WebmasterWorld PubCon 2007 Las Vegas Archives

Conference Coverage Recap: SES Chicago & PubCon Vegas 2007

Our coverage of the December search marketing conferences is now complete. We have extensive coverage, in raw-live format from SES Chicago and PubCon Vegas. Both conferences were a huge hit and lots of fun and learning took place.

Again, a huge thank you to our contributors and writers including Carolyn Shelby, Dave Rohrer, Chris Boggs, Justin Davy, Marty Weintraub, Avi Wilensky and Tamar Weinberg. Your hard work does not go unappreciated by the SEM community and industry - we all thank you.

We covered 28 sessions from PubCon and 24 sessions from SES. Here is a recap of the sessions we covered by conference:

Pubcon Logo

PubCon Vegas 2007 Search Conference Coverage Recap:

  1. Keynote Conversation with Craig Newmark
  2. SEO 101 - The Timeless and Classic Hits
  3. PPC 101 – Beginner to Intermediate Level
  4. Monetizing Social Media Traffic
  5. Reputation Monitoring and Management
  6. Social Marketing 101
  7. Link Building Campaigns and Strategies
  8. Link Baiting - 96 Different Strategies
  9. Optimizing Your Site for Contextual Ads
  10. Content Creation - Cranking it Out
  11. Link Buying
  12. Domain Names and Trademarks - Legal Issues
  13. Effective Domaining Strategies
  14. Web Hosting Industry Overview
  15. SEO Design and Organic Site Structure
  16. SEO and the Big Search
  17. Alternative Discovery and SEO - Feeds, PDF's, and Blog SEO
  18. Brand Management
  19. Keynote with Matt Cutts
  20. Responsible Web Design
  21. Effective Action Based Copywriting
  22. CSS and HTML Coding Today
  23. Ecommerce and Shopping Cart Optimization
  24. Search and Blogging Reporters Forum
  25. Competitive Intelligence
  26. International and European Site Optimization
  27. Organic Keyword Research and Selection
  28. Tools of the Trade

Search Engine Strategies Chicago 2007 Logo

SES Chicago 2007 Search Conference Coverage Recap:

  1. Search Around the World - Part One: Asia/Pacific & Australia
  2. Mobile Search Battle Royal
  3. Redefining the Customer
  4. Meet the Web Analytics Players
  5. The Human Equation: Giving Back Internet Style
  6. Orion Panel – Search, Privacy, and the Community in the Digital Age
  7. Igniting Viral Campaigns
  8. There’s Still Money on the Table!
  9. Orion Panel - Universal, Blended, and Vertical Search
  10. The Transformation of Local in a Search Driven World
  11. Retailer Track: Shopping Search Tactics
  12. Are Paid Links Evil?
  13. Maximum Conversion in Retail: Raising the Bar
  14. Actionable Social Media
  15. Online Maps: Plotting the Direction of Local Search
  16. Case Study: Moving from Paper to Online
  17. Managing Automated PPC Bid Management
  18. Your Marketing Program in Context
  19. Calling All Clicks: PayPerCall and You
  20. PPC Advertising on Influential Blogs and Social Media
  21. Last Minute Holiday Search Tactics
  22. Just for Fun Track: So You Want to Be a Search Marketer?
  23. Fun With Dynamic Websites
  24. Dealing with Difficult Clients

Our top five stories across both conferences by pageviews are:

That wraps up our coverage. See you all in February, for our next major conference coverage event!

posted rustybrick in Search Engine Conferences at December 7, 2007 10:15 AM Comments (0)

Tools of the Trade

Tools of The Trade
Location: Salon A

Successful Search Engine Marketers should be armed with the tools of the trade to make their lives easier. This panel will review some of the well-known tools and not so well known SEM tools. It will cover basics from research tools to advanced paid tools. Knowing how to interpret the data of the tools is just as important as knowing which tools to use.

Moderator: Joe Laratro
Speakers:
Todd Malicoat, Independent Marketing Consultant, Meta4creations, LLC
Joe Laratro, President, Tandem Interactive
Derek Vaughan, CMO, Techpad Agency
Jessie Stricchiola, Founder & CEO , Alchemist Media, Inc.

First up is Derek Vaughan from HostMySite.com and he shows statistics for an eye tracking study. Researchers call the upper left the "golden triangle" and being below the fold is bad for you.

As far as Rankings, he uses a tool called WebCEO - www.webceo.com. It's easy to set up and use, supports multiple websites, it's easy for inputting keyword information, is automated and runs in the background. The warning is that long keywords can take hours and it's addictive. Its interface is beautiful, he says.

Analytics is extremely important and he uses IndexTools (www.indextools.com) It has the best view of your last 100 visitors in almost real time. This is extremely valuable especially if you produce timely content because it alerts you immediately when things get popular. He acknowledges that some people swear by Google Analytics but he doesn't.

What do I know what I don't know what I currently rank for? Use Spyfu (spyfu.com). It has a simple interface that gives you information in adwords, competitor sites, keywords, etc. It really is a deep source of information and is great for metrics superfreaks.

Understanding Traffic to Search Terms: Google Trends (google.com/trends). You can search for a term and see the historical traffic for high tonnage terms. This can help you create a deep list of keywords. Why it rocks: Straight from the horse's mouth, compare traffic over time for key phrases, and iteratively used to create a traffic list.

Tools for generating keyword lists:
- WordTracker (www.wordtracker.com)
- Google AdWords Keyword Tool - beyond the vast knowledge offered, there's a 'site-related keywords' tab in results where you can enter webpage URL to find keywords related to the content on the page.
- Yahoo Keyword Search


Todd is up next and talks about his toolbox:

- Domain and server tools: whois.domaintools.com/domainname.com, dnsstuff.com, ip-report.com/index.php (safe IP blocks), number of sites on this IP bookmarket (Todd has this on his site at stuntdubl.com/tools - seologs.com/ip-domains.htm).

- Competitive tools: Spyfu, SEO for Firefox (tools.seobook.com), SearchStatus Firefox Plugin (quirk.biz/searchstatus), Proxy Switcher (extensionroom.mozdev.org/more-info/switchproxy)

- Backlink/off page information: Link Harvester (linkhounds.com/link-harvester), Greg Boser's Tattler (www.gregboser.com/downloads), Hub Finder (www.linkhounds.com/hub-finder/hubfinder.php). Another way to get links is to use keywords and concatenate them with keywords that give you search results that have pages that are attainable (webuildpages.com/search).

- Keyword Information: WordTracker, AdWords, Aaron Wall's keyword tool (tools.seobook.com). Google Sets (labs.google.com/sets)

[Cut. I had to take a break. It was pretty important. I'll blog about it somewhere else.]

Some other things -
- Mr Ploppy's Tools
- Webuildpages.com/tools/
- WMC File Converter at cumbrowski.com

Next up is Jessie Sticchola and I missed the beginning but she says that a great tool is the External Greasemonkey script by Joost de Valk.

There's also DNScoop.com that gives you the age of a domain, the PageRank, and the approximate price.

Another domain research valuator is seochat.com/seo-tools/link-price.

What about project management? A great tool is 37signals BaseCamp.

You should check hothandadvantage.com - Brett's "personal" site.

Joe is also going to present some stuff but I missed a bit of his recommendations. Here's what I caught:
- Google Webmaster Tools
- MSN AdLabs (adlabs.microsoft.com)
- TheFreeCrawler

posted Tamar Weinberg in WebmasterWorld PubCon 2007 Las Vegas at December 6, 2007 7:52 PM Comments (4)

Organic Keyword Research and Selection

WebmasterWorld PubCon 2007 Las Vegas
Organic Keyword Research and Selection

Moderator: Detlev Johnson
Speakers:
Craig Paddock, Boost Search Marketing
Ryan Smith, Lead Systems Architect, Beyond Ink
Seth Wilde, Search Engine Marketing Manager, uShip

Craig Paddock

Developing keyword lists is the first important step in successful organic search engine optimization. This panel will review how to mine, research, expand, and refine your keywords.

Need guy's name

Keyword Discovery
- Looking at log files -- converting keyphrases
- 3rd party sampling (WordTracker, Trellian)
- Track organic conversions vs. paid conversions

Competitive Intelligence
- HitWise
- Trellian

KWP Expanders/Variations
- Best /online / buy / cheap / discount / wholesale / accessories

Defend your band names/terms
- highest converting (2x+)
- easiest to rank for
- misspellings, variations (locale, etc)
- affiliates will target branded terms you miss
- target more than one result - Universal
- include on ranking reports - don't assume

In determining which kwps are most important to you, let your customers decide. Organically, it's not easy to determine the most important if you're not ranking somewhat for those terms in the first place. What I do is starting a paid campaign just to get data. In as little as 48 hours you can get very good impression data. Use exact [keyword] and broad match in setup. Set no daily limit and bid high enough to be on the first page. Monitor impressions and CTRs specific to your site.

When you're running this test, minimize impressions for "broad" terms. Buy both broad and exact so you can see both what people are searching for and what people are clicking on.

Look at the competitiveness of KWPs. Wordtracker exports popularity and competing sites. Try to the SEO Quake plug-in for FireFox, the SEO for FireFox plug-in.

Check the current ranking for a particular keyphrase. Even if you're already ranking for a term, that doesn't mean you shouldn't target it. It's much easier to improve your ranking for a term you're already ranking for, than ranking for a new term that you currently do not rank for at all.

What is Google Clustering? If you have 2 pages naturally listed from the same domain on the same SERP, then Google will cluster them together. Example: If you have #1 and #9, they will appear as #1 and #2 (indented). If you have #1 and #14, they will not be clustered because they do not appear on the same page. It's basically a freeride up several spots for the less high ranking result.

For your research, create a spreadsheet to organize all of the data you're collecting on each term and then use that to make educated choices. Also, when making your keyword phrase selections remember it's better to be a big fish in a small pond than to jump into a big pond as a small fish.

Also, consider targeting some keyphrases on two pages to take advantage of clustering.

In summary, let your customers decide which KWPs you should target. Let your PPC data steer your organic campaign. KWP research is much more than just KWP popularity.

Ryan Smith

API means "Application Programming Interface". It lets you get information directly from the search engines without having to strip out the HTML and it can greatly speed up and automate a lot of your KW research. It can help you generate lists of keywords found on your site. Suggests keywords, etc.

To write an API, you need to know a web scripting language like PHP, Ruby, Python, ASP/ASP.Net, or Perl.
You need to know how to make Web Service API XML requests, or how to hack their example code.
You might need to know a little reexp voodoo for parsing HTML results.
You'll also need some type of database like MySQL, SQL Server, or even Google Gears.

So let's look at Keyword Rank Tracking...

Advanced Web Ranking XML Reports
- Cheap, reliable, east to manage for small jobs.
- Will use G/Y API keys if available.
- Pulls keyword data via API's
- Will use proxy servers
- Harder to develop automation cs. Web APIs
- Bad for automating large and numerous projects with multiple keyword groups.

Yahoo Web Search API is great.
Windows Live Search API is also great.
Google SOAP Search API is a great... oh wait, they canned that. So if you have a key you're golden. If not, you're screwed.

Matt Cutts said he's working on it. He's "talked to people at Google" and is advocating opening it back up so people can get new keys and don't have to buy them off of eBay. If you'd like to, write to googleapi@hackingsearch.com to sign my little petition.

The Ask.com Search API got killed shortly after Google killed theirs.

Let's look at Web Harvesting...

Web harvesting violates the SE TOS; however, closing the API access violates the trust of developers, so as far as I'm concerned is it serves them right.

Anonymizer.com Proxy Services allows you to prepay for 1 million proxy requests ($1,000), and runs CIA-style front companies who own IPs. They do regular blacklisting detection to rotate out bad IPs. If they have to, they completely kill off front companies and start new ones to get around blocks and blacklists. Cool, huh?

For auto keyword extraction you can use the Yahoo Term Extraction API, WordsFinder.com Keyword Extractor API, or ClickTracks API.

For search volume estimates, the overture keyword selector tool is slightly unreliable in terms of availability and tends to scramble search terms. The Google Trends API and Microsoft AdCenter APIs are good. WordTracker is cool, it's cheap. But I get a lot of zero results so I'm not exactly sure I can recommend it. KeywordDiscovery.com is really the be-all end-all, but it's $500 a month. It's worth every cent though.

[Lots of links you should look at to get up to speed on search and click behaviors... see slides online at hackingsearch.com ]

Seth Wilde

[Seth's presentation was made in the newest version of PPT, and wasn't compatible with the presenting computer, so he had to give his presentation from memory]

The internal search on your site is a wealth of information. You should be regularly mining that data to see what keywords people are actively searching for once they're on your site.

Go to your competitor's sites. Look at their metadata, look at their title tags, etc. It should be relatively obvious what they're trying to rank for. Check to see what terms they're buying.

One word phrases might send you a ton of traffic, but they really don't convert well. It's better to get a 1000 hits with a 15% conversion rate than 10,000 hits with a 1.5% conversion rate.

General rule of thumb, one to three keywords per page. If you go for too many, you won't do well for any of them.

Constantly refine your keywords. It's not something you can do once and forget about it. As your site progresses, adjust as you grow.

posted cshel in WebmasterWorld PubCon 2007 Las Vegas at December 6, 2007 4:49 PM Comments (1)

International and European Site Optimization

Kim Frederiksen - Addvisors - Case Study

Find an Edge
- more business
- better business
- cheaper business


Case Study - VIP Properties
- ppc was getting to expensive

8.7 millionaires in the world
- 2.9 in NAmerica
- 2.8 in Europe
- 2.4 in Asia

Did research to show why it made sense to not only invest overseas, but in Vegas.

Showed the buying power they had. Weakening of the dollar was good for them.


Keyword: Las Veas High Rise
Vegas Condominiums


Shows price per click for Us vs Denmark vs Russia

Lead prices compared and the CPL and CPA

Quality of traffic from overseas was actually BETTER and found that the overseas leads were spending more


Thomas Bindl - Refined Labs

Facts: Shows a map of Europe and an arrow to Germany.
- 82.3 million people
- GDP - #31400
- 52 million people online

Search Landscape
- Google rules 75-90% and in Germany its 93%


shows some CPC numbers
- the expensive categories are the same but are much lower

Language Barrier
- shows some English vs Deutch (German)
- special characters

Local
- 11 million .de domains
- credit cards are just getting popular
- some legal requirements
- German is highly rec'd

Michael Bonfils - SEM International - Cracking the Asian Riddle

Phase 1: assestment
1 - access the translated usability of your site
2 - analyze your competition
3 - research the asian market
Phase 2: Planning
1 - Mapping your action Plan
Ecommerce Japan -> Korea
Branding China -> Japan
2 - Search engines 35% Google - 65% Yahoo (Google has better conversion)
Baidu is about 60% in China
3 - translation and localization
- make well localized keywords, adcopy, and landing pages
- translators are NOT copywriters
- Trust building is HUGE in Asia
- Human face or mascots help
- Monitor your local comps - be aware of what they are doing
Phase 3: Implemetnation
1 Japan
- Its easy - use google
- challenge is the translation
- reporting/analytics - google or other packages will work
- include contact information
- get a .co.jp or .jp domain
2 China
- Start with Google
- Baidu - Implement Directly
- has an implementation fee
- only takes wire fee
- no one there speaks english
- Domains/Hosting
- get your .cn domain
- HOST in China
- Reporting/Analycis
- Yahoo and Baidu give NO impression results
- Use Google for analytics
3 Korea
- Go through Google, Yahoo
- More complicated the BETTER
- Koreans love complex
- Domains and hosting - good luck, get a .kr


Gives many stats on Japan, China, and Korea

Andy Atkins-Krueger - Web Certain - It's Global

- has a blog that covers global search issues

- Lanauges and markets
- The opportunity - there are a LOT in other countries
- Which markets to enter?
- Strengths/Weakness + Opportunies/Risks
- Web Market analysis
- feasiblity of raniking
- internet audience
- market size
- Trans-optimisation
1. keyword research
2. glossary
3. translation
4. optimization
- Usability isnt the same in every language
- 30% off doesnt work in Polish - had to change it to "-30"
- "city breaks" has no direct equivalent in most European languages

- When to use local and when to use English in your campaign?
- Long Tail outside English
- shows 14 languages/countries compared for long tail
- slide shows the shortest and longest tails
- Short to Long: Romance, Scandanavian, English, German/Dutch
- Plurals, prepositions, accents, alternate spellings, inflection, disaggregation

- Hosting
- Local domain name is the way to go
-how many use "pages from" - 15-40% - depends on sector & country
- Organising your Campaign
- shows a slide of countries and what the leading search engine is (Google is dominating)
- Social networking is BIG in Europe
- shows data from Comscore 2007 on some worldwide social networking stats

- Universal Search - different rollouts in different countries


Q: Will English become the language of the internet?

A: There are languages with many more speakers out there now. Speaker gives an example of how English is being used as part of other languages but with different meanings at times.


Q: Keyword research? Tools?

A: European - google keyword tool is the best. Google in Asia works as well. For Asia there isnt anything else on a grand level. They use Google and local people to assist.

Contributed by DaveR.

posted rustybrick in WebmasterWorld PubCon 2007 Las Vegas at December 6, 2007 3:54 PM Comments (2)

Competitive Intelligence

WebmasterWorld PubCon 2007 Las Vegas
Competitive Intelligence

Moderator: Jake Baille
Speakers:
Jake Baille, Managing Director, STN Labs
Andy Beal, Internet Marketing Consultant, Marketing Pilgrim LLC
Larry Mersman, Vice President, Trellian

Andy Beal

FIrst, I like to look at their background. So I go to a service like DomainTools.com where I can see if a site is in Yahoo Directory, Open Directory, registration details, etc. It also tells me all the different sites that are on their IP address. This is a great way to see who all of their client sites are or what their other properties are.

I also like to look at their keyword density. Rank.nl/tools/spider.html What I like about this tool is it breaks things up into 2, 3 and 4 word phrases.

For backlinks, I use Yahoo Site Explorer. What's especially nice about this is that Yahoo generally puts their most important backlinks at the top of the list.

I also like to use the SEOMoz.org/tools to check my competitors page strength. I can see how many bookmarks they have in del.icio.us, how many times they've been popular on digg, etc.

I like to see my competitors growth. SoloSEO.com/tools/indexRank.html

For tracking site changes, I use copernic.com. I can see when my competitors are hiring, releasing press releases, etc. Anytime they update a page, you'll know about it. You can set special alerts for particular words, phrases, links, etc.

Watch technorati.com to see if your competitors are mentioned on blogs or other media.

Also, set up Google Alerts to watch for your competitors activity. Google does a good job monitoring traditional/main stream media. You can set up an RSS feed or email alerts... whichever you prefer.

searchanalytics.compete.com will let you see which keyphrases are driving significant traffic to your competitors website.

touchgraph.com will show you visually how link clusters look. You can see where the major hubs are.

If your competitor is a public company, you can monitor their SEC filings. If someone sells stock, if someone's being investigated, if a financial officer leaves... they have to report all of those things.

Youc an also use Google to keep an eye on their patents.

Oodle.com, a classifieds aggregator, will help you follow job postings at your competitor's company.

Keep an eye on your competitors employees. If you can find any of their blogs, follow them. Especially if the company isn't aware the employee has the blog, they might let something important slip.

Larry Mersman

The definition of competitive intelligence can mean manu things depending on the channel we're dealing with. For the most part, it's the gathering of data on your competitors.

Without going into the log files of the competitor, several forms of information can be gathered by different means. Info can be collected several ways and from many sources. The most typical data pools are: Internet Service Provider, User Panels (User Installed Software) and Website Search Patterns/History.

Who is your competition? More than likely, you already know who most of the platers are in your market. Find your online competition using services like HitWise or comScore, or you can do your own research by going into the SEs to see who is bidding on your kws.

Now that you know who is in your space, find out how they got there, and where ther traffic is coming from...

Referring Domains/Backlinks: Who is sending traffic to your competitor?

Keyword Data: What kws are actually being clicked on to get the user to your competitor?

Knowing what kws your competitor is targeting is important, but knowing which kws are performing best for them will help you understand their strengths and weaknesses.

Many companies will optimize their website around kws they think they will be found under, or where the end user will find a link to their site.

Jake Baille

The best webmasters already investigate their competitors.
SEO is a game: know more than your competition, and you will win
Most novice webmasters have no idea -- use this to your advantage.

Novice webmasters are by and large idiots. They do idiot things like putting sensitive data on their web servers and thus they get indexed by search engines, and even use competitive research tools from their own company IPs.

"WHOIS" My competitor
-- Designed in the 80s
-- Originally intended to be contact point for technical issues
-- Evolved to be the "legal documentation" of internet domains.

Using WHOIS
-- Novice webmasters will enter their real contact information
-- Intermediate webmasters will use an "anonymizing" service
-- Advanced webmasters will just forge their info.

If the domain is forged, you can report the owner to the registrar. The owner has a limited amount of time to correct this.

Regional IP Databases... you can use nslookup to find the IP address of a given domain. Plug the IP into a regional database IP and see what company that IP is registered to. At worst you'll at least find out who the ISP is.

Social Engineering Targets
-- ISP employees
-- Spouses, significant others of employees or ex-employees.
-- Marketing departments/sales people
-- PR firms

The Script for Getting Information Out of People
1. Introduce yourself as somsone you're not.
2. Be friendly. People love friendly people. Never become confrontational.
3. Thank them for their time, and move along.

"allinanchor" is your friend. Returns all the webpages linked to with that target term. It's good for discovering networks.

Google Them! Where are their links from? You can pretty much tell an SEOd site these days by visual link inspection. Also just remember to search the damn internet. Search Facebook, follow people on Twitter, search MySpace.

Watch for unnatural traffic. People who type in "allinanchor" in Google are not your target visitors. People who come from the same search engine 20 times in 2 minutes aren't your target visitors. People who come in from whois.sc aren't your target visitors.

Tracking and Logging: Track their referrer and do something cool with competitors via mod-rewrite:
1. Send all incoming traffic traffic from that specific referrer to a porn site.
2. Serve that traffic a 403 forbidden message.
3. Make them think the site is down.

Defend against social engineering:
1. Instruct your employees they are to talk to no one about your site.
2. Find a trustworthy ISP - most intelligence is gathered at this point.
3. Tell your S.O. to not take business calls at home.

Remember... If you can track something, you can do something about it.

posted cshel in WebmasterWorld PubCon 2007 Las Vegas at December 6, 2007 3:42 PM Comments (0)

Search and Blogging Reporters Forum

Search and Blogging Reporters Forum
Location: Salon A

Round table discussion with searches prime bloggers and reporters about the state of the industry.

Moderator: Michael McDonald
Speakers:
Andy Beal, Internet Marketing Consultant, Marketing Pilgrim LLC
Lee Odden, President, TopRank Online Marketing
Michael McDonald, Managing Editor, iEntry Inc.
Rand Fishkin, CEO, SEOMoz

This session is cool but it's mostly a back-and-forth-no-PowerPoint presentation thing. They're all talking about how mainstream media is influenced by blogs. Political news is being shaped by the blogosphere. A lot more mainstream media people will even be ready to admit it.

Remove paid content and monetize with advertising.

Also, when there are screw-ups in the blogosphere, bloggers often admit their mistakes with a badge of honor whereas in traditional media, those stories are buried and never spoken about.

If you're marketing your product, write a blog. You can get a lot of press with this. Use a blog as a place to point people to.

Rand asks Andy - "How come I'm not on Techmeme and you are?"
Andy answers: That's why you talk about intricacies of the nofollow tag and I talk about real news. :)
Everyone laughs. Andy goes on - your site and my site have different audiences. Your site is more discussion oriented whereas mine isn't as much.

