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by Mack Collier

If great content is the #1 trait of a great company blog, properly
handling comments is #1-A.  Great content pulls in readers and if you
can use that content to encourage comments and then reply to the ones
left in a proper manner, you’ll convert readers into a community.

I also write for the marketing blog Daily Fix, and one of the writers there, Ted Mininni, always has several comments to his posts.  Notice that his most recent post currently has 28 comments.

But also notice that 14 of those comments come from Ted himself.  Ted does an excellent job of making a point to reply to each commenter, and thank them for adding their 2 cents.  Since Ted has a reputation for replying to every comment, readers want to comment on his posts, because they know that he will respond. 

And you should keep that in mind when receiving comments on your blog.  Readers leave comments because they want to have a say, but also because they want you to respond.  They have done you a favor by leaving feedback, and you can say ‘thank you’, by replying back.

Of course the added benefit is that as your post gets more comments, it means that readers are more likely to read the comments section to see what discussion is happening! 

Look at your blog, do you see any posts with only 1 comment?  If so, why didn’t you answer that one comment?  How many readers didn’t leave that 2nd comment, because they saw that you didn’t reply to the first?

Get in the habit of making every effort to answer every comment left on your blog.  If you can do this, you’ll likely find that your readers get in the habit of leaving more comments!

Tomorrow I’ll look at the sidebar elements for a great company blog.

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Search Influence can help! Targeted Traffic. Increased Revenue. Results Guaranteed. Customized Internet Marketing you can afford.

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by Mack Collier

If great content is the #1 trait of a great company blog, properly
handling comments is #1-A.  Great content pulls in readers and if you
can use that content to encourage comments and then reply to the ones
left in a proper manner, you’ll convert readers into a community.

I also write for the marketing blog Daily Fix, and one of the writers there, Ted Mininni, always has several comments to his posts.  Notice that his most recent post currently has 28 comments.

But also notice that 14 of those comments come from Ted himself.  Ted does an excellent job of making a point to reply to each commenter, and thank them for adding their 2 cents.  Since Ted has a reputation for replying to every comment, readers want to comment on his posts, because they know that he will respond. 

And you should keep that in mind when receiving comments on your blog.  Readers leave comments because they want to have a say, but also because they want you to respond.  They have done you a favor by leaving feedback, and you can say ‘thank you’, by replying back.

Of course the added benefit is that as your post gets more comments, it means that readers are more likely to read the comments section to see what discussion is happening! 

Look at your blog, do you see any posts with only 1 comment?  If so, why didn’t you answer that one comment?  How many readers didn’t leave that 2nd comment, because they saw that you didn’t reply to the first?

Get in the habit of making every effort to answer every comment left on your blog.  If you can do this, you’ll likely find that your readers get in the habit of leaving more comments!

Tomorrow I’ll look at the sidebar elements for a great company blog.

Want more from your web site?
Search Influence can help! Targeted Traffic. Increased Revenue. Results Guaranteed. Customized Internet Marketing you can afford.

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Instead of asking for technical changes that IT can’t or won’t make, teaching them what end result you’re after, and the challenges you face to get there, can help the SEO and IT teams work together toward a common goal.

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by Sage Lewis

Jiannis Sotiropoulos from the Pandemic Blog divulges his findings about how to maximize your YouTube results in his article, “Going Viral with YouTube.” Sotiropoulos studied four different videos, three of which were popular and one that wasn’t. Sage highlights five of his major findings, including results like the number of friends you have on YouTube does NOT play a role in promoting it nor does the quantity of videos, but the quality of your video and having lots of friends on other social networking sites does influence the popularity.

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Search Influence can help! Targeted Traffic. Increased Revenue. Results Guaranteed. Customized Internet Marketing you can afford.

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Strictly Business - A Column From Search Engine Land

Should marketers avoid paying for prospects who are early in the buying process and not ready to submit personal information or be contacted by a sales person? Should these “tire kickers” be avoided so that marketers can focus their attention on generating more valuable, sales-ready leads? While this approach may seem logical at first, I believe it is short-sighted and ultimately leaves a lot of money on the table.

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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In House - A Column From Search Engine Land

With many in-house SEM teams ramping up, and in-house efforts in general growing, I thought it might be useful to scope out the basics for an SEO-centric interview. It’s tough enough to find good talent these days, and those with experience are commanding higher and higher salaries, so many companies may be looking to those with fewer years of experience to fill critical in-house roles.

