Seybold Scientific

An Analytical Approach to Marketing Online.

RSS and Search Engine Optimization (SEO)

RSS (Really Simple Syndication) is a system for delivering web content directly to internet users. The concept behind RSS is eliminating the necessity of having to constantly check various websites for updates. With an RSS, time is saved through the convenience of having content automatically compiled into a user’s RSS reader (such as Google Reader). Unfortunately, you must have an RSS feed on your website to have the capability to post updates.

Web pages with RSS capability are typically denoted by a button somewhere beside the content that says “subscribe to this page” or something similar. Also, users of the latest versions of Mozilla Firefox and Internet Explorer determine an RSS page by the appearance of the orange RSS icon in the navigation bar. Users can subscribe to their favorite RSS enabled website by simply clicking the orange RSS icon.

Now that we have considered the benefits and implications of RSS for the web user, we shall now look at it through the lens of the small business owner. RSS is a growing need within the web world where top news sources and top companies are posting blogs. For a business owner, having an RSS feed will contribute to a strong presence on the web. Additional benefits of an RSS feed include announcing upcoming events, listing new items for sale, listing clearance items, listing specials, and anything else beneficial to an individual or a business. An often overlooked benefit that an RSS feeds provides is that it helps with a website’s search engine optimization.

Search engine optimization (SEO) is a series of practices that enable a website to become prominent in search engine results. An important component in SEO is link building, by having an RSS feed, you are able to capture many outside links to your website. Search engines look to outside links leading to your website as building credibility and thus, will place your website higher in the relevance of certain search terms. RSS can help you build links due to the fact that your feed has the ability to be easily implemented in third party websites who enjoy your content.

Another way of using RSS content to optimize your site is by placing widely searched keywords that relate to your core business into RSS feeds. Perform a Google search on your core business and take note of the common keywords you find in the results. These are the words that you need to include in your RSS content for successful SEO.

RSS is beneficial to both the web user and small business owner alike, because it essentially opens up another channel of communication between the two. Search Engine Optimization in conjunction with an RSS feed expands that channel and brings your website into the forefront of the internet. If you want more information or if your website does not currently have an RSS feed but you would like one, please contact us at Info@seyboldinc.com.

Email to a friend.
About This Post
Published: October 27, 2008
By: Ajay Shah

This article is filed under:
Blogs | Search Engine Optimization

Would you like to provide feedback?

RSS - Improving the SEO value of your Website

Real Simple Syndication (RSS) feeds regularly deliver updates from web pages in order to give you the most recent information without having to search through different sites. RSS used in conjunction with Search Engine Optimization (SEO) can help maintain a high placement in search engine results. Two major benefits of RSS when used with SEO include: 1) Search engines pick up on the most up to date content. 2) RSS is easier for search engines to read as it is written in XML over HTML.

First, RSS feeds benefit SEO in that it allows search engines to pick up on the most up to date content from the web. Whether the updates are additional products and services or an additional blogs, the updated material can be found by search engines which can help result in higher page placement.

Real Simple Syndication uses an XML format which is much easier for search engines to read as opposed to HTML. XML allows search engines to crawl faster through content than it would if HTML was used. However, because XML is not readable for typical web users, the entire site cannot be formatted in XML.

Search engines will find any RSS content that is related to the search query before it finds any HTML content. If the engine is able to find RSS content that is similar to HTML, the engine will list the RSS results first. Online presence for any business must be accompanied by RSS in order to maximize any SEO value your website has.

Email to a friend.
About This Post
Published: October 23, 2008
By: Ajay Shah

This article is filed under:
Blogging | Blogs | Search Engine Optimization | Tips & Tricks

Would you like to provide feedback?

Would You Judge A Real Estate Broker By His Blog?

The Washington Post reports that consumers are starting to judge real estate agents by their blogs. Almost 10% of real estate brokers are apparently blogging, a number that is likely to rise faster than that sketchy “up and coming” neighborhood you’ve heard about for years.

Read More

Email to a friend.
About This Post
Published: August 18, 2008
By: Ajay Shah

This article is filed under:
Blogging | Blogs

Would you like to provide feedback?

Blog Trackback Tutorial

This small tutorial may help many of you to understand how a trackback actually works. The value Tac describes in his blog post is very real from an SEO standpoint and more so from a relationship development standpoint. I often comment on blogs leaving an orphan of knowledge in the blogosphere that at times I need to retrace my steps to find. This method of “commenting” actually allows your thoughts to be retraced more swiftly and share your thought lineage with your audience.Take a read here and learn the how to create a trackback link..

