8
Jan

 Google Image Result for http://www.cracow-life.com/media/pics/krakow-new-year.jpg

Belated happy new year! I wish you all health, happiness, prosperity and humor for 2009!

Opposite to previous years, I started the new year by making three resolutions:

  • To be dedicated to help people to make most out of the internet and grow my business
  • To expand my professional network
  • To learn something new every day.

Since I was curious what kind of resolutions other internet professionals made, I browsed through the web for some great thoughts. Here are my favorite resolutions for 2009:

1. Canadian Marketing Blog:

I resolve to be optimistic that businesses will remember the golden rule: You have to spend money to make money – especially in tough times. Stay top of mind with your best customers and they’ll remain loyal.

 2. Copywriters Roundtable:

- Around the clock, make curiosity a habit.  Ask questions.
- Every morning, read one piece of direct mail.
- Every day, have a set time for writing.  Never deviate from it.
- Always seek out your critics.  They’ll teach you much more than your fans ever could.

3. Growthink: Top 10 new year’s resolutions for entrepreneurs. Number 5:

Keep Launching, Innovating and Growing! While the economy may be in for a bumpy ride, make sure you keep it in perspective.  Don’t let all the negative news stop you from moving forward with your entrepreneurial initiatives.

4. Wired: 10 new year’s resolutions for geeks. Number six:

I will follow @stephenfry, @JohnCleese, @wilw, @hodgman, @greggrunberg, @donttrythis (Adam Savage), @levarburton, @nasa, and @thinkgeek on Twitter. If I am not using Twitter I will finally realize what I’ve been missing and sign up right away.

5. @drhilarius:

Stay away from the internet 20% a day, increase productivity by 400%.

What are you new year’s resolutions?

Category : Internet Trends
23
Dec

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It’s that time of the year again. The new year is approaching rapidly, and I’m a little bit stunned how time is flying. 2008 was a year full of exciting, dramatic and tragic events – also for the internet business. I am sure that I’m not the only one who wonders what 2009 has in store for us.

I browsed through the web and collected the most interesting internet related predictions for the upcoming year:

- Mediapost: Digital Will Impact Five Key Areas Next Year
Great list on ‘Marketing Daily’. My favorites:

  • Conversation is king in 2009 because Web presence alone no longer is enough for individuals or brand.
  • The Semantic Web will create more sophisticated, intuitive, refined ways to filter information and services.
  • Savvy companies and brand marketers are starting to trust consumers and enlist their assistance in product design and development.
  • Another notable trend is the transmission effect, or the speed with which conversations and content spread everywhere like rapid-fire– beyond the reach of editorial controls, sites or institutions.

- Junta42: 42+ Social Media and Content Marketing Predictions for 2009
Interesting predictions of the Junta42 community. Among others:

  • Twitter will be officially mainstream, but here will be a backlash against company Twitter accounts.
  • Social Media Marketing will become a more mainstream approach.
  • Combining traditional media with electronic media will increase.
  • More brands will developing a personality or a persona to represent the core values of the company. 2009 will be the year of the personality.
  • Americans are showing more and more interest in RSS.
  • There will be a “gold rush” for social media as new frontier marketing platform.

- Emarketer: Predictions for 2009
Great statistical insights by Senior Analyst David Hallermann and several collegues:

  • Search marketing spending will grow by 14.9% in 2009, to $12.3 billion. (Good news: Search marketing is not recession-proof, but it is recession-resistant.)
  • Video ad spending will run counter to overall economic developments, rising by 45% in 2009 to reach $850 million.
  • Total US Internet ad spending will increase to $25.7 billion in 2009, an 8.9% growth rate.
  • Multicultural marketing will gain intensity online. More African-Americans and Hispanics are going online, through their PCs and their mobile phones, and marketers will follow.
  • Online retail sales (excluding travel) will grow by only 4% in 2009—the first full year to feel the impact of the economic crisis.
  • E-commerce will be a growing revenue stream for social network sites. Expect both MySpace and Facebook to enhance their self-serve advertising systems to allow consumers and businesses to buy and sell real-world goods and services.
  • Advertising in the traditional media will continue to decline in the new year more than any other medium. Industry-wide cutbacks will continue, and there will be some consolidation.

- Search Insider: Search Trends To Watch in 2009
Great thoughts by the sharp mind of David Berkovitz. Three predictions which stood out for me:

  • More and more consumers reach marketers through intermediary properties, likeblogs, social networks, photo sharing sites, Twitter, Wikipedia, and countless other social sites. As a result, marketers have to shift their mindset from optimizing their Web site to optimizing their Web presence.
  • This fall, YouTube surpassed Yahoo as the second-largest search engine. Marketers have to adapt their strategies to n these nontraditional search sources.
  • Search will shift even more beyond the PC. This includes not only mobile devices, but also television models (delivering a hybrid TV-Web experience) and GPS systems in the car (with inbuilt restaurant, attraction etc. search function). Marketers need to reach the target audience on these devices.

