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Whodeani says...

Some time back I wrote a blog post titled, 'Anatomy of a Hit' (the original post can be found here.)

In that post I talked about my dabbling in music during the mid 90's culminating in a minor dance hit that I co-wrote with friends Ivan Gough (of TV Rock fame) and Andrew Harpur.

I also announced my intention to try and write a hit record over the next 12 months (the blog post was written July 2008.)

Subsequent to that post I bought a 'proper' electronic piano (a Roland FP-7) complete with ultra realistic sounds and fully weighted keys.

I also signed up for lessons with a local professional.

Regrettably, while my tutor was brilliant and extremely patient (Jenny Ford from Melbourne School of Music) it turned out I was not the ideal student. The combination of my regular and lengthy traveling OS with a very busy schedule meant I wasn't able to dedicate the necessary time both to the lessons and 'daily' practice.

All is not lost on the learning front however as I wont be traveling OS as much in the near future and I will shortly be moving near Melbourne's CBD (further reducing daily travel in and out of the city). I also now have a brilliant EA working with me (@lindywaldeck) to free up even more time meaning I've ran out of excuses. 

I will re-commence lessons in some form (am considering trying the interactive lessons included within the new version of Garageband) in the coming weeks, fingers crossed.

Follow me on Twitter @whodeani

The thrust of my 'Anatomy of a Hit' post was that I would try and write/produce a hit record over the year following that post.

Its a little over a year since I wrote that post and I 'may' be onto something, albeit a fair way away from what I had originally intended.

My original plan was to take a track that had been bouncing around in my head at the time and try and turn said track into a professionally recording for 'hopeful' release commercially through a record label.

To do that, and mindful of the complexity of the track that I was wanting to do, I felt I had to learn piano in order to have the necessary skills to play then record the song.

Around 3 - 4 months ago I was thinking about a song I had written with 2 friends in the mid 90's and an 'idea' sprung to mind as to how that song could be re-worked thematically for 'now' and brought up to date musically also.

I don't want to give too much away at this stage, suffice to say that the song is about Love in the age of Social Media.

Over the past few months I have worked with one of the original song writers to re-tool the lyrics along the new 'theme'. I have also worked with 2 professional producers/muso's to help bring the track into 2009 and give it the polish and finish necessary for a global, commercial release.

Am currently in the middle of working through the agreement for its release and am also working on a video clip.

Am planning on releasing the track on iTunes and other platforms mid October and will provide a more detailed update via this blog in the lead up to its release.

Filed under: Anatomy of a Hit, Cleva Cleva, Dance Music, Deuce by Cleva Cleva, music, Musician, Social Media, whodeani, Whodeani's Blog

Whodeani says...

Everyone from the main stream media (even Oprah) and celebrities through to leading global brands have embraced the new and exciting communications platform known as Twitter.

http://www.twitter.com

Many of you reading this would know I am a huge fan of Twitter and believe it to be one of the most significant and disruptive web sites/platforms to come along in a long, long while.

For me at least I see Twitter being to today’s crop of social media sites/platforms what Google was to the then disparate and unprofitable ‘search’ space.

That is, I believe Twitter will be the brand that finally works out how to make a real business from a space that while extremely popular is yet to produce a business model that can deliver sustainable and substantial profitability (Twitter is a relatively new entrant to the social media space and while people now feel they ‘need’ to be part of it, many are not sure ‘why’ they should use it or ‘what’ they need to do to benefit from it once they have taken the trouble to join it.)

An interesting quote from a recent article on Twitter (written by Bill Heil and Mikolaj Piskorski) provides some insight into what Twitter is … 

This implies that Twitter's resembles more of a one-way, one-to-many publishing service more than a two-way, peer-to-peer communication network. http://blogs.harvardbusiness.org/cs/2009/06/new_twitter_research_men_follo.html

Researched thoroughly (over a glass or 3 of Margaret River Red), one of Twitter's greatest supporters, me, feels it’s time to get to blogging on the topic. 

This blog post will cover two commonly asked questions (asked of me at least).

“How do I build a following on Twitter?” (Building an audience on Twitter) and “How do I manage my presence on Twitter?” (Managing your twitter presence)

I should point out at the outset that this post is in the main about building a following on Twitter and continuing to grow it for commercial purposes. That’s not to say that the advice contained here-in can not be used for personal Twitter account building, just that the relatively ‘broad’ targeting of many of the suggested techniques is better suited to less personal accounts… 'one to many' as the article mentioned above suggest.

There are a number of tools I have used and researched for the various Twitter accounts I have (each of these using some or all of the following tools to varying degrees.)

