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	<title>Jetting Blogs &#187; facebook</title>
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		<title>Principles Of Facebook Direct Marketing</title>
		<link>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/pay-per-click/principles-of-facebook-direct-marketing/</link>
		<comments>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/pay-per-click/principles-of-facebook-direct-marketing/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 23 Apr 2010 01:43:31 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>BlogPostman</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Pay-Per-Click]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[article-source]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[business]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[eyes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[facebook]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[facebook-paper]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[internet]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[msn]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[myspace]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[network]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[people]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[search-engine]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/uncategorized/principles-of-facebook-direct-marketing/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[ In today&#8217;s world there are several affective ways to market and advertise anything you desire online. Google has reinvented the internet and what it is today, but let&#8217;s not forget about the other ways of driving traffic to your site. When advertising to anyone on the internet, the easiest way to have your site seen by the most people is by advertising it on a search engine or network that has the most amount of traffic. Obviously, today that is Google followed by Yahoo, then MSN.              Those are only search engines. Social networks such as Myspace, Twitter, and Facebook have blown up into a social monster that no one has every witnessed in the past decade. Although Myspace is still very active with just over 70 million users, Facebook has taken the cake with nearly 400 million people worldwide and growing! How would you like to advertise you site or product to that many people and be able to choose the type of people to advertise to? Well you can do just that with Facebook Paper Click Marketing.             Facebook offers paid advertisements on their network. The coolest thing about Facebook marketing is that you choose the people you want to market to. You&#8217;re able to choose the ages of people that your ad will be seen by. You can also select the area of interest that matches other people&#8217;s so only those will be able to view your site. Not only is this important, but it is also cost affective. With Facebook advertising you can market to only those who you think will be best qualified for your special offer.             Here are some quick and easy principles when it comes to using Facebook to market your product. Facebook ads should always consist of shiny objects. Since Facebook allows you to place a picture in your ad, it is imperative that you use a picture that catches the eyes of your customers. Unlike Google, Facebook ads will not show the URL your ad is linked to. Facebook will also show your ad at random.             Some of the best ad examples should tell a story, ask a question, and or even promise some amazing benefit. What&#8217;s even better, Facebook actually lowers your cost per click drastically if your ad has a high click thru rate! The more popular your ad, the cheaper it will cost to run it. Get your business on steroids today by creating a Facebook ad that will appear in the eyes of potentially hundreds of millions! - About the Author: To be apart of an organization that helps its members achieve wealth, develop high levels of emotional well-being, and much, much more visit http://www.accomplishedentrepreneurs.com Email: josh.accomplishedentrepreneurs@gmail.com Article Source ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> In today&#8217;s world there are several affective ways to market and advertise anything you desire online. Google has reinvented the internet and what it is today, but let&#8217;s not forget about the other ways of driving traffic to your site. When advertising to anyone on the internet, the easiest way to have your site seen by the most people is by advertising it on a search engine or network that has the most amount of traffic. Obviously, today that is Google followed by Yahoo, then MSN.              Those are only search engines. Social networks such as Myspace, Twitter, and Facebook have blown up into a social monster that no one has every witnessed in the past decade. Although Myspace is still very active with just over 70 million users, Facebook has taken the cake with nearly 400 million people worldwide and growing! How would you like to advertise you site or product to that many people and be able to choose the type of people to advertise to? Well you can do just that with Facebook Paper Click Marketing.             Facebook offers paid advertisements on their network. The coolest thing about Facebook marketing is that you choose the people you want to market to. You&#8217;re able to choose the ages of people that your ad will be seen by. You can also select the area of interest that matches other people&#8217;s so only those will be able to view your site. Not only is this important, but it is also cost affective. With Facebook advertising you can market to only those who you think will be best qualified for your special offer.             Here are some quick and easy principles when it comes to using Facebook to market your product. Facebook ads should always consist of shiny objects. Since Facebook allows you to place a picture in your ad, it is imperative that you use a picture that catches the eyes of your customers. Unlike Google, Facebook ads will not show the URL your ad is linked to. Facebook will also show your ad at random.             Some of the best ad examples should tell a story, ask a question, and or even promise some amazing benefit. What&#8217;s even better, Facebook actually lowers your cost per click drastically if your ad has a high click thru rate! The more popular your ad, the cheaper it will cost to run it. Get your business on steroids today by creating a Facebook ad that will appear in the eyes of potentially hundreds of millions! &#8211; About the Author: To be apart of an organization that helps its members achieve wealth, develop high levels of emotional well-being, and much, much more visit http://www.accomplishedentrepreneurs.com Email: josh.accomplishedentrepreneurs@gmail.com Article Source </p>
<p>Excerpt from:<br />
<a target="_blank" href="http://www.craigalinder.com/2010/04/principles-of-facebook-direct-marketing/" title="Principles Of Facebook Direct Marketing">Principles Of Facebook Direct Marketing</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
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		<item>
		<title>Twitter New Ad Platform – &#8216;promoted Tweets&#8217;</title>
		<link>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/pay-per-click/twitter-new-ad-platform-%e2%80%93-promoted-tweets/</link>
		<comments>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/pay-per-click/twitter-new-ad-platform-%e2%80%93-promoted-tweets/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 20 Apr 2010 02:42:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Pay-Per-Click]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[author]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[business-model]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[capablitiy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[change-depended]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[facebook]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[focus-search]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[from-the-web]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[search]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[source]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[think-otherwise]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/uncategorized/twitter-new-ad-platform-%e2%80%93-promoted-tweets/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[ One could argue that prior to launching a business there needs to be some form of monetary or revenue strategy set in place prior to implementation. This would be the logical argument and to think otherwise would be bad business. But the digital world has turned this idea on it&#8217;s head. Social network companies like Facebook and Twitter build products that are both useful and addictive, generating enormous amounts of traffic and loyal users. Building a business model is not a priority for them until the tipping point of users has been reached and the risk of turning off current users with advertising is low. Understandably there has been a lot of hype around twitter and possible revenue strategies mainly because the company has been funded by investors and has yet to spread it&#8217;s legs and turn significant profit. Up until now it has relied upon its &#8217;self serve advertisements&#8217; to generate revenue. This has already proved appealing for some big brands and is a growing area for digital marketing spend. Twitter announced this week that on the 20th of April this year it will launch it&#8217;s &#8216;Promoted Tweets&#8217; which will place ad&#8217;s on twitter via search results. Initially the ad&#8217;s will work similar to Google&#8217;s Adwords, triggering on specific key words, but will have the capablitiy to change depended on consumer behaviour.  The potential for viral marketing is enormous via Re tweets. Companies announcing specials and deals will reap enormous benefits from the web&#8217;s answer to traditional word of mouth. You can find out more here: www.focussearch.com.au - About the Author: Article Source ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> One could argue that prior to launching a business there needs to be some form of monetary or revenue strategy set in place prior to implementation. This would be the logical argument and to think otherwise would be bad business. But the digital world has turned this idea on it&#8217;s head. Social network companies like Facebook and Twitter build products that are both useful and addictive, generating enormous amounts of traffic and loyal users. Building a business model is not a priority for them until the tipping point of users has been reached and the risk of turning off current users with advertising is low. Understandably there has been a lot of hype around twitter and possible revenue strategies mainly because the company has been funded by investors and has yet to spread it&#8217;s legs and turn significant profit. Up until now it has relied upon its &#8217;self serve advertisements&#8217; to generate revenue. This has already proved appealing for some big brands and is a growing area for digital marketing spend. Twitter announced this week that on the 20th of April this year it will launch it&#8217;s &#8216;Promoted Tweets&#8217; which will place ad&#8217;s on twitter via search results. Initially the ad&#8217;s will work similar to Google&#8217;s Adwords, triggering on specific key words, but will have the capablitiy to change depended on consumer behaviour.  The potential for viral marketing is enormous via Re tweets. Companies announcing specials and deals will reap enormous benefits from the web&#8217;s answer to traditional word of mouth. You can find out more here: www.focussearch.com.au &#8211; About the Author: Article Source </p>
<p>Link:<br />
<a target="_blank" href="http://www.craigalinder.com/2010/04/twitter-new-ad-platform-promoted-tweets/" title="Twitter New Ad Platform – 'promoted Tweets'">Twitter New Ad Platform – &#8216;promoted Tweets&#8217;</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>Comment Management Tools You Should Know</title>
		<link>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/pay-per-click/comment-management-tools-you-should-know/</link>
