miercuri, 26 ianuarie 2011

SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog

SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog


The Power Of Volunteer Search Marketing

Posted: 26 Jan 2011 05:21 AM PST

Posted by Keenan Steel

This post is primarily a beginning guide to doing volunteer search engine marketing for nonprofit organizations based on my experience, but it is also an effort to convince more companies to donate time and resources to charities. Companies that do so may find significant SEO benefits for their own site, as explained in what follows.

Over the last several years, I've had a few chances to volunteer with a fine charity that takes innocent refugees from areas of danger, relocates them throughout the world, and helps them to begin new lives. While collecting and gathering donated furniture was fulfilling, I wondered if I could make a bigger difference.

I began to see that the charity was restrained by a lack of resources and capital, as I'm sure most not-for-profit organizations do. It's a double-edged sword with charities: if they spend no money on fund raising, they have no funds to distribute. If they spend too much on fund raising, a lower percentage (in greater quantities) of the money goes to the cause, which can hurt a charity's ratings.

What if there was a way that I could increase the charity's visibility long-term without them having to pay for expensive fund raising and marketing services? This was my motivation for learning SEO. I hope you will help out, and what follows is a guide to how and why.

Getting The Orgs On The SERPS

When I do nonprofit SEO, I try to target keywords and phrases where I won't feel bad about taking traffic from the top two or three results. I feel that some charities deserve top spots more than others, and even the charity space is full of spammy blogs, AdSense farms, affiliate sites, and other non-relevant sites that you can de-throne.

On-Page SEO

Just get over the fact that your chosen charity's site will be horrible for SEO. It might almost make you cry when you see a PR 6+ page with a title like “Home.” See it as an excellent opportunity and make the on-page suggestion. Don't take it personally when no one thanks you, or even understands why you're trying to mess with their site. You'll probably have to sell thoroughly explain the benefit of the changes, as the non-commercial sphere is typically less savvy on the internet marketing front.

Leverage The Cause

People are much more open to charitable organizations when a link is requested. You can often get links from organizations which, in the for-profit sphere, would be considered partial or even direct competitors.

No luck sending emails? Consider a popular selling strategy, which becomes even more effective when you're not "selling" anything. I saw the ancient computers that my favorite charity was using, so I hit up a few locally owned stores to see if they could donate any of their older models. I did secure a few new machines, but I was largely unsuccessful. I had expected this, so after putting the pressure on for a big favor, store owners were relieved when I made my next request.

I asked the owner of the store whether he would mind placing a link on his site to the charity. It didn't cost the store anything, and it actually made them look better. The final text was something along the links of "(Store) is proud to promote the efforts of (site) in (cause)". The cause was a deep link with targeted anchor text. They didn't give us a portion of the sales, but even the link was support. Search queries aside, we received a large amount of quality traffic.

Build Relationships

Spamming blog networks is not the way to build solid long-term authority. This is good advice for any marketing or SEO campaign, but it is especially true in SEO for nonprofits. Where else can you ask for someone to send some volunteers and expect them to link to you for doing so? People love to show off their good deeds, and we usually like to hear about them. Rankings go up, the charity's visibility rises, and everyone wins!

Take advantage of the fact that you're (hopefully) not just trying to enrich yourself. That alone gives you instant credibility in the eyes of business owners and large companies. If you're willing to organize an event, you can work with college departments and clubs to win some sexy .edu links.

Accreditation And Google Grants

Depending on your role as a volunteer, you can either suggest or push for approval and ratings from a number of charity watchdogs and oversight groups. These pages are usually authoritative and relevant – not just in the eyes of Google, but in the eyes of users.

Being accredited, approved, etc helps when applying for other types of assistance. You might be surprised how often Google approves Google Grants, which come in the form of free AdWords credits. Grants are definitely worth taking the time to apply for. Oh, and did I mention that you could get a Google link when they give you assistance?

Organize The Masses

When you or your charity plan large events or volunteer operations, you can earn some serious blog love. Speak with local businesses, news outlets, and more regarding coverage. If they're already covering the event, you can even help them target anchor text to the right pages. The people who talk about you are usually willing to help, so don't be shy about giving them detailed instructions on how they can.

I may be a skeptic, but I honestly believe that most people are generous and empathetic if you can give them a reason to care.

What's In It For You?

