Archive for July, 2010

(Evan Kramer is a guest blogger for SEO.com. He has successfully launched consumer websites AjcJobs.com, Kudzu.com, AutoGuide.com, VacationRoost.com, GoHoming.com and ezprints.com. He writes his own blog, The Chief Internet Officer. He currently lives in Atlanta, Georgia with his wife and daughter. If you are also interested in guest blogging opportunities, e-mail marketing @ SEO.com. Guest posts may or may not reflect the opinions of SEO.com.)

For consumer product businesses on the Web, managing data can often be difficult because of all the data constituents involved (Marketing, IT, Operations and all the sub-managers under each).

Search engine optimization needs to be accounted for as part of your data architecture planning. Whether you are dealing with inventory, classifieds, information, etc., there are ways to manage your product data to better optimize your SEO efforts. Managing product data is often at the intersection of Marketing and IT Infrastructure.

I often refer to this as your “Markestructure.” Your Markestructure can be evaluated in more ways than just enhancing SEO efforts, such as CRM, customer acquisition, data hygiene, etc. But for this post, I will focus on four major ways to manage your product data (as part of your Markestructure) for SEO.

    1. Creation of unique product data
    2. Online Distribution
    3. Customer Segmentation
    4. Data conversion

Creation of Unique Product Data

We all know how Google loves content to be unique. Over the past few years, social media has facilitated unique content as user generated reviews appended to product information has helped grow companies like Yelp, TripAdvisor and others. However, outside of user-generated content, how do you make your product data more unique? Retail businesses will often struggle with having to merchandise the same products as competitors — whether it is refrigerators, cars, apparel, etc. A great way to manage differentiation is the utilization of third party data or branded content on your product details pages.

For example, if you are selling appliances online, you can utilize great data from data.gov to mash-up government benefits attached to each type of appliance. Let consumers be aware of the benefits to buying an energy efficient appliance. In addition, you can utilize content staff to enhance the messaging around the product details of the appliances to match of the voice of your brand. For example, if you are selling automobiles online, it is often difficult to differentiate yourself from competition on anything other than price. To a search engine, you can add content on the product page associated with your brand such as testimonials, statistics about your dealership customer service or quirky facts about the make/model of the car using strong keywords.

Online Distribution

Your website is merely one Web page or a group of Web pages from which to market your product data. Depending upon your industry, make sure you have a viable syndication and RSS program in place to proliferate and your product data to the highest degree possible. Once syndicated, you can create SEO programs around your data.

For example, back to the automotive example, there are great syndication outlets for your product data such as Googlebase, Oodle, Vast, etc. Once deployed, you need to assess the meta data associated with each data feed that is impacting search results for that channel. As an example with Googlebase, you may need to have stronger ALT tags on your images, increase the updates (freshness) of your data or merely add more content description with keywords in order to differentiate your product data.

SEO is not only about managing your product data results directly to high SERPs but also your marketing channels that indirectly impact SERPs.

Customer Segmentation

The great thing about SEO is how it is now converging with consumer marketing. The search engines now want to not only consume content like a reader, but also evaluate content like a reader. As such, it’s better if you you can work with marketing to create customer segmentation and integrate strategic keywords into your segment product data pages.

For example, back to the automobiles example, it would be great to utilize the same product data for a Make/Model (say, BMW) against several customer segments in order to generate several unique content pages. You may have a luxury buyer, a mid-life crisis buyer, a speed racer type, etc. For each segment, you can generate a specific landing page to filter to your product data in order to merchandise to that particular customer segment. I know my wife will not be buying a mini-van any time soon for our family because she refuses to be labeled a ‘Soccer Mom.’ Perhaps have a “Cool Mom Car” selection instead?

Data Conversion

Data associated with your products — whether it is retail commerce, classifieds, etc. — should not be tied to a specific format when it comes to generating SEO. At first, you should cover your bases and create an XML file to include all pages with your product data. However, you should explore options on how to convert your data into different formats, such as video, in order to create new unique content for the search engines using the same data. Perhaps take images and convert them to video files. There are sites like Animoto or companies like Liquidus Marketing that can generate great content with static jpeg images. You may also explore text to speech options where you can convert your data into audio files. Whether you create video or audio files, you can syndicate and index these new file types and generate user content against them over time to further enhance the uniqueness of the data.

