Thursday, December 31, 2015

Content Curation Resolutions: 8 Tools to Try in 2016

content-curation-resolutions-cover

Does anyone know where 2015 went? Seems like I just blinked my eyes and opened them on a brand new year.

I always consider the holiday season to be a time for reflection – a time to take a step back from the daily grind, look at the progress I made in the year that’s passed, and prepare to tackle the tasks and projects I want to accomplish in the next 12 months.

Among all my usual resolutions for 2016 (get more exercise … spend more time with friends … bring about world peace … blah, blah, blah), I’m looking to add some new skills to my arsenal and step up my content curation game. But rather than doing all the work myself, this year I plan to follow in the footsteps of our wonderful CMI contributors and community members who have recommended some tools they use for finding relevant content, enhancing their creativity and productivity, and keeping their tasks prioritized and organized.

For those of you who have similar resolutions for 2016, I’ve highlighted a few tools that seem particularly helpful, along with a bit of detail on the specific ways each might be used in a content curation context.

  1. Domo: Many curation projects are published on multiple channels and platforms at once. This means curators typically need to look at several metrics reports, then find a way to correlate the data to create an apples-to-apples analysis about performance.

domo-dashboard

Named as one of the top 10 most influential brands on LinkedIn in 2015, Domo was built to help streamline repetitive and complicated processes like this, bringing all the data points into a single platform and providing simple-yet-robust visualization tools, to help it all make sense. No wonder it came so highly recommended during this year’s CMI Twitter chat on metrics.

  1. Google’s Digital Analytics Fundamentals course: Understanding how well your content is performing is the responsibility of every content marketer on the team – even those who work on the more creative side of things and aren’t as comfortable with the numeric data component of content (guilty as charged). While I have a working knowledge of many Google Analytics reports, I know there’s a world of additional information available that I should be tapping into – particularly as it’s essential to my goal of curating the content that our audience needs, and engages with, most.

Google-analytics-academy

Fortunately, Joe Pulizzi clued me in that Google’s Analytics Academy offers an in-depth tutorial on the fundamentals of working with this essential analytics tool. The full (and free) course has six units that cover everything from core analysis techniques, to creation and configuration of an account, to understanding and analysis of the various types of Google Analytics reports. It also includes archived Hangouts, where Google team members and other experts answer users’ questions. With Google practically holding my hand, I might just conquer my legendary fear of numbers, and uncover ways to make my contributions to CMI more effective.

  1. IFTTT: We all have those little housekeeping tasks that are part of the content marketing process – a tedious, soul-numbing, and time-consuming part, to be sure – yet a necessary part for effective content creation, curation, and management. For me, one of those tasks is logging all the examples we publish across our various content channels in one centralized Google spreadsheet so I can later repurpose them into e-books, infographics, and other curation projects (i.e., the fun part of the job).

ifttt-sync

If This Then That, better known as IFTTT, might just be the tool that can make this chore – and others like it – less of a time-suck. As CMI contributor Dan Smith discussed, by creating customized “recipes” that automate certain interactions between two products or apps (think: adding a recently posted YouTube video to a list of videos on Google Docs, or emailing yourself a weekly roundup of the most popular posts on your blog), IFTTT can minimize the time spent on menial tasks and help to ensure that the important stuff doesn’t slip past your radar.

  1. MindManager: A perennial favorite of Roger C. Parker (who used it to develop his three-step blog post tracker), Mindjet’s MindManager has the reputation of being one of the best mind-mapping software programs. It’s definitely high on my list of tools to explore this year.

mindmanager-mind map

Mind maps help content creators visualize the connection between concepts, enabling them to identify the most logical flow of meaning between them. This kind of tool is helpful for a wide range of content marketing activities – from brainstorming content ideas to structuring a series of loose ideas into a cohesive story framework and organizing those stories into a content marketing calendar. From a curation standpoint, I’m particularly interested in using mind maps to align my project ideas with CMI’s business goals, which will help me better understand which projects to prioritize throughout the year.

