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Accepting Resumes for SEO Intern

Friday, October 30th, 2009

WIMB is currently accepting resumes for an entry level intern position.

Likely candidate should be interested in learning Internet Marketing concepts and tasks, should be outgoing and work well independently. Candidate should be competent in FTP and HTML. PhotoShop,  PHP and MySQL knowledge is a bonus.

Currently the position would be a work-from-home.  We will be opening an office in Saint Louis, MO (south) area next year.  Intern would then be required to spend some time in our office, but hours and location of your contribution can be flexible.

Potential assignments include:

  • Slicing PSD files into usable HTML/images
  • Link building
  • Article submissions
  • Keyword research
  • Wordpress theme editing

Yes, we will teach you if you don’t understand some of it, but you are expected to be a quick study and competent with a PC.

Please send your Word or PDF resume, a few examples of your web work and compensation requirements to info@whereismybusiness.com by Nov 15, 2009. No hard copies accepted.

Basic Keyword Research

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009

Tools required: An Internet Browser ( I suggest FireFox) and a spreadsheet program (such as MS Excel)

The first thing you need to do after attending an eye-opening seminar such as the one we just sponsored is to sit down and start building a foundation.  That foundation will help you decide your future plans and paths.

This foundation show start with some basic keyword research.  I say basic, although in reality I mean detailed.  Keyword research can be a bit monotonous and boring, but without it you’ll be like a pilot with no flight plan.  It is essential that you understand where it is you are going before you take off.  So let’s get started.

Dumb it down

Keywords. What are some generic words that would describe your business?  You may already have a list of words that your web designer asked for (we’ll leave why he/she asked for them for later).  Make a list of 20 or so words that explain your products, your services, your industry.  These need to be high level words that give you an overall summary of your industry.  If you handed this list to a stranger, they’d have a generally good idea of what it is you do.

Buzzwords and Lingo

Many industries have special words or acronymns that are only understoof within that immediate circle.  Avoid industry buzzwords that won’t be used or understood outside of your area.  The only exception to this is if your customers understand what they’re looking for.  If you sell guns, M1A1 may be better and more specific than ‘machine guns’.  Write them both down.

Branch it out

Now start branching out your generic list.  If you sell mattresses, writing ‘memory foam’ and ‘coil spring’ count because they are two separate items under the same mattress umbrella.  Same goes for multiple revenue streams. If you do ‘computers’, you also may do ‘PC repair’ and ‘website design’.  Get a bit more specific than just your high level words.

KW Research 101

Once you’ve got a decent list, it’s time for a little fun.  Type these words into a spreadsheet.  You may want to make a separate sheet for each word, because you’re going to end up with a nice list of similar words for each of your starter words.

Now head over to Google and check out the Google Suggest tool.  Simply start typing in your first keyword in the search box and see what Google ’suggests’ as similar phrases and word combos.  Type in the ones that pertain to you.  Rinse and repeat for each phrase.

You’ll soon find out that there are some great phrases & keywords that you totally missed when writing your short list. Soon your head will be buzzing with new words.  As you come across these foundation words, start a new blank sheet for each one so that you can come back to it in the future.

KW Research 102

For a little bit more research, head over to Google’s AdWords program.  This is their pay-per-click advertising medium, but we can use it to get some great keyword ideas, and it won’t cost a dime.

Start a new campaign, name it something like ‘KW Research’.  Put in an ad as if you were advertising, and soon you’ll be presented with a nice list of words that could also work for you.  Obviously the more keywords Google gives you for your ad, the more money they can make.  Add all the keywords that are relevant to you and finalize your campaign.

Once you’ve completed the campaign, go back and pause the ad campaign so you don’t actually get charged anything.  Now that it’s paused, you can go back into your keyword list and export it to Excel (fancy, huh?) or do even more research on your other terms.

There are plenty of other keyword research tools, but these are two of the very basic.  They’ll get you on your way to establishing a nice list for your SEO campaign.  Building these lists also help you understand your industry a little better, and may be eye-opening when you see just what your customers are typing in to find you.

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Look at Me SEO Seminar

Tuesday, May 5th, 2009

Will Hanke will be speaking at the Look at Me SEO Seminar in St. Louis on August 27.  Tickets are $149 for the all day event.

For all of those who have taken Will’s classes in the past, you know you’re in for some great information.

Also, we will be providing a Free SEO Audit to every attendee at the event. ($199 value). So get to it!

For more, visit the event website: http://www.MarketStL.com

Get Analytics Before You Hire an SEO

Monday, February 23rd, 2009

Even before you hire an SEO to do some work on your website, you really need to know what you’re getting for your hard earned money.

The great thing about SEO is that nearly all of it is trackable.  Every website visitor leaves a nice trail when they come by, and over time you can collect that data and sort through it for patterns, good or bad.  Then, armed with that data, you can make changes that increase the amount of clickthroughs, or even move things around on your page to help influence a higher purchase rate.

However, none of this is possible if you aren’t collecting the data.

Google analytics is arguably one of the best (and free) analytics collection programs on the market today.  Setting it up for your website is a breeze, just sign up and add the code they provide you to each page of your website.

This will do a couple of nice things for you, even before you hire an SEO to start spiffing up your site.

You’ll set a baseline of visitors

You have to know what is already going on on your website before you hire an SEO.  Knowing your baseline of visitors over a week or month will show you the impact of the things you have already done to promote your website.  If it shows an average of 20 visitors a week, then you know that if it increases to 30 and then 40, that your SEO is actually doing things for you.

You can track landing pages

If you’re really not into SEO, or not into marketing at all, chances are you are promoting your home page URL as the place to go.  But what happens if your page on custom widgets is getting tons of traffic, and you had no idea?  You may already have a great web page that doesn’t have a good call to action, and you don’t even know it!

You can see which search engine is referring traffic

Not sure if your visitors are coming from Yahoo!, MSN or Google?  A good analytics program will tell you where your strong points are, helping your SEO focus on boosting those rankings and growing the others into a mature state as well.

You can see geo-information about your visitors

What if you’re a blue widget maker who only sells in Missouri?  And what if 85% of your visitors are living in Washington?  It doesn’t do you much good if you only sell to Missourians.  Know where your current traffic is coming from, and adjust accordingly.

Summary

I know this post is a bit down-n-dirty, but I hope I’ve made the idea clear.  Go get signed up for Google Analytics today.  Get it set up on your account, and then start looking for a good SEO company to help you improve your baseline.