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Archive for August, 2007

Search Engine Marketing Presentation

posted by Jason McElweenie
Friday, August 17, 2007

Boost your Presence, Build you Brand

 

Thanks to the good folks at Slideshare we can now share with our PowerPoint presentations that we use in our Search Engine Marketing training here at Schipul

Below is our Introduction to Search Engine Marketing presentation that was prepared by Annisa Chan. You can view other Schipul SEM presentations on Slideshare here http://www.slideshare.net/schipulsem

 

Jason McElweenie

For more information please contact the Search Engine Marketing Team at Schipul – sem@schipul.com

Social Media Optimization (SMO) is Search Engine Optimization’s (SEO) crazy cousin.  You know the one who kind of looks like SEO but has a nose piercing and a wild, adventurous streak that you still might be trying to figure out.   If your organization has started experimenting with Social Media tactics (which is a great idea, by the way) it’s never too early to start optimizing your Social Media Marketing plan for maximum brand building and exposure.      

Establishing a presence on social networks like MySpace (www.myspace.com), YouTube (www.youtube.com), Digg (www.digg.com) and Blogs can drive enormous amounts of traffic to your Web site.  You have worked extensively to make your Web site search engine friendly, but how do your site and organization fare in the Social Media world? 

The interesting thing about SMO is that your optimization techniques go beyond typical SEO keyword, Meta data and link tweaking (although they remain very important) and dive into the world of relationship building and community participation. 

SMO’s goal is to fine tune your Social Media content so that it is featured and linked to from relevant Blogs, podcast and other Social Media outlets and easily found in specialized Social Media engines.   The resulting traffic, candid feedback and buzz generation can be electrifying!  

To do this, you must play friendly with your audience and prepare to get your hands dirty in the Blogosphere.  Be sure to read Part 2 of the SMO is the new SEO series in our upcoming Schipul SEM newsletter to learn about The Top 5 Ways you can optimize your organization’s Social Media tools.

Want to know more?  Check out Schipul’s Social Media Marketing services and learn how we can help optimize your Social Media marketing plan!

 

Katie Laird

For more information please contact the Search Engine Marketing Team at Schipul – sem@schipul.com

Looking at the Big Picture for Search Engine Optimization

posted by Jason McElweenie
Tuesday, August 7, 2007
When doing search engine optimization, often people will be worried about doing the wrong thing and focus too deeply into the small details and miss the big picture of SEO. 
 
nervousComputer
Before you start doing SEO you should first decide in which direction you want your site to go before worrying about how many keywords and where they should be in the content of your site.

Search engine algorithms are always changing and there is not a way for us to follow or predict when and what the algorithm will change so it is better to make sure your site has the fundamentals needed to keep its ranking.

 Here are some good start places for the foundation of your SEO:

 

  • Age: How old is your URL?  If it is new it will approximately take 6-12 months before it’ll show up naturally in Google so that you can earn your trust by doing link building.  If this is your case, you will want to look into doing paid placement advertising to get your website’s presence and brand building.  Also keep in mind when doing link building you only want to associate your website with ones that are relevant to you to build Trust Rank
  • Web Site Architecture: Is you site easy to navigate and user friendly?  Are the most important content pages of your website within one or two clicks from the homepage or is it buried deep into the site, if so it is harder for the search engine to find and index and at the same time harder for your user to find what they’re looking for.
  • Web Site Usability: This is referring to how users interact with your web site.  Is your web site easy for the user to navigate through and for them to know where they are and where they can go next if they have questions; or if they want to contact you will the information be found without having to click through the whole website.

 

But of course you can’t forget about things like:

 

  • Title tags are important and a great place to have one to two keywords included, but you don’t need to obsess over how many characters you should put in there.
  • In-depth keyword research is a key to optimizing a web page.  Because the search engines changes are constantly changing their algorithms it is really hard to rank only for one keyword on your web page. 

  • Meta tags are still an important place to put your keywords and site decryptions, but again, this is something you should think about after you’ve done the keyword research and know what you want to optimize your web site for.  Don’t spend too much time thinking if a comma or space should be placed between each words, or stress over having too many words in there.

 

Annisa Chan

For more information please contact the Search Engine Marketing Team at Schipul – sem@schipul.com