Friday, November 13, 2015

Case Study: How to increase monthly email subscribers 353%


In this short tutorial I’m going to walk you step-by-step through my #1 list building tactic. Popup content upgrades It takes about 5 minutes to setup… And delivers BIG results. Every time. In any niche. This tactic single-handedly took robbierichards.com from 194 new email subscribers a month in April: To 684 subscribers a month in June: At the current rate I’m projecting to hit 1,000 new subscribers a month at the beginning of 2016. Awesome, right? Here’s how you can get the same results. Open your Google Analytics account and navigate to the Behavior >> Site Content >> All Pages report: Here you’ll be able to see the pages on your site that get the most pageviews. These are the pages you’ll be targeting with content upgrades. To start, pick your #1 most view blog post. Example: This expert roundup I published a few months ago ranks #1 in Google for the search term “best keyword research tool”: It generates 60-100 organic visits a day and has been the most visited p
http://bit.ly/1lmPDFq

Wednesday, November 11, 2015

Have We Been Wrong About Panda All Along?


Thin content! Duplicate content! Everyone knows that these are huge Panda factors. But are they really? In this article, I will explore the possibility that Panda is about so much more than thin and duplicate content. I don’t have a list of ten steps to follow to cure your Panda problems. But, I do hope that this article provokes some good discussion on how to improve our websites in the eyes of Google’s Panda algorithm. The duplicate content monster Recently, Google employee John Mueller ran a webmaster help hangout that focused on duplicate content issues. It was one of the best hangouts I have seen in a while—full of excellent information. John commented that almost every website has some sort of duplicate content. Some duplicate content could be there because of a CMS that sets up multiple tag pages. Another example would be an eCommerce store that carries several sizes of a product and has a unique URL for each size. He also said that when Google detects duplicate content,
http://bit.ly/1koAxiI

Monday, November 9, 2015

6 Steps to Creating a Successful Social Media Strategy for ANY Network


Fact: social media sites drive over 31% of all referral traffic on the Internet. That is a huge amount. It’s on a similar level with search referral traffic: So, if you pay attention to SEO, doesn’t it make sense to pay the same attention to social media as well? You might have already known that. But where should you focus your attention? That’s the big question.  People use the same two or three search engines for all of their needs, but they use different social networks to cover different aspects of their lives. The same person may use LinkedIn for their professional life, Facebook to keep up with friends, Twitter to get the latest news, and Instagram and Pinterest to share pictures. But there are other social networks, smaller ones, that have other uses as well. And although they are “smaller,” they still have tens or hundreds of thousands of users. If a large percentage of these users is in your target audience, that should justify being active on that network. H
http://bit.ly/1RHOket

Friday, November 6, 2015

Remarketing to People That Have Already Visited Your Website – Whiteboard Friday


Someone visits your website once, doesn t convert, and goes on with their day. How in the world do you win them back? Well, the answer may lie in a topic we haven t discussed for a while: remarketing. In today s Whiteboard Friday, Rand discusses how to get back in front of folks who have visited your site or engaged with your industry, new options in retargeted ads, and offers some best practices to follow. Click on the whiteboard image above to open a high resolution version in a new tab! Video Transcription Howdy, Moz fans, and welcome to another edition of Whiteboard Friday. This week we re chatting about remarketing to people who ve already visited your website and then left, or already interacted with your niche, your service, your community, and then gone off somewhere else. This is actually pretty interesting. A lot of times when we talk about the organic marketing funnel—someone performs a search, they follow you on a social network or they see a tweet from you, a Facebook u
http://bit.ly/1WEbxQ6

Wednesday, November 4, 2015

4 Clever Ways Videos Can Help You Attract Customers


 Most people would rather watch a movie than read the book that it’s based on. In general, video is an entertaining and informative type of content that people love. It’s strange, then, that so few businesses use video to improve the results of their online marketing. Videos can attract more attention than regular text content can. And since people can’t really skim videos, most will watch the entire thing if it’s interesting. The biggest benefit of using video is that it typically raises your conversion rate. A video on your landing page will increase your sales, while videos on your blog posts will improve your email opt-in rate. You should think about incorporating video into all steps of your sales funnel.  To truly appreciate the power of quality marketing videos, let’s look at a few case studies. 1. StacksAndStacks.com, a seller of a wide variety of home products, added videos to some of their products. As a result, they found that the visitors who viewed the v
http://bit.ly/1PlF6oW

Monday, November 2, 2015

The Anatomy of a Link – What Makes a Good (and Bad) Link?