This doesn’t mean, however, that you need to skimp on your standards. Sure, the candidate might not have 7+ years of experience, but the newest crop of young SEM folks come armed with sink-or-swim experience, and in many cases, have benefited from some of the great training programs available today. I’ll suggest you refrain from listing an MBA as a requirement and start building a suite of interview questions that’ll help you determine if the candidate in front of you really has what it takes to snag a second interview.

Click to continue reading…

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by Jennifer Laycock

There’s just a handful of days left before the Search Engine Guide team takes to the stage in Houston, Texas for our first ever Small Business Marketing Unleashed conference. Our staff and speakers have been busy finishing up last minute details, putting the finishing touches on presentations and getting ready to load tons of great worksheets and guides onto the flash drives we’ll be sending attendees home with. If you haven’t signed up yet, it’s not too late.

If you’re in Houston, you can just pop on over for the show at the last minute. We’ll make room for you. Even if you live a little further away, there are still a handful of rooms available at the conference center and we’re sending a shuttle to our backup hotels to pick up the folks staying there. (Get full details on lodging at the Unleashed event site.)

Typing discount code “PUPPY” into the registration form knocks $100 off the price.

In the area, but can’t make it to the show? Join us Sunday night for Charity Speed Networking Unleashed. Sponsored by Pop Labs, this pre-show mixer is open to the public and serves as a great way to meet up with our speakers and other attendees as well as local marketing and small business professionals. $10 gets you in the door for a night of speed networking, a charity auction, munchies and a performance by Pop Lab’s m0serious (a.k.a. the SEO Rapper). 100% of funds raised that night go to benefit the Houston Youth Development Center, a mentoring program for at risk students in Houston.

Want more from your web site?
Search Influence can help! Targeted Traffic. Increased Revenue. Results Guaranteed. Customized Internet Marketing you can afford.

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by Jennifer Laycock

There’s just a handful of days left before the Search Engine Guide team takes to the stage in Houston, Texas for our first ever Small Business Marketing Unleashed conference. Our staff and speakers have been busy finishing up last minute details, putting the finishing touches on presentations and getting ready to load tons of great worksheets and guides onto the flash drives we’ll be sending attendees home with. If you haven’t signed up yet, it’s not too late.

If you’re in Houston, you can just pop on over for the show at the last minute. We’ll make room for you. Even if you live a little further away, there are still a handful of rooms available at the conference center and we’re sending a shuttle to our backup hotels to pick up the folks staying there. (Get full details on lodging at the Unleashed event site.)

Typing discount code “PUPPY” into the registration form knocks $100 off the price.

In the area, but can’t make it to the show? Join us Sunday night for Charity Speed Networking Unleashed. Sponsored by Pop Labs, this pre-show mixer is open to the public and serves as a great way to meet up with our speakers and other attendees as well as local marketing and small business professionals. $10 gets you in the door for a night of speed networking, a charity auction, munchies and a performance by Pop Lab’s m0serious (a.k.a. the SEO Rapper). 100% of funds raised that night go to benefit the Houston Youth Development Center, a mentoring program for at risk students in Houston.

Want more from your web site?
Search Influence can help! Targeted Traffic. Increased Revenue. Results Guaranteed. Customized Internet Marketing you can afford.

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by Miriam Ellis

Who are you? An individual? A family? A group of people sitting at desks in an office? An entity
with a physical location where I’ll be standing in a line to speak with someone behind a counter? A
co-op of professionals that will come to me to perform a service? When I hit your website, one of
my first efforts is going to involve trying to determine who you are, behind that screen, those
images, those words on your pages.

As a copywriter, I have a checklist of questions I work to get answers to from clients before I
start writing. One of the big ones is, “what voice do you want to use on your site?”. In general,
we’re dealing with four options:

1) I am a therapist.
2) We are therapists.
3) He/she is a therapist.
4) They are therapists.

For the sake of consistency, every business needs to pick one voice and use it throughout the total
copy of their website. Being I in one paragraph and We in another sounds like an
identity crisis and fails to make a concrete statement to users as to who they are dealing
with. But, how do you choose a first or third person voice? How do you determine which is most
appropriate for your specific small business?

