Archive for ◊ June, 2011 ◊

Author: admin
• Thursday, June 30th, 2011

Stando ad alcune indiscrezioni appena circolate in rete Facebook si prepara a lanciare la prossima settimana un “qualcosa di grandioso” che lo stesso Mark Zuckerber in persona, fondatore e CEO del social network di Palo Alto, ha etichettato come “something awesome”.

Non è ben chiaro ancora se la novità riguardi l’introduzione di nuove funzionalità, di un restyling del sito o del più probabile lancio della tanto attesa applicazione per iPad di Facebook. Le uniche notizie che trapelano è che il progetto ha coinvolto circa 40 persone, decisamente troppe per essere impegnate solo per lo sviluppo di una applicazione per il tablet della Apple.

Zuckerberg non ha fornito ulteriori dettagli utili. Quello che è certo è che la dichiarazione cade proprio in contemporanea col lancio di/a> e sembra quasi un velato contrattacco alla mossa di Google. Staremo a vedere.

img src=”http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Woork?d=yIl2AUoC8zA” border=”0″> img src=”http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Woork?i=hvZ8y4tZHCQ:ShyKQYGsYNU:F7zBnMyn0Lo” border=”0″> img src=”http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Woork?i=hvZ8y4tZHCQ:ShyKQYGsYNU:gIN9vFwOqvQ” border=”0″> img src=”http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Woork?i=hvZ8y4tZHCQ:ShyKQYGsYNU:V_sGLiPBpWU” border=”0″> img src=”http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Woork?d=qj6IDK7rITs” border=”0″>

Stando ad alcune indiscrezioni appena circolate in rete Facebook si prepara a lanciare la prossima settimana un “qualcosa di grandioso” che lo stesso Mark Zuckerber in persona, fondatore e CEO del social network di Palo Alto, ha etichettato come “something awesome”.

Non è ben chiaro ancora se la novità riguardi l’introduzione di nuove funzionalità, di un restyling del sito o del più probabile lancio della tanto attesa applicazione per iPad di Facebook. Le uniche notizie che trapelano è che il progetto ha coinvolto circa 40 persone, decisamente troppe per essere impegnate solo per lo sviluppo di una applicazione per il tablet della Apple.

Zuckerberg non ha fornito ulteriori dettagli utili. Quello che è certo è che la dichiarazione cade proprio in contemporanea col lancio di/a> e sembra quasi un velato contrattacco alla mossa di Google. Staremo a vedere.

img src=”http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Woork?d=yIl2AUoC8zA” border=”0″> img src=”http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Woork?i=hvZ8y4tZHCQ:ShyKQYGsYNU:F7zBnMyn0Lo” border=”0″> img src=”http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Woork?i=hvZ8y4tZHCQ:ShyKQYGsYNU:gIN9vFwOqvQ” border=”0″> img src=”http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Woork?i=hvZ8y4tZHCQ:ShyKQYGsYNU:V_sGLiPBpWU” border=”0″> img src=”http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Woork?d=qj6IDK7rITs” border=”0″>


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Author: admin
• Thursday, June 30th, 2011

New York, NY: September 13-15

SMX East News Briefs:

  • Super Early Bird rates – the lowest available for SMX East – expire July 17. /a> and save $500 off an All Access ticket!
  • Need to justify the investment to attend SMX East? We’ll help with the approval process – use our “/a>” form!
  • Check out the /a> page for easy access to common questions about the show.

Attend SMX East and you’ll take away tactics that increase traffic to your web site, increase conversions…and sales!

Choose from 60 sessions on search engine marketing topics including search engine optimization, paid search advertising and social media marketing on Facebook, YouTube and Twitter.

Need more? Attend in-depth workshops on SEO, Facebook and international search marketing on September 12. See the seminar topics and faculty on our /a>.

/a>

New York, NY: September 13-15

SMX East News Briefs:

  • Super Early Bird rates – the lowest available for SMX East – expire July 17. /a> and save $500 off an All Access ticket!
  • Need to justify the investment to attend SMX East? We’ll help with the approval process – use our “/a>” form!
  • Check out the /a> page for easy access to common questions about the show.

Attend SMX East and you’ll take away tactics that increase traffic to your web site, increase conversions…and sales!

