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Inbound Marketing & Sales Development Inspiration

Can New Domain Extensions Help Your SEO?

Posted May 9, 2016
4 minute read
For every business, a great online presence begins with a great website. It’s the one place online you completely own and control. Therefore, it’s a pillar to being successful online.
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Topics SEO

The Four Leading Causes of Digital Marketing Failure

Posted July 28, 2015
4 minute read
By now, most established businesses have experienced some digital marketing success and failure. Given all the hype around digital marketing, it comes as a surprise when most campaigns fail to live up to expectations.
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Topics Leadership & Management, Pay Per Click, SEO, Digital Marketing

What Keywords Should I Target?

Posted April 29, 2015
4 minute read
Getting your website found in the search engines begins with identifying the proper keywords. While this is a critical first step, many websites do it wrong. So let’s fix that. The following is a common-sense approach to identifying the most important keywords your website should target. If you’re too busy to do this yourself, pass it off to a restless intern. They won’t need any coding or SEO background. Just think of it as “keyword research for dummies.” Throughout this post, we’ll look at the fictitious company “Hickory Industrial Pumps.” Step 1: Optimize for the content already on your website. For websites that lack any search engine optimization, we recommend beginning from the inside out. This means creating a keyword list based on the content that already exists on your website. To do this, go through each page on your website and determine the one non-branded phrase (just one) that best represents each page. A non-branded phrase doesn’t include your brand name. So in the case of Hickory Industrial Pumps, this would mean any phrase that excludes the word “Hickory.” These core phrases should be 2-3 words in length, e.g. “industrial pumps,” “commercial chemical pumps.” This becomes your initial keyword list. Step 2: Determine which core areas of your business are not represented by your existing content. After completing step 1, you may find your list is short and incomplete relative to your business offering and marketing objectives. For example, Hickory Industrial Pumps discovered the terms “commercial pump maintenance,” and “commercial pump accessories,” are absent from their list. Their “Other Offerings” page mentions service and accessories, but there is no single page dedicated to these terms. This is common. There are many phrases for which a website should attempt to rank, but the website lacks a dedicated page on the topic. The solution is to create a second list of additional terms relevant to the business, but do not appear on the first list. This becomes your content production list. So for each search phrase on the second list, you need to create a new page on your site. If it doesn’t make sense to have a page dedicated to a particular phrase, you should re-evaluate whether it’s even appropriate to rank for it. The Adwords Keyword Planner can help you prioritize singular and plural variations based on expected search volume, along with deciding between synonymous terms (e.g. using the word “commercial pump” versus “industrial pump”). Step 3: Identify long tail search terms. After identifying the core search phrases relevant to you, it’s time to create your “long tail keyword” list. Long tail terms are the very niche terms (four or more words in length) that have low search volume, but in aggregate, comprise more search volume than single broad terms (2-3 words in length). Anticipating the unique situations your target market may experience, then developing content around those topics, is an effective way to capture long tail search engine traffic. This begins with identifying your target market personas. The better you understand their pain points, the better you can anticipate what they might search. For example, Busy Bob is a decision maker persona who runs his equipment as long as possible. When something breaks, he needs a replacement immediately. He searches, “commercial pumps expedited shipping” in Google. Hickory’s “Need a pump in a hurry page?” page, which lists the process for expedited purchasing and shipping, would align perfectly with Bob’s search query. Here are a few more things to keep in mind when developing your targeted keyword list. Should I try to rank for my competitors’ names? No. Trying to rank for competitor’s name is a common request from our clients. Not only is this very difficult (if not impossible) to accomplish, it’s not a worthwhile strategy. If a person is seeking out a particular brand, convincing them to abandon their intended path and come to you is very unlikely to happen. Search engines are also unlikely to rank you for terms that don’t exist on your site (refer to step 1 and 2 above). Those two reasons make this strategy ineffective. The broader the term, the more difficult to rank. Ranking for broad search phrases (one or two words) is tempting because of the potential for website traffic. But because broad terms can mean different things to different people, most of the search volume isn’t relevant to you. For example, Hickory may want to rank for the broad term, “pump”. While this gets a tremendous amount of search volume, it doesn’t guarantee the searcher is looking for an industrial pump. Adding the word “industrial” or “commercial” may mean lower search volume, but it guarantees relevance. Why this approach? Content drives rankings. Therefore, the search terms we target need to be well represented on the site. That’s why we recommend this content-centric approach. What next? Once you have identified the most relevant terms for your website, they need to be properly integrated into the code and page content. An experienced SEO firm (::wink wink::) can further massage your keyword list, prioritize based on search volume, and implement geographic references for optimal impact.
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Topics SEO

Is Your Digital Marketing Out of Date?

Posted April 22, 2015
4 minute read
Are you concerned your marketing strategy is stuck in the past? In a recent survey, over a quarter of marketers said keeping up to date with the latest marketing technology and trends was one of their most pressing business challenges. Do you fall into that bucket?
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Topics Inbound Marketing, Pay Per Click, SEO, Display Advertising, Digital Marketing

Don't Get Buried In Bad Marketing Advice

Posted February 17, 2015
3 minute read
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Topics Inbound Marketing, SEO, Marketing Automation, Digital Marketing

Three Reasons Why You Should Be Blogging For Your B2B Business

Posted January 20, 2015
1 minute read
If you own a B2B business, you’ve likely considered blogging as a way to bring new traffic to your site. Regularly blogging about topics that are important to your target market will not only bring relevant traffic and leads to your website, but it will allow you to fully utilize your site as a resource for educating your prospects and help you establish yourself as a thought leader within your industry.
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Topics Content marketing, SEO, Blogging

Top Five Online Marketing Trends That Will Impact 2015

Posted December 22, 2014
3 minute read
The biggest challenge facing brands online is the ability to stand out from the crowd. Put simply, it’s become a very crowded and very competitive space. Winning online today is less about being the most technical savvy and more about understanding your customer journey. To maximize your chance for success in 2015, consider these five important trends.
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Topics Pay Per Click, SEO, Local SEO, Digital Marketing

Four Important Online Marketing Lessons Learned The Hard Way

Posted December 18, 2014
3 minute read
Whether in life or business, experiencing failure often provides invaluable lessons. Today, I intend to help you bypass that hardship and failure by sharing four important online marketing lessons we’ve seen businesses learn the hard way.
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Topics Inbound Marketing, SEO, Digital Marketing

Evolving Into A Digital Powerhouse

Posted September 2, 2014
4 minute read
Author note: the article below was originally published on WorkItRichmond.com, a subsidiary of the Richmond Times Dispatch. I’m reposting my article on this blog with the intention of adding to the piece over time.
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Topics Reputation Management, Pay Per Click, SEO, Web Analytics, Marketing Automation, Digital Marketing

How to Generate B2B Leads via Content Marketing

Posted February 19, 2014
3 minute read
Cold calling isn’t dead but it’s challenging. Most salespeople don’t like it. Personal networking is effective but can be very time consuming. This all leads to a question, “in today’s environment, how do you generate high quality B2B sales leads?” This article presents a way more firms these days are answering this question.
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Topics Sales, Internet Marketing, Inbound Marketing, SEO, Blogging, Marketing Automation, Digital Marketing