I Am, I Said

Take a look at this
this website
for this very interesting small business. I love the fact that this patent lawyer
has such a clear and friendly photo of himself greeting me on the homepage. I immediately know that I’m dealing with a real person, and if I needed a patent lawyer, he’s making a good first impression on me as being an
accessible person. However, when I begin to scan his copy, I have a sense of suddenly being shut
out. The copywriter in this case has chosen to refer to the lawyer in the third person, and I am
left with the experience of reading a biography rather than feeling that the patent lawyer has
just engaged me in a one-on-one conversation. I see this as a lost opportunity and it would be the
first thing I would address if I set about editing the copy of this site. It’s clear that this
lawyer should be an I as in: I will help you make quick work of the intricacies of filing
a patent
. With just a little bit of work, this website could become 100% more engaging.

For a shining example of who is getting the powerful first person voice right, take a gander
at realtor
Cari McGee’s website
. Not only do we have that amiable photo right up front, but Realtor McGee
is making full use of the I will do this for you proposition. I can feel my hand reaching
for the phone by the time I get to the bottom of her homepage.

In general, I advocate the use of the first person voice on nearly any small business website that
is being run by a single professional. It’s a route that comes across as honest, humble and incredibly
personable.

We Are Family

Family owned businesses, joint ventures and companies with staff can still get in on the goodness
of first person energy.
Hardcastle Construction of Tennessee
is on the right track with their homepage where they list
the positions held by members of this family-owned business. They go on to refer to themselves as
we with good consistency throughout their text. A nice photo of the family would complete the
picture here and make the kind of personal outreach they are clearly striving to achieve.

Here’s a
local political website
that’s getting it right. Not only are they making a big point of what
we can do for you, but the photo seals the deal that these are two real guys running for the
South Hackensack Township Committee. Whatever you may think of their political platform, you get
an approximation of meeting these local politicians by visiting their homepage. In my opinion, that’s
what the very best websites accomplish.

He Said/She Said

I believe that small businesses frequently suffer from a fear that their entities just aren’t ‘official’
enough, and I have no doubt that this is why so many of them tend to adopt third-person language
on their websites. It’s an easy mistake to make. Rather than giving you another example like the patent
lawyer, above, I’ll ask you to go to your own website’s homepage and see if it reads like this:

For 30 years, George has been leading walking tours of the Great Lakes. George has loved the
outdoor life since childhood, and he strives to share this hobby with others. He will help others
get the most out of their visit to the Great Lakes region. He is an extremely talented individual
whom everybody loves, and has received numerous awards from the Fish & Game Department.

Text like this makes me ask, “who wrote this? George’s wife?”. Chances are, though, George is the
author of this text, and he has written it in an attempt to sound worthy. It comes off more like
a biography of some historical figure or, even, an obituary. That’s certainly not the impression
you want to make if you’re running a website to make important connections with people, but
I’ve seen everyone from dog walkers to law firms fall into the third-person trap in an
attempt to sound important. Your website is your chance to reach out and touch someone, as the
old TV jingle said, and you can’t do this when your copy reads like you paid someone to say nice
things about your business. That’s what user generated content is for.

The third-person voice is fine for the news, history, biography and similar endeavors, but if
you want to win trust, a personal introduction is a good way to open what you’re hoping will be
a conversation that ends with a customer won.

You’ve Really Got A Hold On Me

It doesn’t matter if you’re the town plumber or the president of the largest bank in the city. As
the web evolves, we are all discovering that the more adeptly a website approximates an interaction
with a live and welcoming company rep., the better chance it has of making money for a business. In
the past, the majority of websites were a little more like business cards, sitting there on
the web with some graphics and words on them, hoping someone would take notice. Now, internet transactions
are so clearly geared towards personal engagement, and this starts with the way you greet your
users. Photos and videos are powerful tools, but written language is still the medium via which you
are likely to convey some of your most important offerings. If your competitors are still referring
to themselves in a distant, passive manner, here is your chance to stand out, grab hold of my attention
with your honest, one-on-one style and win me as a customer.

Want more from your web site?
Search Influence can help! Targeted Traffic. Increased Revenue. Results Guaranteed. Customized Internet Marketing you can afford.

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by Miriam Ellis

Who are you? An individual? A family? A group of people sitting at desks in an office? An entity
with a physical location where I’ll be standing in a line to speak with someone behind a counter? A
co-op of professionals that will come to me to perform a service? When I hit your website, one of
my first efforts is going to involve trying to determine who you are, behind that screen, those
images, those words on your pages.

As a copywriter, I have a checklist of questions I work to get answers to from clients before I
start writing. One of the big ones is, “what voice do you want to use on your site?”. In general,
we’re dealing with four options:

1) I am a therapist.
2) We are therapists.
3) He/she is a therapist.
4) They are therapists.

