Search Engine Strategies
 
SEO, Travel, Online Marketing and More
 
Posted by Aaron on 18 Feb 2008
Here is a free white paper released by Blizzard Internet Marketing and written by my Pubcon friends Mary Bowling and Carrie Hill. If you’re blogging - or getting ready to start - this white paper is an easy to follow guide on setting up your blog with Wordpress and tweaking it in order to maximize your search engine exposure and reap the rewards of a well optimized blog. There is also a great list of plugins that help you get the most out of your blog. In fact, after reading the white paper I setup the contextual related posts plugin, which you will now see under the comment section of my posts.
And, if you’re planning to attend Search Engine Strategies in New York next month, be sure to stop in on the workshop that Mary will be teaching, A Crash Course in Local Search, on Friday the 22nd.
Thanks, Mary!
New White Paper Released- SEO for Wordpress Blogs
Tagged as: SEO, Search Engine Strategies, WebMasterWorld, Optimization Tips, Blogging, Mary Bowling, Carrie Hill, SEO for Wordpress, Blogs, SES, White Paper
Posted by Guest Poster on 02 Jan 2008
Today a guest post from SEO Mary Bowling, who I had the pleasure of meeting at PubCon last month:
I’ve attended 3 unique internet marketing conferences this year, each hosted by a different big-name producer. Each had their own strong and weak points and none of them were ideal. So, I started thinking about all the best things that would go into planning the absolutely perfect conference.
Here are the ingredients I crave:
Registration
Venue
Amenities
Sessions
Networking
Here are a few niceties I’ll throw in, too: dimmable overhead lighting in the session rooms; comfortable temperature; snacks and drinks available throughout the day and at least a 10-15 minute break between sessions.
Mary Bowling is the senior SEO for Blizzard Internet Marketing, Inc and blogs about optimization.
Tagged as: Online Marketing, Search Engine Strategies, WebMasterWorld, Blogging, Other, Mary Bowling, Blizzard Internet Marketing, PubCon, Search Engine Conference, Internet Marketing, Internet Marketing Conference
Posted by Patrick on 07 Dec 2007
I just got back from PubCon Las Vegas. As usual, this was a great conference if you make your living in e-Commerce, search engine optimization, and search engine marketing. I was very impressed by the presenters this year, and I want to take a moment to recognize several by name and to highlight why they made such a strong impression on me:
Robin gave a highly informative presentation of content production for the web. She used a beautiful manufacturing analogy to illustrate her points. To summarize, she informed us that creating quality content is like manufacturing any product. As a manufacturing endeavor, both the quality of your end product and the efficiency of getting it to market depends heavily on the process you use to get there.
Robin is founder of Reviewed.com, a network of independent product review sites, including CamcorderInfo.com and DigitalCameraInfo.com. Her sites are known for their high journalistic quality, their stringent independence of thought and for meticulously sticking to a consumer advocacy mindset.
I was impressed with the discipline and attention to detail that Robin’s company brings to the content they put on the web. Not only does Robin understand the process to drive a piece of content from Assignment to Research, Research to First Draft, Draft to Edit and down the pipeline to a finished, ready for web document. She also has an expert grasp of the economics of this kind of endeavor. By meticulously tracking each step of the process, Robin insists you can arrive at a very accurate understanding of the resources necessary to keep your content pipeline full, whether you want to generate one or two quality articles and postings a week or ten million words of high-quality, valuable content per year.
Robin Liss is a bright light, and I was personally very impressed with and appreciative of her insights.
Some people impress you by their breadth of knowledge and marketing acumen. Some people impress you with their generosity of mind and their willingness to share what they know in order to raise the overall level of our craft to new heights. In Michael Stebbins PubCon presentations, I was impressed with both. Clearly Michael and his colleagues at MarketMotive are doing excellent research, which benefits both their clients and the rest of the web marketing profession. His willingness to share key insights in a plain and easily executed manner is quite refreshing, and I really appreciated Michael Stebbins’s contribution to the conference.
I had a chance to visit with Michael at one of the cocktail receptions, and he is also a hell of a good guy.
Talk about a veteran of SEO and someone with a fantastic ability to convey in a clear manner the importance of adhering to sound Information Architecture and Design principles.
Ted encouraged and argued strongly that folks interested in creating websites should look at key resources from Information Architecture and print typography to gain an understanding of the appropriate methods of organizing and semantically categorizing information and for displaying the written word. As always, content is king, but Ted Ulle adds the important caveat that content is king, if and only if users can navigate and find your high-quality content and search engines can crawl and index your content appropriately.
Take a hard look at your design process was Ted’s big message that resonated with me. Consider the purpose of your website and of most websites. You are trying to provide valuable information to a user, or you want them to trust you enough to make a purchase from your company instead of a dozen other options. You are presenting your content to those users, one way or another. The way you organize and structure your website and its pages effects both the end-user’s ability to find what he or she wants and the ability of the search engines to appropriately identify, crawl, and index what is most important and meaningful about your site.
ALL aspects of your Information Architecture, Graphic Design, and coding should support the proper organization and display of your content. Page navigation, headers, sub-headers, internal page linking structure, and graphical page elements all need to support the user’s ability to quickly find what he needs and take the appropriate action to get from first step to final step in a logical and intuitive manner.
I was very impressed with Ted Ulle’s undeniable expertise in his profession, but I was more impressed with his ability to convey his wisdom in a largely unequivocal and authoritative way backed up by clear examples of why and how this matters.
And I have to say that I also appreciated Ted’s very humorous cautionary tales about things as simple as your site’s error messages. They’re important, and if your IT geeks wrote them, please review them today!
I wanted to call these three indivuals out in the marketing community. I learned a lot. I appreciate their contributions to our profession.
Patrick Soch
Marketing Manager
www.eBags.com
Tagged as: Uncategorized, Search Engines, SEM, SEO, Online Marketing, Search Engine Strategies, Optimization Tips, pubcon, pubcon2007, seo, search marketing, search engine optimization, robin liss, michael stebbins, ted ulle
Posted by Aaron on 10 Aug 2005
I wasn’t able to attend the SES conference in San Jose this time, but, I wanted to point you to the coverage of the conference by the folks at Search Engine Roundtable. They are covering the conference, virtually in real time, on their blog site. Very in depth coverage, probably the best being done.
Here’s the link:
Search Engine Roundtable
Tagged as: Search Engine Strategies
Posted by Aaron on 01 Aug 2005
Yahoo’s tips for optimizing your pages for natural search from their July advertiser newsletter. No big surprises here… Keywords in your title tags, keyword rich headlines, simple layouts, no frames, html links and static pages.
Yahoo! Search Marketing - On Target
Tagged as: Yahoo, SEO, Search Engine Strategies