Reading Best of inbound: February and March

February

Complete list of link building strategies
This is just insane – tons of different strategies and you can even filter them!

The New SEO Process

  • Opportunity Discovery: What opportunities arise with regard to:
    • Business Objectives – what’s the goal?
    • Market research, keyword research, site audit, etc.
  • Content Strategy
    • Ideation
    • Content build
  • Technical Development
  • Social Strategy
    • Link strategy
    • PR
    • Contests, Events, Social Media
  • Measurement
  • Optimization

Link Building resources
an other insane list

Quick Queries For Link Wins

  • Do you have sponsored something but didn’t get backlinks?
  • Find sponsorships under $100, that give you a backlink
  • Find interviews you did
  • Do the same for your competition!

Broken Link Building Guide: From Noob to Novice

  • Pointing out dead links on an other site and recommending others
  • Find broken links: look for high authority sites and high authority pages
  • Contact owner but without any urls in the initial mail if possible
  • Get Link!
  • 301 Redirect Broken Link: If a 301 exists that points to an other location

Buying Links is Shallow, Short-Term Thinking. Buying Blogs? Now that’s a Strategy.

  • Look for blogs in your niche (which may covered you)
  • Propose a monthly payment and a lump-sum at the end of a 3 year period
  • The blog will then move to your domain – but you won’t influence the writings
  • You will help to boost the traffic, improve the UX and design

Findings about how graphics affect conversions

  • Images can reduce readership
  • Try to put the image above the fold
  • Headlines below an image are 10% more read than above the image
  • 80% of people read headlines
  • Captions are read 300% more than body -> try to catch attention and bring the reader back into the text
  • Don’t break the left margin
  • Images without clear relevance are useless
  • Avoid obvious stock photos, poor quality images and oversized faces

March

Link Building Tools We Use at Distilled
Distilled is one of the finest online agencies and Will Critchlow lists some great tools they use.

Incorporating video into your link building strategy

  • You can start for about $1000 producing videos
  • Look for students or graduates from film schools
  • Video in content almost triples the avg. number of links
  • Video is a form not a content – if a video is better than text, make a video
  • If your videos don’t provide value, then they are useless
  • Film in high quality – high quality audio is the most important
  • Create (if feasible) indexable transcripts
  • Make sure that you include a link to your site in the embed code
  • Create Movie schemas and video sitemaps for better indexing

AuthorRank

  • Reputation as a content creator – could influence the SERPs
  • Different Ranks for different topics
  • Google+ as a identify platform and rel=author as your signature
  • AuthorRank could be influenced by shares, time, comments, etc.

How Sitelinks are quietly costing you conversions

  • Under certain circumstances google may swaps your website for a sitelink
  • Monitor analytics and webmaster tools frequently to avoid some problems

Google Places Ranking Factors

  • Places math broader categories if available; e.g. pizza => restaurant
  • Business name is matched: “Alfonso’s pizza” works better than “Alfonso’s Restaurant” for “pizza”
  • 5+ reviews help
  • Category term in reviews helps
  • The physical address is not extremely important but influences the results
  • Average review score matters: score of 1 penalizes heavily

How to Uncover 100s of New Longtail Keywords in Minutes

  • ubersuggest uses google suggest to get new keywords
  • Use these keywords to get even more longtail keywords
  • Now you can add search volume, competition, etc. and work with them

How to rank product pages for SEO

  • Limit global navs -> exploit categories
  • Clear anchor texts
  • Canonical links
  • Similar pages should be interconnected
  • Minimize cross-category links
  • Related products work well: 5 – 10 max
  • Short urls
  • Keep product categories alive

Using a Glossary to Rank and Build Links

  • Helps providing internal keywords
  • Can get you inbound links
  • Enter public resource lists
  • People maybe going to quote you
  • My tip: Find people how search for definitions and prove it

SEO Experts discuss link building for affiliates

  • Interesting, unique product pages: videos, copy, images, comments
  • Guest blogging on vertical and horizontal reach
  • Create a good about us page
  • Ask the product provider if they use your review as a testimonial
  • Create infographics / widgets
  • Ego bait, interviews and crowdsourcing can help you to produce more content
  • Get active in your product’s community
  • Create useful press releases
  • Blog commenting
  • Compare your product with competitors
  • Be as unbiased as possible

Editorial Calendar for Content Marketing
Incredible extensive post about creating a editorial calendar – take a look and be amazed!

