Friday, June 26, 2009

Timing is everything: When to send your email broadcasts

Posted by: Mackenzie Ross, Marketing Coordinator

There is no clear best practice, or set-in-stone rule, as to when to send an email broadcast. That’s because it all depends on your specific audience. Every audience’s email-checking habits are different. For example, a B2B audience might check mail throughout the day while stay-at-home moms might only check email at night. There are, however, different steps you can take to zero in on your audience’s preferred send time.

Get Started: Check your site analytics and note the busiest times. You can use this information to tell when your customers are their most active or are more engaged at their computers. This may be easier to nail down for a business audience, given that you know the work day’s approximate start time, lunch hour and end time.

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Monday, June 22, 2009

Changing SEO landscape? Advanced Google search options

Posted by: Shannon Anderson, Project Manager

Last month, Google launched a search filtering tool called Search Options which allows users to filter their search results to show only videos, forums or reviews over a specified time frame. By selecting the “Show Options” feature in the blue bar under the search field, users can access these filtering options to bring up more relevant and useful listings.

Google’s Search Options also allows users to select “Wonder Wheel” to display other relevant searches that might be of interest. The example below shows related searches to the term “summer olympics.”

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Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Long-tail keywords matter for SEO and PPC

Posted by: Nikki Johnson, Marketing Coordinator

As it turns out, we learned more from the recent swine flu scare than we thought. And not just that we needed to limit travel to Mexico or wash our hands more frequently. An article on WebProNews used the flu as an example of why we should be paying attention to the types of searches people are conducting on the Web.

According to the article, the website stats of a blog posting discussing the swine flu prove that people are now using more long-tailed search queries to find the information they need. In fact, the author claims that the days of focusing search engine optimization (SEO) efforts exclusively on short keyword phrases are gone. Search marketers should now target longer keyword phrases in order to try and capture exactly what someone is searching for. The top search phrase used by visitors to the particular swine flu posting was, “How do you know if you have swine flu?” Nine-word phrases like these are coined “money keywords” and are expected to bring in a targeted audience to your website.

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Friday, June 12, 2009

Microsoft’s new search engine: Bing it on

Posted by: Megan Amick, Marketing Coordinator

Microsoft has recently launched its new search engine called Bing. Bing was designed to be easy to use and efficiently return simple results. In addition, it’s also being promoted as a decision-making tool.  For example, if you’re unsure about where you’d like to eat out, Bing can help you find the right restaurant.

This new product launch from Microsoft joins various other search engine products that have been released recently, including the Wolfram|Alpha search engine. But Bing is also another attempt, once again, by Microsoft to steal market share back from Google. (Google’s share of searches keeps growing and is now over 70%.) Bing is promising that this time the product is different.

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Monday, June 8, 2009

SEO for local businesses just got simpler

Posted by: Kerry Houchin, Marketing Coordinator

Your pizza search just got easier. Thanks to new local search results from Google, you no longer have to type in the name of your city when looking for a local pizza joint or other local business results. Google now shows local results for generic keywords based on IP address even when the location is not specified in the query.

What does this mean for small local shops? The potential for generating business from generic keywords (and SEO) has gone through the roof! First-page results are attainable for even your most basic keywords if the search originated in your region. The local search results are displayed in the center of the search results page instead of at the top of the page when there is no location specified, but a first page listing is still far more valuable than no top 30 result at all.

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Tuesday, June 2, 2009

SEO, PPC and email are top converters in digital marketing campaigns

Posted by: Rosemary Riley, Senior Copywriter

Forbes has just released the results of its “Ad Effectiveness Survey,” conducted among senior marketing executives during February and March 2009. The survey delved into behaviors and beliefs around digital marketing and forecasts areas of growth and weakness over the next six months.

Highlights include:

  • When it comes to influencing brand perception, the most effective tactics were site sponsorships and pay-per-impression programs on digital publications.
  • For garnering conversions, search engine optimization (SEO), pay-per-click (PPC) advertising, and email were seen as the three most effective tools.
  • 82% of marketers are using conversions or sales data.
  • 55% use registrations.
  • Over the next six months, respondents plan to allocate a higher percentage of digital media dollars to viral marketing (42%) and SEO (40%), while 53% stated they would spend less on Ad Networks.

View the complete survey results.