Flashtweet is a tool I first tested early on in the Tweetspace with my ‘Better Sports’ Twitter account (Better Sports is a small startup that sells a simple guide to the rules of golf that I started with my father.)

Flashtweet is a collection of Twitter Tools that help you manage en masse many repetitive tasks in a clean, simple to use interface. With Flashtweet (according to their website) “…you will be able to bulk follow up to 100 friends at a time, unfollow individuals who are not following you back, display mutual friends and all of your followers.”

What to use it for: 2 things.

  1. The Mass follow tool allows you to pull up the ‘followers’ of another Twitter users profile (say someone that shares similar interests to yours or is in the same industry as your business) and then ‘mass follow’ (or select individually) those profiles that may be interested in you. The aim here is to follow people that you find interesting and in turn hope that they find you interesting enough to follow you back. Tip: When using this tool, only follow those profiles that have a photo as these profiles are more likely to be active and therefore a greater chance of following you back. (Further tip… avoid the ‘make easy money now’ style profiles that often show a shot of an attractive model. They may follow you back but will be noisy and likely clog your Twitter stream with all manner of ‘get rich quick’ schemes.)
  2. The Mass Unfollow tool allows you to list all those people that you are following that are not following you back. Simply select them individually or in bulk (lots of 100). 
Personal preference for Twitter Karma for this sort of thing (which I mention further on.)

http://www.flashtweet.com

Twollo (pronounced tee-wollow) is a relatively new tool that allows you to find and follow Twitter users automatically.

What to use it for: Allows you to automatically follow people based on topics that you are interested in. Twollo will follow as few or as many people as you set it to do (within Twitter limitations) all day, every day.

I have only used this tool a handful of times and even then have turned it off shortly after using it .

Is difficult to balance maximising the number of people you would like to follow using the tool with not ‘over’ using your allocated calls of the Twitter platform and restricting you from following people manually through the regular Twitter interface.

http://www.twollo.com

Buzzom (InRev TwitIn) offers several useful twitter tools including the ability to follow people that are ‘likely’ to follow you back (something they mention on their site) and ‘flush’ (unfollow) those that you are currently following that are not returning the favour.

What to use it for: This site is particularly useful for following people given its stated claim that those that it suggests you follow are likely to follow you back. While this claim is not substantiated, I’m guessing they suggest people that have around the same number of followers as they do people they are following.

You are limited to following a maximum of 25 people at once, so if you want to follow larger numbers, suggest you open multiple browser tabs and run the ‘grow’ tool in those additional tabs (is faster than repeating the process within one browser tab.)

The Flush tool on this site is also particularly useful, especially if you have a large number of people you are following that are not following you back (some of the other tools that provide ‘flushing’ functionality have trouble flushing large numbers of people in one hit).

Here the tool randomly selects 25 people that you are following that are not following you back and allows you to ‘remove’ them from your following list (either the whole 25 or those individually selected.)

http://www.buzzom.com

Twitterkarma is a handy Twitter application that helps you manage a large list of followers (and those that you are following.) It pulls your info from your Twitter account, which you can then filter in several ways.

It has a very easy to follow interface that lists your connections and shows against each, your relationship to them including wether or not they are following you back.

What to use it for: Useful to see which followers you are following that aren’t following you back. Unlike Buzzom (mentioned earlier), TwitterKarma allows you to ‘bulk unfollow’ very large groups of people. As mentioned above however, the larger the list you are trying to manage the more likely you are to experience difficulties (including taking a substantial amount of time.)

Speaking of unfollowing, as I was putting this post together I came across the following article on the excellent Read Write Web site.

http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/dear_wanna-bes_your_twitter_stardom_is_coming_to_a.php

The general thrust of the story is that Twitter will be clamping down on people that unfollow (or flush) large numbers of people on a regular basic.

According to the story, Twitter’s Doug William’s stated "There is no limit to the number of unfollows. Using software to constantly churn followers in a repeated pattern of following and unfollowing will however risk suspension."

In lieu of this, suggest you use any of the tools suggested (especially those with the ‘unfollow’ feature) sparingly, possibly experimenting with a test account (one you could afford to have suspended, or worse removed).

http://dossy.org/twitter/karma/

Tweepme is a site that houses a growing group of tweeple whom via this site follow each other.

So in theory if the site has 10000 members then eventually all 10000 members will have 10000 followers and so on.

What to use it for: Useful to get a jumpstart and increase credibility (in some peoples eyes) on Twitter by having a high number of followers.

Note: I tried this a couple of months ago and didn’t’ find any measurable increase in my followers for the account that I used it on.