		<comments>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/pay-per-click/comment-management-tools-you-should-know/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 13 Apr 2010 11:43:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Pay-Per-Click]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[content]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[facebook]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[intense-debate]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[management]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[online-marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[outbrain]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social-media]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[source]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[tools]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Twitter]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/uncategorized/comment-management-tools-you-should-know/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[ What is Comment Management?  Virtually all blog software offers commenting functionality, so why would you need a 3rd party comment management service?  Many of the comments and &#8220;reactions&#8221; to content posted on a blog never make it to the blog itself &#8211; the source of the conversation. Comment Management tools provide all the expected features and also pull in mentions &#038; citations of the post as well. That way when someone reads a post on your blog, they can see comments made directly on the post as well as mentions made of of the post on other sites like Twitter. Should you add a comment manager tool to your blog? It depends how much of your social engagement is happening off your blog and also whether you feel it will add to the user experience to see a collected list of on and off site interactions. For many blogs, citing comment and reaction counts is simply a matter of social proofing and popularity. For others, it&#8217;s an attempt to harvest all the conversation about a post at the source. To help you decide, here are the three main comment management tools to consider: ECHO from JS-Kit offers a wide array of features. It can be embedded on a blog or static web site and pull in comments from Twitter, Digg, comments from other blogs, FriendFeed and several others. Commenters can choose to promote their comments simultaneously to Twitter, Facebook or Google Friends. Sites like Technorati and Guy Kawasaki use ECHO.  We tried JS-Kit but didn&#8217;t like not being able to show comments on top of the off site citations under each post.  JS-Kit ECHO Live is $12/year and ECHO Live white label is $48/year. There is also a PRO version with many other controls and features with costs according to page views ranging from $195 to $1995 per year. Disqus , as you may have noticed, is the commenting system we are currently using on Online Marketing Blog . Disqus lets readers choose their identity, via: Facebook Connect, OpenID, or Twitter Sign-in, when they leave a comment. Comments can be threaded and the moderation dashboard is easy to use. Off site references to your content on Twitter, FriendFeed, Digg, and YouTube are pulled in as &#8220;Reactions&#8221;. You can sort comments as we do, on top, then show the reactions below. Readers can choose to cross post their comment to other social media sites like Facebook and Twitter.   You can edit comment content but not the names of commenters, which is frustrating because some spammers write really useful comment content but spam them hell out of their names and links. The base version of Disqus is free. Disqus VIP offers much hand holding support and analytics. Cost is not disclosed on the site so it must be very expensive. IntenseDebate was acquired by Automattic, the company behind WordPress and therefore, can be easily added to WordPress blogs as well as TypePad, Tumblr or Blogger blogs. There&#8217;s comment threading, notification by email, commenter profiles and points, moderation, cross posting to Twitter and several other features.  IntenseDebate is free. Which comment management tool is right for you? It depends on your use. If you have a static web site and you&#8217;d like to add comment features, then ECHO might be a fit. If you want something that offers all the basics and works natively with WordPress then maybe IntenseDebate is your pick. If you want more features and also don&#8217;t want to pay anything, then it&#8217;s possible Disqus is the choice for you. The great thing about these tools is that they are easy to install and test out. Here are other reviews you might find useful on these comment management systems. Blog Comment System Shootout: Disqus vs. Intense Debate vs. JS-Kit Echo &#8211; 40 Tech 3rd Party Comment System Roundup &#8211; Dave Mosher’s Blog Although I pinged Facebook and Twitter connections for examples of other 3rd party comment management tools that pull in off-site citations, I didn&#8217;t hear about any. I didn&#8217;t find much on Google either. There are other comment management services, tools and plug-ins, just not any (that I&#8217;ve found) that automatically pull in 3rd party mentions of your content. If you know of other comment management systems that pull in comments from other social media sites, please share in the comments. Do you use any of the the tools mentioned above? What has your experience been? What features would you like to see added? © Online Marketing Blog , 2010. &#124; Comment Management Tools You Should Know &#124; No comment &#124; http://www.toprankblog.com ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> What is Comment Management?  Virtually all blog software offers commenting functionality, so why would you need a 3rd party comment management service?  Many of the comments and &#8220;reactions&#8221; to content posted on a blog never make it to the blog itself &#8211; the source of the conversation. Comment Management tools provide all the expected features and also pull in mentions &#038; citations of the post as well. That way when someone reads a post on your blog, they can see comments made directly on the post as well as mentions made of of the post on other sites like Twitter. Should you add a comment manager tool to your blog? It depends how much of your social engagement is happening off your blog and also whether you feel it will add to the user experience to see a collected list of on and off site interactions. For many blogs, citing comment and reaction counts is simply a matter of social proofing and popularity. For others, it&#8217;s an attempt to harvest all the conversation about a post at the source. To help you decide, here are the three main comment management tools to consider: ECHO from JS-Kit offers a wide array of features. It can be embedded on a blog or static web site and pull in comments from Twitter, Digg, comments from other blogs, FriendFeed and several others. Commenters can choose to promote their comments simultaneously to Twitter, Facebook or Google Friends. Sites like Technorati and Guy Kawasaki use ECHO.  We tried JS-Kit but didn&#8217;t like not being able to show comments on top of the off site citations under each post.  JS-Kit ECHO Live is $12/year and ECHO Live white label is $48/year. There is also a PRO version with many other controls and features with costs according to page views ranging from $195 to $1995 per year. Disqus , as you may have noticed, is the commenting system we are currently using on Online Marketing Blog . Disqus lets readers choose their identity, via: Facebook Connect, OpenID, or Twitter Sign-in, when they leave a comment. Comments can be threaded and the moderation dashboard is easy to use. Off site references to your content on Twitter, FriendFeed, Digg, and YouTube are pulled in as &#8220;Reactions&#8221;. You can sort comments as we do, on top, then show the reactions below. Readers can choose to cross post their comment to other social media sites like Facebook and Twitter.   You can edit comment content but not the names of commenters, which is frustrating because some spammers write really useful comment content but spam them hell out of their names and links. The base version of Disqus is free. Disqus VIP offers much hand holding support and analytics. Cost is not disclosed on the site so it must be very expensive. IntenseDebate was acquired by Automattic, the company behind WordPress and therefore, can be easily added to WordPress blogs as well as TypePad, Tumblr or Blogger blogs. There&#8217;s comment threading, notification by email, commenter profiles and points, moderation, cross posting to Twitter and several other features.  IntenseDebate is free. Which comment management tool is right for you? It depends on your use. If you have a static web site and you&#8217;d like to add comment features, then ECHO might be a fit. If you want something that offers all the basics and works natively with WordPress then maybe IntenseDebate is your pick. If you want more features and also don&#8217;t want to pay anything, then it&#8217;s possible Disqus is the choice for you. The great thing about these tools is that they are easy to install and test out. Here are other reviews you might find useful on these comment management systems. Blog Comment System Shootout: Disqus vs. Intense Debate vs. JS-Kit Echo &#8211; 40 Tech 3rd Party Comment System Roundup &#8211; Dave Mosher’s Blog Although I pinged Facebook and Twitter connections for examples of other 3rd party comment management tools that pull in off-site citations, I didn&#8217;t hear about any. I didn&#8217;t find much on Google either. There are other comment management services, tools and plug-ins, just not any (that I&#8217;ve found) that automatically pull in 3rd party mentions of your content. If you know of other comment management systems that pull in comments from other social media sites, please share in the comments. Do you use any of the the tools mentioned above? What has your experience been? What features would you like to see added? © Online Marketing Blog , 2010. | Comment Management Tools You Should Know | No comment | http://www.toprankblog.com </p>
<p><img src="http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/04/ea6a5aa43agement.jpg.jpg" title="Comment Management Tools You Should Know" alt="ea6a5aa43agement.jpg Comment Management Tools You Should Know" /></p>
<p>See more here:<br />
<a target="_blank" href="http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/OnlineMarketingSEOBlog/~3/0RigGl1UXcY/" title="Comment Management Tools You Should Know">Comment Management Tools You Should Know</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Sponsored Posts – Measure The Risk Carefully</title>
		<link>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/pay-per-click/sponsored-posts-%e2%80%93-measure-the-risk-carefully/</link>
		<comments>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/pay-per-click/sponsored-posts-%e2%80%93-measure-the-risk-carefully/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 05 Apr 2010 15:22:34 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Pay-Per-Click]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[content]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[facebook]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jeremiah Owyang]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[online-marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[party]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[product]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[seo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social-media]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sponsored conversation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sponsored-posts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[tactic]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[words]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/uncategorized/sponsored-posts-%e2%80%93-measure-the-risk-carefully/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[ Sponsored posts have been a hot topic in the blogosphere and among marketers the last few years. What exactly is a sponsored post?  The simple answer is:  a company pays a blogger cash to blog about their product or service.  This is different than an advertorial since the blogger is paid cash to write the content as opposed to the sponsor creating the message. An entire cottage industry of companies such as IZEA, Smorty and a slew of others have sprung up to offer a variety of methods to pay for sponsored posts.  Some require bloggers to say good things.  Others tell bloggers they are free to write what they wish.  But in either case, there are potential risks involved marketers should be aware of. Many digital audiences appear to have an  issue with sponsored posts because they see it as a breach of unwritten editorial rules of the web.  It is for that core reason sponsored posts remain controversial. For the purposes of this post, I am just talking about cash for blog posts.  This a different animal than offering sampling, trials or demos of products. Let’s dig into why sponsored – aka cash for blog posts – are something you should measure the risk of carefully: Sponsored posts may draw the eyes of the engines Cash for blog posts could be risky behavior if the sponsored links are follow links.  Matt Cutts at Google has publicly stated that paid posts should not affect search engines .   A simple solution for companies brokering sponsored posts is to require the no-follow attribute added to links within the content.  Some pay-per-post companies offering this service state they require it.  Some bloggers may adhere.  But many bloggers have no idea what a no-follow attribute is and may not follow this guideline.  Additionally, bloggers and marketers engaging in outright cash-for-play are involved in risky behavior even with no-follow links.  This is due to halo effect of linking in the social web, and may walk a thin line with the engines who are paying attention to these campaigns. Before engaging in sponsored posts, consider organic outreach More than 80% of bloggers are already writing on products and brands .  In other words: be remarkable, have great marketing/PR and you’ll be talked about.  Learn the intersection of social media and PR , begin content marketing and engage in strategies that inspire natural coverage, conversation and influence.  The organic approach yields the highest results: since sponsored posts must have no-follow links, the SEO and PR intersection does not exist. Sponsored posts may train audiences to expect cash to write about you By engaging in sponsored posts, you may succeed in training audiences to expect a return every time they mention your brand or product.  Instead of growing in an organic fashion, sponsored posts may keep your brand out of the natural conversations and put you on a treadmill of having to pay cash for coverage.  And that’s not a sustainable way to grow a web community . May be seen as inauthentic Due to FCC rules , all sponsored content must be disclosed.  With this disclosure and transparency, readers see the content was influenced by cash, not the author&#8217;s true perception of the product or brand.  This potentially destroys the true power of word of mouth .  It affects the blogger as well:  they may lose the trust of a carefully built audience.  Audiences may not believe a blogger thought a product was great because that blogger was paid to talk about it. Sponsored posts are advertising &#8211; not social media Companies who pay bloggers cash to write about them are engaging in advertising, not social media.  Would you pay someone cash to talk about your company or product at a party?  What would everyone else at the party think?  That’s exactly what happens on the social web when users see bloggers taking cash to write up products.  