Charlie Peverett – It’s only words? Working with Content Strategy

 

Content may be king, but it's also common currency online.
Taking a content-centred view of the world is a practical way of making sense of the many reasons we publish online, and helps us to work out the purpose, the pain and the politics of who's really involved in making it happen.
We've found that SEO, when partnered with content strategy, can get deeper into organisations while still achieving results - we just need to work a little differently with one another.

 

Searchbots endlessly crawl our websites, but how much do we know about what they actually do? Do they find all our content? Can their time be spent more effectively? How can we actually see and make sense of what they do?
Answers to (most of) these questions and more to be discussed .....

Glenn Jones – Microformats and SEO

Posted on: April 27th, 2012 by admin No Comments

 

Googles rich snippets and creation of schema.org have brought semantic mark up into sharp focus for the SEO industry. The semantic mark up technologies like Microformats, RDFa and Microdata can seem complex and the implementation choices unclear. Glenn will explain the different technologies how to chose one and demonstrate how to mark up HTML so it is picked up by the search engines. Finally, he will take look at the future of how Google could mine social networks data to aid search recommendation within results.

Adam Lee – Killer Market Research for Peanuts

Posted on: April 27th, 2012 by admin No Comments

 

The development of Social Media monitoring tools, web scrapping and APIs has lead to a wealth of information being available for research purposes.
Traditionally companies will pay Market Research companies tens of thousands of pounds to conduct a market research campaign to gather information now available online, which can be collected in a fraction of the time and at a fraction of the cost.
Killer Market Research for Peanuts looks at how No Pork Pies uses their tools to collect, analyse and understand online data to deliver in-depth analysis and insights into client's customers, competitors and industry trends.

 

It can be very daunting when launching or re-launching a brand or product online and this is something that I can speak from experience on. Prior the launch of Koozai back in May 2011, a lot of hard work and effort went into getting it right first time and I want to share some of our top tips, things to avoid and a list of resources and tools to help you achieve the desired result.

 

What does SEO mean when the web itself is a universal exchange of data, information and knowledge? When the web understands the meaning of the content and participation? When the 'things' on the Internet far outnumber the humans?

Last Minute #BrightonSEO Hotels

Posted on: April 5th, 2012 by admin 2 Comments

 

I've had quite a few people asking me on Twitter for hotel reccomendations.

Below are some options of hotels that still have rooms available, (somewhat cheekily they are all affiliate links)


        From  £53 : Umi Hotel
        From  £70 : Best Western Hotel
        From  £86 : Jurys Inn
        From £99 : Holiday Inn - SEAFRONT
        From  £110 : Thistle Brighton
        From  £155 : Hotel du Vin Brighton

If you’ve got any other questions drop an email to kelvin.newman@sitevisibility.com or send me an @ message on twitter @kelvinnewman

 

Once Niche, Now Mainstream

SEO used to be a niche activity, but not any more. Google provide their own free and pretty decent guide to SEO, most organisations have at least one person with some sort of knowledge of SEO .... SEO has even been heard on The Archers, on BBC Radio 4:

The Archers, Radio 4

Yes, Colonel Ponsemby-Smythe in Buckinghamshire, whilst puffing on his pipe and listening to the Archers has also been quietly improving the performance of his golf clubs website.

 

Has SEO Become Evil? Is SEO The Devil's Work?

So ... much of the information that was previously somewhat opaque is now widely known. This is a good and a fair thing: there's no reason why such knowledge should be held in the hands of a few.

 

However, it's not all applied to enhance the well being of human kind. In Will Critchlow's (of Distilled) video Scaling White Hat Link Building, Will mentions that eHow "are publishing the equivalent of four English language wikipedia's per year". Four! Four Wikipedia's every year! (a truly mad statistic)

 

However, eHow don't just blindly publish buckets of content, they very carefully mine the things that we search for, identify gaps where content doesn't exist, and try to fill it. Sometimes usefully, sometimes not so ...

 

And this data mining to mass target the long tail is worrying some folks:

(see also: Is SEO Killing America?)