Choose from 60 sessions on search engine marketing topics including search engine optimization, paid search advertising and social media marketing on Facebook, YouTube and Twitter.

Need more? Attend in-depth workshops on SEO, Facebook and international search marketing on September 12. See the seminar topics and faculty on our /a>.

/a>

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Author: admin
• Thursday, June 30th, 2011

img src=”http://searchengineland.com/download/seotable/SearchEngineLand-Periodic-Table-of-SEO-condensed-large.png” border=”0″ alt=”" width=”588″ height=”728″ />

img src=”http://searchengineland.com/download/seotable/SearchEngineLand-Periodic-Table-of-SEO-condensed-large.png” border=”0″ alt=”" width=”588″ height=”728″ />

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Category: SEO news  | Tags: ,  | Leave a Comment
Author: admin
• Thursday, June 30th, 2011

mobile SEONeed to learn more about smartphone and mobile SEO best practices? Let’s start with a few statistics:

According to an infographic from Microsoft Tag, 51% of smartphone users are more likely to buy from a retailer with a mobile specific web site, however: /a> of retailers have a mobile web site.

A recent study by Google, “/a>” reports 77% of smartphone users visit search engine websites followed by social networks. And nine out of ten smartphone searches results in an action (purchasing, visiting a business, etc.). Mobile use is growing faster than all of Google’s internal predictions, with YouTube seeing 200 million mobile playbacks a day, /a>.

To capture the market, marketers and advertisers are increasingly allocating budget to mobile. In fact, eMarketer /a> total mobile advertising spending in the US will reach $1.1 billion this year, which is up 48% over 2010. Mobile search is forecasted to account for /a> with Google capturing 97% of that market.

How can marketers take advantage of the opportunity with mobile search & optimization?

Of course there’s paid search advertising on mobile as there is on the web, but our focus here is on content, social and organic search, so the following tips will emphasize what you can do without advertising.

Fundamental SEO Best Practices – Effective site optimization applies for mobile sites as they would for desktop websites. Search engine accessibility, keywords, content and links all matter with mobile. Keep in mind screen real estate is smaller for keyword use in titles and descriptions. As a primer, check out this post from the Google Webmaster Central Blog, /a>.

Mobile Friendly Website – First, decide if you need a dedicated mobile site or if you will present mobile users with a mobile friendly version of your existing site.  If you happen to know that a significant number of your customers use traditional mobile phones, then a dedicated mobile site may be warranted.  See the “Mobile Filters in Google Analytics” tip below for info on determining your website’s mobile activity.

mobile friendly website

A custom CSS file can usually accomplish a /a> for traditional, internet enabled mobile phones or it may be necessary to develop mobile specific pages.

Smartphones can view most websites as a desktop browser would, only smaller and may not need such customization. Another consideration is that some features, such as Flash content, will not display on an iPhone. Hopefully HTML5 adoption will address that.  While smartphone use is rapidly rising, there are still a very large number of traditional mobile phones in use. A “mobile friendly” site isn’t exactly a SEO tactic, but if people can’t view your site, there’ not much use in it attracting search traffic.

Mobile URLs & Content - Because of advice given by search engines, many Webmasters have their mobile sites detect user agent access via a mobile device and serve up a mobile friendly site using a different URL such as

  • m.mywebsite.com
  • www.mywebsite.com/mobile/

That is /a>y and website owners can present the appropriate content using the same URL. rel=canonical can be used for desktop content.  In all instances, the same content must be served to Googlebot and Googlebot-Mobile as what a user would see.  Advantages to a single URL include a single destination for link building and also to facilitate social sharing of pages via mobile phones meant for desktop consumption.

Mobile Keywords – When researching keywords, it’s worth considering that mobile search query strings, on average, are /a> than desktop searches. As for mobile keyword research tools, Google’s /a> provides a /a> and the stats you see for Competition, Global and Local Monthly Searches, and Local Search Trends are all specific to the device filter you pick.

Google mobile keyword research

Mobile Formatting and Layout - There are many resources for mobile website development. If you want to test how your mobile friendly website will appear, then /a> offers an array of handy tools for testing websites on mobile devices. Tools include: Keyword Research, Mobile HTML Code Grader, Mobile Search Engine Indexing & mSEO, Mobile Website Emulator and Phone Comparison, Mobile Search Engine Simulation and Results Comparison.