I have included it here however as in theory this type of site seems like a clever idea, especially for commercial Twitter accounts where bragging rights of follower numbers matter.

http://www.tweepme.com

The Twitter Tag Project - Follow Friday is a fun way to increase followers for you and your friends on a Friday.
Rather than entering them manually this tool will scan through your last 200 tweets, count the duplicates and return your most active friends for you to then promote to your followers.

http://thetwittertagproject.com/followfriday.php

Having mentioned all these ways to increase the amount of people you follow and in turn have them follow you, there are also some useful tools to unfollow. 

Untweeps is a simple way to unfollow inactive Twitter profiles.

What to use it for: Allows you to unfollow people who haven’t updated their profiles in 30 days.  Useful for removing inactive accounts, often those that have been set up yet never used (or used sparingly) i.e. spam accounts or squatters.

http://www.untweeps.com

Using the mentioned methods above you should be able to increase your presence on twitter.  But the key is to maintain this presence and keep on tweeting.
Many of us don’t have the time to tweet constantly throughout the day.  However there are tools to make it seem that way by auto tweeting on your behalf.

Tweetlater is a handy tool that allows you to schedule tweets minutes, hours or even days ahead of when you would like them posted.

What to use it for: Tweetlater is especially useful for when the bulk of your followers are from another time zone (as is the case with myself, based in Bali and Australia.)

In my case, quite often I will find useful information around Movies and Technology first thing in the morning (my morning), yet a lot of my followers are based in the US. With Tweetlater I can schedule some of these posts much later in my day to coincide with early morning in the US

http://www.tweetlater.com

Hootsuite is a similar site to Tweetlater (allowing you to schedule tweets to be posted later) but can also do a whole lot more. My favourite feature is the ability to manage multiple accounts, something I use to handle my main Twitter account (@whodeani) and my many business Twitter accounts.

What to use it for: Not only does it allow you to schedule your tweets minutes/hours/days ahead it has a nifty ‘hootlet’ function that allows you to post the page you are currently viewing within your browser to Twitter as a short URL (via the URL ow.ly).

It also provides statistics on posts that include these short URL’s including clicks per URL and a popularity ranking. Outside of  Power Twitter (a plug in for Firefox), this is my most used Twitter tool.

http://www.hootsuite.com/

Tweetie is an iPhone based Twitter tool that includes everything you would expect from a 3rd party Twitter app (the ability to post tweets, search trending topics, read your ‘@’ and Direct Messages) and additional features specific to the iPhone.

2 of these iPhone specific features I used earlier this year while ‘live’ tweeting the Anzac Day AFL match from the MCG in Melbourne (using my Anzac Day account @anzacday).

Firstly, I was able to take photos of the match using my iPhone and upload them (compressed) onto to Twitter. Second, I was able to post alongside these photos, my location using GPS and Google Maps.

So not only was I able to post score updates on the match as they happened, I was also able to show visual highlights of the match and let people know exactly where it was happening.

http://www.atebits.com/tweetie-mac/

Yes it’s true I am a twitterholic!  And twitterholic proves it to be true. This is a useful tool to check how you rank in your area (against those other Twitter users whom have submitted their site to Twitterholic or had it submitted to the site by someone else.) 

As of posting this blog, I am currently ranked 13th in my location on Twitterholic (Australia). A ‘long’ way to go to the number 1 position where @kevinruddpm, the Australian Prime Minister, has 4 times my followers.

I can dream.

                                                                                                        (Note: Global Chart)

http://twitterholic.com/

Your Checklist for Managing Your Twitter Profile.

  • Say something interesting. Simply getting people to follow you is of little use if you aren’t saying anything that will interest them. As easy as it is for people to follow you, it’s just as easy for people to unfollow you.
  • Post regularly. As mentioned above, there are a growing list of tools that allow you to ‘unfollow’ profiles that are inactive. This needs to be balanced of course with ensuring your posts are interesting and that you don’t post too much and cause people to unfollow you (or worse be tagged as spam).
  • Use the various tools mentioned here to find interesting people and follow them. Ideally these people will find you and your posts interesting and follow you back.
  • On a regular basis, review those that you are following and see those that are not following you back (using tools like Flashtweet and Twitter Karma). Consider removing those that are not following you back. This will allow you to follow new people. This particular tip is very useful for those trying to break through 2000 ‘following’. (To be able to follow more than 2000 people, you need to have 2000 people follow you.)
  • Track the success of your posts via tools like Hootsuite to see what people found interesting.

This is just a brief overview of the many applications that support Twitter.

