Thursday, June 7, 2012

21 Essential SEO Tips & Techniques

21 Essential SEO Tips & Techniques

Businesses are growing more aware of the need to understand and implement at least the basics of search engine optimization (SEO). But if you read a variety of blogs and websites, you’ll quickly see that there’s a lot of uncertainty over what makes up “the basics.” Without access to high-level consulting and without a lot of experience knowing what SEO resources can be trusted, there’s also a lot of misinformation about SEO strategies and tactics.
1. Commit yourself to the process. SEO isn’t a one-time event. Search engine algorithms change regularly, so the tactics that worked last year may not work this year. SEO requires a long-term outlook and commitment.
2. Be patient. SEO isn’t about instant gratification. Results often take months to see, and this is especially true the smaller you are, and the newer you are to doing business online.
3. Ask a lot of questions when hiring an SEO company. It’s your job to know what kind of tactics the company uses. Ask for specifics. Ask if there are any risks involved. Then get online yourself and do your own research—about the company, about the tactics they discussed, and so forth.
4. Become a student of SEO. If you’re taking the do-it-yourself route, you’ll have to become a student of SEO and learn as much as you can. Luckily for you, there are plenty of great web resources (like Search Engine Land) and several terrific books you can read. (Yes, actual printed books!) See our What Is SEO page for a variety of articles, books and resources.
5. Have web analytics in place at the start. You should have clearly defined goals for your SEO efforts, and you’ll need web analytics software in place so you can track what’s working and what’s not.
6. Build a great web site. I’m sure you want to show up on the first page of results. Ask yourself, “Is my site really one of the 10 best sites in the world on this topic?” Be honest. If it’s not, make it better.
7. Include a site map page. Spiders can’t index pages that can’t be crawled. A site map will help spiders find all the important pages on your site, and help the spider understand your site’s hierarchy. This is especially helpful if your site has a hard-to-crawl navigation menu. If your site is large, make several site map pages. Keep each one to less than 100 links. I tell clients 75 is the max to be safe.
8. Make SEO-friendly URLs. Use keywords in your URLs and file names, such asyourdomain.com/red-widgets.html. Don’t overdo it, though. A file with 3+ hyphens tends to look spammy and users may be hesitant to click on it. Related bonus tip: Use hyphens in URLs and file names, not underscores. Hyphens are treated as a “space,” while underscores are not.
9. Do keyword research at the start of the project. If you’re on a tight budget, use the free versions of Keyword Discovery or WordTracker, both of which also have more powerful paid versions. Ignore the numbers these tools show; what’s important is the relative volume of one keyword to another. Another good free tool is Google’s AdWords Keyword Tool, which doesn’t show exact numbers.
10. Open up a PPC account. Whether it’s Google’s AdWords, Microsoft adCenter or something else, this is a great way to get actual search volume for your keywords. Yes, it costs money, but if you have the budget it’s worth the investment. It’s also the solution if you didn’t like the “Be patient” suggestion above and are looking for instant visibility.
11. Use a unique and relevant title and meta description on every page. The page title is the single most important on-page SEO factor. It’s rare to rank highly for a primary term (2-3 words) without that term being part of the page title. The meta description tag won’t help you rank, but it will often appear as the text snippet below your listing, so it should include the relevant keyword(s) and be written so as to encourage searchers to click on your listing.Related bonus tip: You can ignore the Keywords meta tag, as no major search engine today supports it.
12. Write for users first. Google, Yahoo, etc., have pretty powerful bots crawling the web, but to my knowledge these bots have never bought anything online, signed up for a newsletter, or picked up the phone to call about your services. Humans do those things, so write your page copy with humans in mind. Yes, you need keywords in the text, but don’t stuff each page like a Thanksgiving turkey. Keep it readable.
13. Create great, unique content. This is important for everyone, but it’s a particular challenge for online retailers. If you’re selling the same widget that 50 other retailers are selling, and everyone is using the boilerplate descriptions from the manufacturer, this is a great opportunity. Write your own product descriptions, using the keyword research you did earlier (see #9 above) to target actual words searchers use, and make product pages that blow the competition away. Plus, retailer or not, great content is a great way to get inbound links.
14. Use your keywords as anchor text when linking internally. Anchor text helps tells spiders what the linked-to page is about. Links that say “click here” do nothing for your search engine visibility.
15. Build links intelligently. Begin with foundational links like trusted directories. (Yahoo and DMOZ are often cited as examples, but don’t waste time worrying about DMOZ submission. Submit it and forget it.) Seek links from authority sites in your industry. If local search matters to you (more on that coming up), seek links from trusted sites in your geographic area — the Chamber of Commerce, local business directories, etc. Analyze the inbound links to your competitors to find links you can acquire, too. Create great content on a consistent basis and use social media to build awareness and links. (A blog is great for this; see below.)
16. Use press releases wisely. Developing a relationship with media covering your industry or your local region can be a great source of exposure, including getting links from trusted media web sites. Distributing releases online can be an effective link building tactic, and opens the door for exposure in news search sites. Related bonus tip: Only issue a release when you have something newsworthy to report. Don’t waste journalists’ time.
17. Start a blog and participate with other related blogs. Search engines, Google especially, love blogs for the fresh content and highly-structured data. Beyond that, there’s no better way to join the conversations that are already taking place about your industry and/or company. Reading and commenting on other blogs can also increase your exposure and help you acquire new links. Related bonus tip: Put your blog at yourdomain.com/blog so your main domain gets the benefit of any links to your blog posts. If that’s not possible, useblog.yourdomain.com.
18. Use social media marketing wisely. If your business has a visual element, join the appropriate communities on Flickr and post high-quality photos there. If you’re a service-oriented business, use Quora and/or Yahoo Answers to position yourself as an expert in your industry. Any business should also be looking to make use of Twitter and Facebook, as social information and signals from these are being used as part of search engine rankings for Google and Bing. With any social media site you use, the first rule is don’t spam! Be an active, contributing member of the site. The idea is to interact with potential customers, not annoy them.
19. Take advantage of local search opportunities. Online research for offline buying is a growing trend. Optimize your site to catch local traffic by showing your address and local phone number prominently. Write a detailed Directions/Location page using neighborhoods and landmarks in the page text. Submit your site to the free local listings services that the major search engines offer. Make sure your site is listed in local/social directories such as CitySearch, Yelp, Local.com, etc., and encourage customers to leave reviews of your business on these sites, too.
20. Take advantage of the tools the search engines give you. Sign up for Google Webmaster CentralBing Webmaster Tools and Yahoo Site Explorer to learn more about how the search engines see your site, including how many inbound links they’re aware of.
21. Diversify your traffic sources. Google may bring you 70% of your traffic today, but what if the next big algorithm update hits you hard? What if your Google visibility goes away tomorrow? Newsletters and other subscriber-based content can help you hold on to traffic/customers no matter what the search engines do. In fact, many of the DOs on this list—creating great content, starting a blog, using social media and local search, etc.—will help you grow an audience of loyal prospects and customers that may help you survive the whims of search engines.