What, you mean warm fuzzy feelings aren't enough? Honestly, though: never underestimate the impact that this can have on morale, especially if you achieve results for a cause that employees believe in.

Requesting Links To Your Site

I know that this is being read by a group of experienced SEOs, and the first thought is probably that you can earn links from high-authority charities. This is true, but please request links with tact. You'll probably get better results and avoid shaming the industry of search engine optimization if links are given freely.

What I beg you not to do is approach charities with anything that sounds like "I will do SEO for you if you give me a link." This is essentially a paid link, and if I have my way it will also get you reported to the BBB, Google, and every consumer watchdog imaginable. Besides, it's just bad social conduct.

Public Relations

Aside from the nonprofit site, you can get some serious love from the media. Good PR is a part of smart SEO, and no company is too large or too small to benefit from the press. Submit a press release explaining some of the work you have done and are going to do for the nonprofit - with their permission, of course.

You can feel good about the PR in that it will benefit the nonprofit's SEO campaign and market visibility, in addition to your own. If done correctly, the press release can trigger interest from additional media sources.

If you have additional questions or tips, please drop them in the comments. I'm always open to learning more. Note that I have left out the charity that I keep referring to per their request. If you would like more information on this charity, or if you would like suggestions on local/national charities, feel free to send me a private message.


Do you like this post? Yes No

So Much Great New Stuff (On-Page Tool, More Accurate Rankings and a Linkscape Update!)

Posted: 25 Jan 2011 04:54 PM PST

Posted by randfish

You might have noticed that SEOmoz has been heating up with some spiffy new changes of late. Our engineering and product teams are in a groove, and that means cool new stuff every 2-3 weeks. Last night, some really slick new features rolled out and today, Linkscape's updated too (our last one was only 21 days ago - meaning data is awesomely fresh).

Let's start with the fun part.

Our old term target tool has been dying for a long time. In fact, we've been wanting to replace it for so long that today, with it's demise and the birth of the new on-page optimization tool, we simply had to hold a wake.

Our customer service team wore black armbands and brought out a cart with old pictures of the tool, whisky and Guiness.

In fact, we might have gotten a bit carried away. I actually wrote a eulogy (which you can watch on video below thanks to Jamie's quick thinking):

Yeah, we're more than a little weird. But we're also crazy excited about the new On-Page Optimization Report tool:

It mimics the functionality of the web app's keyword recommendation system, but can be used on any page + keyword combination on the web. For those of you working outside the web app's campaign environment sometimes, it's a lifesaver.

Next, we've changed the way rankings are gathered to remove the previous geographical bias that existed. When you run keyword searches through the web app to track your rankings, you'll now see geographically agnostic results. You can see a comparison below for the keyword "SEO" on Google (both are from logged-out, non-cookied, non-personalized browsers).

We've been testing this system internally and with some of SEO friends and thus far, the results appear to provide a much more "universal" ordering in the SERPs. For many keywords, this won't have any impact at all (as Google only geo-biases ~25% of queries from what we can tell), but for those who've been troubled by the number of searches that contain suspiciously "Seattle-focused" results, this fix should help. Note that unfortunately, it's not yet in keyword difficulty or the classic rank tracking tool (separate from the campaign web app).

And last, but not least, Linkscape's index updated today with brand new link data which is now visible through Open Site Explorer, the classic Linkscape tool, the mozBar and the sweet new link analysis tab in your web app:

Statistics for this month's Linkscape update (index 37) are below:

  • URLs: 42,969,159,966 (43 Billion)
  • Subdomains: 393,943,689 (394 Million)
  • Root Domains: 110,533,726 (110 Million)
  • Percent of Links w/ Nofollows: 2.15%
    • Percent of Nofollows that are Internal: 57.14%
    • Percent of Nofollows that are External: 42.86%
  • Average Number of Links per Page: 61.96 (9.49 External)
  • 8.31% of URLs crawled were 404 errors
  • 6.05% of URLs crawled were 302 redirects
  • 4.56% of URLs crawled were 301 redirects
  • 3.57% of URLs were blocked with robots.txt
  • 2.54% of URLs used meta noindex

We've got a ton of cool new things coming to the web app and PRO membership over the next few months, so please keep an eye out and thanks for joining us on this exciting journey. We hope to knock your socks off with releases throughout the year!  


