Cleveland Search Engine Optimization Community

I’m at the Search Engine Watch Live! Columbus – May 9th, 2007 – The Premier Conference for Search Engine Marketing & Optimization conference in Columbus today. I thought I’d do a little coverage of the event.

The first hour session is: Organic Optimization Strategies
First off is Jennifer Laycock, speaking on: Common Sense SEO/SEM.

She says that it is no longer practical to continually study the changing algorithm of the engines.

She addresses the Sandbox effect (where sites are held for an undetermined time until they “grow up”.) She says that it does NOT exist and doesn’t make sense. If a new site that fills a niche that doesn’t already exist a new site can do well (Hurricane Katrina sites, for example). If there is a lot of content that already exists for a topic, it becomes harder for a new site to breakthrough.

She says that what is next for search engines could be: Tracking Click-thrus and Latent semantic Indexing.

Speak your customers language.

The most important rule for ppc is not about buying clicks, it’s about buying customers. PPC tracking without metrics will leave you totally guessing what works.

Link building is just like relationship building.

Next up: Jeff Rohrs, President, Optiem, LLC

“How I Learned To Stop Worrying And Love Content Creation”

He discusses a blog he runs: Six Degrees of Bacon. It’s all about bacon (the food). It discusses everything about bacon and bacon news. He uses this blog to test search engine marketing. He says that there is a “passionate” group of people who discuss bacon. He says that being passionate is key to the success of your content and community.

Third on the docket: James Golden, Vice President of Development, The Karcher Group. He’s speaking on Web Standards/Accessibility Issues in SEO.

He discusses the: The Web Standards Project- a group that is fighting for web standards. He says that standards allow spiders and many different platforms to access your site in a meaningful and easier way.

He suggests: Use scallable text, Have a good hierarchy,

Finally, Matt Bailey, President, Site Logic Marketing is speaking on Measuring Organic Success (in 10 minutes). Points are: You have to have clearly defined goals for your site. What do you want customers to do. He discusses that people are taking micro actions on their site that we have to guide a person through. He discusses Segmentation. He uses the Star Trek Red Shirt Phenomenon to discuss segmentation. He delves into it at his blog here: SiteLogic - Marketing Logic » Analytics According to Captain Kirk by Matt Bailey.

He says that you need to set your conversion rate by your separate segments of your site. You should understand your conversion rate by individual product groups instead of a single conversion rate for the site.

He says Google is going to be implementing the “Placement performance report” - shows all of the sites where your ads are appearing and how many clicks each site are giving you.

Laura Thieme, President and Founder, Biz Research is speaking on Measuring Ad Performance & KPIs (Key Performance Indicators).
She estimates that her customers are spending 10% of their budget on optimization. However, she finds that many people are not clicking on paid listings.

She says that ultimately you set goals of what is most important to you.

She suggests tracking calls back to the keyword.

She suggests using funnel reports to watch how people are moving through the site. And then segment organic from paid key phrases.

Next up: Wil Schroter, Go BIG Network. He’s talking about Re-investing ROI: A Case Study
He talks about how to use ppc when you are just starting out.
4 things you need to know:
Gross Value - what’s the dollar value of your goal. This breaks down when the conversion goes off line. This doesn’t have to be a sale. It could be a lead.
Cost per acquisition - How much does it cost me to get $1 in revenue.
Time to transaction - Time between click cost and click cost paid.
The Float - The time between a paid click and a sale.

OK… that’s it for my coverage. I’m speaking next and I can’t figure out a way to blog and speak at the same time.

Sage

What: I did a series of interviews at Search Engine Strategies NYC – April 10–13, 2007 – The Premier Conference for Search Engine Marketing & Optimization. Today I talk with Avinash Kaushik of Google Analytics. Google Analytics is an extremely robust statistical analysis tool. It has a ton of great reports showing your statistics in many useful ways. The best part is that it costs absolutely nothing.

