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Marketing With Video

March 9, 2010

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Marketing with YouTube Videos

Excerpted from Friends With Benefits: A Social Media Marketing Handbook (No Starch Press)

You’ve created a YouTube account and a channel. You’ve produced one or more clever, original, and brief videos that might become stout Louisville Sluggers in your marketing bat bag. Now what? Earlier in Friends With Benefits we made two recommendations: See your videos as part of a larger marketing strategy, and set reasonable expectations. Now let’s turn to what you can do with your freshly hosted YouTube video and how to get it seen.
Set the Stage

As with your profile on any social media site, take time to customize your YouTube account and channel. Take advantage of all the ways in which you can personalize your space: uploading a photo, tweaking the colors, and so forth. As a general rule, we recommend picking an account name that reflects, directly or indirectly, your organization or brand. If you plan to feature your videos on your corporate blog and your blog has a clever name, then you might use the same name for your YouTube account.

Keep in mind that your username becomes part of your YouTube URL. For example, Save the Children UK’s username is, aptly, savethechildrenuk. That makes the organization’s YouTube web address http://www.youtube.com/user/savethechildrenuk. If you want to share your URL, you can safely shorten it by removing the user part, making the previous address simply http://www.youtube.com/savethechildrenuk.

Pick the Right Title

Increasingly, people navigate the Web using search. Instead of typing www.ESPN.com into their address bar, they simply search for ESPN. As we mentioned previously, video is increasingly important to SEO, so consider the title of your video carefully. Make the title descriptive and evocative without being hysterical. A common practice on YouTube and other video sharing sites is for video creators to write melodramatic or exaggerated titles and descriptions for their videos. They also may add totally irrelevant terms to the title and description (“sex!”, “Lindsay Lohan!”, and so forth). This tactic is a very obvious bid to obtain more views. Resist these temptations. For example, imagine you’re the VP of Marketing for ACME Locks. You’ve produced a video demonstrating how indestructible your padlocks are. In the video, your lock is exposed to increasing levels of kinetic force — a hammer, a crowbar, a handgun, and so on. Here are some good titles:

* How Much Abuse Can This ACME Lock Withstand?
* We Smash, Trash, and Shoot a Padlock — Will It Survive?
* Harold Shoots a Lock

On the other hand, here are some ill-advised titles:

* Paris Hilton Fondles a Lock — You’ve Gotta See This!
* ACME Lock Marketing Video #18
* woot!!! r locks r best!

Describe and Lead with a Link

Write an accurate, keyword-rich description for each of your videos. As elsewhere, try to avoid using boilerplate marketing text or anything that feels like advertorial copy. Simply faithfully describe what happens in the video. If you want to drive YouTube viewers to your website (and why wouldn’t you?), we recommend beginning the description with the complete (sometimes called fully resolved) web address. That means including the http:// at the beginning. If you’ve got a long URL as a landing page (say, more than 25 characters), your web designer or site manager can set up a redirect with a shorter URL. Here’s an example of a good description:

http://www.acmelocks.com/ — In this video, ACME Locks Quality Assurance Manager Harold Druken tests our new padlock for durability. He starts with a hammer, then tries a crowbar, and finally shoots it with a 9mm handgun. The results may surprise you! Oh, and don’t try this at home.

Categorize and Tag Responsibly

In addition to titles and descriptions, you can assign a category and tags to a video when you upload it. Like many social media sites (we’re looking at you, Digg), the categories seem limited and a bit baffling. Just choose the one that fits best — we don’t think this is a particularly important bit of metadata. You should write your tags wisely, however. Don’t be deceptive in applying tags to your video, but do try to be as exhaustive as possible. Consider synonyms for your targeted keywords and industry terms. Be as specific as possible. You’ll find applying a core group of relevant tags to all of your videos worthwhile (they may then show up under Related Videos on your video’s pages) along with some additional tags specific to each video.
Play Nice with Others

As with the other social media channels we’ve discussed, becoming a member of the YouTube community is advisable. Create a complete and personalized YouTube profile. Watch other users’ videos and provide feedback through commenting, rating the videos, and marking them as favorites. Record a few video responses for YouTube users who might have an affinity for your video — those who live in the same city or share an interest or work in the same industry. Just as bloggers monitor their blogs’ statistics, YouTube users notice when you participate in this fashion. Just as you do on MySpace and Facebook, add YouTube users as friends. This friend group will come in handy when you want to spread the word about a new video.
Join Groups

If a group exists in the YouTube community for your industry or interest, join it. You can upload your videos to the group and interact with other members. If no group exists, you may want to launch and promote a group. Obviously creating and maintaining a YouTube group takes time and effort, so you’ll want to gauge the relative importance of the video channel in your web marketing work.

