Archive for ‘Search Engine Optimization

Google Boost – The New Local Business Advertising Tool

Dec
10
2010

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Google just introduced Boost, its newest advertising tool through Google Places. Currently in beta, Boost is available in only a handful of cities and not yet available in Indianapolis. However, in a recent conversation with a Google employee, I learned that Boost will be expanded to include Indianapolis in the not-so-distant future.

So small business owners, perk up your ears.

Designed for local small business owners, the core idea of Boost is simplicity itself. First, the business owner writes a simple business description, chooses business industry categories and sets a budget. Boost then automatically creates an ad campaign for your business, finding relevant keywords and managing your budget to achieve maximum potential. Essentially, Boost is a layman’s Adwords, without all the fuss of keyword research, geo-targeting or spending analysis.

Boost ads appear above the search results in the ‘sponsored ads’ section, or to the right of the search results.

On a local search that generates a map insert, Boost ads receive a blue pin on the map instead of the usual red pin.

Boost ads do not change organic search ranking and all analytics data is collected and viewed through the Places dashboard. Each Boost ad budget must be at least $50 monthly, but can be increased at any time. Ads can also be deleted at any point and the business owner will only be charged for the number of clicks that actually occurred during that time period.

More information about Boost billing and the advertising process can also be found in Google Places Help and on the Google Lat Long Blog.


Google’s Place Search Overhaul: Small Local Business is the Big Winner

Nov
1
2010

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Last week, Google revamped the way that they “organize the world’s information,” giving ‘place’ a new centrality in how they rank websites.  What that means, in SEO speak, is that they’ve merged place results with organic search results. This has a number of important implications, but the long-story-short is that this is good news for small local businesses.

Most searches used to look like this:

At the top of the page, the website with the highest organic ranking would appear.  Then, further down the first page, ‘Places’ would appear.  Appearing at the top of the place list could be important, but without a tagline describing your business in your place-listing, your business had no chance to win traffic by distinguishing itself.  The website with the No. 1 ranking at the top of the page usually wound up winning the highest search-traffic.  Now that Google has merged ‘place’ and organic search results, for local searches Google’s page 1 often ends up looking like this:

As you can see, the red place-balloons with the business’s address and phone-number, now appear beneath the organic listing.  What this means is that maps optimization and organic SEO are no longer compartmentalized in terms of how businesses appear in search.

This weeds national competition that does not have a local presence out of the top slots in many cases. For example, say that your customers enter the search terms:  ‘flowers Indianapolis.’  If the national flower-delivery service that does not have a local flower shop formerly appeared in the top-slot, they are likely to fall in the rankings to the best optimized local flower shop.

On the other hand: whereas, formerly, businesses that were well-optimized on Google Place without any organic SEO (or without a website), might have had an advantage over other businesses that were not well-optimized on Place, now they’ve lost that advantaged.  This makes having a well-optimized website ever more important for local businesses.


QR Codes – Can They Bring You New Customers?

Aug
27
2010

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QR Codes means Quick Response. I’m assuming you already have seen examples on web pages or in magazines, but these tools have yet to meet the mainstream. How can you use QR Codes as part of a viral marketing strategy?

I will show you how we do it.

Small Box had a lead generation tool called the Free SEO Score Card. Over the year that we ran the program, it helped us land many new clients who wanted to use Small Box SEO Services. Let’s say we wanted to take that same service viral using QR Codes for a limited time.

Want it to go viral? Add that same QR Code to your Twitter pictures, your Facebook photos, make it embeddable.

Want to go guerilla? Put it on fliers, stickers, or on the side of a car.

Never done a QR before? Google is your friend, find an app for your smart phone and try it out. And then call Small Box at 317-254-0932 and let’s come up with some ideas on how we can use QR Codes to build your business.

Search Engine Optimization

Now if you have a QR Reader for the iPhone or Android platform, take a picture of the above image and it will take you to the Small Box SEO special. For this demonstration there is a limited time offer, but it captures lead information who would be suitable for ongoing marketing and added to our CRM.