Other articles and blog posts with predictions for the upcoming year:

- FolioMag: 117 Magazine And Media Predictions for 2009

- ReadWriteWeb: Social Media in 2009: Our Predictions And Desires

- Fast Company: 8 Experts Predict How Web 2.0 Will Evolve In 2009

- Vator News: Consumer Internet Predictions for 2009

- Peter Kim: Social Media Predictions for 2009

- CSM Watch: Technology Predictions for 2009

- Web Video Unleashed: 9 Online Video Predictions for 2009

- Appirio: Top 10 Cloud Computing Predictions for 2009

Plus: On Twitter you’ll find a great list of Enterprise 2.0 predictions. They are aggregated via the hashtag #e20predictions. Add your own prediction!

If you’re interested in general what will happen with the web not only in 2009, but in next 10 or 20 years, you need to read the report “The Future Of The Internet III” by the Pew Internet & American Life Project” (PDF version). Three interesting takeaways:

  • The mobile device will be the primary connection tool to the internet for most people in the world in 2020.
  • Voice recognition and touch user-interfaces with the internet will be more prevalent and accepted by 2020.
  • The divisions between personal time and work time and between physical and virtual reality will be further erased for everyone who is connected, and the results will be mixed in their impact on basic social relations.

Any thoughts on this? Or did you find any other great posts or articles with internet related predictions which should be added to this list? Let me know!

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Category : Internet Trends
12
Dec

halo_wordpress.jpg 430?34 pixels

I’ve have been blogging for a couple of years now. Of all blog publishing platform I’ve ever used, I still think Wordpress is the best of all.

Apparently I’m not alone: The desktop version has been downloaded over 11 million times this year, and blogs created with the web based tools on Wordpress.com have been viewed by over 230 million unique visitors.

I recommend Wordpress to clients who ask me to build a new website , but haven’t thought of starting a blog. I most cases, they turn into passionate bloggers, because the easy to use admin panel of Wordpress helped them to learn fast – and fuel their blogging passion.

I also love the huge selection of Wordpress designs and templates which is available on the web. There is a solution out there for everybody: from the simple and free one column template to sophisticated and advanced premium themes which include numerous customization options.

Here are my 20 favorites resources for Wordpress themes:

Compilations and Lists:

- Wordpress.org: Theme Directory

- Smashing Magazine: 100 Excellent Free Wordpress Themes

- Teknobites: 10 Clean and Light Wordpress Themes

- Hongkiat: 49 Most Downloaded Themes Of All Time

- Courtney Tuttle: 48 SEO Wordpress Themes

- Theme Playground: The Best Magazine Wordpress Themes Available

- Vandelay Designs: 17 Specialty Wordpress Themes

- Wordpress Hacks: Best 2 Column Wordpress Themes

- Dazzlin Donna: Best Premium Themes For A Non-Blog Look

Great Premium Wordpress Themes:

- WPremix: I created the website of my Los Angeles SEO consulting business Max The Web with this great theme (also promoted as ‘content management system’) developed by R. Bhavesh. As as buyer of the first version, this theme gave me many headaches and bigger and smaller heart attacks because of its bugs. There have been several updates with many improvements in the meanwhile. Now it works smoothly and I am very pleased with it. In my opinion, there is no other Wordpress theme out there that offers such a wide selection of customization features and layout options.

- Woothemes: Over a dozen of great designs by Mark Forrester and his friends, including three free themes.

- Revolution2: Great new themes by Wordpress design pionier Brian Gardner. Technically, the templates are free, but in order to install and use them easily, you need to get the professional support from the creators by purchasing one of the membership packages.

- iThemes: Very slick themes offered by Cory Miller and his buddies. Great design solutions especially for small businesses. I bought one of the early designs, and I liked their support very much.

- Thesis Theme: Great and very flexible theme created by Chris Pearson and his team. It has a passionate following, and the majority of bloggers really seem to like it.

- One Theme: This Wordpress theme has a very modern and fresh look. It comes in five colors and includes many customization features. The only downside: With the price of $99, it’s not exactly the cheapest theme on the market.

- Theme Forest: Great selection with great looking designs at affordable prices (starts at $10).

