Friday, September 30, 2011

ROCKFUSE: Blogging Tips

ROCKFUSE: Blogging Tips


Professional Press Release Service Now Available

Posted: 29 Sep 2011 03:49 PM PDT

Hi Everyone,
   As you know I am a really successful internet marketer. Today I have an amazing offer to people in our group. A professional press release for only 50 dollars that will show up in Google News and other major newspapers. If you know anything about SEO and backlinking you know will know this is an incredible deal. Compare to other Press Release companies who offer the same packages for around 350 dollars. This is a service most people cannot afford but now can for a limited time.

Amazing Press Release offer for everyone in this group only 50 dollars compare with PrWeb services at 350 dollars. I will create and write a professional Press Release with two anchor texts

Professionally written 250-350 word press release
2 anchor text keyword backlinks inserted
Guaranteed publishing on 50+ High Authority News Sites
Guaranteed inclusion in Google News
Syndication across 100s sometimes 1000s of smaller sites
Your press release categorized for publishing on related sites in your niche
Lots of do-follow contextual backlinks inside high pagerank news sites
Create loads of trust in your link profile
100% White-hat link building method
Full report with URLs delivered within 4 – 9 days

Your backlink and website will be on these sites below plus 50 more (GUARANTEED)

Google News
Boston.com
Business Insider
Bnet.com
nydailynews.com
thenewstribune.com
ibtimes.com/

If you ever wanted to do a professional Press Release but could not afford it now is the time. Great deal only available to my group members at this price. Please let me know if you are interested I will only keep this offer going for a brief time.

Professional Press Release: Amazing Press Release offer for everyone in this group only 50 dollars compare with PrWeb services at 350 dollars. I will create and write a professional Press Release with two anchor texts Professionally written 250-350 word press release 2 anchor text keyword backlinks inserted Guaranteed publishing on 50+ High Authority News Sites Guaranteed inclusion in Google News Syndication across 100s sometimes 1000s of smaller sites Your press release categorized for publishing on related sites in your niche Lots of do-follow contextual backlinks inside high pagerank news sites Create loads of trust in your link profile 100% White-hat link building method Full report with URLs delivered within 4 – 9 days Your backlink and website will be on these sites below plus 50 more (GUARANTEED) Google News Boston.com Business Insider Bnet.com nydailynews.com thenewstribune.com ibtimes.com/ If you ever wanted to do a professional Press Release but could not afford it now is the time. Great deal only available to my group members at this price. Please let me know if you are interested I will only keep this offer going for a brief time.


SEOptimise

SEOptimise


When SEO appears on The Archers…

Posted: 29 Sep 2011 04:38 AM PDT

…There can be no further doubt that it's mainstream. Yes, a discussion around search engine optimisation has featured on never-ending Radio 4 farming-community soap opera The Archers.

You're probably wondering why I would know this. The answer is that, being prematurely middle aged enough to refer to the radio as "the wireless", I am also middle aged (and countrified) enough to tune into The Archers from time to time (I don't follow it religiously or anything, honest!).

For anyone who isn't a regular listener, let me update you. Bridge Farm has been responsible for an outbreak of e-coli, spread through its ice cream. It effectively poisoned some kids at a gymkhana and landed two customers in hospital. Naturally, the national and local press has gone to town on the story and the Bridge Farm dairy has lost all of its customers.

But the farmers now plan to rebuild their reputation and their business. The only problem is that anytime anyone searches for 'Bridge Farm', the top stories are all about e-coli – not exactly a message that's going to get people excited about your ice cream.

So, they want to use an SEO agency to work some online reputation management magic and allow them to restore their brand. Here's what I would advise:

Address the issues
Tony and Pat Archer need to draw a line under the crisis. Unfortunately, they can't talk to the press – every time they do, the journalist reignites the e-coli story and they feed the flames. But they do need to ensure they've addressed the issues behind the outbreak and show that they have done so.

One option would be to fire the source of the outbreak – one of their dairy staff – and tell their customers what they've done. But Tony and Pat seem like nice people and don't want to make their employee a scapegoat.

Instead, they should issue a press release highlighting the changes they've made that ensure greater hygiene standards are observed.

Move the story on
After that press release, they need to stop talking about the outbreak. Not on their website and not to journalists.

Each time they do that, they ruin their chances of moving the story on. Even a sympathetic journalist wanting to document how their business is recovering will be telling the story of how they put two children in hospital.

Create new buzz
Instead of dwelling on the negative story, they need to do other newsworthy things, so there are more recent, positive news stories that will potentially appear in the search engine results.

Perhaps they could attempt some silly news story, like making a record-breaking sausage, or a serious but positive story such as launching an organic farming awareness day.

They should probably steer clear of stories relating to any of their dairy business, as this simply invites mentions of the e-coli crisis.

