marți, 26 aprilie 2011

SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog

SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog


Great Content for SEO: Simpler than You Ever Imagined

Posted: 25 Apr 2011 04:16 PM PDT

Posted by randfish

Today I want to share an incredibly simple yet massively powerful process for building search-optimized, "great content." There's no fancy tricks and nothing propetiary about the approach, but it is rare indeed to find an organization that follows these steps and hence, it's a way to potentially differentiate and build a competitive advantage.

Step 1: Build a Survey

No one knows what searchers want better than the searchers themselves, so let's hear what they have to say. To find out, we'll start with a short series of questions asking the survey taker to imagine they've just performed the desired query. Here's an example:

Content Experiment Form
See the full form in action here

The basic structure is simple - request the top 3 content pieces your audience desires, then ask specifically about features that would make the page worthy of sharing (this is important, because it often differs substantively from what makes a page merely answer the user's query). Finally, you can ask them to actually do the search (you don't want them to do it until the end, because what they find might bias their responses) and report any results they liked (which can provide additional insight).

Step 2: Send it to Your Customers / Potential Customers

I cheated and used a tweet:

Tweet for Content Experiment

You can find customers or potential customers virtually anywhere - your friends, neighbors, co-workers, friends on social networks, etc. Anyone who fits your customer demographic or is creative enough to imagine themselves as that demographic will work. A link in the bottom of your email newsletter or a share on Facebook/LinkedIn/Twitter can often do the job, too. You might even try posting a link in a relevant industry forum or discussion group (so long as you're sure it won't be perceived as spammy).

Step 3: Record Responses + Leverage them to Build What the People Want

My Twitter followers are clearly office chair experts because I got some fantastic responses:

Content Experiment Responses

There are some fantastic suggestions in there - enough to form a serious roadmap for content generation and to steer me clear of crafting a landing page missing these features (which would likely increase bounce rate, earn less links/shares and, probably, have a lower conversion rate).

It gets even more fleshed-out with the next section:

Content Experiment Responses

You can see all the responses to my Tweet here

Simply amazing. I really believe that by following the recommendations of these few, late-night, Twitter-obsessed, good web-samaritans, I could build a page of content better than anything the top 20 at Google or Bing have to offer right now.

When you're doing this formally, collect as many responses as you reasonably can (before all the answers start to look the same) and use your intuition plus the aggregates of the data to make the best page possible. Any feature/content mentioned by 3+ respondents should definitely make the cut. From there, you can learn from what they liked/didn't in the current SERPs and bolster it with any remarkable suggestions they gave for making the page "share-worthy."


That's all there is to it.

And while you're thinking, "He's right! It's so easy... I can do this in 15 minutes tomorrow and have the perfect roadmap to build something searchers will love," you're probably busy and might put this on the back burner for another time. Don't do it! Implement now - even for just one keyword and one page. Even if you only get 2 responses! Heck, you can just fill it out yourself 4 or 5 times with how you think others might respond and it will still give you a better plan than 90% of what's in the top 10 results for most queries.

If you follow this process and have examples to share, I'd love to see them in the comments. Feel free to use live links to your pages, feedback forms or responses. You might even be able to recruit some Moz readers to take your survey :-)


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Seth's Blog : Shopify contest launches today

Shopify contest launches today

I jumped the gun last week. As promised, here's the updated link to the Shopify contest. The first 5,000 entrants get a free hardcover copy of Poke the Box, a chance to win their part of over $250,000 in prizes, support a great cause and build a store at the same time. Check it out.

 
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Photostream: Behind the Scenes in Early April

The White House Your Daily Snapshot for
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
 

Photostream: Behind the Scenes in Early April 

The White House Photo Office releases their latest batch of behind-the-scenes photos, this time following the President from town halls across the country to the Situation Room to a moment alone reading on the patio outside the Oval Office.

See more photos.

President Barack Obama salutes as he walks to Marine One following a town hall meeting in Fairless Hills, Pa., April 6, 2011. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

In Case You Missed It

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

Meeting the Needs of People with Autism
Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius discusses the ways the Administration is working to help every American with autism achieve their full potential.

Partners in Sustainability
GSA Administrator Martha Johnson discusses her trip to Seattle, where she met with business leaders to talk about ways the public and private sectors can work together to strengthen our nations clean energy economy

Weekly Address: Stopping Oil Market Fraud, Beginning a Clean Energy Future
The President lays out his plans to address rising gas prices over the short and the long term, from a new task force to root out fraud and manipulation in the oil markets to investments in a clean energy economy.

Today's Schedule 

All times are Eastern Daylight Time (EDT).

9:30 AM: The President receives the Presidential Daily Briefing 

10:00 AM: The President receives the Economic Daily Briefing

10:00 AM: White House Forum on Energy Security WhiteHouse.gov/live

11:25 AM: The President is interviewed by WSB Atlanta, WKYC Cleveland, WTKR Hampton Roads, Virginia, and WXYZ Detroit

1:00 PM: Briefing by Press Secretary Jay Carney WhiteHouse.gov/live

1:30 PM: White House Forum on Transforming Federal Information Technology (IT) Management WhiteHouse.gov/live

1:40 PM: The President holds a bilateral meeting with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan of the United Arab Emriates

2:30 PM: The President holds an expanded bilateral meeting with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan of the United Arab Emirates

4:30 PM: The President meets with Secretary of Defense Gates

WhiteHouse.gov/live Indicates events that will be live streamed on White House.com/Live

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Seth's Blog : The bully-victim cycle

The bully-victim cycle

A bully acts up in a meeting or in an online forum. He gets called on it and chastised for his behavior.