For the sake of consistency, every business needs to pick one voice and use it throughout the total
copy of their website. Being I in one paragraph and We in another sounds like an
identity crisis and fails to make a concrete statement to users as to who they are dealing
with. But, how do you choose a first or third person voice? How do you determine which is most
appropriate for your specific small business?

I Am, I Said

Take a look at this
this website
for this very interesting small business. I love the fact that this patent lawyer
has such a clear and friendly photo of himself greeting me on the homepage. I immediately know that I’m dealing with a real person, and if I needed a patent lawyer, he’s making a good first impression on me as being an
accessible person. However, when I begin to scan his copy, I have a sense of suddenly being shut
out. The copywriter in this case has chosen to refer to the lawyer in the third person, and I am
left with the experience of reading a biography rather than feeling that the patent lawyer has
just engaged me in a one-on-one conversation. I see this as a lost opportunity and it would be the
first thing I would address if I set about editing the copy of this site. It’s clear that this
lawyer should be an I as in: I will help you make quick work of the intricacies of filing
a patent
. With just a little bit of work, this website could become 100% more engaging.

For a shining example of who is getting the powerful first person voice right, take a gander
at realtor
Cari McGee’s website
. Not only do we have that amiable photo right up front, but Realtor McGee
is making full use of the I will do this for you proposition. I can feel my hand reaching
for the phone by the time I get to the bottom of her homepage.

In general, I advocate the use of the first person voice on nearly any small business website that
is being run by a single professional. It’s a route that comes across as honest, humble and incredibly
personable.

We Are Family

Family owned businesses, joint ventures and companies with staff can still get in on the goodness
of first person energy.
Hardcastle Construction of Tennessee
is on the right track with their homepage where they list
the positions held by members of this family-owned business. They go on to refer to themselves as
we with good consistency throughout their text. A nice photo of the family would complete the
picture here and make the kind of personal outreach they are clearly striving to achieve.

Here’s a
local political website
that’s getting it right. Not only are they making a big point of what
we can do for you, but the photo seals the deal that these are two real guys running for the
South Hackensack Township Committee. Whatever you may think of their political platform, you get
an approximation of meeting these local politicians by visiting their homepage. In my opinion, that’s
what the very best websites accomplish.

He Said/She Said

I believe that small businesses frequently suffer from a fear that their entities just aren’t ‘official’
enough, and I have no doubt that this is why so many of them tend to adopt third-person language
on their websites. It’s an easy mistake to make. Rather than giving you another example like the patent
lawyer, above, I’ll ask you to go to your own website’s homepage and see if it reads like this:

For 30 years, George has been leading walking tours of the Great Lakes. George has loved the
outdoor life since childhood, and he strives to share this hobby with others. He will help others
get the most out of their visit to the Great Lakes region. He is an extremely talented individual
whom everybody loves, and has received numerous awards from the Fish & Game Department.

Text like this makes me ask, “who wrote this? George’s wife?”. Chances are, though, George is the
author of this text, and he has written it in an attempt to sound worthy. It comes off more like
a biography of some historical figure or, even, an obituary. That’s certainly not the impression
you want to make if you’re running a website to make important connections with people, but
I’ve seen everyone from dog walkers to law firms fall into the third-person trap in an
attempt to sound important. Your website is your chance to reach out and touch someone, as the
old TV jingle said, and you can’t do this when your copy reads like you paid someone to say nice
things about your business. That’s what user generated content is for.

The third-person voice is fine for the news, history, biography and similar endeavors, but if
you want to win trust, a personal introduction is a good way to open what you’re hoping will be
a conversation that ends with a customer won.

You’ve Really Got A Hold On Me

It doesn’t matter if you’re the town plumber or the president of the largest bank in the city. As
the web evolves, we are all discovering that the more adeptly a website approximates an interaction
with a live and welcoming company rep., the better chance it has of making money for a business. In
the past, the majority of websites were a little more like business cards, sitting there on
the web with some graphics and words on them, hoping someone would take notice. Now, internet transactions
are so clearly geared towards personal engagement, and this starts with the way you greet your
users. Photos and videos are powerful tools, but written language is still the medium via which you
are likely to convey some of your most important offerings. If your competitors are still referring
to themselves in a distant, passive manner, here is your chance to stand out, grab hold of my attention
with your honest, one-on-one style and win me as a customer.