People always say that some blog niches are too saturated like SEO blogs. But think about a site about bathtubs or something - you can own that space if you start a blog. As far as SEO blogs, Andy Beal says that he discovers new blogs all the time in the SEO space and that you should not get discouraged. I agree, yo!

Lee says you can tap into industries even if you have no knowledge in the industry. Rand says that you should use your business and talk about it on your blog: do you sell handbags? Talk about celebrities and their handbags. If you sell housewares, go ahead and talk about housewares.

Mike asks - how much do you talk about? How much do you keep a secret?
Andy says that Rand doesn't reveal enough. He's way too secretive. (But we know that's not true.)
Rand: If you're talking about whitehat practices, 90% is on the blogs and 10% is behind the curtain. I think I've met a lot of people in the last few days that I can't talk about in about a year -- if I did talk about it, they would never talk to me again. (Really? Rand keeps secrets?)

If you generate the illusion of expertise, you're able to get a lot of business too. It's like a free trial run software - if you like the content, you might buy the real deal.

Andy says that he doesn't hold anything back. The more he shares, it's better, but he shares generically. Andy says that he divulged a lot of information in his Reputation Management book that can either make or kill his consultancy business.

What about optimizing the blog?
Blogs are RSS friendly by nature. But you have to be careful with the setup - the average blogger may not have the blog set up correctly. Bill Hartzer wrote a great post about how to optimize MovableType and WordPress (it's on billhartzer.com).

What about frequency? It depends. Some people write very frequently and do well, but some don't write as frequently and do just as well (Todd Malicoat and Greg Boser, for example).

posted Tamar Weinberg in WebmasterWorld PubCon 2007 Las Vegas at December 6, 2007 3:03 PM Comments (0)

Ecommerce and Shopping Cart Optimization

WebmasterWorld PubCon 2007 Las Vegas
Ecommerce and Shopping Cart Optimization

Moderator: Joe Laratro
Speakers:
Rob Snell, Managing Partner, Rob Snell
Ethan Griffin, CEO & Founder, Groove Commerce
Panelist:
Jimmy Duvall, Director, E-Commerce Products for Yahoo! Small Business, Yahoo!

Expert ecommerce panelists take a look at ecommerce sales specifically designed to sell products. Topics include optimization, as well as shopping cart, monetary, presentation, and traffic issues.

Ethan Griffin, "7 Habits of Highly Effective Shopping Carts"

1. Designing for Success

- The top 100 eTailers prefer a 2 column, centered designed. The next most common design is 2 column, left justified design. However, there is no one size fits all solution. You have to test to see what converts best for your product.

Example sites:
-- KineticFountains.com
-- Cafepress.com
-- ATouchofBrass.com
-- EpicDental.com

Make sure your proceed to checkout buttons are highlighted and easy to find. Make sure you have contact information easy to find, same for shipping info.

Try to have a mini-cart show up in the sidebar after users have begun adding items to the cart. This gives them easy access to the products they've already selected.

Take people through specific funnels to optimized product pages. (Checking analytics and seeing what keywords people are searching for is helpful for this).


2. Internal Site Search

It's not an option, it's a requirement. Make sure your site search is displaying relevant results. Check the Google Analytics site search report. People that utilize site search convert at a rate 5 times higher than other visitors. If you're not doing your site search well, then don't make it prominent.

No results page is your chance to save a customer/sale. Offer the visitor other options... best sellers, links to similar categories, etc?

-- WallysWine.com (Site Search Results Page)
-- EpicDental.com (No Results Page)

3. Why Should I Trust You?

Establishing trust with your visitors is important. Assure them your site is secure, your business is solid, responsible and fair. Footers are a good place to put all of your assurances... again, years in business, security, guarantees, credit cards accepted, etc. Remind users that you value their privacy and personal information.

4. Make Buying Simple

-- Show progress
-- Eliminate distractions
-- Reduce shopping cart abandonment
-- Relay error messages in a friendly, useful manner.

Single page checkouts often help conversions by reducing distractions and generally making the process more simple and quicker.

5. Let Your Site Be Known

-- Internal Linking
-- Header Tags
-- Page Titles
-- Anchor Text
-- Image Optimization

6. An Image Says a Thousand Words

-- Your images sell your products
-- Telling a story with your images
-- Multiple images
-- Comparing product images; make sure you're using the most enticing photo available. If you only have blah pictures, get new ones shot.

7. Climbing the Ranks

Pay attention to your off-page SEO. Increase your inbound links through:

-- Online Press Releases (PRWeb.com is used as an example)
-- Directory submissions
-- Blogging/Link Baiting
-- Shopping Feeds (make sure you optimize your data feeds)

Rob Snell, "Pimp Your Products, Sell More Stuff"

The more content we put up, the more our sales went up. First, we got a spokesmodel (Rob's brother Steve), then we wrote buyer's guides. The buyer's guides answer the questions the buyers are going to ask before they call us and ask. We're also starting to add videos. We haven't seen an increase from this yet, but it's new and I think it's going to really help things.

The problem that people run into with their ecommerce sites is that most retailers copy and paste their vendor information right onto their sites. So everyone sounds the same. Exactly the same. These retailers are being lazy. They're not adding any value to the customers.

So how do you pimp your products?

Be an expert. You know so much more about your products than your customers do, and in general retailers aren't doing a good job conveying their knowledge to their users.

Offer your opinions on your products. Offer testimonials. Tell the users what to buy.

Make your own images. Again, you don't want to look like everyone else; but, make sure you're making high quality images.

Get all the content from the manufacturer. Get stuff from on the box, in the box, advertising, instruction manuals, etc. The more content the better. Remember, it's easier to get forgiveness than permission. I'm not telling you to violate copyright... but I'm not telling you I'm not doing it, either. I've never had a manufacturer call me up and tell me to quit promoting their product.

Use the keywords the customers will use.

Just remember, pimpin' ain't easy.

posted cshel in WebmasterWorld PubCon 2007 Las Vegas at December 6, 2007 2:24 PM Comments (3)

CSS and HTML Coding Today

It seems that half of the panel was unable to make it at the last minute.


Marc Juneau - Nolagraphics.com


Gives his background - started at GoDaddy and now has own company.


History of Web

- 1 site to 160 million
- Web started as text base
- Along came graphics and flash

Problems started in about 1996
- sites were built of just flash and images

Why does this make it hard?
- search engines only see html
- many different ways sites were being coded in html
- in many cases there was more code then content

W3c Gets Noticed

Why validate? Clients will never notice.

- 2 schools of thoughts
- make it look good no matter what the html looks like
- design to a standard

*shows a bloated code sample*

Advantages
- helps when multiple people are working on something - everyone knows the standards

Ted Ulle - The MEWS Group - CSS and HTML Today


XHTML - what he considers a misstep

There are a lot of reasons we should not use XHTML - there is a thread on WMW that goes into great detail and should be looked at it.

HTML - the M stands for (the audience yells Markup)

Semantic Meaning vs. visual Rendering

HTML - semantic
CSS - visual


Under used CSS

- common elements deserve their own default style rules (p tag, h1, and so on)

-

Whats the deal? Its a CSS Toolkit and allows you to be very flexible
- .c - text align center
- .s - is a small font
- Line-height - it matters
- set radio (1.25) not px or pt
- improves readability and comprehension
- plugs Usability News and how it is a must read - its from Wichita.edu and only comes out a few times a year

Abused CSS

- Hiding Anchors
- Dont let aesthetics trump communication - Removing underscores?
- Use redundant link cues
- color/background-color
- font variations
- hover behaviors
- Links are the core of the web

- Span tag
- should be rare, very rare
- it exposes weak CSS planning

- H1 and H2
- Do not use just for presentation
- use an imitation style for H1 and H2


A guy does a stand-in as a presenter and uses a presentation from last year.(didnt catch his name)


Shows what is a "standard way" for CSS menus.

Shows a dynamic sample that can be written in PHP, Perl, ASP or any other language.

Advantages
- less code
- less storage
- faster download of css

Q: What is a difference between an ID and a Class

A: ID is for something that only appears once on a page. Marc puts in that he uses IDs for layout and class for everything else.


Q: Image replacement - any techniques?

A: Tester: Some of the old ways (putting text 950 pixels over) looks like spam. SWF Object is the best way for replacing flash. He is suggesting that Adobe and Flash do it for you - that it creates the alternative text on the fly.

Contributed by DaveR.

posted rustybrick in WebmasterWorld PubCon 2007 Las Vegas at December 6, 2007 2:21 PM Comments (1)

Effective Action Based Copywriting

Effective Action Based Copywriting
Location: Salon D

Copywriting, copywriting, copywriting – it’s not just about lots of content anymore. This session will examine ways to write effective copy for search and sales. Learn about action based copywrighting from leaders in the industry.

Moderator: Heather Lloyd-Martin
Speakers:
Brian Clark, Copy Blogger
Heather Lloyd-Martin, President, North American Division, SuccessWorks
Jill Whalen, CEO, High Rankings

Heather is first and she talks about how content is so important for search engine purposes and also helps improve ROI. The way you create and write your copy as persuasion architecture can make the difference between getting a so-so sale and tremendous success.

5 tips:
Learning to love keyphrases. 3 tips: (1) optimize for three related key phrases per page. Some people do one key phrase and stuff their page full of that one key phrase (the money key phrase). You can still have more keyphrases without risks. (2) how you focus your keyphrases depends on the page type (home, product, resource). A lot of people think the home page is everything but it's really not. It's more like the back cover of a book. (3) don't fear keyphrase overlap. It's a good thing. Once you do it, it can help you make your site more relevant.

Work with your wordcount: search engines index the page and the words therein. It's good to provide information. The rule of thumb that's fuzzy - it's about 250 words per page. It depends on the type of page. Technical fields allow you to go over without sacrificing readability but e-commerce sites don't work well in that format because that would be too much fluff. I don't subscribe to keyphrase density but some people do. If it's relevant for that keyphrase, it's really good to go.

Power Keyphrase positions: main body text copy, top to bottom; headlines and subheadlines; and hyperlinks. If you have benefit statements in that headline/subheadlines, you'll immediately grab that person's attention. Put a keyphrase in the hyperlink since it benefits search engines.

Pen-tantalizing titles. The first opportunity for conversion is the SERP: the clickability of a title that differentiates you from the others who have their results on the same page.

Keyphrase rich content + keyphrase rich titles = search engine love

Pen-sorching hot titles:
- Think "clickability"
- Create unique titles for every page
- Include each page's main keyphrases
- Don't necessarily target your company name though that's something you should test for clickthrough.
- Each title should be 50-75 characters with spaces.

Google hint - place benefit statements near your main keyphrases. When Google takes a snippet from your SERP, your description boosts you benefits.

Leverage lots of content opportunities. Content is not just your blog. Check out sephora.com.

REmember what SEO copywriting is ... and isn't. DOn't shove keyphrases into the content and assume it's good. SEO copywriting is the same thing as traditional direct response copywriting but you need to do it just a little differently for search engines. (Bob Bly - every word written is to target your audience.) That's where you see incredible success. Search engines don't pay your bills so write for the customer who do!

www.searchenginewriting.com - free SEO copywriting guide is available on Heather's site.

Jill Whalen is up next.

What's good content? The regular pages of your site - every page should have content that describes your offerings and services. It should speak to your target audience. You want to provide them with information.

Some content is king and some content sucks. Content that's written for your users while keeping the search engines in mind = content that is king. Get the right balance.

What do you need to do for content?
- Keyword Research: find what words people are using to find sites like yours.
- Base your copywriitng around those words: answer their search on your web page.

Choose phrases:
- On the home page, do more general terms.
- In the inner pages, use specific phrases.

Engines have to see the content, so avoid graphical headlines, Flash or graphics, and technical programming that traps spiders.

Some tips:
- Be descriptive. Try something like "our Toronto event planning services" instead of "our product" or "our service." Just be careful and don't stuff it a billion times.
- Don't optimize for single words; expand into phrases. For example, what is "Marketing?" Maybe you can revise it to "Internet Marketing Strategy" or "Marketing your Business" or "Opt-in Email Marketing" or "Marketing Program"
- Don't fake real content. Fix your site - don't add useless articles and write clearly and descriptively. It's going to take work. That's the reality.
- Remember: great content gets you great links. It brings highly targeted visitors that want exactly what you have to offer and converts them into customers.

Finally, up last is Brian Clark whose blog is totally awesome. If you have never visited it, it's at CopyBlogger and you should bookmark it. You'll thank me.

Brian's presentation is entitled "Attention and Persuasion Strategies for Search: Creating Content that Ranks Well and Sells."

You can write in a direct response way to offer organic links.

Here's what you should keep in mind:
How can you create a piece of content that attracts links and persuades people to convert (subscribe, buy something, etc.)? No one is going to link to your sales page, at least not naturally. Provide the following:
- Independent value. We like to get straight to the point but that's like asking people to marry you on a first date. Add something extra, such as a tutorial or a how-to. At the minimum, tell someone why. It develops a persuasion story that naturally leads to the action you want them to take.
- Headline and hook. The headline is the title and that has to contain your keywords. The hook is the angle. It's the beginning of what kind of story you're going to tell. You want to engage people, capture their attention, and get them to read. Attention nowadays is so valuable. You don't want to repeat their search phrases right back to them.
- Scannable structure. If the opening engages them but that's all, that's not so good. You still need to communicate your points with subheads, lists, bullet points, etc. These are opportunities to repeat your keywords. You're writing about that topic and are presenting in a natural way that represents your subject matter.
- What's the story? This is an overview. These all feed off each other. You need to approach your content in such a way to get a cohesive overall piece.

He uses an example of eBook creation and how he blogged about it with a how-to with subheaders that holds people's attention. (He says that doing so is 80-90% of the battle. I'd be inclined to agree.)

Selling tips from Aristotle: have an opening, empathy, solution, and action.
- Essentially you want to structure a story that has a great hook (opening). You need to understand the reader's problem (empathy). Then the solution appears (general terms about what it takes to solve the problem) which leads to your solution or your call to action - you link to another page that is a sales page.

posted Tamar Weinberg in WebmasterWorld PubCon 2007 Las Vegas at December 6, 2007 1:21 PM Comments (2)

Responsible Web Design

WebmasterWorld PubCon 2007 Las Vegas
Responsible Web Design

Moderator: Heather Lloyd-Martin
Speakers:
Gregg Banse, President, 7thpixel
Ted Ulle, Partner, The MEWS Group
Scott Fegette, Technical Product Manager, Adobe Systems, Inc.

<editorial comment>Heather Lloyd-Martin is entirely too energetic and happy for this early in the morning.<editorial comment>

Gregg Banse, "Our Reponsibility to the Client"

Before the Bid
- Determine the goal of the client
- Determine the client's experience and amount of hand-holding
- Be clear about the deliverables
- Know the decision process and who has the final say
- Be sure you can meet the timeline
- Be sure you can meet the timeline
- Do you have the ability and experience to do it -- or can you assemble a team
- Is the job right for you?

Plan the Job
- Get all the pieces out on the table (current project and for the future)
- Don't wait for questions to be asked -- answer what isn't asked
- Murder the little darlings; don't try to force any of your special little pet items. If it doesn't fit in the project then don't force it.
- Offer suggestions and guidance -- fill in the gaps

Plan for the Future
- Plan for upkeep and edits
- Don't break upgrade paths
- Build scalable elements (navigation, databases, scripts)
- Choose scalable hosts
- Write code in up-to-date formats
- Choose open source products with active support forums
- Choose commercial products with support staff

Details Matter
- Robots.txt, favicon, and .htaccess
- Meta Data
- Code Structure & Clean Code
- Cron, SSL, Backups, Script Security, Spam Prevention
- Statistics

Communicate
- Keep the client informed
- Check in with team members often
- Educate the client so they can make informed decisions
- Listen to everyone -- including yourself
- Be clear

Take Price in Your Work
- Periodically review your work
- Get feedback from clients
- Keep yourself educated
- Network with others
- Be on the lookout for ways to improve
- Share your knowledge

It's Just a Job? Not.
- Do what you enjoy. Be honest with yourself and do what you love. If you don't love it, it will show.

Ted Ulle, "Rsponsible Web Design and the Mouseover Menu"

I really only want to lay one little trip on you today. It's a highly opinionated opinion on my part, and it's trendy garbage. HTML hover menus. They've grown like mushrooms after a rainstorm. 95% of the time they're crap, but 5% of the time they're actually useful. So hopefully you'll be able to steer your clients in the right direction.

First of all, a web site is NOT an application. The hover menus are designed to mimic the GUIs for applications. Application users need to (and will) LEARN how to use an application. Website visitors need immediate and intuitive usability. If you're hiding information and making the user poke around, you're doing the user a disservice.

A mouseover menu is akin to having inviting someone over for dinner and then just telling them to help themselves to the fridge. "Figure it out for yourself" is basically what you're telling them.

Visitors cannot see and compare all the options in mouseover menus without hunting around. Further, categories are often constructed using the "company mindset" rather than a user's mindset.

Information Architecture is difficult. It's seldom applied for real, yet it's the most essential work that must be done BEFORE the menu labels are decided. It's a college degree to know how to do this completely.

- Read O'Reilly's book on Information Architecture.
- Also see "Information Architecture for the Small Site" thread on WMW (library/HTML forum).
- Also see "Putting Information Architecture into Practice" thread on WMW (library/HTML forum).

Search Engine Signals

- 100 or less links per page: Count how many links your fancy multi-level mouseover links are adding up to. You're telling the SEs that EVERYPAGE on your site is about those terms... and clearly they aren't. There is a REASON they give these suggestions.

- Understand Importance Hierarchy

- Check Your Google Sitelinks.

You're better off with an inverted L menu. Your visitors will never get lost. The Search Engines will appreciate it. Think hard about following a trend... is it really a trend or is it just trendy?

Scott Fegette, "Responsible Web Design"

As the years have progressed, our responsibilities have changed radically. Job listings for web designers in 1995 were literally: have an eye for design, access to a text editor and a modem. We made up the rules as we went along.

That same job listing today requires that the candidate know; XHTML, CSS, JavaSCript, Flash, Flex, Java, PHP, Ruby on Rails, SQL... etc.

The Freelancer's Dilemma:
- Deadlines vs Web Standards
- A new Responsibility Every Day
- Is it a Page or an Application?
- Clients are still as demanding as ever!

It's a liability to fall behind and a chore to stay ahead.

Responsible Web Design?
- Staying current with web standards and best practices
- Error-proofing for consistent, predictable behavior
- Adopting eddicient workflows to increase productivity
- Using technology in a maintainable, degradable way

** Separation of Disciplines

Three major components: 1) XHTML/HTML; Content/Data Layer. 2) CSS; Design Layer. 3)

JavaScript; Behavior Layer.

(X)HTML - Content Layer
- Treat IDs and Classes as a guide to your content (semantic HTML)
- No 'Bed and Breakfast' markup. (don't use deprecated tags and don't use tags inappropriately and thereby litter your content layer with garbage)
- Respecting Document Flow
- Microformats: real-world semantics you can use (microformats.org) Firefox 3 will be supporting microformats. Learn it now.

CSS - Design Layer
- Name for the styles intent, not it's representation. (If it's for the header, call it "header"; not "BlueBar200px")
- Separate stylesheets by function (layout, typography, effects, hacks, etc.)
- SSIs to include CSS into doc head.
- Use hacks as required, but plan to remove them.
- Test heavily. Disable CSS, resize window, scale fonts, etc.

JavaScript - Behavior Layer
- Externalize all functions for better efficiency
- Attach behaviors unobtrusively to keep markup clean.
- Test with scripting off - confirm the baseline experience
- The Page vs. Application conundrum

The Next Ten Years
- Rich UI functionality keeps increasing
- Media and interactivity intertwines with 'classic web'
- Mobile and non-PC browsers maturing quickly
- Toolsets continue to evolve
- Our jobs will get more complex.

posted cshel in WebmasterWorld PubCon 2007 Las Vegas at December 6, 2007 12:21 PM Comments (0)

Keynote with Matt Cutts

Keynote Coffee Chat With Matt Cutts of Google On the Hot Seat
Location: Salon A

Bring a pile of questions with you. This is a pure question and answer session with the master Google company guy, Matt Cutts.

Moderator: Brett Tabke
Speakers:
Matt Cutts, Software Engineer, Google Inc.

This is the last session day of Pubcon and I am leaving tonight. I am already sad. It isn't sunny out for the first time this week and I feel that Vegas is already starting to miss my presence. Or maybe my sadness is contgious.

Brett asks: What's a typical day at Google?
Matt: I was in grad school in computer graphics and you have to take a couple of classes related to Computer Science as part of the requirements. I ended up taking a library science class that was related to search engines. This was in '99 and I had an interest in jobs in the area. Matt sent an email asking how much these companies pay and they weren't initially doing active negotiations. But 4 days later, they revisited the question, flew him out to California, and Matt's been there since 2000.

As far as a typical day, it's hard to answer that since things happen everyday. It depends on what kind of issues are in the news (like malware on .CN domains). Matt loves his colleagues and webmasters and he loves trying to fix problems and tackling problems before competition gets to Google.

Q: What's your employee number? There's a rumor that it's 69.
Matt: No, it's not 69. It's in the first hundred but it's not 69.

Q: People are all about links but then there's a concern about linking to bad neighborhoods. How do you identify bad neighborhoods? Should you nofollow them or stay away totally?
Matt: Use your gut. Trading links is natural and it's natural to have reciprocal links. At some level, natural reciprocal links happen, but if you do it way too often, it looks artificial. My advice is to go with your gut and if you're worried, you can use nofollow. [Matt notices that there are birds in the conference hall. This is a really big conference hall.] Using nofollow disassociates you with that neighborhood.

Q: What's the deal with paid links?
Matt: A few years ago, there was another search engine called Overture that you'd search and the results weren't sorted by relevance, it was sorted by money. So you'd type "harvard" and not get the university - you'd get test prep. I learned that you don't want a search engine that wasn't by pocketbook. We see a lot of differnet stuff. We capped out our policy recently on our blog about paid links. I put up some screenshots on my personal blog. There was a recent paid post where someone tried to buy the anchor text "alzheimers." The anchor text went to a site that wanted to take money from you. But what if you search for Alzheimers and you get that result first? Obviously it's not a good user experience. We've come out against it as it hurts the relevancy of the results. One misconception is that it's a "Google only issue" but that's not true. All search engines have agreed when we go on record. A user who does that search should not have to find an irrelevant result.

Q: Google recently bought g.cn in China. Can you elaborate?
Matt: If you're in China and you speak Chinese, even remembering the word "Google" is really hard. One of our efforts is to make it really easy to remember. We have google.cn and g.cn and google.com. You can go to either one. Google.com gives main search results but we can restrict g.cn and google.cn to requirements of the country.

Q: Back to the China affair and the backlinks, we see that they buy a lot of links, we see that they come from specific regions of the world. Have you thought of properly investigating these countries or the companies that do this?
Matt: It's a good question. A lot of the spam is not in Chinese. It's in English -- but it's on a .cn domain. If you look at the backlinks and they're all from Japan, that starts to look suspicious. Some spammers have links from every TLD. There's always more we could do. We're always trying to work on it.

Q: Google makes a lot of money on the content networks from parked domains but a lot of these are typosquatted domains. What is Google's stance on taking these down since they're not legitimate?
Matt: First, this isn't my area of expertise so I'm going to give you my opinion only. Suppose you're going to stop all typosquatters. It used to be the case that you tried to get something and maybe you got it right or maybe you didn't get it right and you'd hit some really malicious websites instead. To some extent, Google legitimized domain-related advertising. Search Engine Roundtable (that's us! Matt said my name!) covered some articles where you can opt out of these kinds of domain related advertising. Google is moving in that direction. Having that alertnative is a really good step but we're still listening to feedback to make it even better. I personally think that whenever you advertise, you should have as many options as possible.

