Job Title? d. All of the Above

I have never read an article, err, “whitepaper,” that was so spot on to the reason I shaped my role in the industry to what it is today. I was e-mailed Forrester’s “Implications of the Splinternet and the Future of Web Analytics” yesterday and read straight through it; twice. This paper was a result of a survey that asked 210 marketers took to evaluate the “pain points they experience while trying to keep pace with the rapidly evolving multichannel digital environment.”

My “Ah ha!’ moments came during various moments in the study, but first I will tell you a little about what I do. I like to look at myself as a hybrid role of a strategist, analyst, community manager, and brand enthusiast. Although I would love to have a minion army working for me, splitting up the roles, I take them all on myself, everyday.

I realized when I graduated, and have only been confirmed of it since, that companies, firms, brands, people (whatever you want to call them) who have somewhat adapted to online marketing in the non-tradition sense (social media, multi-platforms, mobile) are scared. They are scared to fully emerge and strategize their brand on these channels because they don’t know if it will lead to a payout.

“Firms reported that measurement is a top challenge for adapting to fragmentation. The failure of measurement to keep pace creates significant barriers to adoption for marketers because uncertain ROI is the top barrier to adopting new channels in their organizations.”

Now, back to why I created by job role. I already had the skills to be an online media specialist, helping brands utilize platforms based on their audience, message, and service/product. That was simple. What I ran into was, “Well, how do we know spending time on these sites are going to lead customers to purchase?” I knew that this emerging industry was going to need more to back it up then telling a brand to Tweet, Pin, Instagram, or Tumble. I learned analytics, SEO best practices, and  the almighty PCC and Google Adwords world. Putting all of these skills together lead me to a place where I could give reasons for strategies and recommendations (with evidence of success) for a brands online goals. Once again, it all starts with strategy. Strategy comes from numbers; numbers turn into creating great content (or let’s hope it does).

“As media fragmentation occurs, what skills do you predict will be most critical to your marketing
organization over the next five years?”

50% surveyed answered “strategy.” The article goes on to state:

“Firms must develop an overarching strategy from which to direct the tools, organization, processes, and measurement capabilities that are necessary to succeed in a fragmented marketing ecosystem.”

So, first comes strategy, then comes testing and implementation (what works, what doesn’t work), and then comes expansion. Although firms are scared that the money they put into “social media” (“WHY? IT’S FREE!?) it is the mind behind the madness takes a lot of work and skills to reach the full potential of a brands online presence.

I have seen so far in my professional career thus far, that case study after case study is showing that brands who adapt to  online fragmentation, WILL see a payout. I am finding ways to measure both presence and engagement, AS WELL AS conversions, traffic and CTR. They are all relative. You can’t be successful with out one or the other. The article ends with a page of general recommendations that I would KILL to have CEO’s read, who are weary about online marketing, and the online fragmentation, and where their brand stands.

This is now the longest blog post I have written in awhile and a praise you for reaching the end. So I will leave you to read the article yourself. It will help understand why emerging online media is so important for companies and how you can keep CEO’s happy with real numbers and real results.

“Success is really hard to measure. One of the biggest challenges. The vast majority of our measurement is in terms of
inquiries, leads, pipeline driven and it’s really difficult to measure a social network in that way. How do you measure?
Numbers of members in the community? Or getting the CIO of the biggest company in the country rather than 15
smaller CIOs? It’s about quality and quantity of people in the community.”

Advanced Google Search Tips: 10 Techniques To Find What You Are Looking For

The follow article is one that I did research for at Amplify Interactive.

Original post with free download of printout:

http://www.amplify-interactive.com/blog/search-engines/advanced-google-search-tips/

Advanced Google Search Tips

1.) “Negative Keyword”

-keyword
Printer -cartridge will show results for the word printer but not the word cartridge.
2.) “File Type”
filetype:pdf
Cancer research filetype:pdf will show only results that you can download as a PDF flie.
3.) “Synonyms Match”
~keyword
~car will search for “car” and synonyms of “car”
4.) “Phrase Match”
“keyword keyword”

“chocolate chip cookies” will not get results for someone who wrote “chocolate mint chip cookies”. Only those three words in that order.

5.) “OR”
The | symbol
Jessica + Williams|Wiliams|William is a search for all of those possibilities (Jessica Williams OR Wiliams OR William)

6.) “Price Range”
#…#
bedding $100…$200 will show search results for bedding between $100 and $200 dollars

7.) “All in Text”
allintext:
allintext: chicken cilantro lime recipe will show search results for recipes with these three ingredients

MORE ADVANCED:

8.) “Search Within”
site:
Animals site:www.facebook.com will show only animal related pages within Facebook.

9.) “Date Search”
daterange:
Facebook daterange: 201108 will find only informationa nd news from August 2011.

10.) “Fill in the Blank”
*
Obama signed the * bill this week will allow google to treat the star as a placeholder for any unknown term(s) and then find the best matches.

