LinkedIn to Your Business Network

Writing by Brick Marketing on Tuesday, 17 of June , 2008 at 8:34 am Leave a comment

Unlike Facebook or Myspace, Linkedin is a social media network designed for business professionals to increase their network and social contacts…which in the business world means to better their business contacts. It is also a place for people searching for jobs can list their skills and business looking to hire can list their criteria. Linkedin gives business people the ability to make the contacts that they need to survive in the social media business network.

Adam Nash at the LinkedIn blog wrote a blog about LinkedIn after his key speeches at the 2008 Social Patterns conference.

LinkedIn is the world’s largest professional network: the new medium for how business gets done. Our members find new ways to interact with each other and improve their business every day.
• LinkedIn a Purpose-Driven Network. LinkedIn was built and designed specifically with the business professional in mind. That kind of focus and relevance makes us as valuable as possible to the professional who comes to LinkedIn for the specific purpose of getting business done.

He also wrote a piece on the use of LinkedIn in the entertainment industry that is worth looking at.

Link directly to your media properties
As LinkedIn represents your professional brand online, use the three outgoing hyperlinks to send people right to your movie, music, or filmography online. Got your projects on iTunes? Netflix? Amazon? IMDb? YouTube? Link to these and enable people to review your creative efforts first-hand.

Keep checking the LinkedIn Blog to find out how other industries are using the site to open the right doors and develop opportunities for their companies and careers. I’ll be here doing the dirty work for LinkedIn, leaving no stone unturned to get the story. Special thanks to Marcio and Telemetrik for use of their song “Nova”!

Leave a comment                      Category: Social Media                      

SEO Tactics That WILL Get Your Site Blacklisted

Writing by Brick Marketing on Monday, 16 of June , 2008 at 9:26 am Leave a comment

A good internet marketing firm will increase your traffic, conversion rates, and general product or service awareness in your target market. There are many ways for a firm to manage your advertisement campaign, and they differ wildly depending on the company that you hire.

Advertising/Marketing firms and webmasters that promise the quickest results with the dirtiest of strategies are to be avoided all together. Unethical companies will try to get their clients to buy into Commando Marketing, using tricks such as hidden text, interlinking, keyword stuffing, and more.

Under NO circumstances should you risk your company’s reputation and online presence with following BANNED practices:

Keyword Stuffing
One of the most commonly abused SEO tactics, this is when a webmaster or SEO places a large number of instances of the targeted keyword phrase in hopes that the search engine will read this as relevant. The text is usually unreadable except as a string of keywords. It is usually added at the bottom of a page and in a very small font size.

Hidden Text
Hidden text is using text that is set at the same color as the background or very close to it. The idea is that search engines read a load of keywords on a page that is simply trying to bump it’s ratings, without having actual relevant content. This is blatant spam!

The above examples are NOT legitimate SEO strategies. Using them will get your website penalized and possibly blacklisted. If you have hired an advertising/marketing firm for your online business, and they recommend or, even worse, actually implement strategies such as this, it is your website and your business that will pay the price.

Leave a comment                      Category: Local Search Engine Optimization                      

Geographic Targeting in your PPC Campaign

Writing by Brick Marketing on Sunday, 15 of June , 2008 at 12:06 pm Leave a comment

In the Local Pay Per Click campaigns, some businesses are still set on quantity, not quality. The amount of potential customers brought into your site was the only thing focused on for so long that some companies are reluctant to bring those numbers down. Less clicks?!? Less traffic?!? That’s bad!

Actually, that can be good thing. Geographic Targeting can, and (if done properly) will decrease the traffic to your site, but you will end up with higher conversion rates and a higher audience share.

Why is geographic targeting important, and is less traffic a good thing, in your PPC campaign?

Geographic targeting is about excluding traffic from outside a specific geographic area that you designate. Geographic targeting is highly valuable to advertisers who serve customers regionally and also to advertisers who want to focus their budget on increasing brand/product awareness levels in specific geographic areas.

It doesn’t make sense to present your ads to people in the UK or China if you don’t ship outside of the US. Drilling down even more, if you sell only in a single state, a single city, or a single neighborhood, you shouldn’t waste your budget on clicks from outside of that area.

When you apply this strategy to your local PPC campaign, your traffic volume will go down, but the key point is that your profits won’t. The consumers who are clicking on your ads are the consumers that can use your product or services.

Don’t focus so much on traffic volume. Instead, keep your eye, and your advertising budget, on quality.

