tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-95246682008-05-27T01:01:09.946-04:00Backbone SEO BlogStephen Turcottehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16551851088635371990noreply@blogger.comBlogger52125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9524668.post-27896301627275405562008-03-11T12:11:00.001-04:002008-03-11T12:11:45.545-04:00testtestStephen Turcottehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16551851088635371990noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9524668.post-1143116814002040662006-03-23T07:19:00.000-05:002006-03-23T07:26:54.016-05:00This Blog is Moving / MorphingHi all, Thanks for subscribing to this SEOBlog. Now that we have launched <a href="http://www.scoutblogging.com/blog.html">ScoutBlogging</a>, I will be posting about SEO, PR and Blogs over there. I will leave this one up and running and monitor for comments but please point your feed readers towards<br /><br /><a href="http://www.scoutblogging.com/blog.html">http://www.scoutblogging.com/blog.html</a><br /><br />Best regards,<br />Stephen TurcotteStephen Turcottehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16551851088635371990noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9524668.post-1141075987142880132006-02-27T15:19:00.000-05:002006-02-27T16:40:43.210-05:00Announcing SCOUT our new Corporate Blogging Service<span style="font-family: georgia;">I've hinted about this in some previous posts but now it's official. See the </span><a style="font-family: georgia;" href="http://www.backbonemedia.com/news-scout-launch.aspx">press release</a><span style="font-family: georgia;">. Backbone is starting a new corporate blogging service called </span><a style="font-family: georgia;" href="http://www.scoutblogging.com/services.html">SCOUT</a><span style="font-family: georgia;">. You can read all about it on our new website </span><a style="font-family: georgia;" href="http://www.scoutblogging.com">www.scoutblogging.com</a><span style="font-family: georgia;">. We've also developed a the SCOUT Flash Demo, which is a neat little overview of the service. I'd love to hear any comments or questions about the service. I'm particularly interested in hearing feedback about the service from real bloggers, SEO and PR Communications professionals.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: georgia;">If you're going to critique, here are a few FAQs</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: georgia;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Is this a service or a product (software)?</span><br /><br />Scout is a service, although we do provide some technology to make sure we deliver the service efficiently.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Do you use your own custom software?</span><br /><br />No, we use off the shelf packages. Moveable Type and Wordpress are our favorites right now but we can also use Expression Engine and more.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Why Moveable Type or Wordpress? I prefer Typepad/Blogger/etc?</span><br /><br />From a search engine optimizatoin and long term marketing perspective, we believe the blog content should be published and associated with your primary domain, not at yoursite.hostedblogsystem.com. Moveable type and Wordpress enable this to work reliably. Also, these systems are commercially supported and have a large network of resellers, so there’s lots of support we can rely upon.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Is this a ghostwriting service?</span><br /><br />No, Scout is not ghostwriting. We provide guidance and advice, but we don’t write your post for you. It’s your voice, but we give story leads, and help with research on follow up to your ideas.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">I already know a lot about blogging, why should I use your service?</span><br /><br />It’s a time issue. Do you have the time to keep up with the industry and analyze your section of the blogosphere? By providing extra coverage and insight we leverage what you do best. Writing with research and information keeps you informed and connected.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">How am I going to make money off of this?</span><br /><br />Blogging helps companies to build their brand online by demonstrating value, brand and thought leadership. By becoming a great blogger, you will become<br />one of the leaders in your industry. That’s what Scout does for you, lets you become a great blogger.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Many blogs do well with SEO; do you offer plug-ins to optimize posts in any way?</span><br /><br />We provide advise that will teach and help the blog writer to optimize their posts over time. The key to blogging is the volume. By following some simple steps our strategy is to get you some higher rankings.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">How much time and effort would someone have to put in to maintain a blog?</span><br /><br />For five posts a week, I’d say 5-10 hours a week. We help to cut down on the time.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Will I have to write any code?</span><br /><br />No code writing is needed.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Why can’t bloggers do the work for themselves?</span><br /><br />They can, but it’s a matter of time and managing the process much more efficiently. Scout helps to make you a great blogger.</span>Stephen Turcottehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16551851088635371990noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9524668.post-1136872906061650432006-01-10T00:32:00.000-05:002006-01-10T01:11:10.383-05:00How will blogs be used in the future?With still more follow-up to my <a href="http://seoblog.backbonemedia.com/2006/01/new-england-direct-marketing.html">original post</a>, here’s another pithy answer to one of <a href="http://anewmarketingcommentator.com/2005/12/27/nedma-discusses-the-pros-and-pitfalls-of-blogging">Bob Cargill's</a><a href="http://anewmarketingcommentator.com/2005/12/27/nedma-discusses-the-pros-and-pitfalls-of-blogging"> perplexing </a><a href="http://anewmarketingcommentator.com/2005/12/27/nedma-discusses-the-pros-and-pitfalls-of-blogging">questions</a> for us to answer for direct marketers at the <a href="http://www.nedma.com/events.html">NEDMA event</a>.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">How do you think blogs will be used in the future?</span><br /><br />I think many companies will empower their employees to blog on the company’s behalf according to a set of loose guidelines. Blogs will be connected by blog aggregation system that is a way to feature the most active blogs and also connect the audience to the most relevant conversations. Blogs will also be incorporated as tools for<br /><ul> <li>employee evaluation- who has the best ideas and audience, who's slacking</li> <li>product development - what are customers saying about what's in the pipe</li> <li>customer services - respond to questions and let customers support other customers</li> <li>market research - hmm pay a research firm or do it ourselves</li> <li>company communications - default</li> <li>marketing - speak with your potential customers</li> <li>pr - cultivate your relations and <a href="http://mediametamorphosis.blogspot.com/2006/01/why-we-should-stop-blogging-and-just.html">just be open</a></li> <li>seo - do all of the above and you won't have to worrry about search engine rankings</li> </ul> Also see the <a href="http://www.backbonemedia.com/blogsurvey/47-macromedia-case-study.htm">Macromedia Blogging Case Study</a> in the Backbone <a href="http://www.backbonemedia.com/blogsurvey/index.html">Corporate Blogging Survey</a><br /><br /><span style=""></span><b style=""><span style=""></span></b>Stephen Turcottehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16551851088635371990noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9524668.post-1136870007042684162006-01-09T23:33:00.000-05:002006-01-15T09:29:36.753-05:00Why do you think more marketers aren’t blogging yet?In a <a href="http://seoblog.backbonemedia.com/2006/01/new-england-direct-marketing.html">previous post</a> I mentioned that I would try and answer a number of provocative blogging questions posed by blogging panel moderator, <a href="http://anewmarketingcommentator.com/2005/12/27/nedma-discusses-the-pros-and-pitfalls-of-blogging">Bob Cargill</a>. In response to an earlier comment from Mariah Hunt, I'm going to try and keep my answers to around 100 words. Here's the question...