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5 tips for content marketing on social media

Social media marketing is a “must” for small business today. You simply cannot afford not to engage in it. However, you need to make sure that you’re using it the right way. Rather than utilizing it to create a constant stream of “look at me” promotional posts, it can be integrated into your content marketing campaign quite easily.


The problem here is that many small business owners aren’t really sure how to use social media for marketing purposes in the first place, much less as a component in a content marketing campaign. What should you do? What types of content will work? How do you ensure you’re reaching your audience? What else do you need to know? We’ll discuss all that and more in this article.

 

Choose the Right Content

First, you need to make sure that you’re using the right content. This touches on a number of different areas – the right content for your audience, and the right content for the social media platform in question, to name only two.

What type of content should you be using? Again, this will hinge on the platform in question. If you’re marketing through Instagram, it could be a behind the scenes photo of your newest product in action, or of your team going to work on a customer’s property with the appropriate hashtags. If you were using Twitter, it could be a link to something more – a whitepaper on your website, for instance. If you’re using Facebook (and you should be), then it could be almost anything, although images get more attention and more shares. Here are some of the more popular types of content to incorporate into social media marketing:

 

·      Infographics: Infographics can be shared “as is” through most social media platforms. They’re images, which immediately grabs your followers’ attention, and they’re highly shareable, as well. Make sure to include links to your site at the bottom of the image, as well as your company name and logo.

 

·      Blog posts: Blog posts can be shared through pretty much all social networks, but Twitter and Facebook are probably the best suited for it. LinkedIn can be a good option if you’re in a B2B vertical. Make sure to use an image at the top of your post so that it shows prominently on the network.

 

·      Reports/whitepapers: Reports and whitepapers can be good content to share on social media, but it’s actually better to share the landing page where your visitors can download the content, rather than the content itself.

 

·      Ebooks: The same thing applies here as to reports and whitepapers. Share the page where your audience can download the ebook, not the ebook itself.

 

Share What Your Audience Wants

One of the most important parts of using social media correctly is to ensure that you’re sharing content that your audience wants. In most instances, they want images. Even on Twitter, images are king, and you can boost retweets by up to 150% if you include an image in your message. Images can be funny, thought provoking, informative or entertaining.

 

In all instances, make sure that the image ties back to your website – a watermarked URL on the image if nothing else. Not only will using images more frequently help boost the number of shares you see, but it will increase engagement, as well. You might be surprised at how many people comment on the pictures who never would have bothered on another type of post.

 

Don’t Market Heavily

Yes, social media marketing is a powerful tool, but it’s more like a scalpel than a sledgehammer. You can’t really hit your audience over the head with direct marketing message after direct marketing message and expect them to stick around. You need to become adept at marketing obliquely – marketing around corners, if you like. What does that mean?

 

Simply put, it means that you need to learn how to market without being overt about it. Keep the heavy-handed sales tactics for other avenues, and focus instead on being an important part of the community. Share posts that contain important information for your audience. Share information from other sources (not direct competitors). Share humorous content. The point is that you need to be “social”, and that implies doing more than just hammering out marketing-related ad after marketing-related ad.

 

Combine Content Marketing with Social Ads

Pretty much all social media platforms these days offer some form of marketing. Facebook is the most prominent (and the most useful), so we’ll focus on that. You need to combine content marketing and social ads. This doesn’t need to be a costly endeavor, though. A quick boost for $10 can put your content in front of thousands of new potential customers. Increasing that boost to $20 can have even greater ramifications.

 

Use boosting and social ads strategically, interspersed within your wider social media marketing campaign. Use these tools to amplify the reach of your content marketing efforts, and you might be surprised at just how quickly your audience grows, and how little you have to spend in the process.

 

Know Your Audience

Sure, you probably have an idea of who makes up your audience, but you need to take things a step further. Your content needs to be written for a specific buyer persona – you’re essentially writing directly to this fictional person. That can carry over to your social media efforts. Know your audience, and share posts that resonate with them. Use buyer personas to help ensure that your content reaches farther and resonates more with each member of your audience.

 

These five tips will help you get more mileage out of both your content marketing and your social media marketing efforts. However, don’t believe that they’re all you need to be doing. Online marketing is constantly evolving, and you need to stay at the leading edge in order to ensure that you’re still reaching your audience.    

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Keywords – your online visibility is built on them. Your customers’ ability to find you online without knowing your website’s actual URL rests on using appropriate keywords. Your ability to outperform your competition rests on the use of the right keywords. As you can see, they’re pretty important, but it can be quite confusing for small business owners who aren’t familiar with how to choose the right keywords, or how to implement them in their websites. What should you know about choosing the right keywords and phrases? Let’s take a closer look.

 

1. Use the Right Tool

 

Chances are good that you think you probably have a pretty good idea of what terms your customers might use to find products or services like yours online. And, there’s a good chance that you’re at least partially right. However, never assume that you know all the potential keywords, phrases and variants that your customers might use to search the Internet. This is why it’s so important that you use an accurate keyword research tool to figure out what keywords you’ll target. Google’s keyword planning tool is free to use, but there are many others out there worth your consideration.

 

2. Use Your Competitors as Inspiration

 

While you may not want to target all the same keywords as your competitors, as that would drive up your costs and the competition for each one, you should take a cue from what they are doing. You’ll find that this can provide you with considerable information about keyword phrases, long-tail variants, and even the density that you want to hit with your content.

 

3. Start with the Basics

 

Many authorities recommend starting with a “seed list” of keywords and then building on that. A seed list is nothing more than a list of highly targeted, accurate keywords that have proven value to your business. You build on, or grow, this list over time by adding to it as you learn more, encounter new terms, use advanced research tools, and discover what your competitors are doing.

 

4. Localize Whenever Possible

 

While localization will limit your reach, it can be important for a number of reasons. First, it reduces competition. Second, it makes you more visible to customers in your actual geographic area. Third, it improves your overall web visibility for those terms and reduces the time you have to wait to see a return on your investment. Use your city name, county name, and the names of nearby areas if they’re applicable in conjunction with your keywords.

 

5. Iterate and Use Similar Terms

 

Once you’ve chosen your starting keywords, spend some time determining which similar terms would be wise to use. For instance, if you operated a shoe store, you might target basics like women’s running shoes, but you might opt for something like women’s wide width running shoes, or maybe women’s Asics running shoes if you wanted to focus on a particular brand.

 

6. Choose Keywords That Work for Your Products or Services

 

Sometimes, the right keywords for your products or services are not the most frequently used by customers. Does that mean you should skip them? Not at all. This can actually be a good thing. Implement some of the more commonly used keywords, but focus mostly on the right keywords even if they’re not all that frequently used. You’ll enjoy much more targeted traffic and your overall competition will be much lower, as will your costs should you use those same keywords in PPC campaigns.

 

7. Remember That Content Quality Trumps Keywords

 

It can be tempting to think that implementing the right keywords is all that you need to do. That’s not true. In fact, Google will reward a website that doesn’t really do much in the way of keyword implementation but has outstanding quality content more than they will a site that does all the right things with keywords, but fails to implement quality content. Remember, no matter what else – content is king. Keyword density and accuracy always take a back seat to content quality and volume.

 

8. Use Misspellings, but Be Careful

 

Consumers often misspell the words they’re using to search for products or services. For instance, they might search for diabetic prodcuts, rather than diabetic products. They might search for consturction tools, rather than construction tools. You get the picture. These misspellings are important to target, but don’t overdo them. Yes, they should play a role in your optimization and content creation, but don’t focus too heavily on them. It can make your content look like it was written by a second grader and give you an unprofessional appearance.

