Posts About ‘industry’

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?).

Can SEO Be Made Obsolete?

Chess - one on many

A common criticism levied against SEO is that it should be unnecessary. A lot of web professionals who don’t work in SEO say that a good website, built properly and filled with great content, will rank organically on its own merits without needing any SEO applied to it.

Now, as a SEO practitioner, I have an almost instinctual resistance against that argument. But it’s too easy to dismiss it out of hand. SEO is after all a multidisciplinary activity, relying on a great many disparate facets to be optimally deployed.

So let’s explore the issue in a bit more depth. Can SEO be made obsolete, if all other aspects of making and maintaining websites are performing at their best? Is it feasible to spread the role of SEO out amongst other web professionals, and not require a dedicated resource? (more…)

4 Principles to Drive SEO Success

SEO Principles to Success

I’ve been lately asked to give some tips, especially to new SEOs, to enhance their skills. Although I already presented in MozCon last year best practices and guidelines to effectively manage SEO projects, I would like to share some principles –instead of specific tips–, that when followed together I’ve found they create the foundation of a great SEO work, providing consistent, long-term value to clients that can be applicable to any SEO project and differentiate exceptional SEO specialists.

I have no doubt that most of you already know and follow them in one way or another but I have also seen how these principles are unfortunately diluted in our busy daily SEO life. Here are these 4 principles to enhance your SEO value and ultimately, achieve SEO success.


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Fighting Sexism at Digital Conferences

bigstock-Peyruse-Boroffka-Lea-featured

There is no doubt that the technology sector is more than averagely sexist. The reasons for this are multitude and too complex to explore in this blog post, but suffice to say that the technology sector – and the digital marketing sector, as a subset of the tech industry – is infused with a laddish attitude and enjoys pervasive and embedded sexism.

I find this rather unpalatable. I think the tech industry needs more women, and more participation from women. We shouldn’t abide by companies and conferences using objectified women as enticements and attention grabbers. We’re not stone age cavemen any more.

If you attend tech conferences – and I include digital marketing events among these – there are a few things you can do to help encourage the industry to become more female-friendly, which in turn will encourage more women to join the tech industry and enable the entire industry as a whole to grow and mature. (more…)

5 State of Search Bloggers Amongst 50 Most Influential in UK

2013-topuk-onlinemarketing-influencers-blog

We know we have a great blogging team, but it is always good to get recognition from the industry and to hear someone else saying you did a good job. That’s why we were proud to have won the European Searchaward last year and to have bloggers win in specific categories in the UK Searchawards both this and last year and we were proud of Aleyda, winning the poll of European Search Personality on Peter’s blog.

Now we have something else to be proud of: TopRank Online Marketing Blog yesterday published a (constantly changing) list of “Top UK Online Marketing Influencers & Bloggers in 2013“. On that list, next to several people who have guest posted for us in the past, we find no less than five State of Search bloggers!

The five bloggers are Paddy Moogan (ranked 18), Sam Noble (ranked 22), Hannah Smith (ranked 23), James Carson (ranked 38) and Bas van den Beld (ranked 5). The list itself is lead by UK Search Personality of the year Dixon Jones and has some familiar names like Kevin Gibbons, Andrew Betts, Dave Naylor, Rishi Lakhani, Andrew Girdwood and many more on there. (more…)

For 2013 The Industry Wishes… (part 2)

I-dream-jeannie-wish

Last week we let the industry and the blogging team tell us what their best moments of 2012 were, this week we are looking forward to 2013. And what people wish for. Earlier this week you could be reading what the bloggers were wishing for in 2013, today we are looking at the industry experts. In this first post Joost de Valk, Dixon Jones, Jane Copland, Andrew Girdwood, Kevin Gibbons, Fili Wiese, Matt Roberts, Avinash Kaushik, Kristjan Hauksson, Mel Carson, Richard Gregory, Nicky Wake, Dom Hodgson, Aaron Wall and Judith Lewis (more…)

For 2013 The Industry Wishes… (part 1)

I-dream-jeannie-wish

Last week we let the industry and the blogging team tell us what their best moments of 2012 were, this week we are looking forward to 2013. And what people wish for. Earlier this week you could be reading what the bloggers were wishing for in 2013, today we are looking at the industry experts. In this first post Becky Naylor, Jon Henshaw, Marcus Tandler, Dennis Goedegebuure, Motoko Hunt, Will Critchlow, Jonathan Allen, Roy Huiskes, Alex Moss, Andre Scholten, Greg Jarboe, Barry Schwartz, and Julie Joyce. (more…)

My Moment for 2012: Aaron Wall, Andre Scholten, Kristjan Hauksson, Motoko Hunt and Jon Henshaw

State-of-Search-my-moment-2012

It is the last day of the year! Which means we are almost done with looking back, but today we keep looking back on 2012 with our friends and bloggers.

This year we asked our friends and bloggers what their moment for 2012 was and what their wishes for 2013 are. You have seen many moments come by already and this is the final one from our friends, but we have our bloggers to end with!

Today in this last group: Aaron Wall, Andre Scholten, Kristjan Hauksson, Motoko Hunt and Jon Henshaw (more…)

A Wish for SEO in 2013: To Get to know.

Not Provided

I will remember 2012 as the year when SEO took a giant leap forward.

It was the year when it became evident –among other things due to the diverse Google updates (Pandas and Penguins)– that if we looked to achieve consistent SEO growth over time we should definitely rely less time trying to trick search engines and short-term tactics that will be more difficult to scale and to focus more on doing #RCS.

It was also the year when content strategy became the sector trend and we at last started to seriously take into consideration content creation thinking more on connecting with audiences and not only search engines. (more…)

The Future of the Internet: Establishing the Boundaries

boundarie

And now for something completely different.

There is a war going on. A war on the internet. No. The war of the internet.

The internet is growing up. It’s now much more than just the collection of webpages it was before. It has grown more complex, more rich, over the last few years. The amount of information on the web keeps growing at an unbelievable rate and with that growth questions arise of who owns which information. Who are the rights holders of what kind of information? What data can be stored, used and sold by whom? And who is to set the boundaries of this all? It’s all about data nowadays. (more…)

Trust and SEO

trust

Let’s face it. Anything you do as an SEO is based on trust.

Clients don’t get an immediate return on their money in the same way as buying, for example, a sandwich, pair of shoes or even a report. It’s an invisible service, often based on best guess.

I work with a company whose CEO, the management author Kevan Hall, often talks about ways of building trust in large organizations. His ideas resonate with me, and so it’s with a hat tilt to Kevan that I address the subject here (although the thoughts here are my own).

Trust is a cornerstone of PR activity. The journalists, bloggers, clients and others that I work with, all need to trust that I know that the information I share with them can be trusted for use or publication. The standards to which the media are generally held also hold PR people to account (and in this context I push aside the kind of reporting that the UK’s Leveson inquiry has addressed, although mostly the publications told the truth – it was how they got the information that mattered). For the most part PR people lose their jobs if ‘called out’ in public by a journalist or blogger.

SEO has a pretty major reputation issue by comparison. SEO for many is synonymous with spam, poor grade content and doing lots of shady stuff.  Whilst the industry is very, very needed, one of its biggest partners, Google, is, it would seem from many of the blogs and articles, anti-SEO. (more…)

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