Avinash is a highly regarded person within the statistical analysis world. You can pre-order his upcoming book here:

Amazon.com: Web Analytics: An Hour a Day: Books: Avinash Kaushik. He also has a great blog here: Occam’s Razor by Avinash Kaushik

Who: Sage Lewis

Where: This was shot at Search Engine Strategies NYC – April 10–13, 2007 – The Premier Conference for Search Engine Marketing & Optimization.

When: April 19, 2007

Why: Google Analytics has literally changed the landscape of the web analytics environment. This tool is a great option for you if you don’t have any stats or if you would like to see your stats from another angle. It is one of the great contributions to our industry.

This is from Home - Web Marketing Watch - Your daily web marketing show.

The Karcher Group is hosting a two-day search engine optimization seminar in the Akron-Canton area featuring a full panel of search engine experts.  Guest speakers include:

  • BJ Mitchel of Business.com
  • Anita Campbell of Small Business Trends
  • Dr. William McHenry of the University of Akron
  • Jake Baillie, managing director of STN Labs and former president of TrueLocal.com. 

Other speakers include Geoff Karcher, owner and president of The Karcher Group with over 13 years of Internet and Search Marketing Experience; Aaron Geh, Vice President of Sales and Marketing, James Golden Vice President of Development, Craig Geis, Senior Web Analytics Specialist, Jen Doerschuk, Pay-Per-Click Specialist and former Yahoo! Search Marketing senior development editor, and Collyn Floyd, Online Marketing/Copywriting Specialist.

The seminar titled “Search Engine Marketing Made Simple” will be held on May 15-16, 2007 at the 356th Fighter Group Banquet Center by the Akron-Canton Airport (4919 Mt. Pleasant Road, North Canton, OH, 44720).  Attendees can select Day One (Basic track), Day Two (Advanced track), or both days.

The early bird seminar registration fee is $249 per day or $399 for both days, effective during the month of April.  

This two-day SEO class is designed to help business owners, marketers, and webmasters increase their Web site’s traffic, rankings and conversions.  Topics include how to improve rankings in the search engines, link building, keyword selection, pay-per-click marketing, usability and more.  Plus, attendees will learn about emerging marketing strategies such as blogging, viral marketing, and online public relations. 

The seminar is structured to allow plenty of time for Q&A, hands-on consulting, and troubleshooting. For more information or to register, please go to The Karcher Group’s search engine optimization seminar page or call 800.310.0317.

January 1, 2007

Social Media Optimization - A new SMO site is born

I can’t even believe it.. I’ve got a blog.It’s my first blog ever and though I’ve been entrenched in the world for years now I’d like to think that I might be able to give a little bit back to the place that I’ve got it from.

Thus is born: SMOmashup.com

As I’ve said, it’s my very first blog and instead of just being random drivel brought to you with some catchy punchline I’ve decided to focus my efforts on a specific part of our industry: Social Media Optimization. Though most all of us deal in some way or another with various forms of marketing on the internet, I’ve decided to go where I’m unnaturally called… the land of MySpace, YouTube, Digg and beyond to see where it is the rest of us can fall into place.

In the world of SEO, so many of us have taken something that’s fairly new to the world and perfected it to a science. The differential to this is the world of SMO, where things we only dream about happen on a daily basis.

At SMOmashup.com I intend to take all of us on a daily journey from the most simplistic (WTF is SMO?) to the most complex (What can Fortune 500 companies do effectively with MySpace?) and just about everything in between. As a newer part of Cleveland SEO I would ask for you to check back each day to see what we can all share from our adventures in the underworld as well as giving up some Link Love to help promote NEO as a place where people can find the cutting edge news in our quickly expanding realm.

December 31, 2006

My Apologies On Comments

Hi everybody,

I was going through 300 spam messages here at ClevelandSEO.com and discovered there were a few legitimate ones in the mix. Sorry about that everybody. I’ve added a blog spam plugin that should remedy this problem from now on. Be sure to check out the comments on the lower right of this blog.

