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by Karri Flatla

Let’s get one thing straight: much as we like to play God, Internet marketers
are not the omnipotent beings some people think we are. The Earthly truth is that we’re just
some really driven people with a lot of knowledge about working the web
to your advantage. And most would agree that this knowledge, when put into action, is worth a few bucks. Of course, it’s easier to continue believing in the omnipotent marketer. As in, if you pay someone enough money to market your business for you, then that person is accountable for your business’ failure to turn a profit, right?

Okey dokey.

Back to Earth now.

If the Internet has made you a believer, I commend your optimism. If your faith has blinded you to the fact that there are no absolutes in marketing–and just a handful of foreseeable truths–your wake up call is coming. Because no matter how irritatingly detailed your web marketer’s contract is, I’d bet the farm you harbor a pile of assumptions about what’s included and what isn’t. And the assumptions you make today, tomorrow and throughout the marketing process dramatically impact the results you’ve been praying for.

Let’s blow up those assumptions then. The following reality check will keep you grounded, keep you sane, and ensure you
get your money’s worth:

Assumption: Web marketers can anticipate the precise combination of copy, design and functionality that will
attract and covert the ideal customer to my website.

Reality: When you hire a web marketer you are hedging that
he can make a better (read: more informed) guestimate than you can
regarding what will motivate your target market to act. Besides, if we could
anticipate such things do you really think we’d give out that information for
the price you’re getting?

Assumption: My website operates in a vacuous digital environment that will send me customers if I pay an Internet marketer enough money.

Reality: There are countless external forces–online and off–continuously acting on the environment in which you do business (e.g. interest
rates, the housing market, consumer spending, search engine algorithms,
what Paris Hilton is wearing, etc.). If marketers could control these forces, they probably wouldn’t be working for you.

Assumption: If I’m ready to sign a contract and make a deposit, I’m ready to let the right consultant revamp my marketing strategy.

Reality: If
trusting the instincts, experience and educated guesswork
of a well recommended marketer causes more than a lunch hour’s worth of teeth gnashing, you’re not prepared to make good use of a consultant. Hire a technician to implement
your ideas instead. It’s cheaper and allows you total creative
control.

Assumption: If sales don’t increase within at least a month or two, my marketing consultant should figure out what he did wrong and fix it.

Reality: If
at least 6 months pass, you’ve resisted the urge to change your strategy 37 times, and
performance still falls short expectations, reflexively
blaming the marketer is not sensible. Tweak the investment you’ve already
made. Then test the results. Tweak again. Test again. There’s a pattern
here. And it works.

Assumption: We closed the project last month and conversions have soared. That web marketer I hired is brilliant.

Reality: Thanks for the accolades, but if you’re pulling strong conversions out of
the gates, you just won the web lottery. The other 99.99% of us mortals should put away our horseshoes, hunker down and do some audience
awareness exercises (read: analytics, testing, research, and so on).

Assumption: My marketing consultant should work with me until I see satisfactory returns on the project cost, at no additional charge.

Reality: There are millions of websites on the Internet. If you want to be a superstar, prepare to pay for activities like testing,
monitoring and maintenance. (Contrary to popular belief, us web beings need more than our computers and some stale air to survive.)

Assumption: I’m not a marketing expert, and that’s why I’m paying someone else to market my website. Answering all these many questions about my target market, the history of my website, bla bla bla ad nauseaum is not the best use of my time.

Reality: The marketer you hire is a key player in the game but
he’s just one. Do not underestimate the impact of your input, where you
started from, and those pesky external forces. No one knows your business better than you, and that’s how it should be.

The
bottom line is that web professionals do not hold all the cards.
Yet many seem to think that a lucky few of us do. This not only
sets you up for disappointment, but you’re more apt to fall prey to
unscrupulous marketers who would rather take your money than help you
make some. At the end of the day, this is your mountain to climb. Are you up for it?

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

From Search Engine Land:


  • comScore: Google Gets High Again In US Search Share

    As with recent search stats from Hitwise and Nielsen, comScore’s latest stats for April 2008 search engine share in the United States shows Google hitting a new high, breaking through the 60% mark for the first time with comScore’s measurements….

