Posts on State of Search about ‘Featured’

Facebook’s Photo Privacy Settings Flawed…. A Safer Alternative Needed

Facebook

It wasn’t until I found out that I was expecting my first child towards the end of 2012 that I really started looking at how photos get shared on Facebook. Looking at what my friends and family do was really interesting and it got me thinking about what I will do when the baby is born and whether I would share my photos across my Facebook network.

Earlier this month, Facebook announced their Q1 earnings and engagement statistics. It is reported that Facebook now have 665 million daily active users and 1.1 billion monthly active users. Active mobile users now stand at 751 million, which was a huge jump compared to Q4 2012 which had 680 million users.

Now, those numbers are very significant and they are continuing to rise, meaning that Facebook is easily dominating the social media world.

As good as this is for Facebook, it also brings a lot of potential dangers and threats as the number of users continues to increase. Over the years working in this industry, there have been countless times when Facebook has been under scrutiny for issues with their security settings, sometimes meaning that once private updates and photos may have been accessible by the public community.

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Building The Case for Long-Form Content

Shelf with books

The resurgence of long-form content on the internet is a hot topic at the moment. Last year Jonathan Colman wrote his powerful call to arms for the SEO industry to up their game and create more value with the content it publishes, and I joined the chorus with my own thoughts on how SEO could come to embrace long-form as a legitimate approach to content.

Long-form content, and whether or not it works on the internet, has been an ongoing debate for many years. Nicholas Carr’s alarmist book The Shallows suggests the internet ‘trains’ us to prefer short snippets of content, but the evidence is mounting that long-form is a legitimate publishing approach online resulting in a positive impact on many different fronts.

Last week Co.Labs published the results of their own long-form content experiment, in which they changed their usual quick & dirty tactic of getting stories out there quickly to a different approach, where they revisited and expanded existing articles and turned them in to growing stories. (more…)

Social Media Automation: The Good And Bad #smxlondon

Social Media

Social media has revolutionsed the way we interact with clients, friends, family and peers but at the same time it can also be very complex and time consuming. This session focused on giving and outline of available tools to automate social media sharing. However, leaving those tasks unattended to a machine can also cause various problems if not social disasters therefore speakers provided the audience with best practices to blend the automation of social media with human oversight.

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Google Penguin Evolved – Do we need to be concerned?

Do you feel lucky

It could be an interesting couple of weeks if recent tweets from Matt Cutts are anything to by. The first Penguin had a significant effect on many SERPs, and if early indications are anything to go by then this one could far exceed that

Talk of this update is not new. I was talking over in Barcelona back in late 2012, and Bronco’s David Naylor had mentioned that many of the engineers had expressed to him that there was a mass update in the offing, whose impact would significantly usurp that of previous Penguin and Panda updates. Rumour has it that this has been held back due to the potential impact of these updates -and the early rhetoric from Matt Cutts and indeed Google would tend to back this up.

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My Mobile SEO Toolbox: Top Tools for Mobile SEO Analysis

Mobile SEO Tools

Which tools are best for mobile SEO purposes? An overview of the top tools which will give you the best results.

Each time I write or speak about Mobile SEO I get the same questions about which are the tools (possibly free) that I recommend for Mobile SEO analysis.

Here’s a compendium of the ones I use the most that are also free with the type of activity they help me with and I hope they help to you too: (more…)

Inbound Marketing: misunderstandings, facts and strategy

cat-vs-dog

When Bas asked us bloggers what we like the most about State of Search. At first, my answer was:Because of the outstanding quality of its posts.
But after, when I gave myself more time to reflect about that question, I gave him this answer:
I love how we may not agree in some few things, but I love how every voice and opinion is welcome and accepted in State of Search.

One of those things us bloggers do not agree is Inbound Marketing (right, Barry?). And I know that many of you, dear readers, have instinctively wrinkled your nose when you read those two words.