Email to a friend.
About This Post
Published: May 20, 2008
By: George Seybold

This article is filed under:
Blogs

Would you like to provide feedback?

Using New Media to Tell the Story

I’ve had the opportunity of late to work with some C-Level executives who seek to employ new media tactics to gain awareness of their products and services. Being an advocate for new media venues. I tend to lean in this direction anyway, but some of these folks are pushing into this venue like a category 5 hurricane.

The reference to a hurricane is deliberate because they effort their way into the space and do not care if they are relevant or if their target audience exists within the community they are aggressing or not.

Contextual Relevance
Communities are formed online by those of like mind. They exist to provide information, validation and entertainment. When businesses begin “efforting” to create a place for themselves in communities, where they are not a natural fit, then they are irrelevant. The product or service lacks relevance in the context of the conversation.

Here’s a scenario. A company makes ear buds targeted a teen demograpghic.. They have a great new product and they are preparing a launch. They decide it is so exciting that they are going to use lots of new media venues to create awareness. The IT department because of their personal exposure recommend Digg, YouTube, Joost.tv, Facebook, iTunes, Second Life, etc,

Immediately the marketing manager takes off like an unstoppable train creating video and audio and articles about this wonderful new technology. The efforting continues as they are actively deployed online. The traffic doesn’t come.

Why?
These communities do not want to be marketed to. They can sniff out insincerity and they will shun that which is not in context.

All is not lost.
New media can be used effectively to promote your product. It simply needs to be above board and in context.

In Digg
Submitting a great product within Digg is fine, but playing the popularity game by notifying all your friends to “Digg it up” is not. Diggers do not like those who will game the system and they will penalize these efforts. Let your product gain ground based on its own merits.

In Facebook and MySpace and ..
Social Networks are great for staying in touch with people. Advertising on these platforms has not been all that successful primarily because the ad units are not placed in context to the subject matter of the page. Think about it this way, if you created a page in MySpace for the product and then sought to “friend” as many people as you could find would you get much response. Look at it form the reverse angle. Would you want to be the friend of an ear bud?

YouTube and Joost.tv and ..
Creating a commercial spot for these venues is expensive. Repurposing a commercial that will be aired on TV for these venues is cheap. If your commercial is “buzz worthy”, by the way you don’t get to decide if it is, but if it is buzz worthy then it will become viral on its own and be distributed beyond your imagination.

Twitter and Pownce and …
It has become very common to announce a new blog post or media spot posted online. One announcement is fine in that you are announcing to your friends so they can go learn more about you. More than one tweet is not acceptable so be respectful of the sheer volume of info these folks are consuming.

Enough on venues, I’ll close on context.
When a consumer is seeking the ear buds or your product, whatever that might be, they will likely begin their search for information within a search engine. Immediately after a product launch the likelihood you will have natural positioning within the search engines is nil. So advertising on the engines is your next best bet. You will get immediate positioning and it offers a means of getting found in context to an active search.

But what about joining the conversation? Well the reality is that you can successfully use the new media spaces to continue telling your story. Use the tools in parallel and allow entry at any singular point. This may look like [search ad > landing page > YouTube video > web site > transaction]. The key is to be visible (search engines), be on point (landing page > YouTube video > web site) and finally make it easy to transact with you. Use new media to tell the story .. perhaps I could have said it all with this one line.

Email to a friend.
About This Post
Published: May 3, 2008
By: George Seybold

This article is filed under:
Blogs | Conversational Media | Integrated Marketing | Search Marketing

Would you like to provide feedback?

WordPress.com, Sphere Announce Official Partnership

WordPress.com, the popular hosted blogging platform, has announced that it has officially partnered with the search and recommendation engine Sphere to bring related content to readers of WordPress-powered sites.

As of this weekend, you will find links to more posts on related topics at the bottom of all English language blogs that are hosted at WordPress.com. Any posts that come from the same blog will be highlighted in bold, then followed by other blogs on the site and finally followed up with content from mass media.

The team at WordPress.com is hoping you will see an increase in traffic of 5 - 10% almost immediately for blogs which focus heavily on a subject, and you could also start to see more traffic coming in from other blogs that cover similar topics as you. Of course, users do have the option of deactivating the tool if they don’t like it.

Email to a friend.
About This Post
Published: April 27, 2008
By: George Seybold

This article is filed under:
Blogs

Would you like to provide feedback?

Social Circuit: Intel Embraces Blog Culture

If you think of the universe of technology—and for that matter-social media, Intel seems to be constantly at the center of it. The devices we use, what we see on them, the companies that provide them, almost completely depend upon Intel for the processing power needed to make it work.

