Category Archives: Search Engines
The 5 essential ingredients for a kickarse blog
Blogging is a great thing to do. It increases the credibility and exposure of a business, raises the profile of the writer, removes barriers to purchase and is like catnip to Google. Done well, that is. But you don’t have to spend much time online to see that most people don’t do it well! To make sure that yours aren’t among them, I’d like to share with you here five important ingredients for a great blog. 1. One main idea A common mistake of blogs is to try and squeeze too much information into a blog. Another is to ramble without ever making your point! Different people will take away different details from your blogs, depending on where they are, what resonates most with them in their current situation, and previous experience and knowledge of the subject. However, there should be one main concept that every reader walks away with . Once you’ve decided on your main point, break it down into about 3 sub-ideas. These three ideas should also tell a logical story that gently leads the reader to the place you want them to be. My blogs typically follow this model: 1. Set the context Don’t assume your reader will have your prior knowledge of your subject matter – if they do, they’re your competition and not your target market! Open your blog by explaining any background concepts necessary to understanding your main argument, thus bringing all of your readers to the same starting point. 2. Lay the foundations Having ensured all of your readers have the right base knowledge, your next section can be putting your reader in the right place so that by the time you’re ready to make your killer argument, they have no choice but to agree! 3. Make your point Having done the ground work, your final section should be making your argument – which was the whole point of writing the blog in the first place! 2. Title People will often make the decision whether or not to read your article based purely on your title – so make it a good one! Think about it – people will find your blog from a list of articles on a website, a tweet or a Facebook link, etc – and if your title is not interesting enough, no-one will even make it to the first line. Your title should be compelling, but it should also accurately reflect your content. If your title makes promises the blog doesn’t deliver, it will chip away at the credibility of your future blogs and you will have to work harder and harder to get people to come back and read your future blogs. 3. Structure and format Blogs are very visual media. If your article doesn’t look nice and easy on the eye, people are less likely to slog through a screen of text, regardless of how brilliant your words are. Judicious use of visual cues will help you to gently guide the reader where you want them: Allow lots of white space . A screen full of unbroken text will discourage the reader. Use short paragraphs , shorter than you were taught in school! It will not feel natural at first, but aim for no more than 4 or 5 lines in your biggest paragraphs. Having said that, they should still be proper paragraphs, and not a page of single lines! Break up your text with sub-headings . There shouldn’t be more than a screen’s scroll between sub-headings. Also, people will read your title first, then they will scan your sub-headings before reading your blog proper. Your sub-headings, therefore, should tell the basic story of your blog. The reader should get what the blog is about based on your sub-headings. Use relevant images . They give the eye a rest and if they’re cleverly chosen can add an extra layer to the narrative. Source them from a site like dreamstime.com or 123rf.com so that you legally have permission to use them – don’t just do a Google search. You will need to credit these sites somewhere on your blog page if you use their images. Finally, aim for about 400-600 words . Less than that and you probably haven’t explained your point properly; more than that and you’re probably trying to squeeze too much information in, so consider breaking it up into two separate blogs. 4. Voice and language Most people who are just starting out tend to write in too formal a tone, and use far too much jargon – as if they’re talking to other people like them! Remember, you’re not (or shouldn’t be!) talking to your competitors in your blog, you’re talking to a potential customer. Potential customers simply won’t care as much about the technicalities and methodology so much as the result. The sign of someone who knows what they’re talking about is the ability to simplify, not the ability to complicate. Never use ten words when one word will do, and never use a long word when a short word will do. As far as formality of voice is concerned, a great rule of thumb is to imagine you’re talking to your nanna. I loved my nanna very much and spent a lot of time with her, so was very familiar with her – but I was always on my very best behaviour around my nan! That’s a good approach to getting the tone of your blog right too. 5. A great topic People often struggle to come up with ideas, or wonder why anyone would be interested in what they have to say. If you’re charging people money for your expertise then of course you have things to say that people want to hear about! Use the following list as inspiration for coming up with great blog topics: Questions you are regularly asked by customers or your target market Tips (like this one!) Anything related to your industry that really winds you up Bad practice or bad advice regularly seen in your industry Misunderstandings or misconceptions that stop people from spending money with you An unusual spin or opinion on a common topic Written by Sheree Lowe. Sheree Lowe owns Sundowner Social Media and is a social media engagement specialist, helping business owners with their relationships and conversations with their customers online. You can read more blogs at her website ( sundownersocial.com ) or say hello on Twitter at @SundownerVA . Proud to be part of Fabulous Women . Continue reading
