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Neil Ferree
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Click this vCita link to if you would like to schedule a free 30 minute phone meeting to discuss how my DiY Content Marketing System will increase your social signals and social shares and get better SERPs for your pages!
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Neil Ferree
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Neil Ferree
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Social media websites like Facebook and LinkedIn always rank well for businesses. The content you are posting on your social media networks also has an impact on your overall ranking
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Neil Ferree
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Neil Ferree
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Neil Ferree
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Many people know that headlines are one of the most powerful tools we have at getting our prospects to take action. But they are consistently overlooked or too focused on what we care about. So wh...
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Neil Ferree
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Google’s has been very clear about their feelings regarding unnatural links. Their recent actions resounded deeply within the SEO community and have inspired a higher level of discourse around things like content, quality and scalability.
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Neil Ferree
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As marketers tackle the inbound marketing terrain, here's what's going through their brain.
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Neil Ferree
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Psychology is the study of human behavior... The aim of marketing is to influence human behavior, and you can’t begin to do that if you don’t understand how humans behave.
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Neil Ferree
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As Facebook Graph Search evolves and marketers begin to come to grips with the opportunities provided from the social graph, it becomes clear that a combination of both search and social media tactics are required if brands aim to improve...
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Neil Ferree
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A local SEO industry survey, managed by SEO software company Brightlocal, revealed that the most in-demand SEO services are on-site SEO and Google+ optimization.
Excerpted from article by Pawan Deshpande, CEO at Curata: "By definition, content curation is the act of continually identifying, organizing, and sharing the best and most relevant content on a specific topic or issue online. When evaluating which content curation tool to use, there are three primary areas of consideration:
1.The Inputs – Where does the content curation tool get information from? What type of content will this allow me to curate? Will it help identify and recommend relevant content?
2.The Organization – What does this tool offer in terms of organizing content once it has been identified? What type of data models does this represent content as? In a simple chronological list, or an inter-linked structure? Does it let me annotate and editorialize the curated content?
3.The Venue – How and where can I share the content once I have decided to curate it?
In this blog post, I am primarily going to focus on the decided on a content curation tool based on the venue – the channels to which your content is curated.
- Embedded Widget. What is it? Embedded widgets allow you to display curated content in a small pane on your existing web properties. Pro’s: Relatively easy to implement with Javascript code or create an iframe. Con’s: Content in widgets is almost never indexed by search engines because they are rendered in Javascript which search engines do not consider. Who should use it? Organizations that are looking primarily to touch up their website with some fresh content may want to use a widget.
- Microsite. What is it? A dedicated microsite or section of a website populated primarily with curated content. Pro’s: Microsites really create a full-fledged experience with curated content as the center piece and can easily because the hub for a specific topic or issue. Con’s: Because the curated content is not tucked away in a widget and is instead front and center, you will need to pay a lot more attention to what you curate. Who should use it? Organizations that are looking to become an authoritative destination for a topic or issue to position themselves as a key resource or thought leader, or to drive traffic and visibility.
- Personalized Page. What is it? A personalized page is a lightweight, single page microsite filled with curated content. Pro’s: Easy to get up and running and are indexed by search engines. Usually free. Con’s: Only one page is indexed by search engines. Who should use it? Individuals or cost conscious non-profits who want to create an information resource.
- Email Newsletters. What is it? An email newsletter or digest containing the latest curated content that is sent out on a regular interval. Pro’s: Email newsletters are a great way to continually educate an audience on a regular basis without fail. Con’s: Email newsletters have two drawbacks: 1. They are not indexed by search engines. 2. They are not real time. Who should use it? Email newsletters are a great medium for curated content for curators with an existing captive audience.
- Twitter & Social Media Channels. What is it? Posting curated content on Twitter and other social media channels such as Facebook and LinkedIn through status updates. The curated content could be links to blog articles or other web content, or curated tweets. Pro’s: Posting curated content is different from other mediums, because it’s a very time sensitive medium. Con’s: The drawback of sharing curated content on social media is that if you don’t have a lot of curated content on your topic, then it’s hard to get noticed. Because social media is content is so fleeting, if you are not constantly and consistently posting your curated content, then your impact will be minimal. Who should use it? Curators who have topics with a sufficient throughput of content. Curators with an existing or potential audience on social media channels. Curators with content that has a likelihood of being shared virally.