So if you think it’s a risky play to pay people cash to talk about your brand or product in person, it’s equally so online (perhaps even more so since the web is referential). Organic push methods do exist Newswires, article submissions, advertorials, syndication products, and other paid methods of gaining exposure amongst web audiences exist.  The social web as a whole has less issues with these services because they are not paying individuals directly to talk about them.  Rather, they are paying to have their messages added to areas they will be found &#8211; and then reacted to &#8211; without cash going directly to users or leveraging a personal brand for influence.  Communications professionals can use paid tools to cross the editorial line with less risk than directly paying cash to individuals. Conclusion Forrester research has been touting the positives of sponsored conversations.  Jeremiah Owyang says they are here to stay .  There are companies engaging in this tactic and doing fine.  I&#8217;m not ruling the tactic out entirely, but I do wish to caution marketing and PR professionals to weigh the risk carefully.  Sponsored posts may run counter to a social media marketing strategy focused on inspiring organic attention and building a community based on trust.  They do not provide the SEO benefits of organic outreach.  Consider your larger objectives and strategies carefully and ask yourself  if sponsored posts are the tactic for you. ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> Sponsored posts have been a hot topic in the blogosphere and among marketers the last few years. What exactly is a sponsored post?  The simple answer is:  a company pays a blogger cash to blog about their product or service.  This is different than an advertorial since the blogger is paid cash to write the content as opposed to the sponsor creating the message. An entire cottage industry of companies such as IZEA, Smorty and a slew of others have sprung up to offer a variety of methods to pay for sponsored posts.  Some require bloggers to say good things.  Others tell bloggers they are free to write what they wish.  But in either case, there are potential risks involved marketers should be aware of. Many digital audiences appear to have an  issue with sponsored posts because they see it as a breach of unwritten editorial rules of the web.  It is for that core reason sponsored posts remain controversial. For the purposes of this post, I am just talking about cash for blog posts.  This a different animal than offering sampling, trials or demos of products. Let’s dig into why sponsored – aka cash for blog posts – are something you should measure the risk of carefully: Sponsored posts may draw the eyes of the engines Cash for blog posts could be risky behavior if the sponsored links are follow links.  Matt Cutts at Google has publicly stated that paid posts should not affect search engines .   A simple solution for companies brokering sponsored posts is to require the no-follow attribute added to links within the content.  Some pay-per-post companies offering this service state they require it.  Some bloggers may adhere.  But many bloggers have no idea what a no-follow attribute is and may not follow this guideline.  Additionally, bloggers and marketers engaging in outright cash-for-play are involved in risky behavior even with no-follow links.  This is due to halo effect of linking in the social web, and may walk a thin line with the engines who are paying attention to these campaigns. Before engaging in sponsored posts, consider organic outreach More than 80% of bloggers are already writing on products and brands .  In other words: be remarkable, have great marketing/PR and you’ll be talked about.  Learn the intersection of social media and PR , begin content marketing and engage in strategies that inspire natural coverage, conversation and influence.  The organic approach yields the highest results: since sponsored posts must have no-follow links, the SEO and PR intersection does not exist. Sponsored posts may train audiences to expect cash to write about you By engaging in sponsored posts, you may succeed in training audiences to expect a return every time they mention your brand or product.  Instead of growing in an organic fashion, sponsored posts may keep your brand out of the natural conversations and put you on a treadmill of having to pay cash for coverage.  And that’s not a sustainable way to grow a web community . May be seen as inauthentic Due to FCC rules , all sponsored content must be disclosed.  With this disclosure and transparency, readers see the content was influenced by cash, not the author&#8217;s true perception of the product or brand.  This potentially destroys the true power of word of mouth .  It affects the blogger as well:  they may lose the trust of a carefully built audience.  Audiences may not believe a blogger thought a product was great because that blogger was paid to talk about it. Sponsored posts are advertising &#8211; not social media Companies who pay bloggers cash to write about them are engaging in advertising, not social media.  Would you pay someone cash to talk about your company or product at a party?  What would everyone else at the party think?  That’s exactly what happens on the social web when users see bloggers taking cash to write up products.  So if you think it’s a risky play to pay people cash to talk about your brand or product in person, it’s equally so online (perhaps even more so since the web is referential). Organic push methods do exist Newswires, article submissions, advertorials, syndication products, and other paid methods of gaining exposure amongst web audiences exist.  The social web as a whole has less issues with these services because they are not paying individuals directly to talk about them.  Rather, they are paying to have their messages added to areas they will be found &#8211; and then reacted to &#8211; without cash going directly to users or leveraging a personal brand for influence.  Communications professionals can use paid tools to cross the editorial line with less risk than directly paying cash to individuals. Conclusion Forrester research has been touting the positives of sponsored conversations.  Jeremiah Owyang says they are here to stay .  There are companies engaging in this tactic and doing fine.  I&#8217;m not ruling the tactic out entirely, but I do wish to caution marketing and PR professionals to weigh the risk carefully.  Sponsored posts may run counter to a social media marketing strategy focused on inspiring organic attention and building a community based on trust.  They do not provide the SEO benefits of organic outreach.  Consider your larger objectives and strategies carefully and ask yourself  if sponsored posts are the tactic for you. </p>
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		<title>New Google Design &amp; Not Entirely Unlike Jeremiah Owyang</title>
		<link>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/online-advertising/internet-marketing/new-google-design-not-entirely-unlike-jeremiah-owyang/</link>
		<comments>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/online-advertising/internet-marketing/new-google-design-not-entirely-unlike-jeremiah-owyang/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 03 Apr 2010 16:30:09 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Internet Marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pay-Per-Click]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[country]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[display-the-new]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[facebook]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[google-design]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jeremiah Owyang]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[John Battelle]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lee Odden]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[online-marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[owyang]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[people search]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[search-engine]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[ No this is not linkbait using Jeremiah&#8217;s name. Read on to find out what this &#8220;not entirely unlike&#8221; business from Google is all about and what it has to do with him. A while back I wrote about the new design Google is testing (which I like a lot) that adds a third column to search results along the left side.  It&#8217;s come and gone a few times since then as I move about the country and as Google reveals it for testing. As of this morning, Google is delivering the new design to me again and I noticed something different after doing a search on my name. (Admit it, you Google your own name too!) At the bottom of the new column it shows an unconventionally named, &#8220;Not entirely unlike&#8221; result.  What kind of label is that? It reminds me of the slang phrase, &#8220;it doesn&#8217;t suck&#8221;. With the addition of Google Profiles and real-time search as well as many other sources, it&#8217;s interesting that Google is making such a distinction at the individual level. However, it&#8217;s not just people being referenced as &#8220;Not Entirely Unlike&#8221;. Here are an interesting set of connections that came up: Lee Odden > Not entirely unlike:  Jeremiah Owyang Jeremiah Owyang > Not entirely unlike: chris brogan, robert scoble, charlene li, om malik, john battelle John Battelle > Not entirely unlike: guy kawasaki, david weinberger, seth godin, robert scoble, om malik Om Malik > Not entirely unlike: marshall kirkpatrick, walt mossberg, kara swisher, robert scoble, john battelle Robert Scoble > Not entirely unlike: dave winer, jason calacanis, jeremiah owyang, steve rubel, guy kawasaki Guy Kawasaki > Not entirely unlike: seth godin, john battelle, robert scoble, clay shirky, lawrence lessig And on and on it goes with circular references (except for me, since I hardly belong in a list with these people). The notion that many public figures on the web frequently reference each other or at least cite common concepts and resources may very well be supported by the connections listed above.  Also I would note this is not the same as the &#8220;Related searches&#8221; that often show at the bottom of the search results. Is there anything useful in the &#8220;Not entirely unlike&#8221; feature for marketers? I&#8217;d say it&#8217;s about as useful as the Wonder Wheel if you were to use it for keyword brainstorming or research. Besides certain people&#8217;s names, it does come up for certain, general phrases too: Internet marketing > Not entirely unlike:  search engine optimization, online marketing, affiliate marketing CRM software > customer relationship management, erp, financial software, crm solution, business software Coffee > espresso, cocoa, orange juice, banana, chocolate Interestingly, it doesn&#8217;t fire for phrases like, &#8220;iPad&#8221;, &#8220;iPhone&#8221; or &#8220;Apple&#8221; but does for &#8220;smart phone&#8221; and &#8220;google phone&#8221;.  To test this yourself, Google must have chosen to display the new Google design to you. It doesn&#8217;t work with the current form of Google. Are you getting the new Google design? What do you think of it? Are there other features you&#8217;ve seen that are interesting? ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> No this is not linkbait using Jeremiah&#8217;s name. Read on to find out what this &#8220;not entirely unlike&#8221; business from Google is all about and what it has to do with him. A while back I wrote about the new design Google is testing (which I like a lot) that adds a third column to search results along the left side.  It&#8217;s come and gone a few times since then as I move about the country and as Google reveals it for testing. As of this morning, Google is delivering the new design to me again and I noticed something different after doing a search on my name. (Admit it, you Google your own name too!) At the bottom of the new column it shows an unconventionally named, &#8220;Not entirely unlike&#8221; result.  What kind of label is that? It reminds me of the slang phrase, &#8220;it doesn&#8217;t suck&#8221;. With the addition of Google Profiles and real-time search as well as many other sources, it&#8217;s interesting that Google is making such a distinction at the individual level. However, it&#8217;s not just people being referenced as &#8220;Not Entirely Unlike&#8221;. Here are an interesting set of connections that came up: Lee Odden > Not entirely unlike:  Jeremiah Owyang Jeremiah Owyang > Not entirely unlike: chris brogan, robert scoble, charlene li, om malik, john battelle John Battelle > Not entirely unlike: guy kawasaki, david weinberger, seth godin, robert scoble, om malik Om Malik > Not entirely unlike: marshall kirkpatrick, walt mossberg, kara swisher, robert scoble, john battelle Robert Scoble > Not entirely unlike: dave winer, jason calacanis, jeremiah owyang, steve rubel, guy kawasaki Guy Kawasaki > Not entirely unlike: seth godin, john battelle, robert scoble, clay shirky, lawrence lessig And on and on it goes with circular references (except for me, since I hardly belong in a list with these people). The notion that many public figures on the web frequently reference each other or at least cite common concepts and resources may very well be supported by the connections listed above.  Also I would note this is not the same as the &#8220;Related searches&#8221; that often show at the bottom of the search results. Is there anything useful in the &#8220;Not entirely unlike&#8221; feature for marketers? I&#8217;d say it&#8217;s about as useful as the Wonder Wheel if you were to use it for keyword brainstorming or research. Besides certain people&#8217;s names, it does come up for certain, general phrases too: Internet marketing > Not entirely unlike:  search engine optimization, online marketing, affiliate marketing CRM software > customer relationship management, erp, financial software, crm solution, business software Coffee > espresso, cocoa, orange juice, banana, chocolate Interestingly, it doesn&#8217;t fire for phrases like, &#8220;iPad&#8221;, &#8220;iPhone&#8221; or &#8220;Apple&#8221; but does for &#8220;smart phone&#8221; and &#8220;google phone&#8221;.  To test this yourself, Google must have chosen to display the new Google design to you. It doesn&#8217;t work with the current form of Google. Are you getting the new Google design? What do you think of it? Are there other features you&#8217;ve seen that are interesting? </p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>5 Tips for Better B2B Branding</title>
