Archive for May, 2011


What Should I Title My Blog Posts for Maximum SEO?

Tuesday, May 31st, 2011

Lighthouse View by Stacy CrampDear Rich,

I’ve read that I should load my blog titles with targeted keywords to increase my blog’s search engine visibility. However, sometimes I just want to use a clever turn of phrase, or a slightly irreverent title that is appropriate for the blog post, but maybe not for Google.

How do I balance my needs to rank well at the search engines with my desire to put my BA in English to use?

Titling in Thomaston

Dear Titling,

I would argue that you don’t need to sacrifice your cleverness to create a keyword-rich title tag for your blog.

Here’s how you create titles that work for your search engine optimization and your end user:
(more…)


Greetings, Fellow Bloggers!

Wednesday, May 25th, 2011

Blogworld Expo NY 2011In just a couple of hours I’ll be presenting How to Dominate Google and Bing with Your Blog at the BlogWorld Expo here in NYC. If you happen to be checking out our web marketing blog, flyte blog, for the first time because of this, here are a few things you should know:

  • Consider subscribing to our blog either by using the RSS feed or the email subscription to your right. You can always unsubscribe.
  • We’ve got a great resource in The 11 Biggest Mistakes Small Business Bloggers Make. I hand crafted each one of those mistakes, so why not learn from my mistakes rather than your own? Cheaper that way, you know. There is an email registration piece, but again, you can unsubscribe at any time.
  • We’ve got an all SEO, all the time blog over at Maine SEO Blog written by our search engine marketer, Nicki Hicks with some contributions by yours truly. You don’t have to be from Maine to enjoy it.
  • Since Nicki’s moving to Florida (but still working for flyte), she’s started a new blog, Florida SEO Blog. Please give it some love.

That’s all! Now I just have to get the world’s biggest cup of coffee and head over the Javits Convention Center. Feel free to say hello!

Rich Brooks
You Can Also Find Me On The Twitter


What Do Customers Want? Product, Service or Experience?

Wednesday, May 18th, 2011

Pabst Blue Ribbon, aka PBR, aka PabstWhen people buy from us, they buy more than our products, our services or our labor; they’re buying an experience. With some purchases that’s more obvious–say, a Disney vacation or a shopping trip to Nordstrom–than others–say, a new printer for the office or bookkeeping services. But the desire for an experience is still there.

When we forget about the experience, and focus solely on our product, we often strip away why people buy from us in the first place.

Here are two examples I recently experienced:

Dark Star Orchestra, or DSO, is a Grateful Dead cover band, but not just any Dead cover band. Their claim to fame is that they recreate a specific set, such as the 11/30/73 show from the Boston Music Hall, song-for-song, in the style of the Dead from that period of time. In other words, they’re more than a cover band, they replicate a specific moment in time.

I had never seen them, so when a bunch of friends bought tickets for their recent House of Blues show in Boston, I made the trip down there. At dinner before the show I was told that they have recently been playing some “original” set lists, which was a bit disappointing. Unfortunately, that night was an original set list, with songs from the 70′s through the 90′s.

Now, I can understand that if you’re a creative musician, that playing in a group-specific cover band can be, well, restrictive. So playing in a cover band where you don’t even get to choose the set list could be soul crushing. But that’s what side projects are for. Or, say that Tuesdays are “original” set nights, so people know what to expect when they come in.

If I want to see live Dead performed, I can just go down to the nearest college bar on a Saturday night; I was looking for a specific experience which I didn’t get.

Pabst Blue Ribbon, or PBR, or Pabst, is a good, cheap beer. It’s better than Bud, better than Miller, and it’s cheap. (Did I mention that already?) In fact, nothing follows a glass of single-malt scotch better than a 16oz can of Pabst, aka the PBR Pounder (IMHO). However, as I listened to National Public Radio, or NPR, the other day, I heard a story about how PBR was moving their headquarters to LA.

El-freaking-Ay!

Not that I have anything against LA per se, but as I’m hanging out in my favorite hipster joint and I reach down for my PBR Pounder I don’t want to have images in my head of Hollywood, palm trees, or worse: Kobe Bryant.

Now, as far as I know it’s not the brewing or bottling that’s moving to LA, just the corporate headquarters. It won’t change the taste of the beer, but it will change the experience of the beer for me and many others who like it’s blue collar vibe. Let’s face it: a lot of PBR is consumed because of its cult status…something that may well be lost when they relocate.

What’s the Takeaway?

I feel too many of us–especially those of us in the B2B space–focus too much on the physical product or the exact service that we bring to market, and not how our customers will experience our offerings. We need to remember that even in B2B, it’s people who are making the buying decisions, and we need to know what experiences they’re expecting and deliver on those expectations.

Have you had a good or bad experience recently with a product or service? Would love to hear about it in the comments below.

Rich Brooks
Are You Experienced?

Photo Credit: Jeff Ruane


Mobile Marketing Advice: QR Codes or Microsoft Tags?

Monday, May 16th, 2011

Dear Rich,

I was planning on using QR codes for an upcoming campaign, but yesterday someone told me I should use Microsoft tags instead. They said it was because you can change a Microsoft tag but you can’t modify the content of QR codes. Which do you recommend?

–Going Mobile in Machias

Dear Mobile,

While some people make a big deal out of the ability to “change content” in a Microsoft tag, I find this to be a bit misleading. You can’t change content in a Microsoft tag; rather you can redirect a tag’s destination by logging into the Microsoft-controlled Tag Manager.