Overall, these are merely four ways to evaluate product data as part of your Markestructure in order to better manage SEO. The process of search optimization is ongoing and requires constant attention. However, this post is a reminder to evaluate the origins, architecture and uses of your product data as part of your overall SEO strategy.

Read the original here:
Four Tips to Effectively Manage Data in an SEO World

SEO.com is hosting the Utah Tech Council’s industry breakfast Thursday, July 29 from 8 to 9:30 a.m. at its corporate headquarters at 14870 Pony Express Road in Bluffdale.

Tim Sullivan, president and CEO of Ancestry.com, will speak on “How to Execute a Big Idea.”

He will tell the story of Ancestry.com’s experience of landing the hit NBC TV show, “Who Do You Think You Are?” and will discuss how to tackle similar big ideas and projects that may seem insurmountable. The show, which will return in August, features celebrities such as Spike Lee, Susan Sarandon, Emmitt Smith and Sarah Jessica Parker using Ancestry.com’s software to trace their roots and discover their ancestors. It has brought massive exposure to Sullivan’s company.

WHEN:
Thursday, July 29
8 – 9:30 a.m.
COST:
$15 for UTC Member
$30 for Non UTC Member
REGISTER NOW:

Event location:
SEO.com
14870 Pony Express Road
Bluffdale, Utah

Driving Directions:
Take I-15 to exit 288, 14600 South. Keep right at the fork and follow signs for Bluffdale. Merge onto UT-140 West. Turn left at I-15 Frontage Road/Pony Express Road. SEO will be on the right.

Event date: 7/29/2010 8 a.m.

Read the original:
SEO.com Hosts UTC Industry Breakfast; Ancestry.com CEO to Speak

SEO.com is hosting the Utah Tech Council’s industry breakfast Thursday, July 29 from 8 to 9:30 a.m. at its corporate headquarters at 14870 Pony Express Road in Bluffdale.

Tim Sullivan, president and CEO of Ancestry.com, will speak on “How to Execute a Big Idea.”

He will tell the story of Ancestry.com’s experience of landing the hit NBC TV show, “Who Do You Think You Are?” and will discuss how to tackle similar big ideas and projects that may seem insurmountable. The show, which will return in August, features celebrities such as Spike Lee, Susan Sarandon, Emmitt Smith and Sarah Jessica Parker using Ancestry.com’s software to trace their roots and discover their ancestors. It has brought massive exposure to Sullivan’s company.

WHEN:
Thursday, July 29
8 – 9:30 a.m.
COST:
$15 for UTC Member
$30 for Non UTC Member
REGISTER NOW:

Event location:
SEO.com
14870 Pony Express Road
Bluffdale, Utah

Driving Directions:
Take I-15 to exit 288, 14600 South. Keep right at the fork and follow signs for Bluffdale. Merge onto UT-140 West. Turn left at I-15 Frontage Road/Pony Express Road. SEO will be on the right.

Event date: 7/29/2010 8 a.m.

View original here:
SEO.com Hosts UTC Industry Breakfast; Ancestry.com CEO to Speak

Web Development SEO TipsOne of the things we constantly have to do as SEO experts is give recommendations to companies on how they need to change their site so that they can be better optimized.

The sad thing is that a lot of the things we recommend should have been done during the Web development phase the first time around.

No matter how much the SEO world tries to get the information out there, a lot of Web developers don’t understand the basic concepts of SEO. This in turn leads to sites being developed that an SEO team will later have to tear apart and fix.

So whether you’re designing a new site in-house, using some kind of template site-building system, or hiring an outside firm, here are 18 things that you’ll want to make sure are in place before you launch your site. It will keep us SEO guys from giving your site an overhaul later. By following these guidelines you’ll have a much more search engine friendly web design from the beginning.

