7 SEO Tips for Better Search Engine Rankings January 31, 2012
Posted by MultiPlanet in Uncategorized, Search Engines.Tags: 19087, search engine, SEO, optimization, ranking, improve web ranking, how to rank
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If you’ve done the obvious things on your website for search engine optimization (SEO)—like sprinkle keywords through your home page and have a value proposition that says what you offer that others do not—you can further increase your website ranking using some of these ideas.
- License your domain name for multiple years. This tells search engines you plan to be around for a while.
- List the geographic areas you serve. This lets search engines know what “local” means to you, so they can bring the right “local” customers to you.
- Give your pictures “alt tags.” Alt Tags are HTML elements that let you describe a picture. Use them because search engines cannot decipher pictures (or other types of rich media, like Flash and videos).
- Use cascading style sheets (.css). Cascading style sheets let you put all the formatting in one file so the search engine does not have to interpret it—and accidentally rank “font” or “cell” as your most frequent keyword!
- Use simple sentences and use keywords as the noun in your sentence. This is the easiest, most direct way to talk to customers and to search engine. “Marketing for Software Companies that Want To Grow” communicates more clearly than “Could Your Marketing Use A Boost?”
- Put a local phone number on the page even if you use an 800-number. Without it, rival companies in your immediate area could out-rank you in searches conducted by local prospects.
- Change something on your homepage frequently. This tells the search engines your site is not static brochure-ware, which also helps your ranking.
MultiPlanet follows the work of SEO researchers carefully to keep our clients up-to-date on the latest search engine advantages.
Contact me directly to discuss your company needs.
–Paige
pmiller@multiplanetmarketing.com
MultiPlanet Marketing, Inc.
Aligning the stars for you.
Anatomy of An Amazing Marketing Deal January 10, 2012
Posted by MultiPlanet in Advertising.Tags: constructing marketing deals, Great marketing deals, marketing example, Philadelphia Inquirer advertising, successful strategy
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Marketing people are creative, and they often earn their stripes by solving business problems with creative marketing.
The Philadelphia Inquirer illustrates this perfectly with their marketing campaign to increase subscribers. In November 2011, they began offering a tablet PC for $89 with the purchase of a one-year subscription to the digital version of the newspaper ($10 a month).
Stroke of Genius!
This is a stroke of genius. What does the Inquirer (an all other newspaper) face? Younger readers aren’t buying newspapers because they get their news from the Internet.
Let’s look at what the Inquirer did. You may have heard the phrase “a problem in search of a solution.” If you tweak that phase a little bit and think of it as “a problem in search of another problem” you have a marketing perspective that can result in amazing deals. Someone at the Inquirer was smart enough to think that way.
Think of the Customer
Instead of thinking about their own problem, the Inquirer thought about the problems of their desired client. What do young people want? Education, jobs, family….Ok, those are too big for even the Inquirer to solve. What do young people want for Christmas? Now that’s a more manageable problem.
So, what do young people want for Christmas? Kindles, music, iPhones, Uggs, Wiis, North Face jackets, digital cameras, iPods, video games, iPads. iPads…iPADs! Give the Millenniums iPADS . . .wouldn’t that be cool?
**Note that last line. Whatever you use as an incentive must have a WOW!-factor.
Give it a WOW-factor!
An iPad fits the bill perfectly. It lets the Inquirer apply another old marketing adage, “give them the razor for free and sell them the blades” (or the more modern version of “sell them the printer cheap and make money on the ink cartridges).
Now you have the “buy a subscription and get a tablet cheap” marketing offer.
When the iPad turned out to be too expensive, the Inquirer teamed with Arnova, which offers a great tablet on the Android Gingerbread operating system, the same OS as the Kindle. (My daughter has practically given up her MacBook in favor of the Arnova tablet.)
To recap: Think about your objective and what your desired client wants. How can you combine their current behavior, desires or wants with your objectives?
It takes brainstorming. It takes lots of “what if we….,” and “wouldn’t be great if…” thinking to devise a creative approach, but it results in great marketing.
Test Yourself
So, test your own skills. Answer this: How did Disney World increase attendance by African-Americans in 2010?
