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Warner Carter | Content Marketing, PR, SEO

Things I Amplify from the web

SEO Panda Means Content Marketing

Content Marketing is the new SEO. Today if your main idea is not better content and well placed then you are missing the basic idea of what Google wants to rank.

Amplifyd from www.pageonebusiness.com

Content Marketing is the New SEO

To make your SEO efforts stand the test of time and Google’s ever refining algorithm you need to define content as your main player in the game. You are hereby challenged to improve your content and think of ways to place your content where it can build links and drive traffic.

Thinking of link bait but what are you fishing for? The interest of your potential client or customer. You must find out what they are interested in. Is it a solution to a problem? Is it data or news?

Once you have determined the interest then you need to provide bait in many different media types as possible.

Content Marketing Is Not New, But the Opportunities Are [Video

One of our goals for my opening keynote at Content Marketing World was to make sure the marketing professionals in the audience understood that content.

Publish Date: 09/17/2011 20:50

http://www.business2community.com/content-marketing/content-marketing-is-not-new-but-the-opportunities-are-video-058940

An Optimized Framework for Better Content Marketing & SEO

The pressure of competition and desire for business growth pushes marketers towards tactics that promise quick wins. Pundits advocate strategy first (been.

Publish Date: 09/15/2011 19:18

http://www.toprankblog.com/2011/09/optimized-framework-content-marketing/

7 Fantastic Resources for Great Content Marketing Ideas | Social

Does your business have a content marketing strategy? Content marketing essentially means that rather than pitching your product directly, you instead provide resources to educate and inform your prospects. If it's done

Publish Date: 09/16/2011 1:05

http://socialmediatoday.com/jasonmillerca/343952/7-fantastic-resources-great-content-marketing-ideas

A Food Pyramid for Content Marketing | Content Marketing World

Content marketers would do well to consider a pyramid concept for balancing their use of the many content formats they use.

Publish Date: 09/15/2011 18:00

http://www.contentmarketinginstitute.com/2011/09/food-pyramid-for-content-marketing/

SEO content marketing roundup, week ending August 14th | SEO

It's true! Yahoo! has fired its CEO and put itself up for sale. Other highlights from Content Marketing World, an interview with Danny Sullivan, and social media hallmarks.

Publish Date: 09/14/2011 20:35

http://www.seocopywriting.com/content-marketing/seo-content-marketing-roundup-week-ending-august-14th/

Read more at www.pageonebusiness.com
 

Link Building Blueprint Part 3

Debra Mastaler is a master of link building so be sure to read all 3 parts.
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Amplifyd from searchengineland.com

This article is really part three of our Link Building Foundational Blueprint series, and will focus on using content to attract links. Here are parts one and two.

There are many ways to generate links using content, you’re probably familiar with article writing, guest blogging, link bait, white papers etc. All of these content tactics are fine and still work, but since they’re talked about frequently, I won’t go into the basic mechanics behind each.

Instead, let’s take a look at a handful of tips and twists you can use with these foundational tactics to generate additional links.

Use What You Have

If you have a company blog and/or are writing articles and distributing them to places like article directories and how-to sites, you’ve already produced a lot of usable content. Here’s a couple of ways to reuse that content and attract links.

Re-use old blog posts

If your site has been online for awhile, chances are you have a blog to go with it. Pull posts with high comment and traffic counts, group by topic and rewrite each as a longer, more robust article. Be sure to point links embedded in the article to internal pages of your site optimized for these terms. Distribute this new content through the article directories.

Re-use old articles

If you have a lot of content in the article directories or in the resource center on your site, pull the articles and rewrite down into small, 200 – 250 word “posts” and use to create a newsletter. Add elements such as:

  • Product Q&A. Less fluff, more facts is best.
  • Cartoon humor. If you can’t find one written for your industry, create one here.
  • Industry announcements. Tap into your association or trade journal news stream.
  • Article submission. Accept industry articles from businesses in your niche.  This will help round out your newsletter, attract links and become a viable source of information for your industry.

After the first newsletter has been published and added to your site, issue a press release announcing its creation and include a link to the registration area. Email your customer base before issuing the press release, let them have a sneak peek at your new offering.

Tip:  Search for sources to add/advertise your newsletter. Instead of using phrases such as  “add url” or “submit site”, use  “fan base” terms to locate like-minded groups. For example:

  • “fan club” + your keyword(s)
  • “association” + your keyword
  • “circle” + your keyword
  • “league” +  your keyword

Our goal here is to find fresh sources to host our newsletter link and tap into an industry fan base. People tend to link to sources hosting what they write, be proactive in finding guest writers from “fan” type  locations and ask them to contribute to your newsletter.

