<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<rss version="2.0"
	xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"
	xmlns:wfw="http://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/"
	xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"
	xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"
	xmlns:sy="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/"
	xmlns:slash="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/slash/"
	>

<channel>
	<title>Jetting Blogs &#187; analytics</title>
	<atom:link href="http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/tag/analytics/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
	<link>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com</link>
	<description></description>
	<lastBuildDate>Mon, 16 Aug 2010 18:11:59 +0000</lastBuildDate>
	<language>en</language>
	<sy:updatePeriod>hourly</sy:updatePeriod>
	<sy:updateFrequency>1</sy:updateFrequency>
	<generator>http://wordpress.org/?v=3.0.1</generator>
<xhtml:meta xmlns:xhtml="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" name="robots" content="noindex" />
		<item>
		<title>WordStream Launches SEO Toolset with Advanced Keyword Research and Content Optimization Features</title>
		<link>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/pay-per-click/wordstream-launches-seo-toolset-with-advanced-keyword-research-and-content-optimization-features/</link>
		<comments>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/pay-per-click/wordstream-launches-seo-toolset-with-advanced-keyword-research-and-content-optimization-features/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 20 Apr 2010 15:16:56 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Pay-Per-Click]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[analytics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[PPC]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[president]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[press]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[search-engine]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[search-engines]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[seo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[tool]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[WordStream]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[wordtracker]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/uncategorized/wordstream-launches-seo-toolset-with-advanced-keyword-research-and-content-optimization-features/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[ BOSTON – April 20, 2010 – WordStream, Inc., a provider of keyword tools for pay-per-click (PPC) and search engine optimization (SEO) efforts, announced today that it has released a suite of custom keyword research, keyword analytics and content optimization tools called “WordStream for SEO.” WordStream for SEO is an advanced keyword research toolset that many are calling “keyword research on steroids.” The new software suite provides the same keyword analysis and keyword suggestion capabilities that SEO tools like Wordtracker and Keyword Discovery provide, but it moves light years ahead by layering in high-level keyword analytics, keyword grouping and organization features as well as integrated content authoring tools, all for the same price as other traditional keyword research tools (starting at $99/month). &#8220;For the same money I was paying for Wordtracker&#8217;s keyword search tool, I get all the same functionality I had with Wordtracker, with a deeper keyword database, keyword analytics, and really powerful keyword organization tools layered on top,” says WordStream customer Kwessi Annor. “So making the switch from Wordtracker to WordStream was a no-brainer.&#8221; Rather than presenting a static list of keyword suggestions along with a handful of related keywords, WordStream for SEO provides users with: Traditional Keyword Research : WordStream for SEO generates keyword suggestions that are pulled from a deep database of search engine querie Personalized Keyword Suggestions : WordStream for SEO goes further than traditional keyword generator tools by mining site data to discover relevant keyword opportunities that people are already using to find the site Keyword Analytics : Instead of vague estimates based on popularity, WordStream provides accurate visit and goal data for keywords from the site on a continuous basis Keyword Organization : WordStream for SEO has sophisticated grouping and organization capabilities, which let users segment keyword lists and uncover content opportunities, analyze data in strategic clusters and create a SEO-friendly information architecture Content Authoring : The Blog SEO Tool within WordStream for SEO connects keyword research with content creation efforts to help generate better, more focused, search engine ready blog posts, product pages and sales copy Part of the WordStream for SEO toolset, Blog SEO, is a Firefox plugin that works alongside content management platforms, such as WordPress, Blogger and Drupal. Blog SEO allows users to discover more specific keyword and copy ideas around general or more granular topics as they are writing. The Blog SEO plugin also keeps a running count of each keyword phrase as it is used, working to keep writers “on message” after the initial research stage. “The Blog SEO plugin is the next step in the evolution of smarter SEO tools, and is a must for anyone who creates Web copy on a regular basis, be it a marketer, blogger, PR professional or social media marketer,” says Larry Kim, Founder and Vice President of Product Development at WordStream. “By integrating keyword research with content authoring, this tool helps make your copy more powerful, compelling and SEO-friendly, so it gets found by search engines and persuades more people to take action.” To explore WordStream for SEO and experience the full keyword research and content authoring toolset, you can sign up for a FREE trial by going to: http://www.wordstream.com/seo-free-trial . About WordStream WordStream is a provider of SEO and PPC solutions for continuously optimizing and expanding search marketing efforts, involving large numbers of search engine keywords . WordStream provides a scalable, private, online keyword workbench—which includes a free keyword tool and an AdWords tool —for conducting keyword discovery, keyword research, keyword grouping, search marketing workflow and for turning research into action. WordStream believes that an organization&#8217;s keywords are a valuable, proprietary asset, and that organizing, prioritizing, coordinating and executing of PPC and SEO efforts around a comprehensive, researched and up-to-date keyword taxonomy is the key to search marketing success. Keyword management improves search marketing productivity and enables greater relevance, which enhances the value of search marketing efforts. #### WordStream Press Contact: ?Ken Lyons, Marketing Manager?617-963-0563, klyons@wordstream.com . ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> BOSTON – April 20, 2010 – WordStream, Inc., a provider of keyword tools for pay-per-click (PPC) and search engine optimization (SEO) efforts, announced today that it has released a suite of custom keyword research, keyword analytics and content optimization tools called “WordStream for SEO.” WordStream for SEO is an advanced keyword research toolset that many are calling “keyword research on steroids.” The new software suite provides the same keyword analysis and keyword suggestion capabilities that SEO tools like Wordtracker and Keyword Discovery provide, but it moves light years ahead by layering in high-level keyword analytics, keyword grouping and organization features as well as integrated content authoring tools, all for the same price as other traditional keyword research tools (starting at $99/month). &#8220;For the same money I was paying for Wordtracker&#8217;s keyword search tool, I get all the same functionality I had with Wordtracker, with a deeper keyword database, keyword analytics, and really powerful keyword organization tools layered on top,” says WordStream customer Kwessi Annor. “So making the switch from Wordtracker to WordStream was a no-brainer.&#8221; Rather than presenting a static list of keyword suggestions along with a handful of related keywords, WordStream for SEO provides users with: Traditional Keyword Research : WordStream for SEO generates keyword suggestions that are pulled from a deep database of search engine querie Personalized Keyword Suggestions : WordStream for SEO goes further than traditional keyword generator tools by mining site data to discover relevant keyword opportunities that people are already using to find the site Keyword Analytics : Instead of vague estimates based on popularity, WordStream provides accurate visit and goal data for keywords from the site on a continuous basis Keyword Organization : WordStream for SEO has sophisticated grouping and organization capabilities, which let users segment keyword lists and uncover content opportunities, analyze data in strategic clusters and create a SEO-friendly information architecture Content Authoring : The Blog SEO Tool within WordStream for SEO connects keyword research with content creation efforts to help generate better, more focused, search engine ready blog posts, product pages and sales copy Part of the WordStream for SEO toolset, Blog SEO, is a Firefox plugin that works alongside content management platforms, such as WordPress, Blogger and Drupal. Blog SEO allows users to discover more specific keyword and copy ideas around general or more granular topics as they are writing. The Blog SEO plugin also keeps a running count of each keyword phrase as it is used, working to keep writers “on message” after the initial research stage. “The Blog SEO plugin is the next step in the evolution of smarter SEO tools, and is a must for anyone who creates Web copy on a regular basis, be it a marketer, blogger, PR professional or social media marketer,” says Larry Kim, Founder and Vice President of Product Development at WordStream. “By integrating keyword research with content authoring, this tool helps make your copy more powerful, compelling and SEO-friendly, so it gets found by search engines and persuades more people to take action.” To explore WordStream for SEO and experience the full keyword research and content authoring toolset, you can sign up for a FREE trial by going to: http://www.wordstream.com/seo-free-trial . About WordStream WordStream is a provider of SEO and PPC solutions for continuously optimizing and expanding search marketing efforts, involving large numbers of search engine keywords . WordStream provides a scalable, private, online keyword workbench—which includes a free keyword tool and an AdWords tool —for conducting keyword discovery, keyword research, keyword grouping, search marketing workflow and for turning research into action. WordStream believes that an organization&#8217;s keywords are a valuable, proprietary asset, and that organizing, prioritizing, coordinating and executing of PPC and SEO efforts around a comprehensive, researched and up-to-date keyword taxonomy is the key to search marketing success. Keyword management improves search marketing productivity and enables greater relevance, which enhances the value of search marketing efforts. #### WordStream Press Contact: ?Ken Lyons, Marketing Manager?617-963-0563, klyons@wordstream.com . </p>
<p>Excerpt from:<br />
<a target="_blank" href="http://ppc-conversion-tracking.com/blog/wordstream-launches-seo-toolset-with-advanced-keyword-research-and-content-optimization-features/" title="WordStream Launches SEO Toolset with Advanced Keyword Research and Content Optimization Features">WordStream Launches SEO Toolset with Advanced Keyword Research and Content Optimization Features</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/pay-per-click/wordstream-launches-seo-toolset-with-advanced-keyword-research-and-content-optimization-features/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Max Kalehoff on Social Media Advertising, Blogging &amp; the Future of Paid Search</title>
		<link>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/online-advertising/max-kalehoff-on-social-media-advertising-blogging-the-future-of-paid-search/</link>
		<comments>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/online-advertising/max-kalehoff-on-social-media-advertising-blogging-the-future-of-paid-search/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 14 Apr 2010 10:18:21 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>BlogPostman</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Online Advertising]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pay-Per-Click]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[advertising]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[advice]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[analytics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[goals]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[industry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[microsoft]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[online-marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[search]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[thoughts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[yahoo]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/uncategorized/max-kalehoff-on-social-media-advertising-blogging-the-future-of-paid-search/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[ One of the most insightful voices in the online marketing industry when it comes to advertising is Max Kalehoff of Clickable . I was introduced to Max at a Search Insider Summit conference several years ago with very high regard by David Berkowitz , another intelligent voice in the industry, so I knew immediately he was someone to pay attention to. Max&#8217;s company recently announced the addition of Facebook Advertising to their PPC management platform and he was very kind to take the time to answer several detailed questions about social media advertising on the Clickable platform, the future of the online advertising industry, slimy SEO middlemen, how he stays current and blogging about his Weber grill. 1. You have impressive credentials in the interactive marketing industry with your experience working at Jupiter, comScore and Nielsen. How did you come to work with Clickable? It&#8217;s mostly luck. I&#8217;ve been fortunate to work with a series of successful startup teams and entrepreneurs that played a key role in shaping the Internet. I came to Clickable from Nielsen , which bought our last startup, BuzzMetrics, the pioneer in social media measurement and research. I admire Nielsen and have many close friends there, but I wanted to build things and innovate again in a startup environment. Fred Wilson from Union Square Ventures, a Clickable investor, introduced me to David Kidder and Munish Gandhi, Clickable&#8217;s co-founders. I shared their vision for helping businesses succeed by simplifying online advertising. We quickly became friends and colleagues and the rest is history. What&#8217;s behind your passion for building early stage companies? Ever since I was a little kid, I&#8217;ve been passionate about building things, solving creative problems and exploring new territory. I&#8217;ve always tried to live out those passions through education, work, hobbies and family life. With work, entrepreneurial ventures are the best outlets for those passions. When I was in college, I started two summer businesses. The first was sailboat charter business, and the second was a Web development consultancy. Post college, I spent a few years in the marketing agency business but soon threw myself into technology and Web startup life. There&#8217;s nothing more invigorating than working closely with a group of like-minded, passionate people trying to change the world. Big companies have their purpose, but nimble upstarts attract smart people who crave abstract problems, peer-to-peer learning, mastery, self-imposed discipline and persistence. Upstarts also require a lot of risk-taking, serendipity and authentic discovery. To me, that&#8217;s the only way to live. And given the mess our world is in, we need more of these minds and ventures to invent our way to a better future. For the uninitiated, what is Clickable and what types of companies should be using it? Clickable is a software-as-a-service platform that makes online advertising simple, instant and profitable. Our tools empower beginners to professionals, and companies of all sizes, to maximize their advertising investment. We have three core products: Our flagship Pro tool is a simple dashboard that empowers marketers to manage online advertising with transformational return on investment. Clickable Pro activates instantly with an intuitive experience that makes it easy to manage performance across all major advertising networks, like Google, Yahoo, Microsoft and, now, Facebook. Clickable Pro is complemented by Clickable Assist, a managed service that delivers agile assistance to maximize online advertising success. Finally, Clickable Platform is a white-label solution for big services companies to rapidly deploy large-scale online advertising programs to their local business customers under their own brands. We have a simple purpose that ties everything together: to help businesses survive and thrive by simplifying online advertising success. We pursue that purpose by living up to three core values that comprise our DNA: 7:1 &#8211; The 7:1 ratio of good to bad acknowledges we&#8217;re not perfect. This is a powerful admission that enables us to listen better and constantly improve. This underlies transparency, trust and collaboration with each other and our customers. Simplicity &#8211; Our complex world is desperate for simplicity. Simplicity is difficult, yet it creates value, differentiation and opportunity. That&#8217;s why we make everything simple and beautiful. And &#8211; We are multidimensional. We innovate constantly to perfect our product-to-market fit &#8230; And we are a competitive sales culture that closes business. We celebrate both. Recently the Clickable ad management platform announced the incorporation of Facebook ads.  