The following is an excerpt from The Linkbuilding Book, an e-book by Paddy Moogan available for purchase and download. This chapter, entitled The Anatomy of a Link, offers deeper insight into what makes for a quality link. Enjoy! Not all links are created equal. One part of the Google algorithm is the number of links pointing at your website, but it would be foolish to make this a raw number and not take into account the quality of those links. Otherwise it would just be a free for all, and everyone would be trying to get as many links as they can with no regard for the quality of those links. Back in the early days of search engine optimization, it was pretty much a free-for-all because the search engines were not as good at determining the quality of a link. Even the introduction of PageRank, combined with anchor text as a signal, didn’t deter link spammers. As search engines have become more advanced, they have been able to expand the link-related signals they can use beyond raw
http://bit.ly/1Q5S4rw

Wednesday, October 28, 2015

A Step-by-Step Guide to Driving 10,000 Visitors a Month Through Pinterest


 Social media can be a great traffic source for almost any online business. But which network is right for you? For most businesses, it makes sense to start with the largest networks. No matter how narrow your audience is, it’s very likely you’ll find members of that audience active on these networks. This means that most businesses should start with one of the following: Facebook Pinterest Twitter LinkedIn Although they are all huge, they are very different networks. The best one for you will depend on your customers, your niche, and your marketing preferences.  Pinterest is the second biggest driver of referral traffic by a large margin. Despite that, it doesn’t get as much attention as Facebook, Twitter, or LinkedIn. This is mainly because it’s a unique network. Every single post on it is an image (with a short optional description). Pinterest can be an amazing traffic source as long as you can create some sort of visual content in your niche. And although it takes so
http://bit.ly/1GwL84O

Monday, October 26, 2015

Beyond Responsive: Design and Development Trends for Adaptable Marketers


A friend of mine recently asked me to review and explain a series of site recommendations sent over by a well-known digital marketing agency with roots in SEO. We talked through the (generally good) recommendations for content and search optimization, and then we got to this: * Mobile accounts for 53% of your traffic. We recommend building a mobile-friendly responsive website. Google recommends using responsive design so that your site looks good on all devices, and it may help increase mobile rankings. And that was it. A bullet point that says build a responsive site is like getting a home inspection back with a bunch of minor repairs and a bullet point that says, Also, build a new house with modern specs. We, as professional marketers, need to realize that this advice is not good enough. We re not helping anyone with broad statements that give no guidance on where to start or what to think about. Google might recommend responsive, but that doesn t mean it s the only option or that i
http://bit.ly/1i8Gs9j

Friday, October 23, 2015

Why Google Rewards Re-Publishing – Whiteboard Friday


It s a fact of life: we get better at what we do with time. Do you use that to your advantage when it comes to your site s content? Whether you re riding the wave of a successful post or improving what you ve done before, republishing is something that should be on your mind and your to-do list. And what s more, Google will actually reward you for doing it! In this Whiteboard Friday, Rand explores the how and why of republishing, helping you set goals for yourself and your content.
http://bit.ly/1jDzSth

Wednesday, October 21, 2015

A Step-by-Step Guide to Creating an Autoresponder That Subscribers Can’t Wait to Open


Email autoresponders are the holy grail of marketing. You set up a sequence of emails once, and you’re done. Thousands, possibly hundreds of thousands, of people will get exactly the same emails from you, in the same order. This allows you to create an unbelievably consistent level of service. Perhaps the most underrated benefit of autoresponders is that they exist within email marketing, the most profitable channel of marketing. Capterra found that every one dollar spent on email marketing resulted in $ 44.25 of revenue. So, not only can autoresponders save you a lot of time, but they can also be extremely effective in driving profit for your business. Of course, there are two sides to everything, and autoresponders are no exception: they have some limitations. If you don’t understand these limitations and take appropriate action, you will end up with autoresponders that suck. Remember that an autoresponder is just a tool. It’s how you use it that counts. One marketer can ac
http://bit.ly/1W4QACW