<br /><br /><strong>Why do you think more direct marketers aren’t blogging yet?</strong><br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://seoblog.backbonemedia.com/uploaded_images/braveheart2-743314.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 10px 10px 0pt; float: left; cursor: pointer;" src="http://seoblog.backbonemedia.com/uploaded_images/braveheart2-741589.jpg" alt="" border="0" /></a>We have a questionnaire for companies that want to blog. One of the questions is <em>“Please list any individuals within your organization that are passionate and forward thinking about the business."</em> The joke is that some companies could read that and leave it blank. Blogging is NOT for the faint of heart and it's not just something that you can tie up in a neat little package and sell to an organization like an ad run. Corporate blogging for business benefit involves a risk and a fundamental shift in the way a corporation interacts with its customers. Most marketing decision makers don't want to rock the boat if they don't have to.<br /><br />There's a risk in putting ideas / intellectual capital out there for the world (customers and competitors) to see and judge. Gut check - What if people comment and critique your ideas? It also requires an investment of time not just in the writing but also in Blogger Relations (interacting with your blogging community). The pay off for the risk is that blogging can be time well spent but it’s much more complicated than bidding for a keyword or sending out 2000 postcards.Stephen Turcottehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16551851088635371990noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9524668.post-1136581401691881042006-01-06T15:24:00.000-05:002006-01-26T21:12:34.780-05:00From here, to web 2.0<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://seoblog.backbonemedia.com/uploaded_images/FromHeretoEternity-740525.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 10px 10px 0pt; float: left; cursor: pointer;" src="http://seoblog.backbonemedia.com/uploaded_images/FromHeretoEternity-737364.jpg" alt="" border="0" /></a>There's a continuing discussion about <a href="http://www.pubsub.com/lists/pr.php">where PR is heading and blogging is headed</a>. The consensus is PR is not going to stand still, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_2.0">web 2.0</a> (please get over yourself if you don’t like the term) is the new frontier and much of it is up for grabs. I see that some big PR companies (like Edelman, Ketchum, Hill & Knowlton) have already started placing their bets. Other companies are just walking into the room, some are stepping up to the table, and a few don’t even know there’s a casino in the city.<br /><br />Lee Hopkins from the land down under sums up the general state of mind very nicely beginning at minute 37:20 of <a href="http://forimmediaterelease.biz/index.php/weblog/the_hobson_holtz_report_podcast_99_january_2_2006/">For Immediate Release, The Hobson &amp; Holtz Report, Podcast #99</a>. FIR is a twice weekly podcast on communications and PR, hosted by Shel Holtz and Neville Hobson. I later found a transcript of his entry on Lee’s blog, which is aptly titled -- <a href="http://leehopkins.net/2006/01/01/where-to-now-then/">Where to now, then?</a>.<br /><br />Lee starts off with a sober questioning of where blogging or podcastig fits into life and whether the big promise of blogging and podcasting has “run out of steam” as the early adopters drop off once they realize that producing podcasts and blogs “<span style="font-weight: bold;">of value</span> takes time (a considerable amount of it) and dedication.” Lee expresses how he is “constantly amazed that <a href="http://blog.holtz.com/">Shel</a> and <a href="http://www.nevon.net/">Neville</a> are able to create the time to put together their shows” and how “They show a level of commitment to this new medium that staggers and humbles” him. This is not just an exquisite piece of suckupery by Lee but more of an eloquent way of asking whether blogging might be too expensive of an undertaking for the ROI (Just listen to FIR, it truly deserves the kudos).<br /><br />At first listen, Lee’s report seems a little tentative about the viability of blogging for dollars. Near the end, he seems to succumb to just being happy with the social benefits he receives from his little community and then half heartedly relinquishes the blogging greatness of a <a href="http://sethgodin.typepad.com/seths_blog/">GodinCity</a> or a <a href="http://scobleizer.wordpress.com/">Scobletown</a>, as a nice aspiration; but not a necessary measuring stick of validation for one's existence. An interesting way to put things Lee, I am in Boston thinking that you would be a pretty good guy to do business with if I had the attention span for your business communications training. I’m not sure if this helps but, Hopkinton MA, is the starting point for the big marathon that leads to the big city of Boston :)<br /><br />Ironically, I think Lee’s post supports a strong case FOR the PR punch of a <span style="font-style: italic;">value blog</span> and for the growing market opportunity for blogging service providers. What I mean by value blog is a blog that adds insight or value to the ongoing conversation, and provides usefullness and ideas to a certain community.<br /><br />Here’s how I see it… Blogging or podcasting has a low barrier of entry but building a little community of like-minded individuals takes effort, availability and a dedication by the blogger. This work does count for something because it creates an archrival reference point of content for that potential customer to find and view. This content can be a significant differentiator in a cluttered world of spin.<br /><br />Building a metropolis may have a higher barrier of entry but that speaks to the case for <a href="http://seoblog.backbonemedia.com/2005/08/blogging-is-better-for-small-company.html">blogs leveling the playing field</a>. If all that it took was a willingness to spend money online, then we'd probably see that someone from <a href="http://www.vonage.com/">Vonage</a> had become an A list blogger by now. Those Vonage guys sure know how to spend on web advertising (but i digress)<br /><br />The bacteria fighting world of 2.0 tames the hucksters and helps the thought leaders refine their sweet spot within the online conversation. This explaines why the top of the food chain is filled with interesting people that understand how to cultivate a community around ideas. This is what I think it means to blog. If it were so easy for humans or predators to make it to the Galapagos Islands would it still be such an exotic place? The barriers to entry means that the blogosphere is a great breeding ground for the fittest ideas. Anyone can throw their ideas into the mix.<br /><br />Here's why there is money in them thar hills. Bottom line oriented companies will want the goodies of the blogosphere (which are SEO Rankings, Branding, Thought leadership, Market research) but they will not have the expertise or the manpower to do most of the heavy lifting. I've spoken with a lot of C level folks from big companies and they tell me that they don't want to be left behind on this one. To me that means there will definitely be a market for many of the Marketing and PR blogging folks out there to provide services that help a company become a good corporate blogger, while also being strategic and leveraging the qualified traffic and goodwill. <a href="http://www.stonyfield.com/weblog/">Stonyfield Farm BLOG "Cow"munities!