New Twist To Old Content

It really doesn’t matter what type of link building you do, but it does matter where you do it. You can have the most outrageous, well written, visually pleasing infographic in the universe but if it’s sitting on an algorithmically crappy, low-traffic web page, it’s not going to help you rank or make money. For link embedded content to be most effective, it needs to sit on solid sources.

It can be hard to find sources in some markets and when this happens, I step back and look at how I can use what’s already out there. I focus on finding industry forums and content already written using my keywords. When I’ve found both, here’s what I do:

Use content hubs

Go to a content hub (article directory, white paper repository or industry news site) of your choice and make a list of all the content written on your subject. It doesn’t matter who wrote it, just be sure the keywords in the article match/are close to yours. Use a tool such as Article Checker to see who’s hosting the original article. Offer your new content to the same sources.

Use forums

There is a forum for everything, from baking bread to zoology protocols;  if there’s more than ten people interested in a topic, there’s a forum. Tap into their collective power by getting involved and becoming familiar with the various threads.

Most forums offer a “marketplace” or “for sale” section where members can drop promotional information and offers on behalf of their company. These sections are great locations to drop information on your newsletter or sell an ebook.

You can post an excerpt from your book and link directly to your sales pages. Take a look at the ebook for sale on the bread forum on the right!

A friendly comment here regarding forums…

Over the years, I’ve been involved in many, both in and outside the SEO community. The topics may change but the overall sense of community doesn’t, so don’t take advantage here and treat them like an advertising platform. Get involved and be a good neighbor before offering your content commercially.

Tip: Substitute “discussion lists” for forums and look for  groups dedicated to talking and writing about your subjects.

Tip: Every time you create new content and upload it to a web page, tweet the title of the article, your company name and the URL of the page it sits on. It doesn’t matter if the article isn’t on your site, tweet it and if you have a Facebook page, add it there too.

Key Takeaways

With the search engines frowning on “content farms” and artificial blog networks, finding and using untapped sources is crucial for link marketing success. Good content drives traffic, builds brand and hosts keyword anchor text, three important components for an online business to rank well and attract quality traffic.

Spend time and resources in finding and partnering with key sites in your online community, and it will go a long way to making your site an authority in your industry. Until next time – good linking!

Read more at searchengineland.com
 

Link Building Blueprint Part 2

Debra Mastaler is a master of link building so be sure to read all 3 parts.
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Page One Business Blog Visit my Blog.

Amplifyd from searchengineland.com

Almost every SEO I know spent the better part of last week discussing recent changes Google made to its ranking algorithm. This update hit some webmasters hard while others went unscathed, and results still seem to be settling out.

Nothing I’m working on was impacted (knock wood) probably because I tend to use a wide variety of linking tactics over a broad spectrum of sites. I think it makes a lot of sense to diversify my linking efforts,  if any of my partner sites are dinged in an update, I’ll be fine since I have a lot of additional links out there working for me.

This week’s blueprint tactic is known as “utility linking”, it’s a great way to increase your backlinks and help insulate your pages from algo shifts. (Previous article: A Link Building Blueprint: The Foundation.)

The basic premise behind utility linking is simple: using various pre-set phrases plus your keywords, you find sites to add your content to.

Sounds pretty straightforward right? Well, yes and no; some of this is simple URL submission, but some of it involves being a little creative and working beyond straight link submissions.

To illustrate, I’m going to use the phrase “dog grooming” as my keyword and go through several ways you can increase your backlink counts through utility linking.

Begin With Simple Link Searches

You’ve probably seen this link building method before but didn’t tie the name to the tactic. Basic utility linking uses preset phrases plus your keywords to find submission opportunities. Here are some common phrases :

You can develop lists of phrases on your own or use one of the many utility tools on the market. I go through the first 20 results and look at each site as a potential link partner; you can go deeper of course but I’ve found after 20 results  the quality usually goes down.

Of the four phrases listed above, I combed through the “suggest a site” results, it took me about three minutes and I found four prospects; two directories, a news outlet and a Twitter account. I doubled checked the two directory pages showing in my utility results to see if they were also showing in the index for the single term “dog grooming” (they were) so I added my site to each.

In less than five minutes, at zero cost and using only one of the many preset terms I have, I gained two links on indexed pages.

