Tag Archive for 'SEO'

Social Media 101: when in doubt, Vark

From Blog Archive

It isn’t difficult to ‘get’ social media

That is, it isn’t difficult so long as you avoid empty caloried, time sucking applications involving cupcakes, first person dog profiles and ‘Which 80s sitcom characters are you’ quizzes on Facebook.  Linkedin’s also great.  Be aware, however that, though a great business resource, is more of a supplementary research tool as its unspontaneous and self-sterilizing nature kind of prevents it from being much else.

Twitter is a culture

Of all social media, twitter offers the ultimate flexibility in terms of branding and rapid niche connecting.  Though a ton of stuff is being written about it, IMHO, if you just follow “Trust Agents” author Chris Brogan’s tweets, read his blog posts and check out his streamed webinars, you should be fine.  Chris is like that super nice summer camp councilor all the girls had crushes on because, well, because he was so nice.  Brogan is humanizing, fair, community oriented and seems to perpetually exudes this ability to make more friends in a day than many make in a year.  Given that trust and transparency are his credo, his personality is hard to resist.

Listen to the linguists

As cerebral as Chris Brogan is warm, fuzzy, entertaining and anecdotal, when it comes to Web content, linguist Ginny Redish is clear, focused and streamline.  Her definitive book on the topic, “Letting Go of the Words” is mercifully readable and thankfully user oriented.  Be prepared to apply design principles to your words and expect to emerge with an updated arsenal of margin notes, color coding, Sans Serif, chunking and  contextual clarity.  Redish’s book so thorough that it is really the only actual investment you’ll need to make to learn about writing for the web.

Arianna Huffington is blogging, okay?

Though social media stars are generally famous for something achieved outside of their viral social media realm, with bloggers that is not necessarily the case.  Think of Perez Hilton.  Arianna Huffington is the living embodiment of the new media blogging superstar and her status is will deserved.  The Huffington Post provides everything from Pelosi to Politiku (the latter of the two, being a passion project of yours truly:-)  “The Huffington Post Complete Guide to Blogging” is about as comprehensive as it gets.  As with, “Letting Go of the Words” once you’ve got it, you can go ahead and return your big yellow For Dummies volumes to the bookshelf…right back where you found them.

Knowing how to ask

Whether it’s where to go to learn more about SEO optimization, or how to treat a cat’s eye infection, be keyword sensitive, bearing in mind that a computer is categorizing your question. Aardvark.com (with a url that uses the shortened, Vark.com) will try and match the question to someone who can answer. Set up an account and it hooks you in through your Facebook network. Vark is undoubtedly one of social media’s best kept secrets. Not only is it a great when all else fails option. It’s also actually a good place to start your research.

When in doubt, Vark

As with Social Media, blogging has no epicenter.  Also, like the others it offers multiple entry points with multiple hubs around which multiple identities can cluster and congregate. What is different with Aardvark is that it is information, as opposed to personality, driven.  Questions are matched with compatible information providers who, like everyone registered on Aardvark, is encouraged to both ask as well as respond to questions.  If the answers the current online members aren’t doing it for you, you have simply to resubmit and Aardvark will send on to the next round.  Still not working, then resubmit.  Still not?  Then use Vark to ask someone on Vark to help you understand what’s going on.

If you’re into this kinda stuff, you should also be sure to check out the post about how Daylight Saving Time and how Google trends can lead you grammatically astray.

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I’m One of Networked Blogs’ Top 50 Film Blogs

Go figure!  Here’s the linkie - http://www.networkedblogs.com/topic/Film/Have no idea how they decide on these things but I guess I’ve made it to Networked Blogs’ (part of Facebook) Top 50 Film Blogs.

Defining a Multi-Topical Blog
Film might not be the focus of most of my posts but when I weighed the options:  Do I write a political blog?  No, not really.  All the real-deal political writers wouldn’t think so, anyway.  Politiku is politics, yes, but fancified.  And I only post my Politiku on Huffington now anyway, for SEO purposes.

And, yes, I write a lot about science.  I’m not a scientist, though.  Nor am I a Search Engine Optimizer, though I write about Search Engine Optimization.

Embracing Hot Topics
Boring as this may be, I simply write about about whatever inspires me.  New hot topics like SEO, yeah, I’m into it.  Into it in so far as I’ve been doing it for almost a year now and am just starting to embrace this particular “hot topic” as a new direction in which to take my freelance writing.  What prompted me to embrace it was not the “hotness,” so much as it was the pragmatic simplicity of gaining a skill that there is an abundance of demand for.  Well, okay, that is “hotness” maybe?