 

9. Identify Primary and Secondary Keywords

 

When you think about keywords, chances are good that you’re considering primary keywords – those that relate directly to your products or services. However, you should also consider secondary keywords. These relate to what you have to offer, but not on the same level as primary keywords. For instance, suppose your company sold locally harvested and sourced honey. Local honey, natural honey and unpasteurized honey would be primary keywords, but you could also target secondary keywords like natural snacks, organic foods and the like.

 

10. Choose Focus Keywords and Background Keywords for Individual Pages

 

Just as you’ll have primary and secondary keywords used throughout your website, individual pages should have a focus keyword (the one used most frequently), as well as background or secondary keywords that are used less often but tie into the overall conversation and help you provide valuable content while optimizing for search engines.

 

As you can see, choosing the best keywords is more complicated than simply using the names of your products or services in your website content. It requires strategy, planning and a great deal of savvy to pull it off successfully.

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Search engine optimization has been around as long as search engines have been indexing websites. During that time, SEO has evolved considerably. Once, it was completely acceptable to stuff as many keywords into website content as possible in order to rank well.

Today, that will get your site banned.

Over time, many important areas that require optimization have come about, but the focus shifts quickly as newer techniques emerge, meaning that critical elements of your website optimization might be overlooked, leading to reduced traffic, lower search engine rankings, and overall poorer performance. What are the most frequently overlooked areas of website SEO?

 

Images

 

You should have quality images throughout your website. This might include images of your products, team portfolio pictures, graphics for the various pages of your website, pictures of your company’s physical location and more. Here’s the thing – those images are important for more than just drawing the eye of your human visitors. They are important tools for SEO. Image optimization is often overlooked, particularly by small business owners attempting to do it all on their own, or by inexperienced webmasters.

 

There are several areas that need to be optimized when it comes to your images. Obviously, the image needs a name, and that should tie in with your keywords. You also need to add a description of the image, as well as an alternate tag/title. These might never be seen by your visitors, but they tell search engine spiders a great deal and can help individual pages rank better.

 

Of course, your images should also be correctly sized and formatted for the web, and they should be of high enough quality that they show off your products to their best advantage. Low-quality images really don’t have much place in ecommerce today and should be avoided.

 

Static, Keyword-Based URLS

 

When it comes to your website structure, SEO should play a significant role. You need to avoid dynamic URLs, as they change constantly, are unwieldy and long, and don’t capitalize on your keywords. Yes, it takes more time to create static URLs, and you’ll need to put some thought into your page names, but the results speak for themselves.

 

If your site currently has dynamic URLs, we urge you to change them as quickly as possible. Yes, this will be a hassle, but it will pay for itself in no time through better optimization and higher search rankings for those pages and your site overall.

 

Unique Pages and URLs

 

Do you have all of your products listed on a single page of your website? It’s more common with small business owners than you might think. However, it’s not doing your optimization and rankings any favors. Instead, you need to have individual pages and specific URLs for each product or service that you offer.

 

You can have a single product page that acts as an anchor, where your customers can come to find what you offer, and then separate pages linked to the name and image of the product or service on the primary page. These subpages should be named appropriately using a keyword and/or your product or service name to help build better results through search engines.

 

Customize Your 404 Pages

 

You should plan on there being times when your customers cannot reach a particular page of your site. This could be due to any reason, ranging from a temporary outage with your host to a problem with the URL to any number of other things. However, if your customer hits a generic 404 page, chances are good they’re going to think that your entire website is down, and they’ll head to a competitor’s page.

 

A custom 404 page can give them important information, let them know they’ve found the right site, and allow them to access other pages. Plus, it’s another chance to use some of your most important keywords and build your SEO ranking.

 

Shoot for Longer Content

 

Content is king, and Google wants you to have as much as possible. That doesn’t necessarily mean that you need to have dozens and dozens of pages if your company requires only a few, but it does mean that you need to focus on longer content pages. While product descriptions can be 100 to 200 words, you need to focus on creating longer content for other areas of the site. For instance, you could add a blog, and create longer content there.

 

Google prefers that you have around 1,000 words or so per post, as this comes across as being the most authoritative. You can also use this as an opportunity to achieve a couple of other goals. Obviously, blogging gives you another opportunity to use your keywords, which will boost your site’s overall rank (as long as the blog is attached to the site and not standalone). However, you can also use those individual blog posts in your content marketing efforts.

 

Share them on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn. Add sharing buttons to the posts so your audience can spread the word for you, and mix up your content types (text, video, audio, photos and more).

 

Don’t Neglect Your Meta Descriptions

 

This is one of the most commonly overlooked SEO steps, even for experienced business owners and webmasters. Every single page on your site should have a meta description. This is the short bit of text that appears under the page name in the search results, and tells human readers what the page is about. It’s also a prime place to use your keywords once more. Every single page on your site should have a compelling, optimized meta description, including product and service pages, blog posts and more.

 

With these tips, you should be able to ensure that your site is better optimized, and ranks highly in organic search results. However, remember that search engine optimization never really ends – it’s an ongoing process of refinement.

 

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Search engine optimization (SEO) is the key to online visibility. No matter how high the quality of your products might be, or how outstanding your services are, that does not necessarily translate into online success. And, while SEO does have some similarities when it comes to small, medium and large businesses, there are significant differences that small business owners need to know.

 

In this article, we’ll discuss what you need to know about the most important elements of SEO for small business owners, and how you can capitalize on these to build better online visibility.

 

It’s All about the Local

 

If you’re a small business owner, chances are very good that you’re also a local business owner. That’s a good thing – Google LOVES local business owners. However, the challenge is that you need to find methods to work that location into your content. You can do this in a number of different ways.

 

One of those is to work your location into your keywords. For instance, septic tank installation in Atlanta is a keyword phrase that your customers might look for (assuming they’re in the Atlanta area), and that Google will reward you for using in your content. Localizing your content throughout your website will have a major impact on your visibility.

 

You should also take the time to make sure that your address, phone number and other contact information on your website matches the contact information on your other online profiles. This should include social networks, online yellow pages/business directories, consumer review sites like Yelp, and more.

 

Choosing the Appropriate Keywords

 

As mentioned above, you need to target the right keywords in the first place. Localization is important, but if you haven’t targeted the right base keywords, your efforts will be less than successful. This is particularly important for small business owners, who lack the deep pockets of big businesses that allow those firms to compete for highly competitive (read: expensive) keywords.

 

Your keywords should be evocative and tied directly to your products or services, and your customers’ needs. However, they also need to be as specific as possible. For example, if you ran an auto repair shop in Charlotte, North Carolina, you might be tempted to target keywords like auto repair, oil change, engine tune-up and the like.

 

You would probably get some traction out of that, but it’s very likely that you’d ultimately lose out to companies with larger marketing budgets that can afford to pay more for their keyword bids. To avoid that problem, you’ll need to change your tactics. You need to get more specific. For instance, rather than auto repair, you might target something like import auto repair in Charlotte, or maybe cheap oil changes in Charlotte, NC if you really wanted to get specific.

 

The more specific your keywords are, the less competition there will be for them. This allows you to target actual search terms your customers are using, while not paying a fortune in the process, or running up against competitors who’ve already saturated the market with the keywords that you’ve chosen.

 

Content Volume

 

Read enough SEO guides and you’ll see that the amount of content on your site is a critical consideration mentioned in pretty much all of them. This is because Google rewards sites with more (relevant) content with higher rankings in the search results pages. It all comes down to authority. Google figures that if you have more relevant content about a particular topic, then you’re definitely an authority on that topic. Thus, you get higher placement.

 

So, in order to capitalize on this, you’ll need to create more content. How much more? Well, there’s the catch. No one really knows how much Google thinks is “more”. The best rule of thumb is this – keep creating content and posting it on your site for as long as possible. It’s not really a process that will ever end.

