Archive for the 'Live Blogging' Category Page 2 of 3



Welcome to NGM Ver. 3 Morgantown Edition

I vowed never again to Liveblog after my last attempt.

Honestly, I’m the only one round here who has to listen avidly. Still, if what I’ve read and heard thus far (and it’s all been excellent) is anything to go by then I shan’t be needing any of these:

Eyestickers
Eyestickers: How to look awake while taking a nap…

Like a lamb to the proverbial slaughter I’ve been roped in again; not because I have the touch-typing skills a dextrous ninja wordsmith (they’re more like those of a sun-baked walrus if truth be told), but because……well, just because.

UPDATE: Right, we’re finally connected and this is now turning into some kind of retroactive / retrospective liveblog. Just ask any questions about any of the sessions in the comments sections of any of the posts as and when you feel like it.

Morgantown Live Blog

Paul Woodhouse will be making the trek down to Morgantown (I’ve been calling it Motown, but one of my Los Angeles friends asked me last night why I was going to Detroit after seeing my status update on facebook).

He’ll be live blogging the conference today to give folks that couldn’t make it – or are waiting to register for Martinsburg – a taste of what we’re discussing.  You won’t get the slides, the free marketing book, a free review of your Web site, the opportunity to network with other Morgantown, WV area marketing professionals, to meet Jeff James or twitter with Skip Lineberg…but it should give you a glimpse of how you can be more effective in your own marketing efforts.

This is good news for everyone except Paul; he hates live blogging (with good reason – it’s hard!).  Maybe he’ll post a picture of himself with a frowny face here to complement the post.  It would complement his “oooh” picture from his live blog of the Southpointe, PA online marketing conference.

SEM II: Join the Evolution

Alright, I said I’d never do this, but I’m going to try and give live blogging a shot.  I’m presenting on paid search marketing in a little bit (but not live blogging that – what a trick that would be), but first up is Neal Rabogliatti from Catalyst Connection in Pittsburgh.  He’ll be talking about search engine optimization.

The conference is SEM II: Join the Evolution and is being hosted by eBizITPA.

The agenda:

* a review of his speech at SEM I back almost a year ago

* designing for success – we talked about this a little before hand and it should be really interesting for the crowd (great turnout today, btw, with a lot of walk ups in a very snowy Erie)

* social media

* helpful online tools

1st really good point: Web developers are really astute and great at their craft from a technical standpoint (mostly), but often they will benefit from working with seo or marketing folks.  Highly agree – both teams benefit from working together.

Good analogy for putting Web sites together: measure twice, cut once.  I remember my dad beating that into my head when I was younger.  Develop a plan.   Think about seo AND user friendly design, conversion, analytics, promoting, monitoring, managing.

Aah – a nice memory from my LA days – “ask for the order.”  It’s not just when a sales person speaks with a person – it’s important for your Web site to do the same.

Neal’s from Catalyst Connection, a great outfit for businesses that believes in lean and related management processes.  Going through the process for putting together an effective, seo friendly Web site.

Talking right now about businesses using keywords that THEY know.  Need to figure out what people are actually searching for.  Also talking about the different number of searches for singulars vs. plurals.

SEO basics – 2 steps:

1. Indexing pages; ranking is based on the content of the indexed page.
2. Ranking  = relevance; broken into 3 parts:
a. page content (keyword density)
b. organizing codes (meta)
c. link popularity

I usually break #2 into two parts when explaining to seo newbies, but this makes sense too, separating on screen page content out from meta.

Folders and root directories – how do you organize?  Name dropping with Jill Whalen, Danny Sullivan, etc. (all named are great industry sources)

Hits on one of my biggest pet peeves – frames.  Arrgh!  Going onto  div / layers instead of tables now.  He’s 100% right, but (don’t tell anyone – I still use tables for quick stuff just b/c it’s so much easier for me – don’t let me personally do any page layouts for your site).

CSS – this is all really good stuff for business execs, owners, small businesses, everyone who’s not doing this for a living.  Things that are more than they need to know from a ‘how do you do it perspective’, but can grasp fairly quickly and will help them be able to dictate how their site should be built.

Navigation – link structure – comparing it to a giant circuit board.

Social media – points out that it’s not just for kids (anymore) or goofy wedding videos.  bookmarking sites, media sharing sites, blogs, and content syndication.  Talks about a polyurethane (sp?) stamping company client of his – put the video of how it works onto youtube.  Great results.  I love examples from manufacturing companies!

On digg stuff now – touches on, but doesn’t really go into being wary of the strong backlash you should prepare for if you post the wrong type of article / press release / news story.  Some good strategy points, including the importance of participation, being real, and offering value.

Lists some helpful tools like keyword discovery and other keyword suggestion tools.  My favorite question (the one I’d ask) from the audience: “Is it free?”

Brought up another one that he said someone will kill him if they knew he brought it up.  I like Neal and don’t want to see him dead, so I’m not putting it in here.

Talking about analytics – going into Google Analytics right now.  I’m not linking to them – figure they have enough juice as is and might be able to survive without one from this blog post – maybe!