Fans engage with one another through the Celine Dion YouTube group.

Curate with Playlists

YouTube enables you to assemble videos — your own and others’ — into playlists of related content. To do so, you click Playlists and select the playlist to which you’d like to add the video. By creating a useful playlist for your industry or cause, you act as a DJ or museum curator. If you create compelling playlists on specific topics or themes, they benefit the larger community and, if popular, get others’ videos more views. Additionally, YouTube tends to include playlists in search results on the site, so be sure to use keyword-rich titles and descriptions for your playlists. Assuming it’s appropriate, you can always include your own videos in your playlists. Just be sure your first priority is to deliver value to the person browsing the playlist. Include new or unpopular videos; a playlist won’t be of much interest to the average user if she has already seen 9 out of 10 of the videos.
Ninety Percent Less Moron

Speaking of community, we need to warn you about YouTube comments. As you may be aware, YouTube commenters seem to have the language skills and sense of humor of a dimwitted eleven-year-old. We’re not sure why, but it endangers our faith in humanity. YouTube recently implemented an Audio Preview button, which encourages users to listen to their freshly composed comment before clicking Post Comment. If you’re a Firefox user, we encourage you to install the YouTube Comment Snob browser plug-in. This plug-in automatically hides YouTube comments that abuse basic rules of spelling, grammar, and punctuation. You’ll enjoy a YouTube with 90 percent less moron. If you’ve got videos on YouTube, feel free to take the advice we provide elsewhere in this book and delete any comments that don’t meaningfully contribute to the conversation. On YouTube, that may very well be most of them.
Include Videos in Pitches

Be sure to link to those other channels in your emailed pitches and on your website. In particular, embed your videos or YouTube channel widget on your social media resource page and in posts on your organization’s blog. For lots of busy social media creators, a quick post featuring your video in their blog or Twitter stream may be an enticing alternative to a longer post about your product or cause.
Feature Videos in Other Communication Channels

Depending on the focus of your videos, promoting them to your existing customers or constituency may be appropriate. For example, feature your videos in your company email newsletter or invite readers to “Look for us on YouTube” in offline advertising.
Annotate Your Videos

In mid-2008, YouTube added the Video Annotations feature. This feature enables you to overlay text, graphics, and sundry other effects to a video. YouTube users are still experimenting with how to implement annotations without annoying their viewers. Some common annotations we’ve seen so far include simple calls to action (“Subscribe to our channel”) or references to other videos. Currently, you can only link to other YouTube videos, not to external sites. If you’re publishing a connected series of videos, you might want to add a message near the end of each one that reads, “Click here to watch the next video in this series.” We expect these postproduction features to continue to expand on YouTube and other video sharing sites, so keep an eye out.
YouTube Killed the Video Star

As with every social media channel, you'll find that YouTube gets more rewarding as you spend more time within the community, engaging with your viewers and learning the ways of the new world that is YouTube Nation. Start small, set humble goals, and split your energies equally between creating a great original video and promoting it to your tribe and the larger Internet community. Even if you never achieve success on a "Will It Blend" scale, you'll enjoy some search engine optimization benefits and an increase in visitors to your website over the long term.

Got Social Media Marketing?

January 8, 2010

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Social Media Optimization / Web 2.0 Optimization.

It takes 6 to 8 months to get results from Search Engine Optimization and increase visibility on the internet. However, business owners do not have the time or patience to wait for 6 months. The solution is to use Web 2.0 or Social Media Optimization techniques to get some quick traffic. Social Media sites like You Tube, FaceBook, MySpace, Flickr.com have huge traffic. But you need experts who can help take advantage of these websites to market your business. There are thousands of Social Media websites, but you need to select the best sites which can get you your desired audience.