Monday, October 19, 2015

Million Dollar Content – An Analysis of the Web’s Most Valuable Organic Content


As much as we like to debate content vs. links, sometimes great content just seems to dominate. I don t mean to say that great content doesn t get great links, or that the purposes of creating great content is not to get links, but simply that some content on the web seems to shine through the SERPs. Content might not be king, but it has lot of sway in Google s kingdom. After sifting through tons of SERP data to find million dollar answer boxes (answer box results that rank at the top for keywords driving millions of dollars in traffic), I decided to dig deep to find content just like it across the web. But I wanted to do something different, something harder. I wanted to find content that didn t have huge Domain Authority. Sure, it is easy for the Wikipedia s and YouTubes of this world to rank for huge keywords, but what about the little guy? Are there any pieces of content out there bringing in millions of dollars of traffic coming from domains with Domain Authority around 50 or low
http://bit.ly/1GlTKej

Thursday, October 8, 2015

Using Social Media as Your Primary (or Only) Link Building Tactic Probably Won’t Work – Whiteboard Friday


A concept we ve covered regularly is what we call flywheel marketing, where the organic traffic, shares, and links you get from publishing one piece of content makes it easier for later pieces to see some success. One of the key pieces of that flywheel is the ability to get those social shares, and based on a recent study, we re ready to admit it: We were completely wrong about that key piece. In today s Whiteboard Friday, Rand explains why, and that the real value may lie in engagement. Click on the whiteboard image above to open a high resolution version in a new tab! Video transcription Howdy, Moz fans, and welcome to another edition of Whiteboard Friday. This week we re talking about an assumption that I think many of us have made over the years. I know I have. In fact, I ve amplified that. I might have even covered it on Whiteboard Friday. Thanks to some research that we ve done together with BuzzSumo, as well as some research we ve seen from our correlation study this summer, yo
http://bit.ly/1NpoOfG

Wednesday, October 7, 2015

5 Techniques to Get 5 Stars: How to Get More (and Better) Online Reviews


Everywhere you go, you see reviews. Whether it’s a physical or digital product, if it’s worth talking about (in good or bad ways), it has reviews. Some of this feedback is simply comments on blogs and forums. But mostly, reviews exist on large e-commerce sites where companies sell their products. The most important thing about reviews is that people care about them. About 30% of Internet users check out reviews on Amazon before buying a product. And that’s just Amazon. Another 13% head to Google. Before, people would ask their friends about products. But now, they rely on online reviews. People trust reviews to inform them about their decisions, and reviews play a huge role in people’s purchasing decisions.  Although there’s no way to definitively say that reviews are good for business, just about every study or anecdotal case suggests that they are. For example, Capterra analyzed the effect of adding reviews for software products and found that conversion rates increased
http://bit.ly/1OkEeAp

Tuesday, October 6, 2015

Beyond the SEO Plateau: After Optimizing Your Website, What’s Next?


It s a near-universal experience for consultants and in-house SEOs who ve worked on numerous organic search campaigns. The first 3–6 months (longer if the site is very large or complex) of any SEO effort is almost always exclusively dedicated to fixing mistakes, improving existing issues, tweaking and tuning the sub-optimal, and generally closing the gap between what exists now and current best practices. The beautiful part of SEO is that, once completed, these efforts can have ongoing and compounding benefits for months or years to come. The newly accessible and optimized pages start earning rankings and traffic, which beget more links, more personalization-biasing, more exposure, more sharing, and more business. If you ve got competent content & dev teams continually checking items off the list (and not creating many new ones), slowly the list of actionable, low-hanging fruit dwindles. I like to call this the SEO plateau. Click for a larger version The existing parts of the site h
http://bit.ly/1JQ31WK

Friday, October 2, 2015

Social SEO Simplified: How to Optimize for the “Other” Search Engines


 Do you want to compete with the best SEOs in the world? It might be fun, but chances are you’ll either get crushed or have very slow success. But that’s exactly what you’re doing when you try to rank for keywords on Google. Sure, you can go after long-tail keywords to avoid the sharks, but you’ll still have some decent competition. But what if you could go back in time when SEO wasn’t so evolved? You would be able to rapidly rank for terms and grow your organic traffic. And although I can’t help you with time travel, I can help you find similar scenarios in the present that could deliver far better results than your current SEO strategy. What am I talking about? I’m talking about spending less time focusing on Google. Why? Because that’s where 99% of SEOs spend their time. I’m talking about taking advantage of ranking for the “other” search engines—the ones on social media sites. I’ve seen very few marketers and SEOs take full advantage of these opportunit
http://bit.ly/1iQE2wQ

