In simple terms, duplicate content refers to any website content that has been copied from an another existing source from the internet.
It's important that you shouldn't just copy content from somewhere else as Google will penalise you for this by lowering your website ranking in search results, or worse, remove you completely.
Below are some reasons why Google penalise websites for duplicate content.
Copyright
First of all, you're breaking copyright laws by using someone else's content and placing it on your site. You need to ask permission from the author to use that content.
Spam
Web spammers are now more advanced and use programs to copy content from legitimate websites to populate their own websites. These websites are then used for malicious activity such as fraud or viruses.
The User
Providing the same content across many websites add no value for the reader and Google wants to provide the most relevant and useful information to the user.
To combat duplicate content, Google has an advanced algorithm that identifies websites that contain duplicate content. The latest change from Google in its bid to combat duplicate content was rolled out in Feb 2011 - called Panda. The Panda update aims to lower the rank of “low-quality sites” on search results and move higher quality websites near the top of the search results.
The best and easiest way to ensure your website does not lose its rankings is to continue to write new, fresh and unique content.
Showing posts with label seo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label seo. Show all posts
Thursday, July 12, 2012
Monday, June 25, 2012
The differences between SEO and SEM
What is Search Engine Marketing (SEM)?
SEM, or Search Engine Marketing is the process of gaining traffic or visibility on, search engines through organic and paid search. A Search Engine Marketing campaign may include the following elements:
- Search Engine Optimisation (SEO)
- Pay per click marketing, eg Google Adwords
- Paid inclusion and trusted feed programs
Search Engine Optimisation, also called SEO, organic or natural search focuses on search positioning and on-page optimisation as well as link building to get your website ranking on search engines. SEO is a long term strategy and will take longer to get results. Where your website appears on search results will take time, and will depend on industry competition and other factors that search crawlers take into consideration when ranking your site, eg keywords, unique content, meta tag descriptions, link building efforts etc.
What is PPC or paid search?
Pay-Per-Click marketing is when an advertiser bids on keywords associated with an advertisement in order to achieve a higher position on Search Engine Results Pages. PPC ads will appear in the sponsored links section for searches for that particular keyword. Your ad will usually appear on search results within a few hours (once you set up your ad and chose your keywords). PPC is flexible and allows you to adjust your spend depending on your budget and how much you want to spend on keywords. PPC campaigns can be activated or deactivated as you wish.
What is paid inclusion?
Paid inclusion is simply the practice of paying a Search Engine or a directory to add your website to its database immediately, rather than setting up that site so that it will be found by the Search Engine spiders on its own.
The pros and cons of SEO and SEM
Below are some of the key differences between SEO and SEM:
Cost:
- Organic search - it costs nothing to index your website on a search engine, but if you engage the services of an SEO company to assist with your rankings, you will need to pay a monthly fee
- Paid search - you are paying on a cost per click basis. Click prices will vary depending on the keywords chosen and how many people click on your ad each day
- SEO - You can't control where your website will rank and it will fluctuate day to day
- SEM - you have control over where your paid ad appears on search engine results as this depends on how much you are willing to pay per click per keyword
- SEO campaigns take months to get your rankings up on search engines - it is a long term strategy to get your website ranking on search engines
- PPC campaigns are effective immediately
- SEO - your website will show to all markets in the geographic area
- PPC - you can target your ads to appear to a particular geographic area
Labels:
digital marketing,
search engine marketing,
SEM,
seo
Tuesday, May 22, 2012
The latest Google Algorithm update - Penguin
On 24 April, Google released its latest search algorithm update called Penguin. This update focused on 'webspam', which involves any practice that aims to rank a website higher in search engines, purposely using techniques that are against Google's guidelines and best practices.
The Penguin update primarily dealt with devaluing sites that were deemed to be participating in link schemes (or that had an unnatural number of links pointing to them), or websites that were ‘over-optimised’.
We recommend that you check your Google Analytics statistics, and if you notice a significant drop in traffic immediately after April 24th, then you may have been hit by the Penguin update. If you think you've been hit, speak to TA Fastrack about an SEO audit of your website to see what may have caused this penalty and provide advice on how to fix it and make sure your site is following all best practices and Google’s guidelines.
You can read more about the Penguin update here.
The Penguin update primarily dealt with devaluing sites that were deemed to be participating in link schemes (or that had an unnatural number of links pointing to them), or websites that were ‘over-optimised’.
We recommend that you check your Google Analytics statistics, and if you notice a significant drop in traffic immediately after April 24th, then you may have been hit by the Penguin update. If you think you've been hit, speak to TA Fastrack about an SEO audit of your website to see what may have caused this penalty and provide advice on how to fix it and make sure your site is following all best practices and Google’s guidelines.
You can read more about the Penguin update here.
Thursday, May 3, 2012
How to get your website ranking better with these SEO techniques
You need a sound SEO strategy to ensure that your website is found on search engines. Specific and targeted keywords and key phrases relating to your products and services used within your content, page titles and meta descriptions are all basic SEO techniques that will help with your website rank.
Below are some other SEO tips to help your website rank better:
1. Quality content is essential
Search engines will favour websites that provide high quality and unique content. Create content that your customers will find interesting and actually read.
2. Use relevant keywords
It’s still important to include relevant keywords and key phrases that your visitors will type into search engines to find your website. But ensure that you don't keyword stuff your paragraphs.
3. Link building
Integrate reputable links on your website and encourage other external websites to link to your website. This will help strengthen the reliability and reputation of your website.
Creating internal links within your website is also important. For example whenever you mention accommodation or things to do, link it to your rooms page or the location or activities page on your website.
4. SEO is a long term strategy
Continue to invest in your SEO strategy and it will slowly build up your page rankings over time. Getting found on search engines the organic way does not happen overnight. You have to continue to invest and work on your website.