Mobile Content – In addition to testing the mobile user experience, it’s also important to /a>. Delivering mobile search traffic to pages is just the beginning with effective mobile marketing. Make sure the content users are /a>and inspires desired outcomes. Achieving mobile content effectiveness draws on content marketing best practices by knowing customers, their pain points and interests, keywords and social topics. Then apply that insight to your mobile content strategy. There are /a> /a> /a> /a> studies to draw ideas from to see what’s worked.

Mobile Site Map – Websites that serve only mobile content can provide Google with an /a>.  Non mobile URLs should not be included, but URLs that return both mobile and non-mobile content can be included.

mobile sitemap

Mobile Filters in Google Analytics - On mobile analytics, /a> says, “You can use Google Analytics to track your mobile visitors without creating a separate, filtered profile. You can get info such as those coming from mobile operating systems, mobile devices and even mobile carriers. If you do decide that an app is the right way to go, the Google Analytics for Mobile Apps SDKs make it easy for you to implement Google Analytics in your mobile apps.”

However, if you do want to use filters to extract mobile data (arguably to see if you have a mobile audience in the first place) then /a> in both standard and beta. Filters will inform you how much of your organic traffic is coming from mobile, how they interact with your content and if they’re converting.

Google Analytics Mobile

By 2012 mobile searches will account for 25% of global searches (Google Smartphone User Study). Consumer use of smart phones and tablets has skyrocketed and in keeping with best practices for changing customer information discovery, consumption and sharing needs, mobile marketing warrants serious consideration by companies of all sizes, industries and locations.

You’ve read my take on determining where to allocate search marketing resources before: If it can be searched, it can be optimized. That certainly means mobile search as much as it does search on the web. The question is, how and when your business will approach mobile marketing and more specifically, mobile SEO?


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Author: admin
• Thursday, June 30th, 2011

If you’re the type of SEO who builds and markets a variety of sites, there’s something very satisfying about spotting an area that few people occupy, and making it your own!

There are various software programs available that help you find niches, often based on finding keyword terms with high traffic and low, or no, PPC bids. These tools can be very useful for keyword list building, however finding great niches requires a little more analysis to establish viability.

Let’s take a look at a few ideas on how to weed out the most lucrative possibilities.

1. Choose An Area Of Interest

It’s not necessary to pick an area you’re interested in, but there are strong reasons to do so.

If you’re passionate about something, you’re more likely to go the extra mile, especially when the going gets tough. Any endevour involves a period of struggle where it’s difficult to see the light at the end of the tunnel, and often the only thing that keeps us going is sheer force of will. If you’re interested in what you’re doing, it’s easier to ride out this period.

This doesn’t mean you must pick an area you already know. You could pick an entirely new area that you’d like to learn more about. Make a list of areas that appeal to you. Think about business transactions and purchases you have been involved with, and see if any hold appeal in terms of interest, as if your aim is take make money, it’s important that any niche you choose has a commercial imperative.

2. Solve A Problem

Make a list of areas you’re interested in, or would be interested in learning about. Next to each topic or keyword term, outline a burning problem that needs to be solved associated with that topic. For example, the term “fishing” may be associated with the problem “how can I compare fishing vacations easily?”.

It is more likely you will find a lucrative niche if you attempt to solve a real problem for people. Be careful to avoid imagined problems. For example, we might find that there are no rasberry-flavored beer available, which may well be an untapped niche, but a lack of raspberry-flavored beer isn’t a real problem for people.

/a>

3. How Much Do you Know?

Once you have a list of topics you’re interested in, along with associated problems that need solving, ask yourself how much you know about each area.

Obviously, you’ll save time if you already know a lot about an area, and it’s unlikely you’ll be able to exploit a niche if you don’t know much about it. It’s never a great position to be in where the customers know a lot more about a product or service than you do!

4. What Type Of Operation Suits You?

You’ll likely make your money in one of five ways: advertising (i.e. adsense), affiliate, selling services, selling information, or selling product.

You may combine them, too, of course. Each has pros and cons, in terms of what suits your circumstances. Do you have room to hold stock? Do you enjoy direct contact with customers? Do you want full control, or are you happy to hand over fulfillment to a third-party?

