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Posts Tagged ‘links’


7 Tips to Help You Get More Clicks on Twitter

April 3rd, 2012 ::

Twitter and click-through rates

When it comes to Twitter marketing, there are few experts more accessible and results-driven than Dan Zarrella. Recently I came across an infographic Zarrella created to show marketers how to get more clicks on Twitter. In this article, I will break down the facts for you so you can increase your click-through-rate (CTR) and see more results from your Twitter marketing efforts.

1.  Compose tweets that are between 120 and 130 characters in length.

Twitter allows space for 140 characters per tweet. Too short, and the tweet might not appear to be worth the effort; too long, and the tweet might seem too dense. Type out several practice tweets that fall within the 120-130 character length so you can get accustomed to the length you want to aim for when writing.

2.  Position your links about 25 percent of the way through your tweet.

After analyzing the length of 200,000 link-containing tweets, Zarrella found the ones with a link positioned about one-quarter of the way through the tweet got the most clicks. Perhaps these tweets provide just enough introductory words to convince followers the link is worth clicking.

3.  Put some space between your tweet links.

This one is pretty straightforward. As the speed of link tweeting increases, the number of CTRs decreases. Be careful not to overburden your followers with too many links because, like other forms of marketing communications, too much can turn off your audience.

4.  Select your words and phrases carefully.

Content producers understand that word choice is critical for creating the most relevant copy, and tweet composition is no different. Avoid the words “marketing,” “@addthis” and “@getglue,” as they get lower CTRs than average tweets. However, the words “please,” “RT,” “via” and “check” get higher CTRs, so work them into your tweets for more clicks.

5.  Try the paper.li system out for yourself.

Have you seen tweets containing the phrase, “daily is out?” Paper.li is a service that lets you publish your own online newspaper of curated information. Zarrella found that tweets containing the phrase, “daily is out” get more clicks than any other phrase. Does Paper.li fit into your content creation strategy?

6.  Use more verbs and fewer nouns.

Getting people to click on your link means encouraging them to take an action. Noun- and adjective-heavy tweets get fewer clicks than ones containing action words. So pack your tweets full of verbs and adverbs to motivate followers to click.

7.  Tweet when people have time to click.

It makes sense to tweet when people aren’t being pulled in different directions due to work and other weekday obligations. CTRs are higher on Friday, Saturday and Sunday, as well as during the afternoon hours, compared to other days and times. For weekend tweeting, platforms like Hootsuite can help you schedule great content without being stuck at your computer all weekend.

So there you have it – relatively simple ways to encourage your Twitter followers to click on the links you tweet. Higher CTRs mean more traffic to your website or blog and more opportunities to generate leads, build your brand, and delight your online community. Try some of these techniques for getting more clicks on Twitter, and let us know how they worked for you by leaving a comment below.

Image courtesy of creative design agency Arrae

Complete Guide to Google+ for Business

March 5th, 2012 ::

Search engine giant Google just may have created a contender for social media giant Facebook. Since its launch last year, Google+ has seen tremendous growth as a communications hub, and now the  social network is quickly becoming a smart hangout for businesses, too. In this article, I’ll show you how to make Google+ work for you.  

Why Google+ Matters

Unless you have been living under a rock, you know Google+ is getting tons of buzz. But why does it matter, from a business point of view?

With over 90 million users so far and a growing effect on search, Google+ is gaining ground quickly. Through page creation, businesses can establish a presence on the network and develop relationships with clients and prospects on several different levels. There are the typical social network interactions such as commenting, sharing photos, and endorsing the brand (+1), but it is the Hangouts feature that sets Google+ apart from its competitors.

With Hangouts, companies can engage with fans and prospects through video conference calls. So, you can make the same face-to-face connections online that you do in real life through this video chat feature.

As I mentioned, Google+ is changing the search landscape as well. Google is learning whose opinions you value most and what content you really care about by studying your interactions on Google+. This information will create a more targeted search experience, yielding more useful search results.

Also, Google’s version of the tweet or share button, the +1 button, will determine how you show up in search results and get traffic. The buttons appear in search results and can be embedded into your website or blog. I’ll explain more about how to use the +1 button next.

Using the +1 Button on Your Blog

According to HubSpot, websites using the +1 button get 3.5 times the Google+ visits. Social sharing buttons make it easy for visitors to share your content on social media sites, so don’t forget to incorporate them into your blog’s marketing strategy.