  • Google News Now On Earth

    Earlier this week, Google added Google News to Earth. This follows the earlier addition of the NY Times to Earth. Other companies plotting news on a map include MetaCarta, Everyblock, Outside.in, YourStreet and a couple of others….

  • Representing Your Business on the Social Web

    The Web is getting more social, and the internet allows conversations between consumers and those who sell goods and services online on a scale that can be global in reach. The nature of that conversation has changed from the days of mass media to now, and success in business…

  • Potential Google Paid Search Deal With Yahoo Faces Anti-Trust Scrutiny

    The NY Times covers the issue of whether Google’s potential paid search deal with Yahoo can survive anti-trust scrutiny. The bottom line involves analysis of how the deal might impact the marketplace and whether it would reduce competition and lead to higher prices for search marketers….

  • New Windows Live Mobile Search Ads Beta, Homepage That Emphasizes Social Networking

    Microsoft this week has done a number of things in the mobile space, in addition to its introduction of the Live Search Cashback program on the desktop (which presumably will extend to mobile search/shopping). Windows Live launched a new homepage for mobile and the company introduced graphical ads and paid…

  • Doing A Fake Story For Linkbait? Disclose — Or Face The Wrath Of Google

    Link baiting entered a new area last week when Lyndon Antcliff had success with a fake story being picked up by some mainstream media sites as well as social news sites. Controversy erupted over the tactic, and now it likely will go into a second cycle after Google’s Matt Cutts…

  • Driving Video Consumption: The Key To Capturing Advertising Dollars

    In a May 1st post to this column, my colleague Tom Wilde questioned whether direct response or brand marketing would lead the inflow of dollars to the online video advertising market. While both forms of advertising are potentially applicable to what is expected to be a $4B (eMarketer) to…

  • Google Announces Doodle 4 Google Winners

    And the winner of the “Doodle 4 Google” competition is… Grace (Suryung) Moon, a 6th grader from Canyon Middle School in Castro Valley, California. She designed the Google logo, “Up in the Clouds,” which she said, “expresses a world in the sky.” The logo is now featured on Google’s…

  • US Congressman Quizzes Google Again On Privacy

    Lawmaker questions Google over privacy practices from Reuters reports Texas Rep. Joe Barton from the U.S. House of Representatives Energy and Commerce Committee quizzed Google on how they will integrate DoubleClick’s data with their own. Some questions posed include how user data from DoubleClick would be merged into Google’s data,…

  • What You Can Learn From Google’s “Site” Operator

    Google has a set of advanced search operators that can be accessed either through the advanced search page, or by using specialized commands in conjunction with your query from any Google web search box. One of the most useful for search engine optimization is the “site:” operator. Google’s “site:”…

  • Now Accepting Pitches For SMX Local & Mobile 2008

    We’re now accepting speaking proposals for SMX Local & Mobile, taking place in San Francisco on July 24-25, 2008. We’ve got an all new agenda for the show. Please note that the agenda is final for the show, and we will only consider pitches for specific panels. There are a…

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:


  • comScore: Google Gets High Again In US Search Share

    As with recent search stats from Hitwise and Nielsen, comScore’s latest stats for April 2008 search engine share in the United States shows Google hitting a new high, breaking through the 60% mark for the first time with comScore’s measurements….

  • Google News Now On Earth

    Earlier this week, Google added Google News to Earth. This follows the earlier addition of the NY Times to Earth. Other companies plotting news on a map include MetaCarta, Everyblock, Outside.in, YourStreet and a couple of others….

  • Representing Your Business on the Social Web

    The Web is getting more social, and the internet allows conversations between consumers and those who sell goods and services online on a scale that can be global in reach. The nature of that conversation has changed from the days of mass media to now, and success in business…

  • Potential Google Paid Search Deal With Yahoo Faces Anti-Trust Scrutiny

    The NY Times covers the issue of whether Google’s potential paid search deal with Yahoo can survive anti-trust scrutiny. The bottom line involves analysis of how the deal might impact the marketplace and whether it would reduce competition and lead to higher prices for search marketers….