I’ll post a link to the answer in the next blog. In the meantime, post your thoughts.
–Paige
MultiPlanet Marketing specializes in creative thinking. Let us work with your management or marketing team to develop solutions for your challenges. Contact me at 610.687.2690. –Paige Miller
Five Steps to a Successful Marketing Strategy and Road Map for 2012 January 5, 2012
Posted by MultiPlanet in Strategy.Tags: marketing road map, strategic marketing, Strategy, successful strategy
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Which way is your marketing program going in 2012? A solid strategy, approved by senior management, can show the way.
Hope your holiday’s were fun! Now it’s back to work and time to start the New Year right with a strategy to guide you through the next 12 months. Here’s how to get started.
A marketing strategy sits between your business plan and your marketing plan. Your business plan defines your market—the group of people who have a problem you can solve—and states the message you want to use to explain the benefit of your product or service.
Your marketing strategy states how you plan to attract those people. Your strategy depends on:
1. Your Budget. Set a budget, even if it is only a small amount. Don’t skirt the issue by asking “what will it cost?” or saying “Tell me what we need and I’ll get the money.” It’s a waste of time to develop a $5MM budget if you only have $50,000 to spend. It doesn’t matter what you need if you can’t afford it. The goal is to maximize the impact of the money you do have. If nothing else, start with 15% of revenues. That should get you into the ballpark.
2. Your Purpose. What do you want to accomplish? Drive people to the website to buy your product? Educate prospective customers to nurture them toward a sale? Build your brand in the marketplace so you make the RFP and short lists of major prospects? Decide now, so you don’t spread yourself and your staff too thin. The more purposes you have, the less successful you will be at any of them.
3. Your Goals. Determine what metrics will best mark your success: leads generated? downloads? Free trials? Sales? Visitors to the site? Sign-ups for the newsletter? Next, set realistic and stretch goals for those metrics. Use last year’s goals as a guide, if you have them. If your company is new to marketing, set modest goals. Better to succeed and feel a sense of forward motion than to set high goals, fail and drain the energy out of the effort.
5. Determine Your Strategy. States how you plan to spend your budget and use your resources. What will you emphasize and what will delay until later? Which marketing channels will you use first? Why? (Do the research to find out how other businesses like your succeeded.)
6. Build Your Road Map. The final element of your plan is your Road Map, which says what you will do each month and who will do it. Keep your budget in minds as you determine which trade shows you want to attend, which publications you want for your articles and which websites or social media sites are best for reaching your customers.
A strategy and road map helps ensure your budget lasts the full year. Too often, “things” come along during the first half of the year that consume your budget, leaving no money for critical end-of-year efforts to meet company sales goals. A strategy and an eye on the calendar makes marketing more effective.
What’s the biggest marketing mistake you’ve seen that a good strategy would have prevented? I’ll give a shout out to the marketer who provides the best example.
Happy New Year, –Paige
MultiPlanet Marketing
For help developing your strategy, contact MultiPlanet Marketing.
Google Changes Ranking Algorithm November 15, 2011
Posted by MultiPlanet in Search Engines.Tags: Google, search engine algorithm, search engine changes, web rankings
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Google changed its algorithm for ranking websites week to put more emphasis on “freshness.” As a result, 35% of the searches you did two weeks ago get different results today. Freshness has been part of Google’s algorithm for a while, but now they are putting more emphasis on it.
That means updating your site/blog is more important now than ever before. As usual, Google doesn’t give any details about the steps in the algorithm, but if you follow Google, you know they hate being duped. So I’m sure they have all the traps set for catching people who try to do the minimum, like republishing a page just so its date is “fresh.”
Changing one little thing isn’t enough to trick Google. They know what you published before and they know what everyone else has published, so don’t think you can curate copy and gain an advantage over someone that is putting out fresh, never unpublished, content. The Google knows when you’ve been bad or good. And they talk to Santa Clause. Learn more about the changes.
Oh, . . and by the way: Be sure to go into your Google account and complete the section on “me.” That lets Google tie your website and blog together if they reside on separate domains. That is, your website is under your corporate domain, but your blog is under WordPress, TypePad or Blogger.
Paige Miller
Multiplanet