Test them out. Some may work for you and your needs more than others.

There may be other tools that spring to mind so feel free share your experiences with using the tools I’ve mentioned and any others in the comments section below.

Follow me on Twitter @whodeani

Filed under: Commercial Twitter Account, Delayed Tweets, Delayed Twitter Posts, Flashtweet, Flush, Follow, Follow Friday, Hootsuite, Inrev Twitin, Manage Multiple Twitter Accounts, Multiple Twitter Accounts, Tweetie, Tweetlater, Tweetme, Tweets, Twitter, Twitter Karma, Twitter Profile, Twollo, Unfollow, Untweeps, Whodeani, Whodeani Twitter

mled says...

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elahnz says...

Guest post by Elahn Zetlin.

When Dean said he was going to revive his jokes.com.au website the first thing I could think of was “How can Hitler help?”

Hitler, for those of you who don’t know, was a very funny man. He was also German, which is a huge contradiction to him being funny. Most Germans are not funny. Take this short joke -  “Warum hat das Huhn die Straße? Weil ich es gekickt.” A little giggle, but that’s all.

While most SS guards were hired for their brutish  chest size and capability in absorbing bullets aimed at Adolf (Ado to his mates), the furthest they ever got in entertaining him was the regular Wednesday night game of strip twister. This was of course after a few shots of cherry schnapps. I mean, you’re in a bunker being bombed to shit, what else are you going to play? Backgammon? Come on.
 
Brainstorming was never a problem for Ado (not to be confused with the Biggest Loser winner). He was most capable of instant brain farts and trains of thought unheard of by the best comedians.  His writings for the Berlin version of Mad magazine “Madder” were warmly received along with his stand-up routines at the Shultz Lounge. He was of course able to choose from his pick of comedy groupies lining up at his change room after the gigs. This is where he met Eva Braun, the then cynical lesbian poet. Unfortunately her poems were funnier than angry, and she quickly gave up for Ado.
 
Later, in his memoirs, “Mein Komedy,” he would say being with Eva was like high school all over. She would go smoke in the girls toilets and he would have long hot showers with the boys after gym class. I honestly don’t get this but I’m sure it’s a German “thing”.
 
So it came to be that I would revive jokes.com.au with the help of Ado, or Hitlo, or Ads, Hit That or The Drude. Thanks to a popular online meme taken from the film “Downfall”, which shows the last few days of Hitz in the bunker, I was able to quite literally make Dean wet his pants laughing. Score for me. The video - ,  was made simply by editing new sub-titles over a particular scene. Numerous others online have used the same scene.

Everything from real estate - ,
Adam Sandler movies - ,
and even problems with Windows Vista - .
 
The wonder of modern “do it at home” editing applications and DVD ripping software now allow any of us to make Dean wet his pants. A lot try, a few do. If only it were an Olympic sport and I was the team mascot. I’d be a giant ball of belly-button lint called Linto.

Jokes.com.au, he told me, will be a beacon for all to come to when the darkness of night falls. All those thirsty for a 2am pick me up, after getting some “munchies” after a session of bong hitting. All those teeny–whatsit Y-Gen-ers hoping to impress their MySpace friends with the latest viral video of a cute fucking kitten. All those Nigerian scammers bored while waiting for some decent replies that don’t ask them to perform the Dead Parrot Sketch from Monty Python in exchange for some money.

Plus I could finally see a way of getting paid for doing what I do anyway.
 
Over the years I’ve managed many attempts at making Dean wet himself. A lot of the time this was by photoshopping images with him in it –


With me in it –


... and me again (tastefully in the background).


And with his friends –


Thus my acceptance in helping Dean help many other people wet their pants looking at jokes.com.au’s pages of funny shtuff. (not a typo)
 
The logo, I told Dean, needed to be refreshed. We should get a new design. Agreed, he said. We then proceeded to overlook locally brilliant and expensive designers for the underrated brilliant and cheap stock of the world wide web via crowd sourcing site 99designs.com. Here we started a competition for a new logo design (see it here – http://99designs.com/contests/20909)

In a world becoming smaller and smaller, competition for work is becoming fiercer. That makes it easier for us to offer a prize of $150 US and not feel bad about it. It’s not like we’re getting a logo designed by a child labourer from India. I mean, to be a good Illustrator designer you’d have to be at least 12, the age Indian kids are married and old enough to bet on the cock fights (Have I gone too far? Send your complaints to Whodeani on Twitter.)
 
So my new job starts now.

