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Scott Buresh receives top honors this week with his article “Sam’s Club Wants to Be Your Search Engine Optimization Company-Should You Let It?”. He explains that Sam’s Club is partnering with a company called Innuity to provide small businesses with access to a dashboard that submits their sites to local search engines, all for only $25! Scott’s concern is that customers will feel they are getting the whole SEO package when really it’s just a small piece of it, but he does acknowledge the possibility of the affiliation increasing validity for the SEO world.


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Sage packs this video full of everything from a new gadget on Google’s Webmaster Tools to a free website service provided by Google Sites, which was formerly the Jot Spot. Matt Cutts also gets air time this week for his article on subscribed links and how to use them, and the Harvard Business Review notices how the Internet-originated peer to peer (or P2P) business approach is influencing other societal structures, like banking.

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Yesterday Barry blogged about Google testing a search box for site search within general search results. Today the feature is being fully rolled out for selected queries. It’s really an extension and elaboration of Google Sitelinks. The Google Blog explains:

[O]ver the past few days we have been testing, and today we have fully rolled out, a search box that appears within some of the search results themselves. This feature will now occur when we detect a high probability that a user wants more refined search results within a specific site. Like the rest of our snippets, the sites that display the site search box are chosen algorithmically based on metrics that measure how useful the search box is to users.

Click to continue reading…

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Here is a recap of what happened in the search forums today, through the eyes of the Search Engine Roundtable and other search forums on the web.

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Everyone is noticing that when they go to their Google Account through AdWords, AdSense, Analytics, or any Google page that requires SSL, they are being prompted with a security warning. Typically, not a major deal, right?

Well, not if you are trying to get customers to buy on your site. As Tim Gross explains, if you are using Google Checkout on your site, this is having a major impact. Not only that, if you are using the conversion tracking scripts for AdWords, and your potential buyer clicked on your ad, they may be prompted with a security warning and leave your site. There goes your sale, and you paid for that.

Click to continue reading…

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We’ve always been pretty open here at Search Engine Guide about how we do things. Partly because that’s just who we are, but mostly because we like the challenge of doing things on a budget (like our readers) and ending up with examples that can help inspire them in their own marketing goals.

So, I wanted to share the thinking and planning process behind the promo videos we’ve put together for our upcoming Small Business Marketing Unleashed conference.

It’s a short video, just a minute and a half, but it sums up the point of our show far more interestingly than a regular blog post or press release would have. With so many shows out there to choose from these days, we knew we had to get across what made us different quickly and compellingly. Of course, that’s the problem being faced by nearly every company online these days. How do you capture someone’s attention online, where information overload has left most Internet users blind to anything resembling a sales pitch?

Social Media Marketing was a No Brainer

As fans of social media marketing and getting creative on a budget, there was no question we’d have to come up with a social media campaign. The only question was what. We kicked around some ideas that would utilize Flickr and Facebook. We came up with one or two really fun (but expensive) offline pitches to bloggers. Ultimately, we remembered that social media isn’t about pushing advertising, it’s about utilizing new tools to spread a personal message.

Our personal style has always been “simple, affordable and a little bit whacky.” (After all, we are the site that put our feed reader icon in a dog bowl to match our beloved puppy logo…) Video seemed to be the best way to get that across and YouTube is obviously where it’s at when it comes to video and social media. Once we’d decided on our venue, we had to decide on our message and our budget.

The Requirements

The budget part was easy. I’m cheap and Robert is cheaper. While we had set aside a nice marketing budget for the show, I absolutely live for the chance to challenge myself with razor thin budgets. Thus, I wanted to keep the total cost of our blog coverage campaign to less than $200. After all, nearly any business can come up with $200 to promote an event. With a budget that tight, I knew heavy duty video editing would be out of the question. That meant we had to come up with videos that could be shot in a single take with no editing required.

The first thought to pop into my brain was to video me standing in front of the Alamo building at Northwest Forest Conference Center talking about the show. It took about two seconds to dismiss that idea as boring. My second thought was “we need something visual.” That’s when I started to kick around the idea of filming someone with a stack of cue cards. I’m a huge fan of the opening credits of Napoleon Dynamite and as soon as I thought of cue cards, I could hear that quirky, fun style of music playing in my ears.