1- Perform Keyword Research Before Developing the Site

SEO starts with keywords. And if you’re planning to market your site in the search engines, you should know what keywords you want to rank for before you even start building the site. Make sure this is done FIRST.

Here are some other posts that talk about how to properly do keyword research:

2- Put Non-www to www Redirects in Place

It amazes me how many sites load with and without the www in the URL. The problem with this is that it creates an automatic duplicate of your site, and can waste a lot of link value as people link to both versions. Decide which version of your URLs you want to use, then 301 redirect everything else to the preferred version.

3- Use a Static, Keyword Based URL Structure

Dynamic URLs can cause a lot of problems if not handled right. So rather than going through all of the headache that they cause us SEO-types, just set your site up with good URL rewrites so that you don’t have dynamic URLs in the first place.

More posts about URLs:

4- Have Unique URLs for Each Product/Service

Even if a product or service can be found multiple ways on the site, make sure that there is only one unique URL for each product or service your company offers. This helps to eliminate unnecessary duplicate content problems.

5- Include Redirect Capabilities

You never know when you’re going to want to take a page down and redirect it to something else. The mistake a lot of sites make is that they just take a page down when they don’t need it any more. When this happens you lose the link value that page may have gained while it was live. So do yourself a favor: make sure you can 301 redirect that old page to a new page that can use the juice.

6- Create a Custom 404 Page

Having a custom 404 page makes it so that if someone lands on a 404 page, they at least know they’ve reached the right site. Without a custom 404 in place, they may just assume the site is down and move on to your competitor’s site.

Here is an example of a custom 404 page:

Custom 404

7- Include Keyword-Rich Alt Attributes

Alt attributes are very easy to overlook. But if you use them the right they can be another signal to the search engines to tell them what a page is about. One quick tip on this one: don’t abuse this attribute by using a keyword phrase on every single bullet point image or stuffing a bunch of keywords into the attribute.

8- Make Room for Sufficient Content

Sometimes designers and developers get carried away with the look and feel of the page and forget to include room for text-based content. That’s what the search engines read, so you have to make sure there is a logical place for that content. Ideally, plan on having at least 150-200 words of optimized content on any page you want to rank well.

You should also make sure that your content is structured right. Have one H1 tag at the top of the main content, and then break out other sub topics with H2-H6 tags as appropriate. Make sure to use your keywords in these headings and in the content, but once again don’t overdo it.

9- Set Up Internal Linking Structure

I think that internal linking is one of the most commonly overlooked things for most sites. In fact, Ken Lyons wrote a great post about it that goes into more detail than I can in this post: Want More Link Juice? Here’s an Easy Way to Get It

10- Decide on a Consistent Title Structure

A site should use the same title structure throughout the site. Pick your convention and stick with it. A good format to follow is to have a phrase that includes main keywords for the page and describes what the page is about, followed by a separator (- or | are common), and then your brand name. For example, “Professional SEO Services for Organic Website Optimization | SEO.com”. Keep these titles to under 65-70 characters so they don’t get truncated in the search results.

11- Include Meta Descriptions on Every Page

Since most of the search engines can choose to use your meta description as your snippet in the search results, you should have a unique one written for every page. Include the main keywords and a call to action to encourage clicks. DON’T just make this tag a list of keywords.

12- Allow Inclusion for Other Meta Tags (canonical, robots, etc.)

If you’re using any kind of tracking codes or other things on your site that create duplicate URLs, you’re going to want to be able to include a canonical tag on those pages. Also, depending on how your site is built you may need to include other meta tags like a robots tag and others. Make sure your site’s back end allows for this when necessary.

13- Incorporate Social Media Sharing Buttons

In case you missed it, social media is a pretty big thing right now. I’m not a big fan of the generic ShareThis button, but you need to have some kind of social media sharing buttons on your products and other important pages. Do some research to decide which social networks are best for your site and then stick with those.