Free Wordpress Designs:

- Blog Perfume
- Performancing
- WPdesigner
- Skinpress
- Elegant WPthemes

Update:

WP Zoom has some many great posts with WP theme lists. Here are three of my favorites:

- Best Free Wordpress Themes in 2008
- Using Wordpress As A Portfolio: 15 Examples and Themes
- 10 Wordpress Themes Designed For Photo Galleries

Do you have other useful resources for great Wordpress themes I did not mention I my list? I know that there are TONS of sites out there, but tips for really well built and great looking templates? Let me know in the comments!

Find out what I am doing right now by following me on Twitter! If you like this post then please consider subscribing to my full feed RSS. You can also subscribe by Email and have new posts sent directly to your inbox.

Category : Blogging Tips
1
Dec

A quick follow-up to to my note about the increasing demand for search engine optimization specialists:

Tim Dineen, Online Marketing Manager at job search engine Indeed, found out that California is the no. 1 state for SEO jobs. Meaning: On the US west coast, you’ll find the highest density of job offers for Search Marketing professionals. His findings are based on an analysis of the @SEOjobs Twitter account (great idea, by the way!), which is populated via a feed from Indeed.

Here is his map:

Where the SEO jobs are - Tim Dineen

Onward Search did a similar analysis, which was based on the SEMPO member roster – and came to the same conclusion.

I was curious to find out about the “demand” for SEO and did a quick (non scientific) research with Google’s great tool “Insights for Search”. As the chart shows, the search volume for the query “SEO” in California has been far above the national average in the last 90 days.

Google Insights for Search - Web Search Volume: United States vs. California (United States) - for seo, Last 90 days

Conclusions: 1. There a lots of choices for California based businesses that are interested in hiring an SEO Consultant or SEO agency. 2. The competition among SEO professionals in this state will continue to increase. Hopefully, this will also lead to a more mature industry with higher education and ethics standards.

P.S. If you’re interested in becoming an SEO professional or are just curious to learn more about this industry, check out the following links:
- SEOmoz: How To Get An SEO Job?
- SEO Journal: 10 Tips To Making It In The SEO Community
- Onward Search: Where In The World Is SEO Talent?
- Reality SEO: SEO Salaries, Jobs And In-House Surve
- SEMPO: In-House Search Marketing Pays Well, But Not Dot Com Hype Levels

Find out what I am doing right now by following me on Twitter! If you like this post then please consider subscribing to my full feed RSS. You can also subscribe by Email and have new posts sent directly to your inbox.

Category : SEO Tips
1
Dec

The advance of technology is based on making it fit in so that you don’t really even notice it, so it’s part of everyday life. (Bill Gates)

Although the cofounder of Microsoft referred to computer technology in this quote, I’m sure it can be applied to search engine optimization as well. SEO has become part of our everyday life. The (non SEO savvy) internet user might not notice it – but the SEO pros do everything to “make it fit” for their clients. Too much of a stretch? (Feel free to disagree with me by posting a comment…)

As I noted many times before, SEO is such a fast paced industry. So many news items, so many updates and changes every day.

Following a list with things I learned in the last 30 days about search engine optimization, internet marketing and social media:

1. I would like to visualize the basic SEO process? Is there a great chart which helps me to understand it?

Yes. Aaron Wall from infamous SEO Book created a impressive and very comprehensible chart, IMHO. The original PDF version can be downloaded here.

The SEO Flow Chart : SEO Book.com

2. Is the bounce rate really a search engine ranking factor?

Yes. At least Top SEO’s must now take bounce rate into account when designing and refining a site, SEO Blackhat writes.

3. Does a non-indexed page pass on PageRank?

Surprisingly, yes. Dutch Search Marketer Eduard Blacquière received the answer through the LinkedIn group LinkedSEO. It said: “NoIndex is a request to not show the page in the results. PR still passes. NoFollow, PR doesn’t pass but does accumulate”.

4. How can I get 800,000 visits from Google.com in just 7 days?

Well, I don’t know if we’re ever going to make it to the homepage of Google. But the “Big G” linked to its new phone with T-Mobile at the end of October. According to Search Engine Roundtable, more than 800,000 unique visitors went to that page during the week the link was active. In one day, more than 233,000 unique visitors were registered. One can only dream…

5. Is the BrowseRank the new PageRank?

Maybe. Marios Alexandrou from All Things SE explains BrowseRank, a measure developed by Microsoft with the purpose of outperforming Google’s PageRank, in a very interesting post.

6. How do I build authority links (including .edu .gov .mil)?

Saad Kamal reveals the secret in a very useful post. First, in order to find authority links: spy on your competitors Find out which .edu/.gov/.mil are linking to your competitor, with a command like “linkdomain:www.google.com site:edu”. Then get Links from .Edu/.Gov/.Mil blogs on your Niche, with a command like the following: “Keyword+inurl:blog site:.edu”. Saad offers many more great tips.