Push other products
Bridge Farm's website should be overhauled so that it is primarily optimised for their non-dairy products.

Rebuilding their dairy business is going to take time and the farm needs to maintain its income in the meantime. One way to do that is to ensure that the meat products are being strongly marketed.

If you search for 'Bridge Farm' and a load of content on organic sausages and happy pedigree pigs ranks first then you have an initially positive experience of the brand.

Drive their reputation socially
The farmers should use their website, write a blog, tweet and encourage supporters to 'like' Bridge Farm on Facebook.

Using these platforms, they can build customer loyalty and increase the amount of positive mentions of their brand on the web.

These help drive new customers and maintain ties with their current ones.

If all else fails, ditch the brand
Potentially, Bridge Farm has simply become a toxic brand. Giving a bunch of gymkhana kids e-coli is one hell of a reputation crisis.

If none of the above methods work and the end seems near, it could well be time to rebrand, repackage and begin their promotional campaign from scratch.

Then they can instigate some positive reputation management tactics and build a loved brand.

Now, how to boost business at The Bull…

© SEOptimise - Download our free business guide to blogging whitepaper and sign-up for the SEOptimise monthly newsletter. When SEO appears on The Archers…

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Thursday, September 29, 2011

Submitedge - Search Engine Optimization Blog

Submitedge - Search Engine Optimization Blog


Handling an Online Reputation Crisis

Posted: 29 Sep 2011 05:16 AM PDT

http://careervanity.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/online-reputation-management-tips.jpgWhat most webmasters dread as much as anything they ever encounter is the online reputation crisis. You can potentially lose a large portion of your visitors if negative feedback and reviews about your brand, products or services get listed in the search results. You have to be well prepared against all kinds of online reputation attacks as each attack is serious. Today as many webmasters have already faced the wrath of online reputation crisis, many of them are taking pre-emptive measures to fight online crisis. This is in fact the best approach to deal with reputation crisis.

Customers are also becoming very cautious when dealing with businesses and companies online. It is common practice now to check companies out by making sure that they are choosing the right brand or the right products. As a businessperson, you will not be able to take any chances when it comes to your brand reputation. Do not wait until something horrible happens to take action. Begin building your positive brand reputation. Spend time creating a positive image online so that if there is an attack against your brand, your positive image you spent time building up already will guard you.

There are several popular strategies that can be used to create a very positive brand image. You can make use of social bookmarking, blog commenting, blog review posting, press release distribution etc. There are numerous options. Whereas before with the proliferation of Web 2.0 properties, we now have a variety of ways to reach out to customers. More and more people are becoming very highly active on the internet for everything from shopping and surfing to transacting business. Seize this chance to boost your brand image. Look for high traffic networks and popular social media to build your online brand reputation.

Should your brand name come under attack, do not panic. That is the worst thing you can do. Take the right steps and implement swift action to minimize any damage that is caused by the attack against your brand. This is not the time to research on the source of the attack. You will have to concentrate now on pushing down the negative results from the search engine results. Suppression is the first step after identifying the attack.

You will have to first identify the keywords that get the negative feedbacks and negative reviews listed. Once you have identified the keywords that trigger the negative results, you need to post content that is optimized around those keywords to combat the negative usage. Multiple press release article distribution will help in this regard since search engines pick up press releases faster than any other type of content posted online. Timing is highly crucial.

In your response to the negative attacks, do not lose any time dawdling around wondering what to do. The longer the negative results stay online, the greater the damages it can and likely will cause to your brand. Upon pushing down the negative feedback and reviews to reasonably safe and manageable  levels, respond to the attack directly by giving your side of the story in the same forum or blog in which negative review has been posted. This way the internet users will be able to get the right picture of what happened.

In many cases, the negative feedbacks and reviews exaggerate the issues and they are beyond reason. Make sure you give your target audience the correct version of the story as this effort will  certainly help in the long run because you will then have a record of what has happened even if someone should stumble upon the negative feedback several months later. A professional reputation management company can help you get back on track.

Funny Blog!

Funny Blog!

Link to Funny Blog » Funny Blog!

Igloos for rent!

Posted: 28 Sep 2011 10:48 AM PDT

I did not know it existed, but igloos made of glass can be rented for those wanting to have a different vacation experience. Since an image is worth a thousand words, here are a few pictures of glass igloos.

Igloo rent

I never thought about renting an igloo before, but I think this is very interesting!

SEOptimise

SEOptimise


Top 10 Retail SEO Mistakes UK Brands Are Still Making

Posted: 28 Sep 2011 04:39 AM PDT

Last week I asked on Twitter to see what common SEO mistakes were still being made by retail websites. This received a great response, so I thought I’d share the top replies with our readers.

I’ve picked some UK high street retail examples to help display the issues raised, but please note that we have no connection with any of these websites – so this is an outside perspective. There may be logical reasons for the examples which we are unaware of, but these have been used in order to highlight where SEO mistakes are commonly made.