  1. Airstory: I’ve been obsessed with trying this writing tool, ever since it was recommended during our recent Twitter chat with Ann Smarty on content marketing tools.

airstory.cards

Available as an invitation-only beta, Airstory helps you turn your content notes, media clips, image files, soundbites, and more into taggable, searchable cards. When you are ready to turn these odds and ends into a cohesive story, just drag and drop the relevant cards into an outline, and start connecting the dots between your ideas and your marketing insights. Airstory organizes and annotates the saved information in your cards for easy reference and stores everything in one view, so you won’t lose track of great ideas for future projects.

  1. ZooBurst: While I’m typically most comfortable when I’m working with text-based content, I often long for the ability to take more of our content pieces off the static page and move them into a more visual medium or a unique and innovative format. Since our design team understandably needs us to prioritize the projects when we enlist its help – and because I have limited artistic talents – I’ve come to accept that few of my more experimental ideas will ever get to see the light of day.

zooburst-storytelling

Still, there may be hope. For example, after the CMI editorial team discovered a Listly of storytelling tools, I’ve been itching to give a creative tool like ZooBurst a try. This digital storytelling application enables users to create three-dimensional pop-up books online and share them via a simple hyperlink or embed them on a website or blog. There’s also an augmented reality mode that gives readers the ability to interact with the content using a webcam and some simple gestures.

  1. ThingLink: While screenshots are great to include in content when illustrating a particular concept or function, they don’t always highlight the specific idea referenced in the context of my discussion. When curating images, I often find myself looking for a way to draw attention to a specific part of the graphic and include explanatory text or add a URL for additional resources on the topic.

thinglink.demo

Recommended by a CMI blog reader (who discovered it on this Listly of awesome content marketing tools), ThingLink enables users to annotate their images and video content with notes, links, and rich media – ideal for marking up graphics to enhance their value and make them more actionable.

  1. Venngage: Speaking of images, one of the most powerful ways to refresh and repurpose content for easier reference is to take the text from a popular blog post (or an article, an interview, a video, etc.) and summarize it visually by creating an infographic. (For example, take a look at the recent SEO Clues infographic we built, based on the Ultimate SEO Checklist post published earlier on the CMI blog.)

SEO Clue - header image

Click to view full graphic

However, creating curated infographics like this can take a big bite out of our designer resources. When regular #CMWorld Twitter chat contributor Jade Phillips suggested using Venngage to create beautiful infographics, reports, and data visualizations, I thought I might try my hand at learning to build them myself. Hundreds of pictograms, maps, and icon tools are available in the Venngage library, and users can even upload their own photos, logos, and images to customize the designs and ensure that they are consistent with their business’ usual branding.

Venngage.data.visualization

Of course, these are just the tip of the iceberg – there’s no way to include all the relevant tools available to content marketers in just one post, let alone try them all out (much as I would love to do so). If there are additional apps, software products, or services that you’ve used and loved, feel free to mention them in the comments – I’d love to add them to my list of new tools to explore.

Want a reminder to read the latest tips, tools, and more insight from the Content Marketing Institute? Subscribe to our blog posts and never miss a day.

Cover image by Joseph Kalinowski/Content Marketing Institute

The post Content Curation Resolutions: 8 Tools to Try in 2016 appeared first on Content Marketing Institute.

Wednesday, December 30, 2015

E-commerce and Mobile: 10 Easy Powerful Tricks to Sell More

According to research carried out by PayPal, which examined more than 17,000 consumers in 22 countries around the world, one-third of online shoppers uses mobile devices to make a purchase.

Mobile commerce, that is the management of commercial transactions via smartphones and tablets, has existed for at least fifteen years: in the late ’90s, Coca-Cola installed vending machines that accept payment via SMS text messages, and a few years later the possibility to pay train tickets directly from mobile phones was introduced in Austria.
However, it is only in recent years that purchases from mobile have seen an exponential growth: PayPal’s research reveals an annual growth rate of 42% in the period between 2013 and 2016.

Searching on mobile, conversion on desktop

Despite the growth of mobile, there is a fact that speaks volumes: the conversion rate on smartphones is 0.8% against 2.78% on desktops and users who clicked on “Add to cart” on mobile are less than half of those on PC.

It seems clear that, despite the fact that more consumers surf online to shop, this often does not lead to purchase. People use their smartphones to search for information about products, to compare prices, perhaps even get themselves intrigued by new products and promotions, but then they would rather complete the purchase on desktop.