 

You can use this content in any number of ways – as blog fodder, in the form of product reviews, product comparisons, whitepapers, reports, and the like. The more value you can deliver to your visitors in the form of relevant, accurate content, the better you’ll do in search engine placement.

 

Link-Worthy Content

 

This is a subtopic, but one that bears a little scrutiny, as it allows you to kill two birds with one stone. Creating content is important. Creating links back to your website is also important. You can do both by creating link-worthy content that others in your industry want to link to and share with their own visitors. Infographics are excellent examples of content with just this type of potential. A quick Google search will show you tons of high-quality infographics that were originally created for one particular website, and then linked to from innumerable others. You want that for your own business.

 

Reviews

 

Google loves consumer-generated content, particularly customer reviews. They’re also very popular with consumers. Really, when was the last time you bought something off Amazon and DIDN’T read the customer reviews or look at the star rating of the product before buying? You can turn that to your advantage. Use your niche focus and localization to help you find consumers who will give you reviews (preferably positive) on social sites. These can include Facebook, as well as Yelp. Those reviews will provide additional juice for your website’s rankings – link to them from your site, but also promote them on your social channels to really up the amount of oomph you get from them.

 

These are just some of the crucial considerations small business owners need to take when it comes to SEO. Remember that localization matters a great deal, and you need to focus on niche keywords to avoid competition with bigger companies with deeper pockets. Also remember that SEO never really ends, and content creation is an ongoing process that will yield rich results over time.

 

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On Page SEO / Off Page SEO

 

When it comes to search engine optimization (SEO), there’s a great deal to master.

It forms the basis of online visibility and is the key to generating organic traffic to your website from search engine searches. However, there’s more than one type.

  • On page SEO refers to the efforts you put in on your website itself – the keywords you implement within the content, the structure of your pages, the tags on your images, and more.
  • Off page SEO refers to your efforts off of your website.

Which is more important, and how do you know what you should be doing in that area?

Let’s take a closer look at each of these and where you should be focusing.

On Page SEO Trumps Off Page SEO… At Least At First

When it comes to search engine optimization, on page trumps off page, at least in the beginning. You need to take care of your website before you can start building links back to it.

What does this mean?

Simply put, you need to ensure that your website is built, up and running, and fully optimized (all on page SEO elements) before you start worrying about anything related to off page optimization. What do you need to consider here?

 

Keywords for Content

One of the first and most important things to consider are the keywords you’ll use in your content. Keywords are nothing more than words or phrases that consumers would use to find products or services like yours through Google, Yahoo or Bing.

You’ll need to research your audience and determine which keywords and phrases matter most to them (and you). Then, you’ll need to figure out which are the most competitive, so that you can avoid targeting them.

 A note on keyword competition:

If you’re not familiar with the concept, keyword competition is a term that applies to the rate at which other businesses target the same keywords. For instance, “running shoes” would be highly competitive, but “women’s running shoes in Sheboygan” would be much less competitive.

Once you’ve settled on your keywords, they need to be added to your content. And by that, we mean all of your content. Your entire site’s content should be written with keywords in mind, but you shouldn’t overdo it.

Google has become very picky about keyword density and over-optimizing. Ideally, you’ll utilize your keywords correctly and hit a natural density (no more than 1%).

Areas of Optimization

You’ll also need to ensure that you’re optimizing your entire website. This goes much further than just the page content. You need to optimize everything from page names to image tags. It’s crucial that you take the time to dig through your site architecture and view it all with a critical eye.

  • Has each area been optimized?
  • Is any area over optimized?
  • Have you targeted not just your basic keywords and phrases, but long-tail variants, as well?
  • Is your menu easy to navigate, with page names that capitalize on keywords?
  • What about the URLs for each page – do they make sense and use appropriate keywords?
  • What about your individual product pages or service pages?

These are just a few of the areas that you’ll need to optimize before worrying about off page SEO.

Building Content

In Google’s eyes, content is the most important thing about your website.

The more content you have (appropriately optimized with keywords, of course), the better you’ll rank in organic searches for those keywords. So, you need to take the time to build out that content before you start worrying too much about off page SEO.

Focus on blog posts, product tutorials, adding whitepapers and reports, subpages for your products or services, and more.

Build content and you’ll find that your rank rises naturally over time.

Off Page SEO

Now we come to off page SEO.

  • What is it?
  • Why does it matter?
  • When should you start worrying about it?

Really, off page SEO is nothing more than link building with other websites. You need links to your site from other websites that Google already ranks highly for related areas.

Another way to think about off page SEO is that it is all about your online reputation. It’s based on content located off of your website that relates to your website, and helps Google determine your website’s authority and ranking.

Here’s an example.

You’ve spent a great deal of time building content on your website, but you have also focused on content marketing off of your website, through Facebook, guest blogging and the like. Google likes your site and sees it as being pretty authoritative, because of the significant amount of content linking back to it.

In contrast, your competitor has spent all of his time building content on his website, and hasn’t focused on off page SEO at all. Google doesn’t rank his site as highly, because there is little information off of his website that Google trusts.

Ideally, you’ll begin off page optimization efforts shortly after building your website, once your basic structure is optimized and in place. Off page SEO is never finished, and it is a slow game – you’ll have to continue working on it forever, basically.

You need to focus on inbound links to your website, building a presence on social media, promoting content through social channels, guest blogging and other elements in order to cement this background information.

In the end, on page SEO is the primary concern for all business owners, but off page SEO is just as important. It simply comes a little bit later. However, while on page optimization efforts might largely end, other than blog posting on a regular schedule, off page optimization will never stop.

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Content marketing is one of the most important keys to building a successful online presence today. Without the right content in the right places at the right time, your customers will miss you. What’s more, Google will also give you a miss. However, while it’s vital that you create high quality content, you also need to follow some specific SEO best practices with that content to ensure not just visibility, but adherence to modern optimization requirements. Here’s what you need to know.

 

Start with Good Content

 

Content quality trumps everything else, so start with the good stuff. Build your content with human readers in mind – write for your audience, not for Google’s search spiders. Remember that part of SEO is the number of shares your content gets, the amount of time your visitors spend reading your content, and how much they interact with it. Those metrics don’t depend on keyword optimization in any way whatsoever. So, focus on building high quality content first, and worry about keywords and keyword density later on.

 

Focus on Doing It Right

 

While the following considerations don’t really affect SEO so much, they will affect Google’s determination of your quality. You need to make sure that all of your content is professionally created and spell-checked, that it reads well, and that there are no blatant errors in the text. If you’re creating video content, the same thing applies, but you get a little bit of leeway as Google can’t yet parse your audio.

 

Content Length Matters

 

If there’s one thing that you need to understand, it’s that content length matters greatly in search engine optimization. This doesn’t pertain to website pages as much as it does to things like blog posts and other elements of content marketing. Google wants your content to be at least 1,000 words long, and you’ll need to maintain good quality throughout. If you choose to make your content shorter than this, you’ll most likely want to double the publishing pace so that you’re still putting out roughly 1,000 words of content at a time, just in two posts. Also, understand that it will take longer to build up a backlog of content for Google to index even if you publish this way.

 

Ensure SEO Is Part of Your Strategy

 

While you should focus on creating quality content first, you can’t forget about SEO until the very end. It needs to be part of your strategy from the beginning. You’ll need to take the same steps here as you did when creating content for your primary website pages. Namely, you’ll need to research keywords, compare them to what your competition is using, determine competition for those keywords, and more. You need to conduct research on your audience’s intent, on what problem or challenge they’re trying to overcome, and then build both content and keyword usage around those answers.