Q: Let's say if I have a VPS and I have a neighbor on the same class C doing shady stuff. Can that poision my entire class C?
Matt: VPS = virtual private server. (I have one too, just FYI.) Spammers are really smart. They will drop an IP address when it's poisoned and then some innocent person will take it. It can't hurt you anymore - the data gets outdated very quickly so we don't worry about this as much anymore. The only concern is when there's a lot of IPs in the same subnet doing some shady stuff and then we may take action.

Q: There's this A-CAP protocol for newspapers that they put content behind a paid wall after a certain time. What are the ramifications?
Matt: It came out a week ago so we need to study it to see what kind of value it provides. I can't say in its incarnation will be supported by all search engines but it may become more mainstream.

Q: If I have a site and I redirect a certain amount of files, are there any set of rules on how many 301 redirects you can set up in a chain?
Matt: To the best of my knowledge, there's no real limit. You can do a 301 and change it 2 weeks later and you'll be totally fine. I don't recommend a chain of redirects that is so long that tires out the Googlebot. It's easier for things to get lost in the queue at the time, so maybe you should point it to the final destination.

Q: On paid links, what's the drawn at when it comes to paid links vs. advertising?
Matt: Those links don't pass PageRank. I want a clean index and accurate search results. I don't want things to hurt Google's revenue. MFA sites are not good for users.

Q: When you're changing servers (on IP addresses), is there a certain period of time that you should leave the old server up?
Matt: There are 3 or 4 steps that I can do. First: lower your DNS TTL to like 5 minutes. Bring up the site on the new IP address, switch the site on the new IP address, keep the old and the new live, and as soon as you see Googlebot crawling the new IP address, you're totally fine. Normally a day or two is all you need.

Q: We're seeing our blog content being stolen and being put on other websites (even with changed words). How do I report that? (Oh yes, that happens to Search Engine Roundtable a lot.)
Matt: Come up and catch me afterwards and we'll talk about it. But that's not entirely scalable. The general way to do it is through a spam report. I need to do a blog post about this but Barry Schwartz (actually, that was me. After I raised my hand and corrected him, he corrected himself also!) wrote an awesome post with screenshots about how to report spam results. See? Look. My name is on it.

Q: What do you think about other directories that charge money to review your site. Is it worthwhile to do this? What do you see for the future? Will Google stop passing link juice to these directories?
Matt: Check the directories and see who is behind it. If you can't figure out who that is or if the directory has the wrong neighborhoods listed, you don't want to be on it. You shouldn't pay all the time to get added. If you pay and get added anyway, that site doesn't use great editorial discretion. Use that criteria and we can determine if it's worthwhile or not.

Michael Gray asked a question and Matt answered and I didn't get it. Sorry. Someone can ask Michael at wolf-howl.com to blog about it.

Q: Are there times when a 302 is interpreted as a 301?
Matt: It's pretty rare because it dilutes things. We try to make it hard for people to hijack listings.

posted Tamar Weinberg in WebmasterWorld PubCon 2007 Las Vegas at December 6, 2007 12:13 PM Comments (2)

Brand Management

WebmasterWorld Pubcon 2007 Las Vegas
Brand Management

Moderator: Joe Laratro
Speakers:
Lauren Vaccarello, Director of Publishing, Forex Capital Markets LLC
Matt Tuens, VP, Sales and Business Development, CKMG, Inc.
Tony Wright, VP of Client Services, Kineticresults
Jessica L. Bowman, Sr. Marketing Manager, Yahoo! Inc.

Joe Laratro:

Brand Management is a complex conversation on the web. Traditional media, social media, blogs, forums, groups, and even chat can leave your brand vulnerable if you are not a participant. This panel will look at traditional brand management issues in this complex and sometimes hostile web environment.

Lauren Vaccarello – Building, Maintaining and Defending Your Brand

What is branding? Branding is what your company is associated with, it’s who you are. In today’s presentation, I’ll be talking about building, maintaining and defending your brand.

Building: What is your story and why should I care? Consumers don’t buy products, they buy stories. For the purpose of this presentation, we’re focusing on a fictitious business: Veg-O-Mania.

Competitive Research: Build your keyword lists. Find out who your top competitors are, why people buy their brand, what their strengths and weakness are. Good tools for this are Keyword Research Tool on SEO Book and social media sites (Digg, etc) -- see what stories are ranking well.

Content: Build your quality content keeping in mind what you learned during your competitive research phase.

Maintaining a brand:

Monitor: What blogs, forums, etc. to see what’s being said about your brand. Google Alerts are great for keeping tabs on things. Set alerts for your company name, your products, and your competitors (and their products).

Defending your brand:

Respond to negative publicity in a timely fashion.
Buy sucks.com so no one else can get it.

If complaints surface, empower your affiliates. Find your best ranking affiliates and then assist them in ranking better. Create subsites, create yahoo groups, participate in forums and blogs… do everything you can to occupy as much of the SERP real estate possible.

Designate someone to personally respond to/address negative comments on forums, blogs, etc. Talk to the people on their level and don’t lie. Also, don’t participate in debates, especially with trolls. You won’t win.

Empower your brand loyalists. Talk to them and let them know you’re aware of the bad publicity and tell them how you’re dealing with it. This will give them information they need to go out on their online communities and defend you. Their word will carry more weight than yours.

Matt Tuens, Brand Management = Content Management

A lot of what Laura was talking about was the content behind the brand. Information is power. The importance of content is discussed far and wide and especially here at PubCon, but very few people actually take full advantage of the power of content.

Content:
-- Extends brand exposure
-- Drives customers to you.
-- Delivers your message.

Brand Management = communicating and maintaining the brand message.
Brand Management = strategic development of the brand to maximize its market value
Content = crucial to brand management

Negative postings on blogs and forums are HUGE opportunities to not just save your brand, but to promote it and make it stronger. It gives you a chance to give your brand a certain je nais c’est quoi. You can increase the perceived value of your brand in the minds of certain demographics and that results in customer loyalty and market value.

Brand management is necessary in all aspects of the brand.
-- Developing the Brand
-- Maintaining and Extending the Brand
-- Protecting the Brand

Content has a four pronged value:
-- Generate high quality organic traffic
-- Establish trust with your visitors
-- Maximize the monetization of each page
-- Simultaneously, each page of content is another opportunity to spread and reinforce your brand message and value.

How much content do you need? That’s not really the right question to ask, the more correct question is “what can I do to make my site as usable and informative to my customers and potential customers as possible?”

Create the ultimate informational resource in your vertical. This lays the foundation to be the dominant brand it its vertical for years and maximizes revenue today. It also develops the brand’s online real estate to maximize its market value.
In summary, responding to negative postings shows the company in question is:
-- on the ball
-- willing to listen
-- accountable
-- cares about their customers
-- welcomes interaction with their demographic
-- willing to help, educate and find a solution for their demographic
-- will respond to concerns
-- will set any records straight that need to be
-- puts a human face to the brand.

Tony Wright, Brand Management and the Art of War

Brand Management as War
-- It might be cliché, but it works.
-- Brand Management doesn’t have the horrors of war, but it has its own horrors. It costs jobs, businesses their livelihood, etc.
-- As in war, winning goes to the prepared.
-- As in war, the goal is minimal damage.

Preparing for the Battle
-- Know the battlefields; monitor your brand
o Google Alerts
o Yahoo Alerts
o SERPs
o Social Media Outlets
o If you don’t have the time, hire someone to do it.

-- Avoid the war if at all possible
o keep your customers happy
o don’t screw ex-employees
o don’t screw partners
o practice good business
o practice good customer service
o admit your wrongs – through the proper channels

-- Train your soldiers
o Make sure your employees know when and how to respond to a crisis
o Don’t keep your employees in the dark – transparency is key
o Provide drills for battle during peacetime
o Prepare for every situation, but be prepared that you might not be prepared.

-- Keep your mercenaries happy (affiliates == hired guns)
o Affiliates are hired guns, treat them as such
o Again, transparency is key
o Treat affiliates with respect and equality
o Have policies for dealing with rogue affiliates
o Get the button pusher involved BEFORE there are problems

-- Know your enemies and your friends
o Monitor ex-employees – especially the disgruntled ones
o Keep tabs on disgruntled customers
o Know who your friends are and when you can call in favors
o Avoid confrontation if at all possible

-- Keep the button pusher informed – but not in charge.
o Lawyers are important, but will damage your brand while trying to save it.
o Use the lawyer as a last result
o Listen to counsel, but make your own decisions
o If counsel doesn’t like it – get new counsel

Jessica L. Bowman, “The Role of Search in Branding”

How brand management is typically viewed as either a way to increase traffic by having a thorough brand-focused PPC/SEO campaign or it’s what is needed to protect your brand again bad publicity or problems in the SERPs.

Maximize traffic and revenue from brand search terms
-- Leverage all of your properties to rank for your brand.
-- Dominate the SERPs as much as possible
-- Display multiple marketing messages within the SERPs
-- Coordinate the SEO/SEM campaigns
-- Coordinate with other marketing efforts – commercials, print ads, mailers, email campaigns, etc.
-- Coordinate with brand management and product management – product/service naming and descriptions based on internet audience terminology.

Hedge against negative content and competitors ranking and getting traffic for your brand terms
-- Recognize threats: competitors and unfavorables
-- Develop proactive and reactive strategies
-- Stay on top of tactics used by threatening sites.

Anything negative is a risk.
-- Any form of negative content on the internet has potential to rank high for your brand.
-- Any web-savvy customer can easily post something negative on a site that makes their way to the top of the SERPS

It’s not just the SERPs, make sure you check the following types of sites…
-- Flickr
-- Picasa
-- Technorati
-- Forums
-- ConsumerAffairs.com
-- Amazon.com (also for websites)

You might be the only person in your company that can fully comprehend the risk your company faces.
-- Bring it up when you see it.
-- Identify the threat that it presents.
-- Get the legal department involved – they can be your champion.

In summary:
-- Look at brand management in the SERPs holistically
-- Make an effort to influence the SERPs, similar to how the PR department does things.
-- Respond as issues arrive, but don’t get sucked into the online debates.
-- Be proactive do you don’t have to be reactive.
-- Be a voice of reason.
-- Empower your brand loyalists.

posted cshel in WebmasterWorld PubCon 2007 Las Vegas at December 6, 2007 11:30 AM Comments (0)

Alternative Discovery and SEO - Feeds, PDF's, and Blog SEO

Rick Klaus - Feedburner/Google - SEO for Blogs and Feeds

- Google does not index RSS/Atom content
- social netowrks encourage feed distribution
- Feedburner's "pro" features are free - one of the large upsides to being bought by a large company
- includes TotalStats and MyBrand
- Sitemaps support feeds - RSS feeds work as a poorman's sitemap

Evolution of Feed Publishers

2003 - Blogs and RSS overlap *visual*

2007 - Feeds today are all manner of content *another visual*

Another visual - shows # of Feeds going way up and shows that we are no longer in an early adopter phase.


Clickthrough Tracking
- They use to use a 302 (Stephan was one of the people that had a problem with the 302) and they now let webmasters choose to be a 302 or a 301

MyBrand
- DNS skills NEEDED!
- you can map the CNAME


Importance of Full Text Over Excerpts
- Says it is stupid to not push your full content in a feed. There are only special cases where a partial feed is right
- They have data that says full feeds are better.
- Encourages people to check out techmeme and how they bring in feeds and create relationships based on the links and the data in the feeds.


Noindexr
- Yahoo and Google do follow it
- you can turn it on in feedburner

Robots.txt
- force services to consume or not consume your feeds

Auto-Discovery "advertises" your availability of your feeds to browsers and bots

*skips ahead over some slides*

If you have a podcast, do NOT just poing to the mp3. Create a page and point to the page where you talk about the podcast - search engines like text.


Facebook lets users import "notes"
- takes poll of how many users import feed into Facebook account
- about 25% raise hand (including myself)
- goes into how to set it up

Stephan Spencer - Netconcepts

- takes poll on who is a blogger and how many use WordPress

Blog SEO
- so easy a child could do it
- 16 year old blogger
- passive content of 1000$ a month
- shows her blog

Optimizing your blog

- Rejig your internal linking
- tag clouds
- related posts
- top 10 posts
- next and previous posts

Build inbound links
- add technorati tags to your posts
- get onto bloggers blogrolls
- trackbacks & comments wont help with link gain


Shows some tag cloud examples

Shows a technorati tag example

Talks about hyphen and underscores and that hyphens are ideal.


title tags
- blog name
- dont use the same text for the page title and the post title

"SEO Title Tag" plugin for wordpress
- Download it from netconcepts.com
- shows how you can use the plugin to optimize title tags and that you can do mass edits


Related Posts
- increases inter-linking on the site
- can use plugins or just call out and do it manually


Name your blog what you want to rank for


Anchor Text
- make the posts title a link the the perm page
- use neat-o-tool (webuildpages.com)
- inernally link back to old related posts with the body of the blog.

Heading tags
- category name on category page
- yes for post titles, no for dates

Optional excerpts - to minimize dupe content
- write unique content - dont just use the first couple paragraphs, dont use the <-- more ---> tag!!

Sticky posts
- always appear at the top of the page
- a way to add keyword-rich intro copy to a category page or tag page
- e.g. adhesive plugin

Author profile pages & author links (for group blogs)

relnofollow
- if you do this you wont pass juice

noindex
- will pass juice but wont show up in the SERPs
- could use a robots.txt to do the same thing


Optimizing your feeds
- full text, not summaries
- 20 ore more, not just 10
- multiple feeds by cate, comments and so on
- keyword-rich item - title
- your brand name in the item - title
- your most important keyword in the site - title - container


George Aspland - eVision

*missed first 2 slides, went to quickly*

better rankings & click-throughs from SERPS
- use lots of formatable text
- optimize the text of the document
- update the document title


A search engine listing for a PDF in Google
- no document title
- all text within images (scanned from hard copy)

Shows a good SERP for a PDF
- encourages you to rebuild a PDF if needed - worth it in the long run

Link to the PDF
- link from pagees that are already indexed
- link pop is important so promote it

PDFs can have links
- shows an example that has active links
- logo is a link to the website as well

how to convert the url's in a pdf into an active link
- highlight your links
- just making something a link wont highlight it like it does in Word, thus you need to highlight it
- export/print your pdf
- open with acrobat - to edit you will need acrobat, not the free reader

- go to Advanced> Links > *toooooo fast man!!!!!*


How to turn any text or image into an active link
- Long list of steps, to get them go to his site and download the instructions


PageRank and PDFs
- seem to follow same pattern as sites

Lets test it (wants people to do this)
- downlaod "optimizing PDFs for Search Engines
- include links to 2 charities
- post PDF and pass along
- we'll check results in couple months

Analysing PDF search results with Click Tracks
- what PDFs were entry pages to a site


Add active links
- PDFs hosted on your site
- PDFs you distrubite to others - white papers, articles, and so on


Can find more here: http://sphinn.com/story/16067

Q: Free forester reports

A: search forester research grapevine endnotes filetype:pdf in Google and you will get a suprise. - Send your thanks to Stephan


Contributed by DaveR.

posted rustybrick in WebmasterWorld PubCon 2007 Las Vegas at December 5, 2007 6:16 PM Comments (0)

SEO and the Big Search

SEO and the Big Search

Moderator: Joe Morin
Speakers:
Melanie Mitchell, AOL
Dave Roth, Yahoo
Maile Ohye, Google

Melanie Mitchell from AOL is up first. She says that AOL has a search engine but when they look at SEO for the site, it's not about the search engine itself. It's more about how they manage the large scale effort and for the content and product areas. How do you optimize a site for search when the organization and culture does not believe in the power of search? You cannot succeed in SEO without the support of the executives, company, and corporate culture.

How do you align the departments along search and how do you build a consensus among your organization to build a competitive advantage? Hopefully, the answers are valuable to you.

Making a search marketing program work at a company without losing your mind:
It's a corporate challenge - change in discipline and change in culture. How you organize, plan and execute determines how to change these key roles.

There is no magic wand to fix it. Why do you have to sometimes be the wicked witch of search marketing?

AOL wasn't designed for searched and it didn't have to be. We weren't set up to be successful in search. You need to change the way to do everything in order to optimize for search. She came on board as an SEO but it was hard to show the executives how it would benefit them.

You had to go from a push company to a pull company. Once we understand the coverage, we need to see the quality of the rates to get people to come to this site to know that 'hey, we're a free site, we have what you're looking for." We needed to gather information and lay it out for the executives to understand. We needed to provide competitive intelligence on competitors and then needed to quantify a gap between AOL and the competition. Our factors were query coverage and query rankings. Then we could lay out the estimated clicks and estimated revenue. What's the current revenue mix between what is search and non search? We know what our organic traffic is but looking at the competition helps us estimate the traffic and then we can tell what our page views are and multiply that out by your competition and say "if we're the leader, here's what we're looking at with our page views." Once you put that together, then everyone can understand it. That's how she sold the executives and told them that she needed their backing: "this is important to our company." That's how you get things out the door quickly. Once it's embedded in the DNA, everyone can play a role and we needed to help everyone understand that role. Is it easy? No.

Put search marketing at a high priority. AOL ended up committing to it in the top 3 of 450 priorities listed. It determines AOL's success. Most people, when they go on the web, search - that's their first stop.

A 6 point plan:
1- Create a core search team. Have subject matter experts and these are folks who eat/breathe/sleep search. They understand the ins and outs of the search industry. Have systems architects who can connect dots between the different platforms of publishing systems. You also want to have a tech lead - take business requirements and translate them to the engineers. Then you need frontliners: SEO leads: programming group, product group, etc. You need program managers and project managers who focus on indexing and ranking - the folks who maintain a roadmap and can worry about delays.
2- Accountability. You need goals, priorities, and incentives. There are hundreds and thousands of folks who have a dramatic effect on how we perform. Search referrals are our major engagement metric. We said "we want to target 30% of our traffic on organic search. Where are we today?" They would get statistical analysis and reward people when they did this well.
3- Training: we had to train people. Test them. If they fail, they need a new job. Otherwise, a failure as a company is worse.
4- Set internal standards. When you first start to learn it, there's a lot of information and it's inundating. Some information can be outdated or can be misinterpreted. Worse, things are plain wrong. So lay it out: here's what we expect from programming to design to technology.
5- Provide tools and training for these tools. There are free tools (keyword analaysis, keyword research, crawling tools, etc.) but we also set up an internal Wiki and a running FAQ.
6- Measure, track, and adjust. If you're going to hold people accountable, you need to know what they're doing. How many page are in the index? What's your search referrals - does it grow or does it stagnate? The market is growing so keep that in mind too. Worry about user behavior: abandonment, return visits, and page consumption.

The last thing you need to do is create a dashboard - a report card of your plan and the results. Show the company the performance.

Final points:
You can't ignore search.
You need people from the top to support you (they have to listen to you).
If there's no accountability, there's no success.
Be transparent with the data.
You have to be willing to do what it takes. It's tough but it pays off. Those who do so become hereoes and so will you.

Next up is Dave Roth from Yahoo. I met him last night. He's a nice guy. I also see Yahoo folks sitting on the other side of the room. Hi Marc, Kristen, and Ruth!

Dave says that there is a new breed of executives that are taking shape. There didn't use to be VPs of search or directors of SEO or SEM. It's a good sign that search is going mainstream but is also a testament of the progress that we've made since we can sit at the big kids table now. The future is bright.

Let's talk about how to do SEO and SEM at a place like Yahoo. My goal is to empower you with the knowledge that we do basic marketing but at a larger scale. We follow very basic principles even though we're a big firm.

Why search marketing? Why do we do it? It's only recently that we did this but it's pretty much for the same reasons: it's the best way to acquire customers, you can make money doing it, and everybody loves it. We do a lot of search marketing: paid search, SEO, and affiliate programs.

Yahoo is engaged in search marketing for a large number of properties: personals, autos, small business, travel, etc. Within those properties, there are subscription models, conversion models, transactional models, lead generation models, and CPM revenue models.

We need to have one method to combine all these models: LTV (lifetime value) optimization. What's the value of that customer? Do I want to break even, profit, or take a loss? That guides your efforts.
What's the lifetime value of subscriptions, referrals, and CPM/CPC revenue?
What's the net present value (NPV) of that lifetime value revenue stream?
What's the acceptable profit margin on NPV?
It works for SEO, too!
As many people say, if you can't attach value to it, it doesn't exist. We therefore have strict metrics.

We have central groups for training, standards, best practices, reporting etc.
But we also have properties and business units who hire SEOs and execute the plan and are accountable for the results.

[He shows a cute picture of his kids. They really are cute.]

Leveraging internal resources:
- What we don't get: speical treatment, algorithm insights, sensitive data
- What we do get: limited data, Yahoo! Buzz, working with search for internal tools.

[He shows another picture of his son wearing his daughter's bunny hat. Awww!]

Opportunity reports: the goal is to quanitify the opportunity to get it in front of the execs so that they can say yes. Run opportunity reports on some properties. We built a predictive model for SEO traffic (keywords - estimate traffic). When you do that, you can compare your virtual performance with your competitors and you can identify gaps. Then you can attach value to it with tools like LTV. Show them the money!

Make SEO a part of the process: SEO is a part of each stage of the product development cycle. Yahoo cranks out products at an alarming rate.
Phase 1: Concept: competitive research, strategies for attracting traffic and links, partner and affiliate SEO possibilities.
Phase 2: Wireframes: site architecture considerations, URL structure planning, internal linking structure planning, SEMantic setup and benchmarking
Phase 3: Desig: Use of keywords, AJAX/Flash/CSS/iFrame considerations, content distributions and layout
Phase 4: Development: clean URL implementation, on page SEO, robots.txt, indexing and feed creation
Phase 5: Launch: datamart report setup, feed and URL submission, press release optimization
Phase 6: Post launch: reporting and analytics, optimization testing and tweaks

Organizational recommendation:
Get the SEO program manager who leads the SEO product development manager. That SEO product develpment manager (a team of people prioritizing each property) who manages SEO property managers (wireframe, design folks who are tied to properties and are related to engineers) and the SEO producer and SEO analysts (measures data).

Be careful for what you ask for or it gets way complicated!

How do you measure success of SEO? There's an SEO scorecard that shows the property, total SEO traffic, change, trending data, value assessments, and SEO health (color indicators). How do you know if you're doing well vs. not well? We built an index and it works on a "clickspace model" (Competitive Visibility Index). Some of our key competitors are identified and we compare our traffic against the competitors traffic. We then compute a relative score that's tracked over time. The key to do this is packaging this up in a way that people can consume.

Final points:
We're not trying to be the most efficient SEOs - we have to do SEO across a huge spectrum (scale and complexity).
Make sure you quantify it and value it.
Train everyone.
Hold people accountable (tie it to their pay or salary).
Infuse SEO into the development process.

Last up is Maile from Google. I saw her before. She was with Vanessa Fox. She's cool but Vanessa didn't introduce me to her.

Maile works at Google Webmaster Central. She is going to go into three topics:
SEO how not tos - common mistakes of optimized sites
Opportunities in video/book/local search
Fundamental and SEO truths.

What happens if you are serving content from the US but then to the rest of the world? A common technique is IP delivery. Broaden your marketplace.

How Not To: Often undesirable IP delivery - same URL but serve different content. If GOoglebot comes from another IP and sees that, it would be providing the wrong information.

How do you go about IP delivery? Keep in mind: Googlebot IPs can be global, Google often transfers information from source to target if 301'd. Search rankings can be influenced by information relating to URL's language and location. Users/browsers have language preferences to respect.

When you design for IP delivery, serve largely the same content on each URL. Create separate URLs for more varied content (like blah.com/de for German content or example.de for the domain). Use Webmaster Tools for geolocation.