It may mean long days locked in my bedroom with the blinds pulled down, surfing the net for hilarious content, feet up on the desk, not getting out of my pyjamas, yet finally getting the respect of my industry peers, fellow webmasters, Oprah, Ashton and of course the hot chicks and VIP treatment at computer swap meets one expects from running a jokes portal. I put all my confidence and trust in Deano, or Whodeani, or Deanski, or The Dood. He’s never let me down and I intend to never let him down either. I just look forward to many more opportunities in making him wet his pants.
 
Elahn Zetlin.






       
Click here to download:
Whodeani_and_Me.zip (990 KB)

Filed under: @elahn, Australian Jokes Website, Comedy, Elahn Zetlin, HItler vs Whodeani, Humour, Jokes, Jokes.com.au, whodeani, Whodeani on Twitter, Whodeani Web Site, Whodeani's Blog, World War Twitter

Whodeani says...

Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) is often referred to as the group of online marketing activities used to enhance or improve the chances of a website being shown among the top results of organic listings within a major search engine (when an appropriate search is undertaken.) These techniques primarily involve link and website content/structure strategies leveraging off targeted keywords (and phrases.)

The fundamentals of SEO have not changed much over the years. If anything, the cleverer major search engines like Google, Yahoo, MSN Search and Ask get with the way they index and retrieve website content... the more relevant the so called 'basics' of SEO have become.

In simple terms, SEO involves modifying your websites various pages (and associated content, images, video footage etc...) to ensure that the major search engines index them appropriately against keywords and phrases relevant to your industry, products/services, individual web-page goals etc.

When considering embarking on modifying your website for SEO, there are 2 key things to address... namely Page(s) Content and the relative importance of your website against your competitors.

For Google your sites 'importance' is referred to as PageRank... all of the major search engines employ a similar construct to 'rank' sites.

Given the dominance of Google amongst the major search engines, with more than 70% of all searches conducted using Google in most regions, we will focus our SEO efforts on how to best set up/modify your site to improve your standing with them.

Importantly as mentioned above, most of Google's competitors employ similar indexing and ranking methods to Google... enough so that the advice to follow will help improve the performance of your website with all the major search engines... not just Google.

1.    Content.

Your sites content tells the search engine how to treat your pages when someone goes into a search engine looking/searching for sites like yours.

The fundamentals here are to research the various keywords/phrases that are appropriate to your site and then modify your sites content appropriately. The 2 best sources here are your competitors websites and your current SEM (Search Engine Marketing) campaigns.

2.    PageRank.

PageRank is a number between 0 and 10 that Google assigns a page within a website that tells Google how important that site is... 0 being not important... 10 being most important. This scale is logarithmic so there are millions of sites at the lower numbers... very few at 8 and 9 and fewer still at 10.

PageRank is a moving feast so far as how it works but essentially it rewards a higher number to websites/pages that appear to be authoritative and relevant for the space they operate in and have lots of similarly authoritative sites linking to it (many people will tell you its about the volume of websites linking to you but these days the 'quality' and 'relevance' of sites linking to you is more important than quantity alone.)

To check on your sites PageRank (or individual pages PageRank) go here...

http://pr.blogflux.com/index.php

(There are plenty of other websites that do this and even toolbars that automate the process of telling you the PageRank for each and every web page you visit... this particular site however has been around for sometime and I find it very straightforward to use.)

When a user goes to Google and types in a keyword or phrase,web sites/pages are basically returned in order of the most relevant (content) combined with highest PageRank. Importantly, the power of PageRank can mean that a site that you may see as not as relevant as yours, may rank higher in Google if they have a better PageRank.

Equally a high PageRank site with poor keyword relevance/optimisation may rank lower than yours. The combination is what counts.

How do you do it... that is optimize your website to get more traffic from the major search engines like Google?

Despite what many of the 'experts' will tell you (or more appropriately try and sell you) about SEO, most of it comes down to some very simple rules... especially for most websites operating in local, foreign or niche markets.

Paid/3rd party SEO help can be useful in highly competitive online verticals in large, established markets such as Travel, Real Estate and Classifieds in the US, where an incremental improvement can deliver a substantial boost in marketing ROI.

If that refers to your business, and you therefore are considering using a 3rd party to help with your SEO efforts, ensure that what ever work they provide does not require your continual, ongoing payment to continue receiving the benefits of their work.

Also ensure that they are reputable (seek references of their work) and do not employ so called 'black hat' SEO techniques (sometime these black hat techniques can harm your efforts leaving you in a worse position than before you hired outside help.)

Lastly, before you commit to paid SEO, negotiate minimum targets that you want to achieve from their efforts (ie a minimum increase of 'X' unique visitors per month) and ensure that part of their payment is tied to reaching these minimum targets.

