Friday, 26 August 2011

I Love MCR! Manchester Celebrates!

The I Love Manchester campaign kicks of today as the city shows that it will rise from the riots just like it rose from the bombing.

The amount of people embracing this great campaign is fantastic and it was started last night in style as the ‘I Love MCR’ logo was projected onto some of the city’s best-known buildings.

Theres a full weekend of events from gigs, the 21st Pride and comedy acts performing throughout the city, theres even going to be a "Tweet Up" where people will be asked to tweet messages of love for the city using the hashtag #IloveMCR.

Everywhere you look Manchester is wearing its heart on its sleeve!



Thursday, 25 August 2011

Will Kitty Brucknell have the X-Factor?

No doubt if you watch X-factor or read the press you will have seen or heard of Kitty Brucknell AKA Kimberley Dayle, who got through the auditions of the London heat of X-factor 2011 on Saturday with a full house as all the 4 judges said yes. What has this to do with SEO? Well were are Kimberleys SEO Consultants and we have had some fantastic organic SEO results with her 3 sites including 2 page 1's, different sites, same phrase Lady Gaga Tribute. As well as being a Lady Gaga Tribute artist she is also puts on an amazing Britney Spears Tribute show.

Kimberley has been a joy to work with and extremely enthusiastic about every aspect of digital marketing, she loves blogging, Twitter, posting videos on YouTube and doing daily updates on Facebook, not at all the diva that the media is portraying her as.

Everyone at GCO is cheering her on and wishes her the best of luck in the next heats, we’re all confident she will reach the finals.


Unrealistic Keywords

It’s better to have many slices of smaller cakes rather than not even getting a crumb from a huge cake!


Keyword research should be a relatively straight forward. You listen to your clients goals, examine the site content, jot your ideas down then get out your trusty keyword research tool of choice and find the keywords with the highest search volumes. Sadly, that's not the way to do it if you want to see real results and ROI.


Your first hurdle is that too many businesses high-competition keywords are simply out of reach or only really achievable for huge companies with bottomless pockets. It maybe they are achievable but in the long term part of your strategy. Being realistic is a good part of the research along with what could be your best keyword tool, common sense! Knowing about the sites age, current authority and adaptability for future work will help greatly in knowing which keywords can be realistically targeted.


Targeting one word keywords are unrealistic in most cases, they may get huge search volumes however this doesn’t mean you’re going to get traffic from it. Huge search volumes often don’t count as they should. Shock horror, well there’s logic to this statement and here’s where common sense comes into play, people learn to search and soon realise 1 word searches don’t work that well, it doesn’t answer what they are looking for. Example, the user is a man and he types in "jeans", he gets too many different results including women’s and children’s. His next logical step is to type in "men’s jeans", he may even want a particular style or colour, so he will refine the search again to "men’s black jeans" or "carrot fit jeans". So a huge search volume can actually be misleading for a lot of one word phrases.


So the actual search volume on one word phrases isnt actually accurate, as it takes into account the users first unsuccessful searches and the fact they more than likely only spent 60 seconds on that page 1, before refining they're search!


Knowing how the user will search is a big part of picking the right keywords, the phrase "men’s jeans" may bring in a lot of searches and traffic, however optimising for "men’s black jeans" qualifies the traffic, there may be a lower volume, however the traffic getting to your site is more likely to have their credit card by the PC and ready to spend!


I’m not saying don’t target one word keywords, but be realistic too and also think about the client. They are paying you not really for page 1 listings but to gain more business or sales, if they aren’t making their money back or profiting from the results, they aren’t going to be happy are they? They may have a limited budget too and can’t compete with the major players in that industry. Using more realistic keywords and I say it again, common sense will build a better campaign and will strengthen the website over time so that the one word phrase could become realistic, plus if the client is getting business then they’re happy too.


And the client can be in fact the final hurdle in your campaign and keyword research as they can fixate on one word or unrealistic keywords, once we return to them with our research it a matter of explaining the benefits and how a one word keyword isn’t as good as lots of qualified lower volume ones. I always explain it as imagine your site is a physical store, by using just the most competitive phrase you have only one road to your shop with many other shops all along the same road, people can only go one way and have too many choices to make and have to search every shop to the point of boredom to find what they want. In fact it’s more like window shopping! Now imagine your shop has many roads to it bringing customers who know what they want and can see it eaily displayed in your store, you’re going to gain more business overall and definitely more than if you had just one way to your store. Educating the client in how people search can be just as important as the research itself and doing it in a way that they can make sense from will help forge a good working relationship and trust.


All this makes more sense and being realistic will improve not only online presence, but will gain more business or sales, it will also set up the site for a strong future. Digital marketing is partially about common sense and understanding how users search and then interact with sites online, knowing this is a good chunk of your battle and works for both organic SEO and PPC.

Monday, 1 August 2011

Websites Selling Google +1’s

Continuing from my last article it seems the Google +1 has already spawned quite a number of companies that now sell clicks, heres an article I found that also shares some of my own reserves about the subject Websites "Selling Google +1’s, Will Google’s Results Be Gamed?"

I had a look myself and some of these companies are even selling clicks via searching your targeted phrase say for example "Lady Gaga Tribute"
or Solar Panels then clicking the +1 that appears in the rankings. Now Ive looked at that and so far its been hit and miss, sometimes you can click in the rankings and then also have to click the homepage itself too, other times Ive clicked in the rankings and the new click has appeared on the home page, so I not sure how exactly that service is being sold or pitched.

Im sure Google will soon either not include +1 in their algorithm or somehow combat this new digital marketing +1 farming tend.