Archive for December, 2009

How to boost Google rankings

Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009

First in a Series:
I’m often asked about how to get higher rankings in Google. Some people insist on spending large sums of money with search positioning companies that guarantee top placement fast only to get mixed results. I pay attention to SEO trends but I do not claim to be an SEO specialist. I have developed and fine-tuned a program over the years, however, that has been proven to increase Google rankings. It works because it’s not based on tricking, cheating or staying one step ahead of Google. Instead it’s based on taking full advantage of how Google was designed to work.

Google’s rankings – even with the rise of social media – are based primarily on:

1. The number of links from other Web sites to your Web site
2. The relevance of those links to the search request

Therefore, if you want to increase your rankings in Google, you need to increase the number of links from other Web sites to your site, especially among Web sites that relate to your industry and you need to do this without trying to defraud Google.

One sure way to get links from relevant Web sites while ensuring you won’t be penalized is by placing relevant news releases and articles in print publications. That’s right… in print publications. Nearly all trade magazines archive the feature articles and news releases published in their print editions on their Web sites. And in nearly every case, they also include a link to your Web site. By placing a single, worthwhile news release in five or six magazines, we might secure five or six links. Do this once per month for a year and we might secure 72 or more links!

See example

Forget About A Recovery?

Monday, December 21st, 2009

Forget about a “recovery”. Nearly every publisher selling ad space is claiming we’re “entering an economic recovery” or we’d “better get ready to advertise in time for the recovery” as if accepting the fallacy that the time to advertise is after the economy has recovered. Meanwhile, a small group of publishers is claiming that “the time to advertise is during a recession” and they cite studies and statistics to support their cases – and they are largely correct.

Like dollar cost averaging in a mutual fund whereby a constant amount of money purchases more shares when the price has declined, continuing to invest in high visibility marketing in the form of advertising, publicity and other vehicles during a slowdown yields substantial returns. Ads and articles running in thinner print magazines command more attention than in hefty editions, attention that is even more valuable if the competition has fled and retrenched. Online ads appear higher on the page for the same budget or bid amount. Plus ad rates are either reduced or can be reduced by a skilled media buyer. You can get more bang for the buck with less noise to drown out your message.

I’m not disputing the concept that investing in marketing during a slowdown yields a huge boost when the recovery comes around but my point is that there is no recovery coming around. The economic boom we longingly remember from a few years ago was artificially created by a series of government-driven policies involving interest rates, credit, taxation and other areas. Economic activity should not have been as brisk as it was. Therefore, to sit still while awaiting the return of another artificially created economic boom before taking action dooms your company to failure.

Instead, we need to operate not based on a hypothetical economic recovery but based on the actual economic conditions we face today and will likely continue to face for the foreseeable future. There is less low hanging fruit today than in the past. Each sale requires greater effort. More leads need to be generated to maintain comparable sales. More follow-up is needed to stay in touch as the buying cycle gets extended. More after the sale contact is needed to drive repeat business and referrals. Yet people and companies still need to buy things. They still need specialized services. The question is, “How will they know to buy them from you if they think you’ve disappeared?”

2009 Top 5 Tweets that triggered most un-follows

Monday, December 21st, 2009

These are the year’s five tweets that caused the most followers to un-follow me:

1. You and I need to pay corrupt 3rd world politicans because we drive cars??
#Copenhagen accord in discord with Americans.

2. “To contract new debts is not the way to pay old ones.” – George
Washington. ROFL-from the grave.

3. #FTC has no biz requiring online disclosure, has no biz requiring offline
disclosure either. http://tinyurl.com/y8jsrr2

4. Uproar over #Obama’s education speech is parents don’t know what’s to be
said and don’t trust that they’ll agree with what he actually says.

5. Suggested when #healthcare gets killed relief to business could aid
economy – felt hatred over phone. Needs discussion not angry silence.

The lesson: “Keep feeding us marketing ideas and opinions, Paul, but if we find out your ideas and opinions on economics or politics aren’t 100% identical to ours, then we’ll unfollow and pretend you and your ideas don’t exist.”