  • New Windows Live Mobile Search Ads Beta, Homepage That Emphasizes Social Networking

    Microsoft this week has done a number of things in the mobile space, in addition to its introduction of the Live Search Cashback program on the desktop (which presumably will extend to mobile search/shopping). Windows Live launched a new homepage for mobile and the company introduced graphical ads and paid…

  • Doing A Fake Story For Linkbait? Disclose — Or Face The Wrath Of Google

    Link baiting entered a new area last week when Lyndon Antcliff had success with a fake story being picked up by some mainstream media sites as well as social news sites. Controversy erupted over the tactic, and now it likely will go into a second cycle after Google’s Matt Cutts…

  • Driving Video Consumption: The Key To Capturing Advertising Dollars

    In a May 1st post to this column, my colleague Tom Wilde questioned whether direct response or brand marketing would lead the inflow of dollars to the online video advertising market. While both forms of advertising are potentially applicable to what is expected to be a $4B (eMarketer) to…

  • Google Announces Doodle 4 Google Winners

    And the winner of the “Doodle 4 Google” competition is… Grace (Suryung) Moon, a 6th grader from Canyon Middle School in Castro Valley, California. She designed the Google logo, “Up in the Clouds,” which she said, “expresses a world in the sky.” The logo is now featured on Google’s…

  • US Congressman Quizzes Google Again On Privacy

    Lawmaker questions Google over privacy practices from Reuters reports Texas Rep. Joe Barton from the U.S. House of Representatives Energy and Commerce Committee quizzed Google on how they will integrate DoubleClick’s data with their own. Some questions posed include how user data from DoubleClick would be merged into Google’s data,…

  • What You Can Learn From Google’s “Site” Operator

    Google has a set of advanced search operators that can be accessed either through the advanced search page, or by using specialized commands in conjunction with your query from any Google web search box. One of the most useful for search engine optimization is the “site:” operator. Google’s “site:”…

  • Now Accepting Pitches For SMX Local & Mobile 2008

    We’re now accepting speaking proposals for SMX Local & Mobile, taking place in San Francisco on July 24-25, 2008. We’ve got an all new agenda for the show. Please note that the agenda is final for the show, and we will only consider pitches for specific panels. There are a…

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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comScore April 2008 US Search Share

As with recent search stats from
Hitwise and
Nielsen, comScore’s
latest stats
for April 2008 search engine share in the United States shows Google hitting a
new high, breaking through the 60% mark for the first time with comScore’s
measurements.

Click to continue reading…

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Today’s search engine marketing news and opinion: A Seat at the Table for Web Analytics; Giving Links Away; SEM/SEO Events to Attend; and more.

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Yahoo made small, but significant changes, to the layout of the top search ads. It seems like Yahoo is now showing a maximum of three ads at the top of the page, when they use to show four ads. Plus, they have moved the display URL under the ad description.

Here is a sample of the old layout:

Yahoo Changes Search Ads

Notice the display URL is on the same line as the description. Plus, there are four ads for this particular search result. This picture was taken from James Omdahl and seems to be as recent as January 2008.

The new/current layout:

Yahoo Changes Search Ads

Notice, the display URL is now under the ad description and there are only three ads.

Spratjac, notified us of this change in Search Engine Roundtable Forums just a couple hours ago. He said, “On some of the keywords that I follow that normally show 4 ads above the organic results, it’s now only three - very consistently.” “Also, the ads look simultaneously more compact (closer together), and yet bigger (the URLs are now on a line by themselves),” he added.

Is Yahoo taking the Google route of reducing the number of ads to improve search quality and click-through rate?

Forum discussion at Search Engine Roundtable Forums.

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by Stoney deGeyter

Today, at 10AM PST I’ll be conducting a webinar for SEMpdx. The webinar is titled Secrets to Creating a Search Engine Friendly Website, and it’s still not too late to register by clicking that link.