What about bells and whistles like Web 2.0 technology - Flash, AJAX, and Videos:
- Don't have a blank cache. Don't go all out and make your site in Flash that is not easily crawled by search engines. She shows an example of disney.go.com.

Instead, design with progressive enhancement. Get HTML for content and navigation. Then think about videos and flash. We have official statements about using SiFR, Hijax, etc. for Flash.

Now that you have these SEO how-tos, there's a lot of opportunity at Google. We have Video, Local Businesses, and Book Search. You can submit this through webmaster central.

How does Google leverage this opportunities? Webmaster Central with more videos (e.g. Matt Cutts talks about snippets). It has over 29,000 views (and it's relatively recent). We're adding snippets to complement the user experience.

SEO truths:
We have design principles: we design for accessibility, speed, and easy navigation. Webmaster Tools helps you verify if Google crawls your site and indexes as expected. You should also get techniques and ideas from the Webmaster Central Blog.

Create unique, compelling content, or a service. An example is Kango's viral piece - what if Google created its own site? (Google for it - I didn't get the whole URL.)

That's all folks!

posted Tamar Weinberg in WebmasterWorld PubCon 2007 Las Vegas at December 5, 2007 5:44 PM Comments (4)

SEO Design and Organic Site Structure

Speaker 1: Mark Jackson – VIZION Interactive, Inc.

I will cover getting your site to do well and traffic – not the end of the game; you need to convert and be successful on all browsers. I will cover keyword research, creating a SE friendly architecture. I won’t get into details, just highlights, and content.

Keyword research – you may use your tool and build strategy around most searched for keyword. At this phase you need to talk to your target audience, don’t just go for the most popular, go for the tail end. Make sure the keywords didn’t come from the CEO, talk to the target audience.
Assign relevancy to words to get a good targeted list. At vision, we put together a spreadsheet and assign relevancy – up to 100%.

Once you’ve done research, find out who is ranking for those words and why. Know who you are; carve out your niche, try to determine factors necessary to compete with those words, then develop your content.

We look at indexed pages for competitive sites and your own, Yahoo does the best here.

Creating the IA: incorporate the keyword research, incorporate comp analysis, then lay out your site. Use keywords when you can in the names of the pages, assign tags, metas, etc.

A good example is Tripadvisor.com. Look at the site map on tourism. They organized their verticals well.

A lot of people say SEO sites are ugly – not true. Avoid java script, image based navigation, flash navigation, flash intros to site. Allow space for content – a lot of ecommerce site get carried away with images. Use alt text. Try to write static urls in the development stage. Design should follow the IA – design should be the 3rd phase of the process, try to have a reason why the site is being designed that way.

Trip Advisor is good for usability. Usability is important. What’s below the fold on their home page is a lot of links using great anchor text.

Read Searchenginewatch.com this Tuesday for article on spam.

Building content:
Once you have your keywords, your site is only as good as the copy you put on the pages write engaging content. Don’t stuff. Make it engaging for visitors and search engines. Once you have content, go back through it and try to link between one page to another, this is great for spiders. Use good anchor texts. People get so caught up with external links but forget about linking within site.

Make sure you avoid marketing fluff. Blogs are great for getting out quick content. Pages will rank quickly.

Summary: do research before design, use research smartly to develop IA. Deign for usability and SEO, in that order. Make sure you have good content.
Speaker 2: Alan K’necht, K’nechtology, Inc:

Linear approach: spiders read from top to bottom, left to right, and go straight through. Search engines care about words, words and words! Not pictures. Also care about positions of words. Then why show graphic first? Good for usability, not search engines. Use 2-tier design architecture. Separate content from presentation. Doesn’t necessarily mean design will be ugly. Organize content logically, i.e. don’t use privacy policy first – use H1 tag first! Use CSS to position.

Newspaper philosophy – they get readers engaged. Why? Linear info – easy to read! Headlines first! Main story first! Important stuff up front! That’s what search engines are trying to do, be easy for the human. Newspaper puts links to inner pages at the end (i.e. continued on page 22). So linear approach is that the important elements must come first! H1 first, H2 second, target words in H1 – first and foremost, this is what page is about! Stick graphic at the bottom!

One of the ways to see if coders did a good job is to turn off CSS using the Firefox Webmaster Toolbar. You can see what the site looks like. You can remove lots of the fluff. If the logo is relevant or well known keep it in towards the top. Get content up front though. Usability for search engines.

Speaker 3: Lyndsay Walker – WestJet – Canadian Airline

Design for your visitors! You want to have a clear navigation not only for visitors but also for search engines.
Avoid flash, there is no advantage whatever. There is so much you can do with CSS and Java that can simulate what Flash can do.
Fresh content is the best.
Use DIVs – more reliable than a table structure.
Use your stats – what browsers are people using? Where are they going on your site?
Test everything in Firefox – it’s a compliant browser. If you design for Internet Explorer, you will test in Firefox and it will be broken. Design for Firefox and tweak for IE. You will save yourself a lot of headaches. Especially since Firefox has great tools and plug-ins. If you watch your stats over time, you will notice an increase in Firefox users as well as mobile device users to surf the net.

Must-haves recap:
Title tag – unique to every page.
Meta description tag – the yes or no if someone will click on our site. Very important.
Header tags – place prominently at the top, H1, H2 etc.
Strong code-to-content ratio – CSS is so important, you really don’t need a lot of code these days.
DIVs instead of tables.
Don’t forget your keywords.
Links – so important – internal linking structure just as important as external.

Side note - Inadvertent SEO – If you are testing out new pages, the search engines will find it whether you are ready or not. If you are not ready for it to be live, use a testing environment or watch your linking structure.

Speaker 4: Paul Bruemmer – Red Door Interactive

Organic Site Structure:

- Server configuration: robot.txt, redirect codes, 404 error codes, internal broken links, canonical duplicate content, dedicated IP address, alias URLs, transfer of keyword page rankings, etc.
- Site architecture gone bad: messed up situation. To prevent, 6 essential components to implement:
Inclusion ratio – it pays to know and track the number of pages indexed to gauge how you are doing in the index.
Directory structure and naming conventions.
Internal linking structure – very often neglected and annoying to correct.
Dynamic and persistent URLs.
Site Map.
Privacy statement.

Content Generation:
Look at competitive landscape and be equal to or greater than.
Textual content types: articles, industry news, etc.
Think about content promotion, RSS feeds, blogs etc.

Content Optimization comes down to 6 on-page factors, Lyndsay summed them up. If you work them into your design you will do really well.

Natural Link Profile: think ahead about creating a neighborhood of links around you which will have a huge impact on your site. Give some thought to your link profile.

Deep Link Profile – ratios of links to subpages in comparison to links to homepages.

Additional considerations are feeds, paid search, local search (map locations, XHTML for mobile), development and administrative staff etc.

Contributed by Sheara Wilensky, a Search Strategist for Promediacorp.

posted rustybrick in WebmasterWorld PubCon 2007 Las Vegas at December 5, 2007 4:35 PM Comments (0)

Web Hosting Industry Overview

A web site cannot exist without hosting. This is an area that is often poorly researched by site owners. This session reviewed current issues with the web hosting industry and touched upon on hot topics including shared hosting, shared IPs, DNS issues, up time, speed, reliability, dedicated servers, server farms, redundancy, back up options, email options and other added value services.

Brett Tabke - Moderator
By George Roberts – Interjuncture Corp – produces anti spam tools, info technology since 1995
Ben Fisher - TechPad Agency – SEO and hosting since 1994


George: Which hosting is right for me?

Shared hosting – this is an account for one or more domain names. Cluster of servers divided up among different hosting customers and gives everyone a little slice. It is usually inexpensive and pretty easy to get the site up and running. The downside is that you are sharing resources. If the hosting company is overselling services, you may have bad performance, or there may be security or spamming issues within all customers.

(Ben – Shared hosting is great for when you are starting out, or if you don’t need a lot of resources. As the site gets more popular and develops, it also becomes more of a target and it grows out of shared hosting. From an SEO perspective, the drawback is they are shared on one IP address – listed in spam house or if blacklisted it can affect your website.)

Virtual Private Servers (VPS) – this is similar to shared hosting – it is dividing resources, but gives you a mini server inside the server so you have control over the operating system. It has a lower cost than dedicated servers but also less resources. You may also only get a certain amount of memory.

Ben – I think VPS is more for the technical savvy. If you know what you are doing and want to have control, VPS is more viable and more cost effective than a full blown dedicated server.

Dedicated Servers – with a dedicated server, you purchase all hardware, build all infrastructures and pay a flat fee per month to host the server. If you have a hundred sites, you can throw them all onto one server. You can even put thousands of domains onto one server. The disadvantages are that with shared hosting, you need an on-site administrator and technical support. With a dedicated server, you are on your own; you need to implement appropriate security measures. If you have the time and the resources, it can be a good value.

Ben – Managed dedicated server – for people who want to spend time on business and not on technical side, will let someone in house take care of everything. Managed is really the way to go. The host will handle upgrades, drives going down, upgrading memory, if someone hacks into your site and uses your box, host will step in and fix. With a standard dedicated server you have to manage, it’s less expensive but everything is on you to fix and maintain.

With a managed server, talk to your hosting options, ask them what services that management includes: just monitoring, updates, admin hours per month, make sure you have clear idea what you are getting with your package.

The big daddy of hosting is co-location. This can go from a single server to a full rack to cages. If you have a few hundred servers, you can rent a cage from a data center, pay flat monthly fee.
There are 3 components with co-location:

Space rent
Bandwidth cost
Power

Advantages are you can pretty much do anything you want. When working with dedicated servers, what you get is a billed out infrastructure with choices of different things. They own the hardware and you are renting. With co-location, you buy everything, switches, hardware, etc. Expensive in the long run but usually balanced out in flexibility and power.

Ben – with co-location, the issue is cost. You are paying for space, bandwidth and hardware. But it is a managed scenario. It’s usually for large corporations.

George - The next thing is controversial in the hosting industry. One of my pet peeves, trying to make people understand, is non-traditional hosting. A lot of people are providing hosting-like services such as online storage, Flickr image hosting, blog hosting sites, Blogger, Live Journal, Word Press, MSN Spaces, YouTube (very specialized hosting site for video). A lot of people have everything on Facebook or Myspace, these are not traditional specialized hosting services.

Ben – non-traditional hosting works because the majority of people don’t know the word “hosting”. It’s mostly for webmasters. The beauty is it makes the ability to communicate on the web very easy. The line between paid hosting and the community/blog is getting blurred. In the future, I think this is where it’s going. If you are building a social media site, you have a future in hosting!

George – dedicated hosting is not going away anytime soon. But those using shared hosting are using it for straightforward purposes: info on their business, photo gallery, blog etc. most of these things are replicated in a lot of these non-traditional hosting services that are out there! Most people say – I want to put up a blog so I need to do XYZ. It’s too much work, and most people don’t want to spend so much time…so a lot of the shared hosting is going to switch over to non-traditional hosting over the next few years.

Live Spaces is very simple! Something to keep an eye out for.

Side note - 20,000 unique visitors is serious traffic and that’s the point where you want to move to VPS or dedicated.

Shared hosting is the “carts/vendors” of the shopping mall. If you are an internet business, putting it in anyone else’s hands that you don’t know, you can go for years and never have a problem, and get complacent, but the first time something happens, you will wish to get off the shared hosting.

Q: What are default packages that the servers come with?
A: Varies. Contact sales dept, should be able to do side by side comparison with different providers. I haven’t seen a standard package. Most of the companies are good at scaling prices commensurate with the services they provide. Everyone markets differently, if you are looking for something specific communicate what you are looking for. Ask questions, find out as much as you can before making your purchase.

Q: Can you elaborate on Grid computing environments?
A: Ben: Amazon uses a grid – it’s a large cluster of servers configured with software that allows you to spawn computing resources on demand. Depending on how your application is developed, if the load gets to a certain point, it will move some of the computing over. I think it is a good technology and there’s a space, but you won’t see widespread use. It’s not really an everyday type product. Not quite at that point yet.
Guy with Question: Servemap allows you to specify your exact requirement and will allow you to customize an environment inside a grid, just like a dedicated server, but it’s set up inside a grid environment.
George: that may be a redundancy in hardware. There are a lot of different ways to do things, that’s not particularly mainstream, I agree they are nice technologies, but don’t think they are mainstream yet.

Q: what is the best strategy of parking a secondary site?
A: Ben:I will have a main domain on an exclusive IP address. If it’s a parked domain or secondary it depends on if the site has content. If it’s just a keyword stuffed domain name and not relevant, it being on its own domain is questionable. Being on the same IP address raises another flag. If doing everything legit, no problem. You want as little similarity as possible – different Who Is records, different IP address, etc.

Side note: Test servers early on for their ability to recover data. Check with service provider to make sure they do back-ups. A lot of hosting companies don’t do backups, it’s up to the domain owner. It’s not necessarily a good thing or bad thing – you get what you pay for – usually they will schedule a backup but they won’t do it automatically.

Q: What is the average pricing and average size site for each type of host?
A: George: Shared is $3.95 - $12.95, as high as $17.95/month. The cheapest ones are mass market hosting companies, looking for as many customers as possible, compete on disk space and bandwidth. More expensive players are more about the customer service because they know more. In a shared environment, you can have everything from a blog to a full blown ecommerce site. Going from this to the next level depends on traffic and how much you are making off the site. If it’s just a blog, shared hosting is fine. VPS - $30 - $79/month depending on resources you want allocated, hard drive space, memory…you can get lower-end dedicated services from $225 – $300, $400/month for more high end hardware. It’s approximately an additional $150/month for managed. Co-location is $100/month for a megabit of bandwidth per second up to $50k, $100k – depending on how much space you need. You are paying for bandwidth regardless of whether or not you use it...but you are getting it at a lower price per bandwidth with the more you order.

Q: Where would you have your DNS hosted, registrar or server?
A: Registrar or 3rd party. Don’t put on server because if the server is down, DNS is down. If it’s resolving you are OK, but if domain name is not coming back…that’s no good!

Q: How do you protect yourself from Slashdot or Digg effect (should we be so lucky!!)?
A: If you want to be that type of site owner that is going to be posting things that could take off, you need to be prepared in advance! Need to be on an infrastructure that will cushion the blow. Let your provider know you will be hosting something that may get a lot of traffic, they will help you move over to another server. If they don’t know about it they are not going to be happy. If you on a shared hosting, you will go down and take the entire server down with you! Go with a low end, managed dedicated server and let your host know - I am willing to pay for it just help me out. Another option is to redirect the URL that gets Slashdotted over to Google, they have free hosting, may not have your system, but you can throw something up there with your logo etc. temporarily. Realistically, Google can handle millions and millions of hits – and it’s free- so take advantage. The less data you have to send back, the less your server has to work.

Contributed by Sheara Wilensky, a Search Strategist for Promediacorp.

posted rustybrick in WebmasterWorld PubCon 2007 Las Vegas at December 5, 2007 4:33 PM Comments (0)

Effective Domaining Strategies

Brett has each person give a background on themselves. Each quickly does so. Monti plugs the domain auction @ 3PM later today.

Domain names as a marketing tool

Mark Klein - Sedo


Background:
- descriptive "direct navigation" - this is where people type a domain into the search bar and not google


About 10% of PPC traffic is "direct navigation" type traffic


Shows a Comscore study.

Why should marketers buy domain names?
- brand
- traffic examples: pc.com, laons.com
- vertical ex: baby.com

Baby.com - a well-implemented advertising portal
- premium domain add to credibility


Better organic search engine placement

Why use campaign specific domains
- I have a headache.com could be an example

Ends the presentation with a few slides aobut the company and what they do at Sedo.


Monte Cahn - Do

Goes over who and what Moniker does. Manage over 2.7 million domains now.

Ways domain names generate profit
- ppc, cpa, affiliate sites, search revenue, and selling domains
- annual advertising is estimated to grow by billions
- domains contribute 15% of Google/Yahoo's total revenue

Domains owned
- shows upward trend of owners of many many domains. 15 in 2006 had 100k+ domains

138 million domain names are registered in the world, 31% increase over Q2 year over year

88% of pages are live (standard and parked), 76% renewed

More then 310 ccTLD extensions globally but 10 make up more then 66% of the total. Germany with .de is number 2.

What makes a good domain name?
- natrual and generic brand
- easy to remember
- clear, concise and descriptive
- commercially oriented
- industry segment
- visually pleasing
- existing type in traffic
- look at if a domain is blacklisted - use the way back machine to see if a domain had content on it in the past aka archive.org


Mistypes - Go home and have loved ones or coworkers type your brand name/company name as fast as they can. Go and register all the misspellings

How do you generate revenue
- domain traffic (direct navigation)
- domain sales
- domain development

Creating your profile
- look at aftermarket
- watch domains dropping


Examples - asthma.com
- company sells medicine for asthma


Look at other langues - Spanish is growing and big already.


Has a list of useful links


Jeff - moderater on wmw (webwork) - 13 domaining strategies in 2007

Asks some questions - domain name portal and webmasterworld domain forum plug


1. Creative domain acqusition finance
- letting the ppc revenue pay the costs
- your revenue isnt their revenue
2. acqusition of underperforming (parked) domains - buy cheap, fix it and use the new found money to pay for the domains.
- auctions - you can find steals
3. auction sniping
4. bottom fishing at certain resellers - Jeff has personally been a bottom feeder for a long time.
5. diversification of revenue stream - test different services
6. macroeconomic adjustments (foreclosures, debt, etc) - the market is dicey, debt and forclosure domains are hot right now
7. tracking the buzz in the forms and emerging buying opportunies - if people are crabbing about income, it may be the time to buy some domains.
8. dailychanges.com and observing domaining trends - domain tools has some nifty tools. Dailychanges is great for research/intellegence. Watch the big guys and see some trends that they are showing.
9. intelligent proactive acquisition vs waiting for doamins to drop - reach out to owners of dropping domains and see if you cant just buy it. Its easier then fighting with the big guys once it drops
10. business owners acquiring keyword traffic domains
11. domainers focusing on the value of converted leads from KW domains
12. domain parking experimentation: images, rotating companies, etc.
13. specilistion, tasting, patent, and informed domaining.

Lists some of the domains he picked up just recently. There are still good domains available right now.

20 unregistered domain bets likly to pay better then Vegas odds. - all were available this morning.


Tom Murphy - State of Aftermarket and Effective Domaining Strategies

Baiscs
1. Buying Domains (primary or secondary market)
- concentrate on areas you either understand or that you believe will increase
2. Selling domains
- take profits as you see fit
3. Maximizing the revenue from your portfolio
4. Test


12 Drivers of valuations
- traffic, popularity, vertical, comparable sales, language, and so on

Everyone is getting into the after market sales (Godaddy just added it)


Buying domains
- if I had 5k or 50k - what should I buy is a question he hears often. Treat domain names like stocks and mix it up.

Selling
- people should have domains for sale at all times
- parked domains sell 5x better then non parked

Contributed by DaveR.

posted rustybrick in WebmasterWorld PubCon 2007 Las Vegas at December 5, 2007 4:30 PM Comments (0)

Domain Names and Trademarks - Legal Issues

Clark Walton, Esq. - Domain Name Law


Diffe cant hide
- Domain privacy services between UDRP and ACPA

Register your trademark
- stay away from trademarks of others

You cant hide

UDRP
- uniform dispute resolution policy
- binding arbitration
- less formal rules
- no hearings

Benefits
- fast process
- works well against international registerants
- fixed costs, can estimate what it will cost to get a domain
- 2500-5000 for laywer

Downside
- only thing you will recover is the domain
- cant recover lawyer fees

ACPA
- anti-cybersquatting consumer protect act (1999)
- federal court
- very formal rules about prodedure and evidence
- live courtin hearings common

Benefits
- Can get domain and damages up to 100k, laywer fees, restraining order, and some other fees paid back

Downside
- harder to estimate costs
- slower 3-6 months and sometimes longer (into the years)

ACPA: (3) Likely outcomes

- settlement 80-90%
- Default judgement 10-20%
- verdict at trial less than 1%

Case study: Default Judgement


Partner Weekly v. Tek System

Partner Weekly is client

- 2004 - Company starts and applies for trademark

- 2006 - Is granted trademark on company name

- Feb 2007 - Client finds partnerSweekly.com

- Feb 2007 - started with a C&D letter

- March 2007 - Defendant makes whois data private using Domains by Proxy

Choose ACPA because:

- emergency relief
- TRO - get domain locked
- Preliminary injunction: get control of domain name
- Possiblity of recovering damages


Wanted control of domain name during process and thus they choose the ACPA.


- March 2007 - TRO / Preliminary Injunction

- April 2007 - Had hearing and judge grants preliminary injunction
- got control of domain

Service of Process
- Have to serve defendant with complaint and motions
- Can be difficult
- email
- regular certified mail
- came back unreachable
- in person service - old mailbox
- search business records for defendant's address
- no match


- July 2007 - Service by Publication
- Use a newspaper ad for 5 weeks and this counts as the above types of ways of serving a person

- August 2007 - Motion for default
- asked for attorney fees, 100k

Conclusion
- Judge granted all requests
- Won lawyer fees and 100k

Can they collect on judgement?
- not without doing more work
- does defendant own any other faluable domain names?
- new service - search whois.sc

John Dozier - Techniques to monetize trademark domain names of other people


Uses the example of Caeser's Palace

- The hotel can protect its trademark in gaming, hotel, and entertainment. But if you open a laundry service in Idaho ... they cant stop you.


If you get a domain

- start a business with that name
- once you are in business for awhile you can consider your brand protected
- its faster to trademark the business name
- there are ways to get a trademark in less then 30 days
- once you get it you go to Google and Yahoo and tell them to not let anyone bid on it


- if you have records that show you are doing it legally - you will have a better chance against other companies that try to get the domain

- Sites like company-nameSucks.com and protect yourself that way
- use it to voice your opinion (via a forum for example) and use free speach to protect yourself
- you will win and lose some cases

- parody/critism - another way to create the site

- international domain law
- if you are in the game, you take some risks
- not everyone knows all the trademarks

Newest trend - International Disputes
- has seen a rise the past 12 months


Sending a C&D gives the domainer time to react and a heads up that you are coming/aware.

Q: Dont hear question

A: Panel explains an example interesting case: Mergers. Two companies merge and the new name is unknown. Domainers go out and register different variations. The new merged company may or may not change the name to one of those domains.

The domains will get some traffic even if the new merged company doesnt change name to them. Merged company could come after the domainers - if they win or lose will depend on each case.

This has been happening more often as of late (this type of example)

Q: If you buy a domain and 5 months later someone creates a company and a trademark.

A: They cant get the domain from you, but depending on the trademark and what you are doing with it - they could come after you for trademark infringement


Q: Federal vs State trademarks?

A: Clark explains that even though he has a state trademark 4 years earlier, the federal could beat him. He considers the state trademark useless.


Q: Another question about state trademarks.

A: Google pays attention to state trademarks and you could take out your comp with them.Google does this on a global scale and is hard for them to second guessing/digging too deep into the trademarks and how trustworthy they are.

Q: What is the law about companyname-sucks.com

A: Right now it is legal in the US. The company can come after you and get it - but not always. If you are trying to make money on the page, the company has a better chance to get it from you as it just isnt a freedom of speech arguement.

Q: John Doe.com - asks if anyone has had this type of case.

A: Personal names can become trademarks. They can be a brand and can be more difficult. Last names for example. When operated as a business it can/will be treated as if it was any other business name.

Contributed by DaveR.

posted rustybrick in WebmasterWorld PubCon 2007 Las Vegas at December 5, 2007 4:29 PM Comments (1)

Link Buying

Link Buying
Location: Salon B

To buy or not to buy; that is the question in link building today.