Being able to track Facebook and search marketing PPC programs side by side seems a significant opportunity for all.  What should advertisers, especially small and medium sized businesses that you serve, expect from social media advertising? What kind of advice do you give to temper expectations? Or do you even need to? We first removed the complexity that prevented marketers from expanding into search networks besides Google AdWords, by introducing a simple interface that marketers could use to manage all of their search marketing campaigns. It&#8217;s become clear that the next place where marketers want a simple, effective solution is on the world&#8217;s largest social network: Facebook. With over 400 million members, Facebook introduces a new way to advertise that complements search marketing. Using extensive demographic targeting criteria, advertisers on Facebook can get out ahead of their customers and create demand that they can later capture with their search campaigns. Marketers can also use Facebook to promote their brands and drive direct sales. Indeed, this is new territory for everyone. We look forward to experimenting with our advertisers to surface best practices and customer profiles that achieve success. In the course of doing business with many SMBs in conjunction with TopRankSMB , a surprising number of marketers mention having &#8220;tried PPC and it didn&#8217;t work&#8221;.  In most cases it&#8217;s due to a lack of knowledge, tools and time to gain the knowledge to run a successful search marketing ad campaign. What advice do you find yourself or your company giving SMBs most often in regard to online advertising? What tips can you give to those just starting out? Indeed, we found that up to 50% of SMBs that try online advertising don&#8217;t succeed, primarily because of complexity. Similarly, a recent study we conducted on SMBs indicated that roughly half don&#8217;t properly track conversions. Knowing conversions is the first step in how an advertiser defines success, whether it&#8217;s generating a lead, having someone fill in a form or making a sale. Tracking conversions is important in directing your ad investment to the keywords that will drive the greatest return on investment. There&#8217;s a lot of talk about efficiency of click-throughs and cost-per-click, but in the end what really matters is the return on your ad spend, and the profitability of your business. Our most common advice? First, make sure you are tracking your results, and don&#8217;t do anything until your analytics are effectively in place. Second, embrace &#8220;goal-based advertising&#8221; &#8212; that is, make investments only toward very specific and realistic business goals. That requires determining the monetary value of your goals, and figuring out which of your services and products have enough potential to justify spend. Finally, invest the time to get educated in PPC and do it right, or hire sometime to do it for you. Otherwise, you will quickly become another statistic in the &#8220;tried PPC and it didn&#8217;t work&#8221; category. That&#8217;s a disadvantageous outcome for most businesses. You really hit a nerve with, Brands: Beware Of Slimy SEO Middlemen Meddling Through Social Media .  The behavior of the SEO account exec you interacted with is strikingly similar to how many media relations people and start-up business owners behave when they pitch us to write about them on Online Marketing Blog. It&#8217;s often a bucket of fake suck-uppiness wrapped around a pitch for a single, short term outcome. It&#8217;s sad because something far more significant could be achieved if they looked past the one &#8220;placement&#8221;. Client demands drive a lot of this behavior and agencies of all types (SEO and PR) often comply. What&#8217;s your advice on creating a more meaningful connection with bloggers? My advice for creating a more meaningful connection with bloggers is the same as my advice for success in life: Give more value than you take. If you provide unselfish value, then people will  become attracted to you and they will advocate you. Advocacy may result in links, testimonials, business referrals, constructive feedback, partnership, loyalty and friendship. But calculating relationships purely based on SEO objectives can quickly become a risk to your brand. It&#8217;s that simple. I like that you can switch from &#8220; My New Weber Grill &#8221; to &#8220; Social and Search Advertising &#8220;.  As an accomplished and long time blogger, what advice do you have for other interactive and marketing types for blogging over the long haul? How has your own blog affected your career and work?  How satisfied are you with your corporate blogging efforts? It&#8217;s important to acknowledge that despite all the experts and gurus, the Social Media and Interactive bible is far from completion. We&#8217;re only in the beginning of the first chapter, and we&#8217;re all students. With that in mind, I think more successful blogging and social media efforts have a defined purpose, goals and room for lots of experimentation. My personal blog is very much me, reflecting the perpetual blur between my professional and home life. They are impossible to separate, and the tension between the two is what makes life interesting. My blog has created an online presence that&#8217;s delivered myriad opportunities. It&#8217;s led to new business, new friendships, introspection and (in some cases) breaktrhough ideas. I also believe a personal blog is the best laboratory to become fluent and personally vested in interactive technologies. The learning I gained from my personal blogging endeavors directly contributed to some of our more successful interactive marketing strategies at Clickable. I know we&#8217;re already into Q2 but what predictions can you offer on the future of paid search for the rest of 2010?  What are your thoughts on: Microsoft and Yahoo, Mobile PPC, sponsored social content or what&#8217;s next for Google and it&#8217;s array of advertising opportunities? Our Q1 2010 analysis of search spending among advertisers on the Clickable Platform reveals that budgets are significantly higher in Q1 versus year-ago, suggesting an economic and advertising rebound. We have seen 75% of our advertisers increase their budgets versus year-ago, while 25% maintained flat or slightly decreased budgets. Based on Q1, we forecast that 2010 full-year search budgets will increase anywhere between 10% and 30% versus 2009. Meanwhile, search budgets are diversifying in terms of network distribution. Microsoft/Bing seems to be gaining ground on Yahoo and Google. Last year, only 5% of customers were using Microsoft/Bing, while currently this percentage is at 9%. We believe one of the big stories in 2010 will be gains in social-network advertising, particularly Facebook. Inefficiencies and behavioral friction have prevented serious experimental dollars to shift, especially among PPC marketers.  Social advertising will grow dramatically in 2010 as the major social networks surface in third-party management tools, as well as improve their own self-serve dashboards. A lot of advertisers are highly interested in seizing new opportunities to connect with customers. Mobile advertising is picking up speed, but won&#8217;t be terribly relevant for most advertisers in 2010. You blog and write for MediaPost which I recommend people read. How do you stay current yourself? Do you have a short list of industry conferences, blogs, newsletters, Twitter handles or books that you&#8217;d recommend? I read a mix of news aggregators and thinkers in strategy, venture capital, tech and media, including: TechMeme , John Hagel ,  Fred Wilson , Umaire Haque , Jeff Jarvis ,  All Things Digital , TechCrunch ,  BusinessInsider , NYTimes Bits and (of course) TopRank&#8217;s Online Marketing Blog . While I write a weekly opinion column for MediaPost , I believe it&#8217;s one of the most thorough and ubiquitous sources of hard news in the interactive advertising industry. I&#8217;m also blessed with a quirky list of friends whom I pay close attention to on Twitter , and they reward me with serendipity, personal tips and reading recommendations. I&#8217;ve not read any good business books in years, so I&#8217;ve abandoned them for fiction, history and poetry. The market is saturated with conferences and good ones are becoming rare; the best ones tend to be grass roots, niche and local, like many Meetups. We co-founded the New York SEMPO Search Meetup , which now has a passionate following of more than 1,000 members. We also founded and run Interesting Cafe, a discussion series that features some of the greatest living innovators in tech, media, culture and science. Small, passionate gatherings like these have the most profound and positive impact. Thanks Max! Max Kalehoff is vice president of marketing for Clickable , a platform that makes online advertising simple, instant and profitable. He also authors AttentionMax . © Online Marketing Blog , 2010. &#124; Max Kalehoff on Social Media Advertising, Blogging &#038; the Future of Paid Search &#124; No comment &#124; http://www.toprankblog.com ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> One of the most insightful voices in the online marketing industry when it comes to advertising is Max Kalehoff of Clickable . I was introduced to Max at a Search Insider Summit conference several years ago with very high regard by David Berkowitz , another intelligent voice in the industry, so I knew immediately he was someone to pay attention to. Max&#8217;s company recently announced the addition of Facebook Advertising to their PPC management platform and he was very kind to take the time to answer several detailed questions about social media advertising on the Clickable platform, the future of the online advertising industry, slimy SEO middlemen, how he stays current and blogging about his Weber grill. 1. You have impressive credentials in the interactive marketing industry with your experience working at Jupiter, comScore and Nielsen. How did you come to work with Clickable? It&#8217;s mostly luck. I&#8217;ve been fortunate to work with a series of successful startup teams and entrepreneurs that played a key role in shaping the Internet. I came to Clickable from Nielsen , which bought our last startup, BuzzMetrics, the pioneer in social media measurement and research. I admire Nielsen and have many close friends there, but I wanted to build things and innovate again in a startup environment. Fred Wilson from Union Square Ventures, a Clickable investor, introduced me to David Kidder and Munish Gandhi, Clickable&#8217;s co-founders. I shared their vision for helping businesses succeed by simplifying online advertising. We quickly became friends and colleagues and the rest is history. What&#8217;s behind your passion for building early stage companies? Ever since I was a little kid, I&#8217;ve been passionate about building things, solving creative problems and exploring new territory. I&#8217;ve always tried to live out those passions through education, work, hobbies and family life. With work, entrepreneurial ventures are the best outlets for those passions. When I was in college, I started two summer businesses. The first was sailboat charter business, and the second was a Web development consultancy. Post college, I spent a few years in the marketing agency business but soon threw myself into technology and Web startup life. There&#8217;s nothing more invigorating than working closely with a group of like-minded, passionate people trying to change the world. Big companies have their purpose, but nimble upstarts attract smart people who crave abstract problems, peer-to-peer learning, mastery, self-imposed discipline and persistence. Upstarts also require a lot of risk-taking, serendipity and authentic discovery. To me, that&#8217;s the only way to live. And given the mess our world is in, we need more of these minds and ventures to invent our way to a better future. For the uninitiated, what is Clickable and what types of companies should be using it? Clickable is a software-as-a-service platform that makes online advertising simple, instant and profitable. Our tools empower beginners to professionals, and companies of all sizes, to maximize their advertising investment. We have three core products: Our flagship Pro tool is a simple dashboard that empowers marketers to manage online advertising with transformational return on investment. Clickable Pro activates instantly with an intuitive experience that makes it easy to manage performance across all major advertising networks, like Google, Yahoo, Microsoft and, now, Facebook. Clickable Pro is complemented by Clickable Assist, a managed service that delivers agile assistance to maximize online advertising success. Finally, Clickable Platform is a white-label solution for big services companies to rapidly deploy large-scale online advertising programs to their local business customers under their own brands. We have a simple purpose that ties everything together: to help businesses survive and thrive by simplifying online advertising success. We pursue that purpose by living up to three core values that comprise our DNA: 7:1 &#8211; The 7:1 ratio of good to bad acknowledges we&#8217;re not perfect. This is a powerful admission that enables us to listen better and constantly improve. This underlies transparency, trust and collaboration with each other and our customers. Simplicity &#8211; Our complex world is desperate for simplicity. Simplicity is difficult, yet it creates value, differentiation and opportunity. That&#8217;s why we make everything simple and beautiful. And &#8211; We are multidimensional. We innovate constantly to perfect our product-to-market fit &#8230; And we are a competitive sales culture that closes business. We celebrate both. Recently the Clickable ad management platform announced the incorporation of Facebook ads.  Being able to track Facebook and search marketing PPC programs side by side seems a significant opportunity for all.  What should advertisers, especially small and medium sized businesses that you serve, expect from social media advertising? What kind of advice do you give to temper expectations? Or do you even need to? We first removed the complexity that prevented marketers from expanding into search networks besides Google AdWords, by introducing a simple interface that marketers could use to manage all of their search marketing campaigns. It&#8217;s become clear that the next place where marketers want a simple, effective solution is on the world&#8217;s largest social network: Facebook. With over 400 million members, Facebook introduces a new way to advertise that complements search marketing. Using extensive demographic targeting criteria, advertisers on Facebook can get out ahead of their customers and create demand that they can later capture with their search campaigns. Marketers can also use Facebook to promote their brands and drive direct sales. Indeed, this is new territory for everyone. We look forward to experimenting with our advertisers to surface best practices and customer profiles that achieve success. In the course of doing business with many SMBs in conjunction with TopRankSMB , a surprising number of marketers mention having &#8220;tried PPC and it didn&#8217;t work&#8221;.  In most cases it&#8217;s due to a lack of knowledge, tools and time to gain the knowledge to run a successful search marketing ad campaign. What advice do you find yourself or your company giving SMBs most often in regard to online advertising? What tips can you give to those just starting out? Indeed, we found that up to 50% of SMBs that try online advertising don&#8217;t succeed, primarily because of complexity. Similarly, a recent study we conducted on SMBs indicated that roughly half don&#8217;t properly track conversions. Knowing conversions is the first step in how an advertiser defines success, whether it&#8217;s generating a lead, having someone fill in a form or making a sale. Tracking conversions is important in directing your ad investment to the keywords that will drive the greatest return on investment. There&#8217;s a lot of talk about efficiency of click-throughs and cost-per-click, but in the end what really matters is the return on your ad spend, and the profitability of your business. Our most common advice? First, make sure you are tracking your results, and don&#8217;t do anything until your analytics are effectively in place. Second, embrace &#8220;goal-based advertising&#8221; &#8212; that is, make investments only toward very specific and realistic business goals. That requires determining the monetary value of your goals, and figuring out which of your services and products have enough potential to justify spend. Finally, invest the time to get educated in PPC and do it right, or hire sometime to do it for you. Otherwise, you will quickly become another statistic in the &#8220;tried PPC and it didn&#8217;t work&#8221; category. That&#8217;s a disadvantageous outcome for most businesses. You really hit a nerve with, Brands: Beware Of Slimy SEO Middlemen Meddling Through Social Media .  