More general information about social media:

14- Install Analytics Tracking

If you don’t have any kind of analytics tracking installed, you have no way to tell where you traffic is coming from, what’s working, and lots of other crucial information. Pick a solution and get it installed. Popular ones include:

Make sure that the software you go with will allow you to block your office IP address, track conversions, ecommerce revenues generated through different online sources, and anything else that will help you to understand what is actually affecting your bottom line.

15- Set up and Verify Webmaster Tools Account

Through Google Webmaster Tools you can find out a lot about how Google sees your site, and can give them indications on how to handle certain parameters, submit your XML sitemap, and be notified of problems they find with your site. Bing’s Webmaster Center is coming along, so it’s worth it to go ahead and verify that one as well.

16- Follow Web Standards for HTML, CSS, and Database Programming

The more you follow standards, the easier it will be for someone else to come along later and make changes or modify the site. It’s a real problem when a site’s backend code or database is so complex that it has to be rebuilt later in order for it to be changed.

17- Generate an XML Sitemap

It only takes a few minutes to do it, but once the site is live make sure you create and XML sitemap and submit it to the major search engines through their webmaster tools accounts. It’s even better if you can set this up so that it automatically updates and pings the search engines whenever a change is made.

18- Create a Robots.txt File

When you create your robots.txt file make sure that you are disallowing any pages or directories that you don’t want the search engines crawling. Standard examples would be login pages, search results pages, and shopping cart pages. You should also include a link to your XML sitemap as well. Also, make sure you test this file in your Google Webmaster Tools account to make sure it is working correctly.

Here’s a great site that talks more in detail about how to create a robots.txt file: About /robots.txt

If you follow these 18 guidelines you’ll launch a site that is in great shape as far as SEO is concerned. If you’re an SEO, feel free to add anything else to this list in the comments.

Read more from the original source:
18 Simple SEO Items Commonly Missed in Web Development

Web Development SEO TipsOne of the things we constantly have to do as SEO experts is give recommendations to companies on how they need to change their site so that they can be better optimized.

The sad thing is that a lot of the things we recommend should have been done during the Web development phase the first time around.

No matter how much the SEO world tries to get the information out there, a lot of Web developers don’t understand the basic concepts of SEO. This in turn leads to sites being developed that an SEO team will later have to tear apart and fix.

So whether you’re designing a new site in-house, using some kind of template site-building system, or hiring an outside firm, here are 18 things that you’ll want to make sure are in place before you launch your site. It will keep us SEO guys from giving your site an overhaul later. By following these guidelines you’ll have a much more search engine friendly web design from the beginning.

1- Perform Keyword Research Before Developing the Site

SEO starts with keywords. And if you’re planning to market your site in the search engines, you should know what keywords you want to rank for before you even start building the site. Make sure this is done FIRST.

Here are some other posts that talk about how to properly do keyword research:

2- Put Non-www to www Redirects in Place

It amazes me how many sites load with and without the www in the URL. The problem with this is that it creates an automatic duplicate of your site, and can waste a lot of link value as people link to both versions. Decide which version of your URLs you want to use, then 301 redirect everything else to the preferred version.

3- Use a Static, Keyword Based URL Structure

Dynamic URLs can cause a lot of problems if not handled right. So rather than going through all of the headache that they cause us SEO-types, just set your site up with good URL rewrites so that you don’t have dynamic URLs in the first place.

More posts about URLs:

4- Have Unique URLs for Each Product/Service

Even if a product or service can be found multiple ways on the site, make sure that there is only one unique URL for each product or service your company offers. This helps to eliminate unnecessary duplicate content problems.

5- Include Redirect Capabilities

You never know when you’re going to want to take a page down and redirect it to something else. The mistake a lot of sites make is that they just take a page down when they don’t need it any more. When this happens you lose the link value that page may have gained while it was live. So do yourself a favor: make sure you can 301 redirect that old page to a new page that can use the juice.

6- Create a Custom 404 Page

Having a custom 404 page makes it so that if someone lands on a 404 page, they at least know they’ve reached the right site. Without a custom 404 in place, they may just assume the site is down and move on to your competitor’s site.