If you would like more information on search engine optimisation for your website, speak to TA Fastrack today on 07 3040 3588.
Below are some other SEO tips to help your website rank better:
1. Quality content is essential
Search engines will favour websites that provide high quality and unique content. Create content that your customers will find interesting and actually read.
2. Use relevant keywords
It’s still important to include relevant keywords and key phrases that your visitors will type into search engines to find your website. But ensure that you don't keyword stuff your paragraphs.
3. Link building
Integrate reputable links on your website and encourage other external websites to link to your website. This will help strengthen the reliability and reputation of your website.
Creating internal links within your website is also important. For example whenever you mention accommodation or things to do, link it to your rooms page or the location or activities page on your website.
4. SEO is a long term strategy
Continue to invest in your SEO strategy and it will slowly build up your page rankings over time. Getting found on search engines the organic way does not happen overnight. You have to continue to invest and work on your website.
If you would like more information on search engine optimisation for your website, speak to TA Fastrack today on 07 3040 3588.
Labels:
digital marketing,
hotel websites,
search engine marketing,
seo,
website
Monday, January 16, 2012
How to get found online with search engines
1. Choose your keywords
- Choose keywords that your target market will use to search for your product and services. For example holiday apartments mooloolaba, serviced apartments melbourne cbd
- Choose keywords based on the search volume. Optimise your website for keywords with the larger number of searches for month. There is no point in optimising your website for keywords that no one will use. You might rank well for these, but if no one uses the keywords to find you, there is no point.
- Remember that depending on the competitiveness of the keyword, it might take longer for you to rank higher for those keywords.
- Place your primary keywords in your page title, headings, within the content of your page and description tags.
- Use your keywords as part of the URL. For example, www.yourcompanyname.com.au/serviced-apartments-mooloolaba.html
- Make use of H1 and H2 headings
- Place keywords within the meta-keyword tags and alt-text on images
- Build inbound links to your website from other quality websites
- Build links to your website using keywords as the anchor text. For example, the text that is hyperlinked to your website should be keywords you are optimising your website for (like serviced apartments melbourne), not the words 'click here' or your company name.
- Track the number of inbound links, keyword ranks and visits every month to ensure that it's building up.
- Track number of visits to your website through organic searches using Google Analytics. It's free to set up and you just need your web developers to insert the code in the website to track the statistics.
Thursday, February 24, 2011
Why the Design of Your Hotel Web Site Matters
It’s more than just Personal Taste - with so many hotels relying on the Internet to help fill their rooms- it amazes me that there are still so many hotel web sites that are not designed to produce room reservations. After-all isn’t that the primary reason why hotel sites are published to the Internet to begin with? It’s also shocking that so many web site designers don’t have a clue about search engines, how they work, nor how and why people select a hotel in which to stay.
So much of the planning and designing of a productive hotel web site starts with the intent of the designer, when the site is being designed. Does the designer understand the purpose of a hotel site? Stephen Covey, in his best seller “Seven Habits of Highly Effective People”, teaches us to “Begin with the end in mind”.
With hotel web sites, the “end” to keep in mind is that a hotel web site must be designed to “sell” reservations; not simply to be an online brochure. Many people have asked me why I feel so strongly that it takes knowledge of hotel marketing to design a productive hotel web site. It’s because an effective hotel web site must incorporate the basic hotel marketing principles of location, facilities, and attractions (both business and leisure); and, most importantly, the site must include dominant well-written sales text.
While a hotel brochure is designed to describe facilities and services, it is not relied upon to “close” sales. The purpose of a web site is far more complex. It must be designed to create search engine popularity, so the site can be found using many different search terms; it must create interest in the hotel’s location, facilities, and services; and, most importantly, its text must be written to convert “lookers into bookers”.
It’s Location, Location, and Location…
With few exceptions, people visit an area but stay at a hotel because of its location, nearby attractions and facilities. Knowing this, it makes pure common-sense to highlight your hotel’s location. It is always amazing to me to see so many hotel web sites which give no clue where the hotel is located; some even without a posted address.
Your location is a very special place. Your location has its own special attributes which attract visitors from all over the World. Your web site should prominently highlight your location’s special attributes and provide a reason to visit that location. Simply listing your hotel’s address is not enough; generating new visitors to your hotel’s location is most important; sell destination first, your hotel second.
Having a Web Presence
In the beginning of the Internet’s popularity, only ten or so years ago, many hotels had the foresight to take advantage of the opportunity to have a presence on this radically new marketing medium. But the Internet has changed a lot since then; we learned that merely having a presence on the Internet does not necessarily generate reservations.
Many of these early sites were designed by pure technicians, or in some cases the owner’s nephew, with a flair for design and some techno-knowledge of how to publish a web site on the Internet. Some sites were good; many were terrible, but in those days, few hoteliers knew how much the Internet would impact our industry and they knew even less about how to design a hotel web site to sell reservations.
During its maturation process, the number of web sites on the Internet has grown exponentially and search engines (the heart of the Internet) have been refined and improved; and are constantly being improved today. If a site cannot be found easily, it’s useless.
The Internet’s explosive growth has been unprecedented in our lifetime. Google, one of the Internet’s most popular search engines indexes more than 6.8 billion web sites. World population is 6.6 billion people; that’s more than one site for each and every one of us! Without search engines, navigating the net would be nearly impossible.
At this point you may be wondering what web site design has to do with search engines; the answer is everything. Search engine requirements must be built into the site’s design. Keep in mind that search engines, at the present time, read text; images and graphics are, for the most part, invisible to them. Search engines seek-out sites which contain the words contained in the search term.
Many web site designers do an excellent job of making web sites look attractive, but fail miserably to comply with search engine and hotel sales and marketing needs. It’s what your site “says” and “how it says it” that creates popularity with search engines and converts visitors into reservations.