Speakers:
Moderator: Detlev Johnson who fills in for Elisbath Osmeloski
Rand Fishkin, CEO, SEOMoz
Jim Boykin, CEO, Webuildpages
John Lessnau, Founder, LinkAdage
Aaron Wall, Author, SEO Book

I'm sitting in the front row and I came in early but Lisa decided to sit next to me and she's taller so my head is in the way of the projector. There's a picture of a finger and it's pointing at my head with the question, "Should You Buy Text Links?" Just great.

I saw Matt Cutts in the audience. He's not on the panel this time. I think he is afraid. Then again, Michael Gray isn't on the panel either. I guess he really has nothing to fear.

First up is John Lessnau. He's the owner of LinkAdage and LinkXL and always gets asked, "should I buy links? What links? Will I get banned?"

But he narrows it down: if you buy links, what kind of links should you buy?
It depends - how old is your site? If you have an older site that has a lot of links, you can slip in a few extra links.
How many links do you have now? If you have tons, it's easier to slip in a few paid links.
Are you happy with your traffic? Some people buy links even though they're ranked high for the big search term. Don't take that risk.
What is your risk tolerance? There's a big risk/reward deal with buying text links. There's one site out there that ranks #1 for a competitive key word and they're buying all kinds of Russian, Chinese, etc. backlinks. (Interesting. Why can't the search engines identify them? He adds that this strategy doesn't always work for all sites.)
Do you get natural links? If you're getting tons of natural links, don't buy links. As people to link to you and change the anchor text that works for you a little better. If they like your site enough, maybe they'll listen.
Is your site under the radar? Are you selling toenail clippers and want to rank on the front page? You might be able to buy 5 links and get in the front page. But on the other hand, if you're in the competitive areas like Rx, casinos, mortgages, it will take harder.

Why buy links?
- It's the only realistic way to get decent links
- Shortcut to better natural rankings: if you're willing to take the risk, there can be great rewards (see next point)
- Instant gratification
- Hopelessness
- Keep up with the competition
- PR envy

What kind of links should you buy?
- Well, don't go to pages that has unrelated links that has an "Add URL" link added.
- Don't go to PR8 sites with contextual links that have descriptions.
- Do go to links that fit among the content.
- Here's a site that screwed up: PR7 and sells links at $100/month. The next week, it had more links and was a PR5.

LinkXL - purchases links in the existing content of websites related to your site that don't openly buy or sell links. Buyers and sellers win.

Cutting Boards R Us: create a strategy for buying links. Come up with a bunch of keywords that you want to rank for and start searching various sites that contain these keywords. e.g. Clean cutting board, cutting board tips, using a cutting board, large cutting board - if a person buys links already in content, you can rank better.

Why links in content: they're naturally relevant, they're the type of real links that created the web, they help search engines understand what your site is about, you're not listed in a large clump of paid links in the footer or sidebar of a website, and as such, you can sleep better at night.

Minimize your risks, buy relevant texts in existent content, and you'll be much better off.

Next up is Aaron Wall. Rather than talking about more links, you need to look at the economics of publishing. These are alternatives to buying links.
- Syndicate content on other sites since it builds authority, sends traffic, and flows PageRank
- Barter (give stuff away, discount for certain sectors - big in education)
- Buy competing websites
- Social interaction - if you speak at conferences, it's self-preferential. He says that people talk about you. I'm talking about you now, Aaron. I know you're happy. His bloggers guide to SEO got 50,000 views in the first week (and it just came out about a week ago. It rocks, btw.)
- Public relations campaign (pump your publicity)

Encouraging organic links -
- Justin Timberlake - cumulative advantage: groups tended to follow a herd mentality and each herd group would vote differently. From one group to the next, it kept changing.
- If you have a regular editoral voice in your marketplace, it makes more people want to trust you and follow. If you convert a few people over, that is a lot better.
- Show social proof
- Beautiful site design actually works
- Signs of credibility - about us, etc.

Directories:
Business.com
Work.com - submit a leading guide. Instead of paying recurring, you get free exposure, multiple deep links, and exposure on Work.com too.

The directory purge of 2007: Google killed many directories.
Buy in if:
- PR is where you expect it
- Cache dates are recent
- Listing quality are decent
Aaron likes niche directories, JoeAnt, and BOTW
- other small ones too (but he won't name them because he doesn't want Matt to kill them)

AdWords Ads for Linkbait
- Create industry-leading content for authoritative easy-to-link-at topics
- Buy AdWords for a wide basket of related keywords.

If you want to get clean links:
- Go directly to Google. Blog about new Google products and wait for someone to blog about your blog post.
- Use Google Checkout - designer portfolio, etc.
- Sponsor events and advertise
- Contests and award programs - even if prizes are virtual and have more value, if the right people seed the idea, it can be highly acclaimed. An example is the Web2.0 awards from SEOmoz. It got a ton of great links.
- Donate or give stuff away (widgets are big)
- Affiliate programs - the more people who see you, the better you're going to do

Dirty links
- Make sure they're hidden in the content or organic looking lists without any disclosure
- Run really dirty stuff through your affiliate program

Jim Boykin is up next. He doesn't have a presentation (thankfully, I don't really want to type from slides anymore) :)
What's already been said? Just about everything. But he reiterates:
- Don't buy links unless you're the Yahoo directory.
- Don't buy reviews unless you're reviewing Google products.
- You can't really get links for free. You have to work for it.
- Stay under the radar. Don't piss off Google.

Finally, Rand Fishkin is up and discusses how to buy links and get away with it.
Imagine an ideal link graph of the web: everyone likes everyone else's stuff and links to them.
What happens when paid links are into the equation? Everyone will link to the person who has money because they'll get paid for it.

From an engineering perspective, paid links equals worse results. The engines who have the most success against manipulation will win market share.

Paid Links Search Engines Catch:
- Brokers who don't cover their tracks - If it sticks out like a sore thumb, you're in trouble.
- Brokers who display their inventory
- Links that appear on the web in an unnatural way. If there's a surge in links all of the sudden during a particular month, a search engine will investigate.

Paid Links Search Engines Haven't Yet Caught:
- Direct one-to-one purchases
- Very smart link brokers that you don't know about. The less you know, the smarter they are.
- Any part of business relationship where links are a secondary part of the services.

A chat with Google Engineers on Paid Links - how do search engines (Google and Microsoft) feel about paid links?
- Matt Cutts: the toolbar update was intended to reduce visible PR based on sites selling links. Google DID NOT visibly reduce PR of all sites that they caught and Matt didn't want to give a percentage. Going forward, Google is likely to continue this practice of visibly showing some portion of sites where it feels the owners have violated link selling protocol.
- Paid link reporting by Matt Cutts: do it because it's in your best interest to see your competition receive lower rankings; do it because you want the web to be a better place and to make the jobs of the search engines easier; the argument of "honor among thieves" is a fallacy - nobody should legitimately believe that paid links make the web a better place (from a SE perspective); send reports through your Webmaster Central account for faster response times.
- Potential penalties for link buyers and sellers: PR might be a penalty, but there's more - removing athe ability of links to pass value, but don't show anything visibly; remove the ability of the links tp pass value and downgrade the visible PR in the toolbar; remove the ability of the links to pass value AND penalize the rankings of the sites/pages being linked to AND/OR the site(s) selling links; remove the ability of the links to pass value AND remove the offending site(s) from the index.

Eydan Seidman from Microsoft also shared his wealth:
- The vast majority of paid links are not beneficial to the user experience. The most recent example was someone advertising mortgatges on the Wisconsin Dells website (which is a water park). The response from the site owner was "someone looking at the Wisconsin Dells page has very broad intent."

Philosophically: it's to try to devalue things that matter to our customer. Live does things manually and algorithmically.

Publicity: Microsoft doesn't speak often on paid links. They're keeping quiet. They are developing channels, however, to do so. (You should sign up to Microsoft's Webmaster Tools because it has extra competitive intelligence that helps.)

A solution to the issue of paid links:
- What is a way of doing paid links that the SEs are okay with? Editorial reviews (Yahoo directory - people review the site and if they like it, it will be included). If every site passes the review, then it's not quality.

A Marketplace for Site OWners who wnat to link and buyers who want reviews to connect - here's a process:
1. The buyer submits a page that needs to be reviewed
2. Interested parties take a look.
3. The reviewers write about the page - if it's good, use a nofollow. If it's great, take the nofollow off, and if you don't like the content, don't write about the site but we'll still pay you.

Search Industry Entrepreneurs, Start Your Engines!!!!!!!!

posted Tamar Weinberg in WebmasterWorld PubCon 2007 Las Vegas at December 4, 2007 8:20 PM Comments (6)

Content Creation - Cranking it Out

Content Creation - Cranking it Out
Location: Salon C

Constant content creation is the fuel for your website. Whether you live 'n die off search engine referrals or natural type-in traffic you understand the need for minty fresh content.

This panel of content gurus will look at how to keep the creativity flowing and managing the content process.

Speakers:
Robin Liss, Founder and President, Camcorderinfo.com
Ted Ulle, Partner, The MEWS Group
Rae Hoffman, Principal, Sugarrae Internet Consulting


First up is Ted, aka tedster on WebmasterWorld. He tackles the question: Does ALL your content fit?

The only way to achieve that is to make your workflow support your priorities. You're aiming for a simple and seamless experience for the end user. Simplicity is actually a discipline and it's not easy - "I would have written you a shorter letter but I didn't have the time."

Always keep your business purpose of your venture #1. How are you going to do that? He presents a workflow:
1. Web strategy first (SEO)
2. Immediately after that is content. You'll have rough ideas.
- Back end and metrics, information architecture
3. Content - full copy at least for the launch version.
- Only now do you go to the graphic design people - web edit in HTML. Some people put emphasis on graphic design way too early in the process. Don't do that.
4. Edit your content again in HTML. It's going to look different on a web page.
Through this whole process, we want to document every decision we make. That's a pain but you want to do that on a site of any size because it will come back and get you.

Menu and navigation: this is part of the architecture process.
- Menu labels ARE your content. They tell people what you are & what you can do.
- Single words or longer phrases. A website is not an application so consider longer phrases that are descriptive. If they are, you can tell a story and communicate what you have to offer.
- Another thing is that if you have too many choices, your visitors will not make a choice at all. Never more than 7 choices at one level of importance. He prefers 5 or 6. This is actually something Ted has tested heavily.

Final Web Edit:
- Content interacts with layout. Look at this.
- Consider CSS in typesetting for the web. You can kill good content with bad layout.
- You can boost weak content with good layout.
- Most people on the web have never learned about print typography, but you should. (Recommended: Robert Bringhurst Elements of Typographic Style.) Your web page is not a print page but it does have similarities.

Where do "Seams" come from?
We want a seamless experience. Seams = someone showing off. It works against your business purposes.
Some of these "showing off" culprits are:
- Graphic design and eye candy
- Fancy Programming Features (I think about Digg's shout feature here)
- IT people shouldn't write copy. Do the search results make sense? (Think about that. Do they make sense to the average user? Do your error message communicate clearly? Usually web editors are so enmeshed in their website that they are blind to these kinds of errors. What about auto-responders?) These are a big part of your user experience.

Code Geeks should not write copy.

Example: Yahoo Directory.
Last week, Ted went to the Yahoo directory to pay for the website to be reviewed. The first thing he did was that he filled out the interactive form. But he forgot to fill out a drop down box with regards to payment. Yahoo's error message was "Invalid Payment Instrument Data." In other words, "what are you telling me?"

Example: Six figure video investment
Their programmer wrote "Open Demo" for a video that should be watched. He's thinking like a geek, not like an average user.

Example: PHP/MYSQL menu
"Search produced no results" even if you clicked on a menu link.

Despite all your planning, know that your data queries can be slow, your copy breaks the template, your SEO mangles the message, the CMS mangles just about everything, and things WILL go wrong. This is the process.

When things go wrong, thou shall not Kludge: It's better to fix it late than never (better late than lousy!) Expect to make tradeoffs, and keep your priorities straight. How do you do that? Well, if you heard what he said in the beginning (and I blogged this!), you know that you've DOCUMENTED this.

That avoids building the Frankensite.

Robin Liss is next. I met her on the shuttle bus this morning. She's very nice! She reviews cool stuff (reviewed.com) and doesn't get to keep it. (So sad.)

Her presentation is entitled High Value Content Production Workflow Strategies - in other words, a guide to creating content for non-spammers.

Here's how we make our content: just like a car maker, you manufacture a product. What lessons can we learn from traditional manufacturing in the ways that cars are made?

Key lessons:
- You can't build a car without blueprints.
- Mr. Ford's assembly line rocks.
- Good tools save money
- Specialization = economic efficiency
- Bottlenecks must be destroyed
- Quality control everywhere
- Measure everything

Design your final product with care - audience, purpose, topic area (this is the critical one), article structure (standardized or open), what does the 1st draft producer need (products, tickets, facts), what supplemental content is necessary (videos, photos, links), how frequent, length, what voice, objectivity vs. subjectivity, deadline and delivery schedule. Answer these questions for individual content pieces, site sections, or entire sites.

Writing the article or filming the video is only the first step of content production. Make sure to budget time and money for the rest of the process.

Mr. Ford's assembly line rocks: more information -
For the Content Creation, we assign the article - then people get materials, then they create first draft, we create supplemental content, they get feedback, they create a second draft, and then there's a second edit, and then you're Producing the content - CMS load and HTMLize, copy edit, SEO edit, final edit, take live, marketing, revision and update.
This is a content pipeline. We want a constant flow.
Ask: who takes what responsibility? How much time does each step take? What steps do you need or not need dependent on content type? What can you outsource (copy-editing)? What about in-house? If you understand it for 1, it can scale to 2 or 20 people.

A modified pipeline: blog.
Assignment > Materials and information acquisition > 1st draft creation > take live > Marketing > Revise and Update. That's why blogs are such an efficient form of content. Blogs, however, are weak. Some pieces are longer form. There's no outside quality control. You can certainly add editing steps but many argue that this is what defines blogs (no outside editing).

So she shows a modified pipeline where there are 2 people involved: 1 person writes and 1 person edits. This has built-in quality control. Even the best writers have to have their work edited and it's best to have as much editing as possible. It may be necessary to go into more than 2 edits, especially with less experienced writers.
It may be efficient to add a 3rd person in the CMS load and HTMLizing. The point is specialization: focusing on the core tasks.

She has a digital camera site and 6-10 people are involved: editor in chief, managing editor, writer, product photographer, product tester, and copy editor. This is not a cheap model at all. You can use part-time contributors to save you money.
There are many quality controls in this process and it's highly efficient because it uses specialization. You can't have a writer test a camera when the writer is not familiar with the camera.
This group produces about 525,000 words a year - about 1 novel a month.

CMS tools:
- Look for WYSIWYG editors that work (FCK editors) to save production time and money
- Dreamweaver
- Plone
- MovableType
- Own your CMS
- Investing money in your CMS will reduce editorial costs long-term

Workflow Management Tools
- Google Calendar
- Lots of spreadsheets

Finding the right writer for the right task:
- Short form vs. long term. Bloggers may not be able to write technical articles.
- Journalist or Opinionated.
- Edgy vs. straight
- Switching tasks takes time. 15 minutes of productivity are lost when you switch tasks.
- When doing large products, different parts of the article might go to different people.

Production and editing specialization
- Find an online copy editor to pay per word
- Find a basic HTML guru
- Hire a part time or full time editor to improve your quality and manage workflow.

Look at your pipeline: analyze to reduce bottlenecks.
- Time in minutes, hours, or days that each step takes in the workflow process.
- Constantly track these times and look to improve them
- Create an "article flow" or "article patter" by reducing bottlenecks.
- Ways to create an event flow; add more staff to a bottlenecked area, outsource, have staff to do double duty, reduce staff time spent on over-producing areas, make sure that there are articles in every step of the pipeline (track it with Excel and Google Calendar), give deadlines not for just when the article is finished but for every part of the pipeline.

Quality Control:
- Our reviews are syndicated on WashingtonPost so we can't mess up.
- Error free content = credibility
- Watch out for grammatical, factual, and analytical errors
- In our pipeline, at least 6 quality control edits are made to an article. You might need more or less.
- More eyes = less errors: a great thing to do is to print things out.
- User comments can be a great way to find errors, but don't let out too many or you'll lose credibility.

Measure everything
- Process
- The time each step takes
- Word count
- When people hit deadlines or miss them
- Average number of articles produced by day, week, and month
- When content gets high traffic

Final tips:
When hiring contributors, make sure you own all rights to the content. Sign release forms that you own all rights, international or domestic.
Put plagiarism clauses in contracts.
Be specific as possible.
You get what you pay for. Cheap original content will cost money in the long term in editing and correction.
Try your best to be original in your content and produce when others aren't.
Blogs are a great way to toe into original content production.
Focus on quality!

[Rae looks a bit confused. She must be nervous that she's up next.]

Rae finally comes up since Robin spoke forever and I only blogged half of what she spoke about. No, I'm serious.

Okay, so Rae speaks a mile a minute. And I thought Robin was bad. I guess I'm totally wrong on that. At least Rae has accompanying slides.

We produce content and try to produce the best content. The goal is to be better than the competitors and have returning visitors. Content is the single most effecitve way to differentiate your site from the masses, develop traffic, and develop good inbound links that will propel your site to the top of the search engines and keep it there.

It can develop links, other traffic referrals and website citations, increase feed counts, mentions in traditional and social media, develop partnerships with affiliate and advertisers, and positions your site as an authority.

There are three ways to get content developed for your website:
- Freelancing (pros: cheapest, no commitment, use as needed; cons: trial and error for quality, availability issues, no commitment)
- Full-time remote writers (pros: no overhead costs, dedicated, more skills for less money; cons: distance management, training barriers, and just a paycheck)
- Full time in house (pros: easier to manage, easier to train, dedicated; cons: overhead costs, more expensive, must have long-term needs)

Rae continues apologizing for speaking so much. I don't forgive you, Rae. My fingers hurt.

Where do you find them:
Freelancers: elance.com, writerfind.com, gofreelance.com, guru.com, freelancerspace.com, seo-writer.com (it's not that spammy)
Full-time remotes: craigslist, jobs.problogger.net, SEOmoz, local papers, local job boards, tjobs.com
Fullt time inhouse: local papers, job boards, monster, craigslist, Careerbuilder, workopolis.com

Knowing what to look for in a content developer will depend on the type of content you plan to develop and what type of industry you work in. Keep in mind: good organization skills, able to work independently, able to follow instructions, able to think for themselves, good language skills, good writing skills, ability to hit deadlines, basic HTML skills, the right writing tone for your site, a good sense of humor (especially important for linkbait), expertise in the area you need a writer for or the ability to learn quickly, journalism specific skills, for video content: someone who is personable and not afraid to be on camera, and basic promotional skills.

Training content developers: having someone who can write awesome content is only a part of the equation. People need to know that your content exists to talk about it. Train your writers to promote their own work as much as possible.
- develop media lists for the topic area your writer is wroking on for them to be able to push their BEST pieces to
- encourage your writers to be active in the community by interacting on forums, blogs, etc.
- teach writers about social media and become involved in them. They need to know who they're writing for (not to lead the social media campaign).
- explain to your writers how they can take angles on pieces to receive traffic and citations from big sites that they may not normally appeal to with their straight niche writing.
- pitch to traditional news outlets to get exposure for your site with a byline that includes your site information in addition to citations in the form of links if they also publish online.
- train your writers to link out when it makes sense and follow up with notifications to companies who are linked to
- explain to your writers how to use Google news alerts to stay abreast of important happenings in the sector so that they can write about them and to alert other reporters about existing topics making news. (Rae mentions that she has an alert for "sugarrae" so she can monitor her brand. That's why I added this to this coverage post. I figure Rae should see the commentary we say about her. Hi Rae!)

[Lisa whispers in my ear, "I don't know anyone who speaks as fast as she does."]

posted Tamar Weinberg in WebmasterWorld PubCon 2007 Las Vegas at December 4, 2007 8:01 PM Comments (0)

Optimizing Your Site for Contextual Ads

Jaan Janes - SVP, Business Development, Pulse 360

Talks about Pulse 360 and what they do. Relvancy - Shows some good examples that his company does and some bad ones by Google.

Relevancy: Do your ads even matter? Alot of sites have unreasonable amount of ads and this hurts other sites. Sites have too many banners, buttons, widgets and so on - its just clutter

Sponsored Link Tips
1. Show the ads - usatoday, wallstreet journal, msnbc examples - clean design
2. Focus on the Audience first - Many advertisers will start blind and then learn to focus on certain audiences. Advertisers go on audience and general topics - they dont do 1:1, more Category level for a given topic.
3. Dont be afraid to try different colors - try colors and tinker with things. He encourages you to experiment
4. Try different placements and ad types - Move the placement around and see the shapes/sizes as well
5. Bottom of the page = bottom of the barrel. Please dont run sponsored linkes 4,567,890 pixels down the page!

Plugs a new Vertical Adnetwork.

Aaron Wall - Seo Book

Optimization vs Overkill
- Depending on format it can be useless to the user.
- build authority and monetize backfill content
- dont float ads left at top in content area
- site has to sel itself
- if too aggressive the ads cost you links
- perception of quality during se reviews
- navigation needs to be useful


Short Tail Sites
- few spots up in the organic rankings can make a diff in earnings
- infest in SEO
- make site easy to link to
- site design
- wait to monetize
- supporting featured content

Long Tail Sites

- Keep core pages clean
- blog readers dont click many ads
- use ad channels to determine where the $ is
- site structure
- link equity push at top earning sections
- less link equity at lower earning sections
- deep link internally on popular articles
- remove ads from exceptionally poor performers - when they rebound then put them back.

- if you do link bait - dont be afraid to add links to some of your better pages after the wave of traffic is over

On Page Optimization tools
- analytics are your firned
- ensure to mix up keyword usage
- longer pages match many keywords
- use a bariety of terms
- www.quintura.com
- goolge adwords has a tool that gives you what a page is relevant to
- tools.seobook.com/yahoo-keywords/


Advanced Tips
- Ad filtering
- members can turn ads off
- date based ad inclusion
- Link Building
- buy a few links pointing at the best earning pages
- syndicate contetn and deep link to best pages
- Own the best keywords
- create a second page to get a double listing
- create authoritative documents or
- spin out sites
- Create your own product

Plug for Seo Book


Matthew Daimler - founder/CEO of Seatguru.com

Airline seating

Shows 2001 Page with google Adsense on the page. Google adsense did 100-200 a day rather then the 100-200 a month that the old ads were doing.

Targeted:

"View Bids" tool to understand what the CPC buyers wanted and try to add content or keywords around those.

1. Networks use content of page to show ads
2. Only 1 Google Ad per page allowed, no wide skyscraper (yet)

Impressions over last 5 years

1 Wide Sky - shows some spikes

2004-2006 - a new design comes into play. New navigation and more content for the contextual advertising. The goal was to get the ads they wanted to show up on the site.

Goals:

1. Get keyword repetition
2. Google wide sky visible in 800x600 resolution
3. Google ad location right in the heart of website activity

Challenge: site was built around 1 Google ad per page. Design used all tables and thus had a poor keyword density.

1 Wide Sky, 1 Sky, 1 Half Banner - Sept 2004 - impressions goes WAY up. When they tripled the impressions the click-thru rate dropped by a lot. The eCPM dropped a lot as well. They saw a 80% drop.

Thoughts on Supply and Delivery

Shows list of 8 Advertisers and CPC.

Level 1 Publisher gets Level 1 Advertiser
Level 2 gets the middle and Level 3 gets the bottom

With more ad units it changed. The Levels each drop with Level 3 getting a lot of PSA's.