Last week I answered some questions that were submitted by registrants and I wanted to hit a few more again today. I’ve got more questions than I have time to answer here, but will also try to get to some of them during the webinar. Anything left unanswered I’ll probably be posting a few answers here a week until I burn through them all.

When developing a successful SEO friendly website, what things must be optimized (like a check-list) in the website to give it a general success?
– Sean

Wow, that’s a pretty broad question. I have a checklist covering about 400 different points, but it’s not all SEO. Some of it is architecture, some is usability, some is accessibility. To me, all of these things are interrelated. SEO is about making your website appealing in a way that the search engines consider it a more valuable resource then the other competing sites. What makes a site valuable to people also makes it valuable to the search engines. The better your site is built, the better visitor experience you can provide and the more you try to create what I call a “Destination Website”, the more people your site will appeal to, the more traffic you’ll get, the more conversions you’ll be able to make. All of that, in turn, translates into links and word of mouth. Which, in turn, translates into search engine rankings for a properly optimized site.

The webinar will cover a number of points from that checklist, primarily from the architecture side. But keep in mind, this is not an SEO discussion. It’s a discussion on how to make your site search engine friendly so it can be search engine optimized. Those are two very different things. You can have “optimized” web pages, targeting your keywords effectively, but if the site isn’t search engine friendly then all the keyword optimization in the world wont’ do you any good. On the other hand, a search engine friendly site usually isn’t enough if you’re not doing effective keyword targeting on your pages.

We do development for our clients on our server, which results in similar content appearing in two places. Is a robots.txt file to keep crawlers out of our development directories sufficient to avoid rankings penalties for duplicate content?
– Tom

Absolutely! Using the robot.txt to disallow any and all development directories should be enough to keep all legitimate search engines out of the development sites. Keep in mind, though that development pages can be bookmarked or linked to so some spiders will still find the information if it’s publicly available. But most of these will not be “legitimate” spiders or search engines. If you wan to keep the non-legit ones out then you might might to password protect your development sites. This will block them effectively from rogue spiders and anybody else who isn’t authorized to view the pages.

How do I build a durable site from the start? What are crucial design pitfalls to avoid–especially those that are hard to undo? (Ex: Company site SERPs dropped off the map when we split a product category into two; it needed to be done…Oddly, we continue to rank well for one of our targeted phrases. Does a necessary change always cause this much pain?)
– Tessa

The webinar will provide you with a number of solid points on how to create (or re-create) a durable, search engine friendly website. I’ll also talk about a number of things to avoid doing, but you have to realize that everything you do to your site will have an effect on the rankings. Sometimes positive, sometimes negative and sometimes barely even noticeable in either direction. With that in mind, you have to consider carefully what changes really need to be made, think logically to how the search engines might react to that and then implement it only if the benefit for your users outweighs any potential negative effect from the search engines.

Sometimes you absolutely have to make changes that will have serious negative consequences. But those changes are often necessary both for visitors and for long-term search engine friendliness. For example if you have a system that creates mass duplicate content then you have to fix that. By doing so you’ll see lots of pages fall out of the index in the search engines. This can cause an immediate negative impact on your business, but you know that by fixing the duplicate issue you’re creating a more search friendly site. The long-term benefit of that change will far outweigh any short-term loss.

Plan ahead in such circumstances, weigh the pros and cons and find ways to combat the cons for a quick recovery of any loss.

Should your company’s URL be keyword rich, or just the name of your company?
– Jessica

If you are just starting out then you can have both. When doing your research for your company name, make sure the URL is available before you make any final naming decisions. The last thing you want is to get what you think is a great company name only to realize that someone else owns the URL.

Is it smart to have a keyword-rich company name? Absolutely. Keywords are words that people use to create an identity between what you do and who you are. If you use keywords in the name then you don’t have to “teach” anybody what your company does. Let’s take McDonalds as an example. In the early days they were called “McDonald’s Hamburgers.” Right there you know this is a hamburger joint. Same with Burger King. What do they do? Make burgers! On the other hand if you have a vague company name like Global Enterprises, well, you’ve got your work cut out for you explaining what you do. If your company name is keyword rich then your URL should be also.