OK... here are the basics of SEO...

As mentioned above you need to address 2 key areas... Site Content and Page Rank.

1.    Content.

First you should research the most relevant keywords and phrases for your site... and your sites pages... that is to find keywords and/or phrases that you believe people looking for your products and/or services would use to find your products and/or services.

As above, the 2 best sources for mine are your competitors websites (here you can learn what words/phrases work... and more importantly 'how' they work)... and your SEM campaign (I will cover SEM... Search Engine Marketing... in a separate post.)

On your competitors websites... do a search in Google for some of the keywords and phrases that you think are appropriate for your space.

Note the websites in your space (your competitors) that seem to appear often near the top of the results for these terms.

Once you have these sites, review them noting keywords and phrases that appear often amongst the pages Title, Navigation, Headings and Body Copy. Importantly, the most relevant terms are usually nearer the top of the page... and/or to the left of any given area/sentence. (Look also at Image Names and Alt Tags if you really want to go deeper on this.)

So when reviewing someone's Page Title for example, pay special attention to the first word, then the 2nd, then the 3rd etc... in any given area. Same would apply to reviewing Navigation (menus), Headings and/or Body Copy.

As I said earlier... the basics of SEO come down to some very simple rules... one key rule in fact.

The fundamentals here are selecting the right words (relevance), for the right location on the page (position), the right number of times (frequency.)

The content element of SEO therefore = Relevance + Position + Frequency.

Lets say you were an online marketing business specializing in SEO and SEM located in Australia... and the top 3 keywords/terms you wanted to be found by (note 'wanted to be found by' not necessarily the most popular terms) were 'Online Marketing Australia', 'Search Engine Optimisation' and 'Search Engine Marketing'... then your 'Page Title' may read something like this...

"Online Marketing Australia, Search Engine Optimisation & Search Engine Marketing. Australia's SEO and SEM experts... Marketing Magic Melbourne" (Note: in some industries you can get rewarded for repetition (within reason) within key areas like the pages 'Title'.)

In the above example I have used the word marketing 3 times and Australia twice... and referred to Search Engine Optimisation and Search Engine Marketing by the full terms and their associated acronyms (SEO and SEM.)

Importantly however the above doesn't 'look' like it has been written purely for the search engines. Any content you place on your pages needs to both be appropriate for search engine indexing and ranking... and also be readable.

Overly optimising your sites content can have the reverse effect both turning off users and in some cases, flagging the site as inappropriate and cause your position (ranking) within the search engines to fall. In some cases it may even get your site removed from the search engines index altogether so it is important to strike the right balance when reviewing and re-writing your content.

One other thing to note in the above example was that I included the company name, 'Marketing Magic Melbourne', at the end of the optimised sentence. This was done deliberately as while the company name is important, important enough to include in the title for sure, in the main people that will 'find' your website in a search engine are more likely to be searching for terms related to your industry and not your company name.

You would assume that people already familiar with your business would already know how to find your website be it from memory... or by simply typing in <company name> followed by '.com' (or .com.au for Australian websites, .co.uk for UK wesbites etc...)

If you were looking for Adidas as an example... many people would first try 'Adidas.com'... or type in 'Adidas' into a search engine... and not try looking for them specifically by typing in 'sportswear' or 'jogging shoes'.

OK...

This content creation methodology, as shown in the Page Title example above, works for all page content, not just the stuff you can see. You need to ensure keywords/phrases are built into Meta Tags, Alt Tags, Image Names, Links etc...

After getting your sites Page Title's right... you should next focus on the naming of the various pages (and then move to Headings, Body Content, Image Naming, Meta Tags etc...)

Here you focus on including your company name and key words and phrases within each pages URL.

As an example...
 
Home               www.YourBusiness.com
About               www.YourBusiness.com/about/Your_Business_about.html
Product            www.YourBusiness.com/Product_Parent/Product_Your_Business.html

For the Product line above... if you were a hardware store selling 'gum boots' (as a sub set of a 'safety wear' category) then it might look like this...

                        www.HardwareStoreBrand.com/safety_wear/gum_boots.html

When it comes to Image Names and Alt Tags... its pretty straight forward.

Again using the hardware example above... an image named gum_boots.gif will help your optimisation efforts much more than image1.gif or 11234333.gif. Equally, an Alt Tag of 'Gum Boots' will work better for you than no Alt Tag at all (remembering of course not to over do the inclusion of any keyword or phrase on a page.)
 
Another great source of keywords and phrases for your SEO efforts can be found within your SEM campaign (assuming you are running one)... that is your Google Adwords or Yahoo Search Marketing online advertising campaigns.