When optimization is a stranger

There are different reasons why people are reluctant to purchase on mobile. According to Paypal’s research, 34% of people say the problem lies in the physicality of the device. The screen size is too small to allow an easy visualization and navigation of the purchase procedure. 18% of users blame it instead on the lack of site optimization, the content layout and difficulty in finding information.

Today, mobile commerce offers a great opportunity to all brands, because thanks to smartphones people can shop anytime, anywhere, multiplying purchasing opportunities. But this opportunity still too rarely results into business, because most of these e-commerce businesses are not yet ready to make the mobile purchase path easy, simple and fast.

M-commerce: undoubtedly fast, but without improvising

For anyone who has an e-commerce business, thinking mobile is a priority that should not be put off anymore: 204 million dollars were spent on these devices in 2014, while in 2018 transactions will be 626 million, three times as much. According to an article on Entrepreneur.com, if you aren’t building e-commerce businesses with mobile in mind, you may be irrelevant in three to five years. Before starting, however, it is important to analyze your objectives and targets, to observe the profiles and behaviors of consumers on mobile, which do not always coincide with those on other channels: the audience is generally young people. According to Paypal, 59% of shoppers on mobile between 18 and 34 years old use their phone to surf for about 3 hours a day (source: eMarketer) and they prefer in 63% of cases (source: Econsultancy) e-commerce businesses that have rich contents, which give detailed descriptions and product reviews. From this first general guideline, we can define the specific audience of the brand. You should always keep them in mind when designing and implementing all these improvements that make the shopping experience on your e-commerce business better and more evolved.

Here is a series of effective tricks to get you started:

#1 Enrich your content: although mobile experience is the emblem of immediacy, when it comes to choosing a product people love to have in-depth information. Therefore you should put detailed descriptions for each item, and you could even add videos illustrating the assembly instructions, functions or its use.

#2 Encourage reviews: Descriptions are important but opinions on your products spontaneously left by costumers are 12 times more (source: Econsultancy). To encourage them, put and highlight under each item a field where they can leave a review and make sure that the publishing procedure is as simple as possible, even on mobile.

#3 Choose explanatory photos: Given the small size of the screen, the pictures should tell what the product is about in a clear and attractive way and highlight its strengths. Make sure they are in good quality and easy to view.

#4 Use legible font sizes: To read the texts, whether they are titles, descriptions or buttons, users should not have to zoom in or move horizontally or vertically to see the whole page. Make sure all the important information are already shown on the opening page.

#5 Scrolling is better: Every link involves a waiting time to open a new page, which is not particularly appreciated on mobile. Structure your information as a single sequence that can be viewed through scrolling, so that users can smoothly pass from one content to another without interrupting their navigation.

#6 Customize your message: The e-commerce app is particularly useful to communicate to users instantly and in a personalized way: thanks to push notifications you can inform customers who have purchased one of your products when a similar or complementary product is on sale.

#7 Enable booking: Considering that many users search for products on mobile but then buy them on desktop, you should provide the opportunity to book an item, so that they can buy it at a later time.

#8 Add Social Medias: 28% of online activity is spent on social networks (source: Social Times) and there are 1.65 million active users on mobile (source: Wersocial). Make sure that they talk about your e-commerce business by adding social sharing buttons on each product and by promoting your best articles on your social medias.

#9 Make payments easy: Purchasing through apps offers consumers the convenience of not having to enter their data each time they make a payment. 26% of consumers consider it a significant advantage (source: Skrill). Ensure the possibility for costumers to use all major credit and debit cards and allow them to complete the purchase path in just a few clicks.

#10 Optimize your efforts: If you can’t apply most of these tips on your e-commerce business or the app currently in use, it may be appropriate to rethink it from scratch and to rely on skilled programmers or web designers. Alternatively, if you have limited time and budget, you can choose an online system to create apps and mobile sites on your own, like mob.is.it, without having graphics or programming skills, and they will be ready in a few minutes with its full features, also for e-commerce.

Experience is the key to commerce, even on mobile

It’s a fact: mobile commerce will continue to evolve and it is possible that these and other winning tricks today will be completely outdated in a few years. How to keep up with the times? By choosing a flexible e-commerce system and remaining faithful to your role: even in the mobile era a marketer’s task is to keep their eyes open and think about the consumers, what can truly satisfy their desires for comfort, immediacy, and simplicity in the purchase path. As stated by Jeff Bezos, CEO of Amazon, “If you do build a really great experience, customers tell each other about that. Word of mouth is very powerful.” Do your costumers talk to each other about your e-commerce business? Make sure that the answer is yes.

