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Obama forces visitors to stay, how rude!

August 22, 2008 By: Nick Category: Off Topic

obama1.jpgI have to admit I was curious. I wanted to get the text message when Obama announced his VP choice. So, I went to the website for the first time. After realizing that I will probably get Obama-Spam for the next three months, I decided not to sign up. When I went to back out of the screen (using the back button in IE 7) I couldn’t get past the index page. HOW ANNOYING! I hate when websites do this, and have never understood the benefit.

Don’t ever force your visitors to stay on the webpage, even if you’re running for president. Actually, especially if you’re running for president. Perhaps this should be a campaign issue?

PS. this is NOT meant to be political at all. I just thought it was amusing.

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Google’s NOT so well known tool

August 19, 2008 By: Nick Category: Free Stuff, Online Advertising, PPC

It’s surprising that such a good tool is not easy to find on the Google Analytics website, especially when it makes measuring online campaigns so darn easy!

For those of you that use Google Analytics there is a tagging feature that allows you to create unique URL’s for all of your campaigns. It gives you the ability to tag every and all links in an email campaign, or even in your PPC efforts. Obviously, Google Analytics is integrated with Google Adwords (if you have your accounts integrated), so you can easily measure these campaigns. However, this tagging tool is especially helpful if you’re participating in other PPC efforts, yes there’s more than just Google Adwords!

Anyway, this tool allows you to enter your campaign information and then produce a unique URL with the tracking data integrated. It will give you a much more accurate picture of what your advertising and emailing is doing for you.

It can be a little tricky to setup at first, but once you get the hang of it, you’ll be tagging everything!

Check it out.

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Don’t help Google spend YOUR money!

August 01, 2008 By: Nick Category: Online Advertising, PPC

When I first started using Google Adwords years ago, I always had trouble thinking of good keywords to try. It is a great place to test the effectiveness of keywords, before you invest in optimizing your site with the. Then, shortly after, Adwords added a suggestion tool to their PPC admin area. I thought this was great! Now Google was telling me what the most popular keywords are, basically taking all of the need for research away!

 WRONG!

Google is not offering their Keyword Suggestion tool so you find new relevant keywords to use. Google is simply showing you the most popular keywords that other merchants are bidding on. There is a HUGE difference.

The Google Keyword Suggestion tool is telling you what other keywords are popular with other advertisers, NOT with searchers. So, what you’re doing by selecting these “popular” keywords is raising the CPC of the keyword, because more advertisers are going after it!

When setting up your Google Adwords account be sure to do your own independent keyword research. Don’t follow the crowd, and pay more for the privilege.

CHEAP PLUG

Check out my new ebook “101 Ways To Improve Your Online Store“! It’s full of tips and tricks to improve all areas of your website, from SEO to PPC, Product pager design, and customer service. It’s all in there.

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The Great SEO Experiment, Part 1

July 31, 2008 By: Nick Category: SEO Experiment, Search Engine Optimization

Ok, “great” might be overstating it, but it should be interesting. The Great SEO Experiment was born a couple of weeks ago when Godaddy announced it would start selling the .ME extensions. This was an ultra-rare opportunity for people to get their hands on some premium domain names with the .me extension. Granted, .me is not widely known, and it may be many years before it has the branding power that .com has. But, this doesn’t mean that online gurus should ignore .me.

I was able to get on Godaddy and grab a bunch of great names. What I couldn’t find information on is the search engine optimization ability of this new extensions. So, here it is. I am going to optimize one of my new .me websites and see what happens! Will Google accept it? Will they bury it? Who knows.

The Guinea Pig

JimmyBuffett.me, which was register in July 2008, will be the source of this experiment. I want to optimize the site so it appears at the top of the SERPs for “Jimmy Buffett“. Now, if this were a .com, it would be no problem. The keyword is in the domain name, so that makes it pretty easy. Well, I am going to do some standard things to optimize the site, so we’ll see where we are. Usually it takes me about 2 months before I notice that search engines pull up the site when I type in the actual domain name.

So, stick around and check for updates. This is only part 1! If I can optimize a premium domain name, with .me, it will open the doors to a lot of other sites. Look out .com!

ACTION LOG (here you’ll find everything I have done since my last post)

1. Added site to three major directories; Google, Yahoo, and DMOZ.

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Don’t get ripped off by an SEO

June 28, 2008 By: Nick Category: Search Engine Optimization

I have been doing search engine optimization for several years now and what has never cease to amaze me are the prices some SEO’s are asking for their work. By no means am I saying that SEO’s are con-artists, but I do believe there are some dishonest firms out there.