Leave a comment                      Category: Local Pay Per Click                      

Sour Economy+Thrifty Consumers=Internet Advertising

Writing by Brick Marketing on Saturday, 14 of June , 2008 at 10:41 am Leave a comment

As we discussed before, businesses are turning away from advertising and marketing using traditional media such as newspapers, television, and radio. Business owners are seeing their competition getting the edge by reaching a larger market share with online campaign using the same budget or less, and it just can’t be ignored any longer. It’s move on, or move out.

The current economic downturn is forcing consumers to research the best possible price for the best service, and the more consumers research businesses and services online, the more they are weeding out companies without an internet presence.

Robert Jaques at vnunet added his voice to the discussion on the internet’s increasingly large piece of the marketing and advertising pie.

Experts predict that internet advertising in the US will continue to “grow fast” in the face of an economic downturn that will force a reduction in overall ad spending.
IDC forecasts that current economic conditions will accelerate the transfer of marketing budgets from traditional to new media.
Internet advertising will grow about eight times as fast as advertising at large between 2008 and 2012, according to the analyst firm, while revenue will double to $51.1bn.
This growth means that the internet will go from the number five to the number two medium in just five years, making it bigger than newspapers, cable TV and broadcast TV and second only to direct marketing.

Robert also apparantly agrees with us that the online Video marketing boom will be one of the biggest factors in the general increase of online marketing.

Leave a comment                      Category: Local Online Advertising                      

Google Cahn

Writing by Brick Marketing on Friday, 13 of June , 2008 at 6:24 am Leave a comment

We talked about Yahoo’s potential buyout and how it could affect advertisers…

It could affect local online advertising in a number of ways:

If Yahoo! is unable to pull itself out of its looming financial crisis then it could eventually go belly up, leaving local advertisers with only two major choices for online marketing - Microsoft and Google (that’s not a real choice).
As Yahoo! continues to lose share value they may decide to seek another buyer and end up having to take less than Microsoft’s offer to sell and reap any returns for shareholders. That could affect Yahoo!s own prices for local advertisers in the long run.

Yahoo! may decide to turn its PPC offerings over to Google completely, which could change how Google prices its PPC advertising for all businesses.
This is just the tip of the iceberg. It will be interesting to see how Yahoo! navigates the waters from here on out.

And now it appears that we have our answer:

With Microsoft apparently out of the picture, Yahoo! is turning to Google to help its chief executive, Jerry Yang, prove that he made the right decision last month when he turned down Microsoft’s takeover bid of $47.5 billion, or $33 per share. Yang asked for $37 per share, prompting Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer to withdraw the oral offer.

If the Google partnership passes what’s likely to be a rigorous review by U.S. antitrust regulators and lawmakers, Yahoo! intends to use its rival’s superior search technology to display ads on its own Web site as well as those of its partners’ in the United States and Canada.

Leave a comment                      Category: Yahoo Local                      

SEO Strategy: Don’t Count Wiki Out

Writing by Brick Marketing on Thursday, 12 of June , 2008 at 11:09 am Leave a comment

BigOak blog wrote a great piece on the continued usefulness of Wiki in the Local Search Engine Optimization wars. A lot of site developers stear clear Wikipedia due to it’s no follow policy enacted last year, but it’s extraordinary popularity with Google is still an essential SEO tool, if you use it wisely. So consider this your reminder to not erase Wiki from your Local Search Engine Optimization strategy.

Even though Wikipedia added nofollow tags in early 2007, backlinks you manage to snag there will still help you from an SEO standpoint. Why? One simple reason: content scrapers. Wikipedia is believed to be the most heavily scraped site in the history of the Internet.

Let’s take this example. Say you were able to secure an external link on the Wikipedia page about cats, here. Congratulations. You just snagged a dofollow link on a PR 4 page, here. Answers.com is one of the many legitimate sites that scrapes content from Wikipedia, and it’s an authority one at that. They were nice enough to keep the content they scrape from Wikipedia dofollow. So how many backlinks will you pick up in the future from that one Wikipedia link? Too many to list, provided your link stays on Wikipedia for any length of time

Back on topic, finding sites that scrape Wikipedia is easy. Infinitely harder is getting external links to stick on Wikipedia. Here are two methods:
1.Fill in missing citation gaps. Wikipedia will occasionally have sentences with a “citation needed” link after them. Create content on your site that revolves around that missing citation. If its quality is high enough, Wikipedia may let that pass as the citation.
2.Manufacture a Wikipedia page that has high relevancy to an existing page. Link to that new page from an existing Wikipedia page. Add an external link to the new page as a reference. This has a higher probability of sticking since the page is fresh and needs sources.