Diversification Required
- Added direct advertiser to replace some of the Google ad blocks. They went directly to the top advertisers and signed some of them up - and some even showed up twice (once in Google and once in Direct).

Adsense & Overall Daily Revenue
- Chart shows that less Google Ads and being more diverse shows site revenue up.

There is a downside - Adsense impressions and revenue dropped. They went too far one way and had too much direct advertising.

To fix this they did a redesign in 2006.

Goals:

Moved to CSS
New features, new menu, more content
Used more popular Google ad types (med rectangle)
Made sure at least 1 full ad was in 800x600
Made sure wide sky was seen in a 1024x768
Tried link units, integrated into Nav - had no success and never went back

Shows chart of Adsense Impressions
- Result was a spike of 5x of impressions.
- Click-thru rate did drop 20-30%
- eCPM dropped but not a lot


As a small publisher they didnt have time to test and further optimize. Only used Google for 5 years and never tried any other network. Didnt get to change shapes, colors, and other different types. Ad Products - didnt get to test different types of products either.

PubMatic - it brings different ad networks together and optimizes it for you

Q&A

Q:Is there a type of ad for a type of content? Affiliate deals or Adsense work better on certain types of sites?

Matthew - Talks about different types and how forums are hard to monetize. Look at the site and think like a user. If you were a user would this type of ad or an ad here annoy you?
Aaron - For informational sites he likes to have ads visible at the top of the site in navigation and at the end of content so that a user has something to do.

Q:When you started your direct ads, was there software you used?

Matthew - to validate data you can run surveys and such. The advertisers were using 3rd Party software and that was taken into account. Doubleclick "lost" 15-20% of traffic and was taken into account for pricing. Billing the client is a lot of work and hassle. They used a 2x multiple of the eCPM as a pricing model. With the loss of Doubleclick, getting the client to pay, and other hassles, its not as much as you would think.

Detlev jokes that he must of had a full time employee then. Matthew laughs.


Q: What does the panel think about MFA theory, and if going from 3 banners to 2 is good.

Matthew - saw difference when they ran 2 or 3 ads. Google still fills the ads in the order that they were processed. So if you have a bad location ad render first, the highest paying clicks are being lost. If you have a MFA that gets the traffic and gets the clicks - Google is going to want to be there and will serve the highest paying ads.


Q: Different niches get different click-thru? For a site with more new users get higher CTR then one with repeat visitors?

Aaron: Some of his sites show one thing and others show another. It just depends on the site
Matthew: One ad was up for 2 years and had the same CTR the entire time. He also thinks that sites with less web savvy users will get a higher CTR on ads.

Contributed by Dave R.

posted rustybrick in WebmasterWorld PubCon 2007 Las Vegas at December 4, 2007 7:43 PM Comments (1)

Link Baiting - 96 Different Strategies

Todd Malicoat - stuntdubl.com - Hook Combinations for Successful Linkbaiting

Shows a photo of B-Real of Cypress Hill (I am able to call it out before anyone - all those years of listening to Cypress Hill payoff)

95 Thesis - Cluetrain.com
Read it
Markets are conversations
it is social media b4 there was social media

some Linkbait will bomb (Todd is rolling and zipping through slides)

2 Step Process
1. Target distribution channel - get people's attention
2. Target (link markets) webmasters - keep their attention

Distribution Channels
blogs
email

Hooks
news hook
attack hook
resource hook
sex hook
picture/video hook
incentive hook
resource hook
contrary hook
humor hook
ego hook

How to combine these? - the 1 + 2 Punch


Example: Interview = Ego Hook + Resource Hook - an example by Graywolf

Example: Humor + Picture + Resource = icanhascheezburger.com and LOLcatz.com

Editoriasl = Attack or Contrary Hook + News Hook = Bill O'Reily and Stephan Colbert (real life)

Has a list of link types but my fingers cant keep up. Check out the presentation

Digg Tips
- know the audience
- submit crazy titles
- stretch relevancy - a new twist on an old topic is the only way to get an old topic some newy eyballs
- 8 diseases that give you super human power - great example of an extreme linkbait

How long would it take to beg for 1500+ links????
- shows yahoo results with a post Todd wrote that has 1500 links

In the end
- be real
- 2 step process
- know the hooks
- understand the audience


Andy Hagans - Domaindev.com - he is from Texas and proud

Link Bating to make Money

Rule #1
Know Thy Community
- lingo, attitude, etc. unique to each community
- Act as a normal user for a while before submitting content

How to Bait digg users
- Digg users are very sensitive to anything that even smells spammy or seo
- Most things he submits doesnt even have ads at all on it and things still get killed
How to bait Reddit Users
- Target: Politica junkies
- Topics: environment, conspiracy theories, etc.
- Tasers - seems to be a story everyday about Tasers

Delicious Users
- Target: librarians and info junkies
- Resource hook works wonders 101 xyz....
- The easiest to manually spam

Stumble Users
- target: im bored, waste my time
- make it pretty! Pics above the fold, formatting, etc - all above the fold.

Ummmm @##@# - battery is dead.


Contributed by Dave R.

posted rustybrick in WebmasterWorld PubCon 2007 Las Vegas at December 4, 2007 7:42 PM Comments (1)

Link Building Campaigns and Strategies

Chris - Moderator

Founder of DMOZ


Jim Boykin - We Build Pages

The presentation isnt flashy and until the other day there wasnt even a presentation *some chuckles*

The Questions:

What link building methods have changed?
- Link Trades - c'mon this is Pubcon
- Submitting to 100's of directories
- 3 way linking
- Buying PR8 and 9 - they are all block
- Link Brokers - Ill leave that to you
- Linking sites together - Google knows its all you
- Paid blog reviews - we all know how Matt feels about this

What always has worked:

Write the most amazing content, or have the most incredible pictures.... moved the screen.

Day 1

Directories - a few old good ones and industry related

Day 2

Talk on some blogs - maybe you will get some

Day 3

..was too fast...

Day 4-20

Write great linkbait articles, create free tools and widgets and more

short coming of LinkBait
- hard to get links to pages you are targeting
- hard to get links using phrases you're targeting

Day 21 - 31
Analyze your competitor's links using free tools, WBP's tools or by hand (yahoo)

Way to check

linkdomain: comp1.com
linkdomain: comp2.com
linkdomain: comp3.com
- linkdomain: yourdomain.com

Day 32 to 1000

Google/Yahoo searches to find related web pages

Contact the owner of the page and request a link via email/phone

If you contact them via email, prove you are human

Then tell them why they should link to your site and possibly rec'd how they should

What will be the value of a link be?
- How old is the site?
- How many and what kind of backlinks?
- How trusted is the site? How many .edu/.gov's does it have
- How interlinked to the main site is the page that the link is coming from?
- Do other sites link to the page you are getting a link on?
- Who else does that page link to?
- will the link be in the body
- will the link be part of content
- What do you have to do to get it? do you have to build content?

Who to link out to?
- .edu, .gov's and other sites that dont rank above you

Greg Hartnett - CEO - Best of the Web

Link Building via Directories

Q: Isnt a directory just a paid link?
A: No way

- Pay for placement
- Successful transcation results in a link
- Directory Submission
- Successful transcation results in a review

Q: How can I tell a good from a bad directory?
A: Common sense
- Good
- have a history
- contain great resources
- have populated categories
- are designed for the user
- add lots of sites on their own - not paid submits
- Is it a lobor of love? Does it feel good to you?

Q: What kind of traffic can I expect?
A: Have you heard of the Digg effect?
- minimal volume
- targeted
- converting

Q: Can I list my site multiple times?
A: Yes
- One site one listing in some cases
- some allow deep links - if it makes sense then why not?
- Relevant content for the category
- CNN is listed 745 times in DMOZ

Q: Is the Yahoo Directory worth it?
A: yes
- Even at the price

Q: Is the ODP corrupt?
A: No
- not as a company
- the few dont represent the overall value of the project (bribes, anti-competitive, and so on)
Q: Which directories are considered most trustworth?
A: Yahoo, DMOZ, BOTW, Business.com


Q: How can I get into DMOZ?
A: prayer?
- read the guidelines
- find the most relevant category
- properly title and describe your listing (should be title of your site)
- submit and move on or...
- become an editor

Q: How can I ensure my site gest listed if I go and pay for one of these review fees?
A: You cant


Q: Where can I submit my Blog?
A: Yahoo and Dmoz, BOTW has blog directory, Search Engine Journal "20 places to submt your blog", Top Rank Blog "Top places to submit your RSS"

Rae Hoffman - Sugarrae

Delegating Link Development

I talk fast, it has alot of wording - it will be available on the site and then appologizes *Thanks Rae*
Outsourcing Link development takes on many forms
- has a long list

The problem with outsourcing is that a good firm can do good but a bad firm can do ALOT of bad. If you dont know anyone, take a look at the conference list of vendors and see who keeps showing up as they must be making people happy and money.

Check a outsourcing company's own links - Are they marketing theirselves or just all talk?

You are who you hire.


A list of potential questions: *she goes over it quickly*


Rae is not a fan of outsourcing - and prefers to hire inhouse.

Providing that you hire the right people and monitor their progress.

A list of potential questions for finding a future link developer *again, goes over quickly*

You will need to create training documents if you bring them in house. Another list that she goes over quickly *Rae talks faster then I can type*

The best thing you can do is train them to be marketers, think for themselves and get traffic and links and not just send emails.

Factors for going inhouse or outsourcing - another quick list


Rodger Montii - martinibuster

Likes Rae's thoughts on Outsourcing.

When having a team he has them bcc him on each email they send out. A team in India and the team in the US both do this.

Isnt a fan of giving control to a group you dont know that well.

Advertising/Link Buys
- banners as long as its a link

Newsletters
- some get emailed and many are archived and live on the site. You pay for the email but keep the link

Paid Links - a huge fan. How else are you going to get the anchor text you need. When you just ask your success rate goes down. Blogs - go to a directory of blogs and start there. Look for a blog with a Google adsense unit about 1/2 way down the site - it shows they want to monitize the site. Contact them and see if they are open to advertising. You can get run of site links pretty cheaply.


What you should look for when buying a link:
- relevance
- no mention of Pagerank - site could be above the radar
- No ads for non-relevant sites
- year long purchase. 200$ looks better then saying $15 a month


Search Queries
"advertise with us keyword -cpm
Search: "rate card" -cpm advertisint"
allintitle:"sponsors" -cpm site:.org keyword (this is done on Yahoo.com)


Buy websites
- inactive sites
- search "temporarily down for maintenance"
- Search allintitle: "site is offline"
- under-performing websites
- You can do a copyright 2004 or something similar to find sites that havent been updated

Things to look for:
- archived links
- ideal if dedicated to a niche
- search: "site of the monht" + keyword
- Site of the day and week, too


Sponsorships
- industry associations
- charity groups
- concentrate on .org
- search: keyword sponsors site:.org
- research competitor backlins in yahoo: linkdomain:example.com site:.org
- .edu job fairs


YouTube
- Videos can have links
- if it gains popularity it can get some traffic and pass it along to you
- Put URL first to help get click throughs

Software
- b2bsoftware section on BOTW


Charity Site Design
- from time to time he does it. They are however quite demanding. Might be some work but you can get some links.

Some moderator lead questions that gets Rae going and Greg talking. Both jump around and talk to fast - you have to be here :)

Conversation moves to what is changed from 1999-2002 and now? Greg talks about links exchanges and having your sites all link to eachother and makes reference to Jim's slides and presentation.

Martinibuster says that buying trust is part of it now.

Contributed by Dave R.

posted rustybrick in WebmasterWorld PubCon 2007 Las Vegas at December 4, 2007 7:41 PM Comments (1)

Social Marketing 101

Social Media is hot in 2007 and should continue in 08.

Rand is up first.


Social Media Marketing Essentials - he has 2 presentations.

socail Media 101 (pure basics) - 60 websites worth watching (more advanced)


Rand takes a vote - small group pics 101, 98% pick advanced.

60 websites worth watching (other one will be available on the site) in order of importance.

flickr.com - live link on photos
deviantart.com - comments, live links
care2.com - group billboards
dfinitive.com - social bookmarking site
adultswim.com - message board
fanpop.com - profiles have links
sphinn - live links
tweako - socail bookmarking
mixx.com - fantastic site
bloggoggle - not a bad site even if you havent heard of it
couchsurfing - profiles have links
comagz.com - has some spam (reads off some of the live links) only one of the group like this (as of now)
ballhype.com - sports based digg like
qoolsqool - andy hagans (thanks) as some were taken from andy's presentation
buzzflash.net
chipin.com
scoreguru.com - like ball hype
blogs4god.com - religious
dnhour.com - profile link
hugg.com - green community
sk-rt.com - profile links
memeorlame.com - getting more popular
showhype.com - pop celebrity
photographyvoter.com - photos
pixelgroovy.com
plugim.com - pretty popular
smallbusinessbrief.com -
babblz.com -
videosift.com
23hq.com

20 domains with strong profile rankings
digg.com -
stumbleupon.com
myspace.com - bands and groups do well
wikipedia.org - profile pages if you do alot of edits on the wiki
mybloglog.com - very strong as of late
technorati.com - tag pages do well
slideshare.net - rising star
youtube.com - channel and profiles
amazon.com - rate things and your profile could do well
deviantart.com
linkedin.com
bookclubs.barnesandnoble.com - very strong
del.icio.us
epinions.com
yelp.com
last.fm
imdb.com -
blogger.com
tribe.net
stylehive.com


12 Sites (that you're probably not using yet)

Fark.com
slashdot.com
picks.yahoo.com - site of the day
hacker news - news.ycombinator.com - everyone should be reading it. Its for web folks and should be read
adobe showcase
askmen.com site of the day
cssbeauty.com and cssvault.com
newsvine.com - good source
meneame.net - spanish language and lots of traffic
boingboing.net
techmeme.com - great traffic if you can get on it

shameless plug - they sell things at seomoz

Graywolf - How to go beyond the single Digg, Delicious, and Reddit

Think long term - dont go for the single event.

Target your story to each niche - target sites.

digg : how to paint the digg logo on your wall
propeller: what does the color of your walls say about your personality
lifehacker: how to paint your living room in a weekend
hugg: how to pick environmental paint


Use calendar and current events
Tax time
spring time
back to school
Fall: save money on heating bill
Winter: last minute tax saving

*shows slide of 120k visits to a brand new site in the last 2 months*

*shows blog subscribers over a long term - it trends upwards*

Its about building an audience that doesnt rely on the engines

Steady link growth - read the google patent.

Links to deep portions of the site, you can get different stories linked

increased brand awareness (takes 7-8 times b4 they will remember it)

Building an audience that knows how to use social media - they in the end will do the work for you

Join the community for the long haul - be involved

Link to other blogs - dont be shy to let them know you are sending them traffic.

10 Tips
- eye catching titles
- above the fold, images
- short easy to read, easy to scan content
- dont make the page deadends
- dont be a grinch - share the links
- be topical and watch trends
- solve someone's problem
- use buttons and widgets to encourage voting
- minimize advertising and go for the links
- everyone loves top 10 lists - break some rules and make yours go to 11


Neil Patel - Dark side of social Media

1. Paying for votes - whenever he has used the pay sites, they have worked
2. social media rings - email lists and have friends vote
- bigger the ring the better
- join multiple rings
- dont vote right away
- donte vote on everything
- dont abuse the ring
- use hxxp instead of http - helps block the referral
3. social media apps
- add friends
- vote on stories
- have a developer build you an app
4. Forced Actions
- use iframes to vote/add a friend/subscribe to something
5. the dark side
- you will think of the best stuff. think within your head. think shady and it will come out sooner or later (gets a lot of laughs)

6. Light reading
- 10e20.com
- brentcsutoras.com
- seomoz.org/blog
has some more but takes it down too quickly


Cameron Olthuis


Common forms of linkbait

Remakable content of feature on your website that compes other peaople to link to it from other websites

Informational
controversial - Jason Calicanis
humor
news - be the first to break a story
tools - calculators, widgets

Benefits of Linkbait

links
link profile
traffic
branding
bookmarks
media publicity

Case Study

Sobercircle.com

First thing to do: research. Look through social media sites and see what others have liked. You can use Digg and Del.icio.us to see what each audience will like.

Del.icio.us gives you other related tags and can help expand your idea. You will also see what has been popluar.

Brainstorm - Try and get as many ideas as you can. The more the better - you will whittle it down over time.


Create the content

- Keep it simple. Most of the people are channel surfing.
- format lists, make it scanable, use images and vidoes.
- *shows example* Used a little known drug and talked about it. Slide shows 1001 Diggs and a video, image, and a fair amount of content.

After content, you need to seed. Submit the site and pick the topics and tags.

- Use a Power Account
- Good titles & descriptions - a good/bad title can make or break you
- proper category & tags - dont go with what is popluar, go with where it belongs
- targeted sites


Results:
1000 diggs
150 comments
800 links
Wikipedia link
read/write web found the page and gave it exposure

Takeaways
- Research your audience
- Content should appeal
- Power account
- TEst test test
- Write good titles and descriptions
- Keep your server up!!!!!


Q & A

How much traffic can you expect? What type of servers?

Cam: 5-25k vistors from reddit. Digg can do 100k+.
Gray: Call your hosting provider before hand
Rand: for images use flickr and other sources. If your page uses a DB, make the page static and it will help you. The Database could really hurt you so just make it static.
Neil: CPU somewhat matters, its the memory. Have 4GB of memory and use Memcache.


What amount of time from when we contact you to the spike.
Cam: 30 days. It takes research and time.
Rand: Its usually the client holding things up. Estimates it at 30 as well.


One question leads into alot of talking and jumping around.

How effective are these strategies BtoB? (Credit Card Processing specific)

Gray: pull it back a bit for the consumer level. Suggests making a video of trying to use a fake credit card and show what happens

Rand: Gives idea for reddit and digg about Credit Card Processing. Suggests that you leverage your data stream for content.

How do you get access to power users?

Rand: the power users are for sale. Find the users and freind them.
Gray: Vote on their stories early so they see you. Really pay attention to stories they are interested in.

What is your estimation of conversion rates compared to PPC/Organic traffic? Or how does it compare on a ROI metric?

Gray: Social media for sales is different then going for links. Most people arent going to Digg and thinking "what can I buy today"
Cam: Most ROI is from links, you usually have super low conversion rates for sales. It has to be very targeted. If looking for sales, look outside the social media sites. Suggests looking at the Blender company who does the viral videos of them blending products
Rand: Your conversion is how many recall my brand, how many sign up for RSS, how many become repeat visitors, how many link? The first goal isnt to monitize, it is links.
Neil: first figure out what your overall goal.

What are some other measures of success?

Rand: Hard core tracking. Track your brand name in the results. Blog Search in Google reports accurate links, or use Yahoo Link. Watch your referring stats, where did it come from? watch your repeat visitors.

Neil: Track your PR. Watch magazines, web sites, and other press contacts. Rand suggests using Google/Yahoo news to see how often your brand was mentioned.

How many man hours goes into an idea?

Neil: as little as possible (gets laughs) The hardest part is the idea
Rand: As little as a day, as long as 60 days (it took Jane 60 days to put together the Web 2.0 awards and get the votes)
Gray: 2 Sides: Maintaining the Power Account and then creating the content/idea.
Cam: No cookie cutter approach.

Contributed by Dave R.

posted rustybrick in WebmasterWorld PubCon 2007 Las Vegas at December 4, 2007 7:39 PM Comments (0)

Reputation Monitoring and Management

Instead of covering Keyword Optimization, I decided to cover Reputation Monitoring and Mangaement, which follows.

Reputation Monitoring and Management
Location: Salon A

If you are not talking with your customer base your customer base will be talking about you. This session will look at ways to monitor, manage, and influence your reputation within the blogosphere and press.

Moderator: Todd Friesen
Speakers:
Geoff Livingston, CEO, Author of "Now is Gone", Livingston Communications
Cameron Olthuis, CEO, Factive Media
Andy Beal, Internet Marketing Consultant, Marketing Pilgrim LLC
Ted Murphy, Founder / CEO, IZEA

Todd announces the session. He says that this session overlaps with lunch and people are still trickling in. Ted Murphy isn't even here yet.

Cameron Olthuis is first. He talks about reputation management and why you should do it: stop the negative, spread the good, and improve your products and services. Give people tools to run with the buzz and keep it going. Pay attention to the constructive criticism and feedback and use that to better your product.

Monitor:
- brand names
- product names
- URLs
- Competitors - ex. Goodyear tires on how they treated the union. Other tire companies came out with rebuttals saying "we don't do that kind of stuff."
- Forward facing figures - ex. Chris Winfield (who is sitting next to me) was interviewed in Search Marketing Magazine and attended an interview of a key Goldman Sachs person. Chris Googled the guy's name and all the results on the top #10 were pretty negative.
- Industry - major breakthroughs, opportunities to take advantage of

Where should you monitor?
- Search engines (Google, etc.) - if people are going to see negative things about you and not about your competitors, chances are they are not going to go with you.
- Google news
- Blogs - catch things as they happen
- Social media sites

Your Google Top #10 -
Comcast has a negative YouTube video of them in the top #10 about the Comcast technician who was on hold with Comcast and ended up waiting so long that he fell asleep on the customer's couch. Maybe you should think twice about that since that's an obviously negative customer service review.

What can you do:
- rank positive results from trusted domains
- try to resolve issues. Reach out to bloggers and ask them to correct the post.
- be honest and genuine. If treat them negatively, you will be called out.
- be proactive. Catch things as they happen instantly. If Comcast could've caught that video immediately and worked with the customer, it wouldn't be ranked so well with over 1 million views.

Social Media Profiles
- MySpace
- YouTube - Google Universal search now puts these in the SERPs. Throw links at good videos to keep bad links out.
- Flickr - has a lot of authority.
- Delicious
- Digg

Takeaways
- monitor the right things
- watch what people are saying
- monitor the right places
- putting out the fires early
- help spread the positive
- take control of the Google top 10
- social media profiles have huge authority

Next up is Andy Beal who has written a wonderful book that will be coming out soon on Reputation Management. You should buy it. I think I will. The book is called Radically Transparent: Monitoring and Managing Reputations Online (out February 08).

He's going to give you some practical tools for monitoring your business (that are mostly free!)

For the record, Andy is from England and now lives in North Carolina and his accent is somewhere over the mid-Atlantic trying to find out what direction to go.

What should you track? Products, company, competitors, recalls, scandals, industry, keywords, patents, executives, etc.

Industry tracking:
- moreover.com/categories/category_list_rss.html - say you really want to keep track of what's going on in your industry. Moreover allows you to follow everything in the industry such as trends and developments.
- mainstream news (news.google.com)
- news buzz (Digg). labs.digg.com/diggspy
- blog posts (Technorati). If you cover Google News and Technorati, you get about 90% of what's out there.
- blog posts (blogsearch.google.com)
- blog comments (co.mments.com)
- blog conversations (blogpulse.com/conversation)
- blog trends (blogpulse.com/trends)
- bookmarks (del.icio.us/popular)
- photos (Flickr)
- videos (video.google.com)
- tags (keotag.com)
- forum posts (boardtracker.com)
- changing information (wikipedia, profile pages)
- customer reviews (epinions.com)
- new product opportunities (amazon.com/tag/iphone)
- search queries (google.com/trends)
- email updates (google.com/alerts)
- the untrackable (copernic.com - $50 for a onetime fee and you can track any changes to a page)

Next up is Geoff Livingston who wrote a book called Now is Gone.

He polls the audience and asks how many people work for small companies and large companies. There's a mix of both in the audience.

