SES Chicago 2008

Fancy a little trip up to SES Chicago next week? I know it’s a little short notice, but here’s the lowdown:

Now in its 10th year, the global SES Conference and Exposition Series educates tens of thousands of marketers each year, with a 98% satisfaction rate. SES Chicago, the only major Search Marketing Conference and Expo in the Midwest, will be packed with 60+ sessions, multiple keynotes and Orion Strategy sessions, exhibitors, networking events and more. We hope to see you there.

Event Overview:

  • Real-time actionable information you need to grow your business through search engine marketing
  • Ins-and-outs of search engine marketing from top search experts and the search engines themselves
  • A unique setting to network with fellow marketers and search engine industry professionals to discuss the trends in search engine marketing
  • Access to the world’s most comprehensive gathering of search engine marketing & optimization-related solutions providers and potential partners & affiliates.

What You Will Learn:

  • How search engines list web sites for free and through paid placements
  • How to get free “organic” traffic by building a site that pleases search engines and your visitors
  • How to efficiently purchase listings guaranteed to rank your company at the top of search engine results
  • How to calculate the ROI of your search marketing efforts by tracking your visitors from the time they hit your site until they buy-and get tips on improving conversion if they don’t

Oh, and Justin’s sending me off with a packed lunch as I’ve been invited to present a Tinbasher case study next Wednesday at the Blogging for Business session.

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.

Blog. Don’t Blag (version 2,682)

This is one of the very first pieces I wrote in relation to my thoughts on business blogging over two and a half years ago. There’s a bit more room for debate as it’s evolved, but I firmly believe the basic premise of the post holds as true, if not truer, now as it did then.

Blogs as the new bricks and mortar

Is the concept of building company foundations slightly antediluvian? Since the birth of the internet it seems as though companies don’t so much lay foundations as allow them to float in cyberspace. Bricks and mortar is so last century, it’s now all about your web presence.

Yeah, right. Your web presence lies. Everybody does it. You aren’t the only one who’s built an all singing, all dancing website with more bells and whistles than a school-full of referees whilst your actual workspace resembles a bombed-out Anderson shelter.

Initially, the ability to be able to present your business as you’ve always dreamed of is intoxicating. But it’ll come back to haunt you in the long run – mark my words. You need to present your business as it is now otherwise you’ll find yourself deluged with inquiries for work you can’t do, or worse still, no inquiries at all.

Let a blog make you honest.

Blogging is the logical solution. By all means have your static website which lays claim to your products, services, testimonials and all the other usual stuff. A business blog allows you to expand on all of these aspects of your site and build a more complete picture. It dots all the i’s and crosses the t’s. Not only that, but your customers can get a feel for you as a person/company which, in turn, builds trust and relationships.

Many moons ago, before I reincarnated The Tinbasher, the whole web presence (main site and blog) had been bookmarked twice (and that could very well have been by me). The week of its relaunch saw it bookmarked fourteen times (these days both sites combined have something around a 30% bookmarking rate every month). We also received as many hits in this week (10/20/04) as the whole of August and September combined. I appreciate arguments can be made about of all this, but that’s not my point. More people are visiting the site since the reincarnation of this blog and more people want to return to the site too.

I read a lot about metrics and ROI (return on investment) and I agree you can’t measure it scientifically. But let’s be perfectly frank, you don’t need to. I see hits going up, stickiness going up and, most importantly, inquiries going up. It’s out of your hands once your salesperson or sales department gets hold. But at least they’ve got something to get hold of! And don’t claim you can’t write or don’t have the time. You can look at your blog in the same way as you’d look at a business meeting with a potential client. A blog can even help you focus your thought processes that whirl about your head on a daily basis.

Business blogging is the new bricks and mortar for your web presence. You have the opportunity to re-identify yourself on the web and to make that vital connection with your customers in the same way as if they’d popped into your office for a brew.