Another good one – Domain Tools.  I’m not as big a fan of alexa, but having that information along with the other info it provides doesn’t hurt.  Having a private conversation with Cathy von Birgelen about alexa right now.   Seems like a better tool for site owners to point to to try and sell ad space.

Onto site maps now – not the traditional one that you click on when you see sites, but xml ones.  VERY important.  robots.txt, too.  Neal’s saying not to list disallows anymore b/c they don’t work; instead, under disallow, use <sitemap_[url].txt>  Everything’s standardized among the major search engines.

Going into real world examples right now.  Ahh, now I know how to spell urethane.  Holy cow – I just looked up and it looks like I got it right.  He’s being very nice and trying not to offend me on behalf of tpaid search folks everywhere talking about cost reduction.  As I told him ahead of time, I’m always in for cost savings!  Be smart with budgeting, bidding, testing, keywords used and on and on.  I don’t want anyone to spend more than they have to to get great returns!

He brings up a great story about a company getting bought out.  Since their site seo ranked higher than the parent company they decided to ditch the old site.  Reminds me of one of our clients.  They do business all over the world and do stuff in Australia quite a bit.  There are some jobs that are too small for them to do the travel, so they turn it over to partners.  The CEO was grinning ear to ear in talking about how mad the other company gets that a US company gets the lead and not the company in the Aussie’s (remember, pronounce with a ‘z’, not an ’s’) on backyard.

Good speech all around, Neal.

Lindsay Patross: Business Blogging Basics

Lindasy Patross

Lindsay works in online community building, managing the corporate blog for Spreadshirt and the website. Read Lindsay’s full speaker bio.
Business blogging, whilst not always free is remarkably cheap. Big shout out to Wordpress being the best blogging platform know to man, woman or child.

Here we go with what blogs are and why you should have one. Blog is a type of Web site. It’s chronologically backwards content – the newest is generally first. If we’re taling categories in a blog on this particular blog you’re reading the categories are down the left hand side. You place posts within those categories.

Comments vs no comments. You can have either. It’s a great feedback channel but can also be a spam headache.

RSS feeds – your blog can be read in a feed reader such as Google Reader . (Here’s a list of other RSS readers.) You can read many blogs at one time. \Good for skimming. To subscribe to the Online Marketing: Innovations that Work blog’s feed just click on this RSS button in the left sidebar. Aggregate your chosen content and let it update and you see the updated sites when you login to your reader.

Q. IS there a time you wouldn’t want to use an RSS feed as you’d rather drive people directly to your site.

Vanity searching for Lindsay Patross. Copy the RSS link to your RSS reader and it will update if you’ve been mentioned. Ties into what Justin Seibert was saying about reputation management earlier. Follow the conversation whether it’s good or bad. You need to know what is being said about you online.

Blogs are a great method of interactive engagement. Word of mouth recommendations.

Why should business blog?

Share info with customers; get feedback from customers; industry information; interesting and fun facts; learn to use your own products differently; establish a brand for yourself or your company. Start a global microbrand!

Passive content. Good for SEO. Tell a story. Humanize! Check the Spreadshirt blog.

LIST OF DIFFERENT BUSINESS BLOG EXAMPLES.

Discretion can be the better part of valor in relation to what you put on your blog. Negative commenting. Be honest and respond to criticism.

SET UP A BLOG:

Here’s a blog software list.

Don’t forget google’s blogger which is free and easy to start with.

Don’t regurgitate. Add to the conversation, don’t repeat it.

lorelle.wordpress.com

Q. How do you get people to link to your blog?

A.Write good content.

Q. CEO of Whole Foods making remarks to drive competition’s price down.

A.Laws of business etiquette should apply to the Web. Better to be honest and transparent

Q.Should a blog be part of a site or separate?

A.It can be closely branded to your site or talk about completely different stuff.

Q.How long would it take for marketing staff to maintain a corporate blog?

A.It depends on the type of content you’re putting up If you just want to be informational put simple stuff up as and when.

Steven Colon: Grow Your Business. What Will You Do With ML2

Steve Colon WEBTRENDS

Steve is a Strategic Business Consultant for WebTrends Inc. Check out his full speaker bio.

Presentation Synopsis:

Not only is Marketing Labs 2 capable of showing you where your visitors are coming from and how long they’re stopping, but it can also measure how engaged a user is on any given page of a site.

There’s no need to panic as Sarah manages to switch off the laptop.

The good old days of spending $500-$600 dollars to drive one person to your Website. Forget about throwing as many emails as is humanly possible to see what sticks.

80% of execs believe their company loses sales due to a failure to engage customers. What drives customers to buy and how etc.

What’s needed for succes?

360 degree view of consumers.

Data-driven decision making

Easy access across the organization

Automated, self-optimizing systems

I honestly think it’s best if you check your presentation notes and check out Marketing Lab 2 itself.

Coke & Mentos video

15-20% of install base is SME.

Q. Ajax and page views – can you track Web 2.o sites?

In a word, yes. It’s got a bit technical on the tracking front I’m afraid and I can’t hear what’s being asked or answered. Which is always slightly problematic.