Don’t let the fact that Wikipedia added nofollow tags stop you from using it in your link building endeavors.

Leave a comment                      Category: Local Search Engine Optimization                      

ProStores by Ebay - Set up, Manage, and Promote your own Web store Product Review

Writing by nick on Thursday, 12 of June , 2008 at 10:59 am Leave a comment

Local brick & mortar business are always looking at ways to drive more foot traffic to their business but if they have ignored online traffic than they could be missing out on a great deal of business.  ProStores has made it easy for all local businesses to get up and running with an online web store.  This one stop shop has provided all the necessary tools for any local business to take advantage of the internet in selling their products. ProStores offers everything from starter packages to advanced enterprise packages making it easy an affordable for all business shapes and sizes. This program is designed to fit all experience levels. Are you an EBay seller?

If you are than this product could dramatically help you with you online selling. ProStores offers promotion and even hosting to make things as convenient as possible. ProStores can also help you search engine optimization for your web store so that it ranks even quicker with all the top search engines such as Google, yahoo and MSN. For any local business launching a web store could be a scary process.

So many choices and decision to make and with what vendor? Come and read client testimonials and gain the confidence that ProStores has what it takes. Many others have reached that same crossroad and ProStores came through the help.

For more information please visit www.ProStores.com and take a look at how this organization can help yours.

Leave a comment                      Category: Local Online Advertising                      

Target Customer Clusters For Businesses on the Go

Writing by Brick Marketing on Wednesday, 11 of June , 2008 at 9:38 am Leave a comment

The advances and advantages of local mobile markets and GPS capability are moving
forward again. The past few years have seen advances that helped your customer
find you, literally, with mobile GPS. New appliations are coming now that turn
a 180 and help you find your customer and bring your physical business to them.

Digital Solid discusses:

The retailer (say, Starbuck’s) could aggregate cell phone data about your movements,
as well as everyone else’s who want the same services as you, and …
Anticipate through statistical means where to locate itself to fulfill those needs,
and …
Alert you via your cell phone where they are in real time (e.g., “We’re two blocks
away — care for your favorite beverage?”)
I didn’t expect this to happen overnight. In fact, two years was a pretty aggressive
time line in my estimation.

Therefore, I’m a little giddy to see the first part of the process being mapped
out and monetized. Check out the new Sense Networks product offering, for a peek
into the future of retailing that factors in predictive modeling of where customers
will be next.

Harvesting the low-hanging fruit, Sense Networks is focusing on helping find city
nightlife hot-spots. Its site explains how this product, Citysense, works:

Citysense is an innovative mobile application for local nightlife discovery and
social navigation, answering the question, “Where is everybody?”

Citysense shows the overall activity level of the city, top activity hotspots, and
places with unexpectedly high activity, all in real-time. Then it links to Yelp
and Google to show what venues are operating at those locations. Citysense is a
free demonstration of the Macrosense platform that everyone can enjoy.

I see this as the beginning of a location-free bank branch or coffee shop. Exciting
stuff!

Leave a comment                      Category: Local Online Advertising                      

Find Advertising Jobs at eMarketingSilo

Writing by Brick Marketing on Tuesday, 10 of June , 2008 at 9:58 am Leave a comment

With local advertising picking up steam in the world of online marketing it will become more and more important to really find the right person that can handle this position with great confidence. eMarketingSilo  has become the one stop shop for your local marketing genius to help grow your company or your clients company.

Stop spinning your wheels at these large powerhouse HR websites where sifting through the bad apples becomes nothing more than chore but filter through many qualified candidates to find that local advertising superstar. With the overwhelming growth of this amazing industry the amount of bad apples will also rise. Since many local advertising employees will deal with local brick & mortar business it is even more important that you have an employee the represents your organization in the community with the most respect and integrity. Many of these businesses are just venturing into the world of online marketing and it is important that the right person at your organization makes that a very comfortable transition.  Online marketing could be a very scary area for many local businesses. Relying on print for so many years it takes the right person to hold their hand. Let eMarketingSilo help you find that reputable employee that will not allow your organizations name to get dragged through the mud.

For more information on how you can grow your firm or organization safely please visit http://www.emarketingsilo.com and find your new work force today.