- Feeds. What is it? Content that’s shared through RSS feeds or other data feeds. Pro’s: People with RSS readers can subscribe to them – who are usually visitors who return regularly. In addition, some search engines crawl RSS feeds. Con’s: Social media these days has in many ways taken the place of RSS feeds and provide more room for annotation. Unlike social media, it’s also difficult to annotate your content as a curator and add your own context. Who should use it? Curators with an audience that prefers this medium. So what’s the right answer? Which venue should you choose as you evaluate content curation tools? A sound content curation strategy utilizes all of the venues and channels, but drives all visitors back to a single microsite. If you’re using a robust content curation platform then you should be able to easily syndicate your content to all channels with ease..."
Read full original article here: http://www.curata.com/blog/content-curation-guidelines-where-to-share/
Via Giuseppe Mauriello
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Neil Ferree
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Search engine optimization may have gone through a transformation over the past few years with the arrival of Google Plus. This is now all about Social SEO.
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Neil Ferree
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The biggest chunk of social traffic to websites comes from outside the official social networks like Facebook and Twitter.
Here's a Google+ cheat sheet to keep handy and get the most out of every post. This cheat sheet breaks it all down from post anatomy, notifications, style options, photo editing and more!
Via Bonnie Burns
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Neil Ferree
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YouTube Audience Retention
Business Video Marketing is a Tuff Neighborhood
• 20% click away in the 1st 10 seconds • 33% click away in the 1st 30 seconds…
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Neil Ferree
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Relationship building with a giant, remote, hugely powerful company. Who really wants to have to do that? Cultivating relationships with real live people
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Neil Ferree
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Rand Fishkin shares his take on the shift from "SEO" to "inbound marketing" and what the future holds for our industry at large.
Via Antonino Militello, Gaurav Pandey
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Neil Ferree
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Why would anyone put the word obfuscate in the title of a blog post when muddle, make unclear, or cloud would suffice?
Well, why would an[..]
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Neil Ferree
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We created the 7 steps to an optimised content marketing strategy make it easy for you to adapt your existing online strategy to a focused content plan. Source: Visual.ly
How can a brand rank in authenticity and pull some publicity out of its Facebook Page? With the right mix of art and science. Check out the latest top shelf insights, data, and tips designed for fashion forward thinking Facebook community managers.
Via Level343
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Neil Ferree
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The Pareto principle (also known as the 80–20 rule, the law of the vital few, and the principle of factor sparsity) states that, for many events, roughly 80% of the effects come from 20% of the causes.[1][2]
Business-management consultant Joseph M. Juran suggested the principle and named it after Italian economist Vilfredo Pareto, who observed in 1906 that 80% of the land in Italy was owned by 20% of the population; he developed the principle by observing that 20% of the pea pods in his garden contained 80% of the peas.[2]
It is a common rule of thumb in business; e.g., "80% of your sales come from 20% of your clients". Mathematically, where something is shared among a sufficiently large set of participants, there must be a number k between 50 and 100 such that "k% is taken by (100 − k)% of the participants". The number k may vary from 50 (in the case of equal distribution, i.e. 100% of the population have equal shares) to nearly 100 (when a tiny number of participants account for almost all of the resource). There is nothing special about the number 80% mathematically, but many real systems have k somewhere around this region of intermediate imbalance in distribution.[3]
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Neil Ferree
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Five of my favorite Google Analytics reports and features, plus one I really, really don't like. At all.
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Neil Ferree
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From company blogs to Pinterest boards, social media and content marketing integration is a must-do for today’s businesses. Strategic content marketing
Excerpted from article by Search Engine Watch: "Looking for a nice selection of SEO power tools that will help diagnose technical issues and optimize your website, or perhaps gain insight on what your competition is doing? Below are 13 SEO tools (many of them free) to do just that. Even if you have little to no budget, you will still able to get the job done with this selection of search marketing power tools. 1. Your Eyes 2. IIS SEO Toolkit 3. Screaming Frog 4. Majestic SEO 5. Adobe Site Catalyst 6. Google Analytics 7. SEMrush 8. Google Webmaster Tools 9. Bing Webmaster Tools 10. SEO Tool Set 11. Google Trends 12. HitWise 13. You Get Signal."
Each tool is analyzed with more information and external links. Read full article here: http://searchenginewatch.com/article/2199683/13-Essential-SEO-Power-Tools
Via Giuseppe Mauriello, Geoffrey Vertlieb, Ivo Nový
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