The bully then calls out the person who cited their behavior in the first place. He twists their words, casts blame and becomes an aggrieved victim.

Often, members of the tribe then respond by backing off, by making amends, by giving the bully another chance.

And soon the cycle continues.

Brands do this, bosses do it and so do passers-by. Being a bully is a choice, and falling for this cycle, permitting it to continue, is a mistake.

 
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luni, 25 aprilie 2011

Watch Live: The 2011 White House Easter Egg Roll

The White House Your Daily Snapshot for
Monday, April 25, 2011
 

Watch Live: The 2011 White House Easter Egg Roll

The 2011 White House Easter Egg Roll is here, and you’re invited! Today, the First Family will host 30,000 people from all 50 states in their backyard for an Easter Egg Hunt and the traditional Easter Egg Rolling, as well as live musical performances, storytime readings, healthy cooking demos, sports and more. This year's theme “Get Up and Go!” focuses on promoting health and wellness, a central part of the First Lady’s Let’s Move! initiative to raise a healthier generation of kids.

Join the First Family and people from around the country for the 133rd White House Easter Egg Roll on WhiteHouse.gov/live.

Photo of the Day

President Barack Obama boards Air Force One, reflected in one of its engines at left, at Los Angeles International Airport in Los Angeles, Calif., April 22, 2011. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

In Case You Missed It

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

Earth Day: The Progress We've Made
EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson looks back on progress so far, and looks forward to continued effort to make sure all Americans get the protections and opportunities they need and deserve. A

Statement by President Obama on Syria
President Obama releases a statement on Syria, "condemn[ing] in the strongest possible terms the use of force by the Syrian government against demonstrators."

Protecting Consumers at the Pump: The Oil and Gas Price Fraud Working Group
Attorney General Eric Holder explains what the Obama Administration is doing to identify and address potential cases of fraud and manipulation that may harm families and businesses. This year, one lucky high school will have an unforgettable commencement speaker – President Obama – and we need your help to determine which school it will be.

Today's Schedule 

All times are Eastern Daylight Time (EDT).

9:30 AM: The President receives the Presidential Daily Briefing 

10:15 AM: The First Family attends the 2011 White House Easter Egg Roll; The President delivers remarks WhiteHouse.gov/live

11:30 AM: The President meets with his national security team on Afghanistan and Pakistan. The Vice President will participate via teleconference

12:30 PM: Briefing by Press Secretary Jay Carney WhiteHouse.gov/live

2:35 PM: The President meets with Attorney General Holder

WhiteHouse.gov/live Indicates events that will be live streamed on White House.com/Live

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Seth's Blog : Alignment

Alignment

Long-term brands and relationships are built on alignment. Here are a few examples ("I" is the royal I, not me in particular):

A perfect relationship: I want your company to help me, and your company wants to help me. We're both focused on helping the same person.

The Walmart relationship: I want the cheapest possible prices and Walmart wants to (actually works hard to) give me the cheapest possible prices. That's why there's little pushback about customer service or employee respect... the goals are aligned.

The Apple relationship: I want Apple to be cool. Apple wants to be cool. That's why there's little pushback on pricing or obsolence or disappointing developers.

The demagogue politician relationship: I will feel more powerful if you get elected and get your way. You will feel more powerful if you get elected and get your way.

The search engine relationship (when it's working): I want to find what I'm looking for. You want me to find what I'm looking for, regardless of the short-term income possibilities.

The Mercedes (formerly Cadillac) relationship: I want a prestige product that reliably delivers an expensive label that's unattainable to many. They want to reliably and consistently charge a lot for a car that sends a message to everyone else.

The farmer's market relationship: I want to eat sustainable foods that make me feel good. You want to grow sustainable foods that make me feel good.

Compare these to the ultimately doomed relationships (if not doomed, then tense) in which goals don't align, relationships where the brand took advantage of an opening but then grows out of the initial deal and wants to change it:

The Dell relationship: I want a cheap, boring, reliable computer. You want to make more profit.

The hip designer relationship: I want the new thing no one else has yet. You want to be around for years.

The search engine relationship (when it doesn't work): I want to find what I'm looking for. You want to distract me and take money to send me places I actually don't want to go.

The reluctant purchaser relationship: I don't want to waste money on something I didn't know I wanted. You want to make a commission.

The troll relationship: I want to laugh at a buffoon who doesn't realize he's making a fool of himself. You want to be respected by the mainstream.

The young actor relationship: I want the fresh-faced young movie star. You want a career that lasts more than a year.

The typical media relationship: I want to see the shows, you want to interrupt with ads.

Alignment isn't something you say. It's something you do. Alignment is demonstrated when you make the tough calls, when you see if the thing that matters the most to you is also the thing that matters the most to the other person.

The tension that comes from misalignment can work for a while, but it's when alignment kicks in that the enterprise really scales.

 
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