The behavior of the SEO account exec you interacted with is strikingly similar to how many media relations people and start-up business owners behave when they pitch us to write about them on Online Marketing Blog. It&#8217;s often a bucket of fake suck-uppiness wrapped around a pitch for a single, short term outcome. It&#8217;s sad because something far more significant could be achieved if they looked past the one &#8220;placement&#8221;. Client demands drive a lot of this behavior and agencies of all types (SEO and PR) often comply. What&#8217;s your advice on creating a more meaningful connection with bloggers? My advice for creating a more meaningful connection with bloggers is the same as my advice for success in life: Give more value than you take. If you provide unselfish value, then people will  become attracted to you and they will advocate you. Advocacy may result in links, testimonials, business referrals, constructive feedback, partnership, loyalty and friendship. But calculating relationships purely based on SEO objectives can quickly become a risk to your brand. It&#8217;s that simple. I like that you can switch from &#8220; My New Weber Grill &#8221; to &#8220; Social and Search Advertising &#8220;.  As an accomplished and long time blogger, what advice do you have for other interactive and marketing types for blogging over the long haul? How has your own blog affected your career and work?  How satisfied are you with your corporate blogging efforts? It&#8217;s important to acknowledge that despite all the experts and gurus, the Social Media and Interactive bible is far from completion. We&#8217;re only in the beginning of the first chapter, and we&#8217;re all students. With that in mind, I think more successful blogging and social media efforts have a defined purpose, goals and room for lots of experimentation. My personal blog is very much me, reflecting the perpetual blur between my professional and home life. They are impossible to separate, and the tension between the two is what makes life interesting. My blog has created an online presence that&#8217;s delivered myriad opportunities. It&#8217;s led to new business, new friendships, introspection and (in some cases) breaktrhough ideas. I also believe a personal blog is the best laboratory to become fluent and personally vested in interactive technologies. The learning I gained from my personal blogging endeavors directly contributed to some of our more successful interactive marketing strategies at Clickable. I know we&#8217;re already into Q2 but what predictions can you offer on the future of paid search for the rest of 2010?  What are your thoughts on: Microsoft and Yahoo, Mobile PPC, sponsored social content or what&#8217;s next for Google and it&#8217;s array of advertising opportunities? Our Q1 2010 analysis of search spending among advertisers on the Clickable Platform reveals that budgets are significantly higher in Q1 versus year-ago, suggesting an economic and advertising rebound. We have seen 75% of our advertisers increase their budgets versus year-ago, while 25% maintained flat or slightly decreased budgets. Based on Q1, we forecast that 2010 full-year search budgets will increase anywhere between 10% and 30% versus 2009. Meanwhile, search budgets are diversifying in terms of network distribution. Microsoft/Bing seems to be gaining ground on Yahoo and Google. Last year, only 5% of customers were using Microsoft/Bing, while currently this percentage is at 9%. We believe one of the big stories in 2010 will be gains in social-network advertising, particularly Facebook. Inefficiencies and behavioral friction have prevented serious experimental dollars to shift, especially among PPC marketers.  Social advertising will grow dramatically in 2010 as the major social networks surface in third-party management tools, as well as improve their own self-serve dashboards. A lot of advertisers are highly interested in seizing new opportunities to connect with customers. Mobile advertising is picking up speed, but won&#8217;t be terribly relevant for most advertisers in 2010. You blog and write for MediaPost which I recommend people read. How do you stay current yourself? Do you have a short list of industry conferences, blogs, newsletters, Twitter handles or books that you&#8217;d recommend? I read a mix of news aggregators and thinkers in strategy, venture capital, tech and media, including: TechMeme , John Hagel ,  Fred Wilson , Umaire Haque , Jeff Jarvis ,  All Things Digital , TechCrunch ,  BusinessInsider , NYTimes Bits and (of course) TopRank&#8217;s Online Marketing Blog . While I write a weekly opinion column for MediaPost , I believe it&#8217;s one of the most thorough and ubiquitous sources of hard news in the interactive advertising industry. I&#8217;m also blessed with a quirky list of friends whom I pay close attention to on Twitter , and they reward me with serendipity, personal tips and reading recommendations. I&#8217;ve not read any good business books in years, so I&#8217;ve abandoned them for fiction, history and poetry. The market is saturated with conferences and good ones are becoming rare; the best ones tend to be grass roots, niche and local, like many Meetups. We co-founded the New York SEMPO Search Meetup , which now has a passionate following of more than 1,000 members. We also founded and run Interesting Cafe, a discussion series that features some of the greatest living innovators in tech, media, culture and science. Small, passionate gatherings like these have the most profound and positive impact. Thanks Max! Max Kalehoff is vice president of marketing for Clickable , a platform that makes online advertising simple, instant and profitable. He also authors AttentionMax . © Online Marketing Blog , 2010. | Max Kalehoff on Social Media Advertising, Blogging &#038; the Future of Paid Search | No comment | http://www.toprankblog.com </p>
<p><img src="http://www.toprankblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/04/max-kalehoff.jpg" title="Max Kalehoff on Social Media Advertising, Blogging &amp; the Future of Paid Search" alt="max kalehoff Max Kalehoff on Social Media Advertising, Blogging &amp; the Future of Paid Search" /></p>
<p>See the rest here:<br />
<a target="_blank" href="http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/OnlineMarketingSEOBlog/~3/PYI9n4VIwq8/" title="Max Kalehoff on Social Media Advertising, Blogging &amp; the Future of Paid Search">Max Kalehoff on Social Media Advertising, Blogging &amp; the Future of Paid Search</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/online-advertising/max-kalehoff-on-social-media-advertising-blogging-the-future-of-paid-search/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Setting and Measuring Goals for Business Blogging</title>
		<link>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/online-advertising/blog-marketing/setting-and-measuring-goals-for-business-blogging/</link>
		<comments>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/online-advertising/blog-marketing/setting-and-measuring-goals-for-business-blogging/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 08 Apr 2010 19:39:41 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Blog Marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pay-Per-Click]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[analytics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[business]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[distribution]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[measuring-goals]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[online-marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[search-engine]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[seo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social-networking]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[time]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[tools]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/uncategorized/setting-and-measuring-goals-for-business-blogging/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[ As companies that realize the value of online marketing understand the need to publish engaging content, one of the most common considerations is a company blog.  Blog software is fundamentally one of the easiest content management software systems to install and use. Of course the software isn&#8217;t magic. The content and ability to reach and engage with customers is a big part of what makes a business blog successful. For those companies that are thinking of starting a blog or reinvesting resources into a company blogging effort that has gone stale, some of the most important questions to ask are:  Have you identified specific goals for the blog? How will you measure success? In sports you can&#8217;t score if there isn&#8217;t a goal and it&#8217;s no different with business blogging.  There are a variety of reasons why publishing ongoing communications that allow readers to interact adds value to a business. Add to that the distribution via RSS that extends the reach of your message and  it&#8217;s easy to see why so many companies start blogging. The failure for many business blogs is centered around not making a connection between business goals, blog specific objectives and most importantly, how meeting customer needs leads to the first two. Here are three key questions to consider as you design your plan for business blogging success: Why start a business blog? What end goals or outcomes can you reasonably expect? There are many good reasons to start a blog. But are those reasons good enough to start and stay blogging for the long haul? Our survey on blogging and SEO showed 90% citing blogging as important, significantly important or a primary SEO tactic. 94% of bloggers reported seeing measurable SEO benefits from blogging within 12 months. Initiate and foster customer engagement Improve coverage by media and bloggers Improve search engine visibility Increase mentions on other blogs, social networking, news, bookmarking and media sites Build thought leadership Provide an informative communication channel Recognize employees, clients, marketing partners and especially brand evangelists How will you know your blogging efforts are successful according to those goals? How are you measuring blogging success? We ran a poll last year with our readers that ranked their most important measures of blogging success. Here is the distribution: Engagement: comments, links 36% Improved brand recognition 31% Build thought leadership 31% Search engine rankings 31% Better communicate with customers 30% Traffic to the blog 27% Coverage by media and other blogs 18% Traffic to the corporate web site 16% Sales leads 16% Industry Recognition 13% Sell products 2% Improved customer satisfaction 11% Page views 9% Time on Site 6% Ad revenue on the blog 5% What tools are you using to measure blog performance? Goals for business and the blog are great but it&#8217;s essential to have the right tools in place for analytics. One of the biggest mistakes is to rely on things like Google Alerts. Web analytics (Google Analytics, Woopra, Clicky, etc) Feedburner Social media monitoring tools Link analysis tools Comment tracking tools Clipping services Forum conversation tracking tools It&#8217;s fundamental, this notion of setting goals, understanding outcomes and the tools needed to measure. But you know the saying, &#8220;Common sense is the least common thing on Earth.&#8221;  Companies can achieve great return on investment with the right plan and leadership in a blogging effort. The key is to do the baseline work to build a foundation upon which it can grow and succeed.  Stay the course and leverage both listening and engagement tools to guide content. Develop networks and distribution channels to grow readership and reach. Take the time to really understand the impact of data provided by reporting tools and create reports for executives that highlight business goals. What are some of the challenges you&#8217;ve faced with setting, measuring and reaching business goals through corporate blogging? Have you started a business blog only to shut it down? Have your company blogging efforts been successful beyond expectations? © Online Marketing Blog , 2010. &#124; Setting and Measuring Goals for Business Blogging &#124; No comment &#124; http://www.toprankblog.com ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> As companies that realize the value of online marketing understand the need to publish engaging content, one of the most common considerations is a company blog.  Blog software is fundamentally one of the easiest content management software systems to install and use. Of course the software isn&#8217;t magic. The content and ability to reach and engage with customers is a big part of what makes a business blog successful. For those companies that are thinking of starting a blog or reinvesting resources into a company blogging effort that has gone stale, some of the most important questions to ask are:  Have you identified specific goals for the blog? How will you measure success? In sports you can&#8217;t score if there isn&#8217;t a goal and it&#8217;s no different with business blogging.  There are a variety of reasons why publishing ongoing communications that allow readers to interact adds value to a business. Add to that the distribution via RSS that extends the reach of your message and  it&#8217;s easy to see why so many companies start blogging. The failure for many business blogs is centered around not making a connection between business goals, blog specific objectives and most importantly, how meeting customer needs leads to the first two. Here are three key questions to consider as you design your plan for business blogging success: Why start a business blog? What end goals or outcomes can you reasonably expect? There are many good reasons to start a blog. But are those reasons good enough to start and stay blogging for the long haul? Our survey on blogging and SEO showed 90% citing blogging as important, significantly important or a primary SEO tactic. 94% of bloggers reported seeing measurable SEO benefits from blogging within 12 months. Initiate and foster customer engagement Improve coverage by media and bloggers Improve search engine visibility Increase mentions on other blogs, social networking, news, bookmarking and media sites Build thought leadership Provide an informative communication channel Recognize employees, clients, marketing partners and especially brand evangelists How will you know your blogging efforts are successful according to those goals? How are you measuring blogging success? We ran a poll last year with our readers that ranked their most important measures of blogging success. Here is the distribution: Engagement: comments, links 36% Improved brand recognition 31% Build thought leadership 31% Search engine rankings 31% Better communicate with customers 30% Traffic to the blog 27% Coverage by media and other blogs 18% Traffic to the corporate web site 16% Sales leads 16% Industry Recognition 13% Sell products 2% Improved customer satisfaction 11% Page views 9% Time on Site 6% Ad revenue on the blog 5% What tools are you using to measure blog performance? Goals for business and the blog are great but it&#8217;s essential to have the right tools in place for analytics. One of the biggest mistakes is to rely on things like Google Alerts. Web analytics (Google Analytics, Woopra, Clicky, etc) Feedburner Social media monitoring tools Link analysis tools Comment tracking tools Clipping services Forum conversation tracking tools It&#8217;s fundamental, this notion of setting goals, understanding outcomes and the tools needed to measure. But you know the saying, &#8220;Common sense is the least common thing on Earth.&#8221;  Companies can achieve great return on investment with the right plan and leadership in a blogging effort. The key is to do the baseline work to build a foundation upon which it can grow and succeed.  Stay the course and leverage both listening and engagement tools to guide content. Develop networks and distribution channels to grow readership and reach. Take the time to really understand the impact of data provided by reporting tools and create reports for executives that highlight business goals. What are some of the challenges you&#8217;ve faced with setting, measuring and reaching business goals through corporate blogging? Have you started a business blog only to shut it down? Have your company blogging efforts been successful beyond expectations? © Online Marketing Blog , 2010. | Setting and Measuring Goals for Business Blogging | No comment | http://www.toprankblog.com </p>