Reading Best of inbound: January

I can remember when inbound.org launched publicly in February this year. It’s a great site, like hacker news for online marketing – however, sadly with less discussions. Even if you read inbound daily, you may miss some article or forget another over time – so I decided, to read the top 25 (up to 50) most popular each month and summarize the insightful ones. Like always, these are mainly notes, i.e. I won’t write down things that I talked about before. Enjoy!

Introducing Scrape Rate – A New Link Metric

  • Scrape rate: number of intitle:“your post title” / number of checked posts (at least 1 month old)
  • Guest blogging: host blog with high readership vs. blog with high scrape rate

Google+ SEO: The Ultimate Guide
Great guide, however extremely long. Check it out, if you’re interested.

Strategic Link Building: Why You Don’t Need To Outrun Lions

  • SEO isn’t about cracking Google – it’s about beating your competitors for a keyword
  • SERP and competitor analysis should be a key component
  • Look into more developed country markets to see the future of your country market
  • The rest of the article is an interesting case study

Second Tier Link Building for ROI

  • Links aren’t just useful for SEO
  • For example, an article reviews your product, ranks quite high
  • If you push that article, it may rank higher and gives you more referral traffic and conversions
  • Often low competition => just push the article instead of your own site, esp. if the article just reviews your product alone

21 Tactics to Increase Blog Traffic

  • Use AdPlanner to find related sites / communities
  • Create graphics / illustrations that can be shared
  • Conduct keyword search for writing posts
  • Reference to useful other posts (internal & external(!))
  • Guest post and invite guest blogger: http://myblogguest.com/
  • Interact with other people: social media, commenting, boards, etc.
  • Create contests, ranking and similar vanity objects
  • Competitive intelligence(!)
  • Don’t give up

Why These 3 Ranking Factors Matter (but Nobody Seems to Care About)

  • Authorship Markup: builds trust & stands out; How to add author information in search results
  • Freshness: content change of page, new links, age of page
  • Category Authority: Focus on a very narrow topic, create tightly linked content, build links

How to increase the odds of your content going viral

  • The right format: easy to find, compelling visuals, print version gets more shared – make them the standard
  • Get buying from your influencers before you publish it
  • Get content from influencers: reviews, survey, opinion, lessons learned
  • Topic, Timing, Seeding: Topical news, Mo – Thu for B2B
  • Analyze everything and test!

Golilocks SEO

  • Start with mid- to longtail keywords on new sites and go into highly competitive keywords later on
  • Mix keywords, related words and synonyms
  • Split your budget into content and marketing for the content
  • Grow your site strategically using data from analytics & CI
  • Diverse anchor texts
  • Point links to the most relevant pages & boost pages that need more attention
  • Mix different link qualities
  • Gradually build new links and try to get viral campaigns going

5 Forms of Scarcity

  • Classic limited stock: “only 2 books left”
  • Geographically limited stock: “currently out of stock at the store in Boston, but in stock online”
  • Real time scarcity: basically all flights
  • Auctions: Holland, English, n-price auction, etc.
  • Treasure hunts / limited offers

Reading Atlanta Analytics

All of this business about paid tools vs free tools, and dare I say the whole concept of #measure, all boils down to the fact that today, we are a tool-centric industry, often to the detriment of being an expert-centric industry. — Stop giving web analytics tools the credit YOU deserve

Atlanta Analytics is a quite interesting blog – however, there aren’t so many posts. The author, Evan LaPointe, does have some nice visions and an interesting perspective, because he comes from a finance background.
I think he makes some important points, these are:

  • It isn’t about page views or uniques – it’s about money
  • Drive actions not data
  • Be a business person not a technologist
  • Demand your share – if you increase your company’s profit by $500,000 per year, you should demand a share of it

What is web analytics?