		<link>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/pay-per-click/5-tips-for-better-b2b-branding/</link>
		<comments>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/pay-per-click/5-tips-for-better-b2b-branding/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 26 Mar 2010 12:35:19 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>BlogPostman</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Pay-Per-Click]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[b2b]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[b2b branding]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[client]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[facebook]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[microsoft]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[online]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[online-marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social-media]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[space]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[staffing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[starbucks]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[strategy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[thought leadership]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[ Think branding only falls in the B2C court? Think again. In fact, three of the top 10 brands in 2009, as ranked by Interbrand, generate a sizable amount of revenue from their B2B customers: IBM, Microsoft and GE. As a B2B marketer your brand is your most valuable asset. B2B branding is less about cool, hip monikers (the Apples and Starbucks of the world) – and more about thought leadership. Particularly in down economies, B2B prospects and customers conduct significant research leading up to purchases. That means you as a marketer have to educate them early on, and establish your brand as a trusted resource that gets their problems and has the solution. To help your organization be seen as the thought leader it is, we’ve identified five B2B branding tips: 1. Consistently produce useful, innovative content These days, every company is essentially a media company. So it’s easier than ever to provide relevant, informative content for customers and prospects. From a company blog to Twitter to YouTube, there is no end to the content channels available. Provide the latest industry news and insight on trends through: Offering a white paper through an email marketing campaign Creating videos and promoting through YouTube and on your web site Conducting interviews with industry influentials and turning into blog posts Whatever channels you choose to promote, and whatever types of content you create, these consistent signals prove to customers and prospects that you are a thought leader. 2. Network digitally and in person Nothing communicates a brand more than direct involvement with customers and prospect. In that regard, online social networking has opened a new door. According to a recent eMarketer study , six in 10 B2B marketers planned to up spending on social in 2010. Whether your organization integrates Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn or another social network into its B2B branding efforts, the same rules apply: Social media is about engaging in conversations, not just pushing products It&#8217;s not about the masses; it’s about your target audience It&#8217;s listening and hearing before selling and talking That&#8217;s not to say that in-person networking is irrelevant. On the contrary, perfect B2B branding combination. Take advantage of opportunities to give keynote speeches, participate in panel discussions or lead breakout sessions at industry events. 3. Get personal and be real B2C marketers seem to have this concept nailed. But humanizing your company for customers and prospects is just as important in B2B branding. For one TopRank® Online Marketing client, an industrial part distributor for the bulk powder processing industry, humanizing its image was a top concern. The TopRank team created the Powder Doctor, a unique character, to relate to customers and prospects through email marketing campaigns. This humorous cartoon character offers advice – Dear Abby style – for common industry problems. Powder Doctor campaigns have increased sales for Powder-Solutions by 83%. 4. Position yourself differently than others in the space No doubt about it, it&#8217;s tough to build personal B2B brand if you’re just like everyone else. You simply can&#8217;t be known for what everyone else is. Standing out from the crowd is easy when your products or services are truly one-of-a-kind. When products or services are similar to those offered by the competition, it’s more of a challenge to uniquely position yourself. For one TopRank client – a staffing software company – that challenge was known all too well. To help the client stand from a large pool of competitors, TopRank developed a copywriting strategy where website copy was written in first person, from the viewpoint of the staffing software (i.e., &#8220;why you should hire me to fill your staffing software needs&#8221;). This strategy has not only helped the company develop a truly distinct B2B brand; the strategy has also achieved increased search traffic, high rankings for terms such as &#8220;staffing software&#8221; and a trend up in inquiries. 5. Leverage proof points It&#8217;s perfectly appropriate – and necessary – to toot your own horn from time to time as part of your B2B branding efforts. Whether it&#8217;s an impressive media placement or a web traffic milestone, implement proof points illustrating why your organization is a thought leader into marketing communications. Keep in mind that proof points are both analytical and subjective. For example: Analytical: website traffic increases, number of retweets of blog posts, number of blog subscribers Subjective: media placements, media interviews, mentions on blogs Are Your Ready to Take B2B Branding to the Next Level? B2B branding through thought leadership is not as easily quantifiable as other marketing efforts. And investments in reputation building might not pay off as immediately as pay-per-click or email marketing. But building a recognizable B2B brand pays off in the form of long-term increased referrals, positive brand conversations on both digital and in-person channels, web traffic and sales. What methods have you used to build a B2B brand? ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> Think branding only falls in the B2C court? Think again. In fact, three of the top 10 brands in 2009, as ranked by Interbrand, generate a sizable amount of revenue from their B2B customers: IBM, Microsoft and GE. As a B2B marketer your brand is your most valuable asset. B2B branding is less about cool, hip monikers (the Apples and Starbucks of the world) – and more about thought leadership. Particularly in down economies, B2B prospects and customers conduct significant research leading up to purchases. That means you as a marketer have to educate them early on, and establish your brand as a trusted resource that gets their problems and has the solution. To help your organization be seen as the thought leader it is, we’ve identified five B2B branding tips: 1. Consistently produce useful, innovative content These days, every company is essentially a media company. So it’s easier than ever to provide relevant, informative content for customers and prospects. From a company blog to Twitter to YouTube, there is no end to the content channels available. Provide the latest industry news and insight on trends through: Offering a white paper through an email marketing campaign Creating videos and promoting through YouTube and on your web site Conducting interviews with industry influentials and turning into blog posts Whatever channels you choose to promote, and whatever types of content you create, these consistent signals prove to customers and prospects that you are a thought leader. 2. Network digitally and in person Nothing communicates a brand more than direct involvement with customers and prospect. In that regard, online social networking has opened a new door. According to a recent eMarketer study , six in 10 B2B marketers planned to up spending on social in 2010. Whether your organization integrates Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn or another social network into its B2B branding efforts, the same rules apply: Social media is about engaging in conversations, not just pushing products It&#8217;s not about the masses; it’s about your target audience It&#8217;s listening and hearing before selling and talking That&#8217;s not to say that in-person networking is irrelevant. On the contrary, perfect B2B branding combination. Take advantage of opportunities to give keynote speeches, participate in panel discussions or lead breakout sessions at industry events. 3. Get personal and be real B2C marketers seem to have this concept nailed. But humanizing your company for customers and prospects is just as important in B2B branding. For one TopRank® Online Marketing client, an industrial part distributor for the bulk powder processing industry, humanizing its image was a top concern. The TopRank team created the Powder Doctor, a unique character, to relate to customers and prospects through email marketing campaigns. This humorous cartoon character offers advice – Dear Abby style – for common industry problems. Powder Doctor campaigns have increased sales for Powder-Solutions by 83%. 4. Position yourself differently than others in the space No doubt about it, it&#8217;s tough to build personal B2B brand if you’re just like everyone else. You simply can&#8217;t be known for what everyone else is. Standing out from the crowd is easy when your products or services are truly one-of-a-kind. When products or services are similar to those offered by the competition, it’s more of a challenge to uniquely position yourself. For one TopRank client – a staffing software company – that challenge was known all too well. To help the client stand from a large pool of competitors, TopRank developed a copywriting strategy where website copy was written in first person, from the viewpoint of the staffing software (i.e., &#8220;why you should hire me to fill your staffing software needs&#8221;). This strategy has not only helped the company develop a truly distinct B2B brand; the strategy has also achieved increased search traffic, high rankings for terms such as &#8220;staffing software&#8221; and a trend up in inquiries. 5. Leverage proof points It&#8217;s perfectly appropriate – and necessary – to toot your own horn from time to time as part of your B2B branding efforts. Whether it&#8217;s an impressive media placement or a web traffic milestone, implement proof points illustrating why your organization is a thought leader into marketing communications. Keep in mind that proof points are both analytical and subjective. For example: Analytical: website traffic increases, number of retweets of blog posts, number of blog subscribers Subjective: media placements, media interviews, mentions on blogs Are Your Ready to Take B2B Branding to the Next Level? B2B branding through thought leadership is not as easily quantifiable as other marketing efforts. And investments in reputation building might not pay off as immediately as pay-per-click or email marketing. But building a recognizable B2B brand pays off in the form of long-term increased referrals, positive brand conversations on both digital and in-person channels, web traffic and sales. What methods have you used to build a B2B brand? </p>
<h4>Popular Searches</h4><ul><li><a href="http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/pay-per-click/5-tips-for-better-b2b-branding/" title="innovative b2b branding">innovative b2b branding</a></li><li><a href="http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/pay-per-click/5-tips-for-better-b2b-branding/" title="tips b2b">tips b2b</a></li></ul><!-- SEO SearchTerms Tagging 2 plugin took 1.33 ms -->]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>How To Develop Great Content – SESNY</title>
		<link>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/pay-per-click/how-to-develop-great-content-%e2%80%93-sesny/</link>