Wanna learn how to make more money with your website? Check the Online Profits training program!



This post is courtesy of: http://www.dailyblogtips.com

Content Strategy Musings for Forward-Thinking Marketers 

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“Quick story.” If that phrase makes you think of CMI Chief Strategy Officer Robert Rose, you’ve probably been following Content Strategy for Marketers, the weekly newsletter that he kicked off a year ago.

Every Saturday, subscribers eavesdrop on his conversations, learn about what he’s reading or watching or listening to, and discover, as he weaves one quick story into another, his latest observations on content marketing and content strategy.

You can download an anthology of all of Robert’s Content Strategy for Marketers musings, and keep reading for a sampling of Robert’s messages that I’ve found especially thought-provoking, useful, and inspiring.

(Note: I’ve identified the newsletter’s edition title in applicable references so you can find the rest of the content more easily in the e-book.)

Treat content as a strategic asset

“Content is perhaps the most important business asset that we fail to manage as well as we could,” Robert says.

What does it mean to treat content as a business asset – a strategic asset – and why should we do it?

“We mostly rationalize the value of content against the priorities of individual functions of the business rather than its entirety. In other words, we look at content as a feature of the business, not as an ultimate strategic value of the business … Content created and managed well, repeatedly, defines a business. That’s why it’s so important.” – Content Is What We Are


Content created and managed well, repeatedly, defines a business. That’s why it’s so important via @robert_rose
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The volume and complexity of corporate content make treating content as a strategic asset one of the biggest challenges of our day.

“I believe that a crisis is fast approaching for many enterprise marketers who are scaling their content-production efforts … We all know that we need to produce content like a media company. But our existing people, practices, and technology are not there yet.” – What Is Big Content?

In that newsletter, Robert also tells us of a dream in which his third-grade teacher appears holding a goat. What does it mean? Tune in next time, he says. (Robert has worked in the movie biz. He will mess with you.)

Ponder this: In what ways does your organization already treat content as a strategic asset – something that people plan, distribute, promote, and manage so that it supports your business goals in measurable ways? What more might you do?

Look beyond the content to the content experience

It’s not surprising that, as co-author of a book called Experiences: The 7th Era of Marketing, Robert talks about the importance of the ways customers experience our content. Here are some examples:

“Content defines every experience we create for our customers – including our product or service. Thus, it cannot be a neutral part of any one experience. Content either enhances the experience or degrades it.” – Content Is What We Are

“Content strategists and marketers need to push interfaces beyond their traditional boundaries. (How quickly yesterday’s ‘innovative’ becomes today’s ‘traditional.’) We need to imagine ways to hack content-driven experiences.” – Hacking Content Experiences

“For some reason, customer-facing content – the thing that creates the customer experience our business will be known for – is treated differently. When a company is stuck in this pattern, content … may be hurting the brand.” – Who’s Afraid of Strategy in Content?

Having once worked for a company that excluded content from its user testing, I want to cheer every time I hear this message. The company I worked for in those days had formed a UX group, a big deal back when the term “user experience” was new. I wrote user documentation for highly regulated products that might affect life-and-death decisions. It seemed only logical to me – mandatory, even – that the UX group would test not only the product usability but also the information usability. Customer-facing content is part of the customer experience, right? Customers, you know, face it.

Didn’t happen. I couldn’t convince anyone in the testing group to include the documentation in the usability tests. The company defined user experience as product experience. Content wasn’t seen (by the suits) as part of the product; it didn’t count.

I still get worked up when I think about that mindset. Deep breaths. Robert is here. Content, he says, is part of the customer experience. It may just be the most important part.


#Content is part of the customer experience. It may just be the most important part.
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Ponder this: How does your organization find out about the customer experience of your content? How could it find out more?

Get techier

Content pros resemble – or need to resemble – IT pros. Robert talks about the “blistering speed” at which enterprise technology is evolving. Even at that speed, technology is not changing fast enough to keep up with what publishers want to accomplish with it. He quotes Zemanta CEO Todd Sawicki: “We’re sort of all dancing around, waiting for the tech to get better.”