Why writing a post about Inbound Marketing now? Well, because most of the time I see it torn down over the base of what I consider misunderstandings of its concepts, especially the one for which Inbound Marketing is a new definition of SEO.

The irony, I must say, is that those misunderstandings are especially powered by SEO “inbound Marketers”, who affirm that Search Engine Optimization has changed and should call itself: Inbound Marketing.

phrase state of search

A premise: this is my take about Inbound Marketing and about why it is not a buzzword and why it is a strategy and not a tactic, and I am not referring to any other definition existing of Inbound Marketing, for instance the Hubspot or SEOmoz ones.

And I will use Inbound Marketing because it is a known term, but if you don’t like it, you can change it with Internet Marketing or even Donald Duck! It is not the name what matters, but the concepts that name represents.

Rather than offering a nice academic definition, which would maybe delight a Marketing professor but wouldn’t help the understanding of what Inbound Marketing is, I prefer to use something more visual:

Inbound Marketing Venn

As it is evident with this Venn, Inbound Marketing is that Internet Marketing strategy, which is based on the synergy of SEO, Social Media, Content Marketing and Analytics.

This means that SEO, Social Media, Content Marketing and Analytics are not synonymous with Inbound Marketing, but they are essential to its existence.
It is incorrect, therefore, to say that the New SEO is Inbound Marketing. SEO is the SEO: period, full stop, no reply is possible.

Cool, first misunderstanding solved.

The Venn is quite clear even for understanding how each of these disciplines has a value of its own, how it can naturally interact with one or more of the others and, finally, how all can contribute to a common strategy, which is – again – what I define as Inbound Marketing.

Many facets of SEO, for example those typically technical, quite always don’t need the intervention of other disciplines.
However, there are other aspects of SEO, where it has a natural closer relationship with them.

SEO + Analytics

Think of the figure now so often cited of the data scientists.

  • Google Analytics
  • Logs’ analysis,
  • Part of what is called Social Analytics
  • What can be included in to the conceptual cauldron of Big Data.

These, and much more, are those aspects where SEO and Analytics work together.

SEO + Social Media

In Spain, where I live, all the actions that see the collaboration between SEO and Social Media are classified under the name of SEOcial.

It is now quite obvious that SEO can have nothing but excellent results from an effective synergy with Social Media, not only because the success in Social Media has an interesting degree of correlation with rankings (and if the social network is Google Plus that is more than obvious), but also because Social Media is right now the best tool an SEO has available to create those relationships, which can ultimately lead to a successful link building campaign.

Finally, we should not forget that exist Social areas where SEO can offer a substantial contribution, such as the optimization of the social profiles themselves or the social networks’ internal search optimisation; take, as an example, how SEO can help in multiplying the success of a business Pinterest account.

SEO + Content Marketing

These two disciplines are cooperating since the beginning of the web and their relationship has most often been ‘abused’ by the all the SEO myths that have occurred over the years (keyword density anyone?).

Now, however, Content Marketing is essential for the success of any serious SEO Strategy, because the better is its quality the easier are outreach and link building for SEO (and we should not forget Panda and Penguin).

Content Marketers, however, have everything to gain with a proper collaboration with SEOs too.
For example, it is SEO what can tell them what is the thesaurus of words and concepts and queries the targeted audience use.

I could go on in the description of all the other possible combinations of SEO, Social Media, Content Marketing and Analytics, which make up the complex world of Internet Marketing, but I think everyone can easily cite at least one tactic in which these disciplines work together.

Inbound Marketing

Inbound Marketing, as I said before, is the product of the combined action of all these four disciplines.
Caution! If these four disciplines are all present in the digital marketing plan of a business company, but they work separately neither have a common strategy and common objectives, then we cannot say that that business company is doing Inbound Marketing.

It is precisely because of this lack of a common strategy and a real synergy between the different disciplines, that very often a business company fails to obtain that plus they expect from their ‘inbound marketing’ effort. Because, the result of a real Inbound Strategy is always greater than the sum of the positive results achieved by SEO, Social Media, Content Marketing and Analytics alone.