The purpose of this is to “extend the life of a marketing campaign and provide regularly updated content to your customers.” While extending a marketing campaign is a good reason, there’s an easy work around that doesn’t require the Microsoft servers.

In a recent campaign for an independent film we used QR codes in our marketing. Initially the QR codes had information about the debut of the film at SXSW, but over time we wanted to direct people to local film times, the website, and even to download the mobile app. To accomplish this all we did is have the QR code point to a page on the main site which we could redirect wherever we like. It accomplishes the same “feat” as the Microsoft tag, but without being beholden to an outside vendor.

Now, onto your question of whether you should choose QR codes or Microsoft tags for your marketing campaign:

It’s unlikely that both of these bar codes will survive; one will go the way of the Betamax…but which one?

Microsoft has deep pockets, so they can continue to force it upon consumers for a while, even if consumers aren’t that interested. However, Microsoft doesn’t have the presence in mobile that it did in desktop computing. Google and Apple are in the lead for smart phone technology, and chances are they’d rather support an open-source solution than one that would help Microsoft.

Also, check out this graph of searches on “qr codes” (blue) vs. “microsoft tags” (red).

QR Codes vs. Microsoft Tags

It appears that the buzz is solidly behind QR codes. Anecdotally, I’ve never seen a Microsoft tag in the wild, but I’ve seen plenty of QR codes.

Lastly, no one “owns” QR codes, so you’re unlikely to see a message like this, which I found on the Microsoft Tag FAQ:

Microsoft may elect to start charging for future or additional value-added features or services related to Tag.

While I can’t promise that QR codes will beat out Microsoft tags for the hearts and minds of consumers and businesses, they appear to have the early lead.

Rich Brooks
QR FTW


How to Take Better Pictures with Your Cellphone

Wednesday, May 11th, 2011

Would you like to take better photos with your iPhone, Droid or other smart phone?

Last night I was on 207, the evening news magazine on southern Maine’s NBC affiliate, WCSH. We talked about some of the great free and inexpensive photography apps that can improve your picture taking, add cool filters, create panoramas or even twist your photos into tiny little worlds.

Some apps, like Camera+, add stabilizers, timers and burst photo options to improve your picture taking.

Others, like Instagram and Hipstamatic, add cool filters that you can try on after you’ve taken your shot.

The picture to the right was taken using the Instagram app on my iPhone. It was already a gray morning in Maine, but the Instagram filter added a slightly ghostly feel to the foggy scene out of our office window.

Pano is an app I like for creating panoramas. What’s nice is that it gives you a sliver of your previous photo so that you can line up your shots better. Here’s one I took of the Portland Waterfront:

Except for the little glitch about a quarter from the right it came out pretty well.

We ran out of time, but I especially like the TinyWorld app that turns your pictures into, well, tiny worlds:

You can watch the video at the 207 website or down below:

Rich Brooks
Unfiltered


How to Create Killer Blog Content from Email Questions

Wednesday, May 11th, 2011

Dear Rich,

How do I come up with new posts for my blog? You always talk about how to use a business blog to rank higher at the search engines and drive qualified traffic to your website, but I have no idea on how to do that.

Frustrated in Fryeberg

Dear Frustrated,

First off: don’t be frustrated! I’m sure there’s plenty of content that you could turn into search engine engine gold for your blog if you just know where to look. In fact, I’m using one of my favorite techniques right now.

A few times a week a client, prospect or random stranger emails me with some question about search engine optimization, email marketing, blogging or social media. Rather than just hitting reply, I turn the question into a Dear Abby style blog post. The way I figure it is that if this one person is asking me that question, how many more hundreds or thousands of people are asking these questions of Google and Bing? Plus, by posting it to my blog it can be easily shared over social media platforms.

What really makes this a powerful technique is that these questions are what people are asking when their doing research into hiring a company like yours. There’s generally less competition for these phrases (so you can rank higher) and they’re very specific (so people who are researching them are getting ready to make a buying decision.)

For more details on how to optimize these Dear Abby posts for search engine visibility, be sure to read How to Turn Emails Into Search Engine Visibility.

Rich Brooks
Blogging for SEO

Photo Credit: Jay Malone


How Social Media Has Changed Journalism

Tuesday, May 3rd, 2011

One of the many stories surrounding Bin Laden’s death at the hands of U.S. forces is how Sohaib Athar inadvertently “live tweeted” the assassination through his @reallyvirtual Twitter account.

Live Tweeting the Assassination

Because of media surrounding Sohaib tweets, he has gone from just a few hundred followers to over 92,000 (and counting) at the time I post this.

It’s just another example (much like the twitpic of the Hudson water landing) of how social media, and especially the immediacy of Twitter, has changed news gathering and the news cycle. Everyone is a potential reporter, editor, photographer and videographer.

Social media has changed the way news is sourced, reported, and distributed. It’s changed the way journalists get their leads, their sources and how they promote and distribute their own stories.

So, although I might have hoped for a slow news day for my publication of my most recent Social Media Examiner article, it only seems appropriate given the topic: How Social Media Helps Journalists Break News. Lots of interesting stories and interviews from journalists, reporters and educators on how social media has changed reporting.

Check it out, retweet it, leave your own comments.

Rich Brooks
Live Tweeting