A well executed SEM campaign will have a large list of keywords and phrases ranging from the broad to the long tail.

Of the 100's... if not 1000's (or 10's of 1000's) of keywords and phrases used in your campaign, a small group will deliver most of the paid clicks to your site.

Importantly, both Yahoo and Google's online advertising platforms allow you to measure the performance of your campaign... right down to what elements of your campaign actually delivered an 'action' (be it an e-commerce sale, a click-to-call enquiry or a completed online subscription.)

From this 'ranked' information you can determine what keywords and phrases are working best on the 'paid' side... and use this information to build out the SEO side (or 'free' side.)

Most importantly you should focus on what has 'converted' best (on whatever conversion metrics are appropriate for your site) within your SEM campaign and not just on what delivered the most visitors.

2.    PageRank.

Wikipedia defines it as such...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pagerank

PageRank is a link analysis algorithm that assigns a numerical weighting to each element of a hyperlinked set of documents, such as the World Wide Web, with the purpose of "measuring" its relative importance within the set. The algorithm may be applied to any collection of entities with reciprocal quotations and references. The numerical weight that it assigns to any given element E is also called the PageRank of E and denoted by PR(E).

A higher PageRank is usually given to a site that has a lot of other websites linking to it but as above... a smaller number of more authoritative sites linking to yours can be more effective.

With the relentless efforts of people trying to game the system (and the efforts of 'black hat' SEO's)... Google focuses far more these days on the quality and relevance of sites linking to you than the quantity.

So for example, a highly relevant, high quality (and high PageRank) site linking to you appropriately (that is with the link in text using keywords relevant to the page being linked to) could be worth more than 10's if not 100's of unrelated, low quality (and low PageRank) sites linking to you.

Several ways to research appropriate 'targets' for linking to you.

  • Research sites currently linking to you and either a) approach them to improve the 'relevance' of the link (such as the text used within the link itself) and/or b) seek out similar sites to those already linking to you. Visit here to learn more of the sites currently linking to you... ie for this new blog... http://www.google.com/search?as_lq=blog.whodeani.com&btnG=Search
  • Use competitive analysis tools like Hitwise, Nielsen, Compete, Alexa and Comscore to research leading sites in your space and the sites linking to them. You could also simply enter your competitors URL's into the Google link just mentioned above.
  • SEM research. Get a feel for the types of users being delivered to your site by the terms being used to find you. Look for sites that may not be in the same space but may share a similar audience.
  • Analytics. Review your current analytics to see where you are getting traffic from. Again, speak with those currently linking to you to improve the 'relevancy'... look at other sources for 'clues' as to the types of other sites you can approach.

Its worth repeating that this post is very much about the basics of SEO. As I said earlier... there are certain verticals, niches and regions whereby achieving a significant improvement in the performance of your site with the major search engines will require the assistance of a 3rd party... BUT it has been my experience that most of the benefit you can gain from SEO... for most types of web based businesses can be had through following the simple rules of this post.

I was going to talk more about Search Engine Marketing (and its connection to SEO) in this post however its pretty long as is.

Will provide more information on SEM in a separate post.

One last thing... if your looking to improve the performance of your site through Search Engine Optimisation, I would recomend you get your broader marketing efforts in check first. I wrote about some of the things you should look at in a previous post called 'The 4 Pillars of Measurable Marketing'.

Filed under: 4 Pillars Of Measurable Marketing, Ask, Compete, Comscore, Desktop Search, Google, Google Pagerank, Hitwise, How do I get Traffic to my Website?, Internet Marketing, Marketing, MSN Search, Neilsen, Online Marketing, Pagerank, Performance SEO, Search Engine Marketing, Search Engine Optimisation, Search Engine Optimization, Search Engine Traffic, Search Marketing, SEM, SEO, SEO Advice, SEO Audit, SEO Consulting, Web Marketing, whodeani, Yahoo

Whodeani says...

I am often asked... "How do I get traffic to my website?"

The challenge when answering this question is that for most businesses with an online presence, getting more people to a website is only part of the problem (in fact in my experience, getting more people to a particular website is the 'last' thing you should be doing.)

For a website to be successfully it isn't enough to simply get visitors (or more visitors) but to focus also on what happens to those visitors once they get there. That is to get them 'to and through' the website.

Most people tend to overlook this point, focusing on getting any and every user they can to visit their website and in doing so paying little attention to what happens to them once they get there.

For me this is the real world equivalent to spending large sums of money to drive an audience to a retail outlet... for the visitor to then be greeted by poor customer service, a confusing offer, too many/too few products on offer, inappropriate fit out etc...