When I talk to a prospective client they often tell me about other quotes they have received. They range from $1,500 to $30,000 for the service. Some charge by the month, and usually fall into the same range for a year of service. What I honestly don’t understand is what the difference is. Now I understand all to well that there is a difference between a good SEO and a bad SEO pretending to be an expert. But in my many years of working in ecommerce I have never come across an SEO worth $30K.

Some will argue (and with some legitimacy) that if an SEO can rank your site well, you’ll often see a great ROI, so what’s wrong with charging a lot? I agree to some degree, but I know that the amount of labor that goes into the actual work does not justified that amount. One SEO’s proposal I saw was for $22,000 for 6 months. The package included 100 links, and five pages optimized. I am sure some other work would have been involved, but when you break down the amount of labor involved, you’re probably looking at $500 per hour.

I know many will appose this, but to add credibility to the industry I really think it needs a major association, or governing body that can set standards. This would ensure that there are a set of standards out there, and any legitimate SEO would adhere to them.

Let me repeat, I know there are a lot of good, honest SEO’s doing great work. But I also know, from talking to my clients that there are folks out there charging outrageous fees to clueless merchants who don’t do their homework.

I am interested in what you think? What do you think is fair to charge for SEO services?

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High Gas Prices will come down, the market says so!

May 08, 2008 By: Nick Category: In The News, Off Topic

Rarely do I comment on political issues in this blog, but this really has more to do with business. I watch a lot of cable news and what really strikes me is how dedicated to tragedy the media seems to be these days. They have been talking down the housing market like crazy, to the point where you have to give your house away in most markets. Oil prices are through the roof, and this too leads the news because it’s more bad news for you to eat up and accept. Well, I don’t accept it. Perhaps I know something all of the talking heads don’t know. Perhaps they are so out of touch they have forgotten the golden rule of capitalism… the marketplace sets the prices. Next time you think the world is ending, and gas is going to reach $10/gallon, please remember that.

I guarantee that gas prices will not drift much pass the $5 mark, if it gets that high at all.  Ok, I can’t guarantee it, because I don’t have that much to offer you if I am wrong, but at least consider the possibility. People tend to believe that the market is manipulated by a bunch of rich dudes in a mansion on the hill. To some degree that may be true, but the market always has the last word. Eventually people will say NO to buying gas at a certain price, and the prices will come down. If your facility made widgets that were in very high demand, you would probably start to push the price up with the demand. However, if you pushed it too high, and people started buying less of your widgets, you would adjust the price. You would have to, or you would be sitting on a lot of widgets. The same rule applies to every commodity in a free market.

Now I am not denying times are tough. My wife and I have had our condo on the market for nine months, and I have a 70 mile commute each day, so I am feeling the pain too. I just am a bit more optimistic than many people out there. Unfortunately, if you’re waiting for the government to help, it’s not going to happen. Anything they could do would be superficial anyway. The answer is in the marketplace, and when the time is right, it will say “uncle”.

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How to get more done in less time, and grow your website

April 04, 2008 By: Nick Category: How To, Off Topic, Search Engine Optimization

One of the most frustrating parts of working in search engine optimization is the time it takes for your efforts to bare fruit. In fact, many of my ecommece buddies have given up on their home-grown efforts, and hired an SEO thinking that it would speed up the process. While there is real value in hiring a professional SEO, this is simply out of reach for many smaller merchants.

As you’ll read throughout this blog and many other blogs there is a countless number of ways to improve your search rankings, and improve your website too. Sometimes, the number of things you should be doing get in the way of growing your business! For example, when I first opened my furniture website I spent countless night-time hours researching different website tips, and studying my own SEO practices. What I lost sight of is that my website needed to grow and improve. I was so busy with learning and researching, I didn’t work on adding new products, writing more product descriptions, improving the images on the site, working on the navigation of the site… all the things a site visitor looks for!

What I slowly came to realize was that there were too many things that need my attention, and not enough hours… what a cliché, huh? Anyway, I decided to create two lists… One list was “Things To Improve Website” and “Search Marketing”. I created goals for myself, so that I could get a little of everything done each night, and slowly grow all aspects of my business.

For example, the “Things to Improve Website” list included all the things I mentioned above. I would pick one thing to work on during the week from that list. Then I would take one thing from the “Search Marketing” list and work on that too. By setting small benchmarks each week, I was able to organize and balance the work I was doing on my website.