Does the niche have appropriate suppliers that match the type of operation your wish to run?

5. Does The Niche Have Online Potential?

It may sound obvious, but not everything is suited for selling over the internet. Gas, for example.

There may be a good reason the niche you’ve spotted hasn’t been tapped. Perhaps it just doesn’t work on the internet. This is why it’s important to test market before you dive in deep. Try setting up PPC campaigns that lead to a site designed to collect, say, e-mail sign-ups. This will help you gauge the level of interest, to a degree, without the cost of gearing up the back end.

Cut the losers early, run with the winners.

6. Who Are Your Customers?

Demographic reports, /a> and data can make for interesting reading. Check out free reports from research companies, such as /a>.

When it comes to online commerce, one important aspect to consider is the access your demographic has to credit or debit cards. The children’s/youth market, for example. Or people with poor/no credit.

In some international markets, credit card use isn’t as widespread as in the US.

7. Do Visitors Have Commercial Intent?

As you probably know, there are /a>: navigational, informational, and transational.

Unless you’re looking for a hobby niche, and whilst there is some cross-over between the search types, you’ll likely focus on areas where the intent is to transact – to perform a web-mediated activity, and that that activity has commercial intent.

Clues regarding search type are hinted at in the keyword phrase, such as “buy x”, “where can I order y”, are transactional, whereas “Microsoft” is likely navigational. There are many less overt permeations, too of course, however the point is to hone in on keywords that hint at commercial endevour.

8. Estimate How Much The Niche Is Worth

Get a rough guide of how much a niche might be worth. This will give you a feel for how much you can spend carving it out, or whether your time may be better spent on a more lucrative niche instead.

It’s a good idea to look up the Adwords bids and traffic volumes. The higher the bids, the more lucrative an area tends to be, however if your niche is genuinely undiscovered, then it’s likely to have traffic volume, but little bidder competition, as few other advertisers have spotted it.

Again, you can test market a niche using PPC and a basic website, where the aim is to see how many people click through from an advertisement, and perhaps show a level of buying interest. Once you have some idea of traffic, you can guess at a likely conversion rate – common industry guesstimates are around 3-8% – and then run your numbers. Conversion rates can be a lot higher if what you offer is in high demand, and in short supply, of course.

Sometimes, the figure you end up with might be too low for you to make any money, but it’s good to know that now, rather than commit a lot of time and resources to an unworkable niche.

9. Market Trends

Is the market you plan to enter rising or falling? You can make money in either market, of course, but people tend to want to enter either fast rising new markets, or markets where demand is fairly steady, as opposed to diminishing.

Check out /a>, such as /a>, /a>, and /a>.

Also,resources such as /a> and /a>.

10. What Are Your Competitors Doing?

If you’re lucky enough to have found a niche with no competitors, well done. However, it is likely you’ll have at least some competitors. It pays to know what they’re doing, so you can emulate them, and go one better, or blow them out of the water by offering something they are not.

Look to see who is advertising via PPC, and who is doing SEO in your niche. How agressive are they? What approach are they taking? Can you make better offers that they make? Can you modify the niche slightly so you’ve not competing directly with them? Your customers will compare offers, so make sure your offer is competitive.

Check out competitive intelligence tools, such as /a>, /a> and /a>

Author: admin
• Wednesday, June 29th, 2011

La News Corp di Rupert Murdoch ha ceduto oggi MySpace a Specific Media con un accordo dal valore di appena 35 milioni di dollari. I /a> sulla vendita del social network circolavano già nei mesi scorsi quando era trapelata una prima ottimistica stima che si aggirava, allora, intorno ai 100 milioni di dollari.

Dai termini siglati nell’accordo, quella di MySpace è invece oggi una vera e propria svendita. I 35 milioni offerti da Specific Media appaiono più come il tentativo da parte di News Corp di volersi liberare di un peso che ha contribuito ad affossare in maniera significativa i conti in profondo rosso della società di Murdoch.