Here is an example of a custom 404 page:

Custom 404

7- Include Keyword-Rich Alt Attributes

Alt attributes are very easy to overlook. But if you use them the right they can be another signal to the search engines to tell them what a page is about. One quick tip on this one: don’t abuse this attribute by using a keyword phrase on every single bullet point image or stuffing a bunch of keywords into the attribute.

8- Make Room for Sufficient Content

Sometimes designers and developers get carried away with the look and feel of the page and forget to include room for text-based content. That’s what the search engines read, so you have to make sure there is a logical place for that content. Ideally, plan on having at least 150-200 words of optimized content on any page you want to rank well.

You should also make sure that your content is structured right. Have one H1 tag at the top of the main content, and then break out other sub topics with H2-H6 tags as appropriate. Make sure to use your keywords in these headings and in the content, but once again don’t overdo it.

9- Set Up Internal Linking Structure

I think that internal linking is one of the most commonly overlooked things for most sites. In fact, Ken Lyons wrote a great post about it that goes into more detail than I can in this post: Want More Link Juice? Here’s an Easy Way to Get It

10- Decide on a Consistent Title Structure

A site should use the same title structure throughout the site. Pick your convention and stick with it. A good format to follow is to have a phrase that includes main keywords for the page and describes what the page is about, followed by a separator (- or | are common), and then your brand name. For example, “Professional SEO Services for Organic Website Optimization | SEO.com”. Keep these titles to under 65-70 characters so they don’t get truncated in the search results.

11- Include Meta Descriptions on Every Page

Since most of the search engines can choose to use your meta description as your snippet in the search results, you should have a unique one written for every page. Include the main keywords and a call to action to encourage clicks. DON’T just make this tag a list of keywords.

12- Allow Inclusion for Other Meta Tags (canonical, robots, etc.)

If you’re using any kind of tracking codes or other things on your site that create duplicate URLs, you’re going to want to be able to include a canonical tag on those pages. Also, depending on how your site is built you may need to include other meta tags like a robots tag and others. Make sure your site’s back end allows for this when necessary.

13- Incorporate Social Media Sharing Buttons

In case you missed it, social media is a pretty big thing right now. I’m not a big fan of the generic ShareThis button, but you need to have some kind of social media sharing buttons on your products and other important pages. Do some research to decide which social networks are best for your site and then stick with those.

More general information about social media:

14- Install Analytics Tracking

If you don’t have any kind of analytics tracking installed, you have no way to tell where you traffic is coming from, what’s working, and lots of other crucial information. Pick a solution and get it installed. Popular ones include:

Make sure that the software you go with will allow you to block your office IP address, track conversions, ecommerce revenues generated through different online sources, and anything else that will help you to understand what is actually affecting your bottom line.

15- Set up and Verify Webmaster Tools Account

Through Google Webmaster Tools you can find out a lot about how Google sees your site, and can give them indications on how to handle certain parameters, submit your XML sitemap, and be notified of problems they find with your site. Bing’s Webmaster Center is coming along, so it’s worth it to go ahead and verify that one as well.

16- Follow Web Standards for HTML, CSS, and Database Programming

The more you follow standards, the easier it will be for someone else to come along later and make changes or modify the site. It’s a real problem when a site’s backend code or database is so complex that it has to be rebuilt later in order for it to be changed.

17- Generate an XML Sitemap

It only takes a few minutes to do it, but once the site is live make sure you create and XML sitemap and submit it to the major search engines through their webmaster tools accounts. It’s even better if you can set this up so that it automatically updates and pings the search engines whenever a change is made.

18- Create a Robots.txt File

When you create your robots.txt file make sure that you are disallowing any pages or directories that you don’t want the search engines crawling. Standard examples would be login pages, search results pages, and shopping cart pages. You should also include a link to your XML sitemap as well. Also, make sure you test this file in your Google Webmaster Tools account to make sure it is working correctly.

Here’s a great site that talks more in detail about how to create a robots.txt file: About /robots.txt

If you follow these 18 guidelines you’ll launch a site that is in great shape as far as SEO is concerned. If you’re an SEO, feel free to add anything else to this list in the comments.

