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Posts Tagged ‘Wordtracker’


Social Media 101: Put Together a Strategy in 6 Easy Steps

July 26th, 2012 ::

Social Media 101

If you are just getting started with social media for your small business, putting together a strategy can be overwhelming. Here are the steps you’ll need to take to put together a basic social media strategy:

1. Decide what your goals are.

The best way to stay motivated and not get discouraged is by deciding what your goals are. Are you going to use social media to increase sales, generate leads, build brand awareness, become a thought leader in your industry, or a combination of all four?  Your answer doesn’t matter.  What does matter is that you know why you want to use social media in the first place.

2. Determine keywords.

If you want to get found online – including on social media – you need to use the words and phrases your potential customers use when conducting a search. You can easily find that information with keyword discovery tool WordTracker.  Once you choose the best terms for you, incorporate them in all content, headlines, status updates and tweets.

3. Find your audience.

While you may think you have to use Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, YouTube and Pinterest, you won’t know what social media platforms you need to use until you find out where your audience is spending time. To find them – and find out what they’re talking about – you’ll want to use social listening tools like Flowtown, SocialMention or ViralHeat.

4. Choose a social conversation tool.

Save time and make your life easier by setting up an account with a social media conversation tool like Hootsuite, Jugnoo, Postling or Sprout Social. You’ll be able to respond to comments and questions, actively engage with people in real-time, and even assign conversations to other people at your business.

5. Put together a list of topics.

Since you already know what your audience is talking about online, putting together a list of topics to post will be easier.  Here’s what you’ll want to share:

  • Curated relevant industry news
  • Company news that will affect your customers
  • Links to your blog posts, white papers, ebooks and other marketing collateral on the topics you already know your audience is interested in
  • Photos and videos from everyday work life and events
  • Answers to FAQs

Remember to mix up the content to keep things interesting, let your personality shine through, and always be positive, even if you are dealing with an irate customer who is lambasting you with angry tweets.

6. Analyze and tweak.

If you owned a restaurant and there were two dishes customers never ordered off your menu, you would remove them, right?  Same with your social media strategy.  If something is not working, tweak what you’re doing. Use social media analytics tools like Crowd Booster, Google Analytics or Swix to make sure you’re using the right social media platforms and sharing the information your audience cares about.

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Did I leave anything out of this post that you are curious about how to do?  Leave a comment below so I can address your questions in future posts.

Image courtesy of socialmarcom.com

3 Easy Ways to Improve Your Search Rankings

July 19th, 2012 ::

SEO

SEOMoz is a company that provides SEO and social monitoring software, and they publish a lot of interesting information based on their own research.  Use the following tips – all based on their research – to easily improve your search rankings:

1. Add fresh content.

Google rewards new content on your site.  If you publish a really useful blog post on a subject that is valuable to your readers, it will get shared via social media and receive some ranking love from Google.

Along those same lines, frequently updating your website is also viewed favorably – that could mean adding new case studies, media mentions, or a video to your homepage.

2. Focus on content titles.

Instead of focusing on clever titles for your blog posts, white papers, ebooks, and other content, focus on including all relevant keywords. By relevant, I mean keywords that people actually use in search, not what you think they use.

To find those keywords, simply use a keyword discovery tool like Wordtracker.  You will learn which keywords and phrases are competitive, meaning popular but not so popular everyone uses them.

3. Get social.

Google judges your content on more than 200 signals, all of which affect ranking.  Four of them are link-related: quantity, diversity, quality, and relevance. Quantity is lowered by quality, meaning relevant links are extremely important to your rankings.

To get relevant links, it is important for thought leaders to share your content and link back to it.  Start by following influential people on Twitter.  If you are engaged, retweet others’ tweets, mention people and companies, and publish interesting content, they will likely follow you back – and see and share your content.

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Have you used any of the above tips to improve your own rankings?  What other tips have worked for you?  Share your ideas in the comments below!

Image courtesy of bradfordbarker.com