Things instantly fell into place. Rachel (Search Engine Guide’s Business Development Manager) and I sat down and made a list of the five target audiences for the show.

We spent about a day scripting out the selling points and messages for each audience. It took me a few hours that night to turn those scripts into the Power Point slides you see in the video. The next day, Rachel took the slides to FedexKinkos and had them printed on large size paper. On her way home, she swung by a craft store and picked up some maroon foam board. We spent that evening taping the slides to the foam board. We spent the next day filming while Robert hunted through music archives for a song to buy.

By the next night, all five videos were live on YouTube.

Total Investment
Slides: $110
Fun and Quirky Music: $38
————————–
Total cost: $148
Total time: 18 hours

(I suppose you could technically add the cost of the digital video camera ($175) and I’d go over budget, but since I already owned the camera, it doesn’t really seem fair to include that in the price.)

Sending the Pitches

Once we had the videos created and online, we had to send our pitches to try and get coverage.

Our $150 video has snagged us coverage on Duct Tape Marketing, Small Business Trends, Chris Brogan’s Blog, John Chow, DoshDosh and quite a few others.

In fact, so far, pretty much every person we’ve pitched the video to has blogged about it. That said, we only pitched the sites we knew and read, making our pitches more personal and more likely to be accepted. Another reason why it’s so essential to spend time building relationships with the people in your niche.

How did the video perform in terms of conversion and sign-up rates? Well, the show isn’t for another six weeks, so it’s too early for me to tell you. That said, I’ll spill the beans in my Social Media and Viral Marketing workshops, so if you’re super curious, why not join us?

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Below is what happened in search today, as reported on
Search Engine Land and from other
places across the web.

From Search Engine Land:


  • Pew: Cellphones More Important To Users Than Internet, TV, Email

    Anyone who doubts how important mobile phones are and will become as a platform and marketing medium needs only to look at the latest Pew Internet & American Life report. Cellphones are now more important to US adults than the internet, television, landline phones and email. In addition, an increasing…

  • Google Analytics Benchmarking Feature, Data Sharing & Audio Ad Charting

    Google Analytics has added three major features today, two of those features are related and the third is a standalone feature. Google Analytics users can now have the option of comparing their site’s data to industry benchmarks. Analytics users can opt-in or opt-out of the data sharing feature by logging…

  • Looking For SMX Advanced 2008 Session Ideas (And Speakers)

    I’m often asked what’s the best way to speak at one of the search conferences we organized. The answer is simple. Suggest a great session. Do that, and you’ve got an excellent chance to present. And right now, we’re looking for some great session ideas for our SMX Advanced conference…

  • Matt Cutts & The Search Community Interview

    I finally got around to watching Whiteboard Friday - The Matt Cutts Interview and felt it was worth pointing out. Matt Cutts, Google Engineer, is a huge part of the SEM industry. Rand Fishkin’s interview with Matt Cutts explores that relationship. Questions include how Matt got into being the face…

  • Obit: A West Coast Digerati Deadpools Ask.com

    Goodbye, Ask.com. You caught my eye back in 1997 as an unusual meta search engine that asked questions to get answers. By 1998, I counted you alongside Google and Direct Hit as shining examples of what to watch in search. You’d dumped depending on others for search results and…

  • Yahoo Celebrates Its 13th Birthday; Will There Be A 14th?

    As Yahoo celebrates its 13th birthday, the looming question is: will the company be able to find an alternative to the Microsoft offer or will Steve Ballmer & Co. prevail? According to the Wall Street Journal, Yahoo has recently “stepped up” talks with AOL about potentially folding AOL’s business…

  • Google Adds Page Load Time To Quality Score Algorithm

    A WebmasterWorld thread tipped both Search Engine Watch and Search Engine Roundtable (that’s me) off on the fact that Google has added an additional quality score factor to the AdWords ranking algorithm. The new factor is page load time. If your destination URL is a very slow loading page, then…

  • Hot Or Not? Finding Hot Prospects With Lead Scoring

    As powerful as search marketing is for B2B lead generation, it has ironically served to increase the ages-old friction between sales and marketing. This is because when buyers use search to research solutions and find vendors, they are extremely early in the buying process—often long before they are ready…

  • SEO Site Audit: A Wise Investment For All Companies

    More and more savvy companies are undertaking search engine optimization (SEO) site audits, to assess the current search-effectiveness of a site, what needs to be done to improve it, and to track how a site is performing over time. I’ve been recommending website audits for years—after all, the accounting…

  • 10 Reasons to Attend SMX Social Media - Register Before March 15 and Save!