So get your keywords in your business name and make sure you can get your business name as your domain name. It’s not so crucial that your domain name is keyword rich as it is that it reflect your company name. Otherwise it creates a branding disconnect. Imagine if Target was found at www.clothingandelectronics.com. While Target doesn’t use keywords in their name, there would be an even worse disconnect if their domain name was different from their brand name.

Your name is important enough to make sure it suites your audience first. Keywords in your business name are great, but don’t go overboard in trying to create a business name that’s just stuffed with keywords. You’ll have a hard time with a business name such as The Boys and Girls School Clothing and Accessories Store. Find something that is workable, catchy and tells the story of what you do in few words. Then get the domain name, not for the keywords, but simply because that’s your business name.

Overall, the effect of having keywords in your domain name is minimal. The effect of having keywords in your business name is much more important. Many people will link to you using only your business name, if that name is keyword rich, then you gain good keyword links with just about every link.

Got more questions? Please feel free to add them to your comments here (I’ll reply in the comments) or email me at questions@polepositionmarketing.com. As long as questions keep coming in I’ll be happy to continue to post answers on a weekly basis.

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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Earlier this week, Google added Google News to Earth. This follows the earlier addition of the NY Times to Earth. Other companies plotting news on a map include MetaCarta, Everyblock, Outside.in, YourStreet and a couple of others.

Click to continue reading…

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Earlier this week, Google added Google News to Earth. This follows the earlier addition of the NY Times to Earth. Other companies plotting news on a map include MetaCarta, Everyblock, Outside.in, YourStreet and a couple of others.

Click to continue reading…

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Small is Beautiful - a Column From Search Engine Land

The Web is getting more social, and the internet allows conversations between consumers and those who sell goods and services online on a scale that can be global in reach. The nature of that conversation has changed from the days of mass media to now, and success in business on the Web may rely more than ever on having a voice that people can rely upon, can relate to, and can trust.

People want to connect with other people when they conduct business online, whether the business is a large one, or a small one. One of the advantages that a small business may have is that it can be easier for them to build positive relationships, engage in one-on-one conversations, and avoid the inertia of bureaucracy and endless meetings.

Some large businesses attempt to reach out on a personal level to their customers. We saw that recently in a blog post, Introduction to Google Search Quality, from Google’s Vice President of Engineering in charge of Search Quality, Udi Manber, in which he introduced himself and described some of how the search engine ranks pages. But there’s no contact information for Udi on the page, no way to write and ask questions, no place to leave comments, and no way to engage him in conversation.

The Web provides ways for owners of small businesses to hold conversations, through blogs and forums and social networks, by contact form and phone and email. Are you taking advantage of the chance to build relationships with people who want to do business with you?

Click to continue reading…

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Small is Beautiful - a Column From Search Engine Land

The Web is getting more social, and the internet allows conversations between consumers and those who sell goods and services online on a scale that can be global in reach. The nature of that conversation has changed from the days of mass media to now, and success in business on the Web may rely more than ever on having a voice that people can rely upon, can relate to, and can trust.

People want to connect with other people when they conduct business online, whether the business is a large one, or a small one. One of the advantages that a small business may have is that it can be easier for them to build positive relationships, engage in one-on-one conversations, and avoid the inertia of bureaucracy and endless meetings.

Some large businesses attempt to reach out on a personal level to their customers. We saw that recently in a blog post, Introduction to Google Search Quality, from Google’s Vice President of Engineering in charge of Search Quality, Udi Manber, in which he introduced himself and described some of how the search engine ranks pages. But there’s no contact information for Udi on the page, no way to write and ask questions, no place to leave comments, and no way to engage him in conversation.

The Web provides ways for owners of small businesses to hold conversations, through blogs and forums and social networks, by contact form and phone and email. Are you taking advantage of the chance to build relationships with people who want to do business with you?

Click to continue reading…