Do you like this post? Yes No

Recommendations for Blog Commenting as a Marketing Strategy

Posted: 24 Jan 2011 05:23 PM PST

Posted by randfish

Many of us in the web marketing space have a love/hate relationship with the practice of leveraging blog comments as a marketing strategy. On the one hand, it can bring valuable participation and content to our sites and provide an outlet for us to reach other communities and bloggers/comment-enabled communities. But, it's also an endless source of spam and low quality contributions that teeter on the "publish-worthy" seesaw.

Given the ongoing popularity of this practice and some recent successes (and failures) I've observed and participated in personally in this arena, I felt it worthwhile to explore in more depth.

Why Comment on Blogs?

  • Branding / Awareness - commenting on blogs will almost certainly get you at least a brief once-over from the writer, and consistent contributions are a proven way to build relationships with bloggers. That participation can also yield awareness and branding to the blog's audience, at least those who are consistent comment readers and interactors. Depending on the blog/sector and your goals, this can be a very positive marketing move.
    _
  • Direct traffic - comments with links, especially those that are well-written and entice readers to click a link (rather than just being a random/irrelevant/spammy link drop) will send visits. If the post itself continues to earn traffic, this can even be an ongoing source of referrals to your site/page.
     
  • SEO / Search Rankings - some blogs use "dofollow" links in the comments that are approved and may send search ranking value. However, it's generally my opinion that many of these links aren't treated as... let's say "impactfully" as normal links in the search engines' ranking systems. However, leaving a link that is so useful and valuable that the blog author edits his/her post to include it (something I've done many times here on SEOmoz and helped to make happen through my own comments) is definitely SEO accretive.
     
  • Second-Order Marketing Impact - many of the effects you might feel from commenting aren't directly impactful, but instead come later on as a result of the post. e.g. the reporter who follows up on a comment for detail to include in a story, the link to your content that comes from another blog discussing your comment, etc.

Given these goals, it's essential to think a bit more strategically about the practice of commenting and participation. Whereas the right contribution can bring you all of the above, the wrong one(s) could adversely impact many of these.

10 Recommendations for Blog Comments

  1. Read the last 5 posts made by the author - assuming you've never participated in this particular blog/community previously, make it a pre-requisite of commenting to read through their prior material. You'll get a good sense of the author, their interests, their perspective and their writing style. All of these will help you considerably to make a positive, impactful impression with your comment.
     
  2. Read at least 3 posts worth of comments - If you don't read the comments on other posts, you may have a tough time getting a sense for the community's level and style of discourse, making your comment appear out of place. You want to stick out from the crowd, but not because you're an inexperienced contributor. If it's your first time to a site, don't just drive-by comment and link drop, take the time to understand protocol and your contribution will be far more likely to generate value.
     
  3. Read previously posted comments on the thread - This one's obvious, but also oft-forgotten. In order to have a comment that the author and other readers will take seriously, you need to know what else was posted on the thread. If there's dozens or hundreds of comments, it's OK to skim, but make sure your point is being made and discussed earlier a reply or back-and-forth thread may even be a more appropriate place to post your content in these cases.
     
  4. Write "more than a tweet t and less than a blog post" - The exact amount is up to you, but generally speaking, the range between a long tweet (~140 characters) and 2-3 paragraphs (too short to be its own blog post) is ideal. It's easy to consume, but gives you enough room to make a substantive point (and potentially leave a relevant/useful link). If you do want to go much longer, write that post! The content will likely be more valuable for marketing on your site, and many times, the author may append their post to include your link. You can then make a short, relevant comment in the post itself and leave a link back to your more in-depth piece.
     
  5. Never drop a pure bio/reference link - If you link with something like this, you're barking up the wrong tree:

    Drive-By Link Drop
    These sorts of "drive-by" link drops will get rejected 8/10 times and have the link removed before approval the rest. If you're going to leave a link, it better be highly relevant to the post, interesting to the audience and as non-promotional as possible (or, if it is highly promotional, prefaced transparently as such).
     
  6. You may link to your own content a maximum of once in a comment - If you're linking to the content of others as a reference, it's fine to leave a link or two, even three (this can be particularly useful if you're referencing data points, studies, surveys, etc. that back up a point), but if it's promotional in any way (even if it simply exists on a site you own/control), best practice says keep it to one.
     