7. Can SEO and user generated content really be a good match for each other?

Yes. Laura Callow delivers great insights on that, backed up by research and data. Among others, she writes that online comments and reviews posted by the enthusiasts are second only to word of mouth as a purchase driver for all web users.

8. Which are the Top 25 most powerful web directories?

Paul Teitelmann from Search Engine People provides a fantastic list. It includes directories like World Site Index, Dmoz Zilla and Octopedia.

9. How to I avoid to screw up a change of my domain name?

Andrew Heaps from Latitude has some valuable tips. Among others: Phase the transition. And don’t forget to tell the search engines.

10. Which are the best books on social media marketing?

Lee Odden from the Online Marketing Blog wrote a great post with over 20 Must Read books about social media marketing. It includes “Cluetrain Manifesto“, “Groundswell”, Seth Godin’s “Tribes”, James Surowieki’s “The Wisdom Of Crowds” and Paul Gillin’s “Secrets of Social Media Marketing”.

I am aware that this list could be ten times longer. Did I miss any of the “big stories” in SEO, in your opinion? Let me know!

Find out what I am doing right now by following me on Twitter! If you like this post then please consider subscribing to my full feed RSS. You can also subscribe by Email and have new posts sent directly to your inbox.

Category : SEO News
1
Dec

“There’s no two ways about it – SEO is hot again”, writes Rand Fishkin, CEO of the Seattle based SEO company SEOmoz, in his latest blog post. He observes that not only his firm has received a higher than normal volume of requests for consulting, but also various job sections for SEO professionals are thriving.

The employment trend chart by job search engine Simply Hired shows a 147% increase in SEO jobs in the last one and a half years alone:

Seo trends  

  Seo trends Seo jobs  

Fishkin lists 8 reasons why Search Engine Optimization is becoming more attractive to companies in a down market:

  1. The Web Outperforms Other Sales Channel
  2. It’s the Right Time to Re-Tool
  3. Paid Search Drives Interest in SEO
  4. SEO is Losing its Stigma
  5. Marketing Departments are in a Brainstorming Cycle
  6. Search Traffic Will Be Relatively Unscathed by the Market
  7. Web Budgets are Being Re-Assessed
  8. Someone Finally Looked at the Web Analytics

While I never would dare to compare my one man consultancy with a well-known SEO agency like SEOmoz, I personally can confirm that there is an increased interest in SEO. Although, as Search Engine Watch summarized recently in a great post, “the SEO process still requires an introduction at the onset of any presentation.”

Indeed, the majority of companies still seems to have a lack of knowledge when it comes to SEO. They either want you to be the miracle worker (”Can you help me to rank no. 1 in Google for keyword XY in one week?”), or prefer a paid search campaign only. As Rand explains perfectly in his post, SEO being discovered because company delivers more bang for the buck in times of marketing budget cuts.

Additionally, Forrester’s Kim Le Quoc and Jaap Favier stated in their report titled“How to Stimulate Consumer to Buy Online”:

“Creating preference with online buyers starts with search engine optimization (SEO). As search increases in complexity, marketing leaders need to move their teams toward advanced search marketing programs.”

These are my personal 4 tips when talking to a potential client:

  • Consider SEO, because it doesn’t require a huge investment (unless you’re working with a top-tier agency that charges an excessive amount of money);
  • Have an audit performed of your site to see where your site;
  • Implement a simple rewrite of your URL structure. Often times, it can be enough to move your site into a position to be indexed by the search engines;
  • Check to make sure that your navigation and pages are properly built with text links and easy to understand text. This can really help improve your site’s accessibility to search engines.

Do you have other suggestions?

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Category : SEO News
27
Nov

Let us remember that, as much has been given us, much will be expected from us, and that true homage comes from the heart as well as from the lips, and shows itself in deeds. (Theodore Rosevelt)

Happy Thanksgiving, everybody! I wish you a relaxing day, a wonderful gathering with family and friends – and a delicious culinary feast.

In honor of this day, many search engines and websites in the search industry got ‘dressed up’. Here is a little collection of Thanksgiving logos:

Ask.com:
Ask.com Search Engine - Better Web Search

Live.com:
Live Search

Google:
Google

Yahoo:
Yahoo!

Dogpile:
Dogpile Web Search Home Page

AOL.com:
AOL.com - Welcome to AOL

Friendfeed:
FriendFeed

Cre8asite Forums:
Happy Thanksgiving '08 From The Search Industry

Search Engine Roundtable:
Happy Thanksgiving '08 From The Search Industry

Plus: Check out Search Insider’s great post “10 Reasons Search Marketers Should Be Greatful”. It’s a must-read!

Category : SEO News