Non-descriptive URL structure

Ideally you want to keep your URLs concise and keyword descriptive. So automatically generated, ID-based URLs aren’t going to help your SEO, unless you’re aiming to rank for g474502s2 - in which case Next.co.uk have dominated market share!

Next SEO

 

Long and messy URLs generated by CMS

Some content management systems really make a mess of URLs. From an SEO perspective you want to have full control over re-writing category-level URLs such as this one on Argos:

Argos SEO

Linking to multiple homepage URLs

This is a common mistake – which is getting better across many sites, but if you click the logo or homepage link on some sites, you’ll find that rather than getting sent back to the root domain, you’re taken to a duplicate copy of the page on a new URL. See this example on House of Fraser:

House of Fraser SEO

Poor title tags/meta descriptions

I’ve worked with a CMS before that didn’t allow you to edit title tags at all – that was a bit of a problem! Hopefully your site won’t be quite that bad, but too often people just think about SEO for generating rankings – what about click through rates and conversions though?

Crafting an enticing title tag and meta description should be as important as writing a high CTR, converting AdWords ad – notice the difference between these two listings for Marks and Spencer – surely M&S would prefer you click on the natural free listing given the choice!

Marks and Spencer SEO

No user-generated content/reviews

For conversion rates alone, having reviews and user-generated content is an excellent way to boost your site’s performance. See this case study on how onlineshoes.com increased sales by 119% due to user reviews. But it’s also a great way of adding extra content to your products – giving the search engines that extra 200-300 words of unique and what should be well-optimised copy (because it’s about the product) could well be enough to make a significant increase in search rankings.

It could certainly be worth testing at the very least for a lot of brands, for example Ted Baker:

Ted Baker SEO

Forgetting about branded product search

One of the first things I check with our e-commerce and retail clients is branded search results. It’s often just taken for granted that you will be ranking for your branded keywords, so it’s assumed that non-branded search and first-time visitors is the main target. However, this isn’t always the case and it definitely shouldn’t just be assumed – these are almost certainly going to be your top converting keywords, so a small amount of effort here can easily pay off to ensure that you’re generating the majority of traffic – which let’s face it you deserve, it’s your product after all!

It’s amazing how many brands don’t rank for their own products though – check out these results for Sony W510 12MP which are dominated by Argos and Amazon:

Sony SEO

Lack of static on-page content

Many websites struggle when it comes to having good, optimised content deeper in the site. For example, product pages which have very little descriptive text written about them could be much better optimised for search. See this example from Monsoon, which showcases the product reasonably well, but does little towards telling users and the search engines about it:

Monsoon SEO

Pulling search results in as category pages

As above, sometimes category pages are very weak on content and often these are just search results which are being pulled into a page. Yes it may do a job for the user – but surely a bit more text here would help to give the search engines a bit more to go on. It doesn’t even have to be too detailed – a quick description underneath “Mens Hats, Gloves & Scarves” on the Debenhams site here would be a big improvement to optimise for the phrase “Mens Hats”, which they currently bid on using PPC, yet fail to rank in the top 50 positions in Google organically for:

Debenhams SEO

Webpages & content too image-based

From the websites I’ve reviewed today, I’ve actually been quite impressed that most of these have now moved away from having content which is too image or flash-based. This is a clear SEO issue to avoid, as you want your site’s content to be as well optimised as possible – which means it should be text-rich. Topman is an example of a site which hasn’t quite got there yet – the only text currently on their homepage is navigational:

Topman SEO

Duplicate content – same product, multiple categories

I’ve seen several retail sites in the past where they have caused duplicate content issues by having category-level subfolders within the product URL. Here’s one example from Blacks, where they have a product which is listed under two different categories, so they’ve ended up with two URLs for what is exactly the same product:

Blacks SEO
Blacks duplicate content

Because they sit under both categories, the URLs are duplicated – so ideally it’s normally best to avoid using category-level subfolders in product pages – see Amazon for an example of this. Also, canonical tags are there to help get around this issue if it exists – but ideally you’ll want to have each product page in a single location. Hope that makes sense, but Dan’s written a much more detailed post on product URLs causing duplicate content issues – so you should read that one if it doesn’t!

So those are the top SEO mistakes we’ve found retail websites are still making – a big thanks to Malcolm SladeRishi LakhaniPaul RogersStuart TurnerAshley HaywardDaniel BianchiniIan Galpin and Edwin Hayward who contributed via Twitter. And if you have any questions or comments on what you’ve found to be the biggest challenges, it would be great to hear about this in the comments.

© SEOptimise - Download our free business guide to blogging whitepaper and sign-up for the SEOptimise monthly newsletter. Top 10 Retail SEO Mistakes UK Brands Are Still Making

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