Local Indianapolis SEO Case Study

Aug
26
2010

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In May of 2010, Small Box was approached by IndyLift, Inc. for help improving search engine ranking and overall visibility for the IndyLift website.  The following is a summary of the IndyLift Case Study which outlines our process and the results achieved.

IndyLift, Inc. is a local Indianapolis forklift dealer, providing material handling equipment, parts, repairs and services.  As seasoned and established experts in the material handling industry, IndyLift focuses on offering personal, high quality service and care.

However, before coming to Small Box, the IndyLift website did not incorporate Search Engine Optimization (SEO) techniques and as a result suffered from poor search engine visibility and only ranked moderately for a small number of keywords.

After a consultation with IndyLift, we were able to identify two goals for the IndyLift website;

  1. Increase organic search visibility
  2. Increase local maps visibility.

After determining these goals, we then embarked on a 5-phase strategy to meet those goals;

  1. Keyword research
  2. SEO Audit
  3. On-site optimization
  4. Off-site optimization
  5. Local listing optimization

A few weeks after completing the implementation of our SEO strategy, IndyLift began to see substantial improvement in both organic search rankings and local map inserts.  IndyLift now holds the top position in the Google map insert for ‘indianapolis forklifts’ and two of the top three organic positions.  Anyone searching for forklifts in Indianapolis will find IndyLift quite hard to miss.

IndyLift, Inc. Rankings

To learn more about our process and results for IndyLift, Inc., download the full IndyLift Case Study.


What I Like About SEO

Jul
14
2010

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Recent conversations with some friends about what I “do” at work sparked this idea.  As I’ve been thinking about these conversations, I’ve started to realize that when I launch into an explanation of what I do, more often than not I start to describe what I like to do.  Granted, there’s still a lot more for me to learn, but there’s something exciting about the process of learning and developing a skill while simultaneously discovering what you like about it.

I’ve always liked words.  I chose to study English over music in college because I figured I’d have a better chance making a living using that knowledge (cue laughter – because nobody actually uses their english degree).  Welcomingly, the basics of search engine optimization (SEO) find their roots in words.  One of the first things we do for an SEO client is begin with keyword research.  This is on my list of favorite tasks.  Keywords are exactly what they say they are – key words.  So if a client wants to reach page one on a Google search, they need to know what words people out there are using to search for their product.

For example, lets say you own a hair salon in Indianapolis.  You need to find the keywords that most people use when searching for places to get a haircut.  Is it “hair salon”?  Is it “best barbershop”?  Perhaps, but it’s also important to consider what people expect to find when they enter keywords in a search and if your service meets that expectation.  If your salon is a upscale luxury salon you would not want to target keywords like “best barbershop” or “cheap haircuts,” the resulting traffic would not find what they were looking for and therefore not visit your salon.  What I do is sit down and figure out what keywords are best for your website.  I look at what you offer, where you offer it and who you offer it to and then basically try to solve a word puzzle – putting together different words and word combinations to find the most common search terms, and then choosing which ones fit and describe you best.  The end result is a list of keywords and corresponding data that tells me what keywords you should target on your website.

Of course, this is only one small step of many in the process of optimizing a website.  And I’m not sure I could even comprehensively list and describe every factor or step.  There’s writing title tags (the words in the grey bar on your browser), writing descriptions, press releases and ad copy.  There’s creating listings in Google Maps and other search engines and hunting down respectable directories for more listings.  There’s link-building and social bookmarking and tweaking little things on the website pages to make sure all the little details match exactly.

But what I like about SEO, what I find myself saying when responding to that inevitable question “what do you do at work?” is that the best thing about SEO is – it’s an exploration, it’s an evolution, it’s always changing.  Even the tasks that tend to drag a bit are always made fresh with a new client because the puzzle is different.  Crossword puzzles never get old because everyday the same newspaper square is transformed into an entirely different puzzle, with different clues and different words.  The same is true for SEO, every client presents a new riddle to unwind.

And I can’t help but to think, that maybe I’m actually getting to use that useless degree of mine after all.