Here’s what a typical week looked like….

MONDAY: Rewrite description for 5 products. Send out 10 emails requesting a link exchange.

TUESDAY: Rewrite description for 5 products. Improve meta tags on category pages.

WEDNESDAY: Improve images for 5 products. Send out 10 emails requesting a link exchange.

THURSDAY: Rewrite description for 5 products. Check Alt-Image tags, submit site to 3 new directories.

FRIDAY: No working tonight, my eyes are burning and my wife is pissed.

SATURDAY: Check rankings on main keywords, see if Redbox has any new movies out

SUNDAY: (See Friday)

I would highly recommend writing a small schedule for yourself for a week, and see if that helps you achieve more. This is especially beneficial for the small merchants that slave away at a 9-5 during the day.

Good luck! Please leave comments highlighting your weekly tasks so others can see.

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Thinking about traffic on a slow Tuesday

March 25, 2008 By: Nick Category: Content is King, Link Building

Well, it’s one of those slow Tuesdays, when my motivation is a bit low, and the list of things I have to do is a bit high. So today I figured I would think about some different ways to drive quality traffic to a website…

1. On all of your content (or product pages) add a “Send to Friend” function, so a user can easily click a button and email a link to your content to someone else. Every time I have added this functionality for a client, they have received many quality hits from people who never would have found the site. This functionality is a MUST for web merchants to have on all of their product pages. Remember, a referral from a friend is the most valuable and credible way to promote your product.

2. Contests are also a great way of driving traffic. The one mistake people tend to make with contests is they do not make the offer (prize) compelling enough. Offer a good discount on your product or service, and you will get people buzzing.

3. How-To’s make great content. Any time you post instruction on how to solve a common problem you’re going to get a lot of inbound links from other sites, and of course, traffic.

4. My father-in-law emails me nearly everyday with a joke or humorous story he found online. This type of content is always good to get people to link to you, or send your link to their friend. Though it does not work as well for merchants, it’s a great strategy for bloggers. If I had something funny to say, I would put it on my blog, but sorry, I have nothing.

Sharing content on the web is a huge opportunity that your site needs to be leveraging. Sites like StumbleUpon, Myspace, Facebook, and others make it easy and fun for users to share content. Make it EASY for your site visitors to either link to your content, or send it to someone. This is the best way to insure lots of buzz and traffic.

I found this statistic interesting. It was taken from a course that SEMPO offers on search engine optimization, though I don’t have the original source.

CONTENT THAT IS SHARED THE MOST ONLINE
Jokes – 88%
News – 56%
Medical Info – 32%

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It’s amazing what you’ll stumble upon

March 19, 2008 By: Nick Category: Free Stuff, Off Topic

I am a fairly new user of StumbleUpon but I must say, it’s really cool. If I am bored or want to find something different I click the Stumble button on my browser toolbar, and I’m off! A lot of what you come across is crap, but every once in a while you find something cool.

I have used StumbleUpon to promote my own blog and it seems to be driving good traffic every day. They also have a neat advertising program that allows you to get quick traffic to your site for about 5 cents per impression (not visit).

Anyway, I came across this neat site. It allows you to highlight text on any website and send it to someone. So, if I found something interesting buried deep in a forum, I could highlight the good part, and send a link directly to it. Try it out.

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Meta tags not important? I think not!

March 14, 2008 By: Nick Category: Content is King, Search Engine Optimization

serps.jpgI was talking to a fellow seo guru yesterday and he was telling me about the decreasing relevancy of meta tags in effecting search engine positioning. I strongly disagreed, but you know the old saying, opinions are like a-holes…. everybody’s got one, and they all stink.

It is true, that meta tags do not play as significant a role in determining rankings as they used to. This is because all of the non-credible seo’s were keyword stuffing and adding lots of useless junk in the meta section, so of course the search engines responded.

However, as my graphic shows, your title tag appears in most SERPS, as does whatever content appears at the top of the page. If you are a blogger, you’ll find that whatever your recent post was at the time the search engine robots came by will appear in the SEARPS. For the rest of you, it is unusually whatever your northern most content is. This is why many website will include some text about their website at the very top. This is especially important for sites with a lot of flash or images.

The point here is that you’re not going to get to #1 in the search engines by playing with your meta tags alone. However, you should not ignore their relevance. Be sure to write short, powerful titles for all of your pages, as well as a unique description. Your keyword tag should ONLY contain keywords that are relevant to that one page (not the entire site), and should preferably match some of the words used in the description and title.

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