I also found a news outlet and a Twitter account that looked interesting. The news blog was dog themed, a quick check of their editorial policy showed they accepted story or article content.

I always try to pitch a series or multiple articles so I’ve negotiated for time as well as content. It took two minutes to find their editorial policy and another 10 minutes negotiating the content placement. We netted three links and established a new guest blogging outlet.

So far, I’ve spent 15 minutes working for my five links. Since I’ve only searched one phrase (suggest a site) and there are approximately 50 more, I think it’s a safe bet to say I’ll probably be able to pull at least 75 new links from my efforts.

The Twitter account I found in the SERPs belongs to a pet Q&A site and had been listed four times. I like the “listed” feature on Twitter, if anyone takes the time to create lists and add sites, they’re passionate about their topic. Go through these lists, friend the people on them and research each member to see if they have a blog as well.

Use the fact you follow their list as a way to break the ice when you email and inquire about guest blogging. Increase the number of times you tweet to at least six times a day, point to the content you dropped on the news outlet and as a guest blogger. Support your content where ever it sits.

Discover Resource Link Searches

Some of the sites in my development portfolio reside in niches dominated by big brands, they rank well and tend to run promotions everywhere I look.

When I want to find a list of sources hosting content or being cited by big brands, I do a little resource utility linking and run this:

linkdomain:domain-to-check.com site: .edu “resources”

The opportunities with this are endless and I’ve found killer sites to partner with. You can change the TLD and quoted term to broaden your search, drill through all the results to be sure you’re taking advantage of everything.

Finding DMOZ

If you’re interested in being listed in The Open Directory Project (DMOZ) this will help you find the right category to submit to:

  • “Only submit sites to this category ” + “Dog grooming”

Adding your URL to the wrong category is one of the main reasons sites don’t make it into DMOZ. Improve your odds by letting the right category come to you.

5 Tips For Utility Link Building

Before you start a utility campaign,  have the following ready to go:

  1. Several 400 – 600 word blog posts or articles using varied anchor text phrases pointing to internal pages of your site.
  2. Compile a list of references so bloggers can see what you’re doing and where.
  3. Keep a spreadsheet handy with all the sites you submit to,  once you’ve added your content  set up an alert to keep an eye on the link(s).
  4. Consider hiring an intern to help with URL submissions;  focus your time on finding blogs, forums, niche directories and other outlets to host your link embedded content.
  5. Read through this utility linking article for additional sources and phrases.

This tactic is very effective and will yield a lot of links, but it can also be a time killer so find a pace you’re comfortable with and keep at it. Until next time, good linking!

Read more at searchengineland.com
 

Link Building Blueprint Part 1

Debra Mastaler is a master of link building so be sure to read all 3 parts.
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Page One Business Blog http://www.pageonebusiness.com Visit my Blog.

Amplifyd from searchengineland.com

Over the next several months, I plan to use my column here at Link Week to lay out a link building blueprint you can use as a guide in your linking efforts. We’ll start with foundational tactics and some of the side opportunities they offer, and keep going into the more detailed “advanced” techniques toward the end. If you follow the blueprint and implement what we cover, by the end of the series you should have a nice collection of links.

Before I start, let’s take a quick look at what happened last week with Google’s algorithm tweak, how it may affect your linking and why now more than ever it’s a good idea to use a wide variety of link building tactics.

Google Pushes Back

Recently there’s been a ”spate of stories“ on Google’s search quality by bloggers in  a wide variety of industries, including the search marketing community. Seems everyone is unhappy with the search results and they’re letting Google know.

While the spate of angry posts is by no means recent, Google finally appears to be listening and last week announced it was stepping up their spam efforts and focusing on:

even stronger action on content farms and sites that consist primarily of spammy or low-quality content“.

There’s also a related post on Google Program Engineer Matt Cutts’ personal blog as well as some personal comments he made on Hacker News; I found this statement particularly enlightening:

” Earlier this week Google launched an algorithmic change that will tend to rank scraper sites or sites with less original content lower. The net effect is that searchers are more likely to see the sites that wrote the original content”

Bold is mine to emphasize the phrases  “scraper sitesand “less than original content“.  If you’re depending on duplicate, respun or tweaked content on throwaway domains or blog networks as your primary link bait, it might be time to consider alternative tactics.

On that note, let’s start the Linking Building Bluerprint by outlining a couple of tactics you can use to help broaden your base of techniques and links!