<p><img src="http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/04/f202460613goals.jpg-150x91.jpg" title="Setting and Measuring Goals for Business Blogging" alt="f202460613goals.jpg 150x91 Setting and Measuring Goals for Business Blogging" /></p>
<p>Go here to see the original:<br />
<a target="_blank" href="http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/OnlineMarketingSEOBlog/~3/G9mRd9th4RY/" title="Setting and Measuring Goals for Business Blogging">Setting and Measuring Goals for Business Blogging</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/online-advertising/blog-marketing/setting-and-measuring-goals-for-business-blogging/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>10 Reasons SES New York is a Must-Attend Marketing Conference</title>
		<link>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/online-advertising/10-reasons-ses-new-york-is-a-must-attend-marketing-conference/</link>
		<comments>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/online-advertising/10-reasons-ses-new-york-is-a-must-attend-marketing-conference/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 18 Mar 2010 12:25:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>BlogPostman</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Internet Marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Online Advertising]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pay-Per-Click]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[analytics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ecommerce]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[industry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[knowledge]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[online-marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[search]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[search-engine]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sesny]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[starbucks]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/uncategorized/10-reasons-ses-new-york-is-a-must-attend-marketing-conference/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[ Let&#8217;s get it out of the way that Online Marketing Blog is a media sponsor for Search Engine Strategies conferences and also that I serve on the advisory board . In fact, the blog you&#8217;re reading right now was the very first blog to be recognized as a media sponsor by a major marketing industry conference. Specifically, Search Engine Strategies thanks to Matt McGowan . As a long time speaker at SES New York in combination with our other involvement, you could say I have a pretty strong opinion of this event. Here are 10 reasons why I think SES New York is a &#8220;must attend&#8221; marketing conference: 1. Keynotes! Starting the day with big picture content is a great way to get the synapse firing in your brain. Well, that and a few cups of coffee from the Starbucks inside the Hilton.  With David Meerman Scott &#8211; Author of the New Rules of Marketing &#038; PR, Avinash Kaushik &#8211; Analytics Guru &#038; Author from Google and Yusuf Mehdi SVP from Bing, you are sure to get riveting insight about the future of internet marketing and where companies should be focusing their efforts in the long term. David Meerman Scott is an excellent speaker and the release of the second edition of his groundbreaking book is very timely as the intersection of Search, Social Media and PR converge.  The best internet marketing campaigns start and scale based on good insight from analytics and what better person to share the wisdom that Avinash Kaushik .  Bing has experienced the best growth it&#8217;s ever had in the past few months and the search marketing industry is starting to take it more seriously. Yusuf Mehdi is the man to tell the story of how Microsoft plans to continue that growth. 2.  Connect with the Industry I&#8217;ve heard that over 5,000 online marketing professionals will be attending SES New York this year. That&#8217;s 5,000 people you have the potential to network with including industry peers, rock stars, potential candidates to hire, potential employers to be hired by, possible partners, investors, news media and of course, the coopetition. Take a look at the conference agenda and you&#8217;ll see an excellent mix of smart marketers from agencies and from major brands like New York Times, Autodesk, IBM and Facebook. Plus you might get to meet people like Mike Grehan , VP and Global Content Director for for Search Engine Watch, ClickZ and Search Engine Strategies. 3.  All the Knowledge You Can Absorb There are over 70+ sessions over 3 days covering the gamut of internet marketing topics from the expected SEO and Social Media to Analytics, Conversion Optimization, Geeky technical sessions, Advertising, Real Time search and one of my favorites, the Business Track. The conference is also sandwiched with a day of hands on training before and after the conference for those that want more than just 12 minute snippets from each speaker. Whether you&#8217;re new to the field of internet marketing or whether you&#8217;re looking for more advanced tactics, there&#8217;s a session for just about everyone. And that&#8217;s not easy to do. Just ask Stewart Quealy , Marilyn Crafts or Jackie Ortez . 4. It&#8217;s New York! As the CEO of an agency that pays for employees to attend conferences, you might think it a bit frivolous to suggest attending an event because it&#8217;s in New York, but the attraction of one of the world&#8217;s greatest cities brings a variety of people and a unique conference experience.  Why not get smarter in a city that can offer you an experience unmatched anywhere?  Whether you&#8217;re a fan of the Falafel stand outside the Hilton (be sure to go to the one with a long line) seeing shows on Broadway ( Wicked was Excellent. Equus was ah, different) or the lights of Times Square , that&#8217;s a never ending supply of new things to see and do in the big apple. That attraction brings together a group of international conference attendees that is unlike events in other cities and well worth taking advantage of. 5. Conference Box Lunches Maybe not! Whether you decide to go with the lunch offered by the conference or you decide to arrange meetings during lunch at one of the many, many restaurants in the area around the Hilton New York, networking over food is something I&#8217;ve found to be incredibly productive. Find a table near full of people, sit down and introduce yourself. Ask lots of questions, be a great listener and people will remember you more than if you try and &#8220;sell&#8221; everyone you meet. Sure, you may network at bars and clubs during after-conference parties, but the music is often so loud you can&#8217;t hear what people are saying and let&#8217;s face it: When SEO&#8217;s get near a bar, distractions are plentiful. The focus isn&#8217;t going to be on business. Connect with people during the day and suggest coffee, lunch or dinner before going out. Then have fun (in moderation of course) with them in the evening.  It will likely be the best networking decision you make during the conference. 6. Create Content Attending conferences can be one of the most productive content opportunities because there are so many ways to do it.  If a session is interesting, take notes &#8211; aka live blogging . If you meet someone smart and interesting, take notes. If you see something sensational at a networking party, no need to take notes on that. Logging what you learn as you hear it can help retention but it also becomes a source of content that you can use for blog posts, sharing with the team back in the office or with your clients. Content doesn&#8217;t need to be limited to text either. If you meet a smart industry expert, ask if they mind doing a short video interview. You&#8217;re in New York after all, take advantage of the city backdrop (sans the car horn and siren noise) to shoot a series of videos with people you respect in the industry.  Those videos can be de-constructed into a variety of content types for digital asset optimization and other SEO tactics. Photos are also useful not only for company blog posts but for use as stock photos long after SESNY has ended. In fact, the photo of Grand Central Station above was taken while I was in New York for a SES conference last year. 7. Live Consulting On day 3 of SES NY there is a track called &#8220;Clinics&#8221;, which could also be called, &#8220;Free Consulting for My Business&#8221;.  There are clinics covering Paid Search, Ecommerce, Conversions and Big Sites/Big Brand Sites. These sessions are a great opportunity for companies to have their web sites or advertising reviewed by industry experts and get recommendations. Keep in mind, that advice is often direct and to the point &#8211; yet polite.  Panelists have been solving web site and online advertising problems for years and they&#8217;ll be able to see issues immediately and share possible solutions just as quickly. The advice a company might get in one of the clinics can be worth several times the cost of attending the conference. 8. Find New Resources to Grow Your Business At SES New York, the exhibit hall will have over 100 companies presenting their products and services.  Cruising the booths and talking to reps (early in the conference, not late) is a great way to learn about companies that might have just the service you need to make your marketing more effective. Heck, if you&#8217;re really good, you might be able to reverse roles and pick up a few exhibitors as clients, depending on what it is that your company does. Finding consultants and services isn&#8217;t limited to the exhibit hall. You can find great resources by attending sessions where representatives from some of the top companies in the industry will be sharing their insights and expertise. Hearing an employee speak gives you some insight into their processes and how they approach working with clients.   You can also find potential employees by networking with speakers, either directly or through referral. 9. Digital Asset Optimization DAO is the name of the panel I&#8217;m presenting on, day 1 of the conference at 10:45 am right after the keynote from David Meerman Scott. Optimizing for the new Google takes a unique and creative approach to content strategy and SEO.  Optimizing and promoting Digital Assets present a tremendous opportunity to grow business through organic search. My presentation will focus on successful DAO implementations for a small business, a publisher/ecommerce site and a very large company.  Plus I&#8217;ll be offering a new TopRank Guide for download.  You won&#8217;t want to miss this session! 10.  I&#8217;ve saved the best for last What are YOUR favorite reasons for attending SES New York? Whatever it is that you&#8217;re considering getting out of SES New York, be sure to get more information on the session agenda here. ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> Let&#8217;s get it out of the way that Online Marketing Blog is a media sponsor for Search Engine Strategies conferences and also that I serve on the advisory board . In fact, the blog you&#8217;re reading right now was the very first blog to be recognized as a media sponsor by a major marketing industry conference. Specifically, Search Engine Strategies thanks to Matt McGowan . As a long time speaker at SES New York in combination with our other involvement, you could say I have a pretty strong opinion of this event. Here are 10 reasons why I think SES New York is a &#8220;must attend&#8221; marketing conference: 1. Keynotes! Starting the day with big picture content is a great way to get the synapse firing in your brain. Well, that and a few cups of coffee from the Starbucks inside the Hilton.  With David Meerman Scott &#8211; Author of the New Rules of Marketing &#038; PR, Avinash Kaushik &#8211; Analytics Guru &#038; Author from Google and Yusuf Mehdi SVP from Bing, you are sure to get riveting insight about the future of internet marketing and where companies should be focusing their efforts in the long term. David Meerman Scott is an excellent speaker and the release of the second edition of his groundbreaking book is very timely as the intersection of Search, Social Media and PR converge.  The best internet marketing campaigns start and scale based on good insight from analytics and what better person to share the wisdom that Avinash Kaushik .  Bing has experienced the best growth it&#8217;s ever had in the past few months and the search marketing industry is starting to take it more seriously. Yusuf Mehdi is the man to tell the story of how Microsoft plans to continue that growth. 2.  Connect with the Industry I&#8217;ve heard that over 5,000 online marketing professionals will be attending SES New York this year. That&#8217;s 5,000 people you have the potential to network with including industry peers, rock stars, potential candidates to hire, potential employers to be hired by, possible partners, investors, news media and of course, the coopetition. Take a look at the conference agenda and you&#8217;ll see an excellent mix of smart marketers from agencies and from major brands like New York Times, Autodesk, IBM and Facebook. Plus you might get to meet people like Mike Grehan , VP and Global Content Director for for Search Engine Watch, ClickZ and Search Engine Strategies. 3.  All the Knowledge You Can Absorb There are over 70+ sessions over 3 days covering the gamut of internet marketing topics from the expected SEO and Social Media to Analytics, Conversion Optimization, Geeky technical sessions, Advertising, Real Time search and one of my favorites, the Business Track. The conference is also sandwiched with a day of hands on training before and after the conference for those that want more than just 12 minute snippets from each speaker. Whether you&#8217;re new to the field of internet marketing or whether you&#8217;re looking for more advanced tactics, there&#8217;s a session for just about everyone. And that&#8217;s not easy to do. Just ask Stewart Quealy , Marilyn Crafts or Jackie Ortez . 4. It&#8217;s New York! As the CEO of an agency that pays for employees to attend conferences, you might think it a bit frivolous to suggest attending an event because it&#8217;s in New York, but the attraction of one of the world&#8217;s greatest cities brings a variety of people and a unique conference experience.  Why not get smarter in a city that can offer you an experience unmatched anywhere?  Whether you&#8217;re a fan of the Falafel stand outside the Hilton (be sure to go to the one with a long line) seeing shows on Broadway ( Wicked was Excellent. Equus was ah, different) or the lights of Times Square , that&#8217;s a never ending supply of new things to see and do in the big apple. That attraction brings together a group of international conference attendees that is unlike events in other cities and well worth taking advantage of. 5. Conference Box Lunches Maybe not! Whether you decide to go with the lunch offered by the conference or you decide to arrange meetings during lunch at one of the many, many restaurants in the area around the Hilton New York, networking over food is something I&#8217;ve found to be incredibly productive. Find a table near full of people, sit down and introduce yourself. Ask lots of questions, be a great listener and people will remember you more than if you try and &#8220;sell&#8221; everyone you meet. Sure, you may network at bars and clubs during after-conference parties, but the music is often so loud you can&#8217;t hear what people are saying and let&#8217;s face it: When SEO&#8217;s get near a bar, distractions are plentiful. The focus isn&#8217;t going to be on business. Connect with people during the day and suggest coffee, lunch or dinner before going out. Then have fun (in moderation of course) with them in the evening.  It will likely be the best networking decision you make during the conference. 6. Create Content Attending conferences can be one of the most productive content opportunities because there are so many ways to do it.  If a session is interesting, take notes &#8211; aka live blogging . If you meet someone smart and interesting, take notes. If you see something sensational at a networking party, no need to take notes on that. Logging what you learn as you hear it can help retention but it also becomes a source of content that you can use for blog posts, sharing with the team back in the office or with your clients. Content doesn&#8217;t need to be limited to text either. If you meet a smart industry expert, ask if they mind doing a short video interview. You&#8217;re in New York after all, take advantage of the city backdrop (sans the car horn and siren noise) to shoot a series of videos with people you respect in the industry.  