I spent some time with Paul Otellini, who became Intel CEO, after moving up the ranks for 30 years, and with Ken Kaplan, one of Intel’s most passionate social media enthusiasts.

This clip will give you some idea of how Intel is using social media internally and at least a hint of where Otellini thinks it will go during his daughter’s lifetime.

Email to a friend.
About This Post
Published: March 21, 2008
By: George Seybold

This article is filed under:
Blogs | Conversational Media | Social Networking | Web 2.0

Would you like to provide feedback?

A List of Objections, Replies and Concessions Regarding Social Media and Tools

1. I suffer from information overload already.

Possible replies:

Information is just nice to have unless it is actionable - that is the problem with email. If you are like me then email comes in, it’s scanned for task items, categorized in some manner and filed. In social media the feed is just there - searchable when needed, but current and living. There is no need for a constantly connected feed.

The right tools for you will feel helpful in time, not like a burden. Experiment for awhile with new tools and stick with the ones that deliver you the most high-quality information, whether those tools are high-quantity or not.

Check out tools like AideRSS and FeedHub - just two examples of services aiming to improve the signal to noise ratio.

Times change and so do information paradigms. Get used to it. The amount of information you had access to 3 years ago was infinitely more than people at any other point in history and we’re in the middle of another huge leap right now.

Concession:

If you think consuming all this new information is a challenge, wait until you try to find the time to make sense of it!

2. So much of what’s discussed online is meaningless. These forms of communication are shallow and make us dumber. We have real work to do!

Possible replies:

Much of it is not meaningless, but if you feel overwhelmed with meaninglessness - try subscribing to a search for keywords in a particular service and using that as your starting point for engagement.

Having a presence and starting a conversation is rarely a bad thing - bring quality conversation to a space and you’ll find others ready to engage.

Personal information can be very useful in understanding the context of more explicitly useful information.

If learning how the market feels about your organization, engaging with your customers and driving traffic to your web work - all very realistic goals for social media engagement - aren’t work, then I don’t know what is. Even in the short term, strategic engagement with online social media will have a clear work pay-off.

Concession:

The signal to noise ratio will be easier to maximize if you can find an experienced guide to learn from. Just jumping into social media and new tools on your own will not necessarily lead to a meaningful experience. It could, but it will take longer. Noise is noise, but relevant noise is gold.

3. I don’t have the time to contribute and moderate, it looks like it takes a lot of time and energy.

Possible replies:

If you aren’t going to eat that lunch of yours, I’d be happy to, thanks.

With practice, familiarity and technology fine-tuned with a little experience you’ll find the time required will decrease.

You might consider this time spent on marketing or communication with existing customer base - perhaps there’s something else in that department that isn’t working well and could be replaced with online work.

Concession:

Doing anything well does take time and energy. You’ve obviously been thinking about this stuff a lot, it is important - and it’s going to take time and energy.

4. Our customers don’t use this stuff, the learning curve limits its usefulness to geeks.

Possible replies:

You might be surprised to learn how many of your customers do already use these new tools. Even more will do so in the future.

The best designed tools are designed like good games - you can get small rewards right away and then learn more advanced skills to win bigger rewards. Among online services that are intended for general audiences, only poorly designed ones are too geeky.

Many of these tools provide value vastly disproportionate to the literal number of people they reach. These are like high-value focus groups where you’ll gather information and preparation to engage with the rest of the world.

Try asking someone near you to give you an in-person demonstration of one of these tools. You’ll find it much easier to learn once you’ve seen the right paths taken to show what it can do.

5. Communicators [bloggers, tweeters] are so fickle, better to stay unengaged than risk random brand damage. We don’t want hostile comments left about us on any forum we’ve legitimized.

Possible replies:

If you need to, you can require that any comments left on your own site be approved before they appear. This slows down the conversation but if it makes conversation possible for you then do it.

There are far fewer people who will take the time to say hostile things, even on the Internet, than you might imagine.

Engage - you’ll be appreciated more for it. People are going to say what they are going to say - you can either let any criticism go unanswered or you can be the bigger person/brand for responding well.

Conversations are going to happen online, better to be engaged than to have it happening behind your back.

It’s ok, no one believes that anyone is perfect anymore. Swing for the fences sometimes - you might strike out, but sometimes you’ll hit a home run.

Even if you’re not responding publicly, you should watch closely so you know what people are saying. Maybe you don’t have a blog, but subscribe to a blog search feed or alert for your company’s name. Maybe none of your people are on Twitter - you can subscribe to a feed for a search via Terraminds.