  7. If at all possible, use your real identity and photo - The goodwill and trust built from an authentic human face and name that go together, match the bio/team of the site they link to and carry across mediums (Twitter, Facebook, etc.) is invaluable. It can often mean the difference between being treated as a respected new member vs. a black hat spammer. If at all possible, use your real identity, full name, and actual photo.
     
  8. Be authentic and honest about who you are and why you're there - You may be paranoid that by admitting you're a marketer, a community manager, an SEO, etc. you'll be thought worse of and potentially excluded, but I can say from experience that honesty is the best policy and that being open about your motivations and background will more often than not build trust and acceptance. That said, in many communities, if your title is officially "SEO link builder" or "SEO specialist" you might want to modify that slightly to "organic marketing specialist" or "content marketer" or even "blogger," if the title fits. So long as those descriptions are still honest, they can lessen the negative perception that "SEO" unfortunately still carries.
     
  9. It's OK to promote your comment (and their post) socially - Bloggers love getting their work tweeted/shared, so if you tweet/FB share a reference to your comment on their post, particularly if you call them out by name, it can have a very positive effect. For example:

    Left a Comment Tweet
     
  10. Make your profile link point to an appropriate place - You can ruin a great comment by linking to what seems like a spammy/manipulative site. If you run a site that's completely off-topic for the blog/community to which you're contributing, at least point to your bio page on the site rather than the homepage. Seeing a great response from "Maggie Thompson" that links to "www.suffolkhomeloans.info" might get a link-strip, but linking to "www.suffolkhomeloans.info/maggies-bio.html" could very possibly pass the same smell test.

Looking forward to hearing your suggestions on comment marketing. And if you want to write your own blog post about it and link drop, feel free - the thumbs here at SEOmoz do a great job of sorting the great comments with links from the spammy, drive-by linkers.


Do you like this post? Yes No

The President's Speech and Your Questions


The White House, Washington


Good afternoon,

Did you catch President Obama's State of the Union Address last night?  If you missed it, it's worth a watch:

As the President said last night, the most important contest we face as a nation is not between our political parties – it's a contest among our competitors across the globe for the jobs and industries of the future. It’s about winning the future.
 
To win that contest, we must out-innovate, out-educate and out-build the rest of the world.  We must take responsibility for our deficit and reform the way government works, so that it’s leaner, smarter and better equipped to meet the challenges of the 21st century.

But last night's speech was just the start of this conversation.

We want to hear directly from you, and President Obama himself will be answering some of your questions in a live interview tomorrow at 2:30 p.m. EST.  And throughout the day tomorrow, policy experts from the White House and around the Administration will be available for in-depth discussions on some of the critical issues that affect you.

Learn more about these events and find out how you can submit your questions:

http://www.whitehouse.gov/Your-Questions

Here's the lineup for tomorrow on WhiteHouse.gov/live:

  • 11:30 a.m. EST: Economy Roundtable with Austan Goolsbee, Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers
  • 1:00 p.m. EST: Foreign Policy Roundtable with Denis McDonough, Deputy National Security Advisor
  • 2:30 p.m. EST: Live YouTube interview with President Barack Obama
  • 3:15 p.m. EST: Education Roundtable with Secretary of Education Arne Duncan
  • 4:30 p.m. EST: Health Care Roundtable with Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius

We're looking forward to answering your questions tomorrow. 

Sincerely,

David Plouffe
Senior Advisor to the President

Visit WhiteHouse.gov




 
This email was sent to e0nstar1.blog@gmail.com.
Unsubscribe e0nstar1.blog@gmail.com | Privacy Policy

Please do not reply to this email. Contact the White House

The White House • 1600 Pennsylvania Ave NW • Washington, DC 20500 • 202-456-1111

 

 

 

How To Add Thesis Teasers To A Static Homepage Graywolf's SEO Blog

How To Add Thesis Teasers To A Static Homepage Graywolf's SEO Blog


How To Add Thesis Teasers To A Static Homepage

Posted: 26 Jan 2011 08:00 AM PST

Post image for How To Add Thesis Teasers To A Static Homepage

So you’ve got Thesis for your WordPress site (and if you haven’t got Thesis yet go and check out Michael’s excellent Thesis review to find out why you should) and you want to use a static homepage to give your visitors a consistent experience when they visit your site.  The problem is that you really like the look of Thesis’ teasers for showing updated links to your blog posts but Thesis doesn’t give you an easy way to add teasers to your static homepage.