</a> are a great example of a low ticket, high volume consumer products company leveraging the goodwill of value blogging for branding and sales. Now the caveat here is Stonyfield Farms had a great product before blogs came along. The product needs to be good. The blog is not going to sell it for you. You can lead a horse to healthy stories that hit on the target audiences for an organic yogurt company but you cannot make a horse eat yogurt.<br /><br />If a random company is trying to sell ice to Eskimos, then all the blogging value in the world will not translate into a directly correlated ROI. I think the sweet spot for corporate blogging is for companies who are selling niche high-ticket products with high margin to national or global audiences. Web 2.0 can be a winning marketing and branding strategy.<br /><br />The question is not if the big bucks will come from blogging and podcasting but when. I think Web 2.0 is still a very new concept with people. Many a CEO has read the BusinessWeek story, <a href="http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/05_18/b3931001_mz001.htm">B</a><a href="http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/05_18/b3931001_mz001.htm">logs Will Change Your Business</a>, and they’re saying "blogging, pod casts and wikies are great" but I don't think a lot of people really understand why they're great yet. I remember when I first started a <a href="http://www.name-branding.com/">blog for a client in 2002</a>, (<a href="http://web.archive.org/web/20021129111239/http://www.theshinolaawards.com/">original site here</a>) I thought it would be great for search engine marketing at that time because it was enabling my customer to produce keyword focused content on a regular basis and I knew that would provide great <a href="http://www.backbonemedia.com/search-engine-marketing-client-positions.aspx">search engine position results</a>. I had already been in the Internet business since 1995 but I really did not get blogging at that point. I just saw it as a great way to make a few friends and improve search engine rankings. I did not see all the angles. We obviously get it a lot more now but I think 2.0 is in its infancy.<br /><br />2.0 is in it’s infancy relative to the mainstream. Remember that there was a time when the web was looked at with skepticism. Like it was another ham radio thing. Ten years later we see that the Internet has changed our world, created billions in wealth and has made millionaires out of many (maybe you know some intimately :).<br /><br />Let me preface this next paragraph by saying I don't believe that blogging is for every company.<br /><br />Once serious business leaders begin to really get 2.0, many will say 'oh shoot', my company really needs to embrace blogging. Maybe they will start out by trying to do it all on their own. That will be a mistake for many companies because doing blogging RIGHT not only requires writing talent and insight but <a href="http://www.backbonemedia.com/blogsurvey/index.html">research</a>, <a href="http://blogsurvey.backbonemedia.com/archives/blogger_relations/">relations</a>, and <a href="http://blogsurvey.backbonemedia.com/archives/2005/09/the_gm_blog_les.html">responsiveness</a>. This is a huge time suck. Show me a CEO that has the time to do all that. When companies realize this, is when 2.0 services companies and maybe even some PR agencies will make big bucks. Is that going to be in 2006? I think to a tip of the iceberg degree, yes.Stephen Turcottehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16551851088635371990noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9524668.post-1136360221668770132006-01-04T02:15:00.000-05:002006-01-11T21:35:21.463-05:00The Pitfalls of BloggingFor a long time now I’ve been touting blogging as the next big thing in online marketing mainly because of its ability to achieve organic search engine rankings. As I mentioned in an earlier post, I'm going to be on a <a href="http://anewmarketingcommentator.com/2005/12/27/nedma-discusses-the-pros-and-pitfalls-of-blogging">NEDMA (New England Direct Marketing Association)</a> panel later this month on The Pros and Pitfalls of Blogging. The session's moderator, <a href="http://anewmarketingcommentator.com/about">Bob Cargil</a><a href="http://anewmarketingcommentator.com/about">l</a>, from A New Marketing Commentator has provied the pannelists and I with some advance notice on the questions. Here's the first one on the list...<br /><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">What are the pros and pitfalls of blogging?<br /><br /></span>Through this blog and <a href="http://blogsruvey.backbonemedia.com">blogsruvey.backbonemedia.com</a>, John Cass and I have written plenty on the benefits of corporate blogging but possibly not enough on the pitfalls. It’s true. If you aspire for high rankings on your most valuable keywords then blogging can get you there. If you want to make friends with some influential folks and ultimately get some great PR out of it, blogging can do that too. However, this powerful communications tool cuts both ways so before you go off and start your own blog, I think it’s important to understand a few things before you publish your first post.<br /><br />One thing that you will find once you start reading blogs or blogging yourself is that the blogosphere is made up of some amazing people who are very knowledgeable, curious, and passionate about their general area of interest. Many of them are also great writers. All of them (to my knowledge) are human and so are you. Humans can be friendly kind and respectful, and humans can also be mean jerks looking to take you down a peg just for the sport of it. Humans make mistakes. You need to be ready for that.<br /><br />I think corporate blogging is about putting your company within the context of relevant online conversations. Just for the record this does not mean pushing your products. I always like to point to <a href="http://www.stonyfield.com/weblog/">Stonyfield Farm's BLOG "Cow"munities!</a> which are four auidence oriented <a href="http://www.stonyfield.com/weblog/">Blogs</a> that discuss strories and topics that their "Cow" mnities care about. This is a great example of how a company can use blogs to connect with their auidence and sell more product without directly pitching it.<br /><br />If you want to engage in a conversation with people in the blogospher, you will mainly find a blogging culture, a group of humans that are willing to read, listen and respect what you have to say if it adds substance to the conversation. Make a strong point and your blogging community could make you feel like a star by linking to your post and commenting on your idea. That’s the benefit of buzz and PR.<br /><br />Here’s the potential pitfall, substance or lack there of can be a double-edged sword however. The edgier it is the sharper it can cut in either direction. Dull is just dull. Bloggers are passionate and that can also mean that what you thought was inspired genius was not perceived that way at all. Make a controversial point and you could end up feeling like the blogosphere has turned you into the guy who invented email SPAM. This is usually where people who are not accustomed the critical side of blogging may get turned off. However, the potential of a negative reaction or attack is not something to look at as a pitfall but more as an opportunity. This however, could by your golden opportunity to engage your adversaries in an online conversation and set the record straight and more importantly establish your credibility. This is what’s great about the blogosphere and why people like it. Bloggers are bullshit detectors and they don’t like to spin or be spun.Stephen Turcottehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16551851088635371990noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9524668.post-1136358804696639342006-01-04T01:56:00.000-05:002006-01-10T01:05:45.536-05:00New England Direct Marketing Association Dishes on BloggingHere’s an opportunity for anyone who will be hungry for a catered dinner and blogging insight on the night of January 19th 2006. Some leading Boston area marketing and communications experts ( Moderated by Bob Cargill, Founder of <a href="http://anewmarketingcommentator.com/index.php">A New Marketing Commentator</a>, Panelists: Julie Woods, Executive Vice President of Product Strategy, <a href="http://www.cymfony.com/">Cymfony</a>, Ted Demopoulos, Principal, <a href="http://www.demop.com/">Demopoulos Associates</a>, Steve Ustaris, Associate Media Director, Media Services, <a href="http://www.caratfusion.com/main/">Carat Fusion</a>) and I will be participating in an interactive discussion with an auidence of Boston area direct marketers about the pros and cons of blogging.