Want more from your web site?
Search Influence can help! Targeted Traffic. Increased Revenue. Results Guaranteed. Customized Internet Marketing you can afford.

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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:


  • Google Drops IMAP Support? Gmail & Google Apps Stops Functioning

    It appears that Google is having major issues with their email server. In the past 15 minutes, I received a few phones, tons of twits and found a fast growing Google Groups thread about Google removing IMAP from their email settings options. This seems to be a major issue, where…

  • Google Website Optimizer Steps Out Of The AdWords Box: Open To All Users & Urchin 6.0 Comes Out Of Beta

    Google has announced that AdWords is no longer a requirement for Website Optimizer. In fact, you can now go to google.com/websiteoptimizer and register, for free, to use Website Optimizer, even if you do not have an AdWords account. Now, you can use Website Optimizer to not just A/B test your…

  • Facebook Adds Lexicon And “Friend Feed” Style Outside Activity Alerts

    Facebook hasn’t yet added Web search but it is allowing users to import content from third-party sites. Users are now permitted to import stories and content (into their mini-feeds) from a handful of sites: Flickr, Yelp, Picasa, and del.icio.us to start with, Digg and others to come. The intention is…

  • Microsoft Launches Live Search News

    Microsoft hits back at Google with Live Search News from News.com reports Microsoft has launched Live Search News. Live Search News takes a more linear view of news, when you compare it to the Google News or Yahoo News home pages. Live Search News looks more like a Techmeme style…

  • comScore: New Google High, New Yahoo & Microsoft Lows, Though Both Rise In Raw Searches

    Continuing from previous search stats from Hitwise and Compete, comScore is now out with search engine share in the United States for March 2008. Similar to Hitwise, Google hits a new high while Microsoft and Yahoo hit new lows. But in terms of raw searches, Yahoo and Microsoft showed…

  • Cuill Gets $25 Million In VC Funding

    Cuill, the stealth search startup backed by former Google, AltaVista and IBM search experts, has completed a second round of funding to the tune of $25 million. The round was led by Madrone Capital Partners and follows on a first round of $8 million from Tugboat Ventures and Greylock Partners….

Search News From Around The Web:

Applications & Portal Features

Business Issues

Local, Maps & Mobile

Link Building

Paid Search & Contextual

Searching

SEM Industry

SEO & SEM

Social Media

Video, Music & Image Search

Web Analytics

Other Items

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

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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:


  • Google Drops IMAP Support? Gmail & Google Apps Stops Functioning

    It appears that Google is having major issues with their email server. In the past 15 minutes, I received a few phones, tons of twits and found a fast growing Google Groups thread about Google removing IMAP from their email settings options. This seems to be a major issue, where…

  • Google Website Optimizer Steps Out Of The AdWords Box: Open To All Users & Urchin 6.0 Comes Out Of Beta

    Google has announced that AdWords is no longer a requirement for Website Optimizer. In fact, you can now go to google.com/websiteoptimizer and register, for free, to use Website Optimizer, even if you do not have an AdWords account. Now, you can use Website Optimizer to not just A/B test your…

  • Facebook Adds Lexicon And “Friend Feed” Style Outside Activity Alerts

    Facebook hasn’t yet added Web search but it is allowing users to import content from third-party sites. Users are now permitted to import stories and content (into their mini-feeds) from a handful of sites: Flickr, Yelp, Picasa, and del.icio.us to start with, Digg and others to come. The intention is…

  • Microsoft Launches Live Search News

    Microsoft hits back at Google with Live Search News from News.com reports Microsoft has launched Live Search News. Live Search News takes a more linear view of news, when you compare it to the Google News or Yahoo News home pages. Live Search News looks more like a Techmeme style…

  • comScore: New Google High, New Yahoo & Microsoft Lows, Though Both Rise In Raw Searches

    Continuing from previous search stats from Hitwise and Compete, comScore is now out with search engine share in the United States for March 2008. Similar to Hitwise, Google hits a new high while Microsoft and Yahoo hit new lows. But in terms of raw searches, Yahoo and Microsoft showed…

  • Cuill Gets $25 Million In VC Funding

    Cuill, the stealth search startup backed by former Google, AltaVista and IBM search experts, has completed a second round of funding to the tune of $25 million. The round was led by Madrone Capital Partners and follows on a first round of $8 million from Tugboat Ventures and Greylock Partners….

Search News From Around The Web:

Applications & Portal Features

Business Issues