  • Quantify today’s success and uncover usability, design, architecture, copy, product, advertising, pricing and marketing optimization that will breed even more success tomorrow
  • Web analytics isn’t:
    • WA is not the measurement of something
    • WA is not defining success but translating it
    • WA is not Omniture, Google Analytics or Clicktracks
  • Web analytics answers the following questions:
    1. Who is coming to my web site?
    2. What are they trying to do?
    3. What is the gap between what they are doing and the ideal?
    4. What are some concrete ways we can close the gaps?
    5. How can we get more of these people?
  • These answers should be answered in context of growth and profitability
  • Analyst shouldn’t become married to one discipline otherwise they are losing the big picture
  • They are central and recommendations are driven by company impact and not by personal impact
  • Even if you cannot solve a problem by yourself, you have uncovered an important problem

Three enormous wastes of your web analytics time

  1. Analytics isn’t implemented in the dev process but afterwards
  2. You care about the correct unique visitors count
  3. You are trying to match two numbers from different tools: Trends not accounting

3.5 things that keep you from finding good web analytics people

  • 1: Good WA can be in your company
  • 2: A lot of experienced WAs are actually reporting writers
  • 3: Your interview process prevents you from hiring good people: if you fear change / that your flaws will be revealed and the application is able, then you probably won’t hire them
  • 3.5: Your salary is too low: increasing your conversion rate by 0.3% can mean hundreds of thousand of dollars additional revenue per month

Web analytics sucks, and it’s nobody’s fault

This is a handmade description for yet another propellerhead analyst who will sit around and run reports for people, get in arguments with other people (or those same people), “agree to disagree” with other departments, and will eventually call everyone else an idiot and will recede into their cave before ultimately quitting for a director-level position at a different, big, resume-enhancing company where the process will repeat itself.

It’s not their fault because a good position for a web analytics person does not exist in the companies that can use these people most. The bigger the company, the more important a small difference becomes. For a site with 10,000 visits a month, an analytics person would have to improve conversion by double-digit percentages to scarcely pay for themselves. For Wal Mart, moving the conversion needle a tenth of a percent probably pays their lifetime salary in a week

The effective web analytics person knows usability, they know some design, they know information architecture, they know HTML, they are good communicators and can thusly write good web copy, and ultimately they are businesspeople who realize the purpose behind all of these crafts is cash flow […] Rather than being careful, politically aware employees, effective analytics people are data-driven, quickdraw decision makers because they have two key assets:

1. Cold, hard facts in the form of data (and I don’t mean just Omniture data)
2. The ability to not have to decide: they can TEST

Big companies are ruled by coalitions of opinions, meetings, conference calls, and semi-educated executives. Data is actually a threat. Data is what gets people fired in big companies, not what gets them bonuses. Data is scary.

What are the REAL web analytics tools?

  • Question: How can you improve the long-term cash flow?
  • Where you need a decent degree of competency:
    • Usability
    • Information Architecture
    • SEO
    • Web marketing (PPC, display, email)
    • Social Media
    • Design
    • Copywriting
    • Website technology (HTML, CSS, SQL, JS, PHP/Ruby/Python/whatever)
    • Communication skills
  • Learn business goals -> department goals -> campaign goals -> personal goals

Have you lost faith in web analytics?

  • Make decisions as often as possible – aka fail faster
  • It isn’t about the newest technology – it’s about money
  • Don’t live in a vacuum – interact with different people and viewpoints

The purpose of web (or any) analytics

  • “We talk about being data-driven businesses. But these aren’t businesses built around a culture of measurement. They’re built around a culture of accountability.”
  • “The purpose of web analytics, or any analytics, is to give your organization the confidence needed to accelerate the pace of decisions.”
  • “We’re talking about being accountable to outcomes, not to some Tyrannosaurus on a power trip. That’s a big deal.”
  • “It’s about making big decisions often.” – Iterate, iterate, iterate

Reading Adobe’s Digital Marketing Blog (Part 3 / End)

Has an Executive Sponsor Got Your Back?