<br /><br /><a href="http://anewmarketingcommentator.com/about">Bob Cargil</a><a href="http://anewmarketingcommentator.com/about">l</a>, the Moderator has developed a great set of questions for us panelists to answer. The interesting part about this whole thing is that we’re speaking with direct marketers. I would bet that many a direct marketer and advertising exec are trying to figure out how blogs can be used to directly market their customer’s products. In this session, we, the courageous group of panelists will attempt to answer <a href="http://anewmarketingcommentator.com/2005/12/27/nedma-discusses-the-pros-and-pitfalls-of-blogging">Bob’s provocative questions</a>.<br /><p></p><blockquote style="font-style: italic;"><p>What skill set does an organization need to have in-house in order to publish a blog? </p><p><a href="http://seoblog.backbonemedia.com/2006/01/pitfalls-of-blogging.html">What are the biggest reasons to – or <em>not </em>to – blog?</a></p><p><a href="http://seoblog.backbonemedia.com/2006/01/why-do-you-think-more-marketers-arent.html">Why do you think more direct marketers aren’t blogging yet?</a></p><p>How can blogs be used as a marketing research tool?<br /></p><p>How can an agency provide blogging services to its clients? </p><p>How can a blog be used to sell products and services? </p><p>How can a blog help an organization with its search engine optimization strategy? </p><p><a href="http://seoblog.backbonemedia.com/2006/01/how-will-blogs-be-used-in-future.html">How will blogs be used in the future?</a></p></blockquote><p></p>The reason I say they are provocative is because I think that the majority of bloggers and people who read blogs would agree that blogs should be free of commercialism, with the exception of clearly defied ad insertions down the side of the page or in-between content.<br /><br />So where does that leave direct marketers. You could apply that question to any Marketing service; Search Engine Marketing companies, Advertising agencies, PR firms. That’s the interesting question here.<br /><br />I have the answer. Of course you're all welcome to disagree. But I think that the best way to use a blog for advertising, direct marketing, PR or SEO is not to do it with any of these tactics as the primary objective. The primary focus should be on creating a great resource for the audience with which you want to communicate.<br /><br />I know that some say a blog should not be preachy but if that's how you write then don't try and sound like someone else. Your blog needs to be coming from the right place. No offence to any practitioners of the aforementioned marketing tactics (which I am also one of) but I don’t think a company blog will work if it’s JUST a marketing strategy. Sure keep your SEO keywords close by, and keep your target audience in mind as you write your post and think about how you will directly communicate with your audience once you've established one but don't let these notions keep you from maintaining a blog that keeps your auidence coming back for more.<br /><br />Now some of you may be saying yea but Steve, you’ve been telling us that corporate blogs are great for search engine rankings, thought leadership and product development and so much more. How are you supposed to do that if you’re not doing it for those results? What I’m saying to you is that if you want to get all the great benefits of blogging you need to be a great blogger. And being a great blogger is not about great SEO or PR or DM or Advertising. It’s about being a great conversationalist within your corner of the blogosphere.<br /><br />Anyway. I think the night is going to be fun and I’m sure there will be more than a few ruffled feathers before the night is through. That alone will be worth the ticket.<br /><br />Here’s a link to the <a href="http://www.nedma.com/events.html">blogging event home page at NEDMA.org</a>Stephen Turcottehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16551851088635371990noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9524668.post-1136350204965736002006-01-03T23:04:00.000-05:002006-01-04T08:22:34.856-05:00Somebody’s got plenty to say about SEO, Online PR and blogging<p class="MsoNormal">Hello to all who have subscribed to this blog. Judging by the traffic, there are quite a few of you coming here everyday even though I have not posted anything here since August. Thanks for your interest. Sorry for such a delay in posts. I could run down a long list of reasons, which would all be lame excuses so I’ll just use three of the best ones …</p> <ol start="1" type="1"> <li class="MsoNormal" style="">Most of the blogging focus has been on our <a href="http://blogsurvey.backbonemedia.com/">http://blogsurvey.backbonemedia.com</a> blog for the past several months.<br /></li><li class="MsoNormal" style="">My wife and I had a second child in August. Her name is Sophia and she's the cutest thing but she and her big sister Paige love to keep us on our toes.</li><li class="MsoNormal" style="">My other baby. I've been in the process of developing a new corporate blogging services company. Its code name is MediaLogger. We have not gone public with the project yet but we started pitching and taking beta clients in December. Backbone will be officially announcing the new company (which is a strategy / web technology / and ongoing service) sometime between now and the Search Engine Strategies Conference in New York City this March 2006. Let me just add that this is not some sort of ghost writing service.<br /> </li> </ol> <p class="MsoNormal" style="">Ok, not off the hook yet. I’ll be posting here more often, so go ahead and move this blog up to a higher level in your speed feed reading system.</p> Enjoy 2006!<span style="">,<br />Stephen</span><span style=""></span>Stephen Turcottehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16551851088635371990noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9524668.post-1122920819635510802005-08-01T12:46:00.000-04:002005-08-03T10:42:02.036-04:00Blogging is Better for a Small Company<a href="http://www.backbonemedia.com/our_team/john_cass.asp">John Cass</a>, <em>Director of Internet Marketing Strategies</em> here at Backbone recently posted about a conversation we had about whether <a href="http://blogsurvey.backbonemedia.com/archives/2005/07/blogging_is_bet.html">Blogging is better for bigger companies or smaller companies</a>. While I do agree with much of what John has written in regard to larger companies having more resources to blog, I submit that blogging has leveled the playing field giving smaller companies the opportunity to share the stage and leapfrog ahead of their closely sized (non blogging) competitors. Sure, as John argues, larger companies have great resources in terms of existing customer base and depth of personal. Those are great reasons to blog and big companies should do it too. I don’t think either one of us is saying that blogging is good for small companies and bad for big companies. I think the biggest determining factor of whether a corporate blog is successful is the people who blog not the size of the company. Nevertheless, this is a fun case to argue so I will stick by my statement and try to prove the case even further.