Take care and Happy New Year!
Sage

December 18, 2006

DraftTroy.com

File this one under Just for Fun:

If you’re a Browns fan, a Buckeyes fan wanting to keep Troy Smith in the same time zone or even a Steelers fan sick of the rivalry being a joke, I invite you to visit my new site, DraftTroy.com, today and sign the petition. Got a MySpace page? We need friends too.

I’m currently sitting in a session at Search Engine Strategies called “Meet the Crawlers.” It’s made up of engineers from all the big engines. I thought I’d bullet some of the more interesting comments they have put out:

Search Engine Engineers

These are the engineers from Google, Yahoo, MSN and Ask.

I’ve always loved this session because the information doesn’t get any better than this. If they say something, it’s pretty much gospel.

  • Google, MSN and Yahoo are adhering to a sitemap standard format. But Ask is not currently doing so.
  • Having multiple variations of the a url (usually because of session id’s) does not hurt you. The engine simply picks one.
  • When rebuilding a site on the same domain, 301 redirect from old urls to new urls, create a new sitemap and submit it, possibly submit the old site map to detect the 301 redirects.
  • If people are putting content on your site (such as comments) that have links, wrap the link in nofollow.
  • The “site:” search is much more accurate in Yahoo than in other engines(Yahoo said). So if you are seeing bit variations of number of pages between Google and Yahoo, keep in mind that those are just estimates.
  • Sitemaps are used as signals to augment the engines’ listings. It is a “hint” but it’s not the be all end all.
  • Crawlers used to have an issue with a depth of crawl so they didn’t go many levels deep in sub-folders. But now its not an issue. “Reasonably deep” levels should not be an issue. If it makes sense for a user then it should be fine. Usability is a good proxy for this.
  • In Google, don’t worry about having listings in the “supplemental results”. It just takes time. Supplemental is not a penalty and you will get traffic from supplemental results.
  • Supplemental results is an extra layer of the Google index. It’s a bit larger and takes a little longer to update. It’s a perfectly normal thing to see some of your pages within supplemental.
  • Ask would not comment on whether they will implement something like Yahoo Site Explorer and Google Webmaster Central. MSN says they are taking feedback on that.
  • If you have a shopping cart that has products in HTTP and HTTPS urls, you should tell the engines which version to use via robots.txt and even better… don’t have products in both versions. The engines support indexing HTTPS urls.
  • If you have text that describes a flash animation and “gracefully degrades” for someone that doesn’t have flash, you won’t have much of a problem.
  • Imagine the crawler as a vision impaired user. Convert your site to play on a browser reader via sound and look at your site through a text-only browser. This will show you very clearly what they see.

November 17, 2006

A Few Pictures From The Event

Anita Campbell
Anita Campbell

Jeff Rohrs
Jeff Rohrs

Susan Lowry
Susan Lowry

The presentations from today’s seminar will be available here: http://cite.uakron.edu/

Eric Olsen from Blogcritics.org is the keynote.

Blogcritics is an online magazine, a community of writers and readers from around the globe.

The title is: “The Fantastically Wild Success Story of Blogeristic Organization”

He is giving us the chronology of his business.

He wants us to understand what blogging is and what blogging software is.

He mentions that “it’s all about the links.” He says that’s the #1 factor of determining how you do on the engines.

He talks about Google PageRank. He says that people have to know about you and link to you in order to increase your PageRank. He says each number is exponentially higher than the previous number. PageRank is a scale from 0-10. There are very few 10’s: Google, Yahoo, New York Times. Blogcritics.org is a 7.

He says that he has 100,000 readers a day. He has 1700 writers, 20 editors. He gets people to write for free for his site because he has readers.

He says that if you have a broad base and no money… the way you succeed is to give away your product. You get the exposure, links and higher pagerank.

Anita Campbell has the closing remarks.
She mentions that having a site like blogcritics.org here in Cleveland is a tremendous asset to our community.

[Having Anita in the Akron/Cleveland area is also a tremendous asset]

[Thanks everybody for putting on a great event. Once again, our area has shown itself to be a highly intelligent seo community.]

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