The +1 button has its own promotion factor built in, which can encourage visitors to click through to your content. Each +1 is like a vote for that content, so users can see how many people have found it useful before they ever click through. All the +1’s next to your content tell visitors that what you have to offer is valuable and that they should check it out.

On the other hand, people love to be the first one to discover something new and share it with their friends. According to Dan Zarella, there is a powerful “first post” effect that causes people to seek out content they can be the first to share. Add +1 buttons to your blog to present many opportunities for people to share your content with others.

Segmenting With Circles

Besides the Hangouts feature, Google+ sets itself apart by allowing users to segment their network into circles. We all understand that, while our networks are full of friends, family, acquaintances, and work colleagues, we many only want a select group of people to see certain posts and photos. That’s where circles come in.

Circles come in handy for businesses when you want to communicate specific information to a select group of people. For instance, you may want to share different content with people based on your association with them and their needs. So, you can create circles for current customers, prospects, employees, industry colleagues, competitors, and more. Effective communications are highly targeted to the audience, and Google+ circles help you organize and target your audience appropriately.

Google+ Best Practices

Finally, I’m going to share some best practices for using Google+ for business, offered by Hubspot’s Maggie Georgieva. Try these out to take advantage of Google+’s enormous communications potential.

1.  Encourage sharing - For your content to become viral on Google+, it must be shared. Encourage people to share your content by asking them to. Just like asking for re-tweets on Twitter, you can increase the number of shares on Google+ by requesting them every time you post a message, photo or link.

2.  Use recommended links - Google+ users have the option to add recommended links under the About tab of their page. Use this space to promote new blog articles and lead generation offers to drive traffic and increase leads.

3.  Share plenty of photos - Individual photos, rather than entire albums of images (as is often the case on Facebook) are shared in large volume on Google+. Add visual interest and a viral component by sharing engaging images on a regular basis. Think outside the box; graphs and charts are images as well, so you don’t have to stick with pictures only.

4.  Analyze your Google+ efforts - Use referral traffic data from plus.Google.com to determine which methods are working for you on Google+. It is always important to study analytics to show whether your efforts are increasing traffic and generating leads, and Google+ marketing is no exception.

Image courtesy of Technorati

How Much SEO Can I Do By Myself?

June 9th, 2010 ::

After months of procrastinating, I really need to get my website tricked out with some SEO.  Because it’s such a technical process and can be rather expensive, I started wondering how much I could do myself. I have zero knowledge of or experience in HTML and web programming, and a budget of…well, let’s say not enough to pay an SEO expert what their service is worth. 

Robot with Magnifying Glass

liferoiblog/Flickr

Based on my research, which consisted of my limited knowledge, a Google search, and finally asking SEO guru Ken Fischer of Click for Help, there is quite a bit you can do on your own.  Needless to say, it’s not going to be nearly as effective as adding all those tags and metadata and technical gee gaws to your website, but it will certainly help. 

Here’s what you need, in no specific order:

Keywords.  Research keywords for your industry simply by plugging words and terms related to what you do into any search engine.  You probably already know what some key terms are, but get really creative.  Ask friends and family for their thoughts—you might get even more ideas. 

Once you have a list of keywords, add them to your website’s content wherever possible.  To make your content both readable and effective, you’ll want to craft your messaging and positioning statements around the keywords rather than just randomly inserting keywords into your content. 

Strong, original, well-written website content.  If your content is poorly written, no one’s going to click through your website, let alone contact you.  Remember that the reason you want your site to be optimized for search engines is not just so people can find you, but so those people become customers.  Without good content, that goal is a lost cause. 

If you’re not a good writer, find someone who is.  If you think you’re a good writer, find a good editor.  Make sure your content uses plain English rather than jargon and is thoughtful and original.  Most importantly, make sure your content speaks to your audience’s needs.  Explain to them how you are going to solve their problems and how you are going to do it better than the other guy. 

Links from other websites.  Link from websites to yours (aka, a backlink) are gold in the SEO world.  Think about it: why would someone provide a link to a website if it didn’t contain useful or interesting information?  Links drive traffic to your website and make web pages more likely to appear at the top of a search engine’s results page, which, in turn, pushes more traffic to your website.  It’s a nice little cycle once it gets going.

Publish articles to the LinkedIn groups you belong to and to an online article distribution service like EzineArticles or GoArticles.  As long as what you are writing is relevant and interesting, it will be shared over and over again.  You can also distribute press releases, sprinkled with backlinks to your website, to an online news release service like PR Web.  It will get picked up by news services, and because PR Web is recognized as an authority, backlinks from their website can drive a lot of traffic to your website.