Thursday, October 1, 2015

Why Meaning Will Ultimately Determine Your Brand’s Content Marketing Success


In 2009 Fletcher Cleaves was a top high school football prospect ready for the next level, eager to do in college what he d done in high school: rack up yards as a running back. But before Cleaves could realize his dream of playing at the next level, a texting, distracted driver plowed into the car he was driving, forever changing his life s trajectory. Today, Cleaves, paralyzed from the chest down as a result of the accident, serves as a tragic reminder of something as seemingly harmless as texting and driving can alter lives. It s impossible to watch the video below and not immediately realize three important facts: Texting and driving is a big deal. This young man was unfairly robbed of his future. This big brand nailed the messaging. Telecommunications brands (and airline companies) enjoy some of the worst customer service ratings on the planet. And to make matters worse, their core messaging via print, radio and online ads is equally atrocious, doing very little to make would-be
http://bit.ly/1KO68m4

Wednesday, September 30, 2015

A Step-by-Step Guide to Generating Clients by Writing Case Studies


You can use many methods to improve your conversion rate. But very few can improve your conversion rate as much as case studies can. Case studies have a few big benefits: they resonate with prospects they show that your product or service can work the transparency increases the trust a reader has in you All of these benefits are important, but the last one—in particular.  Trust is one of the most important factors in conversion rate optimization: Why is trust important? The reasons might seem obvious, but data explains these reasons to eliminate all doubt. A study by Edelman showed that gaining a customer’s trust has many rewards: Obviously, most will buy your products if they trust you and need what you’re selling. On top of that, they will recommend you to friends. And because they trust you, they would rather pay you more for a product than go to a competitor, all because they know what they’re getting when they buy from you. But trust is getting harder to earn. The sa
http://bit.ly/1Ggybq8

Friday, September 25, 2015

Announcing the 2015 Local Search Ranking Factors Results


As we head into the thick of fall conference season, I m happy to announce that the results of the 2015 Local Search Ranking Factors Survey are in. Eager to dive right in? Click here for the full results. At the very least, I hope they help kickstart your Birds of a Feather roundtable conversations. (Or if you have a local search addiction as debilitating as mine, perhaps even an after-party conversation over over a pint!) My high-level takeaways Google s local search algorithm seems to be maturing Overall, we ve seen a continuation of the gradual trend towards Google rewarding quality on all fronts—from citations to links to reviews. And as more companies have implemented the table stakes of site architecture, keyword- and location-relevant title tags, and claiming their Google My Business pages, quality and authority become the differentiators in competitive markets. The influence of Google+ on local results is on its way out (if it even existed in the first place) With the remova
http://bit.ly/1NYtlFO

Link Building Outreach Platforms Compared


Find the original post on Point Blank SEO at: %%PostLink%% In this post we’re going to compare the most popular solutions for conducting & managing link building and/or PR outreach. Which one should I use? After my research & testing, it pains me to give such one-dimensional answers (cue waves of criticism), but since that’s what a lot of you are looking for, here’s the TL;DR version of what you should use: Small business owners – Google Drive / Excel ($ 0/anything/month) Solo person or small team – Pitchbox ($ 47-67/project/month) Mid to large-size team – BuzzStream ($ 15-25/user/month) See the more in-depth comparison here. The group up for the most debate is the mid-size teams (i.e. ~5 people). With that said, making a decision purely off the above is a very poor idea. They were made off a few critical assumptions that don’t hold true for ALL of you. Each platform has its own sets of advantages, so you need to answer these main questions before you can decide which i
http://bit.ly/1NYtnxw

Thursday, September 24, 2015

Let Me Work, Please: A Case for Fewer & More Productive Meetings


If you feel like your workweek is structured around meetings—like all you re doing is preparing for and attending meetings, talking about and reporting on your work rather than sitting and doing it—then you ve reached a point of frustration where you need to regain control of your time. There are two sides to meetings: not attending them if they re unnecessary, and when running a meeting, ensuring that it s purposeful, on-point, and driving a specific outcome. If the meeting lacks purpose and has no desired outcome, what s the point? Today s workplace The current workplace is operated on a model that doesn t promote productivity. Many offices are built around the open office concept, which serves as an ideal delivery system for distraction. This open-plan environment may promote camaraderie, but constant noise damages attention spans and workplace productivity. Even the most sophisticated noise-canceling headphones cannot defend workers from inevitable but unpredictable waves of i
http://bit.ly/1gR7sK5