<br /><br />Here’s my line of thinking. In mainstream online and offline advertising, small companies are at a disadvantage because they cannot match the marketing budgets of their “bigger” rivals. However, a savvy company can leverage their ideas to establish thought leadership, improving coverage by journalists and influencers and also develop a great contextual back link network to improve long-term organic search positions. Traffic and coverage from these activities can be parlayed into lead generation and brand equity. A small company can get the benefit of several marketing activities from a single comprehensive corporate blogging strategy.<br /><br />Since a key currency of blogging is ideas, a small company is not limited by the size of their budget; they are only limited by the importance of their ideas and ability to cogently communicate them through posts on their own blog and through their specific blogging community.<br /><br />Now, what does it take to have good ideas? A couple of ideas come to mind, and I don’t think large companies hold a monopoly on any of these -- Imagination, research, communications. Good ideas do not develop in a vacuum. The large or small company creating and providing the ideas have to be aware of their surroundings. Otherwise you’re putting forth a good idea that is about six months old, and then you’re not a thought leader, you’re late to the party and that’s possibly worse that not showing up at all. This is the essence of my argument. A small company can beat the bigger company to the punch.<br /><br />Leaders of a small business need to stay fully aware of their niche. These are not blogging investments; they are all essential qualities and practices for any business leadership. Whether you’re going to blog or not, the key visionaries in your company should have a real sense of how their business fits into the larger picture and how that business may or may not fit into the picture three years from now.<br /><br />I believe blogging provides a medium for the best ideas to rise to the surface. In my experience small dynamic companies are intensely aware of their niche. Their advantage is also in their ability to react quickly to changes.<br /><br />Usually big companies have an advantage when it comes to marketing budgets, but with blogging, it’s no secret that the tools needed for blogging are cheap. The real investment needed for blogging comes in the time involved with developing a strategy, monitoring your sphere of influencers, researching and generating ideas. These are activities that any sized company should be doing whether they are blogging or not. So I would not consider it an investment into blogging, it’s an investment into the business. A small company can do this just as well as a large company and apply the intelligence into developing an influential blog if they understand the medium and know who there audience is.<br /><br />The benefits of blogging are documented in our <a href="http://www.backbonemedia.com/blogsurvey/index.html">corporate blogging survey</a>. A key benefit is organic search engine positions, link building that supports search engine marketing efforts. Due to lack of budget, many small companies cannot compete Paid Click for Paid Click in the paid search regime, but they can compete for organic search engine rankings. The act of blogging has been proven to help with organic rankings because focused blogs are search engine friendly publishing engines full of relevant organized content. The culture of blogging supports contextual back linking, which is a strong factor in how a search engine like Google decides on who gets the top search position. So, a small company can blog and get their ideas out into the public while also improving the natural search traffic and link popularity. To me this is an effective use of a small company’s limited marketing resources.<br /><br />Small businesses have more to gain and less to loose. A large company has many employees, investors and lawyers. Company leaders have a fiduciary responsibility to this group of stakeholders, which can hider the ability to blog. Many companies like <a href="http://www.backbonemedia.com/blogsurvey/44-Case-Studies-Annies-Homegrown.htm">Microsoft, Maytag, and Macromedia</a> have dealt with this issue and decided to blog but I’m sure they did that knowing that they are taking some risks. I think that they rightly decided the risks of not blogging were greater than the risks of blogging.<br /><br />Another advantage that a small company has over a large one is its size. A smaller company theoretically can act quicker to changes because they’re less cumbersome.<br /><br />Last point (for now) is based on a theory that smaller companies can do more with less and that the measurable gain in terms of annual revenue has a higher probability of being relatively greater for a smaller company. Now I’m sure there is a simpler way to explain that. Here’s another way of saying it -- the relative benefit of a successful corporate blog could be more substantial for a small company. For example, a small company selling a high ticket complex product could pick up two or three new customers in one year and those new business sales attributable (at least in part) to blogging efforts could mean 100% increase in annual revenues for that company. The bottom line is that a small company can gain relatively more, more quickly and they have only time and a bit of face to loose.<br /><br />John’s argument is essentially that blogs are better for a big company because it’s ‘easier’ for them to do while my argument is that blogging can be more ‘beneficial’ (relatively speaking) for a small company. I’m sure there are at least 40 bullets that we could generate for both sides.<br /><br />Doing a quick search i found a couple of blog posts to support my case. Carson at <a href="http://www.buzzmetrics.com/">Buzzmetrics</a> argues <a href="http://www.buzzmetrics.com/blog/archives/2005/07/eating_your_own.html">in favor of blogging for a small company vs. big</a> by saying "a small consultancy has an even BIGGER imperative to blog than a big advertiser, given what a great thought leader marketing technique they (blogs) can be." <a href="http://sethgodin.typepad.com/seths_blog/">Seth Godin</a> covers Small Vs. Big from a different angle in his post titled <a href="http://sethgodin.typepad.com/seths_blog/2005/06/small_is_the_ne.html">Small is the new big</a>. Specificly referring to blogging he writes "Small means you can tell the truth on your blog."<br /><br />I’d love to hear what our readers have to say on all of this.Stephen Turcottehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16551851088635371990noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9524668.post-1121262086670233752005-07-13T09:40:00.000-04:002005-07-13T22:54:11.183-04:00Search Technorati.com to find your audienceWhat search engines do your key influencers use in your industry? With the growth of feed search engines and RSS, many of the people you wish to influence may now be using their RSS feed reader and feed search engines to find good content on the web. You will now have to get content into the new search engines on your keywords, its fairly easy to do inform the feed search engines you have an RSS feed and write content on a regular basis. <a href="http://www.technorati.com/">Technorati.com</a> is a great example of one of the new feed search engines.Stephen Turcottehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16551851088635371990noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9524668.post-1120573981259489502005-07-05T10:31:00.000-04:002005-07-05T11:16:26.166-04:00Target ‘Internet Marketing’ ResponsiblyBlogs are being used by some Internet marketing people to boost their rankings on search engines without actually developing any useful content on their blog, I recently found a blog on blogspot called internetmarket3 that just has a series of keywords around the keyword ‘Internet Marketing’.<br /><br />Developing useful and relevant content is an effective tactic for generating a number of links to your site. Setting up a blog and just including a series of keywords in the blog is a fast way to having your website banned by search engines. Search engines don’t like link farms and these types of practices, if discovered will get your site banned.