  • Without executive sponsorship it’s hard to overcome organizational inertia
  • Senior executive should within a key stakeholder group for WA (e.g. ecommerce, marketing, etc)
  • They should have enough power and influence
  • Depending on the WA maturity the sponsor executive may vary (tactical to strategic)
  • Executive sponsor responsibilities
    1. Align WA program with corporate strategy
    2. Protecting the WA team from other initiatives/corporate politics
    3. Solving problems like budget constraints
    4. Promoting the success of the WA program
      1. Effective executive sponsor should be committed and involved

Online Accountability: Are You Data-Driven or Merely Data-Informed?

  • Without accountability your organization is just data-informed
  • Establish clear goals
  • Regularly talk about the performances
  • Give feedback and maybe rewards – can be adversarial
  • Accounting should start at the top. Lead by example
  • Expand beyond web KPIs

Soft vs Hard Bounces: A Closer Look at Bounce Rate

  • Hard bounce rate = Bounce Rate on new visitors
  • Soft bounce rate = Bounce Rate on returning visitors

Switching to a Data-Driven Culture

  • You have appeal to the rational and emotional sides
  • Sometimes resistance is lack of clarity
  • Laziness can be exhaustion
  • Tactics:
    • Look at what works well instead of was is not working well – easier to promote
    • Provide actions that have to be taken to change
    • What does this mean for the near future?
    • Surprise people – testing stuff is a great tool
    • Try to achieve lots of small goals instead of one big one
    • See failures in execution as learning not as failing
    • Provide a data-driven environment
    • Build habits – repeat, repeat, repeat
    • Provide workshops for homogeneous groups

Five Times to Test: 4 — When you spot an opportunity in your analytics

  • Often hypotheses drive testing
  • But you can generate hypotheses with analytics
  • They took the ~50 top-selling products and plotter conversion rate and avg. selling price
  • Look for outliers
    • Positive outliers: try to promote them more prominently
    • Negative outliers: Check at least the page – is it broken? No content?

Is Your Data-Driven Organization Heading into a Lake?

  • Data should inform and shape not dictate or control
  • It’s like science: intuition helps to understand and inspire, data helps to check and reject
  • It helps you question your assumptions
  • Data-informed: nice to know this information
  • Data-driven: acting on the information

Are You Using Web Analytics To Power & Improve Your Testing?

  • Don’t test randomly, test with hypotheses
  • Benefits of WA:
    • Helps you to understand your testing efforts in context
    • Helps you to prioritize testing areas
    • Helps you to improve your decision maing
    • Provides insights that help you to make even better tests
  • Things you should do:
    • Analyze your conversion funnels
    • Start higher up the funnel (note: in contrast to previous article)
    • Check your top landing pages that have high bounce rates
    • Check heat maps for your testing pages – what is the customer intent?
    • Set alerts for new highly visited pages
    • Improve your test plans with analytics insights
    • WAs and testing people should work together

Never a Failed Test

  • Testing is a long-term strategy
  • Does every test answer a clear business question?
  • Do you know before the test what you do, depending on the results, afterwards?
  • Negative lift is even good lift – you learned something!
  • Do you think testing is valuable or risky?
  • Do you have to hit the big wins? – This can interfere with your learning ambitions

Why we do what we do: Garbage in and Garbage Out — Congruence Bias

  • “the ten­dency to test hypothe­ses exclu­sively through direct test­ing, in con­trast to tests of pos­si­ble alter­na­tive hypothe­ses”
  • Example: Hypotheses: Button 1 opens the door, not Button 2; Test: Just press Button 1 and check if it opens the door
  • In web testing: Test picture against no picture, or CTA against no CTA
  • It’s easy to get big results but not great answers

Great summary/overview: Digital Governance: Best Practices from the Trenches