Those videos can be de-constructed into a variety of content types for digital asset optimization and other SEO tactics. Photos are also useful not only for company blog posts but for use as stock photos long after SESNY has ended. In fact, the photo of Grand Central Station above was taken while I was in New York for a SES conference last year. 7. Live Consulting On day 3 of SES NY there is a track called &#8220;Clinics&#8221;, which could also be called, &#8220;Free Consulting for My Business&#8221;.  There are clinics covering Paid Search, Ecommerce, Conversions and Big Sites/Big Brand Sites. These sessions are a great opportunity for companies to have their web sites or advertising reviewed by industry experts and get recommendations. Keep in mind, that advice is often direct and to the point &#8211; yet polite.  Panelists have been solving web site and online advertising problems for years and they&#8217;ll be able to see issues immediately and share possible solutions just as quickly. The advice a company might get in one of the clinics can be worth several times the cost of attending the conference. 8. Find New Resources to Grow Your Business At SES New York, the exhibit hall will have over 100 companies presenting their products and services.  Cruising the booths and talking to reps (early in the conference, not late) is a great way to learn about companies that might have just the service you need to make your marketing more effective. Heck, if you&#8217;re really good, you might be able to reverse roles and pick up a few exhibitors as clients, depending on what it is that your company does. Finding consultants and services isn&#8217;t limited to the exhibit hall. You can find great resources by attending sessions where representatives from some of the top companies in the industry will be sharing their insights and expertise. Hearing an employee speak gives you some insight into their processes and how they approach working with clients.   You can also find potential employees by networking with speakers, either directly or through referral. 9. Digital Asset Optimization DAO is the name of the panel I&#8217;m presenting on, day 1 of the conference at 10:45 am right after the keynote from David Meerman Scott. Optimizing for the new Google takes a unique and creative approach to content strategy and SEO.  Optimizing and promoting Digital Assets present a tremendous opportunity to grow business through organic search. My presentation will focus on successful DAO implementations for a small business, a publisher/ecommerce site and a very large company.  Plus I&#8217;ll be offering a new TopRank Guide for download.  You won&#8217;t want to miss this session! 10.  I&#8217;ve saved the best for last What are YOUR favorite reasons for attending SES New York? Whatever it is that you&#8217;re considering getting out of SES New York, be sure to get more information on the session agenda here. </p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/online-advertising/10-reasons-ses-new-york-is-a-must-attend-marketing-conference/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>11 Free Tools for Social Media Optimization</title>
		<link>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/pay-per-click/11-free-tools-for-social-media-optimization/</link>
		<comments>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/pay-per-click/11-free-tools-for-social-media-optimization/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 10 Mar 2010 13:28:30 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Pay-Per-Click]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[analytics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[domain-name]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[firefox]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[media]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[optimization]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[seo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social seo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[time]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/uncategorized/11-free-tools-for-social-media-optimization/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[ Plenty of bloggers are talking about the inevitable intersection of social media marketing and search engine optimization. Heck, we&#8217;ve been blogging about SMO since 2006! Keyword optimized social content and channels of promotion provide abundant signals to search engines for improved visibility on standard, social and real-time search. The changing nature of social media marketing and optimization create the need for tools whether for research, marketing and promotion or analytics. Here are 11 social media and SEO tools you might find useful: howsociable.com – Social visibility score knowem.com – Profile building tool Social Media for Firefox &#8211; Build a powerful social profile on social news &#038; bookmarking sites semrush.com – Find competitor organic search rankings Google Insights &#8211; Keyword demand trends Page Inlink Analyzer &#8211; Analyze inbound links, their Delicious bookmarks &#038; keyword tags majesticseo.com – Historical back-link tracking trackur.com – Social media monitoring socialmention.com – Real-time social search &#038; scoring, social keyword research bit.ly – Search friendly URL shortening with analytics analytics.postrank.com – Track social engagement with combined Google &#038; social analytics Below are screen shots of each tool with a more detailed description of how you might use them. HowSociable is a useful tool to quickly gauge the social presence of a particular keyword or brand name. Agencies like TopRank Marketing will use this kind of tool (customized) to take snapshots of customer social presence metrics for social media optimization programs. For each social site polled, you can clickthrough to see specific mentions.  This is a characteristic of more advanced social media monitoring tools, but for those that want a quick glimpse, HowSocialble is easy to use and the price is right, just like these free social media monitoring tools. However, if you want more comprehensive brand search and monitoring, then a paid social media measurement tool is worth the investment. KnowEm is both a free and a paid service that will help you easily and quickly check whether your brand terms or other keywords have been registered as social profiles on a wide variety of social media web sites. Everything from blogging platforms to social news and bookmarking services are included. If you don&#8217;t want to complete all those profiles yourself, you can pay knowem to do it for you.  Companies invest a lot in building their brand, so this tool is helpful both for creating off site promotion channels as well as guarding against brand name squatters. Social Media for Firefox is the only browser addon in our list and can be a handy tool to identify upcoming news items that are gaining popularity on certain social news and bookmarking services. A big part of building a more influential user profile is to be a consistent source of submissions for articles that become popular. This addon helps identify articles that are becoming popular on services like Digg, Reddit and StumbleUpon giving you a heads up to submit to other services.  The logic is that if a news item becomes popular on one service it has a good chance of becoming popular on others.  Relevance, timing and focus are key as is patience for this kind of tactic. SEMRush is an interesting tool for identifying the keyword visibility, both organic and PPC, on Google for pretty much any domain name you might be curious about. Your own or competitors for example. A common question for marketers is, &#8220;What are my competitors optimizing for?&#8221;. This tool helps uncover that insight and in combination with other standard and social keyword research, can be very helpful insight in a social media optimization program. Google Insights for Search is a handy tool to research trends in popularity of various keywords on their own or in combination.  Filters for search type, geographic location, industry or topical category and timeframe allow you to refine some pretty useful information about what&#8217;s in demand. Eric Miraglia &#8217;s Inlink Analyzer is a back link analysis tool based on Yahoo&#8217;s Site Explorer that not only counts and displays source links to a particular URL, but it also shows if the source links were bookmarked on Delicious and what keyword tags were used. This kind of insight can be quite useful for understanding the relationship between social keywords and link popularity. It would be nice if there was a CSV export option. Majestic SEO is easily one of the most powerful and useful link analysis tools available. There is a free version that gives you link acquisition counts over time and if you are a site owner, you can get full reporting for your site once you validate it.  If you use the paid service, you can get the juicy link details on your competition.  This tools is useful for finding high impact links for standard SEO but it&#8217;s also useful for finding out which social media sites your site or competitors&#8217; site are getting  the most links from.  Also, which of your own social destinations (blog, Facebook, Twitter, etc) are getting inbound links and from where. Andy Beal&#8217;s Trackur service is a very easy to use social media monitoring tool that offers a free version that will satisfy many beginners in the social media optimization space.  Social media monitoring services are keyword based, (queries and negative or exclusionary) and that means some very useful information about how popular certain keyword concepts are on the social web. Of course you can use it to monitor what people are saying about your brand, identify a certain measure of influence and where they&#8217;re saying it. But seeing social keyword popularity trends can be quite useful for taking advantage of real-time marketing opportunities. SocialMention is a free real time and social search tool that offers an array of search options (just blogs, just forums, just bookmarks or all) and output in the search results. You can get an indication of basic sentiment and the top social keywords associated with your query. As a free service, you don&#8217;t setup an account and save your search results, but you can easily download them into a spreadsheet. This is probably one of the most useful, free social search tools online. Bit.ly URL shortening is very handy since they&#8217;re included as a default service on Twitter and many other Twitter applications. Bit.ly is rock solid reliable with uptime, which is pretty critical when you&#8217;re relying on their URL redirect to send traffic to whatever it is you&#8217;re promoting. You can also get basic statistics for each URL that your shorten to show how productive the site is where it was shared.  In today&#8217;s succinct social web with Twitter, status updates and micro-content, being able to conserve space with a reliable URL shortener is very helpful. Stats on top of that make this a &#8220;go to&#8221; URL shortening service. PostRank offers a nice measure of engagement at the individual document level and if you pay attention, you can get that data on any web site in their database, not just your own. You can easily see what content on your competitors blogs are getting popular and where.  If you sign up for the PostRank Analytics service, you can incorporate Google Analytics data with social engagement metrics. These are essential comparisons in a social media optimization program and can help you understand where to plan your time on the social web. This is really just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to SEO and Social Media Marketing tools. What low cost or free tools have you found to be effective for social media optimization tasks? ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> Plenty of bloggers are talking about the inevitable intersection of social media marketing and search engine optimization. Heck, we&#8217;ve been blogging about SMO since 2006! Keyword optimized social content and channels of promotion provide abundant signals to search engines for improved visibility on standard, social and real-time search. The changing nature of social media marketing and optimization create the need for tools whether for research, marketing and promotion or analytics. Here are 11 social media and SEO tools you might find useful: howsociable.com – Social visibility score knowem.com – Profile building tool Social Media for Firefox &#8211; Build a powerful social profile on social news &#038; bookmarking sites semrush.com – Find competitor organic search rankings Google Insights &#8211; Keyword demand trends Page Inlink Analyzer &#8211; Analyze inbound links, their Delicious bookmarks &#038; keyword tags majesticseo.com – Historical back-link tracking trackur.com – Social media monitoring socialmention.com – Real-time social search &#038; scoring, social keyword research bit.ly – Search friendly URL shortening with analytics analytics.postrank.com – Track social engagement with combined Google &#038; social analytics Below are screen shots of each tool with a more detailed description of how you might use them. HowSociable is a useful tool to quickly gauge the social presence of a particular keyword or brand name. Agencies like TopRank Marketing will use this kind of tool (customized) to take snapshots of customer social presence metrics for social media optimization programs. For each social site polled, you can clickthrough to see specific mentions.  This is a characteristic of more advanced social media monitoring tools, but for those that want a quick glimpse, HowSocialble is easy to use and the price is right, just like these free social media monitoring tools. However, if you want more comprehensive brand search and monitoring, then a paid social media measurement tool is worth the investment. KnowEm is both a free and a paid service that will help you easily and quickly check whether your brand terms or other keywords have been registered as social profiles on a wide variety of social media web sites. Everything from blogging platforms to social news and bookmarking services are included. If you don&#8217;t want to complete all those profiles yourself, you can pay knowem to do it for you.  Companies invest a lot in building their brand, so this tool is helpful both for creating off site promotion channels as well as guarding against brand name squatters. Social Media for Firefox is the only browser addon in our list and can be a handy tool to identify upcoming news items that are gaining popularity on certain social news and bookmarking services. A big part of building a more influential user profile is to be a consistent source of submissions for articles that become popular. This addon helps identify articles that are becoming popular on services like Digg, Reddit and StumbleUpon giving you a heads up to submit to other services.  The logic is that if a news item becomes popular on one service it has a good chance of becoming popular on others.  Relevance, timing and focus are key as is patience for this kind of tactic. SEMRush is an interesting tool for identifying the keyword visibility, both organic and PPC, on Google for pretty much any domain name you might be curious about. Your own or competitors for example. A common question for marketers is, &#8220;What are my competitors optimizing for?&#8221;. This tool helps uncover that insight and in combination with other standard and social keyword research, can be very helpful insight in a social media optimization program. Google Insights for Search is a handy tool to research trends in popularity of various keywords on their own or in combination.  Filters for search type, geographic location, industry or topical category and timeframe allow you to refine some pretty useful information about what&#8217;s in demand. Eric Miraglia &#8217;s Inlink Analyzer is a back link analysis tool based on Yahoo&#8217;s Site Explorer that not only counts and displays source links to a particular URL, but it also shows if the source links were bookmarked on Delicious and what keyword tags were used. This kind of insight can be quite useful for understanding the relationship between social keywords and link popularity. It would be nice if there was a CSV export option. Majestic SEO is easily one of the most powerful and useful link analysis tools available. There is a free version that gives you link acquisition counts over time and if you are a site owner, you can get full reporting for your site once you validate it.  If you use the paid service, you can get the juicy link details on your competition.  This tools is useful for finding high impact links for standard SEO but it&#8217;s also useful for finding out which social media sites your site or competitors&#8217; site are getting  the most links from.  Also, which of your own social destinations (blog, Facebook, Twitter, etc) are getting inbound links and from where. Andy Beal&#8217;s Trackur service is a very easy to use social media monitoring tool that offers a free version that will satisfy many beginners in the social media optimization space.  Social media monitoring services are keyword based, (queries and negative or exclusionary) and that means some very useful information about how popular certain keyword concepts are on the social web. Of course you can use it to monitor what people are saying about your brand, identify a certain measure of influence and where they&#8217;re saying it. But seeing social keyword popularity trends can be quite useful for taking advantage of real-time marketing opportunities. SocialMention is a free real time and social search tool that offers an array of search options (just blogs, just forums, just bookmarks or all) and output in the search results. You can get an indication of basic sentiment and the top social keywords associated with your query. As a free service, you don&#8217;t setup an account and save your search results, but you can easily download them into a spreadsheet. This is probably one of the most useful, free social search tools online. Bit.ly URL shortening is very handy since they&#8217;re included as a default service on Twitter and many other Twitter applications. Bit.ly is rock solid reliable with uptime, which is pretty critical when you&#8217;re relying on their URL redirect to send traffic to whatever it is you&#8217;re promoting. You can also get basic statistics for each URL that your shorten to show how productive the site is where it was shared.  In today&#8217;s succinct social web with Twitter, status updates and micro-content, being able to conserve space with a reliable URL shortener is very helpful. Stats on top of that make this a &#8220;go to&#8221; URL shortening service. PostRank offers a nice measure of engagement at the individual document level and if you pay attention, you can get that data on any web site in their database, not just your own. You can easily see what content on your competitors blogs are getting popular and where.  If you sign up for the PostRank Analytics service, you can incorporate Google Analytics data with social engagement metrics. These are essential comparisons in a social media optimization program and can help you understand where to plan your time on the social web. This is really just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to SEO and Social Media Marketing tools. What low cost or free tools have you found to be effective for social media optimization tasks? </p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/pay-per-click/11-free-tools-for-social-media-optimization/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Basic Tips on Web Analytics</title>