<br /><br />To produce effective Internet marketing you have to consider who is going to read your content, not just the search engine spiders, people search, and when a searcher reaches a website they are looking for content that makes sense and is useful. A series of keywords is of no value to anyone.<br /><br />Backbone Media counsels our clients to use legitimate <a href="http://www.backbonemedia.com/internet-marketing.asp">Internet marketing</a> practices. We have found a strong content strategy produces links and also long term continuity. A company’s content strategy is very important to its success in getting higher search engines rankings, both from developing a lot of good content and generating interest in the content that produces a lot of backlinks.Stephen Turcottehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16551851088635371990noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9524668.post-1120081018143874282005-06-29T17:35:00.000-04:002005-06-29T21:45:29.743-04:00Corporate Blogging Survey Results Are In<a href="http://www.backbonemedia.com/blogsurvey/index.html"><img style="margin: 0px 10px 10px 0px; float: left;" alt="" src="http://seoblog.backbonemedia.com/uploaded_images/discoverblogging-711130.gif" border="0" /></a>Backbone Media launched the Backbone Media Corporate blogging Survey in May of this year. We published the corporate blogging survey results today. You can read the results on the corporate <a href="http://www.backbonemedia.com/blogsurvey/">blogging survey white paper website</a>, or <a href="http://www.backbonemedia.com/blogsurvey/blogsurvey2005.pdf">download the PDF</a>. To comment on the results visit the newly updated <a href="http://blogsurvey.backbonemedia.com/">corporate blogging survey blog </a>and start a conversation about corporate blogging.Stephen Turcottehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16551851088635371990noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9524668.post-1119375646286626312005-06-21T13:39:00.000-04:002005-06-21T14:10:38.563-04:00Online Newspapers Use Blogs for 'interactivity & immediacy'New survey released today from <a href="http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/050616/sfth030.html?.v=16">Nielsen//NetRatings </a>reveals the changing nature of the newspaper and online newspaper readership. About one fifth, 21%, of those polled stated they primarily use the online version of a newspaper to read news.<br /><br />"A significant percentage of newspaper readers have transferred their preference from print to online editions," said Gerry Davidson, senior media analyst, Nielsen//NetRatings. "Accordingly, many online editions now feature original content and have developed an online strategy that includes online message boards and editorial blogs, which leverage the medium's strengths of interactivity and immediacy."<br /><br />The leading online newspapers are turning to blogs and forums to increase their interaction with their audience. Companies can learn from the publisher’s experience by using forums and blogs to create a stronger online community with their audience.Stephen Turcottehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16551851088635371990noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9524668.post-1119304843540785992005-06-20T17:59:00.000-04:002005-06-21T14:09:25.573-04:00Paying for pay for click when you have editorial SEO resultsI am often asked the question, should my company use pay for click advertising if we have high <a href="http://www.backbonemedia.com/search-marketing-services-PPC-02.htm">editorial SEO results</a>?<br /><br />While organic results can bring you more traffic and higher conversion rates, if you do have the budget, running PPC campaigns for your highest converting keywords can get you even more conversions. Backbone Media typically recommends to our clients to run pay per click campaigns when they first launch a website domain name. It’s the fastest way to get top rankings. And if your site suffers from the Google Sandbox effect (Google puts some new websites on ice for about three months when they first launch) it’s a good way to get traffic while you are waiting for Google to give you a higher ranking.<br /><br />Some marketer’s have also found that overall conversion rates or both editorial listings and PPC listing improve when a site has both organic and PPC on a web results page. Your goal should be to reduce your overall budget as you achieve higher results in the editorial listings, however it’s still important to review your conversion rates. After all that’s the goal of any Internet marketing strategy, getting more conversions.Stephen Turcottehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16551851088635371990noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9524668.post-1119093211320161032005-06-18T07:10:00.000-04:002005-06-19T00:49:39.800-04:00Using metasearch to discover what you missing in search: Dogpile.comDogpile’s <a href="http://missingpieces.dogpile.com/">missing pieces tool</a>, provides a handy graphical way to determine what websites appear or don’t appear in the top results page on three top search engines; Google, Yahoo! And Ask Jeeves. Missing pieces is a flash system where a searcher can enter a keyword phrase and search for websites on all three major search engines. The missing pieces circle displays all sites appearing within each search engine, but also represents which sites appear on all three, just two, or only one search engine. Missing pieces lets you compare and discover the websites you were missing from the other search engines. However, no guarantees the other missing sites will provide a better resource in providing the best result for your search.<br /><br />Dogpile had commissioned a <a href="http://missingpieces.dogpile.com/whitepaper.pdf">study</a> with the University of Pittsburgh and the Pennsylvania State University to determine the amount of overlap or lack of overlap between each search engine in the study. The study determined there was only a 3% overlap for page one searches with 10,316 searches, 12% of returned results were shared by two search engines, and 85% of returned results were unique to one search engine.Stephen Turcottehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16551851088635371990noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9524668.post-1118445063546236792005-06-10T19:03:00.000-04:002005-06-10T19:11:03.566-04:00Business Bloggers Wanted: New Survey Seeks to Measure Business Blog Results<em><strong>Call to corporate bloggers to take blogging survey: Future report on survey to feature Thought Leadership, Marketing, Search Engine Optimization, Sales &amp; Public Relations results from company blogs</strong></em> <p><img src="http://seoblog.backbonemedia.com/survey.gif" align="left" hspace="10" /> BOSTON, Backbone Media, Inc., a Boston based Internet marketing company that specializes in integrated search engine optimization and website design services, announced a survey on business blogging -- </p> <p><a href="http://www.backbonemedia.com/blogsurvey/" target="_blank">http://www.backbonemedia.com/blogsurvey/</a>.</p> <p> The survey seeks to understand what results business bloggers have received from their blogs. Specifically the survey asks respondents what sales, PR and product development results they have seen from their blogging initiatives. Backbone Media, Inc. will develop a snapshot of what makes a successful blog, and then translate the industry snapshot into a working model for future company blogging initiatives.