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In the meantime, content professionals have to embrace technology, despite its imperfections, lest we put our employers and ourselves at a disadvantage. Robert illustrates this point with numbers:

“In just one year, the number of marketing-technology companies has gone from 947 to more than 1,800. It has doubled in a year … I searched through a couple of job sites for ‘content strategists’ and found on one site almost 5,000 jobs that contained ‘well versed in technology’ as part of the job description … What does all this mean? … As you move through your career as a content marketer or content-strategy practitioner, how well do you need to know technology? The answer is, as well as possible.” – How Well Do You Need to Know Technology?

You might wonder why Robert’s research included looking at what it takes to do a content strategist’s job. Content marketers are not content strategists. But content marketers do have a lot to learn from content strategists. That’s one of CMI’s big themes for 2015.

Getting techier is just one way in which we need to learn from the folks in related content professions.


Content marketers are not content strategists. But they do have a lot to learn from content strategists.
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When it comes to IT, we’ll never keep up with the changes. Keeping up isn’t the goal. The goal is to keep learning.

Robert pursues a similar theme when he evokes Bruce Wayne just after he has climbed a mountain in the movie Batman Begins.

“Bruce Wayne, searching for training to master his fears, gives a symbolic blue flower to Henri Ducard (no spoilers). Bruce has been told that delivering this flower to the top of the mountain will enable him to find what he’s been looking for. Henri takes the flower and says, ‘To manipulate the fears in others, you must first master your own.’ Then he asks, ‘Are you ready to begin?’ Breathless, Bruce says, ‘I can barely stand.’ With a powerful kick to the chest that knocks Bruce halfway across the room, Henri yells, ‘Death does not wait for you to be ready!’” – Are You Ready for the Next Level of Digital Content?

We are Bruce Wayne, and technology is about to deliver that kick to the chest. How about it? Robert asks. (Is that a blue flower in his hand?) Are we ready to begin?

Ponder this: What do you need to learn next about technology? How will you get that knowledge? When will you do it?

Don’t get too techie

As important as it is that we get techier, Robert reminds us not to overvalue the role of technology in our jobs. He says that great content “strikes the right balance between human care and technology – between art and science – resulting in more-resonant audience experiences.”

He compares the classic movie Jurassic Park to The Hobbit trilogy and other movies produced today. Whereas Steven Spielberg struck the right balance between human care and technology, blending in computerized effects “only when he needed them,” many directors today “overuse computer-generated imagery. And audiences can sense that something is wrong. The suspension of disbelief is broken.”

One place where marketers need to avoid overdoing tech is in personalization. Robert tells of a colleague who wondered how personalized email can get before recipients feel “weirded out.”

“Yeah, this is the same ‘snap’ that today’s moviegoers experience. Computer and robotics engineers have a name for this phenomenon: the Uncanny Valley. The ‘valley’ is the dip in people’s comfort level when they encounter a nearly human image – a likeness that’s a little bit off. People feel repulsed rather than attracted to the almost-but-not-quite real. With our marketing content, this ‘snap’ into the Uncanny Valley is not good. It’s lazy directing, and it’s lazy content.” – Can You Be the Steven Spielberg of Content?

How do we as marketers avoid the Uncanny Valley? Be like Spielberg. Use technology only when you need it. Strike a balance between technology and humanity.


Use technology only when you need it. Strike a balance between technology and humanity by @MarciaRJohnston
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Ponder this: In what ways might your customers feel weirded out or even repulsed by the experiences they have with your organization’s content? If you think no one is ever repulsed, how do you know? How could you test your assumptions?

Face your fear

Robert calls for marketers to change. At the same time, he understands the paralyzing fear of change. He stares down fear in several newsletters.

He channels Seth Godin, noting that when people raise their hands, they often unthinkingly keep them low. Robert urges us to raise our hands all the way up and avoid making “half-hearted attempts to tweak traditional marketing campaigns into ‘content campaigns’”:

“Expanding the remit of marketing into a group that creates valuable, content-driven experiences (rather than simply describing the product) using product-development methodologies for that content (rather than campaign-minded tactics) is the evolution of marketing … We’d better not be afraid to give it our all to make this evolution happen.” – Are We Reaching High Enough?

