- Educate your video production team on SEO basics e.g. identifying keywords for video titles and file names, tagging options, creating keyword-rich text descriptions of video content
- Identify a specific theme for video keywords e.g. more tightly focused. Identify related terms that share the same root as the primary theme and use the term 'video' as a modifier
- Host each video on a separate web page so you can use your landing page for keyword rich content
- Write compelling titles and 140-150 word descriptions for your videos that include the keyword themes.
- Employ video tagging and user comments on video pages
- Include a transcript of the words spoken during the video
- Add a video site map linked from your home page with a complete list of videos, organised by category e.g. an xml file with a list of URLs that contain video files, along with keyword-rich video title, description, duration and frequency of updates and page's relative importance.
Discussing digital marketing strategies, tactics and project management techniques.
Monday, 25 January 2010
SEO for video content - 7 tips
7 tactics for optimising search viability for video content
Sunday, 24 January 2010
Sharing made easy
ShareThis is an easy and clean way to encourage visitors to your site to share your content.
Twitter tips
Buzz marketing is about getting people excited by what you have to say and giving them a reason to share your content with other people.
How to get your brand on Twitter
How to get your brand on Twitter
- Tell people what is happening in your life / business
- Engage with like minded by following industry thought leaders, post replies to interesting threads, retweet posts that you want to share with your followers and send direct messages to create one-on-one dialogue. Mr Tweet helps identify people on Twitter to either follow or influence.
- Highlight new content from your website
- Monitor conservations using search tools you can monitor references to your company. Respond to negative comments and reinforce positive comments.
Tips
- Use URL shortening such as TinyURL
- Install Tweetdeck to make management easier
- Use Mr Tweet to identify useful contatcs
- Check you @replies folder and respond to comments
- Always check direct messages and respond
- Make tweets interesting - don't just sell!
- Retweet intersting posts
- Be human and ask questions
Remeber Twitter is for customer engagement but also can form an effective sales channel as shown by Dell selling over $1million worth of discount products via Twitter updates.
Sunday, 17 January 2010
eNewsletter best practice
- Great content to engage the subscribers. Readers want valuable, relevant content - not marketing messages.
- Getting opened: who it is from, the prior value provided by the sender, the subject line, as well as what can be seen in the preview pane.
- Getting it read: keep executive summary under 75 words, create summaries that link to the full article or webpage, within articles paragraphs should be between 50-100 words, use of white space, spacing, bullet points, italics and bolding make it easier to read.
- Getting action: use active language that creates a sense of urgency - instead of “learn how” use “learn now”, place the CTA near the relevant content, send them to a relevant landing page and give multiple choices for contact not just email
Conversion optimisation - Journey analysis
- Where are visitors routed to when they first come to the site?
Natural search visitors often don’t arrive on an appropriate page. Using an Advanced Segmentation report showing paid and non-paid search traffic segmented by landing page will highlight high bounce rates. You either need to route them to another page or provide a more relevant experience when they land. - What is the journeys forward from the initial pages?
The Navigation Summary can be used for forward or reverse path analysis - you can see where people are flowing to your conversion pages or add to Basket page. It highlights the most popular paths and the content that influences the decision e.g. how many who convert go to the “About Us” page? Entrance Paths report shows which content visitors prefer when arriving at a particular page.
Methods for improving conversion
Where to focus efforts to improve conversion:
- Customer journey analysis
- Copy optimisation
- Online surveys / customer feedback
- Cart abandonment analysis
- A/B testing
- Event-triggered / behavioural email
- User testing
- Segmentation
- Expert usability reviews / consultancy
- Multivariate testing
- Pinchpoint analysis
What is Crowdsourcing?
“Utilising a network of customers or other partners to gain insights for new product or process innovations and to potentially help promote a brand“.
Great example of by penguin for the development of Spinebreakers, a new proposition for teenagers.
“During the website development Penguin recruited hundreds of teenagers from every area and background for focus groups and usability testing. The teenagers made every decision, choosing the URL and the nature of the brand themselves. “We decided not to make any assumptions,” says Rafferty. The site is now run by three tiers of teenagers, or “crews” as they elected to be called, who have varying levels of control over the site“.
and running the site:
“The core crew of 12 teenagers write all of the website copy and come into the Penguin offices every month to discuss strategy; the second crew of 70 deputy editors are based all over the country and have back‑end access to the site; while the third tier consists of the hundreds of teenaged bloggers who participate on the site“.
Great example of by penguin for the development of Spinebreakers, a new proposition for teenagers.
“During the website development Penguin recruited hundreds of teenagers from every area and background for focus groups and usability testing. The teenagers made every decision, choosing the URL and the nature of the brand themselves. “We decided not to make any assumptions,” says Rafferty. The site is now run by three tiers of teenagers, or “crews” as they elected to be called, who have varying levels of control over the site“.
and running the site:
“The core crew of 12 teenagers write all of the website copy and come into the Penguin offices every month to discuss strategy; the second crew of 70 deputy editors are based all over the country and have back‑end access to the site; while the third tier consists of the hundreds of teenaged bloggers who participate on the site“.
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