		<comments>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/pay-per-click/how-to-develop-great-content-%e2%80%93-sesny/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 25 Mar 2010 12:00:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>BlogPostman</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Pay-Per-Click]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[develop]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[director]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[facebook]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[industries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[industry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[online]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[online marketing tips]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[people]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[research-tools]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[search engine strategies]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[white]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[ At Online Marketing Blog, content marketing is frequently a hot topic.  And with good reason:  it&#8217;s a vital skill for marketers. Not only do we at TopRank Online Marketing see great results implementing content marketing for clients, but the industry as a whole sees it as a clear trend.  Consider the following stats: 6 in 10 marketers plan to spend more on content marketing in 2010. 71% of bloggers who maintain blogs for a business – their own or one they work for – report that they have increased their visibility within their industries through their blogs (as just one example of content marketing in action). Content marketing plays an integral role in many of the top digital marketing tactics marketers implemented in 2009. In this fast-paced panel, 3 content marketers each shared some quick tips, trends and strategies for content marketing. Byron White, Chief Idea Officer, ideaLaunch Byron ran through an overview of 10 tips to follow when fleshing out a content marketing plan: 1.  Develop a content marketing plan – many digital marketers just dive in without any type of plan.  This is always a mistake, before going any further, you need to get organized and understand next steps 2.  Use free and paid research tools to research terms – there are a slew of both free and paid research tools which can help you define keywords necessary to create a keyword glossary.  Use tools in conjunction with your own creativity to create an inclusive list of terms. 3.  Find the hot topics and keywords – by understanding the industry and leveraging tools, you can discover hot/trending topics and keywords to be a part of your mix in addition to the mainstay terms. 4.  Develop customer profiles for testing/research the competition – building customer profiles and competitive research allows you to draw upon a knowledge base when creating content to both stand out from competitors and connect with your audience. 5.  Develop an SEO plan with “keyword silos” – made up of long tail and short tail keywords – in addition to building a keyword list, group it into like terms in order for your content team to leverage it in an effective manner during content creation. 6.  Score content for SEO strength – either via an automated tool or manually, score existing content for SEO strength in order to gauge what to optimize first. 7.  Infuse your brand with great content – on the web, your content is your brand (and your brand is your content). 8.  Create stories – people connect with stories more than just product pages and lists of features.  Tell stories and connect with prospects at a much deeper level. 9.  Define great content – know what great content looks like before you develop it.  You can’t create something remarkable unless you have a vision in mind. 10.  Document content publishing date – this is a frequently forgotten, but important tip.  Only by documenting new content publishing date can you track/trend success of that content over time. Of course, metrics are key – track interaction and engagement with content.  Get to a point you understand how your content, whether a blog post or a product page, is converting and working for your brand. Heather Lloyd-Martin, CEO, SuccessWorks Heather spoke on developing great content in the B2C and B2B space. Why care about content?  The best SEO is good content, according to Seth Godin.  If you want people to convert, link to you or even visit your site you need quality content. Main advantage of good content?  Control.  Great content allows you to gain control of your site. Tip # 1:  Think about your target audience Start by creating a customer persona.  The questions you need to answer to do this include: Who is your target audience?  (hint: it’s not everyone) Do you have multiple audiences? How old is your typical buyer/reader? What education level do they have? What are their average levels of income? What benefits are important? Tip #2: Expand your keyphrase universe Look for opportunities to build out new, unique content.  Reach both hit and long tail phrases, and create content that speaks to a broad mix of terms.  One way to do this is build out a resource section to answer both broad and ultra-specific, detailed questions. Tip #3:  Free your content from “fake SEO rules” “Party like its 1999…but don’t optimize your site that way.”  I.E. – there’s no need to follow a specific keyword density to rank.  Instead focus on quality first, keywords second. General SEO content rules: Keyphrases in headlines/subheadlines Keyphrases in hyperlinks Keyphrases throughout the content (but not forcing it) Keyphrase-rich title Focus around 2-3 keyphrases per page Tip #4:  Help your titles sizzle off the surface of SERPs When you’re on a SERP, there are 10 results and users need to pick one. Try to keep your titles to around 70 characters Include your main keyphrases Clearly explain what the landing page is about Include benefit statements (such as “free”) whenever possible Tip #5 There is always something you can do Beware the “website mullet.”  Check for outdated copy.  Some of the worst offenders can be press pages, conference/events pages, old articles, etc.  Where possible, update copy or add additional content if you have older areas of a website gathering cobwebs. Also, if you want to build out a new section of the site to make your content friendlier but can’t change the template:  start a blog or create a new section of the site.  Don’t let technical issues get in your way. Jonathan Allen, Director, Search Engine Watch Jonathan spoke on the idea of using other people’s websites/social sites to gain rankings and an audience.  The theme  was on mash-ups – aka remixes of content. Define your goal – is the goal of this content to persuade or sell people to take action or is it more long-term, to develop links to improve your search engine rankings/brand awareness.  Develop personas – I.E. connectors, those hyper-connected individuals who will help your content spread.  By reaching them, you achieve the highest propensity for your content to spread. Create content – it must be relevant and must be compelling. Connect – once content starts to spread, connect with others and encourage them to share so it spreads further. Rinse and repeat – when you find a formula that works, continue to leverage that to create additional content.  ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> At Online Marketing Blog, content marketing is frequently a hot topic.  And with good reason:  it&#8217;s a vital skill for marketers. Not only do we at TopRank Online Marketing see great results implementing content marketing for clients, but the industry as a whole sees it as a clear trend.  Consider the following stats: 6 in 10 marketers plan to spend more on content marketing in 2010. 71% of bloggers who maintain blogs for a business – their own or one they work for – report that they have increased their visibility within their industries through their blogs (as just one example of content marketing in action). Content marketing plays an integral role in many of the top digital marketing tactics marketers implemented in 2009. In this fast-paced panel, 3 content marketers each shared some quick tips, trends and strategies for content marketing. Byron White, Chief Idea Officer, ideaLaunch Byron ran through an overview of 10 tips to follow when fleshing out a content marketing plan: 1.  Develop a content marketing plan – many digital marketers just dive in without any type of plan.  This is always a mistake, before going any further, you need to get organized and understand next steps 2.  Use free and paid research tools to research terms – there are a slew of both free and paid research tools which can help you define keywords necessary to create a keyword glossary.  Use tools in conjunction with your own creativity to create an inclusive list of terms. 3.  Find the hot topics and keywords – by understanding the industry and leveraging tools, you can discover hot/trending topics and keywords to be a part of your mix in addition to the mainstay terms. 4.  Develop customer profiles for testing/research the competition – building customer profiles and competitive research allows you to draw upon a knowledge base when creating content to both stand out from competitors and connect with your audience. 5.  Develop an SEO plan with “keyword silos” – made up of long tail and short tail keywords – in addition to building a keyword list, group it into like terms in order for your content team to leverage it in an effective manner during content creation. 6.  Score content for SEO strength – either via an automated tool or manually, score existing content for SEO strength in order to gauge what to optimize first. 7.  Infuse your brand with great content – on the web, your content is your brand (and your brand is your content). 8.  Create stories – people connect with stories more than just product pages and lists of features.  Tell stories and connect with prospects at a much deeper level. 9.  Define great content – know what great content looks like before you develop it.  You can’t create something remarkable unless you have a vision in mind. 10.  Document content publishing date – this is a frequently forgotten, but important tip.  Only by documenting new content publishing date can you track/trend success of that content over time. Of course, metrics are key – track interaction and engagement with content.  Get to a point you understand how your content, whether a blog post or a product page, is converting and working for your brand. Heather Lloyd-Martin, CEO, SuccessWorks Heather spoke on developing great content in the B2C and B2B space. Why care about content?  The best SEO is good content, according to Seth Godin.  If you want people to convert, link to you or even visit your site you need quality content. Main advantage of good content?  Control.  Great content allows you to gain control of your site. Tip # 1:  Think about your target audience Start by creating a customer persona.  The questions you need to answer to do this include: Who is your target audience?  (hint: it’s not everyone) Do you have multiple audiences? How old is your typical buyer/reader? What education level do they have? What are their average levels of income? What benefits are important? Tip #2: Expand your keyphrase universe Look for opportunities to build out new, unique content.  Reach both hit and long tail phrases, and create content that speaks to a broad mix of terms.  One way to do this is build out a resource section to answer both broad and ultra-specific, detailed questions. Tip #3:  Free your content from “fake SEO rules” “Party like its 1999…but don’t optimize your site that way.”  I.E. – there’s no need to follow a specific keyword density to rank.  Instead focus on quality first, keywords second. General SEO content rules: Keyphrases in headlines/subheadlines Keyphrases in hyperlinks Keyphrases throughout the content (but not forcing it) Keyphrase-rich title Focus around 2-3 keyphrases per page Tip #4:  Help your titles sizzle off the surface of SERPs When you’re on a SERP, there are 10 results and users need to pick one. Try to keep your titles to around 70 characters Include your main keyphrases Clearly explain what the landing page is about Include benefit statements (such as “free”) whenever possible Tip #5 There is always something you can do Beware the “website mullet.”  Check for outdated copy.  Some of the worst offenders can be press pages, conference/events pages, old articles, etc.  Where possible, update copy or add additional content if you have older areas of a website gathering cobwebs. Also, if you want to build out a new section of the site to make your content friendlier but can’t change the template:  start a blog or create a new section of the site.  Don’t let technical issues get in your way. Jonathan Allen, Director, Search Engine Watch Jonathan spoke on the idea of using other people’s websites/social sites to gain rankings and an audience.  The theme  was on mash-ups – aka remixes of content. Define your goal – is the goal of this content to persuade or sell people to take action or is it more long-term, to develop links to improve your search engine rankings/brand awareness.  Develop personas – I.E. connectors, those hyper-connected individuals who will help your content spread.  By reaching them, you achieve the highest propensity for your content to spread. Create content – it must be relevant and must be compelling. Connect – once content starts to spread, connect with others and encourage them to share so it spreads further. Rinse and repeat – when you find a formula that works, continue to leverage that to create additional content.  </p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>10 Steps to Optimize Your Content Marketing Strategy</title>
		<link>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/pay-per-click/10-steps-to-optimize-your-content-marketing-strategy/</link>