 

The Right Keywords Matter

 

As mentioned, you need to use the right keywords. Each piece of content (pages if you’re doing single pages, but documents if you’re creating longer form content like reports) should focus on a single primary keyword. This is the driving force behind the content, and could be considered the main theme or subject. You also need two to three secondary keywords per page. These relate to the primary keyword, but are different words. For instance, if your primary keyword was gardening, your secondary keywords could be things like organic gardening, pesticide-free gardening, or raised bed gardening.

 

Write for Personas

 

You’ve probably heard about buyer personas before, but they bear a little more discussion to help ensure that you really understand what they are and why they matter so much. As a business owner, it’s vital that you know your audience, and how it breaks down into subgroups. Each of those subgroups should receive a persona – a personalization that embodies the characteristics most common to the subgroup.

 

For instance, you might have Edna, an aging Baby Boomer who’s concerned about making her money stretch, but who believes in paying for quality products. You might have Adam, a Millennial focused on using technology to make his life simpler and easier, and Jen, a member of Generation X who is interested in avoiding unnecessary exposure to chemicals in her food, and living a more natural life.

 

Each of those people could be a customer of your company, but would have drastically different reasons for seeking out your products or services. You need to break your audience down into segments, identify the motivating factors for each, name them, and then write content for those personas specifically.

 

Vital Keyword Considerations

 

Content marketing can be instrumental in building your success, or it can rob you of your juice and result in reduced ranking online. If you take the wrong tack with keyword implementation, Google may think you’re trying to game the system.

 

Keep your keyword usage natural. Ideally, you should hit 1% density (one use of the keyword per 100 words of text), or even less if necessary. Google has gotten a lot better at indexing content based on subject, rather than keyword density, so resist the urge to keyword stuff. Nothing good can come from that.

 

You should also make sure that your keyword usage is organized correctly. As mentioned previously, use one primary keyword and a few secondary keywords per page, and don’t try to mix them up too much or use too many of the same keywords in multiple pieces of content.

 

If you follow these best practices, you’ll find that you are able to create high-quality content that delivers value to your human readers, while also giving Google something to index, and nothing to red flag your business for.

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Content remains king. Despite the rise of social, the explosion of marketing tools, and the many ways to measure your success, content is still the most important consideration in your marketing efforts. You can use PPC ads, harness the power of social media ads, and promote your company through tweets all you want, but if you don’t have content that will appeal to your audience, you’re going to fall flat on your face.

 

This is where many business owners struggle, though. What content should you use? What’s the best option for your needs? What do your customers expect you to have available for them, and what sort of content gets the most traction? Let’s discuss some of the most critical types of content for your marketing needs, and why each is so important.

 

Educational Content

 

One of the most important types of content to have is that which educates your audience. This might be content that educates them about your product or service, but you’ll find more traction if you can educate them about the problem they’re experiencing, the causes of that problem, and the various solutions to it, with your product or service listed as just one of the possible options.

 

This comes across as much more genuine, and far less marketing-oriented. You position your company as one that cares about your customers’ challenges, rather than just about building your bottom line. Educational content can take any number of forms, as well, from blog posts to entire ebooks and reports. However, it’s better suited to longer form options, rather than short-form marketing like social media posts.

 

Entertaining Content

 

Your audience wants to be entertained. You’ll find that entertaining content can also be quite memorable. There are any number of prime examples out there of businesses creating compelling marketing content that entertains. Volkswagen is one of these, but you’ll also find Guinness, Nike and many other companies capable of delivering content that makes audiences chuckle, while reinforcing their brand’s qualities and ethos.

 

Entertaining content can be long or short, and it can be text or video if you prefer. As a note, video-based content is an ideal medium for entertainment, as it’s one of the most sought-after forms of content on the Internet. Remember that YouTube is the second largest search engine in the world, and it serves up nothing but video content.

 

Inspirational Content

 

Content that inspires your audience is an excellent option to include in your marketing campaign. It should not be the only type of content you use, but it does provide a vital alternative to other options, and allows you to change the way your audience sees your company. What sort of content might be inspirational? Well, take your pick, really. One option is to adopt a social cause – access to clean water, environmental consciousness, physical health and well-being, access to mental health care services – these are just the tip of the proverbial iceberg.

 

Combine that support with inspirational messages and actions. Sponsor a running team in a local 5K or 10K race where the proceeds go toward your supported cause, or donate a portion of your proceeds for a specific period to a charity or worthy cause. These are all inspirational actions, but they also tie into your company’s social responsibility and show that you’re more than just a faceless business interested in profit. You’re an integral member of the wider community.

 

Conversion-Oriented Content

 

Not all of your content should be focused on building your brand. Some of it needs to be focused on converting potential customers into actual buyers. You’ll need less of this type of content, but it’s still vital to create it and know where and how to use it. Conversion-oriented content can be just about anything that encourages a potential customer to take that last step and convert. Even a product page of your company’s website is technically conversion-oriented content.

 

Other examples include demonstrations, blog posts that highlight how your product or service works, case studies involving your services of products, ratings for your wares and more. You can use this content in many ways, as well. Obviously, it can and should play a significant role on your website, but you should also consider using it in blog posts, in email marketing, in giveaway content (reports and case studies), and the like.

 

Content Formats – Using Content Types to Your Advantage

 

While we’ve discussed content formats to an extent, we need to dig into them a bit more. What content formats are the most beneficial for businesses? While there’s no one size fits all solution out there, you’ll find that the following content formats are generally better received than others:

 

·      Infographics: Infographics can be used in just about any way, from email marketing to social media and have a significant potential to go viral.

·      Video: Like infographics, video content can be used in an incredibly wide range of platforms, and can be highly effective at building your success.

·      Lists: Lists have always been popular, and they remain so, but you’ll need to avoid being seen as click-bait-y to use them effectively.

·      Case Studies: Case studies are particularly effective in the world of B2B marketing, but they can also be used to great effect in B2C marketing, as well.

·      Blog Posts: Yes, blogging is still alive and well, and if your company doesn’t have an active blog, you’re failing to reach your audience in a big way.

 

These are just a few of the various content formats that you need to harness and put to work on your behalf. Content marketing is vital, no matter your industry, size or niche, and it’s equally crucial that you use the right type and format to reach your audience and guide them through the sales funnel.

 

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There are many different tactics that can be used to ensure a higher search engine ranking, and some work better than others. What a local business usually is focused on is generating more leads, being found in the local market, and increasing local traffic. By utilizing a few different tactics, you can do all those things and do them well. We’ll go over a few of your best options bellows.

Mobile SEO

Pretty much everyone knows at this point that having a responsive mobile site is crucial. Google announced quite some time ago that mobile searches are much more common than desktop searches. Because of that, having a mobile site that people want to use is something you should put a high priority on.

You want to make sure your site is easy to use. You’ll have people use it who are very tech savvy, but many people won’t be. You want both groups, and everyone in between, to be able to pop on your site and find the information they want. One way to excel at this is to offer tabs on your mobile site that link to the most used webpages. It can also be smart to check out competitors to see what they list to get an idea of any changes you might want to make.

Name, Address, Phone Number

This is something that is easy to do and can actually have a big impact for the time put into it. Make sure that you have your NAP (name, address, and phone number) on your homepage. If you have only one location, you can even put it on every single page on your site. This should be present on your mobile website, as well. This ensures people (and search engines) know who you are, where you are, and have a means to contact you.

Choosing Directories

Being listed in directories is crucial for the local business. It can help your search engine ranking, but more importantly, it can also offer a place where customers can find you. For those who prefer to use a service to get going with this, consider Moz Local. It’s important to get your site listed with Google Maps, but it can be a good idea to look at Bing, Yahoo, and other places as well. Some of these directories have a fee associated with them, but others do not.

Free listings that you can start with include Yelp.com, Superpages.com, YellowBot.com, YellowPages.com, YP.com, and Eventbrite.com. However, you should also do some research on local directories, as well, and post your information on as many of them as possible.