Inbound Marketing, then, is a strategy, not a tactic.

Tactics are the SEO, Content, Social and Analytics actions, with which the Inbound Strategy develops itself.

Somehow, it is the same sophistication of the actual Internet Marketing that requires the existence of Inbound Marketing and the figure of the Inbound Strategist.

Why canan SEO strategist not be also an Inbound Strategist? Consider what’s under the SEO definition today (and I am surely forgetting something):

  • Technical SEO;
  • Keyword Analysis;
  • Outreach and Link Building;
  • Video SEO;
  • Images Optimization;
  • SEOcial;
  • Local Search;
  • News Search;
  • ASO;
  • Structured Data;
  • Authorship;
  • Knowledge Graph;
  • Website Performance Optimization;
  • International SEO.

An SEO strategist has neither the time nor the knowledge to be able to commit the most of his work and simultaneously managing the Content Marketing, Social Media and Analytics areas.

The same is true of content strategists, social media strategists and senior analysts.

The Inbound Marketing Area

Here, then, what it should be – in my opinion – the organization of any department of Inbound Marketing:

Inbound Marketing Department

The Inbound Strategist independently develops the Inbound Strategy, after having taken into account the inputs of the strategists of the various disciplines, and delegates to the latter the execution of the tactical actions corresponding to them, while coordinates their “synchronicity” as to create that synergy, which is essential for obtaining the common objectives.

SEO, Social Media, Content and Analytics strategist, then, elaborate their corresponding strategies, taking into account the coexistence and compatibility of their own strategies and the Inbound one.

Of course, this is an ideal model and not all the companies have in-house the human resources, the knowledge and / or the budget to create such complex Inbound Marketing department.

In that case, especially in the case of small and medium sized companies, it is possible to try grouping functions and, apparently contradicting myself, to decide that a ‘lower’ Strategist assumes also the Inbound Strategist functions. Or it would the case to contract the services of a Inbound Strategist Consultant or of an Inbound Marketing Agency.

That model, however, in my opinion should be the one the agencies, which declare to offer Inbound Marketing services, follow.
For this reason, those SEO agencies who have not within them the representative figures of all those four areas do not offer Inbound Marketing in the strict sense, but SEO: advanced, content-oriented, call it what you want, but always SEO.

Nor Inbound Agencies are those, which, despite of offering services in all the typical areas of Inbound Marketing, do not provide the figure of the Inbound Strategist such as I have described it above.

Conclusion

SEO is not Inbound Marketing, but it is an essential element of it.

And SEOs are Inbound Marketers when they collaborate with other professionals from other areas of Internet Marketing to develop a common Inbound Marketing strategy; but remain essentially SEOs, as they always were.

In short, SEO and Inbound Marketing are not mutually exclusive; the opposite: they need each other.

And Inbound Marketing does not negate the value of SEO, indeed! It exalts it.

So why all these discussion (right, Barry?).

Questions to Ask Before Taking your Business Social

lets-do-social

It’s Monday. Chances are there are currently many businesses holding their weekly meetings to decide what they will be doing this week. Chances also are that some managers had a nice weekend with meeting friends and maybe even some birthday parties. The talks on those parties used to be mostly politics, but these days the discussions differ a lot. For example Social Media is discussed on almost every gathering. The good, the bad and the ugly of Social is being discussed.

I am willing to bet my entire fortune on it that somewhere on a birthday party some manager, some CEO or somebody else with a decision making role overheard or was part in a conversation about how Social Media is used in business. That person will have heard from his conversation partners what a great business tool it is for them and how their Facebook page reached ‘a 100 likes’ within a short amount of time. When that same manager turned his head at the birthday party he would see a group of kids all looking at their phones. Updating their Facebook status, playing a game or ‘apping’ their friends. In the back of his mind he will have thought: we need to do something with that.