See the original post:
18 Simple SEO Items Commonly Missed in Web Development

A few days ago, a client expressed a doubt that’s probably all too common. He said, “You guys recommend that I get more involved in social media, but I’m in the (insert boring industry here) industry. What is there to say about the (insert boring industry here) industry?”

Is social media stardom reserved only for the world’s most exciting things like, say, gilded yak shaving?

I think not. Just a few days ago, I watched the people in this office go nuts over a social media campaign about body wash. People around the world have been obsessed with campaigns about blenders, hamburgers, and beef jerky. There are not a lot of inherently exciting things about those products, but they were able to engage users like few things can. If they can do it, you can do it in your boring industry. Here are two things to remember:

1. It’s not about the product

Most consumer products and services are boring, which is why good social media marketing is about emotion and branding instead of the product. Your aim should be to make people laugh, shake their head in disbelief, do a double-take, etc. If you can’t do that with an explanation of your boring product, then it’s time to get creative.

Think about this – if everybody else in your industry is just sitting in front of a webcam, giving dry guarantees about how their product is the best and posting it on YouTube, then you are in a good position to stand out.

2. It’s about strengthening your brand

The goal of all things social is to get people to spend money at your store. When your brand speaks to people at an emotional level, it makes them actually want to spend money at your store. To that end, simply get social and tell people in a creative way why your brand is better than everyone else’s in your industry. At first, they might crack a smile and not think much of it. Gradually, they’ll warm up to the idea and begin to associate your brand with what they want. Now you’re building brand equity. If your industry is boring, then the bar is low and it shouldn’t be too hard to make your brand shine.

So if it’s not really about the boring product, but rather about getting your brand into people’s heads, then that explains why body wash can be so successful at social media. And if the personal hygiene products industry can do it, then the (insert boring industry here) industry can do it. Yes, you’ll need some creative people on your team to make it happen, but it has been done before and you can do it again.

Now get out there and make your boring product the next Internet sensation.

View original here:
So Your Industry Is Boring – Don’t Let That Keep You Out of Social Media

We’re teaming up with Search Engine Marketing Professional Organization (SEMPO) in a free webinar that will discuss how to tear apart a site and find common issues that are keeping it from ranking well.

This webinar is about the nitty-gritty details, and will explore the key components of a Web page that search engines analyze to determine how a page should rank. Join Dan Patterson, our Director of On-Page Optimization, as he discusses various search tools and analyzes elements like:

  • Keyword targeting
  • URL structure
  • Unique and duplicate content
  • Page titles and meta data
  • Internal links
  • Image & flash optimization

When: Thursday, July 22

Time: 12:00 PM Eastern (9:00 AM Pacific)

Where: Online web conference

How:Register Here

Cost: Free

Who Should Attend: Executives, in-house marketers, IT professionals

To register for this session, go here.

Information about how to attend this Webinar session will be emailed directly to you before the Webinar. Please note that the audio portion of the Webinar will come through your computer speakers or headset – a conference bridge will not be used. Please comment if you have any questions.

About SEMPO
Search Engine Marketing Professional Organization (SEMPO) Mission: SEMPO is a global non-profit organization serving the search engine marketing industry and marketing professionals engaged in it.

Here is the original post:
SEO.com and SEMPO Webinar: How to Perform a Technical Audit, July 22

A fool and his money are soon parted. This old time Idiom has never been truer especially when it comes to poor PPC management.

<pThe search engines have perfected an amazing money-making machine. Not employing best practices can result in the sad end of any PPC campaign. If best practices are employed, PPC can be a Godsend. You can start making money almost instantly. Unfortunately, the following PPC management blunders are very common and typically result in frustration and monetary donations to the Google fund.

1) Website not clearly defined

All the traffic in the world can’t overcome a poorly defined website. Sites that are confusing with poor navigation will lead to poor website conversion rates. Remember, that finding the winning PPC recipe takes time and effort. If possible, test different versions of your site. Sometimes a landing page will work better than a 50-page website. Regardless, be sure to synchronize your keywords, ads, and site. PPC is a science of relevancy. Matching keywords, ads, and pages improves user experience. On the other hand, failure to do this will have a negative impact on conversion rates and quality scores.