Website Title Tags

When it comes to search engines, title tags are paramount to success. Google isn’t ranking websites as a whole, it’s ranking pages. That holds true for other search engines, as well. For a local business, ensure you use your city or location so people know you’re there. You should also describe what you offer and use top keywords to do so.

The most important aspect of this will be your meta description, which tells customers and searchers what you do or provides. This is what goes under the link on a search engine and explains a bit about you. The blue section is the title, the black is the meta. Use this as a way to talk up your business and include keywords to get the right customers on your site.

Google My Business

Setting up your information here can be a critical aspect of finding success online. You can provide information about your business, including what type of business it is, where it’s located, what you offer, and so forth. You can also include your logo and some photos, which can make people more interested in learning about you.

Below is a small set of steps that can walk you through setting up your business with this website.

1.    Visit Google My Business and see if you are listed on the site already.

2.    If you are not listed, list yourself. Be sure to fill in information about your business, along with its location.

3.    Verify your address with Google. They will send out a pin to your location which you will input into the site to prove that you own it.

4.    Complete your business profile by offering photos and information that customers will be interested in.

5.    Connect with other businesses to get your business out there even more.

You should also occasionally check in to update your description and information. Double check that your name, address, and phone number are correct. Not doing so can actually hurt you, as search engines will be unsure about what information is actually correct.

Reviews

Reviews matter quite a bit when it comes to page ranking on search engines, something not everyone is aware of. Having a decent number of positive reviews on places like Google My Business, Facebook, and Yelp can actually move your ranking higher above other local businesses in the same sector. As such, it’s important to spend time acquiring reviews from happy customers.

You can do this in many ways, but one option is to send out correspondence to customers and ask them to review. You can also offer a discount or a promotion to make people more likely to do so. If you are polite and genuine in your requests, people are often more than happy to leave a review for you. They may also appreciate the personal contact and become further entrenched as a customer or fan of your brand.

By deciding to do some of the things on this list, you can certainly have an impact on traffic and leads to your site. Doing a few will help to some extent, but if you jump in and do them all, you can expect to see decent results. This is especially true if you keep to the work and continually strive to provide customers with what they want.

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It seems like a million years ago when a business would pay a sum once a year to be listed in the Yellow Pages. In modern times, there are tons of online directories out there, just waiting for you to list your company. With four out of five consumers now using a search engine to find products and services, it’s important that your company is out there and ready to be found.

Sifting through the many directory choices can be a little overwhelming, something we understand. That’s why we’re providing you with a list of some of the most important places to be seen in order to get more exposure as a local business. We’ll also shorten the process by providing you URLs to submit your information.

Google My Business

Chances are, if you’re reading this, you already know about this site and have a listing on it. That’s great, because it is massive and takes in over seven billion searches on an average day. In addition, it has a map that is mobile-friendly, something customers will appreciate.

If, for some reason, you aren’t listed on Google My Business, you should do that first.

MerchantCircle

MerchantCircle is a free network that targets small businesses who are looking to connect with other small businesses and customers in the local area. Those who use the site can post business blogs, boost listings, and take advantage of a host of marketing tools for building their business. By being active on the site, a business will get more local exposure. You can sign up here.

Yahoo Local Listing

This site is ranked just under Google and Bing and brings in millions of searches on a daily basis. The site does have a basic listing that is free, but there are paid options as well. For under $10 a month, you can add a description and photos, while paying just under $30 lets you post listings on dozens of other directories. You can sign up and post a listing here.

Yelp

Yelp is an excellent site for finding consumer reviews. Businesses can send public and private messages to customers and also access the Yelp reporting tool to review business trends. The most used categories on Yelp are restaurants, shopping, and home services. Sign up here.

Bing Places for Business

Bing gets the most visits of any other directory, excluding Google. Some of the perks include the allowance to add multiple locations, videos, and photos with a free registration. In addition, Bing is the default search engine for many Windows devices, so it gets a lot of use. You can enroll here.

Yellow Pages

This site acts as the online version of the classic Yellow Pages that was delivered to your home. They also bring in millions of searches a day. The service allows you lead generation, advertising, and ad performance data. Sign up at this URL.

White Pages

While White Pages isn’t quite as large as Yellow Pages, it’s still an excellent destination to list your local business with. It has over 30 million companies on its directory. It also has opportunities for sponsored ads and a text message service for paying customers. Find out more here.

Yellowbook

This directory has business listings in an easily searchable format. The listings include information about your business, a link to your website, a map, product descriptions, and both display and video ads. In addition to being posted on the directory, it will be listed with partner sites, as well. You can enroll here.

Manta

Manta bills itself as having one of the largest online repositories of resources for small businesses. Registration can be done in a snap and you will be able to highlight your products, while also using various optimization package options. You can expect to find news, advice, promotion options, and tools specific to small businesses. Enroll here.

YellowBot

This service is similar to Yellow Pages and allows you to provide location information and basic contact information for your business. They offer customer reviews and there are options for premium listings, easy sign-in with Windows Live, Facebook, Google, Twitter, and Yahoo, as well as searchable tags. You can sign up here.

Citysearch

This directory specializes in listings for restaurants, hotels, bars, spas, and other businesses. They have a partner network that includes MerchantCircle, Expedia, and Urbanspoon. Listings can be accessed through the Citysearch app and preferred businesses may be named on local “best of” lists in over a dozen categories. You can sign up here.

TripAdvisor

This directory has a subscription rate for businesses related to entertainment or hospitality industries. The site has about 390 million unique visitors in a month and has more than 400 million reviews related to nearly seven million restaurants, accommodations, and attractions. Sign up is available here.

Hotfrog

This online directory offers the ability to help get your website listed in Google searches. You can also set up coupons for customers. The site attracts 1.5 million users a month across 38 different countries. Find the signup here.

Angie’s List

This site is extremely well known and offers consumer reviews in over 700 countries. Angie’s List has over three million members who rate, hire, review, and research service providers in their local area. This year the company was listed on Deloitte’s Technology Fast 500. You can create a file for your company here.

Local.com

This directory is free and offers searchers details on events, deals, and information related to their city. There are more than 16 million business listings that span every zip code in the United States. Some paid options exist, including coupons. Sign up here.

Foursquare

This site is a business directory but also a social networking site where users can check in their locations via a map function. It has over 60 million users and 50 million monthly active users. Sign up for it here.

There you have it, a total of 16 different directories that can help you get your business out in front of people in your own community. Whether you choose to sign up for only a few, or all the services on the list, it should help you with gaining a following among those nearby.

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If you’ve been working to market your business on the Internet, you’ve likely already been exposed to the terms local SEO and organic SEO. But, you may be curious what the difference is between these two types of SEO.

We’re going to walk through the differences between the two, but also talk a little about how local and organic SEO are similar, as well.

Organic Search

An organic search is a search where the user is looking for information rather than a particular location that provides a service or product. For instance, someone might make a search for ‘chana masala recipe’, hoping to find instructions for how to make the dish in their own kitchen. The search engine will likely give the most popular recipes for chana masala.

The search engine uses hundreds of factors to index and rank websites, including keywords, inbound links, grammar, and outbound links, to determine the best webpages that offer what you are searching for.

Local Search

A local search is very similar to an organic one, except that a local search has a geographical component to it. When someone looks up both a location and industry, the search engine understands that the person wants to find a local business that is in the industry specified.

So, rather than looking for a chana masala recipe, maybe someone wants to order in Indian food, instead. Their search might look something like this, ‘Chicago Indian delivery.’ Google, or another search engine, will see that location and pull up any results there that fit the query.

Below those results on Google, you’ll see the organic results from above. These will not have local intent involved.