		<link>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/pay-per-click/basic-tips-on-web-analytics/</link>
		<comments>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/pay-per-click/basic-tips-on-web-analytics/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 17 Feb 2010 15:52:25 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>BlogPostman</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Pay-Per-Click]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[analytics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[business]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[location]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[online-marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[search-engine]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[search-engines]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[small business]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[tracking]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[traffic]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[visitors]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[web analytics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[web-sites]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/uncategorized/basic-tips-on-web-analytics/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[ Just about every business with a web site does something to market and promote it. When those companies are asked about web analytics, it&#8217;s surprising how many look back with a blank stare.  This isn&#8217;t the case with mature online marketers but it does happen a lot with new business web sites and blogs. For many companies that are new to web analytics the idea of digging in and finding useful information can be daunting.  It&#8217;s common marketing sense to measure what you&#8217;re marketing, but making sense of analytics data doesn&#8217;t always find time in the mix of duties a small business or new web site owner is responsible for. The amount of information that analytics packages deliver isn&#8217;t always easy to sort through and turn into business decisions. So what should those that are new to web analytics do? Keep it simple and start off with the basics. Each analytics package is different in features, price and learning curve. I&#8217;d suggest starting out with Google Analytics as it&#8217;s free, feature rich, and not too complicated to learn. Start off by looking at the items below. Unique Visitors &#8211; Unique visitors are are an important metric as it counts everyone as one for any given time period. This means that if you had 250 unique visitors, 250 different people visited your site at least once. If your unique visitor number is low, it could mean that your site is either having issues in search engines, or need more content. Traffic Sources &#8211; Are you getting traffic from Google, Yahoo, Twitter, or other sites? Referring information can help you see where your traffic is coming from which you can then use to make decisions on where and how to promote your future content. Referring Keywords &#8211; These are the phrases that someone put into a search engine and arrived at your site with. Ideally they&#8217;d be keyword phrases that related to your company. If not, then it may be an indication that you&#8217;re either not optimized, or optimized for the wrong phrases. Top Content &#8211; No matter what size your site is, knowing what pages get the most traffic can help you when building out new pages. Using the same format, or building out content on that topic, can help drive more traffic. These are also pages that call to action (CTA) buttons should be added if you want your visitors to do download a white paper or do something specific. Location &#8211; If your business wants a strong local presence, the location area in analytics can tell you country, state and city of where your visitors are coming from. Are your visitors actually local? That&#8217;d be a good thing to know. Campaign Tracking &#8211;  Track visitors from sources where you are marketing to a particular goal page or conversion. As you feel more comfortable with Google Analytics you can then start to explore other actionable data including conversions, trends and features such as the most often used search terms on your internal search engine. Features like goals, top entrance/exit pages, bounce rates, and time on site are also a good metrics to use in understanding how visitors are interacting with your content. Visit the Google Analytics Help page to find out everything you need to know to make the most out of GA. Web analytics can be overwhelming as there is a lot of information to be analyzed and then decisions that need to be made from that data. Instead of trying to jump in and consume it all, take it one step at a time. ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> Just about every business with a web site does something to market and promote it. When those companies are asked about web analytics, it&#8217;s surprising how many look back with a blank stare.  This isn&#8217;t the case with mature online marketers but it does happen a lot with new business web sites and blogs. For many companies that are new to web analytics the idea of digging in and finding useful information can be daunting.  It&#8217;s common marketing sense to measure what you&#8217;re marketing, but making sense of analytics data doesn&#8217;t always find time in the mix of duties a small business or new web site owner is responsible for. The amount of information that analytics packages deliver isn&#8217;t always easy to sort through and turn into business decisions. So what should those that are new to web analytics do? Keep it simple and start off with the basics. Each analytics package is different in features, price and learning curve. I&#8217;d suggest starting out with Google Analytics as it&#8217;s free, feature rich, and not too complicated to learn. Start off by looking at the items below. Unique Visitors &#8211; Unique visitors are are an important metric as it counts everyone as one for any given time period. This means that if you had 250 unique visitors, 250 different people visited your site at least once. If your unique visitor number is low, it could mean that your site is either having issues in search engines, or need more content. Traffic Sources &#8211; Are you getting traffic from Google, Yahoo, Twitter, or other sites? Referring information can help you see where your traffic is coming from which you can then use to make decisions on where and how to promote your future content. Referring Keywords &#8211; These are the phrases that someone put into a search engine and arrived at your site with. Ideally they&#8217;d be keyword phrases that related to your company. If not, then it may be an indication that you&#8217;re either not optimized, or optimized for the wrong phrases. Top Content &#8211; No matter what size your site is, knowing what pages get the most traffic can help you when building out new pages. Using the same format, or building out content on that topic, can help drive more traffic. These are also pages that call to action (CTA) buttons should be added if you want your visitors to do download a white paper or do something specific. Location &#8211; If your business wants a strong local presence, the location area in analytics can tell you country, state and city of where your visitors are coming from. Are your visitors actually local? That&#8217;d be a good thing to know. Campaign Tracking &#8211;  Track visitors from sources where you are marketing to a particular goal page or conversion. As you feel more comfortable with Google Analytics you can then start to explore other actionable data including conversions, trends and features such as the most often used search terms on your internal search engine. Features like goals, top entrance/exit pages, bounce rates, and time on site are also a good metrics to use in understanding how visitors are interacting with your content. Visit the Google Analytics Help page to find out everything you need to know to make the most out of GA. Web analytics can be overwhelming as there is a lot of information to be analyzed and then decisions that need to be made from that data. Instead of trying to jump in and consume it all, take it one step at a time. </p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/pay-per-click/basic-tips-on-web-analytics/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Ten Must Read Tips to Start a Small Business Blog</title>
		<link>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/online-advertising/blog-marketing/ten-must-read-tips-to-start-a-small-business-blog/</link>
		<comments>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/online-advertising/blog-marketing/ten-must-read-tips-to-start-a-small-business-blog/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 15 Feb 2010 14:29:49 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Blog Marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pay-Per-Click]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Web Marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[analytics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[business]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[domain-name]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[facebook]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[online-marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[open-source]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[search-engine]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[small business]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[time]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/uncategorized/ten-must-read-tips-to-start-a-small-business-blog/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[ A friend of mine who is an experienced corporate marketer started a new business. The store just opened and being the good pal that I am, I was able to provide some advice regarding marketing on the web &#8211; specifically regarding blog marketing. This is a new small business, so considerations for what to do about a web site included: cost, functionality, flexibility, ease of maintenance and marketability. The web site needed to serve as both an online representation of the business, but without transactional functionality, as well as a host for landing pages used with email and PPC campaigns. My recommendation for a low cost, easy to use and search engine friendly content mangagement system? Blog software. What often happens when friends ask for advice regarding web marketing is that I&#8217;ll make some recommendations in a casual setting or email links to a few resources like this one on blog marketing tips , then a few weeks or months later, the conversation will turn to, &#8220;So, how is your blog or web site doing?&#8221;, and I find out that the site/blog was either not started at all, it was created in a way that blows away any chance of SEO or marketability outside of advertising or it was built using resources with no cost of entry but without the capabilities to scale if successful. Something along those lines happend with my friend&#8217;s blog. What was the issue? The blog was started using Blogger.com, which by itself is not a problem, but the blog address selected was: nameofstore.blogspot.com. This is understandable because it&#8217;s the default URL selection when you create a blog with Blogger.com. However, picking a third party domain for the blog address violates one of the most important rules in sustainable blogging: Always host the blog address with a domain name you control. That means yourdomainname.com/blog or blog.yourdomainname.com or yourdomainnameblog.com. Otherwise, you give up control. How so? What if the blog host goes down? Free services rarely provide support. Also, what if the service does not support the functionality you need? You can&#8217;t change their entire platform to suit your individual needs. There are other reasons for keeping the blog address as part of your own domain name including the ability to change blog software services without having to change your blog address. Of course there&#8217;s also a benefit for search engine optimization if you host the blog as a sub directory of your main company domain name such as yourdomainname.com/blog. Blogs are very linkable entities and other blogs tend to be enthusiastic about linking, so any links to your blog can be percieved as a vote of credibility to your main web site since the blog and the web site share the same domain name. Now back to our tale of the small business blog. My friend had only made one post on the blogspot.com URL so nothing would be lost by moving to a dedicated domain name. My own experience with Online Marketing Blog was different. After blogging for nearly 2 years at a blogspot.com address, I decided to move to a dedicated domain name and Wordpress. It took some talented optimization and 6 months of aggressive promotion to recoup the linking footprint (100,000+ inbound links) that was lost. Of course, now our traffic is multiple times more than what it was. What my friend decided to do was register a domain name and setup a hosting account. Since there was no main company web site to attach the blog to, this makes the most sense. Essentially, the blog became the company web site. With more and more businesses, this is becoming a very practical, cost effective and functionally efficient way to manage web site content: Using blog software as a content management system. As my friend asked what to do next, writing everything down in a notebook, it became clear that there&#8217;s a litany of things you COULD do with setting up a blog. Even if we filtered it down to what one SHOULD do, the list was amazingly long. As someone new to the whole idea of blogging and this not being a formal consulting arrangement, I decided to create what I think, is a short list of what a small businesses CAN do when starting a blog. 1. Decide the purpose of the blog. Do this before going out and registering a domain name or anything else. Is the blog going to serve as a journal for starting the business? Is it a search marketing tool? Is it to be used to demonstrate thought leadership and create credibility? Will it be a communication tool for customers? Will it also serve as the main company web site? Is the purpose some or all of the above? I could elaborate on setting up each of these types of blogs if I ever decided to write that book, but for now, we&#8217;ll stick with a blog that serves as a company web site, hosts landing pages, serves as a small business resource and marketing tool. 2. Pick a URL. If the purpose of the blog is to support company brand and audience, then the URL should be part of the company web site. Ideally, the blog hosting situation allows for a sub directory such as companysite.com/blog.  