    Early bird registration for Search Marketing Expo - SMX Social Media in Long Beach, CA ends March 15. Register today and you’ll pay only $1195 for all the sessions, keynotes, networking and parties. Space is limited so secure your spot now. This West Coast version of SMX Social Media is…

  • Google Tests Additional Search Box Within Search Results

    Tamar tipped me off to people seeing secondary search boxes in the Google search results. I see them myself now. For example a search on amazon returns this search box directly under the snippet but above the URL, here is a picture:…

Search News From Around The Web:

Applications & Portal Features

Business Issues

Local, Maps & Mobile

Microhoo

Paid Search & Contextual

Searching

SEM Industry

SEO & SEM

Social Media

Video, Music & Image Search

Other Items

Recent Hot Items From Sphinn, Our Social News Sharing Site:

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As any good search engine optimization company knows, in search, more so than any other medium, you have a very short window of opportunity in which to engage your prospect. The only way to get a solid competitive advantage in this arena is to utilize various techniques in order to make sure that you are giving a prospect exactly what it is that he or she is looking for. Otherwise, your prospect will simply click the back button and visit one of your competitors - a process that only takes seconds.

One way to gain a competitive advantage, of course, is to work on the website itself. Any search engine optimization company worth its salt will also be involved in conversion testing on your website - in other words, making certain that the visitors who arrive on your site are likely to take a point of action that eventually leads to a sale. Split tests, modifications in content, different color schemes, and numerous other variable elements can all have a measurable impact.

There is also another way that a quality search engine optimization company will seek to maximize the value of the prospects that find your website through search engines. In this case, however, it is using your company differentiators in the keyphrases that they target to make sure that the traffic that comes to your site is of a very high quality.

Gaining a Competitive Advantage with Differentiators

As more and more companies turn to organic search to gain a competitive advantage while promoting their products and services, it can be increasingly difficult to achieve high rankings for the generic terms that everyone in your industry is pursuing. While any ranking is ultimately attainable, eventually a search engine optimization company has to decide whether the effort involved is worth it, especially when it recognizes that you can get overall better results from the campaign by making sure that a very high percentage of people that are typing keyphrases into search engines are looking for exactly what you offer.

This is why your search engine optimization company should be able to leverage differentiators in your keyphrases to give you the best competitive advantage available.

What Keyphrases Will Work Best for Your Business?

Suppose that you are in an industry where companies can have a wide array of prices, approaches, customer service levels, and so on. Instead of targeting, from the outset, the general keyphrase that defines the industry (for example “email marketing”), a good search engine optimization company will take the time to help you gain a competitive advantage by realizing what is different about your company in order to a.) attract very highly targeted prospects who know what they are seeking and b.) reduce the competitiveness of the keyphrases they are choosing.

Let’s take a look at a high-end provider of email marketing that has advanced web-based functionality and focuses on the B2B market. This fictional business is seeking a competitive advantage by working with a search engine optimization company. We can safely assume that the percentage of people that type “email marketing” into a search engine who are looking for this exact type of company is anywhere from between 0 and 100%.

By looking into the popularity of other variations, however, we can see that it is nowhere near 100%. Phrases like “cheap email marketing” or “free email marketing” are very popular, demonstrating that many people seeking “email marketing” are not looking for exactly the service that the provider is offering.

Imagine that instead of targeting “email marketing”, a daunting task (that, even if achieved, assures that a high percentage of visitors that come to the site are not looking for the provider’s particular type of solution), the search engine optimization company takes advantage of the provider’s differentiators. In this case, the search engine optimization company would instead target phrases such as “business to business email marketing” and “web-based email marketing”. Suddenly the two objectives have been achieved - the provider knows that a much higher percentage of visitors that are typing these terms are actually looking for the right kind of company and the competitiveness of the phrases has also been reduced, leading to faster and higher rankings.

