrace SMM, and forecasts for Social Networks to reach massive spends, I struggle to see how the traditional media agency (which typically manages PPC/Display/Affiliate budgets for clients) fits into social media.
Are there areas where media agencies can benefit & monetize the market? if so, what kind of services do you see them providing and how?
Thanks
Matthew
Dear Matthew
I should start by saying that I have never worked for a dedicated media agency. I've worked for a large Internet agency that managed media spends for clients along the lines you discuss, but not for some years. So I'm not familiar with current service trends in such agencies.
However, I would think that social media marketing will play a big role in the service offerings of both traditional advertising and media agencies over the next year or two. For starters, blogging as a phenomenon is being take up at an unprecedented rate globally, with podcasting and video-blogging gaining momentum. The ability to quickly create and monetize blogs as well as advertise on other people's blogs has created new advertising channels that are laser-focused on niche markets. Being able to pick and choose channels where qualified leads hang out is a media agency's dream scenario! These new channels greatly expand the limited PPC channels that agency clients have been stuck with for the past 8 years or so.
Apart from the blogs themselves, there are the large social media networks such as Digg, Sphinn, Facebook, YouTube MySpace etc. Smart agencies and media firms are already taking advantage of these networks by running viral marketing campaigns and competitions designed to promote their client's brand or product via online word-of-mouth. Word travels fast in cyberspace but bad press travels faster so online reputation management should go hand-in-hand with any social media campaigns.
The book I'm reading at the moment Do It Wrong Quickly by Mike Moran would make excellent reading for media agency staff trying to get a handle on social media and how to leverage it.
Kalena
FAQ7: Is a 3 word search phrase counted as 1, 2 or 3 keywords?
Dear Kalena... 
Just read your fine feature article at Site Pro news in the Nov 28th issue. In your part 2, would it be possible to include the max character length, max# of keywords that you would recommend be used. Also I was wondering if a three word term such as "widgets in FL" would be counted as one keyword or two or three?
Ed
Dear Ed
Thanks so much for your feedback on my article. That article is actually half of a larger one I wrote a few weeks ago and you can expect to see the other half in SiteProNews shortly. I think Part 2 will answer your questions, but this recent piece by Danny Sullivan about the keywords tag might also help.
As for "widgets in Florida", there is no official standard in terms of how many keywords you should target on each page or in each tag, but it is generally very difficult to optimize a single page for more than 3 or 4 keywords or phrases. "Widgets in Florida" can be considered a single search term but also covers the individual keywords "widgets" and "Florida" and the phrase "widgets Florida" (search engines consider "in" to be a stop word) so I would describe that phrase as covering 3 or 4 search terms and I would probably stick with optimizing your page for that single phrase and concentrating on other search queries for your other pages.
Kalena
Got a question? Ask Me:
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