Message Control is Gone: the reality is that social media has destroyed the ability for organizations to control messages. Price recently had a big whoop where he tried to change the message (tinyurl.com/2g4dwz). He's trying to shut down sites that are not promoting him well. Instead, it united fan sites against his message. Old companies are finding themselves at a loss about how to handle themselves in these situations. People really need to show who they are and what they're about. Negative comments are going to happen particularly if you're in a consumer business. Old techniques are losing strength. Searches yield all results. This is a new era of WOMM. Dell knows that they have 23% negative comments and now they're happy about it.

Remember this? George Allen introduces Macaca - he wanted to be president in 2009. As a result of his comments, this country's entire political balance shifted from a republican controlled congress to a democratic controlled congress.

Marketing is about participation. Word of mouth marketing is not about SEO. SEO is great and it's the new advertising. The reality is that if you don't have substance to back up your ads, people are going to run away. Media outlets, speaking organizations, blogs are subject to the community. You need to be a part of the community, not just an entity talking to the community.

The Buzz Bin is the name of Geoff's blog, but it's also the name of an Viacom product. Geoff is ranked above Viacom's spots (and even Wikipedia). For marketing, you need to know SEO and social media. Nothing is going away. There's always going to be a NYTimes.

Monitoring: monitor your activities and a few tools are emerging: Radian6, BuzzLogic, cymfony, etc. Google Alerts and Technorati are good.

Responding to Criticism:
- Online communications requires a 24/7 crisis PR approach. Reputation management is very similar to crisis communication. You have to be reactive, factual, and transparent. Most importantly, give up control of the message but know you can respond. Dell has really addressed concerns but still gets egg in their face. Even lately, Apple has been in the hotseat for reputation management - because Steve doesn't talk, says Geoff.
Popcorn's diacetyl crisis: tinyurl.com/yp8gj6
Dell Hell: tinyurl.com/2vxd7s

How do you do this? Comment.
Remember, companies are led by people and people make mistakes. Acknowledge your wrongs and the steps taken to correct the problem. People who admit their wrongs fare much better (in terms of following) than those who don't.
Publish a co-joining statement. Do it on your website if you don't have a blog. For example, Steve Jobs did that with the $200 discount on iPhones. Make sure your side of the story is clearly communicated.
Don't apologize and then repeat the errors. Nobody likes Facebook because they're doing the same thing and screwing people over.
If someone is complaining and you can't do anything about it, acknowledge what they said and make them feel like you heard them (empathy!). If they know that you cared enough, you'll feel better. (I feel like Digg should take note of my rants on my very nice and beautiful mostly Digg-themed blog.)
Little guys matter.
Consider the source: trolls will be trolls. Some things just don't require commenting.

posted Tamar Weinberg in WebmasterWorld PubCon 2007 Las Vegas at December 4, 2007 5:28 PM Comments (3)

Monetizing Social Media Traffic

I have very sporadic Internet. I am sorry this is late. I'll do the best I can. :)

Monetizing Social Media Traffic
Location: Salon A

Social media traffic is decidedly different from search traffic, newsletter traffic, or general link traffic. Knowing how to capitalize on this potentially huge traffic influx is critical for social media players. This session will look at ways that social media outlets can be monetized.


Moderator: Rand Fishkin
Speakers:
Vanessa Fox, Features Editor, Search Engine Land, Entrepreneur in Residence, Ignition Partners,
Michael Gray, President, Atlas Web Service
Alexander Barbara, CEO, ReidBrown Enterprises, Inc.
Laura Fitton, Principal, Pistachio Consulting

Rand introduces the session and says that it is necessary at times to monetize our social media efforts.

Up first is Vanessa Fox who owes me an email address. I will never let you live it down, Vanessa.

Generally speaking, page views don't mean that much unless you're setting up a CPM ad model. In Social Media, you worry a lot about pageviews but many people leave. Don't lose sight of the other things that you can be doing.

She shows her analytics (September 6, 2007) where she sees a surge in traffic. But these people all abandoned the site. September 6, 2007 was the day that Vanessa Hudgens had nude results on the internet. Vanessa Fox ranked #1 for "vanessa nude" and people didn't visit the site to see poor ol' Vanessa fox. On that day, visitors spent 2 seconds on the site, and the abandon rate was 96%. (She said she should have monetized it somehow but now regrets that she hasn't.)

If you have viral piece of material, you need to have backup material that keeps people there. Make sure that the viral piee of content is interesting to the types of users that you're trying to attract to the users to the site. You want people who are going to stay, go to other pages of your site, and convert. Make it really easy for the visitors to see what you have to offer: turn your visitors into customers.

Think about what your goals are: social media visitors don't convert as highly as search visitors. Search visitors are actively seeking out that content.
Example: Flixter - when you register, you see quiz material, a brief FAQ, and some viral information (reviews, most wanted info, etc.)

Provide ways to navigate the site. Zillow had a CPM network. They had a piece of "Famous Unique Homes" - the navigation bar, however, didn't have much information. Use that space to keep people hooked in.

Michael Gray is up next.

Social media for sales and conversion: understand the space. It's an advanced tactic. Sales should only be part of the vision, not the entire vision.

What types of products work?
- Products (physical and virtual)
- Consumer goods (almost always better than B2B)
- Impulse purchases
- Low or "door buster" prices. People are always sensitive to prices. Technology related items generally do better.

Example: thisnext -
They had a gift guide for a spa. If you click on items, you could get more information and they had affiliate links to make sales.

Example: techiediva -
What people were buying as gifts for the holidays.
You can see how to get a particular look for less with a direct link.

Pitfalls: watch out!
- Be clear about your offer, especially restrictions and quantities.
- Anticipate the demand and have the right number of stock.
- The worst thing you can do is fail to deliver your product. Microsoft had a free USB key last year and hundreds of thousands of people signed up - many were pissed when they didn't get it.
- Monitor what people are saying about you and do damage control.

Manage expectations for long terms of success:
- Decide if a hybrid or dedicated delivery channel is optimal. Decide what is right for your audience.
- Let people get the content every way they want: email, RSS, SMS, whatever.
- Use trends and current events in terms of offerings.

Alternative Content: Video
- Will it blend? iPhone
- eBook - a guy used a sexy woman and sold many books
- Diet.com - 15-minute boot camp workout: if you can see people losing the weight, you'd be more compelled to buy.

Alternative content: podcasts
- Drop links in your podcasts.
- Ricky's Picks (Disney podcast)

Alternative content: Twitter
- CarnivalCruise
- JetBlue
- SouthwestAir

Next up is Alexander Barbara. He marketed a site and put it on Digg. It's not a typical type of site that goes on Digg. It's a health and wellness blog written by a female blogger and doesn't always fare well on Digg.

Some stats:
- Submitted one at Wednesday at 3PM - Took 38 Diggs to hit the homepage - 7:30PM - 825 - 13,876 visits on Day #1, 28,661 in 5 days
- Submitted one at Monday at 11AM - took 57 Diggs to hit the homepage - 6:30PM - 750 - 12,316 on Day #1, 19,461 in 5 days

Can your site handle the traffic? If you have a new site, you get a few dozen sites a day. You have to realize that you're getting a few dozen hits per second with the Digg effect. Be careful as some webhosts may interpret this as a DDOS attack and shut your site down.

If you don't know if your site can handle it, redirect some traffic to a few other sources. Use mod_rewrite or a temporary 302 redirect to a static page. You can also use the Google Cache (make the site live a week before and then use a 302 redirect) or Coral Cache.

What about the quality of the traffic? He shows a CTR of the number of ads - it was 14x higher on day 5 than day 1. It proves that Digg users are banner blind (yes, we are). Pull the ads off of your page when you submit to Digg and restore them a few days later.

The RSS subscriber numbers also went up pretty well. People subscribe during the Digg effect but then they unsubscribe. It's a unique behavior that's typical of Digg folk and we've seen this on many blog examples.

Monetizing the traffic:
- Monetize directly: targeted offers, AdSense, CPM based model
- Monetize indirectly: subscribers, links, branding

What we learned:
- Understand your audience: target your content that appeals to your site visitors and the Digg audience. That's why lists work rather well.
- Choose wisely. How do you want to monetize that traffic?
- Be prepared for the traffic.

Last up is Laura Fitton who I met via Twitter. She's a Pistachio.

Basically, she gives her history. Before she was Pistachio, she was a homebound mother of two kids under the age of 2. In March, she started blogging and connected via social networks and it helped her becasue now people are coming to her for consulting gigs.

This is how she built her brand and her company by using social media.

- Ads are ailing. A lot of people make money by helping people sell. But now it's better to make more money to help people buy.
- What you hear is a lot more important. Markets are conversations. Conversations suck if you don't listen. But what if they're out there saying that "my company sucks!"? If they're saying something like "Dell sucks," then Dell needs to know and Dell needs to fix it. Set up Google Alerts to learn what people are saying and engage them.

What is social media and how can it turn into value? We know it drives traffic. Some people might be around to see, but if you get engaged on a social network, you bring a lot more people who are interested in buying. She has a Twitter account with 800 followers over 2 months. (Meanwhile, I have had my account since December '06 and I have a little over 300 followers.)

SOcial media makes money? What I see is that social media builds value. You want to build lasting value. SOcial media builds business. What value does your business bring to the world and how can you enhance it in social media? Even if you're on a CPM model, you want people to be engaged and tell you what they want: that will make you serve them better. You're not trying to trick them or sell them.

"You've already won me over." ~ Alanis Morrissette

If you get a quick surge and it pays quick bucks, it's great, but then it's over. But you need to teach a man to fish and build something of lasting value.

Social media is all about knowledge. How do you know what you know? What are your sources? Are they credible? Knowledge is socially mediated. Markets are socially mediated.

Tricks, tips, and shortcuts? No, there are none. Here's why: gaming won't pay. In social media, your customers write the rules. You can win the battle and lose the war.

Facebook Beacon: the poster child of social media completely screwed people over. The Beacon is a warning. They had a system that told your friends what you just bought. They alienated privacy groups and pissed off mainstream media, bloggers, pundits, Charlene Li from Forrester (when her coffee table showed up on Facebook), and their channel partners. It's really important that you should be careful that you're not violating your own Terms of Service. (Overstock, for example, had violated their terms by showing these bought items on Facebook, and now they're going to get sued.)

How do you do it right? Focus on what really matters and what really lasts. Focus on listening. Figure out ways to make yourself useful. Help others. It has worked for Laura (and has worked for Dell, too; Forrester has the data, she says).

Obviously, you want to connect because your conversions will go through the roof.

Why didn't Perl die? When people wake up every morning and they love something and they love each other in the context of something, they're going to keep building it. The passion of one man for the project will not go away. Digg traffic might go away, but building actual communities and relationships around what your value is is going to last.

Seize control. If you're worried that your CEO shouldn't blog, bear in mind that other people already think you suck - rectify that perception. Get out there, try, fail, fix it, try again. Walmart did the same thing with their American Camping blog - they admitted that they messed up and blogged instead. Go out there, don't be afraid to fail.

Resources;
- Cluetrain manifesto
- Naked conversations
- Tipping point and Made to Stick
- Marketing to the social Web
- Geoff Livingston's book, Now is Gone
- Another book (I'll try to list it later).

posted Tamar Weinberg in WebmasterWorld PubCon 2007 Las Vegas at December 4, 2007 5:26 PM Comments (2)

PPC 101 – Beginner to Intermediate Level

Moderator: Christine Churchill. Will talk about copywriting secrets.

Better qualified traffic if better ads.
Things to remember is competitors have same problem, 25 words or less. Harder to be concise when you have less room. Takes creativity and thought to make good ads. Find a way to differentiate b/w your ad and all the others.

Optimizing you PPC campaign:

- Writing a good ad: think about the purpose, what is the ad supposed to be doing. Grab the visitor attention, make it stand out, if you look at your ads, if everyone is using DKI, don’t do it if you want your ad to look different! Think of the ad title as the ad to the ad to grab attention, get keywords in there to make it an attention grabber.
- Differentiate your ad. What differentiates your company from all the other companies? Why should I pick your company? Questions to ask yourself before writing the ads, why are you different. If you can put that down everything else will be easier. Put that on your ad and landing pages.
- Provide an incentive to click: capture their attention: special pricing, limited time offer, up to 50% off etc. work into your ad.
- Create a sense of urgency: if ppl think they can only get something for a limited time, they will buy right now: today only!

- Use keywords in your title! If showing up in title, tends to get higher conversion rates, higher CTRs, makes ads more visible b/c gets bolding effect, draws the eye.
- Talk about benefits of product: look at features. Turn into benefit, i.e save time! Get into users mind, if you can save them time and money will be more inclined to click on your ad.
- Call to action: sounds so fundamental, but a lot of ads don’t have them. It will help quite a bit.

- Brand names: instill a sense of confidence in the searcher. Increases CTRs for well-known brands.
- Avoid being self-centered in ad. Remember the what’s in it for me principal, why the user should by from me.
- Pre-qualify visitors. Putting a price in your ad can pre-qualify, will screen out ppl who wont pay that price, i.e. luxury vs. cheap hotels. Way to discriminate ad. The one down side is reducing CTR because might be scaring away ppl who might otherwise click on your ad. It does scare away the freebie hunters.
- Be seasonal: conveys freshness, being up to date, festive messages.
- Use psychology: ad humor, works well. Attracts attention. Test it out. If all advertisers are doing, may not want to.
- AB Testing. Small subtle differences can make huge performance differences so worth testing out different ad copy, landing page combinations. Play with display URLs, normally shorter are better b/c more memorable, stick in some keywords, great branding opportunity. Tends to work better in our testing. Shorter, concise seems to be the best.

Credibility factors: normally engines don’t like superlatives but if you won an award for BEST or NUMBER 1, can use it in the ad. Exception to the rule. Must substantiate on landing page. They could turn an ad off then you have to call Google etc. and explain we really are number 1, and then they will turn it back on.
DKI – all the ads are looking alike. Look at what the landscape is for your ad, if all looking identical do something to make your ad more unique.
Avoid Hype – read ads out loud to see how they sound, gives an extra edge on if its good or not. Good copy can improve ad performance. Different techniques work in different niches, work better in some industries than others. Test everything. If you only a little time, spend it on the title.

Mona Elesseily is next speaker:

Page Zero Media, director of marketing strategy.

Written couple books on yahoo, have obsession with yahoo, but also love other search engines. In my opinion key to successful campaigns is understanding the difference b/w the search engines. Hopefully with an understanding of the diff features you will be able to capitalize.

Will be going over ad copy, match typing, effective ad distributions – works when it comes to Yahoo, trademarking, case studies.

Lets start with ad copy.
One of the most imp ways to make an impact with PPC and get rankings in the search results is ad copy. Diff b/w engines to uncover opportunities:
Yahoo – there are 40 characters as opposed to 25 in Google, so make use of extra 15 characters. Use extra characters in the headline to include a feature or benefit of other product or to include a company name. The company name makes the most sense if you have brand recognition. With Capital One, we included the name in the headline.
The second difference is the description in yahoo is not divided into two 35 character lines, its all together so advertisers can avoid some of the choppiness or abruptness. The engines skew slightly different so it’s important to tailor ad copy. As an example, we were advertising on Chicago tourist attractions. It was such a broad ad, write an individual ad for each attraction, museums, tours etc.

I have some very basic information, seems like most of you are already advertisers: match types are very different, I want to review a bit more.

Exact match, phrase match, broad match, negative match. Don’t think I need to go over these, we are all comfortable with that.
In yahoo there are 2 match types, standard and advanced. There also excluded terms which are not a match type.
Standard match - equivalent of exact match in Google: includes A and THE and OF.
Advanced match display ads for broader range of searches. Keyword phrases do not to be in account to trigger advertising. Basically, the match types in yahoo are much broader in scope than in Google.
Something called match driver – matches root terms and derivatives: misspellings, plurals, variations of root terms.

Yahoos exact match is broader in scope.

On match driver you want to be aware that yahoo incorporates match driver technology so advertisers cant opt of out match driver.
Advanced match is the default match type.

Google has expanded broad match.

Ad distribution tips:

In Yahoo, keywords don’t always trigger ads so you want to ad relevant keywords and synonyms.

Google trademark policy:
Google is most lenient with TM, yahoo only in specific cases advertisers can use TMs.
May want to concentrate on non-trade mark terms to save time and aggravation. Yahoo seems strict in comparison but not as strict as it may seem.

Once you understand the differences b/w the search engines and incorporate them you will see overall improvements in your results.


Andrew Beckman – President of the Search Ad Network

Denver based SEM firm. Started a decade ago. Different world. Focus today is the tools we use as an SEM firm and how we utilize it to maximize PPC campaigns. Use this presentation as a guide to learn more about tools.

Basic tools:
Have a thorough keyword list – Trellian, Wordtracker is a great start. Seed list and expand. Better to have a large list and shrink it down.
Look at misspelled keywords. Great way to get low CPC ads. Travel without L gets tons of traffic. Some misspellings are gold mines.
Google’s keyword suggestion tool. Can put in URL and they will spider and spit out keywords. The advertiser competition barometer is a good indicator.

How has web analytics and who looks at it consistently? This is the backbone of every online marketing campaign. Track keywords that are causing sales. Need to parse PPC from SEO traffic. Shows demo of analytics software to do this.


With analytics tools, use overlay report. You can tag certain marketing campaigns, give it a name, and when users come to your site you can see where are they clocking when they arrive. This will allow you to start shifting the components of your site and make sure users are seeing more pages, spending more time on your site etc.

Multivariate landing page tool: this is where PPC will allow you to differentiate yourself and tag specific components of the landing page and start shifting around the component of the page and basically give us different conversion percentages. Need to convert web page into a sale. Get IT ppl involved with this, important component in the industry.

MSN Ad Labs
Search funnel – put in a keyword phrase to see where ppl have searched before and after to help build out keyword list.
Seasonality forecast tool
Google Trends tool – different cities have different metrics, etc.
You’d be surprised with diff info getting from these tools.

Some free info tools:
Compete.com – how we are ranking against our competitors and how many visitors coming to different sites. i.e. Expedia, Orbitz, Travelocity. Gives trends.
Alexa is another good tool, page views of competitors, see how you are doing against comp, may give you some good ideas.
SpyFu – reveals what comp is bidding on, CPC expect from diff keywords. Great website. Can really start forecasting budgets as see what competitors are bidding on to cover all your bases. Can see related terms etc. A lot of the data is free.

Q&A Portion.

Q: How good is the CTC on misspelled terms – I go straight to the “did you mean” spelling before looking at ads!
A: We started to write misspelled words in our ad copy and that give us a little boost at the fraction of the cost. I optimized a page with a misspelled world and got some traffic as well from that.

Q; Bidding on generic keywords or single words like ball instead of baseball, what effect would that have on campaign?
A: A single keyword will kill your budget and I don’t know anyone who does that. It will have a very low CTR. Need to go much further, i.e. geo targeting, day-part, etc.

Q: How do I shape and track a long tail keyword list in a very competitive industry? Is there a method to tailoring the campaign within an industry?
A: I don’t know if there are any shortcuts…look at advanced targeting. Go into the analytics to see all variations of keyword phrases. Even with misspellings. Play with all tools available.


Contributed by Avi Wilensky is a search engine marketing specialist and owner of Promediacorp.

posted rustybrick in WebmasterWorld PubCon 2007 Las Vegas at December 4, 2007 4:31 PM Comments (0)

SEO 101 - The Timeless and Classic Hits

This is a Q & A Intro to SEO 101 session with Jill Whalen, Bruce Clay, Jake Baillie, Bill Slawski, and Ash Nallawalla.


Q: How important are on page factors now relative to off page factors?

A: Bruce: If you do the wrong thing it will cause problems, on-page – best practices, spiderable, if do all pages correctly gets good jumps in ranking.

Jill: Linking extremely important, both work together, on-page comes in handy, first get on-page stuff in order then focus on linking. So many ppl look for links before even having decent title tags etc.

Ashi : If working on competitive sites, off-page more imp., if not competitive on page more imp.
Treat on page as formula, treat as guide.

Bill: Getting into competition is important. Being there without paying attention to content, not doing things well, not part of game. New thing people are not paying attention to: search engines indexing parts of pages instead of whole pages, need to think about how pages are laid out, if cover more than one topic, can use more than one heading on a page.

Jake: if prioritize on-page factor, which is single most important to optimize first?

Bill: unique content, title tags, meta, etc. are unique otherwise pages get lost. Crawl a site to make sure no issues with pages getting indexed. If SE’s can’t find pages, nothing matters.

Which is most important?

Bill: Probably the title.

Ashi: Title, get architecture right.

Jill: title tags, optimize for proper keywords

Bruce: title tags most weight, body tags close second. Must have unique content on every page. Title more important. Need site map.

Q: What is the worst SEO factor you’ve seen?

Bruce: all flash, no site map.

Jill: content in graphic big mistake.

Ashi: whole website is one file, splash pages

Bill: saw a website where 1 page was indexed 15,000 times. This page had 28 widgets and everytime clicked on url changed, hours to figure out why, minutes to fix with java script.

Jake: dairyqueen.com – home page indexed as cookies required!

Q: What is the biggest problem these days? Tips on avoiding dupe content problems, content issues?

Bill: starts by crawl site with links sleuth. Find where the problem is – where the CMS is messing up. Xenu link sleuth rocks! Make sure robots.txt doesn’t disallow Xenu.

Ashi: Robots.txt is a good way to solve dupe content issues. Good examples are those who run Vbulletin forum software - they easily cause dupe content issues. Wordpress has a good plugin (forgot name) which puts a nofollow on every link. Use Firefox search status by quirk.biz allows you to view nofollow links. Individual posts have the follow tag, but all the duplicate links to the dupe page have nofollow.

Jill: Don’t use session IDs, feed engine clean URLs. If rewriting URL’s to clean them – exclude the ugly URL’s. Don’t need to mod rewrite much these days

Bruce: www vs. non www is a dupe content issues, also https: can have a problem. Content syndication can cause problems. Have to address that. Biggest problem is multiple pathways to same content because of the architecture. Pick pages you want indexed and de-index the ones you don’t. Getting spidered is great – but they might interpret it as dupe content. Easiest way to resolve issues is do a site: in google and look for duplicate page titles. If you don’t have duplicate page titles, and see them in the index, that’s the big problem.

Jake: How many people represent large brands that everyone’s heard of? Can you guys tell us how you approach these sites?

Bruce: We have a different approach for every site – it’s a consulting solution – not a page by page. Need a consulting agreement.

Jill: Good and bad with working with each, large and small sites. Large ones can be good. Sometimes doing training for people in house so they get excited about it – it can be good. Otherwise it’s tough. Easier to work with a marketing manager that knows what SEO is. The challenge is great for large sites because they have many links. Don’t need to do link building for large sites very often so it can be exciting.

Ashi: Works with a large Australian online company with many divisions. Problem with the large company is that everyone is an expert in the online world. They have a lot of power to engage external consultants, and sometimes you get the business working with multiple SEO consultants. Some companies acquire technology for reasons other than SEO. Security might be the main priority. Maybe different divisions choose different CMS’s and the site is built by multiple crews.

Bill: Both large and small have unique changes. Need a strategy for each. Often find making a business case when presenting SEO. Work on templates instead of individual pages. Often not the first person there is a challenge. Play SEO archeology – one site had 2000 301 redirects from previous campaigns. Pities search engines for trying to figure out what’s going on. Small sites can do investigative marketing research. Finding niches that large companies cannot take advantage of. No board meetings and committees. Both fun, just different.

Jake: Open it up to the floor. Any questions:

Q: We are in the process of moving into the world of CSS. What should we do?

Bruce: I redid my site the same way it was done 12 years ago. Went to pure style sheets. Decided to make it W3C compliant. More content. Rankings went up. CSS won’t cause any negatives. Style sheets work well.

Jill: If leaving content same, no problems should arise from style sheets. Keep URLs the same. If not 301 redirect them.