Sunday, June 3, 2012

Have you heard about McDonalds and how they start it?

Have you heard about McDonalds and how they start it?


Have you heard about McDonalds and how they start it? 
 
The original McDonalds was owned and operated by 2 brothers but discovered by Ray A. Kroc, a 54 year old milkshake machine salesman. Ray was intrigued when the McDonald brothers ordered 8 shake machines for the small restaurant and decided to go and visit. The following year (1955) Ray became a joint operator and started his push for expansion.

In 1961 Ray A. Kroc purchased the trade mark privileges from the McDonald brothers for US$2Million. The company went on to list in 1965 and began its international expansion in 1967 when they opened the first store in Canada.

McDonalds put their success down to Simplification, Standardisation, and Specialisation (the three Ss) and to the management of Quality, Service, Customer experience and Value (Q,S,C&V).

Saturday, June 2, 2012

The success story of Virgin (Richard Branson)

The success story of Virgin (Richard Branson)


The success story of Virgin (Richard Branson)
 
Branson was educated at Scaitcliffe School (now Bishopsgate School) until the age of 13. He then attended Stowe School until he was 15. Branson suffered from dyslexia and had a generally curious spirit, resulting in him not being a good student. He was the captain of football and cricket teams, and by the age of 15 he had started two ventures that eventually failed: growing Christmas trees and raising budgerigars.