		<comments>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/pay-per-click/10-steps-to-optimize-your-content-marketing-strategy/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 24 Mar 2010 15:38:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Pay-Per-Click]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[audio]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[customer]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dao]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[digital]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[digital-media]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[facebook]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[measurement]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[online-marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[optimization]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[search-engine]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[seo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[ SES New York kicked off with an excellent keynote presentation by David Meerman Scott (interview) followed by a panel on Digital Asset Optimization including Mark Knowles, Chris Boggs and myself. Richard Zwicky moderated. The rising importance of optimizing one&#8217;s digital assets came out of Google and other search engines&#8217; decision to start including information and file types from other sources that their main search index. Some queries trigger search results that go beyond web pages, MS Office docs and PDF files to include images, blog posts, news, video thumbnails, books and others. While many SEOs were responding to the changed landscape of the Search Engine Results Page (SERP) and optimizing for other file types, many others were already optimizing holistically under the premise of, &#8220; What can be searched on can be optimized &#8220;. Most companies are not wired to create the variety of content that can achieve top visibility on search engines. In most cases, search engine optimization efforts are focused on content and digital assets that are currently in place.  Being able to get more marketing impact out of existing content is as much a driver of digital asset optimization as it is a part of a holistic strategy that matches up with the opportunities presented by an ever changing search results page. In the DAO session I presented a historical perspective on DAO based on when we started writing about it in 2007 and the changed search landscape we face with personal, real-time, social and mobile search. I also discussed TopRank&#8217;s 10 Steps DAO Content Strategy: Search &#038; Social Media Keyword Research Anticipating demand via search is traditionally handled by keyword research tools such Google&#8217;s tools, Bing or services like Wordtracker and Keyword Discovery. As advertising and media placements can drive search, so can social conversations. Social media monitoring tools can help marketers conduct social keyword research as a compliment to search based keyword research. Find out what key language and key topics are being discussed on the social web and you&#8217;ll have invaluable insight into content idea that provide value for social media marketing and search engine optimization. Analyze Search Results Landscape The output of Universal and real-time search results are not persistent. For example, a search for a particular phrase one day might yield news and image results and on another day display only web pages. It&#8217;s useful to monitor the search results landscape for keyword phrases that you&#8217;re after. Understanding the mix of data sources besides the main search engine index can help with the allocation of optimization resources. If News and real-time results are most common, it may make more sense to focus on content promotion there vs images or video. Define Buyer Personas &#038; Buying Cycle Understanding the needs of your customer is marketing 101. Search marketers are becoming more sophisticated in their understanding of customer profiles and developing personas to represent who you&#8217;re trying to attract via search is an important step in a content strategy. Knowing what kind of content and what type of digital asset your customers will best respond to can improve effectivness at driving traffic from the search visibilyt you&#8217;ve achieved through SEO. The buying cycle is another dimension that warrants attention to make sure you&#8217;re creating, promoting and optimizing content that is relevant to where your customers are in their search/research process. Broad concepts usually represent early stages of research versus more specific phrases which often indicate a buyer is closer to purchase. Inventory Existing Content &#038; Assets With a more holistic SEO effort, especially one that will incorporate digital assets, it&#8217;s important to have a baseline understanding of what you have to work with. Taking inventory of your content and digital assets is something we&#8217;ve been recommending for over 3 years and it&#8217;s an essential first step. Having an understanding of current content and digital assets can also uncover content that is ripe for re-purposing. A common example is video that can be deconstructed into multiple, short form videos, single images, transcribed into text or splitting the audio off into a podcast. Develop editorial plan for new content Understanding your search and social media keywords, buyer personas and the assets you have to work with will help identify what new content you&#8217;ll need to create. Adopting the perspective of a publisher, not just a marketer, will help resource allocation, planning and goals/measurement for content creation. For example, rather than just sending out a press release and publishing a blog post with a new product announcement, a company might, based on search/social keyword research and an understanding of their buyer personas, decide to create a resource page for journalists that includes links to relevant resources, standard press release, images, PowerPoint, video, past media coverage, executive interviews, audio snippets, demo and appropriate media relations contact info. It would be made easy to bookmark or share this resource page as well. The assets being linked to from the resource page would be hosted either on the corporate site, optimized of course, or hosted on 3rd party media sharing sites such as Flicrk, YouTube, SlideShare, DocStoc, PRWeb and others. This provides a richer experience as well as numerous options for interaction. It also offers multiple, potential entry points into the resource page via search, since the optimized digital assets can rank in search results on their own and link to the destination content on the corporate web site. Map Keywords to Content &#038; Digital Assets The functional process of implementing search/social keyword research is to map those concepts to the content and assets you have. This helps manage the initial keyword optimization process. Mapping keywords to the editorial plan is also a useful guide for the future creation and optimization of content. Not only are web pages, images, video and other assets optimized for search, but optimized for customers. Operationalize Content &#038; Digital Media Creation with SEO SEO and digital asset optimization are not one-time events. Keyword demand will change and of course, new content and media will be published. To ensure keyword optimization of new content, it&#8217;s important to incorporate SEO with established content creation and promotion processes. That might be updating the corporate styleguide with SEO and keyword usage rules or it might mean making programming changes to the web site&#8217;s content management system to prompt content creators with keyword cues when adding text or other media. Develop Off Page DAO Assets The beauty of social content is of course, that it&#8217;s social! Sharing should be easy and encouraged. Hosting some digital assets on social media sharing sites such as those mentioned above (Flickr, YouTube, Slideshare, DocStoc) can introduce your optimized content to new audiences and attract both traffic and links. More relevant links mean better search engine visibility and web site visitors. Promote/Syndicate via Distribution Channels How will anyone know you have excellent content and digital assets if you don&#8217;t promote? Dedicate a fixed and persistent effort to developing social networks where your customers and influentials spend their time on the social web. Do the same with social media sharing web sites so that when you post a new video on YouTube for example, your network there can be notified. Developing distribution channels for content will significantly improve reach and the likelihood of your content being passed on, shared and made socially popular. Email newsletters, RSS, Ping.fm and TwitterFeed services are good examples of content distribution services that help promote content efficiently. Ongoing Measurement with Web, Social and Search Analytics Search marketing professionals are well aware of the value from web and search analytics that measure search visibility performance as well as web site interactions and conversions. The importance of social media monitoring and analytics is also essential for a DAO Content strategy. On the front end, social media monitoring tools can help you identify conversations and influentials that are meaningful to the topics and customers your marketing efforts are trying to reach. Social keyword research can in part, be accomplished by some social media monitoring tools. Those same tools are essential for measuring the social impact of your digital asset and social media optimization efforts. A simple cycle would be one where you&#8217;ve identified new keyword topics beginning to buzz on the social web and taking that cue to create content. Promote that content through your social networks and use social media monitoring to track the effects of your content contributions to the larger conversation on the topic. Use web analytics to measure any increase in search based traffic based on the growing popularity and awareness of the topic based in part, on your contributions and social interactions. With an Optimized Content Strategy, there&#8217;s good news and bad news. The good news is that by following these 10 steps, a significant impact can be achieved in overall authority for the topics and keyword concepts focused on as well as the ability to attract new business, media coverage and employees. The bad news is that it&#8217;s not easy. Making the commitment to serving customers with content and media on an ongoing basis, indefinitely without the initial ability to forecast ROI will make many companies say, &#8220;Great idea and it makes sense, but not for us.&#8221; However, those companies that make the effort to really understand and implement these fundamental concepts are making an investment with a payoff that is very long term and with momentum, very signifcant. Some companies will be able to &#8220;come out of nowhere&#8221; and dominate their category by following these 10 guidelines for an optimized content marketing strategy. Live blogging coverage of the Digital Asset Optimization session at SES New York was provided by: SEM Geek Outspoken Media Search Engine Roundtable AimClear And this article on Holistic SEO with Digital Asset Optimization was recently posted on ClickZ ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> SES New York kicked off with an excellent keynote presentation by David Meerman Scott (interview) followed by a panel on Digital Asset Optimization including Mark Knowles, Chris Boggs and myself. Richard Zwicky moderated. The rising importance of optimizing one&#8217;s digital assets came out of Google and other search engines&#8217; decision to start including information and file types from other sources that their main search index. Some queries trigger search results that go beyond web pages, MS Office docs and PDF files to include images, blog posts, news, video thumbnails, books and others. While many SEOs were responding to the changed landscape of the Search Engine Results Page (SERP) and optimizing for other file types, many others were already optimizing holistically under the premise of, &#8220; What can be searched on can be optimized &#8220;. Most companies are not wired to create the variety of content that can achieve top visibility on search engines. In most cases, search engine optimization efforts are focused on content and digital assets that are currently in place.  Being able to get more marketing impact out of existing content is as much a driver of digital asset optimization as it is a part of a holistic strategy that matches up with the opportunities presented by an ever changing search results page. In the DAO session I presented a historical perspective on DAO based on when we started writing about it in 2007 and the changed search landscape we face with personal, real-time, social and mobile search. I also discussed TopRank&#8217;s 10 Steps DAO Content Strategy: Search &#038; Social Media Keyword Research Anticipating demand via search is traditionally handled by keyword research tools such Google&#8217;s tools, Bing or services like Wordtracker and Keyword Discovery. As advertising and media placements can drive search, so can social conversations. Social media monitoring tools can help marketers conduct social keyword research as a compliment to search based keyword research. Find out what key language and key topics are being discussed on the social web and you&#8217;ll have invaluable insight into content idea that provide value for social media marketing and search engine optimization. Analyze Search Results Landscape The output of Universal and real-time search results are not persistent. For example, a search for a particular phrase one day might yield news and image results and on another day display only web pages. It&#8217;s useful to monitor the search results landscape for keyword phrases that you&#8217;re after. Understanding the mix of data sources besides the main search engine index can help with the allocation of optimization resources. If News and real-time results are most common, it may make more sense to focus on content promotion there vs images or video. Define Buyer Personas &#038; Buying Cycle Understanding the needs of your customer is marketing 101. Search marketers are becoming more sophisticated in their understanding of customer profiles and developing personas to represent who you&#8217;re trying to attract via search is an important step in a content strategy. Knowing what kind of content and what type of digital asset your customers will best respond to can improve effectivness at driving traffic from the search visibilyt you&#8217;ve achieved through SEO. The buying cycle is another dimension that warrants attention to make sure you&#8217;re creating, promoting and optimizing content that is relevant to where your customers are in their search/research process. Broad concepts usually represent early stages of research versus more specific phrases which often indicate a buyer is closer to purchase. Inventory Existing Content &#038; Assets With a more holistic SEO effort, especially one that will incorporate digital assets, it&#8217;s important to have a baseline understanding