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Top 5 Inbound Marketing Stories of the Week: Question (SEO) Authority

 

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Question Mark ManIt's my pleasure to be taking over the continuation of this weekly series since its creator, Lauren Brown, headed down under - to Australia, that is. While she's out throwing boomerangs and hanging out with kangaroos, I'll be sharing with you the most popular inbound marketing articles every week.

This week's top article on InboundMarketing.com was written by SEO guru Rand Fishkin, who shares his top five SEO advice pet peeves and encourages readers to contribute their two cents. The recommendations he finds flawed sound good in theory, but he asks us to think about them a little deeper, and think logically ...

1. 5 Common Pieces of SEO Advice I Disagree With

Author: Rand Fishkin of SEOmoz

Some of the advice Rand disagrees with (and his suggestions):

  • Focus copywriting on keywords and content structure to please search engines (You should also focus on the humans reading your content.)
  • Strictly follow the "never link to someone who has linked to you" recommendation (There are times when reciprocal linking is okay.)
  • Make your H1 heading different from your title tag, which is good from an SEO standpoint (It's also bad from a usability standpoint.) 
  • Spam reporting your competitors will come back and bite you in the butt. (There are ethics involved here. Stand up for what you believe in, whether it means reporting or staying quiet.)
  • Search engines rank older websites higher than newer websites. (Older doesn't - and shouldn't in search engines - always mean better.)

Lesson: Don't believe everything you hear. Question (SEO) authority.

2. 9 Things to Do To Make Sure Your Next Blog Post is Read by More than Your Mom

Author: Darren Rowse of ProBlogger

Although it's always nice to have the support of mother dearest, Darren's article expands upon a previous article of his that explored the myth, "all you need to do to is write great content on a blog for it to get readers." Sure, writing great content will keep readers coming back to your blog, but you have to get them there in the first place.

Darren therefore covers 9 ways to ‘seed' your content (rather than ‘forcing' it upon readers) to promote your blog and grow its readership beyond your immediate family. These tips should never all be used to promote a single article, but they include tweeting it, updating your Facebook status, pitching it to another blogger, pitching it to another Twitter user, sharing a link in an email or forum signature, bookmarking it, linking to it in a guest post, making it ‘sharable' and linking to it in a newsletter. And one final word of advice from Darren - being persistent and forming relationships is key to making the above tips work.

Lesson: If you seed it, they will come (but there must be something good there first).

3. The Building Blocks of Social Media for Business

Author: Chris Brogan of chrisbrogan.com

Chris aims to answer his most often-asked question by businesses interested in marketing within the social media sphere: "Where do you start?" He highlights 6 basic building blocks of social media for a business, but also warns that companies should know their boundaries and proceed at their own pace.

In a nutshell, Chris advises to:

  • Start by listening to what people are saying, not with how you can talk.
  • Make your website a two-way place where information can be started by someone and responded to by another (hint: a blog). Social media is a two-way street. 
  • Determine where your customers are (social networks, forums, etc.), follow them there, listen, then participate.
  • Participate in other communities where people might be talking about your products/services, but be wary.
  • Take advantage of email marketing. It's not dead.
  • Take a look into what's coming next, like mobile trends and beyond!

Lesson(s): Take baby steps. Think before you speak.  Dip your toes in the water.  (You get the picture.)

4. Small Business SEO: Keyword Rankings

Author: Suzanne Vara of Kherize5 

Suzanne's article seeks to help small businesses rank in search engines for highly searched terms. While it may seem nearly impossible for small businesses to rank on page 1 of the Google results for these terms, she discusses the helpful alternative of utilizing longtail keywords, which is a great way to rank for terms that do not necessarily have high search volume but will bring targeted traffic. Once you start developing authority by ranking for longtail keywords based around the core, highly searched terms you're ultimately looking to rank for, your core keyword will start ranking higher as well.

Suzanne concludes her article with 7 steps to improve core keyword rankings, which include such steps as modifying your website, searching keywords, and researching and reviewing your content.

Lesson: There is more than one way to solve a problem.

5. Just 4 People Doing Social Media?

Author: Paul Dunay of Buzz Marketing for Technology

Remember when not everyone used email and some people considered it unessential to business? Can you imagine considering email unessential today? The people who do are laughed at. In Paul Dunay's article, he replaces "email" with "social media." In a couple of years from now, will people laugh at your company for being uninvolved with social media?

Paul's article is a warning to companies that social media is not a trend that will fade away, just like email didn't. If your company doesn't start participating and engaging in social media, he warns that it may become the butt of an industry joke.

Lesson: Don't get left behind. Stay on top of the latest business and marketing tools.

Photo by Marco Bellucci

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Posted by Pamela Seiple on Fri, Sep 04, 2009 @ 06:06 AM

COMMENTS

Aren't you afraid that Australians might find the intro a bit offensive? :D Anyways... I'm not Australian. 
 
Among these articles "Just 4 People Doing Social Media?" was my favorite. 
 

posted on Friday, September 04, 2009 at 7:57 AM by Toni Anicic


It's ok Toni, 
Now Darren will just have to decide whether the plug in this post outweighs a potential desire to go track down Lauren in his homeland and pass along a message to give to Pamela. ;) 
Joking aside, great articles Pamela, and thank you for sharing. I really enjoyed Rand's article.

posted on Friday, September 04, 2009 at 8:07 AM by Dan Ronken


Hopefully Darren - and other Australians - has a sense of humor about my overly stereotypical statements :o)  
 
I'm not anti-Australian, I swear!

posted on Friday, September 04, 2009 at 8:12 AM by Pamela Seiple


I've been blogging for five years, and I was at Apple when we started using email as far back as 1982. Still, I struggle to believe unquestioningly that the progression from email to social media as a ubiquitous business utility will be as forceful or inevitable as the rise and universality of email. Such a pronouncement sounds similar to the death reports, several years ago, of the 30-second TV spot. The more likely scenario, I suspect, will be emergence of a more highly evolved species of uber-private forums, where like-minded people can gather and share content. Comments???

posted on Friday, September 04, 2009 at 11:45 AM by turnerdevaughn


Thanks for the SEO´s lessons! They are great. 
We are just growning with the website grader! 
 
www.santapaulahotel.com.br

posted on Friday, September 04, 2009 at 1:05 PM by Gustavo


I was impressed to see that Suzanne also chose to talk about the importance of long tail keywords. 
 
I personally use long tail keywords to get my websites a higher ranking. I loved seeing that someone else had the same idea. 
 
Anyways, I enjoy your blog a bunch and will be commenting alot. 
 
Great job!

posted on Sunday, September 06, 2009 at 7:24 PM by Ant


Just to clarify, SocNets are important and here to stay. The primacy of your target--your customer--is unchanged, however. You begin the outreach process, a.k.a., the "conversation", with a clear understanding of who, and WHERE, these people are.

posted on Tuesday, September 08, 2009 at 11:19 AM by turner devaughn


The informations provided here are unique and are very helpful for the newcomers as well as for the SEO Developers like me. The free tool named "Website grader" is awesome. I used the same and was surprised to discover this one, that provided so relevant informations like meta tags and others that no other known tools provided. I used it for mailmantra.com 's site. Moreover it's free. great..n thnx.

posted on Thursday, September 10, 2009 at 5:05 AM by Priya


Thanks for the support, Stacie! :o)

posted on Thursday, September 10, 2009 at 1:21 PM by Pamela Seiple


Comments have been closed for this article.