Concessions:

Some of the critical things that get said about you online might not warrant a response. Just decide which ones do and file the rest away somewhere.

Communicating in this different context is very new and challenging for traditionally trained business people. Good luck.

6. Traditional media and audiences are still bigger, we’ll do new stuff when they do.

Possible replies:

They already are, from blogging to online video to social networks to mobile to micro-blogging - big, established brands are already doing all of it. They may be experimenting, but they will bringing all their market dominance into the most useful social media sectors as soon as it suits them. Will that be too late for you? It might be.

Traditional media audiences are also more passive - online audiences can engage with, rebroadcast and otherwise amplify your communication efforts.

Concessions:

That’s true and fair, if you think your business can thrive while taking that attitude towards a period of intense social and economic change then you just rock on with your bad self. I’ll be taking my love of innovation to the employer down the street.

7. Upper management won’t support it/dedicate resources for it.

Possible replies:

A lot of technology adoption has for some time had to happen despite this reality. People adopt new tools on their own at work, without permission. They discover powerful ways to solve their problems and then they share them horizontally.

Compared to other expenses, meaningful engagement with new online technology does not have huge costs.

Concessions:

Meaningful engagement with new technology does require some expenditure of time, energy and money. If you’re not willing to do this then you’ll be unlikely to see big benefits.

8. These startups can’t offer meaningful security, they may not even be around in a year - I’ll wait until Google or our enterprise software vendor starts offering this kind of functionality.

Possible replies:

The skills you build and the connections you make will remain with you, though. This is a paradigm shift underway more than it is about any particular tool.

Chose your tools carefully - expect data export as an option so you can back up or switch services whenever you need to. This isn’
t widespread yet, but the best tools allow it.

Concessions:

You do need to be careful, but if you do so intelligen

tly then the benefits can really outweigh the risks. It is very possible that any one of these services might shutter in a year or two, but you’ll get a lot out of them in the meantime and hopefully won’t lose access to your data if that happens.

9. There are so many tools that are similar, I can’t tell where to invest my time so I don’t use any of it at all.

Possible replies:

A little experimentation goes a long way.

Try asking people in your field who have some experience what tools they are using.

Try searching for keywords related to your work in various sites. You’ll find out that way which sites are best suited for you.

Concessions:

It’s true, it can be very confusing and very few people are able to keep up with all the new services that are launching. Don’t worry about it, just do your best.

10. That stuff’s fine for sexy brands, but we sell [insert boring B2B brand] and are known for stability more than chasing the flavor-of-the-month. We’re doing just fine with the tools we’ve got, thanks.

Possible replies:

Some of these things, RSS and Wikis for example, aren’t passing social fads - they are emerging best practices and the state of the art.

ROI is very hard to measure, but try allocating a little energy over time to experiment and see what kind of results you get. From connections between people and projects, to search-friendly inbound links, to early access to important information - the benefits of engaging in new social media go on and on.

Conclusion

Finally, remember that social media is about people and their impact on your brand and your impact on their lives. If you are relevant, add value, and have an open and honest conversation with your customer, then you will reap the rewards. And that, my friend, is ROI.

Email to a friend.
About This Post
Published: February 7, 2008
By: George Seybold

This article is filed under:
Blogs | Conversational Media | Forum | Social | Social Networking | Web 2.0 | Wiki | Word-of-mouth

Would you like to provide feedback?

Find Your Cause - Boise Bloggers

Perhaps no other forum in the world can lay claim to the heart of American culture quite the way blogging can. State your cause – from music to technology to family, bloggers have found a voice and today’s Internet is alive with the latest trends. Come contribute, listen and discover Boise’s blogger community.

January 29th around 5:30 @ Lush (on Main St. between Capitol and 9th).

Questions?? Email george.seybold@gmail.com or tacanderson@gmail.com with questions.

Email to a friend.
About This Post
Published: January 17, 2008
By: George Seybold

This article is filed under:
Blogs

Would you like to provide feedback?

The New Microtrend: Microwork

My Two cents: Yeah, so this guy, Tac Anderson, well he is the really really smart guy who works at HP. I know him personally so I can vouch for him. Heck I hired him when I couldn’t figure you some stuff out. So listen up, cause this is your chance to read some really smart thinking ..

Earlier this year Chris Anderson of Long Tail fame wrote a post that’s been sitting in the back of my head for a while. The concept is about what he calls “spare cycles”.

Off to his blog with you >

Email to a friend.
About This Post
Published: December 22, 2007
By: George Seybold

This article is filed under:
Blogs

Would you like to provide feedback?