Some Web Site Common-Sense
Hotel site designers, even those with hotel marketing experience, tend to be very right-brained creative types. Don’t assume that they always know all those key factors which make your hotel’s location unique and popular. When you select a designer for your site, either new or replacement site, make a list of sales features and keep them in priority order.
A good designer knows the prime web site real estate to occupy those most important details of your location and hotel. Remember, it’s not just what you say; it’s how you say it. Begin with the end in mind; the “end” is to generate reservations not just increase the number of visitors to your site.
I know it’s tempting to let your designer create a work of art; after-all you have all those beautiful images of your hotel, but it’s often their lack of hotel sales knowledge which will doom your site to obscurity and mediocre performance.
Good simple navigation of your site is also essential. Basic rule; don’t make users learn how to navigate your web site. Understanding how and why people choose a hotel is the first ingredient in designing a hotel web site. It is not a matter of simply describing all your hotel’s attributes; it is how they are presented that really counts.
Take an Objective Look at Your Site
If your site is not producing a good volume of reservations, it’s probably time to have a marketing analysis done of your site. A site analysis can reveal why your site is performing poorly; often some minor adjustments can make a substantial difference in your sales results. It can also reveal a need to scrap your current site in favor of a new, properly designed, one.
Are you measuring your site’s conversion rate? If not, why not? Don’t be fooled by simply measuring the number of visitors to your site. Most hotel web sites only convert less than four percent of visitors into reservations; increasing that ratio is the ultimate goal. Properly written and placed sales text can make a huge difference.
A web site is a living breathing sales tool which needs to be adjusted constantly to keep up with changes in your market, your hotel, and the ever-changing search engine parameters. Your web site is generating data and statistics, which you can use to improve your web site and its performance. Ask your web master to produce and evaluate this data. Sometimes there may be a small additional fee, but it is very worthwhile.
Your web site is capable of producing 30% to 70% of your total reservations; get it to work for you.
If you would like any further information on our budget and premium hotel website design click here to contact us or call us on 07 3040 3588.
So much of the planning and designing of a productive hotel web site starts with the intent of the designer, when the site is being designed. Does the designer understand the purpose of a hotel site? Stephen Covey, in his best seller “Seven Habits of Highly Effective People”, teaches us to “Begin with the end in mind”.
With hotel web sites, the “end” to keep in mind is that a hotel web site must be designed to “sell” reservations; not simply to be an online brochure. Many people have asked me why I feel so strongly that it takes knowledge of hotel marketing to design a productive hotel web site. It’s because an effective hotel web site must incorporate the basic hotel marketing principles of location, facilities, and attractions (both business and leisure); and, most importantly, the site must include dominant well-written sales text.
While a hotel brochure is designed to describe facilities and services, it is not relied upon to “close” sales. The purpose of a web site is far more complex. It must be designed to create search engine popularity, so the site can be found using many different search terms; it must create interest in the hotel’s location, facilities, and services; and, most importantly, its text must be written to convert “lookers into bookers”.
It’s Location, Location, and Location…
With few exceptions, people visit an area but stay at a hotel because of its location, nearby attractions and facilities. Knowing this, it makes pure common-sense to highlight your hotel’s location. It is always amazing to me to see so many hotel web sites which give no clue where the hotel is located; some even without a posted address.
Your location is a very special place. Your location has its own special attributes which attract visitors from all over the World. Your web site should prominently highlight your location’s special attributes and provide a reason to visit that location. Simply listing your hotel’s address is not enough; generating new visitors to your hotel’s location is most important; sell destination first, your hotel second.
Having a Web Presence
In the beginning of the Internet’s popularity, only ten or so years ago, many hotels had the foresight to take advantage of the opportunity to have a presence on this radically new marketing medium. But the Internet has changed a lot since then; we learned that merely having a presence on the Internet does not necessarily generate reservations.
Many of these early sites were designed by pure technicians, or in some cases the owner’s nephew, with a flair for design and some techno-knowledge of how to publish a web site on the Internet. Some sites were good; many were terrible, but in those days, few hoteliers knew how much the Internet would impact our industry and they knew even less about how to design a hotel web site to sell reservations.
During its maturation process, the number of web sites on the Internet has grown exponentially and search engines (the heart of the Internet) have been refined and improved; and are constantly being improved today. If a site cannot be found easily, it’s useless.
The Internet’s explosive growth has been unprecedented in our lifetime. Google, one of the Internet’s most popular search engines indexes more than 6.8 billion web sites. World population is 6.6 billion people; that’s more than one site for each and every one of us! Without search engines, navigating the net would be nearly impossible.
At this point you may be wondering what web site design has to do with search engines; the answer is everything. Search engine requirements must be built into the site’s design. Keep in mind that search engines, at the present time, read text; images and graphics are, for the most part, invisible to them. Search engines seek-out sites which contain the words contained in the search term.
Many web site designers do an excellent job of making web sites look attractive, but fail miserably to comply with search engine and hotel sales and marketing needs. It’s what your site “says” and “how it says it” that creates popularity with search engines and converts visitors into reservations.
Some Web Site Common-Sense
Hotel site designers, even those with hotel marketing experience, tend to be very right-brained creative types. Don’t assume that they always know all those key factors which make your hotel’s location unique and popular. When you select a designer for your site, either new or replacement site, make a list of sales features and keep them in priority order.
A good designer knows the prime web site real estate to occupy those most important details of your location and hotel. Remember, it’s not just what you say; it’s how you say it. Begin with the end in mind; the “end” is to generate reservations not just increase the number of visitors to your site.
I know it’s tempting to let your designer create a work of art; after-all you have all those beautiful images of your hotel, but it’s often their lack of hotel sales knowledge which will doom your site to obscurity and mediocre performance.
Good simple navigation of your site is also essential. Basic rule; don’t make users learn how to navigate your web site. Understanding how and why people choose a hotel is the first ingredient in designing a hotel web site. It is not a matter of simply describing all your hotel’s attributes; it is how they are presented that really counts.