Who Needs to Rank in Local & Organic?

If you have a local business with a specific address that you want people to check out, you want to rank high in local search. Someone who is searching for you is likely looking for a business they can visit soon, and you want to be the business they find first.

However, if you aren’t worried about location and simply want your business to rank for certain keywords, organic search is what you are looking for. Essentially, if you want people to go somewhere specifically in the world, work on local search. If you want people to go somewhere online, organic search is going to be what helps you out.

Local Businesses & Organic Searches

You may wonder if there is any point in raking well organically if you are a local business. The answer here is that it depends. A business with multiple locations may want to hit some targets on the organic search front. This also applies if you have a blog that you want to bring more visitors to.

If you have a single location and simply want foot traffic, focusing on local SEO may be all you need.

Local Search Marketing

For those looking to market to the locals, it’s very important to show up on local searches. At least 50% of searchers who are doing a local search are going to visit businesses within 24 hours. If you aren’t listed where you need to be, you likely won’t even be on the searcher’s radar.

In order to optimize for local searches, location is key. You need to ensure that search engines are aware of where you are located. This allows them to offer you as a potential destination when users look for businesses like yours in the local area.

This is why it’s so important for your business name, address, and phone number (NAP) is consistent across your website, along with other local listing directories. That’s only the tip of the iceberg for local SEO, but it’s a very important aspect to keep in mind.

Organic SEO

Since organic SEO doesn’t rely on location, it’s less important to worry about optimizing in that way. Instead, you want to make sure that your website is ranking well for certain search terms. This might be a short term like ‘chana masala recipe’ or a question, such as someone would speak into their voice search ‘what is the best chana masala recipe.’

The best way to utilize keywords is to place them strategically throughout your content. You should use your main keyword in headings, and other keywords can be used throughout your paragraphs. But whatever you do, don’t stuff keywords. Too many of them can have a negative effect on your search engine ranking.

How Local and Organic SEO Affect Each Other

There are many SEO practices that can actually help both organic and local search rankings. A good example of this is when claiming your business page on local listing directories, such as Google My Business, Yelp, TripAdvisor, and Bing. Each time you fill one of these out, you’re adding another place that links back to your website.

By listing on these directories, search engines can take your NAP and determine where you are located. As mentioned above, they also link to your website. This helps with link building which can help your organic SEO rank. This is because search engines look at the number of backlinks you have when ranking your website.

Having on-site local SEO, like when you update a page with your location or writing a blog post about a local event, is another way you can help both local and organic rankings. Search engines appreciate when websites offer new content, so even if the content is local, it helps boost organic SEO, at the same time.

When it comes down to it, working on local or organic SEO can help your website ranking. However, it can also have a negative effect if it’s done in the wrong way. Consider your strategies thoroughly to ensure that doesn’t happen to you.

Having search engines know your site can help bring in potential customers who are interested in what you offer. But remember that searchers are the most important people to take care of. Ensure your website has everything they need so they can find your services, hours, and location easily.

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You likely already have a website for your business, but have you considered ways you can optimize it to bring in more traffic? Truthfully, the more tweaking you do, the better you will do with attracting new customers and traffic. You don’t want to go overboard, but at the same time, you want to make sure your website is the best it can be.

However, there are a number of simple ways that you can change your site so it offers a better experience for users. We’ll go over the most useful ways to optimize your site, so you have a great starting point to build off of. Many are simple tweaks that you can implement when you have a few extra moments, although some are more time consuming.

Quality Backlinks

Something that can improve your ranking is having links from high-quality websites. The sites you want links from are going to be authoritative domains that people trust. Being linked to from them adds positive reputation to your own site. If you can acquire backlinks from large companies, this is an added positive.

Local Links

If you want to focus on local businesses, that can help as well, but remember to cast your net to the most quality of them available. Having links from local newspapers and media sites is great for your business. Ensuring your website is posted on local directories is another excellent idea.

Social Media

Posting on social media can lead to people visiting your website. If you post quality content, you’re going to gain users. Those users will then share your content. Those who may not know about your company may end up clicking, giving you a chance to make new fans.

Local Reviewers

Reviews are very important for a local business looking to gain page views and traffic. A large number of local directories will feature ratings from some local businesses. The more positive reviews you have, the better. For one, you could be featured on a directory. In addition, the more ratings you have, the more likely someone new will find you and check out your business.

One of the ways that you can entice people to leave an honest review is by offering a discount or promotion. This offers a situation where both you and your users benefit.

Location Information

Local SEO benefits from using location information, especially when regarding keywords. Many local companies choose to include their city and state in their title or description. If you have your location listed on major pages, you may be featured on a web search looking for businesses in the area. People in the area are more likely to check out a website that is located nearby.

Avoid Stuffing

Keywords can be helpful, but the overuse of them can actually get more negative attention than positive. While there are arguments about the keyword density you should use, many people suggest anywhere from 0.1% to 2% of your main website copy. You should also not use the same keyword over and over. It can actually turn people off of reading your copy as it comes off as nothing other than advertisement.

Content Is King

Of course, some webpages are going to benefit from being concise. However, in most case, pages with a reasonable amount of text rank higher on the search engines. So, take your time to craft stories and content that people will appreciate. It can help gain the attention of your audience and at the same time give you a better rank on Google and Bing.

Image File Names

You may or may not know this already, but search engines can read image file names. This can be an effective use of SEO, simply by properly naming an image and using keywords that you want to rank for. It takes very little time to do so and can give you an edge over the competition.

Alt Tags

If you aren’t familiar with alt tags, these are the tags used to describe an image. These tags are read by bots who search your site for ranking purposes. While they cannot see an image, they can understand what it is about if you implement alt tags. You will typically want to use a tag that contains a keyword that you are looking to rank for.

Headers as Keywords

While you may know that titles are great for keyword inclusion, so are headers. These are used to break up long pages of content and can offer the perfect option for inserting some lesser-used keywords that you want to rank for. If you have a handful of headings, use a different keyword in each one to make the most of their usage.

Title Keywords

The titles of your pages and posts are a good place to add in your main keyword. Search engines take titles seriously and they will value whatever is there. Add in a main keyword, or post your location, in order to have that accessible to search engine bots. It’s just one more way you can implement keywords without it being overboard for users, but still offering extra access for search engines.

URL

The URL of your site may be the most important thing about it. Every time someone types in your domain name, they’re going to think about your business and brand. It’s an excellent idea to keep your domain name short, so it’s simple to type in. Subpages should also not be overly lengthy. Keeping the word count to 10 or 15 words per URL is the best plan.

Using these 12 tips and tricks, you will be well on your way to having a website that is optimized for local SEO. You can implement these all at once or take it one at a time. Most of these tricks will gain you positive ranking and additional users, but it can take some time to do so. Be patient and enjoy the ride!

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If you are looking to attract locals, SEO can provide an opportunity to find a niche in your own community.

It doesn’t matter what services or products you sell, you don’t have to be the biggest provider or offer something others don’t. (Although that can, of course, be helpful.) You can use your location as a niche. Being proud of where you’re located and making it a part of your marketing can draw in customers.

Why? Because most people make their purchasing decisions, local or otherwise, based on Google. You need to be there so people can find you and discover what you have to offer.

There are a few different actions you can take to ensure your SEO is doing what it needs to be doing. We’ll go over the most useful of them and how to implement them to get what you want – traffic and customers.

Add Visual Content to Listings

Visual content is important for any business. It provides an improved experience for your users and draws people in. Videos and images both result in people spending longer on a site, and the longer they hit up your site or listing, the more they learn about you.

So, fill up your site with relevant images, audio clips, and videos that paint your business in a good light. It will have a great impact on how long someone stays on your site and may bring in new customers.