2) Failure to implement AdWords tracking and Google Analytics.

With PPC virtually every metric is measurable. Without tracking, how do you know which page, keyword, or ad is working and what’s not working? Don’t do anything with PPC unless you can track it.

3) Sending traffic to broken pages

Sending traffic to broken pages only results in wasted money. Be sure when pages are deleted the corresponding PPC elements are also taken offline. PPC accounts should always mirror the website.

4) Not evaluating the competition

Frequent competitive reviews will help keep your pulse on the competition. Using your core keywords, you can easily study your competitors messaging and website in just a few clicks. From this info you can counter and find a hook that will differentiate your company from the competition.

Keep in mind you won’t really know what is working until you test it yourself. Be sure to also study your competitor’s ad text. At any time you might be competing with 9 other advertisers on the search network. Make sure you are always testing more than 1 ad at a time with a strong call to action. You should also rotate your ads evenly. You can then determine the best messaging based upon CTR and conversion rate.

5) Allowing campaigns to run on auto pilot

You might remember that old infomercial with the catchy tag line “Set it and forget it”? PPC is not a set it and forget it. If you have this mentality you might as well throw your money into the Fire Place. I recommend evaluating your PPC campaigns every day. This will help keep your finger on the pulse of your PPC campaigns. Many PPC managers don’t review data often enough. Failure to check in on a regular basis can result in lost revenue.

The bottom line is, don’t take shortcuts when setting up your PPC account. Setting up PPC accounts the right way takes a lot of research and time. However, the amount of money you will save in the long run will make the time you spent worth it. Stop donating wasted dollars to the Search Engine Slush Fund.

Original post:
5 PPC Management Blunders That Will Burn Your Cash

Yahoo Will Begin Testing Bing Powered Results This Month

Posted by DavidLeeTV On July - 15 - 2010

Yahoo recently sent out an email to their advertisers that discusses some of the organic Yahoo to Bing transition topics. The email goes over some of the basic questions about the transition and gives some pointers, but it adds some appreciated insight into the launch of the Bing search results in the Yahoo engine and dates of when they will begin testing.

In the email, Yahoo confirmed that they are currently testing the Bing powered results “offline”, but today, for the first time, Yahoo confirmed that they will be testing the Bing powered results in the live search results this month.

The email said:

“Though much of our testing is already happening offline, this month (July 2010) we’ll also test the deliver of organic and paid search results provided by Microsoft on live Yahoo! traffic.” Yahoo also said: “testing volumes will fluctuate during this period” and they will ensure to keep the “paid search volume in particular kept low” so that it will not impact their advertisers adversely.

It is assumed that the complete switch over will happen sometime in August or September, depending on how the testing goes, but you should keep your eyes open for the Bing search results on Yahoo as early as the next few days.

Read the rest here:
Yahoo Will Begin Testing Bing Powered Results This Month

Yahoo recently sent out an email to their advertisers that discusses some of the organic Yahoo to Bing transition topics. The email goes over some of the basic questions about the transition and gives some pointers, but it adds some appreciated insight into the launch of the Bing search results in the Yahoo engine and dates of when they will begin testing.

In the email, Yahoo confirmed that they are currently testing the Bing powered results “offline”, but today, for the first time, Yahoo confirmed that they will be testing the Bing powered results in the live search results this month.

The email said:

“Though much of our testing is already happening offline, this month (July 2010) we’ll also test the deliver of organic and paid search results provided by Microsoft on live Yahoo! traffic.” Yahoo also said: “testing volumes will fluctuate during this period” and they will ensure to keep the “paid search volume in particular kept low” so that it will not impact their advertisers adversely.

It is assumed that the complete switch over will happen sometime in August or September, depending on how the testing goes, but you should keep your eyes open for the Bing search results on Yahoo as early as the next few days.

See original here:
Yahoo Will Begin Testing Bing Powered Results This Month

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