So what do you do?  You are using Thesis after all.  One of the most flexible frameworks available for WordPress.  There must be an easy way to set up static homepage teasers using Thesis hooks.  Right?

Not exactly.  If you’re looking for a simple line of code to tell Thesis, “Hey! Stick some blog post teasers over here on my static homepage!” then I’m afraid you’re out of luck.  But with a few dozen lines of code and a little bit of know-how, you can do exactly that.

We’ll start by taking the code that Graywolf created for adding a Lifehacker-style carousel of your featured posts above your site’s header.  We’re going to break this code down into its constituent parts and make a few simple tweaks so that we can use it to display these featured post teasers on your static homepage.

To start with, we’ll take the first few lines from Michael’s top_carousel function and rename it as home_carousel like so.


function home_carousel(){
global $post;
if (is_front_page ()){
}
}

You’ll notice that we’ve also set it so this function is only activated if the page being displayed is_front_page so that it will only appear on our site’s homepage.

Next we’re going to add in the “wrapper” that will contain our homepage teasers carousel so that we can add some visual styling using CSS once we’re done.  Once again, this is simply a case of taking Michael’s original top_carousel code and changing the names to suit our new home_carousel instead.  I’ve also added in extra line with a h2 title for the homepage teasers block which you can edit or remove completely as you see fit for your site.


function home_carousel(){
global $post;
if (is_front_page ()){
echo '<div id="homecarousel">';
echo '<h2>Featured Posts From Our Blog</h2>';
echo '</div>';
}
}

Now we can use the exact same query from Michael’s original top_carousel function to find our featured posts to display in our new home_carousel.  If you prefer, you can change the query to look for a “featured” tag instead, but if you’re already using the top_carousel to show posts from a “featured” category elsewhere on your site you might as well stick with the category query to find the posts for your homepage teasers as well.  One change that we will make here is to only show the 3 most recent “featured” posts because we’re going to put this in our content column and 3 posts will fit quite nicely, whereas 6 would take up too much space on our homepage.


$the_query = new WP_Query(array(
'category_name'=>'featured',
'orderby'=>'date',
'order'=>'DESC',
'showposts'=>'3'
));

Next up we’re going to use the same code from the original top_carousel to define how to display the posts that our query just found.


while ($the_query->have_posts()) : $the_query->the_post(); $do_not_duplicate = $post->ID;
$image = get_post_meta($post->ID, 'thesis_post_image', $single = true);
echo '<div class="carouselu">';
echo '<a href="';
echo the_permalink();
echo '" >';
echo '<img src="http://www.YOUR-DOMAIN.com/wp-content/themes/thesis_18/lib/scripts/thumb.php?src='.$image.'&w=140&h=140&zc=1&q=100"></a>';
echo '<a href="';
echo the_permalink();
echo '" >';
echo the_title();
echo '</a>';
echo '</div>';
endwhile;

Remember to change YOUR-DOMAIN to (you guessed it) your domain name and also check the rest of the path for where Thesis stores thumbnail images for your posts.  If you’re using the current version of Thesis, v1.8, and you’ve left it in the default directory then you can leave it with thesis_18 but you will have to remember to come back to your custom function and change it whenever you upgrade to a new version of Thesis.

Last, but not least, we need to remember to clear the div’s that we’ve set for this function so that we can style it with CSS later.  To do that we add the following line of code.


echo '<div style="clear:both"></div>';

Now we put it all together and we get.


function home_carousel(){
global $post;
if (is_front_page ()){
echo '<div id="homecarousel">';
echo '<h2>Featured Articles From Our Blog</h2>';
$the_query = new WP_Query(array(
'category_name'=>'featured',
'orderby'=>'date',
'order'=>'DESC',
'showposts'=>'3'
));
while ($the_query->have_posts()) : $the_query->the_post(); $do_not_duplicate = $post->ID;
$image = get_post_meta($post->ID, 'thesis_post_image', $single = true);
echo '<div class="carouselu">';
echo '<a href="';
echo the_permalink();
echo '" >';
echo '<img src="http://YOUR-DOMAIN.COM/wp-content/themes/thesis_18/lib/scripts/thumb.php?src='.$image.'&w=140&h=140&zc=1&q=100"></a>';
echo '<a href="';
echo the_permalink();
echo '" >';
echo the_title();
echo '</a>';
echo '</div>';
endwhile;
echo '<div style="clear:both"></div>';
echo '</div>';
echo '</br>';
}
}

Now that you’ve put it all together just copy and paste your code into your Thesis custom_functions.php file and then add the following line to activate the function.


add_action('thesis_hook_after_post_box', 'home_carousel');

This tells Thesis to add your new homepage teaser carousel after any post content in your homepage’s body but you can easily change this to move it to other places on your homepage.  Check out the ever-useful Thesis Hooks Reference for a visual guide to which hooks go where.