Tactic One: Associations = Credible Sources, Credible Links

It’s a safe bet to say most scraper and/or low-quality sites don’t have a lot of credible link juice behind them, they may have some links but not from the type of sources who can “vouch” for the site algorithmically and as a business. Build your business and link credibility by joining a:

(Collectively referred to as Associations)

Many marketing experts feel tension reduction is the basis of motivation, eliminate this negative barrier by displaying brands, seals and marks visitors may be familiar with. Join the relevant associations in your industry (and local areas), display the badges each organization offers and be sure to link to your site from theirs.

If your business isn’t tied to a bricks and mortar operation, no worries — many local associations now accept an online business registered to do business in their City or State*.

Consider joining a virtual organization created for your industry, search by niche +  “virtual chamber of commerce” to find them.  (*my example is for US based operations only).

Send an announcement Tweet each time you join an Association, include a link to your listing in the membership directory. Ask your followers to retweet (RT) it.

Build a presence on Facebook and other relevant social media site shosting your demographic. Don’t depend solely on Facbook here, use a tool like GoToWeb2.0 to find topically/geographically relevant social media sites to join.

Build out your profiles (many social media sites allow links in your profile as well as your business pages) and be sure to list all the Associations you belong to.

While you’re on the various social media sites, look to see if the Associations you’re a member of  have a presence; friend/join if they do. The idea here is to associate your name with as many credible industry Associations on as many social media platforms as you can and build links while you’re doing it.

Tactic Two: DMOZ/Yahoo! Directory – Links, Leads & Love

When you say “directory submissions” most people think of submission services or those long lists of general directories out there. Not me, I submit to four general directories and then refocus my efforts on mining DMOZ and Yahoo! Directory for submission opportunities in niche directories, associations and the media.

Niche Directories

Both Yahoo! and DMOZ offer a “Directory” category under most of their major topics. For example, on DMOZ, if you’re in the boating industry you’d go to:

Recreation : Boating : Directories

Once you got there, you’d find 50 potential niche directories to add your link to. In the Yahoo Directory, if you’re looking for niche finance directories, you ‘d go through the 43 listed here and add your site. (The Yahoo! Directory UK is closed but the US version lists a fair number of directories from the UK).

Another way to find niche directories is by using Classified Ad sites. I know this sounds a little odd but many classifieds host a forum and/or directory as a way to make their sites “sticky” and keep visitors coming back. Classifieds are always listed under the Shopping category by type on DMOZ, using our boat example here’s what you’d find:

Shopping:  Classifieds : Watercraft

Of the 51 classified sites listed here, about a 1/3 of them host a directory and/or forum. The Yahoo! Directory has a slightly different set-up but in most cases, offers more listings to browse through.

Associations

Earlier, we talked about using membership into associations, the Chamber of Commerce,  business bureaus etc ( Associations) as credibility indicators and ways to build links for your business. Depending on your niche, it can be hard to find a list of groups operating in your area, Weddles Association Directory is a good place to start, but they only list national associations and not local organizations, clubs, chambers and special interest groups.

DMOZ and Yahoo! Directory are excellent resources for this although each uses a different term to display “Association” results. Using our boating example, here’s what we’d see if looking for organizations to join/submit links to within the boating community:

DMOZ – Recreation : Boating : Associations

Yahoo! - Business and Economy > Business to Business > Transportation > Maritime > Organizations

DMOZ excels in this particular segment, in addition to the 82 Associations listed for the boating community, they also offer 783 additional resources under sub-categories such as Sailing Clubs (510) and Sailing Associations (187).

Not all of these clubs and organizations require fees to join, many are free, welcome new members and allow links in your profile. If you do end up paying for a number of memberships, keep in mind membership into an association is an expense of doing business so check with your CPA about using it as a tax deduction.

One last thing about potential link benefits from Associations. Whether free or paid, when you join one, you become part of an elite group of people with similar interests. Ask about extending promotional offers to the membership and opt-in anyone who participates.

Down the road, you can ask for a link and use the fact you both belong to the same club as an ice-breaker and point of commonality. And finally…

Media Sources

Both DMOZ and Yahoo! list media sources by category, DMOZ lumps magazines and ezines together and calls them “News and Media” while Yahoo! breaks listings between Publications and Trade Magazines.

Most online media sources have a directory or resource center that accepts submissions, you just have to spend time visiting each site to find the location. The same goes for any on- and offline newspaper, most host forums and directories, which you can submit URL’s to.