Social media.  When you post to your favorite social media platforms, be sure you are offering advice, tips, and success stories with relevant links back to your website.  Avoid outright sales pitches at all costs.  Of course, if you’re running a special promotion, a sale, or launching a new product or service, you’re going to advertise that.  But people are more likely to pass along good advice than an announcement regarding a new product launch.  If your company sounds interesting, people will visit your website.      

Blog.  As with social media, blog posts that offer useful, relevant information and contain links back to content on your website will spur web traffic.  Publish a great blog, and people will pass it along, post it to Facebook, tweet it, and refer to it and ultimately drive traffic to your website.

Maximize Getting Your Business Found with Inbound Links

February 23rd, 2010 ::

A foundational component of web sites are the concept of links. It is how we move from one page to another and essentially forms the “Web” part of the World Wide Web. As search engines grew in sophistication, linking became a primary part of the algorithm to determine the value of a web site by virtue of how many people link to it or create an inbound link.

Link building plays vital role in higher search engine placements and good traffic to your website. Links helps in improving your link popularity and in turns helps in top ranking on search engines. There are three types of inbound links – Unidirectional (One Way Links), Reciprocal (Two way links) and Trilateral (Three Way Links) Building Services.

While doing all this linking can help your business get found, it could also hurt and possibly irreparably damage it with search engines. To prepare you, David Wallace put together this short list of things to do to increase the value of inbound links:

1. Indexed By Google

One of the most important factors to look at when securing a link on any specific web page is whether that page is actually indexed by Google. Common sense would tell you that if the page is not in Google’s index, they are not going to recognize that it is linking to your page. In other words, the link won’t count in their eyes.

2. PageRank

While Google PageRank is certainly not everything, a PR 5 is certainly better than a PR 1. And a PR 7 or better has the potential of passing a lot of link juice to the page your linking to. That being said, I would recommend having a good mix of links from different PageRanks as it looks more natural.

3. Relevancy

Is the site or page relevant to your business model? For example, if I have a site that sells software, I want to obtain links on software related sites. It does not have to necessarily be a competitor but could be a site that reviews various software products or covers news related to software.

4. Identifying Paid Links

Try to avoid links that are clearly identified as paid links. Words such as “Sponsored,” “Advertisements,” “Partners” and the like make it very easy for a search engine such as Google, who by the way does not like paid links, identify them. Once they are identified as “paid links” they may no longer pass any link value.

An easy way for a site to identify a link as sponsored would be to use an image in place of text and then make sure not to give away the details in the image’s alt attribute. That may sound sneaky but remember that Google has pretty much declared war on paid links. So, if you want them to count, make sure the site owner is not making it too easy for Google or any other engine to detect them.

5. Outbound Links

How many other sites is the page linking to? I don’t want to see any more than 10 outbound links including mine on any given page. This is especially true if I’m paying for it. The more outbound links, the more diluted the link value that is passed to each site.

6. Inbound Links

Does the page have any inbound links from other sites? What types of sites are linking to that page and even more importantly, what are they saying (anchor text)?

7. Placement of Link

Search engines, especially Google, have worked hard in the last few years at trying to identify links that are not specifically “editorial” in their context. Therefore it is best to avoid links that are placed in footers, blog rolls and the like that would give of an indicator that it is not “editorial.”

I typically like links that are within the content itself or even above the fold near site navigation. Keep in mind that a properly placed link in addition to passing link juice may also send valuable traffic your way.

8. Is Link ‘NoFollowed’

A link that has the ‘nofollow’ attribute is going to do little as far as passing any link popularity or link juice to your site. That being said, you should not always avoid these types of links as they can drive traffic to your site (Twitter is a great example of this) and even make your link building look more natural in the eyes of search engines.

9. Alexa Rank

While a site’s Alexa Rank should not be taken as an exact science, it can provide a good guess at how popular a site is. Because Alexa gathers its data from those who have installed the Alexa toolbar on their browser, traffic results will not be exact. However it is easy enough to see that a site that has an Alexa Rank in the tens of thousands generates a lot more traffic than one who has an Alexa rank in the tens of millions.

10. Age of Domain

Two facts regarding domains that have been around for awhile – 1.) search engines seem to place more trust in a domain that has been around for some time; 2.) a domain that has some age to it most likely has acquired inbound links itself.

This is a great start and a starter checklist of what you should look for when you are doing inbound linking and are approached by people offering to link to you.