We generate Social Media content for you, be it creating videos, blogs or writing articles to creating profiles on Social Networking websites or creating viral videos and posting them on sites like YouTube or creating a presentation around your Unique Value Proposition and publishing the presentation on major presentation websites. No two companies are the same nor are their needs. We will create a custom Social Media Marketing plan based on your requirements and target Audience.

With the massive reach of social news sites, the blogs/ content we create for you can build natural links to your website. Bloggers and webmasters get access to your content and can link to you if they consider your content as newsworthy. These links are natural since they are placed in editorials.

Social Media Marketing also plays an important role in Online Reputation Management. However the strategy for Reputation Management varies based on your particular requirements. For a detailed proposal, you can contact our Marketing team mail or call them at 949-542-2601.

Local Internet Marketing

January 8, 2010

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Your website is an essential tool in your overall business marketing activities. But just having a website is not enough. You must employ some internet marketing in order to attract qualified visitors, potential customers, to your site. We specialize in local internet marketing to attract local visitors to your site.
Search Engine Marketing with a Local Twist

It's a fact, search engines are the primary method of finding stuff online. And it holds true for people looking for local businesses too. This search traffic represents highly qualified traffic. People in the process of actively searching for a website want something to satisfy their needs. Most of them want to buy a product or a service to fulfill that need. If they can easily find your site then you get their business.

We are experts in search engine optimization, keyword analysis, traffic analysis and internet user behavior. Let us apply these skills for your small business and your local internet marketing activities.
Search Engine Optimization

Your website needs to appear on the first page of search results to attract visitors. And it must do so for the right sets of keywords that people are searching for. With our help your website will be well positioned for your best keywords to attract local web surfers.

Search Engine Optimization (SEO) is the process of targeting and optimizing a website for its most important keywords. It requires a deep understanding of search engines and their criteria for ranking web pages. We of course have those skills and by applying our proven techniques to your website your business will benefit by allowing local people to find you and become new customers.
Google Maps Optimization

Google Maps has quicly become an important traffic source for local businesses. The Maps "Local 10 Pack" now appears at the top of many local type searches in the main Google search results. Ranking well here is important as it is often the first thing a searcher see's. Ranking well in both oraganic search (the main results) and Maps search means your website is maximizing it's exposure to potential customers.

There is quite a different process invloved for ranking high in Maps results. Our Google Maps optimization services (link to our other website) can help your local business get teh exposure it needs to be the local leader in your market.
Pay Per Click Advertising

For those that don't know, the main results you see in a search engine are obtained freely. These are known as the 'organic' search results. Ranking well for your keywords in organic results is the realm of SEO. It can take a considerable amount of time and effort to achieve. But there is a short cut.

Pay-Per-Click advertising (PPC) can place you right up front immediately for the keywords you choose. The catch is in the name of this service, pay per click.

Search engines offer sponsored space on their pages, sometimes a few at the top and often those on the right hand side are the sponsored search results.

You create a small add, choose your keywords where you want the ad to appear, and bid on how much you want to pay for every click on your ad. PPC advertising can produce immediate results and it can be used as a tool to test keywords. But it can be tricky and the learning curve can get expensive.

We can help develop and manage your PPC campaign. Our Keyword research tools can help find the best performing keywords and phrases. Our copywriters can create compelling ads that attract clicks, and they can create a great landing page for those ads that help to increase conversion rates.
Start Marketing Your Business to Local Internet Users

Future Proof Your Google Maps SEO

January 8, 2010

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Google Maps is still in it’s early stages of evolving and improving the ranking algorithm. Lots of easy, often spammy, methods for ranking are still working, but slowly many of these will be getting picked off by the G team. Are the current optimization methods you’re using today going to continue to work in 3 months? 6 months? A year or more? Or will you be one of the many complaining in the maps forums or various blogs about how your highly ranked listing suddenly dropped to page five.
Strive for Quality

Google ultimately wants to provide relevant and quality results to it’s users. It’s simply in their best interest to do so. It’s in your best interest then to satisfy Google to that end. Give them reasons to believe your business is a quality one. Give those quality cues early.

I see many small business owners, too many really, hoping for that quick fix home run, only to be continually chasing it over and over again when something in the ranking algorithm changes. Think about each and every aspect of your listing and why you are doing it the way you are.
Tone Down the Keyword Spam

Keyword spamming of business name titles, descriptions, and additional fields is a common tactic. About a month ago there was a rash of complaints over lost rankings due to keyword spamming in category fields. This sent hundreds of business owners scrambling to figure out what was wrong and how to fix it. The same is likely to happen when Google ads more filters to cut other forms of keyword spam.