Tuesday, September 22, 2015

Social Influencer Prospecting with Co-Citation


A few Saturday nights ago, I had a bit of a eureka moment. I’d been thinking about how we could prospect for social influencers in a way that was more data driven than the current approach of doing keyword searches on tools like Followerwonk. An interesting feature of BuzzSumo was introduced to me a few weeks prior by AJ Ghergich (@SEO), a marketer that’s very talented when it comes to content promotion. He pointed out to me that you can see exactly which Twitter accounts shared a given piece of content, via the ‘View Sharers’ button next to each result. This was very interesting, and thought it would be useful to simply grab a list of who shared a specific piece of content that was relevant, and add them to our prospecting lists. However, on that Saturday night, I realized that this feature was much more powerful than that. But before we explain how, let’s start with how we currently generate quick-win link prospecting reports for new clients to give you the background know
http://bit.ly/1FesDl5

Monday, September 21, 2015

14 Examples of Truly “Epic” Content: How Does Yours Stack Up?


 The word epic is overused. It’s become watered down over the years, and most people don’t seem to appreciate what it means. Which is a problem. Why? Because the first rule of content marketing is: Create epic content. I’ve written about creating great content many times before, but epic is a level above that. According to the dictionary, epic describes something that is: heroic; majestic; impressively great OR of unusually great size or extent In plain English, it refers to something that’s so much better than any other thing out there that you can’t help but to be impressed with it. And although you can’t always hit the epic level with your content, it’s something you should strive to reach at least a few times a year. That’s when you’ll start getting hundreds of links to your content and tens of thousands of views. But here’s the problem: You can’t create a guide to making epic content because it comes in many different forms. Great content is fairly predic
http://bit.ly/1FcxoLX

Drive More Traffic To Your Site With These Proven Methods


When it comes to the success and profitability of your blog, the number of visitors you receive is more important than anything else. We can talk about leads, conversions and authoritative backlinks until we’re blue in the face, but without any actual traffic your blog is just a barren wasteland on the internet. In order for your blog to be successful, it needs to be seen. Today I’m going to reveal proven methods that are guaranteed to bring people to your blog. What You Will Learn Proven methods to generate traffic How to apply them to your own site How to get your first 1,000 visitors ATTENTION: Unlock My Award Winning Blogging Resources Instantly 3 Ways To Bring Traffic to Your Blog Today Before we dive into these methods, it’s important to understand that while traffic is good it’s important to drive relevant traffic to your blog. More specifically, it needs to be people who are within your target audience. If you you blog about SEO tactics and someone stumbles in looking
http://bit.ly/1Mm1c8j

Friday, September 18, 2015

How to Use Keywords Throughout Your Marketing Strategy


Posted by kristihines How do you use keywords? If you re only using them to optimize your website for search, then you re missing out on many ways to get visibility amongst your target audience. In this post, I m going to share with you the best ways to use keywords across your entire online (and even offline) marketing strategy. Webpage optimization I don t want to spend a lot of time on this one, especially since you can read all about it in the Beginner s Guide to SEO. But just for a quick review, here are the places that you should use your target keyword phrase on each page of your website that you d like to optimize for search. In the SEO title tag of your page (or just the main title of the page if your CMS does not allow you to edit SEO fields). This is a requirement for the on-page optimization of a keyword. In the meta description for your page. Even though it may not count for optimization purposes, it will get bolded when someone sees your webpage in search results for tha
http://bit.ly/1FRMJwh

Tuesday, September 15, 2015

6 Clever Ways to Get Influencers to Link to You


One of the most important things I say you should do is create great content. But then what? If you don’t do anything with that content, no one will see it, which is a waste of your time, effort, and money. Once you start using promotional techniques, you’ll start getting readers to your blog posts. A few dozen at first, then a few hundred, maybe even a few thousand after a while. But there’s one thing missing at this point. I’ll tell you what it is in a second. From my experience, I can tell that organic search traffic is going to play a major role for almost all websites. You can try to diversify, but the fact remains that any site with a ton of traffic gets a large chunk of it from search engines. After all, organic search traffic makes up over 60% of the traffic on the web. 
http://bit.ly/1if0yz2