At 16, Branson decided to quit school and move to London, where he began his first successful entrepreneurial activity setting up Student magazine. When he was 17, he opened his first charity, the "Student Valley Centre". 

Branson started his first record business after he traveled across the English Channel and purchased crates of "cut-out" records from a record discounter. He sold the records out of the boot of his car to retail outlets in London. He continued selling cut-outs through a record mail order business in 1970. Trading under the name "Virgin" he sold records for considerably less than the so-called "High Street" outlets. At the time many products were sold under restrictive marketing agreements which limited discounting, despite efforts in the 1950's and 1960's to limit so-called resale price maintenance. In effect Branson began the series of changes that led to large-scale discounting of recorded music.

Branson eventually started a record shop in Oxford Street in London and, shortly after, launched the record label Virgin Records with Nik Powell. Branson had gained enough profits from his record store to purchase a country estate, in which he installed a recording studio. He leased out studio time to fledgling artists, including multi-instrumentalist Mike Oldfield.

Virgin Records' built a reputation for signing unconventional artists including Mike Oldfield, the Sex pistols and Culture Club. Branson went on to found a number of companies collectively known as the Virgin Empire. He sold the record business in 1992 to EMI in order to keep the Virgin airline afloat. He has since re-entered the music industry with V2 Records.

Success story of HP (Hewlett Packard): They can do it, how about you?

Success story of HP (Hewlett Packard): They can do it, how about you?


Success story of HP (Hewlett Packard): They can do it, how about you?
 
Hewlett and Packard first met as undergraduate students at Stanford University. After graduation in 1934, Hewlett went to MIT to earn a master's degree in electrical engineering, while Packard worked at General Electric. Both returned to Stanford, Hewlett for an Engineering degree and Packard to start a fellowship. The two were invited to contribute to the foundation of a technology community in the area now known as Silicon Valley. 

In 1939 HP started in Packard's garage, with US$538 and 2 employees. The name of the company was decided with a coin toss. Their first product was a resistance capacity audio oscillator, based on Hewlett's graduate work, which Walt Disney Studios purchased to help produce Fantasia.

Today the company has evolved into a $25 billion business with over 98,000 employees and offices in 16 nations.

Friday, June 1, 2012

Online Branding: On site Optimization for small business.

Online Branding: On site Optimization for small business.


Online Branding: On site Optimization for small business.
 
Internet is became the most powerful in this digital, internet marketing is very popular, affordable and effective way for marketing and advertising small business product and service. Here’s below is few tips of On Site Optimization that you can use to improve your online branding.
On site optimization is not as complex as it sounds. Its just a matter of keeping everything in your site in good working order. Make sure to follow these following rules if you really want to have an advantage with google. 

1. No spelling errors
2. Keyword rich as in use the keywords inside your site if your looking to move up with google search.
3. Make sure all pictures are not broken
4. Add keyword rich alt title tags to all pics on your site. Make each one different.
5. Unique written content or as much of it as possible. Google loves new paragraphs and pictures.

General Meta Tag defined
A meta tags purpose is for spiders to gather a little bit of information about your site to help it decide where to place you in search engines along with many other things as well. Many people believe that the meta tag is not important but don't listen to them. The meta tag is extremely important. It allows you to have a better chance to gain in search engines as well as gives appropriate information to google and other engines that read from the meta tag (MSN, YAHOO, etc).

You can and SHOULD add a meta tag for every single page on your site. Each one will be different depending on how different the keywords are on that page. There is the possibility where you won't be able to add meta tags to all pages. Often if you are running a site that runs a lot of SQL call ups on pages you won't have a page file of a lot of areas of your site. This is common with online arcade sites, video sites, and other functional sites that record stats and information from visitors. Regardless put a meta tag into as many pages as possible.

Irrelevant meta tag = no traffic forever
If your site is about dogs and you have keywords, anchors, or in the description about Brad Pitt because you find that that keyword has huge searches then google will know that it's total junk. The spider will go through your pages and it'll find that there is no words that have anything to do with celebs or brad, and it'll throw your site so far down the “PIT” of google it'll never be found be even by the greatest pet lover in the world. I realize that there is so much to it that you may make a mistake and that's ok. 