Take an Objective Look at Your Site
If your site is not producing a good volume of reservations, it’s probably time to have a marketing analysis done of your site. A site analysis can reveal why your site is performing poorly; often some minor adjustments can make a substantial difference in your sales results. It can also reveal a need to scrap your current site in favor of a new, properly designed, one.
Are you measuring your site’s conversion rate? If not, why not? Don’t be fooled by simply measuring the number of visitors to your site. Most hotel web sites only convert less than four percent of visitors into reservations; increasing that ratio is the ultimate goal. Properly written and placed sales text can make a huge difference.
A web site is a living breathing sales tool which needs to be adjusted constantly to keep up with changes in your market, your hotel, and the ever-changing search engine parameters. Your web site is generating data and statistics, which you can use to improve your web site and its performance. Ask your web master to produce and evaluate this data. Sometimes there may be a small additional fee, but it is very worthwhile.
Your web site is capable of producing 30% to 70% of your total reservations; get it to work for you.
If you would like any further information on our budget and premium hotel website design click here to contact us or call us on 07 3040 3588.
Labels:
hotel,
hotel websites,
search engine marketing,
seo,
ta fastrack,
website
Wednesday, February 16, 2011
10 Ways to Improve your Hotel's Social Media Visibility
By Adrian Caruso - TA Fastrack's CEO
Many hotels and destinations have recently approached TA Fastrack and asked about improving their social media visibility. While there is no firm method of optimizing your Web 2.0 content, there are best practices that can improve your performance. Below, you’ll find ten of our favorite best practices that can easily be implemented to increase your followers as well as your web traffic.
1. Keep the CONVERSATION going
Like its name suggests, social media is, by nature, well – social. Think of websites like Facebook and Twitter as extensions of your network of friends. Unlike, say, strangers at the grocery store, it’s perfectly okay to reach out to someone you’re connected with on a social networking and say “hey, how are you doing?” – so long as you do it effectively. Instead of just talking, try to ask questions of your fans and followers. Encourage them to post content on your Facebook page. Check your @ replies on Twitter and your Direct Messages (DMs) often – if someone has a question, be proactive in your response. Even if the comments and feedback on these sites are negative, you can turn the experience into a positive one with a fast and timely response.
2. Create engaging CONTENT
Unlike your Brand.com website or standalone page, your social media presence is a great way to push the content envelope. Use a conversational copy tone – you may even want to solicit a younger member of your staff to manage your Facebook or Twitter accounts full time. Find someone to manage your pages who is passionate about the brand – their enthusiasm will reflect that in the copy. Use images, video and links wherever possible. A huge part of SEO is the power of the inbound link – and social media is a great way to generate that buzz!
3. Drive your readers to ACTION
Don’t be content to just tell your readers about a renovation – encourage them to talk about it, send in a photo, book a reservation, or secure a special promotion. Offer a special coupon to your 1,000th fan or follower. Give away a free drink in your hotel lounge or at a local restaurant to someone who mentions Twitter when they order a cocktail. Ask for opinions about a new renovation or local attraction. Online readers aren’t passive – they’re constantly scanning – so make sure your content is encouraging them to stop and participate!
4. Images are your FRIEND
Is your hotel beautiful? Did you have a great recent event, wedding, or photo shoot of your new menu? Did your destination just host a major event? Upload those gems to Facebook, twitpic or Flickr! Send a snapshot of the beautiful sunrise over your hotel, or of visitors enjoying the local culture, to your Twitter followers, and encourage them to snap photos of their own time at your hotel, resort or destination. Create a Facebook album of a recent event within the hotel or destination and tag people who attended – chances are a little vanity will go a long way, compelling them to return to your page again and again to see their photo, while encouraging their friends to do the same.
5. Create BUZZ – Aim to get your material to “GO VIRAL”
Have you ever seen the trending topics on Twitter? Utilize these hashtags or aim to create your own! Some of our favorites for the travel industry are #TravelTuesday (relevant travel related industry info) and #FollowFriday –which enables you to thank your new followers each week. Don’t forget the power of the retweet or RT, either. Retweet (or re-publish) people who are talking about your hotel or great things people are saying about your market. This can also apply to YouTube. Have you created a great or funny video? Upload it and share it across social media platforms. Create a great contest on Facebook and post it all over! The options are only as limited as your imagination.
6. Practice effective LINKING and NAMING
While you can’t directly optimize your content, you can practice effective linking strategies. Instead of saying “click here,” choose appropriate anchor text. If you’re really talking about your new menu, say “Enjoy the Trellis Restaurant Dinner Menu” – search engines recognize these types of links as more valid. This also applies to page naming – be sure to name your Facebook Fan page (use your full property name, unless it’s very long) and your Twitter page to make them as easily searchable as possible. Avoid funny characters like underscores when you can help it. People often forget to type these in!
7. Stay on top of the latest TRENDS
Social Media is a continually evolving industry – new applications are launched every day! Some of our new favorites include Foursquare and Gowalla – applications that let users on other social networking sites know where you are located by “checking in” to certain businesses and locations. You can even offer special promotions to people who participate in these programs by checking in at your hotel or visiting local businesses a given number of times.
8. Know your NEIGHBOURS
Encourage cross promotion with local businesses, important bloggers and local media outlets. They can be your biggest fans! Host an in-person networking event, and issue your invitations via Facebook or Twitter. Encourage local social networking groups to host “Tweetups,” or in-person meetings of Twitter friends, at your hotel or local hotspots within your destination. Offer a special discount as an incentive!