Use the Right Social Media

Social media is great for a business, it allows you to build a community for free. However, you need to know what social media sites your local community is drawn to. If your customers and other locals love to tweet but don’t touch Pinterest, put your time and energy into Twitter.

Once you decide where to focus, be sure to optimize your page so potential customers check it out and stick around. Fill out your profile, be active, and offer an entertaining experience for the best results.

Local Keywords

Using a keyword planner can help you determine what are the best keywords to use on your website. Typically, people searching for local businesses will search for the city first, following it up with keywords about the business. For instance, you may want to use the keyword ‘Chicago pizza delivery’ instead of ‘pizza delivery Chicago IL.’

Another good trick is to hit up Google and type in your keyword ideas. You can then scroll down to the bottom and find related searches. Some of those might be great keywords too, or at least push you in the right direction.

Local Directories

Local listing pages are a wonderful way to create an identity and improve your ranking on search engines. Often, all it takes is claiming a page and then putting in a few pieces of information about your business. You can also search for directories in your industry for more ideas.

Some of the most popular directories include: Google My Business, Yelp, YP.com, Bing Places, Foursquare for Business, and Funnls Local.

Start a Community Blog

Another excellent way to capitalize on your location is with a community blog. This isn’t the sort of blog that revolves around your business. Instead, this type of blog is used to talk about events and happenings in your location. Of course, you can choose to post about things in your industry, but simply posting about things close to home gives you another tie to your community.

Best of all, some of these articles can become massive on social media, which leads to more people visiting your website. It’s a situation that is a win for everyone involved.

Test Your Website for Various Devices

You want to be sure that your website works well on all sorts of devices and at various resolutions. Someone who visits your site and finds that it doesn’t work correctly will likely get frustrated and leave, which is the exact opposite of what you want.

There are various websites out there that allow you to see how your website will look on specific devices. You should also run tests of the website on various browsers, including Chrome, Firefox, Edge, Safari, and Opera.

Positive Reviews

Positive ratings and reviews actually have an impact on where your website ranks on search engines. This is especially true for sites that allow users the ability to sort various businesses by their ratings. However, only legitimate reviews will help your case. Posting fake reviews is bad form, and when you get caught, can seriously plummet the reputation of your brand.

Because of the way ranking works, make sure that all your contact information on pages with reviews is the same. It should have the name spelled and formatted the same, as well as the phone number and address. That means that if you abbreviate ‘Avenue’ on one site but not another, it can actually hurt your SEO.

Keywords in Moderation

While keywords are great in small doses, they can actually be annoying if they are in every line of copy on your site. So be careful, use the best keywords that you can but use them sparingly. You do not want to stuff keywords into everything as it can actually hurt you in the long run. There is a lot of conflict about the right density of keywords to use, but anything more than 3% or so is probably going to be lost.

Publications

Every location has publications and every local publication is looking for stories that resonate with those in the area. Speaking to people employed at these publications could lead to a story, which means more people gaining knowledge of your brand. If you’re holding an event or releasing something new, consider hitting up a magazine or newspaper and having a story run about it.

Be aware that doing search and social media optimization does work, but it can take time to see the results of it. However, if you stick with it and try some of these suggestions, you’ll find it helps in the long run.

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Anyone who has experience with SEO strategy knows that it is constantly changing. This is especially true for those working with local SEO. Optimizing your on-site and off-site SEO is crucial, as local competition is quickly heating up. You want to use the best strategies possible to get customers and clients on your website. Take this time to make sure you’re on the top of rankings, because if you aren’t, someone else will snatch that spot.

Here are some excellent tactics that you can use to help your business rank higher in the local market.

Local Structured Data Markup

Structured data markup – which can also be called “scheme markup” – is something added to the code of your website to provide search engines useful information about your business. Some things you can ensure a search engine picks up are reviews you’ve acquired, services you manage, and products you sell.

The reason doing this is important is because most businesses aren’t using this technique at all and those who are usually only work with the basics. By diving into this strategy, you will make your business stand out among the competition. It can even lead to higher rankings, which is nothing to sneeze about.

Google appreciates sites using structured data markup because it allows their technology to understand the content on your site. In fact, Google provides a Structured Data Testing Tool that lets you know if your markup is working the way it should be.

Online Directories

Roughly 80% of customers use a search engine to make local searches. This is why having business listings online is such an important thing. You should take time to get your business listed on the top online business directories. Some of the first you should consider are Yelp, Citysearch, and Merchant City. It can also be a good idea to find local directories that you can have your business listed with. Check with your Chamber of Commerce and local newspaper’s site to see if they have directories you should list with.

In addition to this, you want to have your business name, number, and address on major citation data aggregators, such as Acxiom, Factual, Infogroup, and Neustar. When filling these out, make sure your business name, address, and phone number are all used consistently. Misspellings, altered formatting, and abbreviations can actually make it harder for search engines to determine what information is correct.

Google My Business Optimization

Google My Business counts as a directory, but it’s a huge one and needs to be considered with an awareness of that. If you haven’t claimed your business on Google My Business, you should do that as soon as possible. It is completely free and it can get you some amazing exposure for your business, especially when you optimize things to the best of your ability.

To claim your business, surf over to http://google.com/business. From there, you’ll need to go through a verification process. Google will send out a postcard to your business’s physical location. This postcard will have a pin included which you will simply plug in to proove you own the business.

As far as optimization goes, start with filling out your business hours, payment types accepted, categories, and filling in a great description. It’s also smart to upload a logo, along with photos of your business, services, and products. After that, fill in every section that pertains to your business so it’s complete for potential customers.

Meta Description & Titles

Titles and meta descriptions are HTML elements that you can customize for your webpage. Whatever you put into the title and description will be displayed on search results. You can use this as a way to offer a small ad, and as such, needs to be crafted carefully.

In 2016, Google made the width of the search results area larger. This allows for a title tag that is around 50 to 60 characters, and a description that can be anywhere from 160 to 200 characters. With that knowledge in mind, take advantage of the space you have to show yourself in the best light possible.

Writing descriptions and titles can be difficult, because text that isn’t exciting and descriptive may make it harder to get people to click. In addition, if you make your text a bit too long, it won’t all appear on the search engine, which can look pretty unprofessional.

Keep these tips in mind while crafting your title and descriptions:

·      Focus on a single keyword that is carefully targeted and place that keyword toward the beginning of the tag if you are able to.

·      Don’t waste space on unneeded characters and words, make every character matter.

·      When looking for local customers, use the name of the city or area your business is in or will be serving.

If someone sees your business show up, you want to make them click on it. Don’t waste characters and time on things that won’t get you more page views. Be succinct and interesting.

Online Reviews

Customers put a lot of trust into online reviews in order to determine what businesses offer quality products or services. Surveys show that over 80% of people trust online reviews just as much as word of mouth. In addition, about 70% of customers are happy to leave a review for a business if they are asked to.

There are quite a few software offerings that allow you to track, manage, and acquire reviews. Some of the most popular include Get Five Stars, Reputation Loop, Trust Pilot, and Vendasta. There are also social media platforms, such as Hootsuite, that notify you if your business is mentioned. This allows you to respond, which shows you care what customers are saying.

By implementing these strategies for local SEO, you’ll have a jump on the competition. You will find that doing each of these things well can lead to more page clicks and customers. There’s not a better day than today to get started, so get in there!

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11 Tips on utilizing Pinterest for Local SEO 

Pinterest and Your Business' Local SEO

If you are looking for a new way to lift your local search rankings, Pinterest may be a good option for your business. This social media platform is fairly well entrenched at this point. It also offers something a little different from the big boys, such as Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn.

Pinterest has stayed relatively popular over time and has many avid users who visit the platform on a daily basis. This is partially because of the innovative social media features, but also because of the attractive and simple to use interface.