Much has been discussed elsewhere about keyword usage in business name titles, and Google’s stance on it, so I won’t say much about it here other than to say if you do it, keep it light.

Writing and crafting descriptions and additional field information is not simply about jamming in keywords, the quick and dirty way. Instead take your time to craft a good description that uses a couple of your main keywords in a natural way. You should really only need 1 or two variations of your main service keywords and one instance of your city name within your description. At 200 characters your description field may just give you enough room to word it in such a way as to also include a Call to Action of some sort.

Use Additional Fields to help target other service keywords, as well as reinforcing your main keywords one or twice more. Write nice little sentences that may provide real information to a potential customer.

Some examples of bad Additional Field usage;

* NYC Laptop Repair : Yes
* Laptop Repair : New York

This would be an example of quality in an Additional Field;

* Laptop Repairs : Our NYC computer technicians can repair your laptop or notebook with ease. From broken monitors to dead batteries.

See the difference? Those bad examples, I’ve seen all kinds of that out there. Not only from small business owners that don’t really know better, but from some larger scale SEM agencies optimizing listings for clients. Tisk, tisk.

Just look at what we accomplish with the higher quality Additional Field that is targeting the exact same keywords. A user can actually read it and get some value out of it, thus building goodwill and trust (not much, but miles above that lame crap in the bad example). You are hitting not only your main keywords, but a few other relevant ones as well.

It might take an extra 5 minutes to try to write something decent that will fit inside the 120 character limit but in the long run it’s well worth it. When Google adds a keyword density filter, or something similar, you won’t be scrambling to rewrite your Maps listings again.
Be Careful with Reviews

Upon realizing reviews have an effect on Maps rankings many business owners jump to trying to amass a number of reviews quickly. Often taking the easy route of creating fake reviews. Woa! Careful there. Fake reviews are easy to spot, both by users and by search engines.

Comments about fake reviews

I repeatedly see legitimate reviews commenting upon what looks like a fake review for the same business. If a couple people are taking the time to write such a comment in the reviews how many more are noticing it and are left scratching their heads as their trust levels diminish. Fake reviews are also quite easy to spot by a computer algorithm. Where has that user left other reviews? Did that same user claim that business listing? Is that same review content appearing for other business listings, or from other review sources? Copypasta is easy but tastes horrible.

Instead, create and implement a system that will continually encourage the generation of reviews over the long haul. Include links to review sites in thank you emails sent to customers. Hand out a thank you card at the cash register that includes information on leaving online reviews. Get creative, there are lots of easy and non-spammy ways to get real reviews.
Recognize Inherent Limitations

Maps search is primarily about the broader categories of business services, for the vast majority of businesses out there. It is not much of a long tail search play. That is much better suited to organic SEO and Pay Per Click advertising.

Now there is a bit of a long tail effect in Maps but it is very weak in comparison. With only 5 categories to choose from, very limited space for descriptions and other information, and the fact that a map is only triggered in the Universal Search Results for mainly those broader category types, the system itself creates limitations. Recognize them and work within them to maximize your relevance to the types of key phrases people are actually using to find your services.
Diversify your Local Marketing

As Google Maps has grown in prominence I get more requests for help with Google Maps listings but I’m seeing many who are relying solely on Maps to generate business. That’s a dangerous position for a small business to be in. Anything could change at any time such as a massive algorithm adjustment that bumps you out of the top results, or a silly mistake in your optimization triggers a filter, or Google completely changes the game with a new version of Universal Search Results, perhaps as simply as occupying the entire visible page, before scrolling down, with paid ads.

Don’t neglect organic search optimization and the long tail riches it trickles your way. Or PPC ads that help you pull a larger fraction of total available traffic (yes, even for same keywords you already rank well for in maps and organic). Experiment with social media marketing via Facebook and Twitter. Try the Pay Per Click options through Facebook. Advertise locally on relevant local websites. There is a lot more yo can do besides just Google Maps.

So for 2010, and beyond, focus on quality to win the local SEO game now and into the future.