Tag : tools

  • 10 Link Building Tips You Don’t Want to Miss

    Posted May 27th, 2011 By in Link Building With | No Comments

    Online entrepreneurs know that link building is one of the best ways to increase a site’s rank in search engines and thereby generate more traffic. Despite understanding that link building is an essential component of search engine optimization, many business owners balk at the complicated and time-consuming task of getting well-respected sites to link back to their websites. These 10 tips will give you the guidance and tools you need to maximize the effectiveness of your link building efforts without wasting your time and resources.

    1. Check out what your competition is doing. Never underestimate the value of experience, expertise and most important, results. You can discover high-ranking competitors who target your same audience and then determine what their most effective links are.
    2. Focus on pages that already rank well for search engine queries you’d like to rank for. Pages that rank well for the keywords you’re using have successfully established themselves as authorities and thus are great pages from which to acquire links. Of course, in order to get a link from those pages, your link will have to add value to them.
    3. Investigate the age of prospective linking partners. One of the most significant factors in measuring the quality of a domain is how established it is. Simple queries using readily available free tools can show you how old a domain is, which is one factor in determining how established a website is.
    4. Keep the focus on quality. A few high-quality links will benefit you much more than a large number of mediocre ones. Concentrate on established, trusted domains with content that directly relates to your site and target audience.
    5. Use effective anchor text. If the words “click here” appear anywhere on your site, fire the person responsible! Internet users don’t need to be told where to click anymore, but search engine users do need to be able to find you; without meaningful anchor text, the chances of that are pretty slim.
    6. Provide superior content. The battle may always rage, but now more than ever content really is king, and sites that offer relevant, compelling copy are rewarded in many ways, including by attracting quality links organically.
    7. Submit your articles to article directories. Now that you have relevant, high-quality content, submit it to a directory where webmasters can post it to their own sites with a link back to you, driving traffic to your site and creating opportunities for the content to be picked up by trusted sites that bestow link authority.
    8. Become a blog commenter. Focus on blog posts that are directly related to your niche and offer commentary that is constructive and useful to the reader.
    9. Submit your content to social media sites. Tailor your headlines to individual sites for the best response; the idea is to inspire people so that they spread the word for you, generating quality links in the process.
    10. Network via email. Building partnerships with others in your niche can help grow your brand. When writing your email copy, use the same rules you would for articles on your site: Write an attention-grabbing headline and follow it with useful content that benefits the reader.

    Guest Author: Randall Davidson is a co-founder of AudioTranscription.Org, a San Francisco-based audio transcription company that provides high quality general and business transcription services. Through founding and developing his audio transcription business, Randall has learned the importance of link building in order to increase search engine rankings and to drive traffic to his site.

     

     

  • 20 of the Most Favored Social Media Blog Posts of 2010

    Posted Dec 20th, 2010 By in Blogging, Business, Social Media With | 1 Comment

    Here are 20 most read and widely-shared social media blog posts of 2010 on MirnaBard.com. It’s a good time to revisit many of these posts, as they are great reminders when planning for 2011.  Please let me know what your favorite one was in the comments below.

    Thank you for all my supportive readers.  I appreciate you more than you know!

    1. Ask Mirna: What criteria do you suggest people use to select a social media expert?
    2. 7 Signs Your Social Media Consultant is Really an Expert
    3. 15 Categories of Social Media
    4. 21 Twitter Conversation Tips
    5. 99 Favorite Social Media Quotes and Tips
    6. Top 50 Social Media Mistakes Made by Small Businesses
    7. 6 Essential Mindset Shifts for Social Media Success
    8. The 21 Essential C’s of Social Media
    9. How to Write Re-tweetable Tweets in 5 Minutes or Less
    10. 290 Email Spam Trigger Words to Avoid
    11. 4 Steps to Strengthen Your Brand with Social Media
    12. Is Social Media a ‘Get Rich’ Scheme or Competition?
    13. 3 Undeniable Ways to Turn Competitors into Enemies on Social Media Sites
    14. 25 Monitoring Tools That Will Not Cost You a Penny
    15. 11 Key E’s of Social Media
    16. 11 More Key E’s of Social Media
    17. 5 Definite Reasons Why Videos are an Effective Marketing Tool
    18. 7 WordPress Plug-ins to Help You Control Content Scraping
    19. 9 Ways to Reduce Scraping and Catch Blog Post Theft
    20. 7 Simple Social Networking Tips for Business

    Which one of the 20 was your favorite of 2010?

  • The State of Social Media for Business 2010

    Posted Nov 22nd, 2010 By in Business, Social Media With | 1 Comment

    SmartBrief, Inc. has released an extremely valuable tool to add to your social media collection — The State of Social Media for Business 2010. This report is the most comprehensive study I have seen on social media.  It is filled with goals, opportunities, threats, and tactics of social media. Approximately 6,500 executives shared everything about how their companies are adopting, integrating and utilizing social media in this benchmarking study.

    This excellent survey was designed to provide a benchmark of current trends and ways of tracking the following:

    • Who is using social media for business
    • What social-media tools and channels are being used
    • What goals are being pursued
    • What tactics are being deployed
    • What obstacles are standing in the way of adoption
    • How companies assess their own social-media strategies

    Some key insights from the report include:

    • 66.5% of businesses have adopted social media in the past 18 months.
    • Less than 15% of businesses are measuring the ROI of their social-media efforts.
    • Only 14.2% of businesses find their social-media strategies to be “very effective” — and only 7.3% consider them “very revenue generating.”

