Friday, 20 May 2011
BT Search Smart - Is it just Rubbish?
I can see that their target audience is the SME (Small to Medium sized Enterprise) and that they charge a rough figure of around £74.00 a month.
I have a customer who tried using the services and wanted me to find out exactly what progress has been made as they don't understand the jargon the salesman from BT is saying.
From what I can see they have built a few links from exact phrase domain names which have no value or trust within Google and basically represents spam.
Check them out here:
carcrashinjuryclaim
This concerns me on a personal level as exact phrase domain names are brilliant for search and if used for genuine business they can be fantastic.
heres a few other reviews I have come across:
BT Web Clicks
http://www.seoers.org/BB/break-room/bt-smart-search-7115/
BT SEO and Lattitude
Wednesday, 24 November 2010
New Online Advertising Regulations
You might say the internet just became a little less free. As of March 2011, the adverts and marketing communications a company puts on its own web site or on free channels like Facebook and Twitter will fall under the watchful eye of the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA).
For years, the advertising industry’s standards body has maintained the Committee of Advertising Practice (CAP) Code. The Code ensures adverts are legal, decent, honest and truthful, and is used to justify ASA adjudications on whether adverts are acceptable or not.
A lot of online advertising activity is already covered by the CAP Code, from emails and pay-per-click advertising to banners and pop-ups – anything that has been paid for. But it’s the free marketing space on the internet that small businesses are exploiting so successfully and this, too, is about to come under regulatory control.
So when you promote your firm on your website or tell people about your offer on Twitter or Facebook, you may have to start taking a little more care over what you say about your own products and those of your rivals.
The line between marketing and editorial
The extended CAP Code will only cover online marketing, not editorial. But it’s a tricky distinction to draw. If you write a blog where you talk about your industry, your products or even a weekend away, does it count as marketing?
The ASA admits there are grey areas and has promised to review the Code each quarter. It has also said it welcomes feedback from businesses. That’s a good thing, says Rhodri Ferrier of men’s grooming products producer and 2008 Start-Up Stars winner, Bulldog.
“We’re a very small player in a market dominated by big guys with huge advertising budgets,” he explains. “We have to be fast and clever with what we do, particularly engaging with people on social networking platforms. But social networking is much more about a dialogue with consumers, so we’ll be keen to see what counts as best practice there.”
On the whole, Ferrier is “broadly positive” about the extension. “All companies need to be open, honest and transparent with their consumers, and anything the ASA can do that helps is welcome – particularly in our sector where you see some outlandish claims,” he says.
The don’ts – and their consequences
Outlandish claims about your product is just one of the areas covered by the CAP Code. Other no-nos include selling to children, encouraging anti-social behaviour or simply causing offence. There are also specific rules for sellers of products such as tobacco, medicines and alcohol.
It’s likely that you are mindful of restrictions when planning your advertising or marketing. But social media is so much more informal and immediate that it can be easy to slip up. Even a throwaway comment about a rival business on Facebook or Twitter could lead to a complaint.
Anyone can complain to the ASA. If the regulatory body finds a breach, it can ask you to amend or remove the comment or claim. If you refuse, there are sanctions.
“These include the removal of paid-for search advertising – ie, ads that link to the page hosting the non-compliant marketing communication,” explains ASA’s Matt Wilson. “We have the search engines’ buy-in on this.
“We also have ASA paid-for search ads, so we can put our own ads online to highlight an advertiser’s non-compliance. And we have an enhanced name and shame gallery on our web site, where we can list people refusing to cooperate.”
What’s the real impact?
In reality, it is unlikely that many small businesses will be affected by the extension to the CAP Code. More than 30 million adults access the internet almost every day in the UK; yet in the last two years, the ASA has received just 4,500 complaints relating to internet content. This could change if businesses themselves start using the beefed-up Code to address misleading and untrue comments made by their competitors online – in fact, this may even be the biggest impact of the regulatory change.
Bulldog’s Ferrier says a common sense approach to your use of all marketing channels will ensure you stay trouble-free. He reveals that Bulldog plans to audit its online content as a “belt and braces” exercise.
“We’ll also amend our employee handbook to make sure it covers social networking, and to make sure people are aware that these policies exist, given that we have multiple users of Twitter and Facebook.”
Time will tell how much small businesses might be affected by the CAP changes. In the meantime, there are simple steps you can take to ensure you don’t risk falling foul of the regulations:
Monday, 8 November 2010
What is Bounce Rate - Google Analytics
Bounce rate is the percentage of single-page visits or visits in which the person left your site from the entrance (landing) page.
So, if a visitor has landed on your website via a query in Google and very quickly pressed the back button, this will contribute to a high bounce rate.
In cases where visitors are coming from search engines, a high bounce rate may mean that the keywords they used and the content they found on your site are not aligned - so your site doesn't meet their expectations in some way.
Don't look at bounce rate in isolation - look at the overall picture of your website and how it's performing according to the metrics that matter to you. What DO you want your visitors to do at your site? Are you making it easy for them to do that, and are you measuring it
Tuesday, 26 October 2010
The Basics of Facebook Marketing
The Basics of Twitter Social Media Marketing
Sunday, 12 September 2010
New Facebook Page design for cyclexpress
We have dabbling with Facebook for quite a while now and turned a lot of customers to powers of this fantastic marketing tool.