Then there’s the fact that the constant sharing to and from the site can help with search rankings.

But, you may wonder how you can utilize Pinterest to help with your local marketing. We have a number of tips that can help you take Pinterest and use it for the benefit of your brand.

So, check those out and consider whether Pinterest is another platform you should add to your marketing arsenal.

Setting Up Your Profile

When you make your profile on Pinterest, you will have the option to hide it from search engines, which you will clearly not want to take advantage of. When it comes to the ‘About’ section of your profile, use your main keywords to describe your business. You will also want to set your location to wherever your business is located.

You can also add the URL to your website and connect to your business Twitter and Facebook accounts.

Local Reviews

Another option, when it comes to the URL you post on Pinterest, is to link to one of your review pages that features many positive reviews. This is only something you should consider if you already have a reasonable local ranking for your main website.

However, this can get you some traffic toward the review page, which can help ranking for your business name.

Pinterest Boards

The biggest draw of Pinterest might be the boards, which are used to categorize the pins you post. To take advantage of boards from a marketing standpoint, you should consider having a board with your city name where you post pins about the area.

You should also have boards for your industry, products, and services.

Following on Pinterest

Following other Pinterest users in your area is a great idea, as it could lead to them following you and even visiting your website. You may also find that they have some excellent local pins for you to display on your own boards.

Following people and businesses in your industry is also a good step to filling out your followers with some great content.

Pinning Strategy

It’s important to only pin photos and infographics of a good quality, as Pinterest is a very visually oriented social media platform. In order to gain exposure and get users to follow you, you want to be sure your pins are of great quality items.

Of course, not every pin is going to be excellent quality but ensuring most of them are can go a long way toward helping your marketing on the site.

Keyword Text

When you post photos on your local board, take the time to describe it and use keywords to do so. This will give people more information about you and the pin, which is more likely to get people to click. Even though Pinterest is largely visual, you don’t want to forget your keywords.

Any time you can associate your brand with your industry or the local area, you should take advantage of it.

Think Local

While you will want to post many pins that relate to your business, don’t forget that other local pins can be helpful too. This shows that you care about the community as a whole. It can also bring exposure to people who might not otherwise find you.

Posting photos of landmarks and special events is a good way to utilize this aspect of marketing. Any local view can lead to business, whether from that specific user or someone connected to them.

Heart Photos

When you come across quality pins from other local users, you can click on the like (heart) button to show your appreciation. Even if the photo is not something you want to pin, you can still express care and respect by clicking this button and putting yourself out there.

However, don’t do this on every single pin you see. Save it for the truly special ones.

Create Content

Design an infographic related to your industry (or have one designed for you) and use Pinterest to gain exposure for it. Being a content creator can be a real perk on this platform and offering a few items that are specifically created by your business can provide you with more followers and clicks.

You can also use Pinterest to link to blog posts and things of that nature, just be sure there’s a high-quality image to go with it to draw people in.

Cross Promote

Facebook and Twitter are great places to cross promote your pins. This allows you to gain a larger audience. In addition, it can lead to those who follow you on one platform making the move to be a fan on another platform.

You always want more numbers, and this is just one option for getting there.

Run Contests

Pinterest can be an interesting platform for holding a contest. One option is to make the contest available to customers, asking them to post pictures of your products and place of business. In exchange for that, you can offer promos, coupons, or unique prizes that customers will be happy to compete for. Through this option, a user’s friends will gain access to your business and could end up on your profile or even website.

There are many ways to use Pinterest to bring in some local love, many of which we’ve mentioned above. You don’t have to use all of these tips, but by incorporating a few of them, you have a new place for marketing and a potential opening to a new audience who might make awesome fans.

 

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Blogging as a part of your Local SEO Strategy

You have a website. You have a social media strategy. You send out newsletters with links that bring views in.

But do you have a blog?

It can seem like blogging is only done by huge companies when it comes to business marketing. That is far from the truth. Even local businesses have a lot they can gain from choosing to publish and maintain a well-devised blog.

If you don’t believe us, consider these statistics, straight from Google:

  • 4/5 of internet consumers use a search engine to find local businesses around them.
  • Half of consumers who perform this search for a local business end up visiting that same business on that same day.
  • Of the people who make up the first two, 18% make a purchase at the business they end up visiting.

 

That should be more than enough proof of how your website, and blog, can lead to great business advantages. Blogging can help you rank higher in the search results, leading you to be that company a consumer clicks on, visits, and purchases from.

How to Make Blogging Work for You

There are many ways to make blogging a part of your day and ensure a higher search engine ranking. Some of them are common sense, while others are far from it.  Utilizing ideas from both columns will help you in your marketing efforts.

So, how do you make blogging help in marketing?

Schema Markup

As much as possible, use schema markup to “tell” Google and Bing that you’re a local business. This can help bump your ranking on the search engines.

However, you don’t have to stop there. Use markup to ensure the type of business you do is known.

Many small businesses don’t do this so it really can make your website, and your business, stand out.  Plus, by utilizing your blog this information can be provided numerous times, along with other keywords that can help.

Check for Consistent NAP

NAP refers to your business name, address, and phone number. Something that is extremely important is listing this in the exact same way on every site you work with. This includes directory listings, social media, website, and blog.

Be sure to check this over every once in a while, to ensure nothing is formatted strangely or written in a different way from typical.

Provide Interesting Information

If you aren’t sure what to blog about, you are far from alone.  Many businesses make posts that only serve as advertisements for their products and services.

Don’t be that business owner.

Instead of talking about yourself and your business, talk about things that matter to your audience. Get to know the people who are reading and talk about things they care about.

Industry information, tips, hints, and stories are more likely to get you links that help in the pursuit of prime search engine space.

Blogging on Your Business’ Domain

It’s much better to park the blog on your actual business domain. This is because links to the blog might lead to the main site and vice versa.

Links are very important in search engine ranking so having all inbound links going to the same place is something essential.

Whether your blog starts ranking higher or your business does, each will build off of the other as far as popularity.

Talk About Things Happening in the Neighborhood

On days when you aren’t sure what to write about, consider delving into news and events nearby. You can talk about an election or a local fair, while using the perspective of your business to make the article stand out.

Not only may you gain new readers interested in what you’re talking about, but those who are already reading your blog may find out something new and decide your blog is a good place to find further information of the sort.

Incorporate Location

Of course, many local searches will include the name of the city you are located in. However, this isn’t the only location to use to your advantage. You can find ways to talk about neighboring areas or cities or use terms that are common in the specific area.

These are things that might bring in more clicks and entrench you as part of the community that you are a part of.

Converse About Other Blogs

To build up readers on your own blog, it can be a good practice to participate on other blogs of businesses in the area. You might go to blogs that do things similar or complementary to your own services and leave a few comments.

You can also mention them in your own blog post. This often leads the other blog to link to your site, giving you both an advantage and potential higher numbers when it comes to readership.

Being seen as someone who understands about cares about the community is never going to be a bad thing.

Themes and Keywords

Think about the way people use technology today and make your blog optimal for these searches. Of course, you should use specific keyword phrases important to your business, but long-tail keywords can be a great thing to add into blog content.

Are there questions you think local individuals might be typing in?  Find a way to add those answers into your own keywords to pull in more people and provide higher conversions.

Conclusion

Blogging is not just for the corporations out there, it’s a great way to become a steadfast member of your local community online. By conversing with other local companies, you gain an audience who might not otherwise know you exist.

When you link to events and talk about news in the area, you show care for the people who are there and interested.

Blogging might take some time and creativity, but it’s something everyone should think about incorporating. The many positives that can come from it can have a huge effect on conversion and search engine ranking. So get out there and make some people think.

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