 

Many of the examples in the above article are examples of organisations mining the vast amounts of data that we voluntarily provide (sometimes unwittingly) to sell more. So, I think its a bit off-the-mark (but it makes a good headline) to point the finger at SEO. I think the examples are more cases of unscrupulous or clumsy uses of our data. The Target example is a case in point:
How Target Figured Out A Teen Girl Was Pregnant Before Her Father Did

 

SEO Is .... ???

So what is SEO these days, and what will it become?
It's certainly changing - Google appears to be finally challenging the more dodgy end of the SEO world:

Private blog networks being targeted

 

We've had Google Panda:

Google Panda update

 

... and Google Venice:

Google Venice update

 

... and now we have a heads-up that Google has those who "over-optimise" in Google's sites:

Beware over optimised sites
(see also http://www.seroundtable.com/google-over-seo-update-14887.html)

 

All the above can only be for the good ... finally, hopefully, some meaningful clearing out.

 

But, there's other kinds of changes happening too: in some cases, Google is taking some elements of control and influence away from site owners: for example, by choosing to change some Title tags in search results:(see also http://goo.gl/jDcjp, http://goo.gl/V2jSg)
Google ammending title tags

 

This does all makes sense - Google focusing on the quality and usefulness of its results. You can also see this as Google cleaning up its advertising hoardings (after all Google now apparently perceives itself more as an advertising company than a technology company).

 

But with this targeting of the more spammy end of SEO, and this much greater emphasis on quality content and as Google say "building the for the user", surely SEO is becoming less a set of skills specific to just search optimisation and more an amalgam of other non-search-specific skills -isn't it?

Skills such as:

  • Technical: Build a website well (and hence ensure all content can be found by people and searchbots).
  • Market Research: Know your potential customers, know what your organisation should be relevant to versus what your organisation *is* currently relevant to.
  • User Experience Design: Build for your users, look at providing engaging experiences, understand conversion & bounce rates, A/B testing etc.
  • Information Architecture: Build your website/digital presence around what you should be relevant to.
  • Creative Marketing (and this is becoming increasingly influential): How to create something cost-effectively that engages, sparks interest, compels people to share/Tweet/link, etc

Are SEO people therefore becoming merely digital project managers that pull together many disciplines not particularly related to search - or - is there more to it than that?

 

There's been a rash of thoughts about trying to rename SEO to reflect some of these changes: is SEO the world of "organic web strategists"? Or, "inbound marketeers"? I quite like Ian Laurie's comment, that SEO is a marketing tactic, that really its just a strand of "internet marketing".

 

For my two pennies-worth personally I prefer "data driven natural search marketing" or just "natural search marketing", but DDNSM or NSM isn't as catchy as SEO is it? Thoughts anyone?

Roland is speaking at Brighton SEO on April 13th, examining how we can see what searchbots actually get up to, and why it matters.

Roland is a partner at Refined Practice, and a natural search marketing consultant at http://www.cloudshapes.co.uk/.

 

BrightonSEO Bowlorama… Saturday Social

Posted on: March 1st, 2012 by admin No Comments

 

Now a day of SEO-conference-fun-joy is good but what would be better?
An extra day of shenanigans!

 

How are we going to have that extra day? Well we've booked a job lot of
lanes at Brighton Marina's Bowling Alleys for a "BrightonSEO Bowling
Challenge" the Saturday lunch-time after the conference.

 

So if you fancy proving yourself the best SEO Bowler this is your
chance. You can enter as a team of six for your chance to #win in one
of three categories, 'Best Bloke', 'Top Lady' and 'Team Champions'.

 

It's £120 (+VAT) per team of six, to enter just send an email to
kelvin.newman@sitevisibility.com

 

It'll be a good laugh, a great networking opportunity and a chance to
wear weird shoes.

 

Long gone are the days when I was able to organise BrightonSEO with a few scraps of notes. It's proper complicated now. That's where I was hoping you might be able to help. We're looking for people who are keen to volunteer to help us on April 13th.

 

So if you've missed out on a ticket and would like to come, or just would like to help us out on the day this is the perfect opportunity. You could be manning a roaming mic, helping people register or generally make our lovely little event run smoothly.

 

Wanna get involved? Drop me an email at kelvin.newman@sitevisibility.com