Otherwise, a sub-domain such as blog.companysite.com will work and you can can host the blog elsewhere, separate from the company web servers. IT will like that. If the purpose of the blog is independent of the primary company brand, or messaging, then a dedicated domain name such as topicgoeshereblog.com might work better. It&#8217;s tempting to use a keyword only domain name, but those keywords will not be a silver bullet for search engine rankings. A catchy, meaningul brand name for the blog will go much farther as content can always be optimized for search engine rankings. 3. Pick blog software. In most cases, WordPress is the way to go. An inexpensive Linux platform hosting account that supports PHP and mySQL can be secured for $10-$20 per month. However, should the blog get really popular, expect to upgrade to support increased demand. It&#8217;s entirely worth it. The blog software will need to be installed on the server that will host it and the database will also need to be set up. This is fairly straightforward, but in all honesty, it&#8217;s best to have someone that knows what they&#8217;re doing help. As an example, I do very little of the technical work on our blog and prefer to have a specialist (Thomas McMahon) take care of maintenance, adding plugins, design and functionality updates. We have outside programmers do any heavy lifting in the application development department. Wordpress software is open source, ie free, so if you are code/technically savvy and you have the time to figure it out, it&#8217;s certainly doable. There is no one &#8220;right way&#8221; to setup a blog. There are literally hundreds of shades of gray. It can cost a hundreds to thousand of dollars for a blog consultant to install, setup and customize the design of your blog. You&#8217;re not paying for the software, you&#8217;re paying for expertise that will save you MONTHS of time and allow you to get to market more quickly and efficiently. 4. Customize the blog. After installation of the core blog software, there are a number of customization tasks. First, the blog design should be modified to match your branding. If you don&#8217;t hire a consultant to do this, there are many free templates that can then be customized, but many of them require a link to the author at the bottom. Personally, I&#8217;m not a fan of those, but they are a low/no cost place to start. Design customization involves modifying the CSS, JavaScript, graphics and possibly a few database elements. The second set of customization tasks involves plug-ins to improve the adminstration, front end functionality and the SEO friendliness of the blog. Thanks to Twitter and Thomas for this recommended minimum list of plug-ins: Redirection HeadSpace2 Google XML sitemaps Gravity forms All In One SEO PostPost ACE WP Plug ComLuv Disqus Members only Cookies for comments Section widget Page order Related posts FeedSmith FeedBurner Plugin Sociable Askimet or WP-SpamFree Post Teaser 5. Create a content plan. In concert with the purpose of the blog, it&#8217;s important to generate a basic editorial guideline for creating content. The easiest way to manage this is by creating categories for the kinds of content you plan on posting. Before you create those categories, it&#8217;s a good idea to do some keyword research as the categories will become excellent repositories of related content. Why not make it even easier for search engines to understand and rank them? Common keyword research tools include: WordTracker and Google . Paid keyword tools include WordStream.com and KeywordDiscovery.com Once you identify which keyword phrases best represent the content you&#8217;ll be publishing, use them to name your content categories. Each time you make a blog post, that entry will be associated with one or more categories, creating a very search engine friendly repository of content. Create an editorial calendar or schedule of posts to keep you on topic for your audience and true to the purpose of the blog. Leverage interactions with blog readers as well as your analytics to know if your content and keyword picks are productive or not. 6. Pick your blogging team. In the case of most small businesses, the blogging team is a team of one. That&#8217;s fine, just be sure to document what&#8217;s working and what&#8217;s not so when the time comes, you can get your blogging team mate up to speed quickly. Since blogger&#8217;s block (like writer&#8217;s block) can really dampen a good thing for a small business blog, go ahead and keep a good number of posts in draft mode. Add to them as you get new ideas and inspiration. Or facts and examples. That way, you&#8217;ll have a steady stream of blog posts ready to publish in advance. In fact, you can schedule blog posts in advance using WordPress. 7. Make it easy to share. Blogging in a vaccum is inevitable blogging death. It&#8217;s essential that you solicit comments in your posts, respond to comments quickly, create and enforce a commenting policy. Being responsive is an essential part of attracting subscribers . Don&#8217;t covet the comments either. Visit other blogs in your industry and write useful comments. Those bloggers may notice you and it can become something more, like an invite for a guest post, collaboration or simply a new online friend. Make it easy for readers of your blog to save and share your content with sharing buttons or widgets. It pays to create accounts on the more popular services and develop social networks there. Your contacts on Digg, Delicious, StumbleUpon and similar services will watch for your next post and vote for the good stuff, which can drive your content to be exposed on more popular areas of those web sites. More exposure can mean more traffic. The social bookmarks tool is handy for adding such functionality to any web page and Thomas offered several new blog promotion tips last week. 8. Get your social on . RSS feeds come with blogs and it&#8217;s worth taking the time to make sure the RSS feed is readily available and obvious for people to subscribe. Submit your blog and RSS feed to our HUGE list of blog and RSS directories . Set up social profiles on sites such as Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn as appropriate and automate the sharing of links from your blog posts to those services. In other words, you could use a service like TwitterFeed to publish your latest blog post to Twitter and Facebook automatically. Be sure to publish your blog URL everywhere you publish your web site address. 9. Make static. If you&#8217;re using the blog as a CMS for a small business web site, then make your static web pages such as those for About our Company, Product/Service pages, Contact Forms, etc. The blog can be customized to have a home page like any other web site as well. That way, visitors arriving on your site can see what they expect from a company selling products/services. At the same time, blogging creates a rich and frequent source of useful content that&#8217;s syndicated via RSS, promoted automatically to relevant social channels and leaves the door open for interaction via comments. 10. Measure. Test &#8211; Test. Measure. It&#8217;s important that you set goals for the blog, a plan to execute tactics and most of all, measure progress. Most web site measurement is focused on web analytics and metrics specific to different types of marketing such as with email, SEO or PPC. Standard web analytics software such as Google Analytics will address the vast majority of your needs. I would also recommend social media monitoring and analytics. Monitoring can be as simple as the RSS feed from search.twitter.com combined with the RSS feed from the results of a search on Google&#8217;s blog search. You could also use services like socialmention.com , trackur.com or more robust social media monitoring tools such as Techrigy SM2, ScoutLabs or Radian6. Social monitoring tools will help you understand what your customers are saying about you on the social web as well as uncover new interaction opportiunities with influentials. Real time search means real time marketing and social monitoring can facilitate that. One example would be if a competitor Tweets a deal on a product. Your Twitter search on that competitor or product would create an alert. You could then decide to offer a deal at a lower price or some other counter offer. Another example is if a customer complains about your company. Before others jump on the bandwagon, your social monitoring tools would alert you and you can then qualify and address the situation quickly. As web analytics and social media monitoring tools become increasingly intertwined, you&#8217;ll be able to identify many other key metrics for the effect of your social participation on bottom line business goals. There you go. Ten tips for starting a small business blog. This was a long post and yet, it&#8217;s nowhere near a comprehensive guide to create a small business blog. Even though there is plenty of free blog software and advice available online, many companies would benefit from having professional help with a business blog. The funny thing is, my friend will look at this post and say, &#8220;This is the SHORT list?&#8221;. Blogging can be simple to start, but no one said it wasn&#8217;t hard work. If you&#8217;ve created a blog for your small business, what has your experience been? Did you do it yourself? Do you get expert help? Have you set up a small business web site using blog software? we&#8217;d love to hear about your experiences, challenges and successes. ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> A friend of mine who is an experienced corporate marketer started a new business. The store just opened and being the good pal that I am, I was able to provide some advice regarding marketing on the web &#8211; specifically regarding blog marketing. This is a new small business, so considerations for what to do about a web site included: cost, functionality, flexibility, ease of maintenance and marketability. The web site needed to serve as both an online representation of the business, but without transactional functionality, as well as a host for landing pages used with email and PPC campaigns. My recommendation for a low cost, easy to use and search engine friendly content mangagement system? Blog software. What often happens when friends ask for advice regarding web marketing is that I&#8217;ll make some recommendations in a casual setting or email links to a few resources like this one on blog marketing tips , then a few weeks or months later, the conversation will turn to, &#8220;So, how is your blog or web site doing?&#8221;, and I find out that the site/blog was either not started at all, it was created in a way that blows away any chance of SEO or marketability outside of advertising or it was built using resources with no cost of entry but without the capabilities to scale if successful. Something along those lines happend with my friend&#8217;s blog. What was the issue? The blog was started using Blogger.com, which by itself is not a problem, but the blog address selected was: nameofstore.blogspot.com. This is understandable because it&#8217;s the default URL selection when you create a blog with Blogger.com. However, picking a third party domain for the blog address violates one of the most important rules in sustainable blogging: Always host the blog address with a domain name you control. That means yourdomainname.com/blog or blog.yourdomainname.com or yourdomainnameblog.com. Otherwise, you give up control. How so? What if the blog host goes down? Free services rarely provide support. Also, what if the service does not support the functionality you need? You can&#8217;t change their entire platform to suit your individual needs. There are other reasons for keeping the blog address as part of your own domain name including the ability to change blog software services without having to change your blog address. Of course there&#8217;s also a benefit for search engine optimization if you host the blog as a sub directory of your main company domain name such as yourdomainname.com/blog. Blogs are very linkable entities and other blogs tend to be enthusiastic about linking, so any links to your blog can be percieved as a vote of credibility to your main web site since the blog and the web site share the same domain name. Now back to our tale of the small business blog. My friend had only made one post on the blogspot.com URL so nothing would be lost by moving to a dedicated domain name. My own experience with Online Marketing Blog was different. After blogging for nearly 2 years at a blogspot.com address, I decided to move to a dedicated domain name and WordPress. It took some talented optimization and 6 months of aggressive promotion to recoup the linking footprint (100,000+ inbound links) that was lost. Of course, now our traffic is multiple times more than what it was. What my friend decided to do was register a domain name and setup a hosting account. Since there was no main company web site to attach the blog to, this makes the most sense. Essentially, the blog became the company web site. With more and more businesses, this is becoming a very practical, cost effective and functionally efficient way to manage web site content: Using blog software as a content management system. As my friend asked what to do next, writing everything down in a notebook, it became clear that there&#8217;s a litany of things you COULD do with setting up a blog. Even if we filtered it down to what one SHOULD do, the list was amazingly long. As someone new to the whole idea of blogging and this not being a formal consulting arrangement, I decided to create what I think, is a short list of what a small businesses CAN do when starting a blog. 1. Decide the purpose of the blog. Do this before going out and registering a domain name or anything else. Is the blog going to serve as a journal for starting the business? Is it a search marketing tool? Is it to be used to demonstrate thought leadership and create credibility? Will it be a communication tool for customers? Will it also serve as the main company web site? Is the purpose some or all of the above? I could elaborate on setting up each of these types of blogs if I ever decided to write that book, but for now, we&#8217;ll stick with a blog that serves as a company web site, hosts landing pages, serves as a small business resource and marketing tool. 2. Pick a URL. If the purpose of the blog is to support company brand and audience, then the URL should be part of the company web site. Ideally, the blog hosting situation allows for a sub directory such as companysite.com/blog.  Otherwise, a sub-domain such as blog.companysite.com will work and you can can host the blog elsewhere, separate from the company web servers. IT will like that. If the purpose of the blog is independent of the primary company brand, or messaging, then a dedicated domain name such as topicgoeshereblog.com might work better. It&#8217;s tempting to use a keyword only domain name, but those keywords will not be a silver bullet for search engine rankings. A catchy, meaningul brand name for the blog will go much farther as content can always be optimized for search engine rankings. 3. Pick blog software. In most cases, WordPress is the way to go. An inexpensive Linux platform hosting account that supports PHP and mySQL can be secured for $10-$20 per month. However, should the blog get really popular, expect to upgrade to support increased demand. It&#8217;s entirely worth it. The blog software will need to be installed on the server that will host it and the database will also need to be set up. This is fairly straightforward, but in all honesty, it&#8217;s best to have someone that knows what they&#8217;re doing help. As an example, I do very little of the technical work on our blog and prefer to have a specialist (Thomas McMahon) take care of maintenance, adding plugins, design and functionality updates. We have outside programmers do any heavy lifting in the application development department. WordPress software is open source, ie free, so if you are code/technically savvy and you have the time to figure it out, it&#8217;s certainly doable. There is no one &#8220;right way&#8221; to setup a blog. There are literally hundreds of shades of gray. It can cost a hundreds to thousand of dollars for a blog consultant to install, setup and customize the design of your blog. You&#8217;re not paying for the software, you&#8217;re paying for expertise that will save you MONTHS of time and allow you to get to market more quickly and efficiently. 