Robert again urges us to take action in the face of fear. In that newsletter, he recalls the Starbucks #RaceTogether campaign, which encouraged baristas to write the hashtag on cups and to talk about race.

“It was immediately met with a backlash on social media, and it was ridiculed by John Oliver on Last Week Tonight and on marketing blogs all over.  It doesn’t matter what you think of the Starbucks campaign. It doesn’t matter whether its strategy or execution was flawed. They tried something big.” – Action Reduces Fear

starbucks-race-together-image

Image source: Starbucks

All of us should try big things, Robert says, and we shouldn’t stop just because we get scared. Trying big things “is the key with becoming strategic with content for creating differentiated customer experiences. Every action we take reduces the risk of the next. It’s only through continued inaction that the risk of the first step increases.”

While leaders at all levels need to take action in the face of fear, those who control the big budgets often find themselves in Robert’s sights: “We have to change. We have to get over the fear of the different. The C suite must see content as one of the most important things to get right.” Who’s Afraid of Strategy in Content?


Content is one of the most important things for your organization to get right. Don't let fear stop you.
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Whether or not we have the support of the C suite, though, he challenges each of us to look for opportunities to do what we can as he shares with a characteristic flourish:

“Can we pick one? Take one action? Even if we fail at it, that one action reduces the fear of the next. And one of those actions just might be the one that changes everything.” – Action Reduces Fear

Go ahead, apply those words to your life. Robert dares you.

Ponder this: What one action calls to you right now? If you took that action, what’s the worst that could happen?

The Content Strategy for Marketers newsletter goes out via email every Saturday. I look forward to reading it every week. I bet you would, too. One of these weeks, we’re bound to find out what happened with the third-grade teacher and the goat.

Cover image by Joseph Kalinowski/Content Marketing Institute

The post Content Strategy Musings for Forward-Thinking Marketers  appeared first on Content Marketing Institute.

Tuesday, December 29, 2015

Our Favorite Tweets from the 2015 #CMWorld Twitter Chats

CMI-Favorite-Tweets-cover

At the Content Marketing Institute, our team is filled with people who have a genuine enthusiasm for the practice of content marketing. We also are fortunate to be supported by another team with a similar fervor – a vibrant #CMWorld Twitter Chat community. This super-smart, incessantly curious, and generous group gathers each Tuesday at noon Eastern Standard Time. We extend our sincere thanks to the hundreds of people who have joined us in 2015, including our inaugural CMI Community Champion Mike Myers.

Joe summed up our sentiments well when he tweeted:

Love you all #CMWorld. You are helping to change the face of communication and business as we know it. The big picture is real.

Below are a few of the most retweeted and insightful tweets from our chats. We invite you to join us in 2016. (You can see a schedule of upcoming chats and read transcripts from previous chats here.)

Community talk

Getting to know the #CMWorld community

100th chat

CMWorld wrap-up

Audience-building

Email marketing

Subscriber-building via websites and blogs

Customer experience and content marketing

Growth hacking content marketing

Strategies for building your email list

Content creation

Headline tips

Content built for intentional repurposing

Content Inc.

Content marketing for entrepreneurs

Charitable component to your business

Content marketing careers

Personal branding and content marketing

Professional development

Content promotion and distribution

Paid promotions for content marketing

Value of traditional media in content marketing

Content promotion

Content to build trust

Content marketing research

Research in your content marketing strategy

Influencer marketing

Media and influencer relations

Community-building to support marketing goals

Measurement and ROI

Content marketing metrics

Content hacks and tools to double conversion rates

SEO

SEO and content marketing

Social media

Social media management / management of multiple accounts

SlideShare

LinkedIn

Customer service in a social/tech age

Social selling

Event apps to build and develop content for reuse

Varied content for social distribution

Instagram

Strategy

Content-driven experiences

Multichannel marketing

More intelligent content marketing

Content program development in a large enterprise

Engagement, impact, and sales

Content strategy 101

Teams and processes

Culture of content

PR and content marketing

Subject-matter experts

Role of the editor in content marketing

A good editor is someone who can turn something ridiculously terrible, into something ridiculously incredible. #cmworld

Wyzowl @wyzowl

Team processes and brand guidelines

Front-end vs. back-end marketers

Culture of content marketing

Multi-author blogs

Tools and technology

Content marketing productivity

Content marketing tools

Visual content and design

Creative video solutions


Want to discuss the latest trends in content marketing and get advice from experts? Join CMI (@CMIContent) and a guest every Tuesday from 12 PM – 1 PM ET as we discuss key content marketing topics. Follow #cmworld on Twitter to join the conversation. 