You have to crawl before you run. It's not something that happens overnight. eventually you'll be seeing that certain keywords you put in are getting traffic and others are not. It's a long process. Maybe you'll see you are getting traffic from a keyword that is not from anything you tried and you could try to put it in your meta tag and throughout your site. Experimenting is good. No site is the same. In time you'll know your site like the back of your hand.

Popzone Asia is the first Online Branding, Internet Marketing in Cambodia, contact us now to brand your business online.

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

The most successful of having Own Business Website

The most successful of having Own Business Website

Having a website of your own provides your business with invaluable advantages over the traditional advertising channels. There are at least 7 reasons why you should present your business online:

1. Increased customers' convenience: Searching for businesses and products over the Internet is much easier and quicker than leafing through the Yellow Pages. Anytime a potential or existing customer wants to find out more about your business, they can easily do that, especially if you have an "F&Q" section added. Your customers can be always in touch with you, all they need to know is your website address.
 
2. Greater accessibility to your business profile: Your business profile will be accessible from EVERYWHERE. No other ad channel provides such global coverage. You will not depend any more on restricted presentations based on phone book entries. What is more important, more and more customers nowadays resort to the Internet when searching for products, services and businesses.
 
3. Greater opportunities for promoting your business portfolio: People can`t buy your products or services if they don`t know that they actually exist. Through a WEBSITE you can tell your potential audience much more than you could possibly do via any print advertisements, Yellow Pages listings, or TV/radio commercials. There are no limitations with regard to space and time, nationality and residency. You can say as many things as you want, to as many people as YOU wish. And your business representation can be as resourceful as is the Internet.
4. Low-cost efficient advertising: Practically, what happens is - your website runs a NON-STOP PROMOTION of your business! Your customers are always able to obtain up-to-date and thorough information about your services or products. Instead of having to rely on randomly aired TV or radio commercials, they can simply browse through your website whenever they have time or need to.
5. Around-the-clock availability: A website is available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year. It will be your hardest-working employee, never getting sick, or taking holiday. And you can always rest assured that your website is there for you - to answer to your customers` questions, or to collect their feedback instead of you.
 
6. It saves time: With a website, prospective customers can learn about you and your business at any time of the day or night without you having to be all the time pre-occupied with the process. The time you would otherwise spend on answering or re-directing of your customers` questions can be now saved and invested in further activities to increase your profits, in other words - in further expansion of your business.
 
7. It saves money: You can save a lot of money spent otherwise on print and postage costs for brochures, coupons, flyers, specials, newsletters, and other mailings. Furthermore, while regular renewals of printed materials can be quite expensive and also time consuming, updating information on your website is always handy, fast and most important - amazingly efficient. As we all know, nothing is more valued in a business than optimal productivity for minimal input costs.

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Take Advice from the Experts: Six Tips for Social Media Success

Take Advice from the Experts: Six Tips for Social Media Success
 
Take Advice from the Experts: Six Tips for Social Media Success
 
Even the very best marketers can use a little advice -- and new ideas --every now and then. With that in mind, six of our favorite social media marketers share their secrets to social success.

1. Start with the Right Strategy
"Align with the goals of your department. That's a good starting place.
In most cases your department strategy should also align to a larger corporate strategy. We don't want a communication strategy that is at odds with our service strategy."

2. Know Your Objectives
"Tie your social media activities to existing objectives, such as
increasing online sales, driving web traffic or boosting attendance at your next webinar or offline event. Set a reasonable target, see what
happens and use it as a benchmark for future campaigns."

3. Deliver Relevant Content
"Deliver the right content, at the right time, in the right channel to
​​ the right customer (or partner). Relevant content happens as a result of listening, thought leadership, Google insights, and community
sentiment."

4. Develop Meaningful Relationships
"Use social media as a platform for developing relationships. Show your
thought leadership by answering questions on LinkedIn and Quora--it could lead to new contacts and leads."

5. Integrate into Your Marketing Mix
"Don't leave opportunities on the table; explore how you can extend your marketing effort by integrating social elements into your PR, events and customer support activities." 

6. Measure What Matters
"Distill social media measurement down to core metrics that your company is already measuring that have history behind them. When you show what social media is or isn't delivering there is a conversation that cantake place."
Source: Marketing Proof.
Learn more about
Online Branding Click here.