9. Keep sites SEPERATE
People who follow you on Twitter are often your fans on Facebook and vice versa, so don’t update the exact same thing in both places! It’s fine to cross promote, sparingly – a post on Twitter saying you created a great new Facebook album with a link, or a note on Facebook talking about an exclusive Twitter promo (great ways to get followers on both sites!). But if you continually update both pages with the same information, they begin to lose relevance. So despite seeing the option to stream your Twitter updates to Facebook and vice versa – it’s generally a ‘no-no.’
10. Don’t get DISCOURAGED
Your growth won’t be overnight, and follow/fan/friend rates will vary from day to day. You may see explosive growth or bookings as a result of a particular contest that won’t work again the next week. Don’t get discouraged – your continued efforts will pay off over time. Social media is a continually evolving discussion and new techniques are emerging daily!
If you need help improving your hotel's social media visibility, please call TA Fastrack on +61 7 3040 3588. TA Fastrack's social media's team has the tracking tools to monitor your brand across the digital landscape. We can tell you what people are saying. We can then manage your brand online and influence the influencers to spread the word and ultimately book with you. We understand the travel, tourism and hospitality industry so we know how to create a presence for your brand in niche markets.
Many hotels and destinations have recently approached TA Fastrack and asked about improving their social media visibility. While there is no firm method of optimizing your Web 2.0 content, there are best practices that can improve your performance. Below, you’ll find ten of our favorite best practices that can easily be implemented to increase your followers as well as your web traffic.
1. Keep the CONVERSATION going
Like its name suggests, social media is, by nature, well – social. Think of websites like Facebook and Twitter as extensions of your network of friends. Unlike, say, strangers at the grocery store, it’s perfectly okay to reach out to someone you’re connected with on a social networking and say “hey, how are you doing?” – so long as you do it effectively. Instead of just talking, try to ask questions of your fans and followers. Encourage them to post content on your Facebook page. Check your @ replies on Twitter and your Direct Messages (DMs) often – if someone has a question, be proactive in your response. Even if the comments and feedback on these sites are negative, you can turn the experience into a positive one with a fast and timely response.
2. Create engaging CONTENT
Unlike your Brand.com website or standalone page, your social media presence is a great way to push the content envelope. Use a conversational copy tone – you may even want to solicit a younger member of your staff to manage your Facebook or Twitter accounts full time. Find someone to manage your pages who is passionate about the brand – their enthusiasm will reflect that in the copy. Use images, video and links wherever possible. A huge part of SEO is the power of the inbound link – and social media is a great way to generate that buzz!
3. Drive your readers to ACTION
Don’t be content to just tell your readers about a renovation – encourage them to talk about it, send in a photo, book a reservation, or secure a special promotion. Offer a special coupon to your 1,000th fan or follower. Give away a free drink in your hotel lounge or at a local restaurant to someone who mentions Twitter when they order a cocktail. Ask for opinions about a new renovation or local attraction. Online readers aren’t passive – they’re constantly scanning – so make sure your content is encouraging them to stop and participate!
4. Images are your FRIEND
Is your hotel beautiful? Did you have a great recent event, wedding, or photo shoot of your new menu? Did your destination just host a major event? Upload those gems to Facebook, twitpic or Flickr! Send a snapshot of the beautiful sunrise over your hotel, or of visitors enjoying the local culture, to your Twitter followers, and encourage them to snap photos of their own time at your hotel, resort or destination. Create a Facebook album of a recent event within the hotel or destination and tag people who attended – chances are a little vanity will go a long way, compelling them to return to your page again and again to see their photo, while encouraging their friends to do the same.
5. Create BUZZ – Aim to get your material to “GO VIRAL”
Have you ever seen the trending topics on Twitter? Utilize these hashtags or aim to create your own! Some of our favorites for the travel industry are #TravelTuesday (relevant travel related industry info) and #FollowFriday –which enables you to thank your new followers each week. Don’t forget the power of the retweet or RT, either. Retweet (or re-publish) people who are talking about your hotel or great things people are saying about your market. This can also apply to YouTube. Have you created a great or funny video? Upload it and share it across social media platforms. Create a great contest on Facebook and post it all over! The options are only as limited as your imagination.
6. Practice effective LINKING and NAMING
While you can’t directly optimize your content, you can practice effective linking strategies. Instead of saying “click here,” choose appropriate anchor text. If you’re really talking about your new menu, say “Enjoy the Trellis Restaurant Dinner Menu” – search engines recognize these types of links as more valid. This also applies to page naming – be sure to name your Facebook Fan page (use your full property name, unless it’s very long) and your Twitter page to make them as easily searchable as possible. Avoid funny characters like underscores when you can help it. People often forget to type these in!
7. Stay on top of the latest TRENDS
Social Media is a continually evolving industry – new applications are launched every day! Some of our new favorites include Foursquare and Gowalla – applications that let users on other social networking sites know where you are located by “checking in” to certain businesses and locations. You can even offer special promotions to people who participate in these programs by checking in at your hotel or visiting local businesses a given number of times.
8. Know your NEIGHBOURS
Encourage cross promotion with local businesses, important bloggers and local media outlets. They can be your biggest fans! Host an in-person networking event, and issue your invitations via Facebook or Twitter. Encourage local social networking groups to host “Tweetups,” or in-person meetings of Twitter friends, at your hotel or local hotspots within your destination. Offer a special discount as an incentive!
9. Keep sites SEPERATE
People who follow you on Twitter are often your fans on Facebook and vice versa, so don’t update the exact same thing in both places! It’s fine to cross promote, sparingly – a post on Twitter saying you created a great new Facebook album with a link, or a note on Facebook talking about an exclusive Twitter promo (great ways to get followers on both sites!). But if you continually update both pages with the same information, they begin to lose relevance. So despite seeing the option to stream your Twitter updates to Facebook and vice versa – it’s generally a ‘no-no.’
10. Don’t get DISCOURAGED
Your growth won’t be overnight, and follow/fan/friend rates will vary from day to day. You may see explosive growth or bookings as a result of a particular contest that won’t work again the next week. Don’t get discouraged – your continued efforts will pay off over time. Social media is a continually evolving discussion and new techniques are emerging daily!