Leave a comment                      Category: Advertising Jobs                      

Focus is the Key For PPC

Writing by Brick Marketing on Tuesday, 10 of June , 2008 at 7:16 am Leave a comment

Jennifer Osborne at SearchEnginePeople wrote a good article on the 26 Mistakes That Cost You Money in a small business PPC campaign. The article is a little lengthy (26!) but some of the points she brings up are worth noting.

11. Using very Broad keywords. Broad keywords tend to be used by people early in the buying cycle. Think about the difference between “Vacation”, “All Inclusive Vacation” and “Bermuda All Inclusive Vacation”. Generally we find that people using very broad keyword queries are very early in the buying cycle, in the Learning Phase. As a result, conversion rates for these types of keywords are very low. Yet broad keywords tend to cost the most.
Narrower, more specific keywords tend to be used by people who know what they want and are closer to the Purchase Phase of the Buying Cycle.
I’ve seen Broad keywords eat 50% of a Small Business budget without any conversions. In this scenario, by not bidding on those expensive keywords the client reduced their spend by half while maintaining the same # of Conversions and Doubling their ROI.

I love that tip, and I’ll explain why. Too many businesses get wrapped up in their PPC strategy and focus on the broad keywords that will get the most attention, but as Jennifer points out above, the broadest keywords queries are often used when potential customers are researching a purchase. They are not ready to buy yet, so your conversion rates are rock bottom.

Bidding on the more specific keywords might seem like you are targeting a smaller audience, (because you are) but that smaller audience is the one that is ready to purchase.

Focus your PPC strategy. Sharpen it. And ultimately make it work for you.

Leave a comment                      Category: Local Pay Per Click                      

Internet Marketing Strategy: Why There Isn’t a Best

Writing by Brick Marketing on Monday, 9 of June , 2008 at 12:13 pm Leave a comment

We have a lot of emails in our box asking us “Which is the best promotional strategy?”

First let’s look at the background:

There are over 140 million websites currently in existence, with millions more pages within them. While only a fraction of those sites are actively updated and promoted, statistically it still means that if your site doesn’t have a promotion strategy, it will never stand out bright enough to be seen in an endless internet sky.

Now let’s look at what your current strategy is for your website or internet business:

Are you relying on home-learned SEO tactics? Are you launching an all out Local Mobile Media Campaign? Are you relying upon a Pay Per Click model? What’s working? What’s falling flat?

Now lets give you the answer that you might not like:

There a lot of strategies out there to increase your exposure and traffic, and ultimately make you a tidy profit, but which strategy is the best for you? You’ll notice that I didn’t ask “Which is the best promotional strategy?” I didn’t ask it, because it’s a trick question, there is no magic bullet to internet marketing, there is only the creation of a strategy that fits your business model the best.

So What is Your Solution?

The solution for a business that is serious about their internet marketing campaign is to have a Local Web Marketing expert look at your business from every available angle and personalize a strategy for you. It’s possible that your current strategy needs only to be fine-tuned, and it’s possible that it will need to re-hauled completely to look into new marketing arenas.

Leave a comment                      Category: Brick Marketing                      

Google Earth 3-D; See What it Will Do to Local

Writing by Brick Marketing on Sunday, 8 of June , 2008 at 11:09 am Leave a comment

Just about everyone is talking about Google Earth’s 3-D mapping images and how incredibly cool it is. Accesses maps, satellite imagery and aerial photography taken in the last three years has been combined to create 3-D maps that can be manipulated using a variety of features including navigational controls for tilting, zooming in and out and moving left or right.

Standard mapping tools such as distance calculators and routing directions are included, but it is the pure inclusive experience of really looking at something with the ability to explore it that has people buzzing.

Remarkably, I have seen very little about the local advertising potential that is exploding with this new imagery software. The travel industry is understandably the most excited, and why wouldn’t they be? If Travel Company A advertises its offerings using Google 3-D, customers will have the ability to really know and get excited about their destination; they can virtually visit the surrounding area of restaurants, shops, and fascinating side streets. If Travel Company B is advertising the same trips, with 5 static 2-D images, I can tell you straight out who is going to win that advertising war.

If you want to see how great this can be, go and see the Disney Google Earth site. I bet you’ll be taking a virtual vacation, and planning a trip there, in about 2 minutes flat.

There is potential for an absolute explosion of commercial applications for Google Earth 3-D for local advertising. Real Estate firms, retailers, service firms, Parks and Travel are just the beginning. If these companies don’t get into the 3-D game, they might find themselves lost in the dusty pages of search engine static.