of what you have to work with. Taking inventory of your content and digital assets is something we&#8217;ve been recommending for over 3 years and it&#8217;s an essential first step. Having an understanding of current content and digital assets can also uncover content that is ripe for re-purposing. A common example is video that can be deconstructed into multiple, short form videos, single images, transcribed into text or splitting the audio off into a podcast. Develop editorial plan for new content Understanding your search and social media keywords, buyer personas and the assets you have to work with will help identify what new content you&#8217;ll need to create. Adopting the perspective of a publisher, not just a marketer, will help resource allocation, planning and goals/measurement for content creation. For example, rather than just sending out a press release and publishing a blog post with a new product announcement, a company might, based on search/social keyword research and an understanding of their buyer personas, decide to create a resource page for journalists that includes links to relevant resources, standard press release, images, PowerPoint, video, past media coverage, executive interviews, audio snippets, demo and appropriate media relations contact info. It would be made easy to bookmark or share this resource page as well. The assets being linked to from the resource page would be hosted either on the corporate site, optimized of course, or hosted on 3rd party media sharing sites such as Flicrk, YouTube, SlideShare, DocStoc, PRWeb and others. This provides a richer experience as well as numerous options for interaction. It also offers multiple, potential entry points into the resource page via search, since the optimized digital assets can rank in search results on their own and link to the destination content on the corporate web site. Map Keywords to Content &#038; Digital Assets The functional process of implementing search/social keyword research is to map those concepts to the content and assets you have. This helps manage the initial keyword optimization process. Mapping keywords to the editorial plan is also a useful guide for the future creation and optimization of content. Not only are web pages, images, video and other assets optimized for search, but optimized for customers. Operationalize Content &#038; Digital Media Creation with SEO SEO and digital asset optimization are not one-time events. Keyword demand will change and of course, new content and media will be published. To ensure keyword optimization of new content, it&#8217;s important to incorporate SEO with established content creation and promotion processes. That might be updating the corporate styleguide with SEO and keyword usage rules or it might mean making programming changes to the web site&#8217;s content management system to prompt content creators with keyword cues when adding text or other media. Develop Off Page DAO Assets The beauty of social content is of course, that it&#8217;s social! Sharing should be easy and encouraged. Hosting some digital assets on social media sharing sites such as those mentioned above (Flickr, YouTube, Slideshare, DocStoc) can introduce your optimized content to new audiences and attract both traffic and links. More relevant links mean better search engine visibility and web site visitors. Promote/Syndicate via Distribution Channels How will anyone know you have excellent content and digital assets if you don&#8217;t promote? Dedicate a fixed and persistent effort to developing social networks where your customers and influentials spend their time on the social web. Do the same with social media sharing web sites so that when you post a new video on YouTube for example, your network there can be notified. Developing distribution channels for content will significantly improve reach and the likelihood of your content being passed on, shared and made socially popular. Email newsletters, RSS, Ping.fm and TwitterFeed services are good examples of content distribution services that help promote content efficiently. Ongoing Measurement with Web, Social and Search Analytics Search marketing professionals are well aware of the value from web and search analytics that measure search visibility performance as well as web site interactions and conversions. The importance of social media monitoring and analytics is also essential for a DAO Content strategy. On the front end, social media monitoring tools can help you identify conversations and influentials that are meaningful to the topics and customers your marketing efforts are trying to reach. Social keyword research can in part, be accomplished by some social media monitoring tools. Those same tools are essential for measuring the social impact of your digital asset and social media optimization efforts. A simple cycle would be one where you&#8217;ve identified new keyword topics beginning to buzz on the social web and taking that cue to create content. Promote that content through your social networks and use social media monitoring to track the effects of your content contributions to the larger conversation on the topic. Use web analytics to measure any increase in search based traffic based on the growing popularity and awareness of the topic based in part, on your contributions and social interactions. With an Optimized Content Strategy, there&#8217;s good news and bad news. The good news is that by following these 10 steps, a significant impact can be achieved in overall authority for the topics and keyword concepts focused on as well as the ability to attract new business, media coverage and employees. The bad news is that it&#8217;s not easy. Making the commitment to serving customers with content and media on an ongoing basis, indefinitely without the initial ability to forecast ROI will make many companies say, &#8220;Great idea and it makes sense, but not for us.&#8221; However, those companies that make the effort to really understand and implement these fundamental concepts are making an investment with a payoff that is very long term and with momentum, very signifcant. Some companies will be able to &#8220;come out of nowhere&#8221; and dominate their category by following these 10 guidelines for an optimized content marketing strategy. Live blogging coverage of the Digital Asset Optimization session at SES New York was provided by: SEM Geek Outspoken Media Search Engine Roundtable AimClear And this article on Holistic SEO with Digital Asset Optimization was recently posted on ClickZ </p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>5 Tips To Optimize Press Releases For Search From PRWeb – SESNY</title>
		<link>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/pay-per-click/5-tips-to-optimize-press-releases-for-search-from-prweb-%e2%80%93-sesny/</link>
		<comments>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/pay-per-click/5-tips-to-optimize-press-releases-for-search-from-prweb-%e2%80%93-sesny/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 24 Mar 2010 11:58:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>BlogPostman</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Pay-Per-Click]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[director]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[facebook]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[images]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[online]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[online pr]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[press-releases]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[prweb]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[search engine strategies]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[search-engines]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social-networking]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[ TopRank Online Marketing has been working with PRWeb providing SEO consulting services for nearly one year. PRWeb was founded in 1997 to help small businesses and communications professionals leverage the web to share their news directly with the public. As part of this process PRWeb lead the way for the “direct-to-consumer” press release, enabling companies to communicate their news directly to customers, prospects, analysts and the media. During the past decade, PRWeb has reshaped the traditional press release and changed how companies large and small distribute news. Innovations of PRWeb over the years include: Search engine optimization (SEO) for press releases to increase the visibility of news in search engines like Google and Yahoo! Social bookmarking tools like trackbacks and bookmark links to take advantage of the explosion in social networking Really Simple Syndication (RSS) to increase the distribution potential of news and built the industry’s largest RSS network Allowing customers to include podcasts along with their news to increase the impact of their news release The “Feature Video” allowing customers to leverage the video content from popular sites like YouTube to bring their news to life Meg Walker, Director of Online Marketing for PRWeb lead a session discussing how to optimize press releases to gain the strongest visibility in both search engines and media. 1.  Meet audience demand Prior to drafting a release, you need to understand what your audience is demanding.  Meeting audience demand is integral to accomplishing your press release visibility objectives. There are many times you don’t realize there may be a hook in to reach your target, and understanding audience demand allows you to tap into it. The steps to meet audience demand include: Knowing your audience – what is it potential prospects and media are interested in?  In what tone should they be spoken to?  Do they appreciate a certain angle over another?  Understanding is key and should drive the strategy behind the release. Be relevant – more than just understanding your audience, give them content that is both relevant and timely.  By doing this, you’ll create the highest propensity your news gets picked up, shared and passed on. Satisfy customer demand &#8211; to know what the demand is, first research popular trends in search engines and stay on the pulse of your industry.  By creating content that is related to hot topics you can create far more visibility for your releases.  Staying up to date, informed and on the pulse of your customers is vital to connect with them through press releases. 2.  Stay focused By keeping your keywords and topics focused, your release can rank better in search engines and resonate more with media.  As you are writing releases, remember you are writing about one topic per release .  By segmenting the message or trying to say too much at once, you dilute your key points and take a risk prospects and media will walk away without taking next steps or remembering the point.  Keep it simple, focused and impactful. 3.  Use images for search Images can increase the click through rate on releases in both regular and news search by 15 – 25%.  It’s a simple step, but can’t be stressed enough.    Additionally, using images creates more traction in media – journalists and bloggers both love images as it helps them tell their story. At PRWeb, we have seen releases that used 3 images generate more than 50 articles.  We also find that many people are discovering images via image search, which then draws them back not only to the release, but to the customer web sites.  Because PRWeb hosts press releases forever, your images can continue to receive both organic and image search traffic indefinitely. 4.  Use videos to engage visitors By using video in news releases, we have seen up to a 500% increase in time on pages.  As the web shifts to a rich media experience, bloggers, media and end users are becoming more accustomed to video.  In the future, it may be common that video is included with releases.  But since today it is not as frequently used, it’s a chance to make your news stand out. 5.  Optimize your release Anchor text links &#8211; use 3 One to homepage – direct visitors directly to your company website. One to product page – send media and consumers directly to the product they are reading about. One to blog post – this presents an opportunity to speak to readers in a less formal fashion.  With social web users and digital influencers continually expecting social content, a press release presents a great opportunity to spark interest in your social content. Alt-tag – an alt tag helps your images get discovered in search engines – all release images should be tagged appropriately. URL Keyword – top keywords can be used as part of the URL string, so be sure and include those during the release selection process.  PRWeb allows you to customize this. Description Tag – add a keyword rich and compelling description tag (on PRWeb, that will become the meta tag). Title of release – the title of the release will become the title tag of the page, which is a vital element of your on-page optimization.  If you have a target phrase, ensure your phrase leads the title of release.  You can learn more about PRWeb at their website or follow them on Twitter . ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> TopRank Online Marketing has been working with PRWeb providing SEO consulting services for nearly one year. PRWeb was founded in 1997 to help small businesses and communications professionals leverage the web to share their news directly with the public. As part of this process PRWeb lead the way for the “direct-to-consumer” press release, enabling companies to communicate their news directly to customers, prospects, analysts and the media. During the past decade, PRWeb has reshaped the traditional press release and changed how companies large and small distribute news. Innovations of PRWeb over the years include: Search engine optimization (SEO) for press releases to increase the visibility of news in search engines like Google and Yahoo! Social bookmarking tools like trackbacks and bookmark links to take advantage of the explosion in social networking Really Simple Syndication (RSS) to increase the distribution potential of news and built the industry’s largest RSS network Allowing customers to include podcasts along with their news to increase the impact of their news release The “Feature Video” allowing customers to leverage the video content from popular sites like YouTube to bring their news to life Meg Walker, Director of Online Marketing for PRWeb lead a session discussing how to optimize press releases to gain the strongest visibility in both search engines and media. 