5 Steps to Proper Conversion Rate Optimization
Too many webmasters approach website creation and management from a single perspective. If something looks good, they assume that it’s as attractive and as profitable as it’s ever going to be. But savvy marketers know that this isn’t the case. Truly effective website performance can only come from the measurement of set metrics and experimentation to determine which conditions and variables lead to the strongest website results. By continually measuring and testing using the conversion rate optimization (CRO) process described below, you can boost on-site engagement and overall site profits significantly with just a few tweaks. Step #1 – Explore your site’s current performance Before you can begin any CRO campaign, you need to understand how your site is currently performing. Suppose you want to increase the number of sales that occur from a given sales page on your website. You aren’t trying to boost traffic necessarily – just to increase the number of people who are already on your site who make the leap from reader to buyer. While you can run a simple calculation – dividing the number of sales you make over a set period by the number of visitors your page receives in the same time – you’ll find the process much easier to manage with the use of Google Analytics or a similar web data measurement system. Use Google Analytics to create a “Goal” that tracks your site’s current performance before moving on to the next step. Step #2 – Identify CRO test variables The process of conversion rate optimization involves serving up different page variations in order to measure objectively which version will be more successful. There are two protocols for doing so: A/B split testing, in which a single on-site variable has been changed, and Multivariate testing, in which several variables are compared at once. As an example, an A/B split test might involve changing the wording of your sales page headline in order to test its efficacy. In a multivariate test, different combinations of headline text, color, size and position could all be tested at once. If you’re new to the process of split testing, stick with the easier-to-manage A/B protocol and use it to test any of the following site elements (among others): Site headline wording and/or appearance Product image placement and design Calls to action Product or sales offers Size, placement and design of “Add to Cart” buttons While you can test smaller site features (for example, your site’s body text font), begin by testing the variables that are likely to have the biggest possible effect on your overall conversion rate. Step #3 – Develop any necessary experimental test pages Once you’ve decided on a test variable, create any necessary experimental pages before setting up and running your CRO split test. Following with our example above, if you were to create an A/B split test that measured the performance of different headline wording options, you’d need the URLs of two pages: Your original page URL The URL of a live test page featuring your experimental headline wording Depending on the program you use to carry out your split test, you may also need the site URL that demonstrates a conversion has taken place. In the case of product sales, this will likely be the “thank you” page that visitors reach upon completing a sale. Step #4 – Run A/B or multivariate split tests After gathering all of this information, you’ll need to load it into a program that will automatically serve up either your original page or your test page at random to visitors and record the number of conversions that stem from each variation. For most webmasters, the easiest way to run split tests is with the use of Google Analytics’ “Content Experiments” tool (formerly, the Google Website Optimizer). Not only is this tool free to use, it makes launching a new split test as easy as filling out a few quick forms and adding a small snippet of code to your website. The tool also ties directly to the Analytics “Goals” created earlier, giving you a richer data set to work with when it comes to improving your site’s conversion rates. Step #5 – Select a winner and launch a new test Upon completing the steps above, you’ll be able to launch your split test and start generating data immediately. While this information can be exciting to watch, be sure to wait until Google has determined a statistically significant winner before making changes to your site based on this variable conversion data. Then, as soon as you’ve ended one test, make it a point to start another right away. There are hundreds of thousands of different combinations of variables that can be tested on any given website. Don’t miss out on the one that could make all the difference in your business’s bottom line by running one test and then giving up on the power of conversion rate optimization! Continue reading
eTail Canada 2013
eTail Canada the only cross-channel and online retail conference focused specifically on the needs of retailers operating in Canada. eTail Canada will take place 29 April – 01 May in Toronto, and will present multi-channel strategies, international expansion strategies, shipping and logistics topics, acquisition and retention campaigns, consumer profiling trends, mobile, social; i.e. virtually every Keep on reading: eTail Canada 2013 Continue reading
Zayo Group Relocates Headquarters to Boulder, Colorado
April 3, 2013 — Connectivity and colocation provider Zayo Group announced on Wednesday it will open a new 15,520 square foot corporate headquarters office at 1805 29th Street in Boulder, Colorado. Keep on reading: Zayo Group Relocates Headquarters to Boulder, Colorado Continue reading