Cover image by Joseph Kalinowski/Content Marketing Institute

The post Our Favorite Tweets from the 2015 #CMWorld Twitter Chats appeared first on Content Marketing Institute.

Monday, December 28, 2015

Don’t be Pigeon-holed by Google’s Local Algorithm Changes

On July 24, 2014, Google updated its local search algorithm, setting out to make local search more relevant, more accurate and more useful for users. Pigeon aimed to do that by incorporating ranking signals into local optimization that are similar to traditional web search ranking factors.

Along with bringing traditional search ranking back into the local fold, Pigeon improved Google’s location and distance parameters. This was coupled with a somewhat sweeping redesign for local optimization thanks to Google Pigeon, where cities are no longer geographical entities. Pigeon effectively sliced and diced cities into “neighborhoods” resulting in a smaller search radius for local search queries.

This shook up the SERPs. Some businesses lost the rank they had achieved by optimizing for cities, while some local businesses ended up in different places, at first causing a panic and leaving local SEOs begging the question “what now?”

If you feel you have been Pigeon-holed into a less desirable position due to changes in the local search algorithm, you are in luck because we have some suggestions to help you get back on your feet.

1. Neighborhoods don’t go by just one name

Neil Patel pointed out on Search Engine Land that there is a colloquial name that a neighborhood has as well as a formal one. Making a comparison similar to his, a local New Yorker might say “Alphabet City” whereas a tourist might call it the “East Village.” Not only that, Patel went on to posit that the Pigeon algorithm updates would return better results for queries that incorporate usage for both colloquial and formal terms. By optimizing for both types of keywords you leverage this fact, and for competitive niches, it may be easier to rank higher and capitalize on the less competitive neighborhood synonym.

2. Optimize Your Local Directories, and Use them as a Source of Information

Pigeon places importance on local directories such as Yelp, TripAdvisor and Urban Spoon. Make sure you have a presence on all local directories that are important to your niche and make sure they are well optimized. Directories are a great source of information for your local optimization efforts. If you want to harvest keywords that tourists are using, read relevant reviews.

3. Don’t Change Your NAP

Although your city keywords may now have to be oriented with neighborhood keywords, don’t change the NAP (name, address and phone number) that you have been using. Your NAP is integral to a successful local SEO strategy.

4. Have Traditional Values

Shift some of the focus on your local optimization to traditional SEO optimization tactics. According to Moz, on-page signals total out to 21% of local ranking factors. So place your keywords in the title tag, work on increasing your on-page domain authority, and pump out that optimized content.

5. Don’t Panic, Make a Good Website Instead

Finally, to quote “The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy” – Don’t Panic! As with any major change in the SEO community, the initial reaction to Pigeon seemed to be very large. After the dust settled with it, however, the feelings about it became somewhat neutral, according to a poll run by BrightLocal during a webinar called The Impact of Pigeon Update back in December 2014. 53% of the respondents thought the change was negative – making the consensus about 50/50. 69% felt that the user now enjoys positive changes from Pigeon, and the majority felt as though there were little or no changes to their business.

This of course varies in context – the niche and circumstances of the business definitely come into play. Most local SEO experts now advise local businesses to beef up their brand recognition and focus on optimizing for location.

The Bottom Line:

Although at this stage in the game, this last word of advice may seem cliché, it will be offered. If you place most of your focus on just maintaining a quality site that is relevant and helpful to your audience, you should be able to navigate through algorithm changes with ease. The fact is Google wants to keep its job as a search engine, and it does this by returning quality sites that are relevant to what users are looking for. Focus on this fact, and you ultimately won’t find yourself pigeonholed by updates to algorithms.

Kristin rankin works for BBEX ,An internet marketing consulting company located in Boca Raton,Florida.BBEX is one of a top SEO company in Florida specializes in website designing,SEO,Social media and other online marketing strategies to assist your company for getting more leads and business .

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