</p> <p>John Cass, Backbone Media's Director of Internet Marketing Strategies commented on the survey, "Company blogs work best when they are managed by people who are authorities and genuinely passionate about their products. Last year I conducted a corporate blogging survey, and people at larger software companies, including Microsoft and Macromedia, told me that the best return on blogging came from having the people who are responsible for building their software, blog about their products. Blogs to such companies are learning tools for product development and customer feedback. For example, Macromedia's development team had gained a lot of product ideas from the interactions with customers. It's been a year since the last survey, I want to understand how things have changed and developed with the product development and promotional benefits from blogs."</p> <p>The survey will be completed alongside an online marketing analysis of business blogs. Backbone Media President Stephen Turcotte remarked on this aspect of the survey, "We see business blogs as a more human and individual way for people from companies to communicate and connect with their particular audience. The interesting story is that there seems to be a blurring of the lines between personality, customer relationship, brand identity, editorial journalism, PR, marketing, and sales. This survey will allow us to better understand the factors that go into a company's decision to blog and what are the intended (and unintended) consequences on areas such as thought leadership, editorial press coverage, search engine rankings, inbound links and ultimately sales."</p> <p>John Cass will be presenting the results of the corporate blogging survey at the upcoming online conference Global PR Blog Week 2.0 on PR and blogging. And John will be moderating a panel discussion on blogging at the AMA's workshop on blogging in Boston June 24th. Here's the address of Backbone Media's corporate blogging survey -- <a href="http://www.backbonemedia.com/blogsurvey/" target="_blank">http://www.backbonemedia.com/blogsurvey/</a></p> <p>Backbone Media, Inc. is an Internet Marketing consultancy based in Waltham, Massachusetts. Backbone takes an integrated online marketing communications approach with their clients, first setting a strategy then using such appropriate Internet Marketing tools such as SEO, PPC, e-mail marketing and CMS driven websites to get results for their customers.</p>Stephen Turcottehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16551851088635371990noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9524668.post-1118261229665962312005-06-08T16:05:00.000-04:002005-06-09T00:05:34.036-04:00The Speed of Internet MarketingOur website design team recently met with a new potential client that's looking to do there third redesign in the 14 months. That got me thinking that Internet marketing efforts change so fast today, that by the time your content is posted on your website, its almost outdated. It seems that product sections on a company website will only need to be updated every every few months. A benefit of a blog is that you can quickly get information out to your customers and keep your public message in sync and on th edge of your industry. Communication with your audience is kept fresh plus you have the ability to interact with your audience.<br /><br />Fast communications and getting the word out to your customers is one of the findings from Backbone Media’s preliminary results to the Backbone Media <a href="http://blogsurvey.backbonemedia.com/archives/2005/06/_not_a_factor.html">corporate business blogging survey</a>.Stephen Turcottehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16551851088635371990noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9524668.post-1117900587058080342005-06-04T11:52:00.000-04:002005-06-05T20:29:09.073-04:00Using Search Engine Optimization to Promote a Software WebinarHow to get the most out of your web seminar marketing effort using search engine marketing.<br /><br />Here's a good strategy for doing a webinar that will support the SEO process.<br /><br />1) Create an About the Web Seminar Page. Include the title, a sub title, description and about two or three paragraphs of copy who should sign up, what it's about and what they will get out of it. The title should contain some good keywords as well as the descriptions and the body copy. You can design into the page a big call to action that links to your webinar software signup form. There great thing about this page is that there are multiple benefits for doing it (see 2, 3 and 4).<br /><br />2) You can promote the seminar to your in-house lists or sponsored targeted email list(s). Then use your About the Web Seminar Page as a landing page. Just to set some expectations. Industry experience shows that you can expect a conversion rate of .0.5 - 3% from email. The actual attendance from those who signed up will range from 40 - 60%.<br /><br />3) You can also promote the seminar with PPC advertising on specific keywords. Once you see the content for the landing page you can select a few keywords to target and then get an estimate for your PPC advertising budget.<br /><br />4) The ‘About the Web Seminar Page’ will be helpful in achieving organic rankings on the topic keywords. You should not expect that this page will get great rankings within a few weeks but it can be a benefit for organic rankings for future web seminars (two to three months). In order to get those long-term rankings, the page should remain live on the website and get re-purposed for the next planned web seminar. This will insure that the page stays in the organic search listings.<br /><br />5) Additional SEO benefit, See if there is a way to have the webinar taped to make up a transcript. You can then offer the transcript to the webinar attendees at a later date.Stephen Turcottehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16551851088635371990noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9524668.post-1117644983326234462005-06-01T12:55:00.000-04:002005-06-01T13:19:03.920-04:00Controversy Brings Brand Opportunities for Online PRNegative online PR does not have to only bring bad news for a company, depending upon the severity of an incident it is possible for a company to do the right thing and respond quickly to public relations misfortune. HP recently launched a blogging initiative but <a href="http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=05/05/06/1835218&amp;from=rss">removed a comment</a> posted by a blogger. The main contributor to the blog was out at the time and a colleague had removed the comment posting. When they returned the main contributor quickly replaced the comment. HP was congratulated for resolving the issue so quickly. Often it is not the actually incident but a lack of concern or approach that create a disaster for public relations. If you have a similar incident respond quickly and you may actually gain from the event.Stephen Turcottehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16551851088635371990noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9524668.post-1117070269079299652005-05-25T21:16:00.000-04:002005-05-31T22:51:00.176-04:00Reseller Marketing Through BloggingDeveloping a thriving reseller community is important if a software company is going to grow and prosper. Resellers look for good products, strong service and a growing customer base. Any technology company that can foster a good reseller community, one where references are exchanged throughout the network and leads are provided from the technology company will build a successful reseller community.