Sunday, September 13, 2015

Traffic and Engagement Metrics and Their Correlation to Google Rankings


Posted by Royh When Moz undertook this year’s Ranking Correlation Study (Ranking Factors), there was a desire to include data points never before studied. Fortunately, SimilarWeb had exactly what was needed. For the first time, Moz was able to measure ranking correlations with both traffic and engagement metrics. Using Moz’s ranking data on over 200,000 domains, combined with multiple SimilarWeb data points—including traffic, page views, bounce rate, time on site, and rank—the Search Ranking Factors study was able to measure how these metrics corresponded to higher rankings. These metrics differ from the traditional SEO parameters Moz has measured in the past in that they are primarily user-based metrics. This means that they vary based on how users interact with the individual websites, as opposed to static features such as title tag length. We ll find these user-based metrics important as we learn how search engines may use them to rank webpages, as illustrated in this excel
http://bit.ly/1iGN5R6

Saturday, September 12, 2015

Demystifying SEO: How to Skyrocket Your Traffic Through Schema Markup


Good writers always write for their visitors, not for search engines. Actually, that’s not quite true… At the dawn of SEO, you did have to write for the search engines. The primitive search engines could only evaluate the relevance of your content to the query by the number of times the searched keyword was mentioned in the content. By simply including the keyword as many times as possible, you’d rank well. Obviously, search engines have evolved since then. With Google’s updates in the past few years, it’s become clear that keyword stuffing no longer helps you rank (in fact, it hurts you). Now, Google looks at several on-page factors to determine a page’s relevancy. The new advice for content writers is: write for your visitors, and let Google worry about the rest. It’s not bad advice. In fact, that’s what the writer should do. However, SEOs can, and often should, optimize that content further. Even if you write all your content yourself, you need to play the parts of
http://bit.ly/1MjbJUy

Friday, September 11, 2015

New Study: Data Reveals 67% of Consumers are Influenced by Online Reviews


Posted by Dhinckley This post was originally in YouMoz, and was promoted to the main blog because it provides great value and interest to our community. The author s views are entirely his or her own and may not reflect the views of Moz, Inc. Google processed over 1 trillion search queries in 2014. As Google Search continues to further integrate into our normal daily activities, those search results become increasingly important, especially when individuals are searching for information about a company or product. To better understand just how much of an impact Google has on an individual’s purchasing decisions, we set up a research study with a group of 1,000 consumers through Google Consumer Surveys. The study investigates how individuals interact with Google and other major sites during the buying process. Do searchers go beyond page 1 of Google? We first sought to understand how deeply people went into the Google search results. We wanted to know if people tended to stop at page
http://bit.ly/1iiU7Mh

Thursday, September 10, 2015

25 List Building Strategies: From Zero to 4,476 Email Subscribers in 10 Months


Building an email list should be your number one priority. Period. Why? It allows you to generate traffic and REPEAT customers on demand. Think about it An email list is something people opt into. They actually want to hear from you. You can build a relationship with your readers. People buy from those they trust. Your message gets delivered to the place 91% of consumers check everyday the inbox. YOU OWN THE LIST. An email list is the only channel if nurtured that will allow you to directly and personally communicate with your audience on an ongoing basis. It’s essential to building a profitable business. So, how do you build an email list without breaking the bank? That’s exactly what I’m going to show you in this post: 25 actionable list building strategies you can use to grow your email list TODAY. ​ These are the exact strategies I use to grow my email list from zero to 4,476 subscribers in 10 months: Download a Free PDF of this Guide + BONUS 3-Step List Building Formula
http://bit.ly/1Ns5fDa

What’s in Your SEO Arsenal? 6 Skills All SEOs Need to Have


There’s no university degree for SEO. Yet, you’re expected to know a lot about many different things. This is why it’s so tough to define what a great SEO is. In most professional situations, knowing SEO alone is no longer enough. You also need to have your fair share of marketing, business, and PR skills. While some of these skills are luxuries, I’ve identified six things that all good SEOs need to possess. Great ones will possess all of them and more. SEO is an interesting field because it can use skills from all sorts of other fields. So, if you’re passionate about something that doesn’t seem immediately relevant to SEO (discussed in this article), don’t just throw it away. You never know when it will come in handy.  1. Great SEOs know how to get consistent results As an SEO you know you can’t guarantee that a specific keyword will rank #1—certainly not 100% of the time. For some reason, statements like that have led people to think that SEO is blind luck.  This
http://bit.ly/1Kb2VcH