    The data also shows that despite some early innovators, most companies are in the burgeoning stages of social media adoption. The report shows areas that are underleveraged and still have enormous potential for expansion.  The following trends highlight how most companies are just scratching the surface of social media potential for business:

    1. Many companies are new to social media and have used the channel for a year or less.

    2. Companies rely heavily on five major social-media platforms.

    3. Awareness of other social-media platforms is low.

    4. It takes time for social media to become effective for companies.

    5. Most companies use social media to broadcast information to customers and prospective customers.

    6. Most companies have not yet cracked the code on how to create an engaging, creative or effective social-media strategy.

    7. Most companies do not have an expectation of social-media ROI, and social-media measurement is not yet the norm.

    8. There is a big opportunity for companies to distinguish themselves in this arena.

    You can download the key takeaways in a FREE topline or purchase the 145-page State of Social Media for Business report.  I highly recommend the latter.

  • 15 Paid Monitoring Tools That May Be Worth Every Penny

    Posted Sep 24th, 2010 By in Business, Internet Marketing, Social Media With | 11 Comments

    You’ve heard social media gurus say that you must listen online before getting involved with social media, but you don’t understand what that means.  So, what does it mean to “Listen” in social media? To listen also means to monitor, to lurk, or to observe what is going on online because it is essential to do your homework before you leap.

    A couple months ago, I listed 25 monitoring tools that will not cost you a penny; however, there are tons more that may be worth including into your budget.  Below are 15 monitoring tools that have a price, but will help you ensure that nothing online will escape your radar.  They are listed in no particular order.

    Radian6: One of the most comprehensive tools out there, Radian6 allows you to listen in on conversations that involve you and gives you the opportunity to put the information into quantitative formats, which allow you to create an action plan to improve your strategy.

    Visible: This platform comes in at the higher end of the spectrum of social media monitoring services in both price and functionality. Get not only updated trends on online conversations, TruCast will make you aware of all the influencers that people listen to when looking for new brands to try out. It also offers very strong customer relationship management (CRM) capabilities.

    Trackur: One of the more affordable social media monitoring solutions. Trackur provides conversation trending, email alerts, custom filters, a nifty AJAX dashboard and the ability to monitor brands, execs, employees and competitors. (more…)

  • 25 Monitoring Tools That Will Not Cost You a Penny

    Posted Jul 6th, 2010 By in Business, Internet Marketing, Social Media With | 5 Comments

    Your brand, industry, and competitors are being discussed online whether you use social media or not. Actively monitoring what people are saying about you, your brand, your industry, and your competitors has many benefits, including protecting your brand reputation, discovering what customers want and need, learning of new opportunities, staying on top of competition, avoiding disasters, and measuring ROI.

    Below are 25 monitoring tools that won’t cost you anything to use, and will help you gain a wealth of knowledge about your brand, influencers, prospects, customers, competitors, and much more.

    1. Backtype – Get alerts of where your competitors are promoting their website and who they are interacting with.
    2. Bit.ly – Shorten and track how many clicked on and retweeted your links.
    3. BlogPulse – Get data from blogs, news posts and other online content that include you or your competitors in the conversation.
    4. BoardTracker – Search forums and discussion boards or set up alerts that will tell you when and how often people mention a particular search term.
    5. DomainTools – Get a report on a website’s domain information.
    6. Google Alerts – Set up email alerts of target keywords or phrases that are important to you, your brand, and industry.
    7. Google Analytics – See where your website traffic is coming from, what pages are being visited, what keywords are being used to find you, etc.
    8. Google Video – Find videos on a specific topic, competitor videos, etc.
    9. Jodange – Track consumer sentiment about your brand or product across the Web.
    10. Klout – Measure who a person influences and the specific topics they are most influential on.
    11. Knowem – Check and reserve your brand, product, personal name or username on social media websites.
    12. Monitter – Find out what people are saying in real-time on Twitter.
    13. Oodle – Discover competitors’ plans for the future by monitoring the types of jobs they post online.
    14. Quarkbase – See traffic data, similar sites, social comments, description, social popularity about websites.
    15. SEO for Firefox – Find out a site’s PageRank, age, number of links at a certain domain/page, if it’s listed in certain directories etc.
    16. SEOPro Link Checker – Find out which sites link back to your website as well as your competitors’ sites.
    17. SocialMention – Check and get alerts on what people are saying about a term across different blogs and social outlets.
    18. Technorati – Find industry bloggers, influencers, and monitor who mentions you or your competitors in the blogosphere.
    19. Trendrr – Find out how your brand or product is trending in real time compared to others.
    20. Tweetburner – Shorten and track URLs on Twitter and Friendfeed.
    21. Twendz – Track conversation and user sentiment on Twitter in real-time.
    22. Twinfluence – Measure the combined influence of tweeps and their followers.
    23. Twitter Search – Using keywords and phrases, search what people have discussed on Twitter.
    24. Xinu – Find out how well your site is doing in popular search engines, social bookmarking and other site statistics
    25. Yahoo Site Explorer – Discover who is linking to you and your competitors.

    Of course, it does not stop with these. There are hundreds of tools out there! In another blog post, I will discuss the paid monitoring tools.

    What tools do you use? Which free tools did I miss?

Copyright © 2011 MirnaBard.com