Keep in mind, this segment is geared on using media sources to submit links to, not ways to work with journalists. We’ll cover that later :)

Don’t limit yourself by using only DMOZ and Yahoo!, check out the resources BOTW, Joe Ant and The Virtual Library have to offer.

Read more at searchengineland.com
 

Free Xbox!!! wow

Darn Nice of Microsoft to be sending free Xboxes. Page One Business Blog http://www.pageonebusiness.com That is my Blog.

Amplifyd from www.sfgate.com

Microsoft Sending Free Xbox Replacements To Surprised Customers (MSFT)

Talk about customer service!

Microsoft is sending out thousands of free Xbox 360s to replace boxes suffering from software glitch -- even though most users probably didn't even notice the problem.

Read more at www.sfgate.com
 

Business Writing Contest

Now is your chance to win a contest. Page One Business Blog http://www.pageonebusiness.com That is my Blog.

Amplifyd from battellemedia.com

BigBreak.pngAs I've told folks on Twitter, I'm a judge in American Express OPEN's "Big Break" program, a Facebook promotion that is offering five worthy small businesses a chance to fly to Facebook HQ and get a complete "business makeover," as well as $20,000 in cash.

BigBreak.png

As someone who has started five or so small businesses, I know the power of a helping hand at the right time, heck, I know the power of just organizing oneself to enter a contest like this. Just doing the work of communicating why your business is worthy of support from someone else is an exercise that can yield benefits all on its own.

And every one of us knows a small business that we love and want to support, I know about ten, in fact. I've been telling them about this program, and encouraging them to sign up. I hope you will do the same.

But time is running out. The deadline to enter is this Friday, May 20th.

Read more at battellemedia.com
 

Good Places to get Good Links

Of this Top 500 websites online I noticed there are several where I can place content and make links. Page One Business Blog http://www.pageonebusiness.com That is my Blog.

Amplifyd from www.seomoz.org

Top 500

SEOmoz's list of the top 500 domains & pages on the Web. Last Updated May, 2011

The table below contains a list of the top 500 registered domains (∗.example.com) ranked by the number of linking root domains.
This data is sourced from the Linkscape Web index of 115+ million domains and 40+ billion pages.

Read more at www.seomoz.org
 

Fun As We Go…: Final Destination: A Home in Lake Tahoe!

another great travel story by Ashley at Fun As We Go. I felt I was at Lake Tahoe in the snow. URL:  funaswego.blogspot.com

Ever Been To Ireland?

Have a trip to the Emerald Isle just this moment with our delightful wayfarer, Ashley!

Amplifyd from funaswego.blogspot.com

Ireland: Lets Stay a Night or Two!

Some of my favorite things about Ireland are driving at high speed on the "wrong" side of the road, pints of beer and chatting with the locals and I found a place with all that rolled into one, Galway! 
On the last leg of our road trip through Ireland, I fell in love and wanted to stay, never to return!  Not to say the rest of Ireland didn't have me at hello...there was just an aura surrounding Galway; a magnetic connection.
sign "voted best in Ireland",
The next morning we woke up to the sun shining bright

Here I Am

My Photo
An inquisitive mind bent around discovery, I travel the world for the experience, the people and the wisdom found in culture. It's never "why" I travel, but when and where because I can't stop!
Ashley

Follow Fun As We Go

Follow FunAsWeGO on Twitter
See more at funaswego.blogspot.com
 

Where is San Diego?

another fascinating travel story by Ashley

Amplifyd from funaswego.blogspot.com

Final Destination: Restaurant Chasing in San Diego!

POSTED BY Ashley
I swear sometimes I watch the Food Network as an excuse or to give myself a reason to plan my next road trip! I love to travel and my hubby loves to eat so this is a match made in heaven (or really just an excuse).

It was time to explore San Diego after watching Drive-Ins, Dinners and Dives, so I got to planning. There was a long weekend coming up, so what better time for a road trip.  We decided to stay in the Gaslamp district of downtown San Diego to be in walking distance of many restaurants and bars because lets face it, that is what we were there to do; eat and drink! 
Next we walked the streets of the Gaslamp district, peering in different bars and reading restaurants' menus, then headed for the hotel. We wanted to relax before meeting up with local friends for a night out on the town.
When one thing falls short but another exceeds expectations, I say it was totally well worth it!  We enjoyed a weekend away chasing restaurants in San Diego.
Read more at funaswego.blogspot.com
 
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