Acquistato da News Corp nel 2005 alla cifra record di 580 milioni di dollari quando godeva di un periodo di enorme popolarità il social network è stato il protagonista di un rapido e inarrestabile declino dal 2007 in poi, incapace di frenare l’avanzata inarrestabile di Facebook. A maggio 2011 Quantcast stimava che MySpace aveva appena 19,7 milioni di visitatori unici mensili contro i 157 milioni di Facebook.

Come riporta il New York Times, con il passaggio di proprietà la maggior parte dei 400 impiegati di MySpace sono stati contestualmente licenziati.

MySpace non ce l’ha fatta e la sua lenta agonia si è trascinata negli anni anche grazie ad alcune scelte operate dal management che non hanno di certo brillato. A nulla sono valsi i tentativi di rilancio e di rifocalizzazione del brand in nicchie di mercato specifiche nell’ambito dei gruppi musicali e delle celebrities che hanno invece contribuito a snaturare lo spirito iniziale del social network e ad aumentare l’emorragia di utenti verso Facebook che, ad oggi, domina saldamente il mercato.

Poco o quasi nulla si conosce dei piani futuri da parte di Specific Media sul destino di MySpace. Quel che è certo è che con Facebook che continua a crescere e con l’imminente arrivo di /a>, ogni tentativo di rilancio sarà un’impresa decisamente complicata.

img src=”http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Woork?d=yIl2AUoC8zA” border=”0″> img src=”http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Woork?i=zBwSUWms7Jk:8DnegiaJQA8:F7zBnMyn0Lo” border=”0″> img src=”http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Woork?i=zBwSUWms7Jk:8DnegiaJQA8:gIN9vFwOqvQ” border=”0″> img src=”http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Woork?i=zBwSUWms7Jk:8DnegiaJQA8:V_sGLiPBpWU” border=”0″> img src=”http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Woork?d=qj6IDK7rITs” border=”0″>

La News Corp di Rupert Murdoch ha ceduto oggi MySpace a Specific Media con un accordo dal valore di appena 35 milioni di dollari. I /a> sulla vendita del social network circolavano già nei mesi scorsi quando era trapelata una prima ottimistica stima che si aggirava, allora, intorno ai 100 milioni di dollari.

Dai termini siglati nell’accordo, quella di MySpace è invece oggi una vera e propria svendita. I 35 milioni offerti da Specific Media appaiono più come il tentativo da parte di News Corp di volersi liberare di un peso che ha contribuito ad affossare in maniera significativa i conti in profondo rosso della società di Murdoch.

Acquistato da News Corp nel 2005 alla cifra record di 580 milioni di dollari quando godeva di un periodo di enorme popolarità il social network è stato il protagonista di un rapido e inarrestabile declino dal 2007 in poi, incapace di frenare l’avanzata inarrestabile di Facebook. A maggio 2011 Quantcast stimava che MySpace aveva appena 19,7 milioni di visitatori unici mensili contro i 157 milioni di Facebook.

Come riporta il New York Times, con il passaggio di proprietà la maggior parte dei 400 impiegati di MySpace sono stati contestualmente licenziati.

MySpace non ce l’ha fatta e la sua lenta agonia si è trascinata negli anni anche grazie ad alcune scelte operate dal management che non hanno di certo brillato. A nulla sono valsi i tentativi di rilancio e di rifocalizzazione del brand in nicchie di mercato specifiche nell’ambito dei gruppi musicali e delle celebrities che hanno invece contribuito a snaturare lo spirito iniziale del social network e ad aumentare l’emorragia di utenti verso Facebook che, ad oggi, domina saldamente il mercato.

Poco o quasi nulla si conosce dei piani futuri da parte di Specific Media sul destino di MySpace. Quel che è certo è che con Facebook che continua a crescere e con l’imminente arrivo di /a>, ogni tentativo di rilancio sarà un’impresa decisamente complicata.

img src=”http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Woork?d=yIl2AUoC8zA” border=”0″> img src=”http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Woork?i=zBwSUWms7Jk:8DnegiaJQA8:F7zBnMyn0Lo” border=”0″> img src=”http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Woork?i=zBwSUWms7Jk:8DnegiaJQA8:gIN9vFwOqvQ” border=”0″> img src=”http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Woork?i=zBwSUWms7Jk:8DnegiaJQA8:V_sGLiPBpWU” border=”0″> img src=”http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Woork?d=qj6IDK7rITs” border=”0″>


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