Leave a comment                      Category: Brick Marketing                      

Face the Changes: Social Media Opens it’s Source

Writing by Brick Marketing on Saturday, 7 of June , 2008 at 8:32 pm Comments (1)

Facebook is now confirming that their developer platform will go open source. This can have significant effect on the Social Media Marketing crowd by changing not only the volume of people using it, but also the demographic statistics that can be harvested. For advertisers, this change can mean a significantly better conversion rates and prices.

We’re working on an open-source initiative that is meant to help application developers better understand Facebook Platform and more easily build applications, whether it’s by running their own test servers, building tools, or optimizing their applications. As Facebook Platform continues to mature, open-sourcing the infrastructure behind it is a natural step so developers can build richer social applications and share what they’ve learned with the ecosystem. Additional details will be released soon.

Andy Beal’s Marketing Pilgrim discusses some of the changes:

What does this change? After all, Google’s Open Social initiative has already created (or was supposed to create) an “industry standard” of APIs for social networking, and Facebook declined to sign on.
However, the implications of going “open source” change the impact of Facebook’s platform. While OpenSocial’s APIs are designed to be widely usable (ie generic), Facebook’s markup language, query langauge and JS library enhance the offering here.
OpenSocial is has some open source code, but their FAQ doesn’t indicate that they are currently, fully open source:

Comments (1)                      Category: Social Media                      

Google Trends Can Optimize Your Optimization Strategy

Writing by Brick Marketing on Friday, 6 of June , 2008 at 10:55 am Leave a comment

Success success

Google Trends is a tool that is designed to show the trends in searches for specific keywords. The statistics go back to the beginning of 2004, and are updated daily. If your business marketing relies even slightly on local search engine optimization, then keywords are a big part of your life. You need to know what keywords potential customers are looking for in order to further customize your SEO campaign to capitalize on that.

So to sum up, you need to know the best keywords for your search engine optimization strategy. And Google Trends will succinctly spit back the statistics on any keywords you enter into it.

Robert Niles wrote an entertaining yet very informative article on Google Trends that can give you some nice examples on how the tool can work for you.

If you’ve not yet discovered Google Trends, click over and have yourself a look.
Google Trends allows you to select up to five words or phrases, then shows you how those search terms rate relative to one another in both the volume of search queries handled by Google, as well as news references tracked by the search engine. It’s an addictive site for a data geek, like me, and essential for any online publisher who wants to optimize his or her publication to attract more visitors from search engines, such as Google.
Your site’s traffic logs ought to show you which search terms readers are using to find your website. But Google Trends shows which terms people are using to look for sites. That’s a key distinction. With Google Trends, you can test related search terms that are not showing up in your traffic logs, to see if they are, in fact, more popular than the terms people are using to find your site. If they are, you will have found the terms you need to start emphasizing in your site’s content and navigation design.
Plus, the site’s just fun to play with.

Leave a comment                      Category: Local Search Engine Optimization                      

Yelp! I Know Where You Are!

Writing by Brick Marketing on Thursday, 5 of June , 2008 at 10:46 am Leave a comment

Local Mobile Marketing is one of the most aggressively focused on areas for small businesses in urban cities. A strong internet presence and good reviews can absolutely bring your new business into the social spotlight and make the company a huge success. There is a down side for consumers, though. Local Mobile Marketing may send you to the local restaurant, but you’d have to log onto a site like Yelp to find actual reviews about the place. To solve this problem, Yelp has a new location aware mobile feature that is going to make a huge change in the urban local mobile marketing sector.

First, we know that that Yelp is:

What is Yelp?
Yelp is an online urban city guide that helps people find cool places to eat, shop, drink, relax and play, based on the informed opinions of a vibrant and active community of locals in the know. Yelp is the fun and easy way to find, review and talk about what’s great — and not so great — in your world.
What Should I Be Reviewing On Yelp?
Yelp is meant for just about any sort of local service or destination. Our biggest categories today are restaurants, bars, salons and retail businesses, but you can also use Yelp to find reviews of everything, from doctors to tennis pros to parks and museums.

And now Yelp is developing an app for IPhones that will triangulate your geographic location to provide you with reviews and information about businesses where you are, at that moment. Are you visiting Boston for a Red Sox game, and you want to know the nearest seafood restaurant for a post-game bite to eat? This new Yelp application will not only know where you are in Boston, and where the closest restaurants are, it will also give you the restaurant reviews so you can avoid, or patronize, the right establishment.

Leave a comment                      Category: Local Mobile Marketing                      
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