1.  Meet audience demand Prior to drafting a release, you need to understand what your audience is demanding.  Meeting audience demand is integral to accomplishing your press release visibility objectives. There are many times you don’t realize there may be a hook in to reach your target, and understanding audience demand allows you to tap into it. The steps to meet audience demand include: Knowing your audience – what is it potential prospects and media are interested in?  In what tone should they be spoken to?  Do they appreciate a certain angle over another?  Understanding is key and should drive the strategy behind the release. Be relevant – more than just understanding your audience, give them content that is both relevant and timely.  By doing this, you’ll create the highest propensity your news gets picked up, shared and passed on. Satisfy customer demand &#8211; to know what the demand is, first research popular trends in search engines and stay on the pulse of your industry.  By creating content that is related to hot topics you can create far more visibility for your releases.  Staying up to date, informed and on the pulse of your customers is vital to connect with them through press releases. 2.  Stay focused By keeping your keywords and topics focused, your release can rank better in search engines and resonate more with media.  As you are writing releases, remember you are writing about one topic per release .  By segmenting the message or trying to say too much at once, you dilute your key points and take a risk prospects and media will walk away without taking next steps or remembering the point.  Keep it simple, focused and impactful. 3.  Use images for search Images can increase the click through rate on releases in both regular and news search by 15 – 25%.  It’s a simple step, but can’t be stressed enough.    Additionally, using images creates more traction in media – journalists and bloggers both love images as it helps them tell their story. At PRWeb, we have seen releases that used 3 images generate more than 50 articles.  We also find that many people are discovering images via image search, which then draws them back not only to the release, but to the customer web sites.  Because PRWeb hosts press releases forever, your images can continue to receive both organic and image search traffic indefinitely. 4.  Use videos to engage visitors By using video in news releases, we have seen up to a 500% increase in time on pages.  As the web shifts to a rich media experience, bloggers, media and end users are becoming more accustomed to video.  In the future, it may be common that video is included with releases.  But since today it is not as frequently used, it’s a chance to make your news stand out. 5.  Optimize your release Anchor text links &#8211; use 3 One to homepage – direct visitors directly to your company website. One to product page – send media and consumers directly to the product they are reading about. One to blog post – this presents an opportunity to speak to readers in a less formal fashion.  With social web users and digital influencers continually expecting social content, a press release presents a great opportunity to spark interest in your social content. Alt-tag – an alt tag helps your images get discovered in search engines – all release images should be tagged appropriately. URL Keyword – top keywords can be used as part of the URL string, so be sure and include those during the release selection process.  PRWeb allows you to customize this. Description Tag – add a keyword rich and compelling description tag (on PRWeb, that will become the meta tag). Title of release – the title of the release will become the title tag of the page, which is a vital element of your on-page optimization.  If you have a target phrase, ensure your phrase leads the title of release.  You can learn more about PRWeb at their website or follow them on Twitter . </p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Google: The Social Media Company</title>
		<link>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/pay-per-click/google-the-social-media-company/</link>
		<comments>http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/pay-per-click/google-the-social-media-company/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 19 Mar 2010 13:06:08 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Pay-Per-Click]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[facebook]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[google social media]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[google social search]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[google-buzz]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[google-wave]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[latest]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[networking]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[online-marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[search]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[search-results]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sharing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social-search]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[tool]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[youtube]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.jetcityjimbo.com/uncategorized/google-the-social-media-company/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[ Over the last few years, the popularity of social channels – for professionals, teens, grandmas and everyone in between – has skyrocketed. Consider the recent numbers: Twitter experienced an annual growth in 2009 of 1,382% Facebook now boasts 400 million active users Every minute, 20 hours of video are uploaded to YouTube Between blog posts, Facebook status updates, tweets, videos and every other piece of social content published, there&#8217;s a whole lot of information floating around out there. Enter the latest social media player, Google. Google&#8217;s latest activities, acquisitions and features all point to the fact that the search giant no longer has a close eye on web 2.0; it&#8217;s already there. Here are 5 ways Google is now becoming a dominant social media player: 1. Google Social Search Google Social Search results Until now all of the social content in channels like Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn, hasn’t been easy to find in a central place – including through Google search.  Until now, that is. That&#8217;s where Google Social Search comes in. It’s still in the experimental stages, but this new feature combines users&#8217; social connections with organic searches. For example, if you were to search for &#8220;New Zealand,&#8221; social search results would appear beneath the organic search results. The tool scans your social connections’ content (based on the social accounts included in your Google profile) to create these results. 2. Google Buzz Google Buzz These days, it seems the social world is abuzz with talk of Google Buzz . This new product is built into Gmail and essentially turns users&#8217; inboxes into social networks. A mobile version of Google Buzz is also available. Here&#8217;s how it works: Google Buzz leverages current email contacts and connects you with their social profiles. Through Gmail, you can share status updates and photos, and start conversations, all through from your email. What does this mean for your brand? You may want to consider adding Gmail to your social media marketing mix. 3. Twitter and Facebook Feeds in Search Results Imagine the tweets highlighting your latest blog post or a new product launch getting found in organic searches. These days, that’s a reality. At the end of February, Google happily announced on Twitter that public status updates from Facebook fan pages would now be included in real-time search . Facebook joins a long list of other social content appearing in search results including: Twitter tweets FriendFeed updates Google Buzz posts MySpace updates Twitter and Facebook marketing efforts, then, take on new importance and new meaning. It&#8217;s now essential that all social content be optimized just as other online content is optimized. 4. Google&#8217;s Social Acquisitions Still not convinced that Google’s sights are set on social? Just check out the list of its acquisitions over the last nine years, and count the social platforms. In terms of sites owned by Google, the search giant has the gamut covered: Video Sharing: YouTube Blogging Tool: Blogger.com Wiki: Knol Social Networking: Orkut Image Sharing: Picasa Social Search: Aardvark 5. Google Wave Google Wave Essentially, Google Wave is 21 st century email. The tool enables real-time communication and collaboration – i.e., share images, post videos, discuss ideas. Within Google Wave, you can create a message, invite other users to take part in the discussion, and add files, images, videos, you name it. The coolest part about the tool is conversations are live, but you can rewind the wave at any time to see a previous comment. It&#8217;s only available in limited preview right now, and you need an invitation from Google to join. Unfortunately, I&#8217;m not one of the lucky ones. Google, if you’re out there, can you hear me? There&#8217;s no doubt about it: Google&#8217;s gone social. What&#8217;s up in the air is where it will go next. What do you think will be the next Google social media tools or applications? ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> Over the last few years, the popularity of social channels – for professionals, teens, grandmas and everyone in between – has skyrocketed. Consider the recent numbers: Twitter experienced an annual growth in 2009 of 1,382% Facebook now boasts 400 million active users Every minute, 20 hours of video are uploaded to YouTube Between blog posts, Facebook status updates, tweets, videos and every other piece of social content published, there&#8217;s a whole lot of information floating around out there. Enter the latest social media player, Google. Google&#8217;s latest activities, acquisitions and features all point to the fact that the search giant no longer has a close eye on web 2.0; it&#8217;s already there. Here are 5 ways Google is now becoming a dominant social media player: 1. Google Social Search Google Social Search results Until now all of the social content in channels like Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn, hasn’t been easy to find in a central place – including through Google search.  Until now, that is. That&#8217;s where Google Social Search comes in. It’s still in the experimental stages, but this new feature combines users&#8217; social connections with organic searches. For example, if you were to search for &#8220;New Zealand,&#8221; social search results would appear beneath the organic search results. The tool scans your social connections’ content (based on the social accounts included in your Google profile) to create these results. 2. Google Buzz Google Buzz These days, it seems the social world is abuzz with talk of Google Buzz . This new product is built into Gmail and essentially turns users&#8217; inboxes into social networks. A mobile version of Google Buzz is also available. Here&#8217;s how it works: Google Buzz leverages current email contacts and connects you with their social profiles. Through Gmail, you can share status updates and photos, and start conversations, all through from your email. What does this mean for your brand? You may want to consider adding Gmail to your social media marketing mix. 3. Twitter and Facebook Feeds in Search Results Imagine the tweets highlighting your latest blog post or a new product launch getting found in organic searches. These days, that’s a reality. At the end of February, Google happily announced on Twitter that public status updates from Facebook fan pages would now be included in real-time search . Facebook joins a long list of other social content appearing in search results including: Twitter tweets FriendFeed updates Google Buzz posts MySpace updates Twitter and Facebook marketing efforts, then, take on new importance and new meaning. It&#8217;s now essential that all social content be optimized just as other online content is optimized. 4. Google&#8217;s Social Acquisitions Still not convinced that Google’s sights are set on social? Just check out the list of its acquisitions over the last nine years, and count the social platforms. In terms of sites owned by Google, the search giant has the gamut covered: Video Sharing: YouTube Blogging Tool: Blogger.com Wiki: Knol Social Networking: Orkut Image Sharing: Picasa Social Search: Aardvark 5. Google Wave Google Wave Essentially, Google Wave is 21 st century email. The tool enables real-time communication and collaboration – i.e., share images, post videos, discuss ideas. Within Google Wave, you can create a message, invite other users to take part in the discussion, and add files, images, videos, you name it. The coolest part about the tool is conversations are live, but you can rewind the wave at any time to see a previous comment. It&#8217;s only available in limited preview right now, and you need an invitation from Google to join. Unfortunately, I&#8217;m not one of the lucky ones. Google, if you’re out there, can you hear me? There&#8217;s no doubt about it: Google&#8217;s gone social. What&#8217;s up in the air is where it will go next. What do you think will be the next Google social media tools or applications? </p>
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