Jake: Long ago a concept was promoted of ratio between text to code. Does reducing that ratio help?

Bill: MSFT looked at looking at onpage content in spam fighting. They spoke about code to content ratios and text to style ratio. Not sure that there is a magical percentage, other than in spam area. If there’s a lot of code on the page, open to errors. I like CSS because it eliminates some types of duplicate content. Can use style sheets to have people view site on wireless devices which is growing fast. If not thinking about mobile, and how CSS can help – missing opportunities. Mobile search – it will help.

Ashi: If you have a large website. Introduce changes gradually.

Q: One of our products is a barcode scanner. People often search for “bar code” as two words and one word. Most people search the technically wrong word. What do you recommend?

Jill: Dedicate a page to misspelling. Doesn’t recommend using both versions on the page.

Bruce: When you get the “did you mean”, sometimes it disappears because the index is getting smarter. If you do a search and it asks “did you mean”, there is a prominence of the other way. Given that, I would want to rank with the way most people write.

Ashi: Don’t use misspellings on visible text. Try microsites around you that use misspelling and try to get traffic from them.

Bill: This is an issue that search engines should handle better. Less a problem in English than German. As Bruce said, the engines mine query logs to understand how people search. Treatment and handling of merged words – look at the SERPs when doing keyword research. Has tried using alternate versions, but not too much.

Jake: Write a page that asks – what’s correct Bar Code or Barcode!

Q: Talk a little bit about sitemaps – dynamic vs. manual – a Google sitemap- what’s the importance to those and the best way to create them.

Bruce: Need 2 – a spiderable one and an XML. Follow standard at sitemap.org. Can use a sitemap: command in robots.txt to point spiders to sitemap. Including Ask. Can daisy chain large amounts of sitemaps. Beware of dupe content!

Jill: If your site is made correctly, don’t really need it. Don’t get the advantage unless you have a massive site. Without internal link structure, not going to succeed.

Ash: There are lots of free tools and scripts – use for large websites – agrees with Jill.

Bill: Agrees with Jill. Valuable for larger sites. Doesn’t hurt to do it and see what happens. Look at webmaster central tools to see indexing errors. Make sure everything is there.

Q: How do I use Mod rewrite - how to find people who know how to do it.

Jake: Webmasterworld is great for that.

Ashi: If you look for an .htaccess cheat sheet – it will help you.

Jake: There is a session covering it.

Jill: Look at forums.

Q: How much of one’s online budget should go to SEO:

Bruce jokes: All of it (chuckles). Go with a ROI approach. If it works, spend more.

Jill: Agrees. If making more on PPC, use PPC. All about ROI and conversions.

Q: Any relevance of domain name to ranking?

Bruce: Matt Cutts said 0, 1, and 2 is the max in a domain. File names – max 14 hyphens. Try not to use hyphens in domain name. In filename ideal is just a few. In Google an underscore is a character and does not separate words.

Bill: Subdomains, just to add. MSFT did a paper on spam. Found that subdomains that use lots of hyphens are flagged.

Q: Search engine friendly pages and query strings. Is the only benefit the keywords? Can you help me with that?

Jake: It’s a pet peeve of mine. Parameters won’t cause you not to be indexed. It’s not your problem. It’s how you use them and how they create dupe content. Largely the issue is not the parameters.

Jill: Jake said it all.

Bill: Is keywords in the url part of the question? Yes. SE use lots of ranking signals – is there special importance to adding the keyword in the url – such as the query string. Not very many, but there might be some.

Jill: In many cases don’t change indexed pages, and then rewrite the URLs. Could be SEO suicide.

Jake: Shorter URLs are good for usability. The shorter the better.

Q: How do you deal with feed base sites?

Bill: Do something better. Build better descriptions. When submitting feeds, make your website as crawlable as possible. Optimize the feed. Submit both. Might not get as crawled deeply if feed based.

Bruce: If the query for a product is shopping related vs. intent based query – need an appropriate site. Mindset.research.yahoo.com is a great tool to analyze intent. Can optimize around that, need to know what search engines reporting.

Jill: If you do it, and it makes you a positive ROI, continue doing it.

Q: If you maintain the #1 position, what housekeeping should be done?

Bruce: If it ain’t broken don’t fix it. If you rank #1, I’ll go to the top 3 sites and ranking doesn’t always mean conversions. If you are number 1, congrats your’re doing well – focus on your bounce rate. Not a focus on SEO – don’t break it – focus on your conversions. I might go to site #2, then site #3, then buy from site number 3.

Jill: Make sure you are not optimizing for 1 phrase. You are optimizing for thousands or more phrases. Stop looking at the rankings. Look at conversions. Start thinking about what other phrases will get traffic.

Ashi: Keep a close eye on the competition.

Bill: Broaden the ability of people that come to your site. Sometimes rankings are the wrong thing to look at. Long tail terms might be better. It’s just not being number. Can’t set and forget.

Q: Follow up to Bruce – what can you do dynamically to improve conversions on organic pages?
How can you change the content based on the query string coming in.

Bruce: A/B testing – improving copy so that bounce rate diminishes. It’s a science and industry. There are good tools to focus on multivariate testing. When I search, I want to see my keyword at the top – not welcome to my site. Once someone comes to your site, the person is on a mission – you want to keep them there and answer there question and convert them. If you can’t convince them, doesn’t do you good. Bounce rates under 20% are good. Your question is a session in itself, but it must be done.

Q: What if a product is out of stock?

Bruce: It matters if there a links to the page. Might want to 301 redirect it to pass the PR.

Bill: Create a new page an continue to get traffic to that page – replace the product or add a new model.

Q:This is a question on duplicate content question. We have good navigation for the user experience. When you go to different pages, has the same navigation. Do I want to a nofollow on the navigation?

Jill: That’s a typical way a site is built. No penalty.

Ashi: One guy I know uses Iframes for navigations. I haven’t tested it but it’s worth thinking about.

Bill: Doesn’t hurt you to have the same navigation structure on every page.

Bruce: In my case, my navigation is flash, just to reduce the html, and then footer links. In many cases there are too many links. Keep them less than 100 links, or use iFrames – must look at architecture of page. Make sure the search engines see the page as content. Under normal circumstances, don’t have to worry about it.

Q: Because spiders change behavior as do the engines, how do you prepare for that?

Jill: Even though little things change to fight spammers, IMO the search engines always want the same thing – the best relevant page. That’s your long term goal. Don’t have to worry about these loophole changes to fight spammers.

Bruce: My approach is more specific. I agree with Jill, search engines want the same thing and if you understand the use of normal architecture – chances are the items are not going to change. Play by the rules and the search engines won’t penalize you.

Bill: On the basis of crawling – there’s a paper written in the late 90’s by a Stanford professor – helped create Google. For example, how far a page is from the root directory. Search engines prefer many homepages verses many subpages. Based on architecture, links, PR – things you control – like trailing slashes in URL. Good paper worth looking at.

Q: If a website’s content is largely built on a subdirectory – should we move it to own domain?

Bruce: Happens all the time. Split them up and use the 301’s not hard, but tedious.

Jill: A brand new domain needs an aging delay. 301’s will help, but sometimes a new domain won’t have the same equity as old directory.

Q:Is there a correlation between inbound links and number of pages indexed. Would you start with the important pages in a sitemap?

Bruce: No correlation. I think the searcher learns how to be more specific.

Jill: If you have the content, put up the sitemap.

Ashi: Did a test. Used sitemaps and Google indexed new pages quickest, then Yahoo, then MSN.

Bill: Had a site with a million pages. Took 4-5 months for the first couple pages to get indexed. Search engines identify massive increases in links, pages and see something out of the ordinary. Visitors will give natural links and other marketing will help besides SEO.

Contributed by Avi Wilensky is a search engine marketing specialist and owner of Promediacorp.

posted rustybrick in WebmasterWorld PubCon 2007 Las Vegas at December 4, 2007 3:28 PM Comments (3)

Keynote Conversation with Craig Newmark

Keynote Conversation with Craig Newmark

Good morning, my friends! We have a huge Pubcon today! In fact, Brett says that this is the biggest Pubcon ever.

Craig comes up and tells us that "we're providing a community service, but there's really nothing altruistic about it. We're not a nonprofit. We're a for-profit community service."

Craig says that people are allowed to liveblog. Thank you for your permission, Craig. :) (He says he liveblogged yesterday. Good. I'm not the only one who does this kind of thing.)

Craig says that he's not running things at all in Craigslist. He said that in 2000, his management skills were not adequate for the job - so Jim Buckmaster is now CEO. He now does customer service.

He's pitching a lot about smartphones. He says that smartphones will become smarter than we are.

The deal is that in '94, he was at Charles Schwab (the brokerage firm) and liked the informational nature of these companies where the Internet was going to lead the direction. He saw how people abused Usenet and he wanted to grasp the "tragedy of the commons," when a public resource that is largely free, people will abuse the commons and you'll have a real problem (like spam).

So he started a mailing list (a CC list using PINE - yay!) and was telling people what was happening in San Francisco at the time. Back then, he was talking about events and venues. It started spreading via word of mouth and ultimately people were asking to join the list. Eventually, people wanted to sell things (apartments, items, jobs, etc).

So, back then, in 95, the list grew to about 240 members and PINE had an email address limitation. His friend then set up a Majordomo mailing list (called SF-events). But his friends said that people were already calling it "Craigslist" because it's personal and quirky. It was a lesson in branding and establishing an identity.

[The net became people's printing press - and now, if you see bloggers practicing this. (His blog is cnewmark.com.)]

He got an email from a colleague who said that he needed to personalize emails with tags (e.g. Job in San Francisco) and he implemented that. So he wrote code and turned the emails to HTML and published this into his website. PINE makes it very flexible because you can pipe it into a Perl script and that would process it into a webpage - this worked.

In '97, three milestones were hit:
1 million pageviews per month
Microsoft wanted to run banner ads. He decided he didn't need the money and declined. It wasn't a value judgment; it just didn't feel right. It wasn't about being noble or altruistic; it was just about what felt right.
Some folks approached Craig and wanted to run the site as a volunteer operation (non-profit). In '98, they tried that (charging for job postings) and it worked out a bit (the job postings were paid) but the volunteer operation was a failure possibly because of Craig's management skills (he says he doesn't lead as much since he was doing a lot more contracted work).

In '99, he turned Craigslist into an actual company. He realized that his hobby became his business.

He also rewrote the code in '99. Version 2 was released then and nothing significant has changed in the last 8 years.

Jim brought the company up and they introduced new cities. New York was one of them and picked up in October of 2001 - one event probably triggered that traffic.

They provided anonymous relays for email in some cases, but people now had the option to make it visible if they wanted it for personal branding.

Real estate ads and job listings are the only things being charged right now.

Now, he's doing customer service but he's part of a team of Customer Service reps. He is the founder of the company but reports to a guy named Clint. It felt right for him. Only recently have people been asking "why is Craigslist successful?" They have only 9 billion pageviews per month with Linux, Apache, MySQL, and Perl. They have a very awesome caching system (that they'd like to make open source). The server farm consists of 120 cheap generic machines at a colocation facility. And yet, it's still running on PINE.

So why is the site taking the path that it's going? It's about an idea of shared values. No matter where you are in the world or your cultural background, people believe that they should take a break. Humans have a "live and let live" attitude. The deal is that everyone seems to believe that you should be treated as you want to be treated.

And if there's any bad intentions, you can "flag for removal" to delete any spammy articles. Of course, this has been gamed but they have safeguards for that. Democracy is a poor form of government but it's the best kind that we've tried, he says.

The internet is everyone's printing press. It's pretty good, pretty democratic - but the problem is that people don't always pay attention to your stuff. It's an ongoing and painful problem to deal with. Something big is happening and we're seeing that ordinary people are getting together and are changing things on a massive scale. The changes we see are like what we've seen 300-400 years ago (he says he has an interest in history). We're seeing that in the elections (like Barack Obama), people are committed to change the things that are being run in Washington so they can open up how people see things. We see the EFF (Electronic Frontier Foundation) to fight the Telecom Amnesty Bill and to fight for our rights online.

Now there is a Q&A:

Q: Thanks for the inspiring speech! (Applause from a lot of the people). I'm some of a marketing guy and wanted to understand the technical things. Is it really true that you have 9 billion pageviews on about 120 servers?
A: Yes, we do. Our database servers are heavy duty and have redundant arrays.
Q: How do I call Craigslist and get you on the phone?
A: We'd rather you read the FAQ first. But if you want to call me, my phone number is listed. You can also email me at craig (at) craigslist (dot) org. I handle mostly abuse cases.

Q: How can people do business on Craigslist? How can Search Engine Marketers ethically use Craigslist to use links?
A: It's simple common sense stuff. You go to our site, you pick out the city you want to advertise in, you pick out the categories and check them out. Check out how people use that category and post your ads there. The idea is that every site has its own culture. Every site is a place in the virtual sense and when you go to a virtual place, you try to fit in - that's how you use the site ethically. I know there's a temptation as a search engine marketer to put links in, and you don't want to be flagged. If you're misbehaving, you might get an email from me or Clint, or if you're really unlucky, Annette. Just use it well.

Q: What about wedding announcements on your site?
A: I've gotten at least 2 invitations to weddings. Same applies to missed connections. I do have to explain that by virtue of running a site, that does not authorize me to officiate at a wedding (that's assuming you want it to be legal). We hear about other stuff - there have been 3 successful kidney donations through our site. We don't want to screw it up though, so we're not promoting it.

Q: I know there's a little back and forth with regards to making mashups (with some being disallowed whereas others are allowed), so do you plan on releasing an API?
A: People use our RSS feeds and search for that, but we're not sure if there's such a need for that. We're not getting enthusiasm from the ordinary people. Some people want fast and secure stuff, and others have to add features that have to be added.

posted Tamar Weinberg in WebmasterWorld PubCon 2007 Las Vegas at December 4, 2007 12:51 PM Comments (1)

Search Engine Roundtable Conference Coverage: December 2007 Package (SES Chicago and Las Vegas Pubcon)

This is the first time in our history of conference coverage where we are going to attempt to provide coverage of two different search marketing conferences that are overlapping on the same week. If you did not know, Search Engine Strategies Chicago is the same week as WebmasterWorld's PubCon. And yes, we will be covering both in great depth - thanks to our wonderful volunteers.

First let's thank our volunteers, who include Carolyn Shelby, Dave Rohrer, Chris Boggs, Justin Davy, Marty Weintraub, and Steve Krull. (Oh, and I, Tamar Weinberg, am writing too) ;)

Now here are the schedules:
Search Engine Strategies Chicago 2007 Logo

Search Engine Strategies Chicago 2007

Monday, December 3
9:00-10:00AM: Search Around the World - Part One: Asia/Pacific & Australia (Justin)
9:00-10:00AM: Mobile Search Battle Royal (Chris)
10:15-11:15AM: The Human Equation: Giving Back Internet Style (Justin)
10:15-11:15AM: Meet the Web Analytics Players (Marty)
10:15-11:15AM: Redefining the Customer (Chris)
11:30AM-12:30PM: Orion Panel: Search, Privacy and Community in the Digital Age (Chris)
1:30-2:30PM: There's Still Money on the Table! (Chris)
1:30-2:30PM: Igniting Viral Campaigns (Justin)
2:45-3:45PM: Orion Panel: Universal, Blended and Vertical Search (Chris)

Tuesday, December 4
9:00-9:45AM:Keynote Presentation: Seth Godin (Chris)
10:15-11:15AM Shopping Search Tactics (Marty)
10:15-11:15AM Usability & SEO: Two Wins For The Price of One (Steve)
10:15-11:15AM: The Transformation of Local in a Search Driven World (Justin)
11:30AM-12:30PM: Landing Page Testing Overview (Steve)
11:30AM-12:30PM: Big Site, Big Search (Justin)
11:30AM-12:30PM: Are Paid Links Evil? (Marty)
2:00-3:00PM: Actionable Social Media (Chris)
2:00-3:00PM Maximum Conversion in Retail: Raising the Bar (Justin)
2:00-3:00PM Sitemaps: Oversold, Misused or On The Money? (Steve)
3:30-4:30PM: How to Build Investment Interest in Your SEO/SEM Company (Steve)
3:30-4:30PM: Online Maps: Plotting the Direction of Local Search (Justin)

Wednesday, December 5
9:00-9:45AM: Keynote Presentation: David S. Isenberg "Neutral Net" Topic (Marty)
10:15-11:15AM: Podcast & Audio Search (Chris)
10:15-11:15AM: Managing Automated PPC Bid Management (Marty)
10:15-11:15AM: Case Study: Moving from Paper to Online (Justin)
11:30AM-12:30PM: Your Marketing Program in Context (Justin)
11:30AM-12:30PM: Managing PPC for Multiple Clients (Steve)
2:00-3:00PM: Calling All Clicks: PayPerCall and You (Justin)
2:00-3:00PM: CSS, AJAX, Web 2.0 & Search Engines (Steve)
2:00-3:00PM: Retail Case Studies (Marty)
3:30-4:30PM: Last Minute Holiday Search Tactics (Chris)
3:30-4:30PM: PPC Advertising on Influential Blogs and Social Media (Justin)
3:30-4:30PM: SEM Pricing Models (Steve)

Thursday, December 6
9:00-10:00AM: So You Want to Be a Search Marketer? (Marty)
10:15-11:15AM: Landing Page Optimization Clinic (Steve / tentative)
10:15-11:15AM: Search Marketers on Click Fraud (Justin)
11:30AM-12:30PM: Dealing With Difficult Clients (Chris / tentative)

Pubcon Logo

WebmasterWorld PubCon Vegas 2007

Tuesday, December 4
9:00-10:00 AM Keynote by Craig Newmark (Tamar)
10:00-11:30 AM Social Marketing 101 - The Playing Field (Dave)
11:35AM-12:50PM Monetizing Social Media Traffic (Tamar)
11:35AM-12:50PM Optimizing Your Site for Contextual Ads (Dave)
1:30-2:45PM Keyword Research, Selection and Optimization (Tamar)
1:30-2:45PM Link Building Campaigns and Strategies (Dave)
2:45-4:00PM Content Creation - Cranking it Out (Tamar)
2:45-4:00PM Link Baiting - 96 Different Strategies (Dave)
4:00-5:30PM Link Buying (Tamar)


Wednesday, December 5
9:00-10:00AM Keynote by Richard Rosenblatt (Dave)
10:15 AM - 11:30 AM Domain Names and Trademarks - Legal Issues (Dave)
11:35AM-12:50PM Interactive Site Reviews - Focus - Social Media (Tamar is speaking!)
11:35AM-12:50PM Effective Domaining Strategies (Dave)
1:30-2:45PM SEO and Big Search (Tamar)
1:30-2:45PM Alternative Discovery and SEO - Feeds, PDF's, and Blog SEO (Dave)

Thursday, December 6
9:00-10:00AM Keynote with Matt Cutts (Tamar)
10:15-11:30AM Effective Action Based Copywriting (Tamar)
10:15-11:30AM Brand Management (Carolyn)
10:15-11:30AM CSS and HTML Coding Today - (Dave)
11:35AM-12:50PM Search and Blogging Reporters Forum (Tamar)
11:35AM-12:50PM International and European Site Optimization (Dave)
11:35AM-12:50PM Responsible Web Design (Carolyn)
1:30-2:45PM Ecommerce and Shopping Cart Optimization (Carolyn)
2:45-4:00PM Competitive Intelligence (Carolyn)
4:00-5:30PM Tools of the Trade (Tamar)
4:00-5:30PM Organic Keyword Research and Selection (Carolyn)

Again, a big thank you to our volunteers! These schedules may change, but we'll do our best to stick with them.

posted Tamar Weinberg in Search Engine Strategies 2007 Chicago at November 29, 2007 11:00 AM Comments (1)

Pubcon's Wednesday Night Activity: Werewolves

Barry Schwartz: SEOmoz CardSEOmoz is holding a Werewolf parlor game event next week in Pubcon where registrants are able to score cool playing cards (including the one of Barry, pictured). If you don't know how to play, you can read the rules.

The event will be held on Wednesday night, Decmeber 5, from 8-10PM in the South Hall during Pubcon. Registration is limited to 200 participants and you can sign up here if you're interested.

Looks nice. Those cards are good looking. ;)

By the way, our Pubcon coverage schedule will be up later today!

Forum discussion continues at Sphinn.

posted Tamar Weinberg in WebmasterWorld PubCon 2007 Las Vegas at November 29, 2007 10:19 AM Comments (0)

Are You a Blogger Going to Pubcon? Show Tickets Available!

If you're a videoblogger or a blogger who might be able to write a review about some Vegas shows, you might be interested in the 500 tickets that Joe Morin scored for you. You will need to meet some criteria, however:

To participate you must be a WebmasterWorld PubCon attendee, and an active editorial or video blogger. You may attend more than one show provided that you write a separate review (i.e. separate blog post) about each show. These tickets are in limited supply and this is a first come first serve opportunity and we reserve the right to deny tickets to any blog or editorial that we deem inappropriate to host a review.

The shows available are: Blue Man Group, KÀ by Cirque du Soleil, Mystere by Cirque du Soleil, and Monty Python's Spamalot.

Very cool. In fact, as beu says on Search Engine Watch Forums, it's something that every conference should consider (and the venues themselves would probably appreciate the coverage from the blogger - social media, anyone?)

Forum discussion continues at Search Engine Watch Forums and WebmasterWorld (subscription required).

posted Tamar Weinberg in WebmasterWorld PubCon 2007 Las Vegas at November 29, 2007 10:10 AM Comments (0)

Going to Pubcon? Unofficial Events Guide Posted

Sphinn has the scoop on some of the events to be held at Pubcon which is to occur next week (already!)

So far, there are a few parties, including an Enom one to be held on Wednesday, December 5th, but forum members are encouraged to chime in so that a Sphinn lunch can be scheduled on one of the days (TBA).

Tim Dineen has kindly prepared a PubCon events list for sessions (and extracurricular events) he will be attending, but if you're looking for more and want to let us know where you'll be, feel free to add to the Sphinn discussion. Remember: I will be there, and while I'll be blogging most of the sessions, I expect you to say hello :)

posted Tamar Weinberg in WebmasterWorld PubCon 2007 Las Vegas at November 27, 2007 7:21 AM Comments (1)

Google's Matt Cutts to Keynote at WebmasterWorld's PubCon: Got Questions?

There are three keynotes at the upcoming PubCon. They include Craig Newmark of Craigs List, Richard Rosenblatt of DemandMedia, and Matt Cutts of Google. Now, most of you are probably more interested in Mr. Cutts. If so, and you are dying to have a question about Google answered by Matt, then let WebmasterWorld know.

The only catch is that the thread is within WebmasterWorld's Supporters Forum. If you are not a supporter, maybe you can contribute and gain access to that forum. If not, maybe post your questions here and I may post them for you.

But what about getting the answers to your questions? Well, you should probably buy a pass to PubCon, but if you can't make it, don't worry, we will be covering it. Tamar will be leading the coverage at PubCon, with contributors helping covering the sessions.

Isn't SES Chicago at the same time? Yes. I hope that we will be able to cover that as well. I personally won't be going to any conferences in December, but we have contributors willing to type away on their laptops to share the knowledge learned at the conferences. If you are interested in helping us with either PubCon Vegas or SES Chicago, please contact us and we will send you more details.

Also, if you are interested in a small SEO/SEM networking event in Israel during the first week of February 2008, please go to my personal blog and vote, so I know.

Back on topic. If you have questions for Matt, post at the WebmasterWorld thread or drop a comment below.

posted rustybrick in WebmasterWorld PubCon 2007 Las Vegas at November 8, 2007 7:39 AM Comments (0)

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