Wednesday, September 9, 2015

How I Generated 2,178 Leads In 14 days With Just $60


This is a case study of how one of the blogs readers was able to generate a lot of leads in a short period of time using a single giveaway. By leveraging a mix of partnerships and the viral component, results were quite mind blowing. Whether you’re a blogger or an entrepreneur, doing giveaways can be a great way to grow your list of potential customers. Read the case study to see how she did it for her wellness brand. What You Will Learn How I gained 2,178 subscribers by running a single giveaway in only 14 days and only $ 60 spent on advertising Planning your giveaway in a way that attracts quality leads What to expect when running a giveaway Mistakes most people make when running a giveaway for list building ATTENTION: Unlock My Award Winning Blogging Resources Instantly Why Should You Care? Before I dive into this case study, I wanted to make sure I introduce myself. Why should you care what I have to say anyway, right? Well, my name is Kamila Gornia and I am a digital marketing
http://bit.ly/1iwVyq7

5 Ways to Build Links Without Getting Penalized


How do you get more search traffic if you’re not supposed to build links? It’s a catch-22… You know you should create content that attracts links, but you need to have links to have an audience that can link to you. Therefore, you must be proactive in order to get backlinks to your site. And according to Matt Cutts, the importance of backlinks isn’t going away anytime soon: …backlinks still have many, many years left in them … over time backlinks will become a little less important … we will continue to use links in order to assess the basic reputation of pages and websites. According to just about every study out there, backlinks are still one of the most important factors in ranking highly in search engines—as the image above illustrates. Bottom line: You need to build backlinks. But…you need to do it in a safe way, so you don’t have to worry about having your site sent into oblivion by the next Penguin update. Avoiding penalties while building links isn’t ab
http://bit.ly/1iwVAOB

A Clear Path for Marketers to Surviving Content Shock


Posted by EricEnge Yes, we all know that content marketing is all the rage. More and more brands are embracing content marketing as a basic way to engage with the community at large, and to build credibility, trust, and relationships with potential customers. You ve probably also heard about content fatigue, or the oncoming content glut. Mark Schaefer attracted a ton of attention on this topic with his post, Content Shock: Why content marketing is not a sustainable strategy. A key part of his thesis is that each human has a physiological, inviolable limit to the amount of content they can consume. He then goes on to say that deep pockets win, that the entry barriers will become higher and higher, and that the level of investment that one will have to make in content to win will become impossibly high for most businesses. Many responded with counter-arguments, including this article by Joe Pulizzi called Content Shock: Worrisome Trend or Content Marketing Myth?, in which he includes a
http://bit.ly/1iwVAyf

Content, Shares, and Links: Insights from Analyzing 1 Million Articles


Posted by Steve_Rayson This summer BuzzSumo teamed up with Moz to analyze the shares and links of over 1m articles. We wanted to look at the correlation of shares and links, to understand the content that gets both shares and links, and to identify the formats that get relatively more shares or links. What we found is that the majority of content published on the internet is simply ignored when it comes to shares and links. The data suggests most content is simply not worthy of sharing or linking, and also that people are very poor at amplifying content. It may sound harsh but it seems most people are wasting their time either producing poor content or failing to amplify it. On a more positive note we also found some great examples of content that people love to both share and link to. It was not a surprise to find content gets far more shares than links. Shares are much easier to acquire. Everyone can share content easily and it is almost frictionless in some cases. Content has to wo
http://bit.ly/1iwVxTb

Tuesday, September 8, 2015

10 Tips to Master Google Panda 4.2


Google’s search algorithm updates tend to scare business owners and webmasters because they are as unexpected as they are unpredictable, penalizing websites in search engine results for reasons that are pretty much unknown to anyone who doesn’t have a deeper understanding of how SEO, and Google in particular, works. Those who have hired a great SEO service needn’t worry about losing their ranking with the new Panda update, but if you should find yourself in trouble with Panda 4.2 and need to take care of business yourself, here are some useful tips that will help retain your website’s position: 1. Know if you’ve been affected: only a small number of queries were affected, and not all of them were penalized, so in truth, your website might not have been affected at all, or might even have benefited from the update.
http://bit.ly/1EN0zow