I would call this the 'shotgun' approach to marketing basically firing off as many marketing bullets as you can in the blind hope that you will 'hit' some potential customers, and better still, maybe even convert a few to sales.

This approach doesn't work offline and is even less effective online where a user leaving your site to go to a competitors is only a mouse click away.

Some time ago I created a 4 part marketing methodology which provides an easy way to measure the performance of any marketing system (in this case a website) and affect its performance.

For a website it goes like this...

1.    Are enough potential customers being exposed to your business?

Here you need look at everything from self maintainable generation of traffic (URL Forwarding, Search Engine Optimisation, Doorway Pages/Mini Sites, Link Exchange Programs etc...) to external programs (Search Engine Marketing, Banner Advertising, Website Sponsorships etc...).

Additionally, given the way Search Engines 'index' page content, work needs to be done on 'visible' copy before the website goes live. This would include restructuring main area copy towards the terms that potential customers/visitors may use to find the website (or the various goods/services you are trying to sell.)

I will elaborate further on Search Engine Optimisation (SEO), Search Engine Marketing (SEM) and Online Advertising in general in a follow up post.

2.    Is your businesses 'core offer' being seen by enough of your target customers?

Work here includes modification of website navigation, page size (speed), copy and design to maximise the number of people that will see your businesses core offer(s).

Analysis of your website statistics will determine where potential customers are going within the website. This data can be used to determine what pages require improving and what pages could be left alone (or in some cases deleted altogether.)

Fundamentally, this section involves doing what you can to get more people to see what it is you built your website for in the first place.

This could be anything from trying to drive more people to sign up for a newsletter through to viewing a range of products/services that your business offers.

3.    Are you getting enough potential customers engaged in the sales process? Do you have enough enquiries?
 
This is one of the more critical areas for review.

Here you are trying to get more website users to move from 'just browsing' to being actively engaged with your business. That is to call your 1800 number, fill in an enquiry form or view the various products/services you have on offer.

This could include things like modifying the 'product' (or service) copy for Search Engines, re-designing e-commerce forms to be easier (and quicker) to fill in, improving the forms 'call to action', better placement of contact information etc...

Installing external functionality to move people to or engage people in your offer is also an option.

Some time back I discovered a brilliant platform that does just that called LivePerson (or the opensource version, PHPLive) which can both push potential customers to the 'offer' and more importantly, prompt people to engage in the quoting/buying process as soon as they enter your website.

4.    Are you converting as many leads as your business is capable of?

Improvement in this area will cover everything from ensuring that the quality of leads (in the case of a sales driven website) getting to the sales people is high through to making sure that each and every lead is promptly addressed, given to the relevant sales person and most importantly, entered into the system for follow up.

Once again, technologies like LivePerson and PHPLive will help close more sales.

Analysis of your websites stats would help determine which type of customer generated more sales and therefore allow you to modify various marketing programs, website copy/design etc... as appropriate.

Importantly for this section, you need also review 'non website factors that contribute to helping or harming the sales/conversion process.

I once provided some advice for a very large business in the 'moving' sector that was getting a strong volume of leads but not converting as many of these as they would have liked.

The problem boiled down to 1 fundamental issue... poor management of the leads coming from the website.

Here leads were often getting lost (they were printed out by reception and handed on paper to the sales staff) and in the main were not being addressed in a quick enough fashion (what worked for the offline business wasn't working online where quicker, more nimble competitors were responding in 'web time'.)

3 things I suggested ended up contributing to an approx. 500% increase in sales for this business.

- All leads from the website were automatically submitted to a Customer Relationship Management (CRM) system.
- All leads from the website were to be responded to within 24 hours of them being received.
- Casual staff were employed to work weekends such that leads received on a Saturday (where almost 50% of leads come from in the moving space) were addressed shortly after they were submitted.

OK...

The above 4 area's are constantly repeated as you gather data from your websites statistics, SEO, SEM, customer feedback, marketing performance and competitor analysis... 'Feedback Loops'.

Importantly by improving each of these 4 marketing touch points, even incrementally, you should see a profound improvement in volume of leads/enquiries from your website marketing efforts... and hopefully therefore in actual sales, membership subscriptions or service contracts (or whatever you would define as a 'conversion' from your website.)

Filed under: How do I get Traffic to my Website?, Marketing, Measurable Marketing, Online Advertising, Online Marketing, Performance Marketing, ROI, ROI Marketing, Search Engine Marketing, Search Engine Optimisation, Search Marketing, SEM, SEO