Using Modifiers to Give You the Edge

There are hundreds of modifiers that can give a competitive advantage by reflecting a company’s differentiators, including words such as “free”, “affordable”, “high-end”, “full service”, “proven”, “turnkey”, etc. The point is that by making use of your unique differentiators in the search terms you target, your search engine optimization company is already setting the table for your prospect before he or she even clicks over to your website. When the message that is seen on your site then supports the keyphrase that was typed, you now have an engaged visitor. This can mean more leads, less site abandonment, and better overall website performance.

Conclusion

Remember, your company is better than the others out there. Ask yourself why, and then tell your search engine optimization company to take advantage of these differences in your keyphrases to give you a competitive advantage in your industry. The subtle addition of a few seemingly minor modifiers can have a huge impact on your bottom line.

Learn something from this post?
Come and experience Search Engine Guide style teaching in person! Join us for our first ever Small Business Marketing Unleashed Conference in Houston, Texas on April 21st and 22nd.

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If you haven’t heard, the teams from Best of the Web and the Internet Marketers of New York are throwing their third charity party later this month during Search Engine Strategies New York. This time around, they’ve decided to let the Internet marketing community decide which charity the event should benefit. They asked four industry folks to back a charity and they’re asking YOU to cast your vote. I’m one of the four and as you can imagine, I’m pushing for the event to benefit the HMBANA Milk Banks.

Voting ends tonight at midnight, and the Milk Bank is in a tight race with the National Association for Colitis and Crohn’s Disease to be the winning charity. If you’ve got a spare second, I’d greatly appreciate your vote. Milk banking still operates well under the radar, with few people even having heard of it. This makes fundraising difficult and leaves tons of premature infants who desperately need donor milk unable to get it due to lack of supply. With donor milk proven to reduce NICU stays by 20% and giving amazing protection against deadly diseases like Necrotizing Entercolitis, we need your help to snag every penny possible.

Please visit the SES NY Charity Party voting site and cast your vote for the milk banks.

Learn something from this post?
Come and experience Search Engine Guide style teaching in person! Join us for our first ever Small Business Marketing Unleashed Conference in Houston, Texas on April 21st and 22nd.

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I remember when there was this nice lull between December and April where I didn’t have to book flights, write presentations or find someone to watch my kids. These days, it feels like one conference blends into the next. On the plus side, that means you have tons of options to choose from if you’re looking to attend a search marketing or online marketing conference.

I made my first trek across the pond for Search Engine Strategies London a few weeks back. Many of my fellow speakers then headed straight to California for SMX West. (I, on the other hand, headed on to Italy with my husband for my first computer-free vacation in six years!) Both SES London and SMX West were great events . I’ve heard praise from attendees and speakers on both sides. (You can read coverage of SES London here, here, here and here. You can read coverage of SMX West here.)

In fact, I only have a brief two week rest here at home before I head off again to Search Engine Strategies New York. If you’re in the industry or are an experienced marketer looking to get up to speed on what’s going on in the industry, this show’s a good call. If you’re looking for really in-depth training on a particular topic, you might also want to consider the intensive four-hour workshops being offered the day after the show. (I’ll be doing one on Viral Marketing.)

Of course if you’re a small business on a tight budget or are brand new to the world of search marketing, social media or blogs, you might want to hold off on the big shows and consider attending our own Small Business Marketing Unleashed event in Houston this April.

Whichever show you head to, look me up. Always nice to make new connections.

Learn something from this post?
Come and experience Search Engine Guide style teaching in person! Join us for our first ever Small Business Marketing Unleashed Conference in Houston, Texas on April 21st and 22nd.

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Anyone who doubts how important mobile phones are and will become as a platform and marketing medium needs only to look at the latest Pew Internet & American Life report. Cellphones are now more important to US adults than the internet, television, landline phones, and email. In addition, an increasing number of consumers are using their mobile phones for things other than voice communications, including accessing mobile internet content.

Click to continue reading…

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Google Analytics added a new benchmarking feature today. Users can now compare their site’s performance to industry benchmarks, though only if they agree to share their data to help produce such aggregate benchmarks. Another feature added is the ability to see when your Google Audio ads run, in relation to your web site traffic.

Click to continue reading…

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I’m often asked what’s the best way to speak at one of the search conferences
we organized. The answer is simple. Suggest a great session. Do that, and you’ve
got an excellent chance to present. And right now, we’re looking for some great
session ideas for our
SMX Advanced
conference happening in Seattle this June 3 & 4.