If you need help improving your hotel's social media visibility, please call TA Fastrack on +61 7 3040 3588. TA Fastrack's social media's team has the tracking tools to monitor your brand across the digital landscape. We can tell you what people are saying. We can then manage your brand online and influence the influencers to spread the word and ultimately book with you. We understand the travel, tourism and hospitality industry so we know how to create a presence for your brand in niche markets.
Friday, December 3, 2010
7 Secrets to Getting More from Google AdWords
Everyone knows that Google's Adwords service, works something like an auction. For example, if your Google Adwords budget is $5,000 a year and you're competing against other larger companies in the same industry as you that have budgets ten times larger, they can bid much more than you on the keywords or phrases where you want your ads to appear. But you're not necessarily out of luck here. By raising your Quality Score, you could spend less, while still getting more customers to your site and compete with the other larger companies.
Google assigns each ad a Quality Score - a number between 1 and 10 that reflects whether Google thinks its users will like your ad and whether it is relevant to their search and the web page it links to. That number influences how high your ad will rank in an auction.
A higher Quality Score means you can outrank competitors with higher bids, and get much more bang for your advertising dollar.
Below are some tips on how you can raise your Quality Score.
1. Don't run ads users won't click on
Let's just try this ad and see if anyone clicks on it. After all, since it's pay-per-click, if they don't click on it, it won't cost you anything. That may seem like good logic, but it's a big mistake. Click through rates (CTR) is one of the most important elements of Quality Score. If an ad for your business runs and users don't click it, it can lower your Quality Score, thus costing you more to run the same ad or even other ads in future.
Google actually assigns Quality Scores to ad groups as well as advertising accounts, so a bad CTR can hurt you in many ways.
Constantly testing slightly different wording and picking the ads with better CTR will help you not only by bringing you more customers to your website, but also by lowering your cost per click.
2. Divide and conquer
Don't just lump all your keywords and phrases into one group of ads that sends people to the same page. What works best is if you divide your keywords into groups that relate to a common theme and then send users to a dedicated landing page. For example, if you are in the holiday accommodation business, instead of grouping 'Hotel,' 'Motel,' 'Affordable Accommodation' and 'Holiday Accommodation' into one ad group, it is best if you break it down. You would have one ad group that relates only to holiday accommodation and if someone who clicked on that ad, they would be directed to a landing page for your various room types. Another ad group would be set up for 'Motel' etc.
3. Get rid of keywords that aren't helping you
Avoid keywords that, although may fit your market, are too general. If your market is very competitive and your keywords used are too general, you may find that bigger companies might outbid you and your ads won't appear on Page 1 of Google. Home in on your market and be specific with the keywords if you want your Adwords campaign to be successful.
4. Add content to your website and landing page
Having useful content is one of the big things that will help your Quality Score. And don't copy and paste content from other sites onto your page as Google will penalise you for duplicate content. Your pages need unique content, a variety of content, and frequently updated content. This will lead to a better user experience.
5. Give users choices
You may want your landing page to urge users toward a strong call to action, such as "Click here to learn more about our product" or "Sign up for our free e-newsletter." But Google wants users to have a wide array of choices, and having a menu of navigation options on your landing page will improve your Quality Score.
If users go to a landing page, they usually want more information. If they can't find the information they want, become frustrated and leave, this will be reflected in a poorer landing page Quality Score.
6. Tell about yourself
Does your site have prominent links to an "about us" (or "company") section? And does it offer a privacy policy where users are asked to enter information such as their e-mail addresses? If the answer to either question is no, your Quality Score will suffer.
Google recommends transparency. If users are going to give you their data, Google prefers to see a good privacy policy and a no-spam policy in place.
7. Make sure your pages load quickly
If a webpage loads too slowly, that's not a great user experience. Change hosting companies, or change the graphics on the page, so that the page loads quickly.
Site up time is critical. Even small down times that are otherwise unnoticeable are picked up by Google's automatic quality checks. If Google checks a landing page and it's down, by definition it's not relevant and there's a high probability of a Quality Score penalty.
To keep this from happening to you, consider using a site monitoring service, or if necessary, change your hosting provider.
TA Fastrack can assist you with Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) and Search Engine Marketing (SEM) services. To find out more, visit www.tafastrack.com.au or call 07 3040 3588 for more information.
Google assigns each ad a Quality Score - a number between 1 and 10 that reflects whether Google thinks its users will like your ad and whether it is relevant to their search and the web page it links to. That number influences how high your ad will rank in an auction.
A higher Quality Score means you can outrank competitors with higher bids, and get much more bang for your advertising dollar.
Below are some tips on how you can raise your Quality Score.
1. Don't run ads users won't click on
Let's just try this ad and see if anyone clicks on it. After all, since it's pay-per-click, if they don't click on it, it won't cost you anything. That may seem like good logic, but it's a big mistake. Click through rates (CTR) is one of the most important elements of Quality Score. If an ad for your business runs and users don't click it, it can lower your Quality Score, thus costing you more to run the same ad or even other ads in future.
Google actually assigns Quality Scores to ad groups as well as advertising accounts, so a bad CTR can hurt you in many ways.
Constantly testing slightly different wording and picking the ads with better CTR will help you not only by bringing you more customers to your website, but also by lowering your cost per click.
2. Divide and conquer
Don't just lump all your keywords and phrases into one group of ads that sends people to the same page. What works best is if you divide your keywords into groups that relate to a common theme and then send users to a dedicated landing page. For example, if you are in the holiday accommodation business, instead of grouping 'Hotel,' 'Motel,' 'Affordable Accommodation' and 'Holiday Accommodation' into one ad group, it is best if you break it down. You would have one ad group that relates only to holiday accommodation and if someone who clicked on that ad, they would be directed to a landing page for your various room types. Another ad group would be set up for 'Motel' etc.