<br /><br />Blogs help companies to build an active community, technology companies should consider using them to help boost their reseller network.Stephen Turcottehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16551851088635371990noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9524668.post-1116891042853372602005-05-23T19:29:00.000-04:002005-05-23T21:51:01.850-04:00Cookie Rejection a big issue in the Internet Marketing industryCookies from the bakery taste good to nearly everyone, not so cookies in the online world. Users are getting increasingly sophisticated about rejecting cookies, so says a study by webtrends on <a href="http://www.siliconbeat.com/entries/2005/05/23/rejecting_cookies_a_problem.html">cookie rejection rates</a> by industry in featured in the San Jose Mercury News.Stephen Turcottehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16551851088635371990noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9524668.post-1116698804332795692005-05-21T14:06:00.000-04:002005-05-22T16:43:09.490-04:00Froogle On Google Brings Sales To B2BShopping search engines are becoming increasingly important to consumer marketing companies. A shopping engine lets you upload your products with images and product description into their website. Google’s <a href="http://froogle.google.com/">Froogle</a> is one example. For some keywords shopping results appear on the main search engine results in Google. Business to business companies have not really considered this method of marketing, but I’ve started to notice shopping results appear for more commercial keywords. Conduct a search for your keywords and determine if shopping engine results are appearing at the top of the Google web results.Stephen Turcottehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16551851088635371990noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9524668.post-1116473181600572222005-05-18T17:11:00.000-04:002005-05-19T00:40:07.916-04:00The Ideal SEO ClientThere was excellent thread on Search Engine Watch Forums started by the Moderator Nacho. The opening thread was " What do you say are our <a href="http://forums.searchenginewatch.com/showthread.php?t=5680&page=1&amp;pp=20">Search Engine Marketing industry BIGGEST growing pains</a>? Why? ".<br /><br />This might be inside baseball if your not in the SEO industry but I highly recommend reading <a href="http://forums.searchenginewatch.com/showthread.php?threadid=5680">this thread</a> for the progression of ideas and thoughtfulness of many of the posts.<br /><br />I particularly liked and related with a few posts.<br /><ol><li>The first 27 posts covered a lot of ground and Nacho provided an <a href="http://forums.searchenginewatch.com/showpost.php?p=46531&postcount=28">SEM Industry Biggest Growing Pains Executive Summary</a> here. </li><li>This one by an independent SEO named ephricon who posted about the <a href="http://forums.searchenginewatch.com/showpost.php?p=46550&amp;postcount=29">disadvantages and advantages of doing SEO for larger corporations</a>.</li><li>And this one by Stacy Williams, a search engine marketing specialist and president of an SEO company called Prominent Placement. Stacy remarked on <a href="http://forums.searchenginewatch.com/showpost.php?p=46553&postcount=31">the Lack of experienced SEO talent &amp; training</a> and how it's quite a task to keep everyone up to date with the rapidly changing SEO business, while at the same time attending to customers and projecting herself as an active member of the SEO community. I can relate with her and I really respect her willingness to put that out there. </li></ol><p>After reading every post I felt the need to put in my two cents. I started thinking about everything that was said and came to the realization that SEOs tend to be looked upon as vendors that should be relegated to specific areas of the company's online strategy. A major pain is that we can really do a lot more if our clients perceive and work with us as partners. We have some clients who do work with us in this way and it really works for them.<br /></p><p>I feel like internet marketing is at another tipping point and this time it’s about the evolution of SEO/M towards enterprise integration. The major growing pain I see is that a comprehensive SEO/M strategy needs to permeate a company’s overall business, marketing and communications strategy. An SEO can make a big difference for a client if we educate them how to harness the killer apps of the web (search, email, online public relations, blogs & forums, rss and more) to advance company objectives.</p><p><strong>The Ideal SEO Client</strong></p><p>In the ideal world, the SEO client would say something like “We want you to meet with our board and provide us with your best guidance on how Search Engine Marketing and optimization techniques can support our company objectives. We’re ready to provide you with whatever you need in terms of support and manpower to get the job done. Don’t worry; Frank down in IT is totally behind you guys. We know you’re going to need his support so we’ve provided you with some dedicated access over next few months. The copywriters and product managers want your team to come in and give them a tutorial on how to write better copy for our website. We have clients in South America, Europe and Asia so recommend your best options for international, multi language search. Our PR agency has been advised to run all our press releases by you before they go out on the wires. They also want you to be in on some of our PR strategy meetings so you can advise on how SEO, and online communities research tactics can leverage what they are trying to do. Oh this is cool too, our CEO is an amazing writer and he has lots of interesting things to say about our industry. Can you help us setup a corporate blogging strategy that not only supports his position as a thought leader but also provides us with a way to get closer to our customers? CEO is willing to carve out an hour a day to blog. Will that be enough? He’s also designated a few passionate people from our products department to post to the blog as well. One more thing, let's make sure our website is doing it best to convert those visitors into leads and we're tracking everything.” </p><p><strong>Reality for Both Sides, SEO and Client, Requires Investment</strong></p><p>In the real world this approach requires a lot more investment; work, coordination, internal selling and political maneuvering compared with the old fashioned optimize the site for relevant keywords strategy. It also requires a greater commitment and involvement from client. Most clients are not ready take this on all at once but I think many of these elements could and should be part of SEO. Some would call this a pain. Who you kidding -- it is pain. But, it's also thrilling because I see SEO/M types as the bridge between traditional marketing / communications and the future of marketing (notice how i did not say Internet Marketing, just marketing). Maybe a lot of SEO firms are not setup to work this way but I think the SEO’s of the future will need to be able to effectively influence aspects beyond the traditional SEO realm (getting into customer service, crisis communications, spokesman's statements to the press). </p><p>To Stacy’s point, We're probably not going to find a ton of <a href="http://www.backbonemedia.com/team.asp">people who are trained in SEO</a> so we're just going to have to cultivate it from within. Yea, that's going to be a pain but it also means that an SEO's value is still on its way up (quite a way to go IMHO). </p><p>Don't sell yet!</p>Stephen Turcottehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16551851088635371990noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9524668.post-1116359906480647602005-05-17T15:55:00.000-04:002005-05-17T18:50:34.486-04:00How can blogs improve rankings?If a company already has a <a href="http://www.backbonemedia.com/search-engine-optimization.asp">search engine marketing strategy</a>, blogging can be a natural next step. Why is that? One of the biggest challenges for our client’s is coming up with unique content, once you have optimized site accessibility, meta tags, body copy on your home page, landing pages, white papers and press releases, what is there to do next? You need to create more content.<br /><br />Corporate blogging is the perfect solution for content creation because it provides the most passionate people in your company an outlet for communicating ideas and establishing thought leadership. Oh, and by the way it creates very relevant optimized pages for search engines. The great dynamic about blogging is that it demands more content. Most bloggers will post several times per week, and if the posts are interesting then they start receiving the most valuable SEO benefit of all a quality backlink.Stephen Turcottehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16551851088635371990noreply@blogger.com