Film vs Optimized Content
Unlike film –in which, content is an end in and of itself– the SEO stuff I write about creates content based on trending terms.  In other words, content is determined by the swarm rather than from within.

Thank you, Networked Blogs
So, thank you, Networked Blogs, for putting my ‘Film Blog’ in your top 50.  Glad to hear you like what I have to say about film.  Back to trying to find an agent to represent my unsold screenplays and back to trying to find new clients while seeking out a real job to get me by.  And yes, perhaps a real job that would involve writing in some capacity but I’ll take a permanent position with health insurance over that, any day.  In other words, if you –yes, you the reader– need someone to create Search Engine Optimized, keyword rich content, even better!

So…ya wanna read more of my SEO stuff?  Click here.

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Daylight Savings Time 2009 optimized

Last spring’s Daylight Savings Time post is increasing my current daily blog traffic over 500%.  Reason?  Three of them, actually:

1.) Daylight savings time is near an end

2.) Everyone is googling the term to figure out which exact day that end is gonna fall on.

3.) The search engines aren’t differentiating between beginning and end when discussing Daylight Saving Time.

There’s another reason, too.  Kind of an accidental one.  Rather than titling this post with the correct, yet under utilized, singular form of the word, “saving,” I deliberately and incorrectly pluralized it.  Here is why:

Search Engine Optimization -
According to Google’s Adwords Keyword Tool, the global monthly search volume for “Daylight Savings” is 1,000,000.  The grammatically correct “Daylight Saving” global monthly search volume, on the other hand, is a mere 368,000.

From Blog Archive

The Economy -
Were this a boom economy, I might well have chosen to use the phrase consistent with the National Institute of Standards and Time in my title.

Given the ubiquitously strained job market everyone is dealing with, however, it is in my best interest to revert to the inaccurate yet optimized Googleadwords.com degeneration of Daylight Saving because it will increase web traffic thereby optimizing my chances of my attracting a potential client or employer during this edge of the close of yet another end of Daylight Saving cycle.

In other words: this is me compromising my grammatical integrity in order to appeal to the larger, inaccurate, populous because I need a job.

From Blog Archive

Spring Forward / Fall Back -
“Spring Forward / Fall Back” is the best –not to mention, most accurate– colloquial way I know of to remember this stuff.  Unfortunately it is limited to the direction in which you need to move your clock and provides nothing about how to remember the actual day of the year that this switch falls on.

The Day That Daylight Saving Time 2009 Ends -
Last spring’s title phrase, “Why Daylight Savings Time Makes Me Miss My Atomic Clock” post not only falls short grammatically; it fails to provide the day and time that daylight saving time 2009 is scheduled to end: November 1st at 2:00a.m.

Because I used the accurate term, “Daylight Saving” (rather than “Daylight Savings”) chances are that this section, though most relevant to the majority of the readers of this post, will attract less attention from those long legged google spiders who will eventually crawl it.

Google’s Long Legged Spiders -
Doubtful as it is that the phrase, “November 1st at 2:00a.m.” will prompt those long legged spiders to unravel and reweave but at least now the peops who googled, “Daylight Savings” –the majority, in other words– will get the information they came here to find.

From Blog Archive

Not a computer geek? That’s okay.  You can read my history geek Daylight Saving post, then.

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Why there’s more to SEO than tags and trending terms

I approached last week’s SEO workshop dubiously.  According to my understanding (which is based on what friends who do this stuff all the time) the best way to draw more traffic to your blog is simply to write all the time.  And that’s not totally untrue.  What’s also true, however, is that my neologistic propensity does not serve me well, when it comes to interacting with the creepy crawlie google spiders that be.  Take, for example, the term SEO.  Should I, on a whim, decide to refer to it as ‘Essie-oh’ instead, then, yes, my number of hits actually would go down.  Maybe not due to that alone but certainly it plays a factor in it.  So its a strange way to think about writing, basically, some words’ll crawl better than other words.  Plain as that.  Am I having a deja vu right now?  Maybe.  Lucky for me, the site doesn’t earn any money so there’s not reason to draw a certain target margin demographic to a particular page.  Shall I further explain?  I’m less cynical about it than I’m coming across, actually.  But I’m tired nevertheless.  Okay, more soon.


Susanna Speier - Blogged

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