3. Get rid of keywords that aren't helping you
Avoid keywords that, although may fit your market, are too general. If your market is very competitive and your keywords used are too general, you may find that bigger companies might outbid you and your ads won't appear on Page 1 of Google. Home in on your market and be specific with the keywords if you want your Adwords campaign to be successful.
4. Add content to your website and landing page
Having useful content is one of the big things that will help your Quality Score. And don't copy and paste content from other sites onto your page as Google will penalise you for duplicate content. Your pages need unique content, a variety of content, and frequently updated content. This will lead to a better user experience.
5. Give users choices
You may want your landing page to urge users toward a strong call to action, such as "Click here to learn more about our product" or "Sign up for our free e-newsletter." But Google wants users to have a wide array of choices, and having a menu of navigation options on your landing page will improve your Quality Score.
If users go to a landing page, they usually want more information. If they can't find the information they want, become frustrated and leave, this will be reflected in a poorer landing page Quality Score.
6. Tell about yourself
Does your site have prominent links to an "about us" (or "company") section? And does it offer a privacy policy where users are asked to enter information such as their e-mail addresses? If the answer to either question is no, your Quality Score will suffer.
Google recommends transparency. If users are going to give you their data, Google prefers to see a good privacy policy and a no-spam policy in place.
7. Make sure your pages load quickly
If a webpage loads too slowly, that's not a great user experience. Change hosting companies, or change the graphics on the page, so that the page loads quickly.
Site up time is critical. Even small down times that are otherwise unnoticeable are picked up by Google's automatic quality checks. If Google checks a landing page and it's down, by definition it's not relevant and there's a high probability of a Quality Score penalty.
To keep this from happening to you, consider using a site monitoring service, or if necessary, change your hosting provider.
TA Fastrack can assist you with Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) and Search Engine Marketing (SEM) services. To find out more, visit www.tafastrack.com.au or call 07 3040 3588 for more information.
Labels:
Google Adwords,
search engine marketing,
SEM,
seo,
tips
Wednesday, December 1, 2010
Looking Back on 2010
As I sit in a very crowded airport, I find myself reflecting back on this past year. For the Interactive Marketing/Search industry, 2010 was very active with mergers/acquisitions, partnerships, innovation and constant change. Although it’s been a wild ride, as we look toward 2011, advertisers should leverage the knowledge learned this past year and prepare for what’s ahead.
Here is a sampling of some of the more eventful happenings from this year:
Contact me for more details.
Here is a sampling of some of the more eventful happenings from this year:
- Google Caffeine, Instant & Preview
- Partnership between Yahoo & MSN/Bing
- Promoted Tweets
- Facebook Pages to “Like” not ‘Friend/Follow”
- LinkedIn Company Page Feature for “Products/Services”
- iPad and entry of the Tablet
- Introduction of Droid and Windows Phone
- Remarketing Ads
- Invasion of all things Mobile
- Enhanced features (extensions) in AdWords for more robust ads.
- Measuring Social Media Results and Monetization of Those Efforts
- Crafting Multi-Device, Robust Mobile Strategy Beyond Basic Visibility
- Improving on Analytics and Integration With Other Important Data
- Refining Paid Search Campaigns – More Experimentation With Other Engines, Portals, Networks, etc.
- Multi-Channel Strategy Development & Execution … Holistic Marketing
- Content Maximization for Enhanced SEO Value
- Experimentation – Multivariate Testing
- Identification of Metrics & Goals
Contact me for more details.
Keep Online Marketing In-House or Outsource?
The goal of this article is to share practical suggestions to help you figure out whether to keep your marketing efforts in-house or to outsource them.
All things being equal, it is very appealing for a company to maintain internal control over their SEO, SEM, Design, Social Media and Analytics efforts. There ought to be a multiplier effect from having someone with those skills be able to interact on a daily basis with the rest of your team and as a result, be able to execute in a highly efficient and “dialed-in” manner. A perception also exists that it’s cheaper to manage inside than pay a firm to help you. That may or may not actually be the case.
As I look back on our past 8 years in the marketing industry and the great clients we have worked with, I can point to many examples where we have essentially trained that in-house person for an organization through months or years of working together. We have always tried to teach as we go and recognize that a transition from out-of-house to in-house works well for certain companies. The key is finding and retaining an individual(s) who understands the key disciplines and who can effectively execute on behalf of your company.
Besides the difficulty in recruiting in-house talent, another challenging aspect centers around the fact that there are so many different skill sets involved which ultimately need to be mastered. SEO, SEM, Design, Social Media and Analytics all overlap, but are each unique disciplines. When we work with a client, their main point of contact within TA Fastrack is their Client Strategist, but our Client Strategist then interfaces with subject matter experts internally on SEO, SEM, Analytics, etc. It’s a lot to ask of most individuals to become proficient in each of these areas.
If you hire an individual who already has some of these skills (and or is highly trainable), then this path can work. You may also need to consider hiring multiple individuals. What tends to be less effective is adding interactive marketing responsibilities to a person on your staff who already has a heavy load or who doesn’t demonstrate enthusiasm about the opportunity, as the results are typically underwhelming.
The bottom line, I believe, is that companies need to be incorporating SEO, SEM, Design, Social Media and Analytics, plus possibly Affiliate Marketing into their overall marketing mix. In-house or out, someone needs to be constantly thinking about and acting intelligently in these channels on behalf of your business.
At TA Fastrack we have the resources and most importantly the best experts in each marketing channel who will always think strategically about improving the current results you get from each channel. To discuss the benefits of outsourcing your marketing, please contact me directly via email or call me on +61 7 3040 3589.
Enjoy more success with your marketing!