Now that you’re function is in place the only thing left to do is add some styling to it using your custom.css file.


#homecarousel {border:1px solid #efefef; padding: 0px;padding-left:10px;}
#homecarousel h2 { font-size: 14px; font-weight: bold; text-align: center; }
.carouselu {width:150px;float:left;padding:3px;text-align:center;}
.carouselu IMG {border:2px solid #ccc;display:block;}

For the sake of this example we’re going to use the same CSS styling as Graywolf uses for his original top_carousel so that you can get a consistent look if you’ve just taken the sample code and used it on your site.  The one addition I’ve made is the line that styles the h2 title element, making the font bold and centring the title within the homepage teasers box.  If you’re feeling adventurous it’s very easy to make changes to Thesis’ custom.css to update the look of your homepage teasers.

Thesis Teasers on a static WordPress homepage

In the case of the example screenshot here I’m using a 2 column layout with Thesis, which has given me extra room to increase the showposts number from 3 to 4. I’ve also made some changes to the custom CSS to match the overall design of my site. One of the great things about Thesis is how easily you can experiment with design changes using the built in Custom File Editor, which is so much quicker than changing and FTPing updated files over and over until you’re happy with the result.

Ken Jones is an Independent Online Marketing Consultant from Coventry in the UK who freely admits that he knows very little about programming, which is why he’s such a big fan of Thesis because it makes it so easy for people like him to produce great looking websites.  You can connect with Ken and follow his stream of consciousness Twitterings @TheKenJones.

tla starter kit

Related posts:

  1. How to Add a Carousel to Your Thesis Blog If you’ve spent any time visiting blogs lately chances are...
  2. How to Add a Visual Slider to Thesis The following is a tutorial on how to add a...
  3. Thesis Tutorial – How to Add Adsense Section Targeting Using Adsense on your blog usually isn’t the most profitable...
  4. Make Thesis Work Better With Digg and Facebook If you’re involved with social media sites like Digg, Facebbok...
  5. Thesis Tutorial – Adding Date Based Triggers to Your Posts There are a lot of times when you are working...

Advertisers:

  1. Text Link Ads - New customers can get $100 in free text links.
  2. BOTW.org - Get a premier listing in the internet's oldest directory.
  3. Ezilon.com Regional Directory - Check to see if your website is listed!
  4. Glass Whiteboards - For a professional durable white board with no ghosting, streaking or marker stains, see my Glass Whiteboard Review
  5. Need an SEO Audit for your website, look at my SEO Consulting Services
  6. Link Building- Backlink Build offers 45 PR5+ Backlinks for $295
  7. KnowEm - Protect your brand, product or company name with a continually growing list of social media sites.
  8. Scribe SEO Review find out how to better optimize your wordpress posts.
  9. TigerTech - Great Web Hosting service at a great price.

This post originally came from Michael Gray who is an SEO Consultant. Be sure not to miss the Thesis Wordpress Theme review.

How To Add Thesis Teasers To A Static Homepage

Winning the Future

The White House Your Daily Snapshot for
Wednesday, Jan. 26,  2011
 

Winning the Future: The State of the Union Address

Last night, President Obama delivered the State of the Union Address at the U.S. Capitol. In case you missed it, check out the video of the enhanced version of his speech.

If you have questions about the President’s State of the Union Address, we’ll be answering as many as we can throughout the week. Visit WhiteHouse.gov/sotu to find out how to get involved.

The State of the Union Address

In Case You Missed It

Here are some of the top stories from the White House blog.

Interactive Feature: The First Lady’s Box, State of the Union Address 2011
Learn more about the remarkable individuals who will join First Lady Michelle Obama for the 2011 State of the Union Address.

My Guests at Tonight’s State of the Union Address
Continuing her commitment to support our nation’s military families, Dr. Jill Biden writes about her guests for the 2011 State of the Union Address: wounded warrior Army Sergeant Brian Mast and his wife Brianna.