4. Customize the blog. After installation of the core blog software, there are a number of customization tasks. First, the blog design should be modified to match your branding. If you don&#8217;t hire a consultant to do this, there are many free templates that can then be customized, but many of them require a link to the author at the bottom. Personally, I&#8217;m not a fan of those, but they are a low/no cost place to start. Design customization involves modifying the CSS, JavaScript, graphics and possibly a few database elements. The second set of customization tasks involves plug-ins to improve the adminstration, front end functionality and the SEO friendliness of the blog. Thanks to Twitter and Thomas for this recommended minimum list of plug-ins: Redirection HeadSpace2 Google XML sitemaps Gravity forms All In One SEO PostPost ACE WP Plug ComLuv Disqus Members only Cookies for comments Section widget Page order Related posts FeedSmith FeedBurner Plugin Sociable Askimet or WP-SpamFree Post Teaser 5. Create a content plan. In concert with the purpose of the blog, it&#8217;s important to generate a basic editorial guideline for creating content. The easiest way to manage this is by creating categories for the kinds of content you plan on posting. Before you create those categories, it&#8217;s a good idea to do some keyword research as the categories will become excellent repositories of related content. Why not make it even easier for search engines to understand and rank them? Common keyword research tools include: WordTracker and Google . Paid keyword tools include WordStream.com and KeywordDiscovery.com Once you identify which keyword phrases best represent the content you&#8217;ll be publishing, use them to name your content categories. Each time you make a blog post, that entry will be associated with one or more categories, creating a very search engine friendly repository of content. Create an editorial calendar or schedule of posts to keep you on topic for your audience and true to the purpose of the blog. Leverage interactions with blog readers as well as your analytics to know if your content and keyword picks are productive or not. 6. Pick your blogging team. In the case of most small businesses, the blogging team is a team of one. That&#8217;s fine, just be sure to document what&#8217;s working and what&#8217;s not so when the time comes, you can get your blogging team mate up to speed quickly. Since blogger&#8217;s block (like writer&#8217;s block) can really dampen a good thing for a small business blog, go ahead and keep a good number of posts in draft mode. Add to them as you get new ideas and inspiration. Or facts and examples. That way, you&#8217;ll have a steady stream of blog posts ready to publish in advance. In fact, you can schedule blog posts in advance using WordPress. 7. Make it easy to share. Blogging in a vaccum is inevitable blogging death. It&#8217;s essential that you solicit comments in your posts, respond to comments quickly, create and enforce a commenting policy. Being responsive is an essential part of attracting subscribers . Don&#8217;t covet the comments either. Visit other blogs in your industry and write useful comments. Those bloggers may notice you and it can become something more, like an invite for a guest post, collaboration or simply a new online friend. Make it easy for readers of your blog to save and share your content with sharing buttons or widgets. It pays to create accounts on the more popular services and develop social networks there. Your contacts on Digg, Delicious, StumbleUpon and similar services will watch for your next post and vote for the good stuff, which can drive your content to be exposed on more popular areas of those web sites. More exposure can mean more traffic. The social bookmarks tool is handy for adding such functionality to any web page and Thomas offered several new blog promotion tips last week. 8. Get your social on . RSS feeds come with blogs and it&#8217;s worth taking the time to make sure the RSS feed is readily available and obvious for people to subscribe. Submit your blog and RSS feed to our HUGE list of blog and RSS directories . Set up social profiles on sites such as Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn as appropriate and automate the sharing of links from your blog posts to those services. In other words, you could use a service like TwitterFeed to publish your latest blog post to Twitter and Facebook automatically. Be sure to publish your blog URL everywhere you publish your web site address. 9. Make static. If you&#8217;re using the blog as a CMS for a small business web site, then make your static web pages such as those for About our Company, Product/Service pages, Contact Forms, etc. The blog can be customized to have a home page like any other web site as well. That way, visitors arriving on your site can see what they expect from a company selling products/services. At the same time, blogging creates a rich and frequent source of useful content that&#8217;s syndicated via RSS, promoted automatically to relevant social channels and leaves the door open for interaction via comments. 10. Measure. Test &#8211; Test. Measure. It&#8217;s important that you set goals for the blog, a plan to execute tactics and most of all, measure progress. Most web site measurement is focused on web analytics and metrics specific to different types of marketing such as with email, SEO or PPC. Standard web analytics software such as Google Analytics will address the vast majority of your needs. I would also recommend social media monitoring and analytics. Monitoring can be as simple as the RSS feed from search.twitter.com combined with the RSS feed from the results of a search on Google&#8217;s blog search. You could also use services like socialmention.com , trackur.com or more robust social media monitoring tools such as Techrigy SM2, ScoutLabs or Radian6. Social monitoring tools will help you understand what your customers are saying about you on the social web as well as uncover new interaction opportiunities with influentials. Real time search means real time marketing and social monitoring can facilitate that. One example would be if a competitor Tweets a deal on a product. Your Twitter search on that competitor or product would create an alert. You could then decide to offer a deal at a lower price or some other counter offer. Another example is if a customer complains about your company. Before others jump on the bandwagon, your social monitoring tools would alert you and you can then qualify and address the situation quickly. As web analytics and social media monitoring tools become increasingly intertwined, you&#8217;ll be able to identify many other key metrics for the effect of your social participation on bottom line business goals. There you go. Ten tips for starting a small business blog. This was a long post and yet, it&#8217;s nowhere near a comprehensive guide to create a small business blog. Even though there is plenty of free blog software and advice available online, many companies would benefit from having professional help with a business blog. The funny thing is, my friend will look at this post and say, &#8220;This is the SHORT list?&#8221;. Blogging can be simple to start, but no one said it wasn&#8217;t hard work. If you&#8217;ve created a blog for your small business, what has your experience been? Did you do it yourself? Do you get expert help? Have you set up a small business web site using blog software? we&#8217;d love to hear about your experiences, challenges and successes. </p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/online-advertising/blog-marketing/ten-must-read-tips-to-start-a-small-business-blog/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Get Smarter at Online Marketing Summit</title>
		<link>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/pay-per-click/get-smarter-at-online-marketing-summit/</link>
		<comments>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/pay-per-click/get-smarter-at-online-marketing-summit/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 10 Feb 2010 12:05:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Pay-Per-Click]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[analytics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[client]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[enterprise]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[facebook]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[goals]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[legal]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[marketing pr conferences]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[online]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[other events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[search]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[snow]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/uncategorized/get-smarter-at-online-marketing-summit/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[ I know I did an upcoming events roundup last week but the upcoming Online Marketing Summit in San Diego is certainly worth a post of it&#8217;s own.  Besides, I get to announce that one of our clients from Zoomerang (MarketTools), won a free conference pass! Congratulations to Amy Lindahl! Last year OMS came through Minneapolis and I had an opportunity to present on building a case for social media through a  Social Media Roadmap . Feedback comments like &#8220;lived up to the hype&#8221;, which is a compliment not too dis-similiar from, &#8220;it didn&#8217;t suck&#8221;, renewed my appreciation for Minnesota Nice. But I digress. Back to the upcoming OMS in California.  The annual OMS conference is, to my great pleasure and happiness, in sunny San Diego.  I&#8217;ve had a chance to connect with the event organizer, Aaron Kahlow several times and appreciate the invite to present at OMS a great deal. One of my goals for 2010 is to vary the conferences that I speak at to reach different audiences. OMS is held in conjuction with ClickZ Feb 22-24 at the Paradise Point Resort and Spa with a day of pre-conference training and a Search Engine Strategies day on Feb 25th.  I will arrive in the morning on the 23rd and will unfortunately, miss the morning sessions. But I do plan on attending &#8220;Social Media Inside The Brand: DuPont Case Study&#8221; which promises to cover the legal aspects of Social Media, how to develop a proper Social Media Marketing policy, and how to sell a &#8220;word of mouth&#8221; project internally. Sage advice for client side marketers. There are some big names in search that will be presenting at OMS such as John Battelle, Tim Ash and Marshall Simmonds as well as marketers from brands including: Planet Holloywood, IBM, REO, New York Times, Jack in the Box, Eastman Kodak and Ogilvy 360. Later in the afternoon (3:40 pm) on the 23rd I will be on a Social Media Forum which is part of a new &#8220;Leaders&#8221; track with a total of 5 savvy social media marketers on the panel. (Chris Baggott, Lee Odden, Michael Senger, Caitlin McCabe, Ben Hanna) Luckily, we have Jason Baer as moderator who has taken the &#8220;Twitter approach&#8221; to Q and A in light of the inevitable time constraint. Jason will be asking questions and we are to provide answers in 140 characters or less.  Topics to be covered include: What&#8217;s the best way to integrate social media with other marketing efforts like email, direct mail, etc? How can you measure the effectiveness of social media efforts? What&#8217;s the #1 myth preventing companies from embracing social media? What are the main differences between B2B and B2C social media programs? It should be a great panel! Day two OMS includes a great mix of sessions. I&#8217;m looking forward to: Social Media in the Enterprise Wharton Dispels Myths of Social, Viral and Online Marketing through Cold Hard Research Social Media Measurement Best Practices Integrated Marketing Forum Lunch Keynote: &#8220;How We Used Data to Win the Presidential Election&#8221; Acquiring New Customers with Email and Social Media Demand Generation Secret Sauce (Jon Miller from Marketo, our client) Using Social Media for eCommerce On Feb 25th, Search Engine Strategies Day, SES has programmed a series with Search Engine Strategies conference speakers covering the gamut of SEO, PPC, Local, Social, Analytics and of course, PR/Social/Search. I will be on the &#8220; PR, Social Media and Search &#8221; panel at 3:15 to discuss the intersection and future of these complimentary channels. If you know my agency TopRank Online Marketing and the content we publish here at Online Marketing Blog, you know the subject matter of this session is a perfect fit.  Panelists include: David &#8220;dk&#8221; Klein, Dana Todd, Rand Fishkin, myself and moderator duties will be handled by Sally Falkow. I know there are a lot of people attending OMS and there might even be some tickets left if you&#8217;re not.  I&#8217;m really looking forward to it (and not just because I get to escape the snow for four days at a resort in San Diego).  If you&#8217;re attending OMS later this month, please say hello. I&#8217;d like to get feedback from other attendees on this conference for our blog coverage. If you&#8217;ve been to an OMS event, what was your favorite thing about it? ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> I know I did an upcoming events roundup last week but the upcoming Online Marketing Summit in San Diego is certainly worth a post of it&#8217;s own.  Besides, I get to announce that one of our clients from Zoomerang (MarketTools), won a free conference pass! Congratulations to Amy Lindahl! Last year OMS came through Minneapolis and I had an opportunity to present on building a case for social media through a  Social Media Roadmap . Feedback comments like &#8220;lived up to the hype&#8221;, which is a compliment not too dis-similiar from, &#8220;it didn&#8217;t suck&#8221;, renewed my appreciation for Minnesota Nice. But I digress. Back to the upcoming OMS in California.  The annual OMS conference is, to my great pleasure and happiness, in sunny San Diego.  I&#8217;ve had a chance to connect with the event organizer, Aaron Kahlow several times and appreciate the invite to present at OMS a great deal. One of my goals for 2010 is to vary the conferences that I speak at to reach different audiences. OMS is held in conjuction with ClickZ Feb 22-24 at the Paradise Point Resort and Spa with a day of pre-conference training and a Search Engine Strategies day on Feb 25th.  I will arrive in the morning on the 23rd and will unfortunately, miss the morning sessions. But I do plan on attending &#8220;Social Media Inside The Brand: DuPont Case Study&#8221; which promises to cover the legal aspects of Social Media, how to develop a proper Social Media Marketing policy, and how to sell a &#8220;word of mouth&#8221; project internally. Sage advice for client side marketers. There are some big names in search that will be presenting at OMS such as John Battelle, Tim Ash and Marshall Simmonds as well as marketers from brands including: Planet Holloywood, IBM, REO, New York Times, Jack in the Box, Eastman Kodak and Ogilvy 360. Later in the afternoon (3:40 pm) on the 23rd I will be on a Social Media Forum which is part of a new &#8220;Leaders&#8221; track with a total of 5 savvy social media marketers on the panel. (Chris Baggott, Lee Odden, Michael Senger, Caitlin McCabe, Ben Hanna) Luckily, we have Jason Baer as moderator who has taken the &#8220;Twitter approach&#8221; to Q and A in light of the inevitable time constraint. Jason will be asking questions and we are to provide answers in 140 characters or less.  Topics to be covered include: What&#8217;s the best way to integrate social media with other marketing efforts like email, direct mail, etc? How can you measure the effectiveness of social media efforts? What&#8217;s the #1 myth preventing companies from embracing social media? What are the main differences between B2B and B2C social media programs? It should be a great panel! Day two OMS includes a great mix of sessions. I&#8217;m looking forward to: Social Media in the Enterprise Wharton Dispels Myths of Social, Viral and Online Marketing through Cold Hard Research Social Media Measurement Best Practices Integrated Marketing Forum Lunch Keynote: &#8220;How We Used Data to Win the Presidential Election&#8221; Acquiring New Customers with Email and Social Media Demand Generation Secret Sauce (Jon Miller from Marketo, our client) Using Social Media for eCommerce On Feb 25th, Search Engine Strategies Day, SES has programmed a series with Search Engine Strategies conference speakers covering the gamut of SEO, PPC, Local, Social, Analytics and of course, PR/Social/Search. I will be on the &#8220; PR, Social Media and Search &#8221; panel at 3:15 to discuss the intersection and future of these complimentary channels. If you know my agency TopRank Online Marketing and the content we publish here at Online Marketing Blog, you know the subject matter of this session is a perfect fit.  Panelists include: David &#8220;dk&#8221; Klein, Dana Todd, Rand Fishkin, myself and moderator duties will be handled by Sally Falkow. I know there are a lot of people attending OMS and there might even be some tickets left if you&#8217;re not.  I&#8217;m really looking forward to it (and not just because I get to escape the snow for four days at a resort in San Diego).  If you&#8217;re attending OMS later this month, please say hello. I&#8217;d like to get feedback from other attendees on this conference for our blog coverage. If you&#8217;ve been to an OMS event, what was your favorite thing about it? </p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/pay-per-click/get-smarter-at-online-marketing-summit/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
	</channel>
</rss>