Adrian Caruso - CEO, TA Fastrack
All things being equal, it is very appealing for a company to maintain internal control over their SEO, SEM, Design, Social Media and Analytics efforts. There ought to be a multiplier effect from having someone with those skills be able to interact on a daily basis with the rest of your team and as a result, be able to execute in a highly efficient and “dialed-in” manner. A perception also exists that it’s cheaper to manage inside than pay a firm to help you. That may or may not actually be the case.
As I look back on our past 8 years in the marketing industry and the great clients we have worked with, I can point to many examples where we have essentially trained that in-house person for an organization through months or years of working together. We have always tried to teach as we go and recognize that a transition from out-of-house to in-house works well for certain companies. The key is finding and retaining an individual(s) who understands the key disciplines and who can effectively execute on behalf of your company.
Besides the difficulty in recruiting in-house talent, another challenging aspect centers around the fact that there are so many different skill sets involved which ultimately need to be mastered. SEO, SEM, Design, Social Media and Analytics all overlap, but are each unique disciplines. When we work with a client, their main point of contact within TA Fastrack is their Client Strategist, but our Client Strategist then interfaces with subject matter experts internally on SEO, SEM, Analytics, etc. It’s a lot to ask of most individuals to become proficient in each of these areas.
If you hire an individual who already has some of these skills (and or is highly trainable), then this path can work. You may also need to consider hiring multiple individuals. What tends to be less effective is adding interactive marketing responsibilities to a person on your staff who already has a heavy load or who doesn’t demonstrate enthusiasm about the opportunity, as the results are typically underwhelming.
The bottom line, I believe, is that companies need to be incorporating SEO, SEM, Design, Social Media and Analytics, plus possibly Affiliate Marketing into their overall marketing mix. In-house or out, someone needs to be constantly thinking about and acting intelligently in these channels on behalf of your business.
At TA Fastrack we have the resources and most importantly the best experts in each marketing channel who will always think strategically about improving the current results you get from each channel. To discuss the benefits of outsourcing your marketing, please contact me directly via email or call me on +61 7 3040 3589.
Enjoy more success with your marketing!
Adrian Caruso - CEO, TA Fastrack
Labels:
email marketing,
marketing,
search engine marketing,
seo,
social media
Wednesday, November 10, 2010
Get your website found with SEO
Many businesses are opting to have a website developed to present their products and services to as wide an audience as possible.
However, having a beautifully designed and presented website does not guarantee an immediate increase of customers begging for your offerings.
The secret is to provide a way that your potential clients can find your website amongst the billions of pages on the internet when they are searching for information when they are considering a project or a purchase.
And of course that secret is the search engines, who, when your potential client types in certain keywords i.e. words that describe your business, display a list of results to the searcher that matches those keywords as closely as possible.
However if you are in the same business as many others, eg: a used car sales business, a workshop, a spare parts house or a marine dealer there may be hundreds of competing businesses who, because they are in the same industry as you, use the same keywords as you do.
This means that all of your competitor's information will be displayed to your prospect as well as yours. Even worse, the number of results displayed at once [on one screen] in most search engine search results is set to 10 by default. This means that your listing may turn up deep into the search engine results. It is a well-known fact that most searchers will not look past page three of the search results; therefore if your listing is displayed after page three there is a good chance that few searchers will ever see it.
There are several ways that you can increase your rankings in the search engines, including Google Adwords, and SEO [search engine optimisation] services. Some SEOs provide a guarantee that your site will be listed in the first one or two pages of Google's search results within six months but they are not shy when it comes to charging for the service. Google Adwords also work but could cost you thousands as you pay for everyone that clicks on your ad in Google's sidebar regardless of the value of the "clicker" to you as a client.
So how do you achieve high rankings - ie: page one in the search engine results without spending a great deal of money.
By taking advantage of the free kicks provided by listing sites on the web, by promotion in Government and Trade association websites, by requesting that your suppliers link to you and by utilising the use of reciprocal links from associates who own websites and who are in the same industry as you but not competitors.
If you would like more information about the TA Fastrack SEO service and how SEO or Adwords can help your business, speak to one of our marketing consultants now on 07 3040 3588.
However, having a beautifully designed and presented website does not guarantee an immediate increase of customers begging for your offerings.
The secret is to provide a way that your potential clients can find your website amongst the billions of pages on the internet when they are searching for information when they are considering a project or a purchase.
And of course that secret is the search engines, who, when your potential client types in certain keywords i.e. words that describe your business, display a list of results to the searcher that matches those keywords as closely as possible.
However if you are in the same business as many others, eg: a used car sales business, a workshop, a spare parts house or a marine dealer there may be hundreds of competing businesses who, because they are in the same industry as you, use the same keywords as you do.
This means that all of your competitor's information will be displayed to your prospect as well as yours. Even worse, the number of results displayed at once [on one screen] in most search engine search results is set to 10 by default. This means that your listing may turn up deep into the search engine results. It is a well-known fact that most searchers will not look past page three of the search results; therefore if your listing is displayed after page three there is a good chance that few searchers will ever see it.
There are several ways that you can increase your rankings in the search engines, including Google Adwords, and SEO [search engine optimisation] services. Some SEOs provide a guarantee that your site will be listed in the first one or two pages of Google's search results within six months but they are not shy when it comes to charging for the service. Google Adwords also work but could cost you thousands as you pay for everyone that clicks on your ad in Google's sidebar regardless of the value of the "clicker" to you as a client.
So how do you achieve high rankings - ie: page one in the search engine results without spending a great deal of money.
By taking advantage of the free kicks provided by listing sites on the web, by promotion in Government and Trade association websites, by requesting that your suppliers link to you and by utilising the use of reciprocal links from associates who own websites and who are in the same industry as you but not competitors.
If you would like more information about the TA Fastrack SEO service and how SEO or Adwords can help your business, speak to one of our marketing consultants now on 07 3040 3588.
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