You can learn more about pitching a session idea
here.
Session pitches will be accepted through March 11, and then I’ll get to work
drafting up the actual agenda. After that, we’ll have some additional speaker
openings posted. But the best way in is to suggest that killer session!

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I finally got around to watching Whiteboard Friday - The Matt Cutts Interview and felt it was worth pointing out. Matt Cutts, Google Engineer, is a huge part of the SEM industry. Rand Fishkin’s interview with Matt Cutts explores that relationship.

Questions include how Matt got into being the face of Google for webmasters, how other Googlers are aiding him, and the struggle in demonstrating that he is not the final answer at Google for SEOs. It is really a great interview.

In addition to the SEOmoz interview, Wired has a really short Q&A with Matt that was just published yesterday.

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Last week, we attended SMX West in Santa Clara, CA with a room full of exhibitors and cool schwag. Since I like schwag, Danny Sullivan told me that I had to rate the schwag in the exhibit hall, a task that I thoroughly enjoyed. In the end, everyone was a winner, but to be fair to Danny (and to make it a little competitive), I selected a few more outstanding pieces of schwag as the true winners.

Here was a very cool SureHits shirt:

SureHits Shirt (Type 1)

And a very practical Chapstick holder:

OutSearch Chapstick Holder

Personally, I love these ABCSearch click magnets:

ABCSearch Click Magnets

There are plenty of others, and I’ll be posting every single piece of schwag over the next few weeks (and months, since I’m traveling again as of tomorrow) on Schwag Addict.

And so you know, Barry made me write this article. ;) The schwag is a great part of fostering some community (and great branding) and the fun stuff is always remembered.

Speaking of SMX West, Barry created a video that highlights the attendees. Ignore the music; it’s from iMovie (he told me):

Enjoy!

Forum discussion continues at Sphinn.

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Goodbye, Ask.com. You caught my eye back in 1997 as an unusual

meta search engine
that asked questions to get answers. By 1998, I counted
you alongside Google and Direct Hit as shining examples of what to watch in
search. You’d dumped depending on others for search results and started
providing answers using your own human editors. I hung with you over the years,
cheered when you acquired the impressive Teoma crawler in 2001. I was thrilled
when you alone among the major search engines dumped the traditional search
metaphor for the Ask3D
view last year. Now you’re just for women, apparently. No more appealing to the
"West Coast elite" or "digerati" you say. You can tell yourself that, if it
helps. The truth is, you’re dead. You’re about to join the legion of other
has-been search engines, some of which you own or power, like Excite and iWon.

It’s OK. It hurts, but we both know it’s for the best. I know what you’re
thinking. I can hear you explaining it to me, over and over. IAC chief Barry
Diller bought Ask.com back in 2005, gave both Steve Berkowitz and then Jim
Lanzone time to try and pull searchers in by being more innovative than Google,
and that didn’t work. You tried. But now, it has to be out with the
search product CEO
and in with something new.

But listen, I say. Ask held its own against the combined weight of Google, Yahoo
and Microsoft. That was a success, it really was. And Ask WAS innovating. Among
the major search engines, it was the only one with something really different,
really unique going on. And as we’re about to move into a likely
Google-Microsoft duopoly, perhaps Ask’s day was about to come.

Sigh. I know, I know. Innovation is all fine, but why bother if you believe
you’ll never grow share? Why not shut everything down that’s new, fresh and
expensive to do and just get the most money off the basic traffic you know won’t
go away.

Click to continue reading…

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Pole Position Marketing did an excellent writeup on some link building secrets from 12 link building type people, including Rand Fishkin, Hamlet Batista, Jim Boykin, Debra Mastaler, Bob Gladstein, and Michael Gray and published the findings in a 24 page PDF.

Here’s part of one tip (you’ll have to read the PDF to get the rest of the tips):

Not all links are created equal. We know that some links help more than others in getting high search engine rankings. For some time now, link builders have primarily relied on Google’s toolbar PageRank as a good measure of the quality of a link. Higher PageRank values were ostensibly better than lower ones. Unfortunately, Google has played so much with the PageRank values it displays that it has become increasingly less useful.

Forum members are finding this information incredibly useful and actionable, so take a read.

Forum discussion continues at Sphinn.