This Monday morning that manager will have headed into the office, into the weekly staff meetings and will have said: “We need to do something with Facebook as well, where is our Facebook Page?”. And then the treadmill starts. A Facebook Page will be set up. Content will be created and will be posted. There will be employees begging their friends for likes and after a few weeks or months they start to wonder why Facebook didn’t work for them as ‘promised’. The manager by that time will have forgotten all about it and the marketing team will need to start looking for solutions.

Because they haven’t thought about it first. Because they lacked a strategy and just chose a channel. (more…)

Key Considerations for International Content Creation

3D User Content Crossword

Good old content! Everyone’s favourite topic in 2013, developing content strategies, producing engaging and original content and getting it shared is consuming more and more of a marketer’s time. So thinking about doing all of that in numerous languages can be pretty daunting.

Unfortunately, there is no easy solution. Creating decent content in multiple languages is going to take time and cost money, but doing it right will bring rewards. Of course, you could pay a visit to Google Translate (don’t do it!! Ever) or use an agency to blanket translate everything you’re ever written but that is unlikely to help you achieve the results you’re aiming for. I’ve taken a look at just some of the things to think about when creating or localising content for different countries and audiences. (more…)

7 Things My Girlfriend Taught Me About SEO

balcony-search

No, she doesn’t work in SEO…

I love seeing how my girlfriend uses the internet. I take note of her search methods, the kind of keywords she uses to search, the types of sites she buys from. And of course, I’m frequently called to the computer to “have a quick look” at something mind-blowing.

I see it as a chance to see how “normal” people use the internet, you know, people that don’t live and breathe SEO like we do everyday. So without further ado, here’s a post I’ve been meaning to write for sometime; here’s what Sylvie taught me. (more…)

Why We Are NOT Accepting Guest Posts Anymore

stop-guestpost

In the past few months there has been a lot of talk about content marketing. Another ‘buzz term’ of which I sometimes think many don’t even understand what it actually is. Many bloggers are giving and getting the advice to ‘go out there’ and create a profile for themselves and find the right place to share content. The biggest advice: guest post.

Guest posting has different advantages after all: as a blogger you get your profile out there, you make good use of Google’s authorship markups (get your face plastered around the web some would say) and last but not least: it might get you a nice link.

All nice, there is however a big downside to this trend: my inbox has exploded with (in many cases) low quality guest post requests.

Now it is not necessarily my inbox I’m worried about here though: the quality of content in general is rapidly decreasing this way. As the one running State of Search I have now decided to ‘do my share’ and make a statement: no guest posts are accepted anymore. Let me explain. (more…)

The Mobile Web vs. Mobile App Choice: Which is better for you?

Mobile Web or Mobile App?

Last week I had the great opportunity to speak at SMX Munich with a presentation called “The Mobile Search Universe“, giving an overview of the different alternatives to create a Mobile presence and how to optimize it to improve its visibility.

One of the most important aspects that I covered during the presentation -and that I want to share in this post specifically, due to its importance- is the Mobile Web vs. Mobile App decision that many businesses are making at the moment. (more…)

“Big data is going to replace the majority of marketers”

use-the-data-2

Big Data, it is a term of which many marketers still don’t know how to act on it. Maybe because they don’t understand it or maybe because it is ‘too big’ for them. But they will need to understand and get a grip on it to not fall behind and in the end get lost entirely.

Earlier today I spoke to Bryan Eisenberg when he was on his way to his keynote presentation about big data at the PPC Hero conference. Bryan, on his birthday actually, made an interesting point which he will also be making in his keynote speech: we might be heading into a direction in which marketers are (partly) being replaced by automation.

Let’s elaborate a bit on that. The idea is based on several different elements which Bryan and his brother Jeffrey describe in a new whitepaper which can be gotten from the website http://www.usethedata.com. It is about understanding big data, or as Rod A. Smith, an IBM technical fellow and VP for emerging Internet technologies says in the whitepaper:

“Big Data is really about new uses and new insights, not so much the data itself,”

(more…)

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