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Posts Tagged ‘social search’

Optimize Your Model For Sharing And Social Search In 11 Steps

April 2nd, 2010

Yesterday, we focused on how to make your brand findable and shareable in social media. A white paper by Gigya validates the shift to, and resulting importance of, social search and its dependence on crowd participation. Online businesses must optimize in order to earn referral traffic from social networks.

With the advent of social feeds — a live stream of friends’ activity shared on social networks like Facebook and Twitter — consumers can more easily rely on trusted personal relationships to determine what’s worthwhile to read, watch, play and buy online.

Honestly, there are too many top 10 lists, and I subscribe to the Spinal Tap school of numeration, so this list will go to “11!” Here are 11 steps for optimizing your brand for sharing and social search.

1. Keywords

This one seems elementary and trivial for many, but it can’t go unsaid. Social media is inviting new players within marketing and communications to the table. Their absence from traditional SEO practices requires the review of all keywords that stakeholders use to find relevant information regardless of the platform or network.

2. Brands Become Media

Essentially, for brands to earn the attention of desired audiences their content must be timely, relevant, irresistible, and shareable. Content production is only part of the equation. Establishing a cadence to entice people to introduce our work to their friends and followers is atypical.

Begin by defining an editorial calendar to produce and distribute relevant content for each and every network with rhythm and conviction. In the era of real-time and social search, brands now become the CNN of their industry while also socializing the content and experience to broaden reach and awareness.

3. Define the Experience

Modernize and socialize your site to complement the experience visitors expect in 2010. Once someone is introduced to your content and they land on your site or landing page, make sure it’s presented in a gripping format and the proper hooks are in place for easy sharing back to the attention dashboards of their social graph. Many Web sites are still stuck in the time of Web 1.0 and essentially represent a static dead end to the dynamic and interactive experiences transpiring in social networks.

4. Establish a Formidable Presence

Go where your audiences are already highly active, and also where they’re experimenting. Create enticing, compelling, and personable social profiles in the networks of relevance that convey a sense of “what’s in it for me?” Establish relationships based on context and make sure those relationships are fortified through the production and distribution of value-added content, combined with the art and science of reciprocity, response, and recognition.

5. Social Media Optimization (SMO)

Optimize the site and all social objects for traditional, social, and real-time search based on the keywords that are defined in step one. Invest time and resources in the eloquence of describing and defining social objects through titles, descriptions, tags (keywords), links, and active content promotion. Create content in the methods dictated by the communities you wish to reach (e.g., blog posts, tweets, videos, pictures).

6. Social Search

Now that Google and other search engines are experimenting with the addition of social search into results, the fusion of sharing and social networking improves the likelihood of someone clicking through to our desired objects. Data shows that, in addition to e-mail, visitors who find content shareable choose to share it on Facebook, Twitter, Yahoo, and MySpace.

7. Connect with Social Influencers

As attention spans continue to thin and as interesting content spins through attention dashboards at blinding speeds, brands must proactively connect relevant information to social beacons who can lend credibility and spark conversations and dialogue around the objects we introduce aligned by theme and context.

8. Employ the Human Algorithm

Google is already experimenting with a human algorithm of sorts for ranking real-time search results. The stature of one’s social capital ultimately contributes to the hierarchy, placement, and findability of the content and social objects we share online. Not only do we need to connect with social influencers to help us share our story, we also must identify and connect with individuals in the public stream and and the back channel to ensure that the conversation generates ranked awareness.

9. Social Architecture:

Analyze how key individuals in your markets are discovering, consuming, and sharing content today and integrate one-click social functionality across all pertinent content platforms. Also, make sure to stay on top of the most promising trends because social sharing will continue to rapidly evolve.

Eradicate proprietary login systems and consider pervasive social logins, such as Facebook Connect and Twitter logins, as they’re designed to trigger social effects through reactions on the host site back to their respective social graphs. This extends the reach of content from a site that was once considered a destination to the networks of relevance in order to attract qualified visitors.

10. A Call to Action

Implementing calls to action remind someone that captivating content is worthy of sharing. Integrating the tools to instantly do so is one part; reminding them to do so completes the circle. However, sharing isn’t the end game either. Inciting responses in addition to sharing, such as posts, retweets, likes, etc, create paths that define and engender the experience you desire with destinations and calls to action integrated to close the loop.

Decide the activity you wish to inspire and integrate it into steps one through nine. Give them something to find and to talk about!

11. Listen and Adapt

Create listening dashboards to monitor all activity including the number of shares, discoveries, click-throughs, etc., and find ways to improve the experience, as well as how to ignite a greater volume of sharing.