The President’s State of the Union Address: What They’re Saying
With reactions pouring in to the President's State of the Union Address, we thought you might be interested in some of the early responses from observers across the country

Today's Schedule

All times are Eastern Standard Time (EST).

9:00 AM: The President departs the White House en route Andrews Air Force Base

9:30 AM: The President departs Andrews Air Force Base en route Green Bay, Wisconsin

11:35 AM: The President arrives in Green Bay, Wisconsin

11:45 AM: The Vice President discusses how the Administration is incentivizing investment in innovation and helping to lay the foundation for American competiveness in the 21st century WhiteHouse.gov/live (audio only) 

12:35 PM: The President tours Orion Energy Systems, Inc.

1:00 PM: The President delivers remarks on the economy WhiteHouse.gov/live

1:30 PM: The President tours Skana Aluminum Company

2:50 PM: The President tours Tower Tech Systems, Inc.

4:10 PM: The President departs Green Bay, Wisconsin

6:00 PM: The President arrives at Andrews Air Force Base

6:15 PM: The President arrives at the White House 

WhiteHouse.gov/live   Indicates events that will be live streamed on WhiteHouse.gov/live.

Get Updates

Sign Up for the Daily Snapshot 

Stay Connected

 


 
This email was sent to e0nstar1.blog@gmail.com
Manage Subscriptions for e0nstar1.blog@gmail.com
Sign Up for Updates from the White House

Unsubscribe e0nstar1.blog@gmail.com | Privacy Policy

Please do not reply to this email. Contact the White House

The White House • 1600 Pennsylvania Ave NW • Washington, DC 20500 • 202-456-1111 
 
 
  

 

 

SEOptimise

SEOptimise


Not Using AdWords Remarketing? Don’t Delay! (Actually Do)

Posted: 25 Jan 2011 08:13 AM PST

I recently read an AdWords Remarketing tips post which made me think of a few ways to improve your AdWords Remarketing campaigns by introducing a delay between when a person visits your site and when you start showing adverts to them.

Image from Stuck in Customs on Flickr

Buying Cycles
One problem with Remarketing is that it is hard to measure incremental value from it. A remarketing conversion tells you that someone who visited your site came back to your site and then bought something; the causal link between the advert and the purchase is not as clear as it is with search advertising.

Giving users time to complete their purchase naturally before you start showing them adverts avoids this problem whilst still taking advantage of the main feature of Remarketing; that people who have already been on your website are more valuable than people who haven’t.

For an ecommerce client we set up a 7 day delay on their remarketing to match the length of their buying cycle.

To setup a delay you need to create a remarketing tag as normal and then create another list using that tag but with a shorter duration. In this case they have 1 tag across their whole site with two remarketing audiences associated with it, one of them has a duration of 21 days and the other has a duration of 7 days. Then create a custom list containing everyone in the 21 day audience and no one from the 7 day audience. Bingo! Now you have to wait to see if it works.

Consumables
Another client sells a product which uses a consumable that they also sell. They reckon that people will need a refill after about 6 months. Using AdWords Remarketing, we are able to target people 6 months after they purchase with adverts for refills. Awesome!

Setting this up can be a bit more complicated.

If you want to target everyone who purchased but with a 6 month delay then you can use an existing Adwords conversion tracking code as a Remarketing tag. Then you can define your audiences as above.

If you need to target only people who purchased a particular product then you will need to insert a new remarketing tag into the conversion page only if the customer has bought the product. This might be easy or hard depending on your platform and web development team.

Seasonals
I manage several clients in the travel industry. I have setup a Remarketing audience for them that targets people who have converted 11 months down the line; just when they will be thinking about their next holiday!

Image from joiseyshowaa on Flickr

The maximum duration for a Remarketing audience membership is 540 days (nearly 18 months) so there is plenty of time to take into account all sorts of seasonal variation.

I hope this post has given you some Remarketing ideas. Leave a comment or find me on twitter if you have any other Remarketing tips.

© SEOptimise – Download our free business guide to blogging whitepaper and sign-up for the SEOptimise monthly newsletter. Not Using AdWords Remarketing? Don’t Delay! (Actually Do)

Related posts:

  1. Top 10 tips & things you need to know about AdWords Remarketing
  2. The Value of AdWords Brand Bidding
  3. 2010 Predictions – How Well Did I Do?