SEO: ” Times Are A Changin’ ” by Wil Reynolds

This is a summary of the closing keynote at Searchfest 2012 in PDX

Speaker: Wil ReynoldsSEER Interactive

Quick Summary:

Isn’t it about time, we actually get rewarded for doing things right? Isn’t it time, building good content and not $15 dollar articles gives us a boost? What about building community, and connecting with people? We’ve been told for 10+ years that those tactics were the key to success, and they weren’t really. Lately it looks like that is starting to change, and we’re going to delve into examples of where it is and is not working, with specific takeaways on how to balance out your campaigns to get you ranked today and protect you for the LONG haul.

My Takeaways:

-The SEO Dilemma: What Google says will work vs. What actually works

-Honest Conversation: non-quality links, buy outs and paying for links beats real interactive and natural or organic links and conversations. WHY

-How to help balance both sides of social and paid and low quality links: You can’t jump away from crap tactics when they are the ones that worked.  You can’t always depend on good links for high rankings.

-Today: we need to build the bridge between the two forms of booting a website and or company.

TACTICS (3):

1. Infographics: Beings with a human condition. Where do I fit in the world? I want to learn more. I want to impress people. People will go find out things they want to share but people are lazy.

      +A snippet of information that allows your to say “Hey, did you know…”

      +We want to learn something new but then move on

“I don’t mind losing, but I want to know whether or not I lost”

Agency Challenge: Understand the depth of your client’s goals

Client Challenge: Is your agency asking you questions

Few questions = more risk your strategy

2. Asset Building: If you have a large client, look go look for assets that they have already been using. you will find links through scholarships and opportunities that they are already using.

3. Leveraging Community: Breaking down followers or customers depending on what or who they are. Reaching out to them is automatically easier because they already follow you and know what you are all about. Start this conversation!

+Warning: Do not @ everyone in a certain category with information. You want to start conversations with particular people.

TOOLS:

Guest Post Links available from your followers: http://www.bit/ly/guest-post-gdoc

inboxq.com

Call Me A Blogger- SearchFest 2012

Recently, I was a live blogger for Portland Oregon Searchfest 2012. SearchFest presents multiple informative learning tracks, workshops, and panel sessions designed to provide direct insight into the most up-to-date strategies and technological advancements in online search marketing and social marketing.

Industry experts and thought leaders from around the country deliver in-depth presentations ranging from basic SEM and social media fundamentals to specific advanced techniques.

Two sessions I wrote for are “Social Media Strategy” and “SEO On-Page Optimization.” I have a lot of fun summarizing these presentations for SEMPDX and invite you to go take a look. My summaries of other presentations are coming up on my personal blog to come.

Social Media Strategy:

http://www.sempdx.org/sempdx-events/current-events/advanced-on-site-seo/

Advanced On-site SEO

http://www.sempdx.org/blog/social-media-marketing/social-track-social-media-strategy/

Local/Mobile Strategies and Tactics

A summary of a presentation given at SearchFest 2012 in Portland OR.

Speakers:

Greg Sterling – Sterling Market Intelligence
Chris Silver Smith – Argent Media

Summary: Mobile marketing changes as fast as the most recent phone and and social app. Our expert is here to explore the ever changing landscape of local and mobile marketing and help you determine what tactics are right for you and your marketing strategy.

WHAT JUMPED OUT AT ME AS THE MOST IMPORTANT TIPS:

Chris Silver Smith:

+Local Search Ranking Factors: Relevancy, Distance, Prominence

-Basic business listing info from data aggregation (Ex: infogroup)

-Make it easy for your website to be found by using semantic markup language- allows your to inform Google bots of what elements on the page are for.

-Use Citations: Mention a business at a location, or a telephone number, or an address. Mention of a business name can be a citation as well. They will try to analyze your popularity depending on the number of citations. This makes is easier for people to find all the information they want in one place. Google will favor this.

+Biz data sources = Basic citation sources

+Analyze competitors place pages to discover more citation sources

+Participate in local events so people talk about your location and you may be included on wiki pages about the event

Unorthodox Citation Sources:

-Wikipedia articles (businesses, buildings, shopping center)

-Wifi hotspot. If you add this to your business you can be included in hotspot listings

-Geocache Locations

-National Register of Historical Places (If your company is registers as this, you will be put on state government websites and receive citations this way)

-ATM locations, Weather Monitoring Station, Pressed Penny Machines (specialty directories)

-Specialties examples: Spanish speaking, Jewish owned etc

Check-in Services

-This is the kind of data Google is interested in by counting it as a unique data factor. Looking at companies that rank better depending on the amount of check-ins they have.

-Encourage your employees to check-in if you are not a customer oriented location (factories)

-Facebook check-ins are indexed by Google to look at search results for data

Chris Silver Smith: @gsterling

“If you are not doing mobile you are practicing marketing malpractice”

-80% of Google’s top advertisers do not have a mobile website (OUCH!)

-Mobile web vs Mobile apps? Determine the difference. There are a lot!

-Mobile right now is only about 9% of search right now, but will continue to grow in the future

Mobile Advertising:

-Mobile is 23& of media time spent and 1% of budgeting (WHY!?)

-Mobile Eco-system- not as complicated as you think! Google has 95% of the share on the search side (PPC and Click to Call)

-Google’s Ad Unit Smorgasbord:

       +Traditional Search Ads

       +Click to Call

       +Custom Search Apps

-Device Targeting- All you have to do is categorize by carrier, geography, devices and more on Google Adwords for PPC campaigns. It’s that easy.