If the socialization of content is defined by governing behavior, it is that of sharing and searching. The share economy currency is defined by likes, links, retweets, updates, comments, shares on Facebook, Twitter, Google Buzz, MySpace, et al.

The potential and overall impact of social objects, either discovered or shared, only expands the reach of the brand as social media becomes pervasive. Providing the necessary means for individuals to not only find your content, but also actively share it across the social Web, is paramount to the survival of businesses in the era of curated search, social influence, and channeled attention.

Brian Solis is the author of “Engage”, a new book that helps businesses build, cultivate, and measure success in the New Web. He is globally recognized as one of most prominent thought leaders and published authors in new media. A digital analyst, sociologist, and futurist, Solis has influenced the effects of emerging media on the convergence of marketing, communications, and publishing. He is principal of FutureWorks, an award-winning New Media agency in Silicon Valley, and has led interactive and social programs for Fortune 500 companies, notable celebrities, and Web 2.0 startups. BrianSolis.com is ranked among the top of world’s leading business and marketing online resources.

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Seo Tips For Google Social Search Offered

March 16th, 2010

Online marketing professionals unsure of how to respond to Google’s recently launched Social Search service have been offered tips on how to make the offering part of their search engine optimisation (SEO) strategies.

Writing in a post for Search Engine Watch, John Greer of Range Online Media says that Social Search – which sees users look for information via their personal connections – has a number of implications for the world of web marketing.

To make the most of the new service, marketers should ensure they make active use of Twitter – including using keywords within their posts – to increase their presence in search results, he advises.

The expert also recommends optimising email newsletters, as Social Search can cover results from Gmail, while making use of full-text RSS newsfeeds mean that there are more opportunities to get content indexed and included in search listings.

“Newsletters can be posted online, or found through desktop search, so optimising them has multiple benefits,” Mr Greer comments.

“This means no more newsletters that are one giant image.”

Google unveiled Social Search in January as an extension of an experiment started in 2009.

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Source: www.directnews.co.uk

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3 Ways Location Will Change Seo

March 9th, 2010

3 Ways Location Will Change SEO

As South By South West my locationInteractive approaches, social media applications across the web are revving up their development and marketing. This is the event that only a few years ago helped to propel Twitter into mass adoption. Leading up to this year’s conference, location-based social networks seem to be generating the most buzz. Applications like Foursquare, Brightkite, Google Buzz, Yelp and Gowalla all have the goal of connecting people who are online to offline locations where they can meet old and buid new friendships. While these types of services may be the next big sector of social media growth, they will likely also have a significant impact on inbound marketing.

Location-based social networks offer a new set of data for inbound marketers that will impact search engine optimization, customer relationship management and lead nurturing.

Today let’s focus on ways that location-based data may impact SEO.

3 Ways Location-Based Applications Will Change SEO

1. Add Relevancy To Real-Time Search — It has been reported that Google is working on taking its search technology real-time. User generated content from blogs and social media sites like Facebook and Twitter are acting as catalysts for these changes. The problem is that Google’s search engine has been built on showing you the most relevant result, NOT showing you the most relevant result at the exact second you search. Google is working to make real-time search more relevant and will likely use data from the social web as well as data from location-based applications to do this. If you are a Gmail user, you may be also using Google Buzz. Some of you may even be using Google Buzz on your iPhone and letting Google know where you are having your conversations. It is this type of location data that Google can pull from Buzz that will help Google make real-time search more relevant. These changes will impact how prospective customers find your business.

2. Provides an Added Context for Social Search — Late last year, Google introduced a new experiment called social search, which is the start of helping people discover information from others they are connected to online. Location provides valuable context for social search. Imagine you are planning a trip and researching hotels and restaurants and a search engine was able to give you results of places that your friends have been to and even rated. This information can change the way many people make decisions because social search with location provides information and reviews from trusted sources instead of anonymous user reviews.

3. Makes Mobile Screen More Important – When people use location-based applications and social networks, they are likely using them mainly from mobile devices such as iPhones, BlackBerrys and other smart phones. As location-based technologies grow in popularity, they will continue to drive adoption and use of mobile devices. As more people use smart phones, mobile searches will increase, which will impact not only how search results are served but it also means potential customers will be looking at business web sites on mobile devices, some of which don’t support flash.

Marketing Takeaways for Location’s Impact on SEO

Begin to examine and understand how location-based applications like Foursquare work and how your customers may use them.
Connect with customers and prospects online in order to become a relevant part of their real-time and social search results.
Set up a Google Profile and add your blog feed and social sites.
Audit the way business web properties are displayed on different mobile devices and check to make sure lead forms work.

Do you use any location-based applications? If you use Foursquare, you may want to check out FourSquare Grader.

Photo by: Chris Owens

SEO for Lead Generation Kit

Source: blog.hubspot.com

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