From the category archives:

Web Marketing

Animal Shelter Marketing Letter

by Caroline on February 19, 2007

More info for animal shelters needing web sites or web marketing……..

… I’ve been building/rebuilding web sites for animal rescue groups. It’s my way of giving as I don’t deal with the shelter that well. I do two basic things: 1) build the site, 2) market the organization on the web.

The web sites I build are usually built on free software called Joomla. Instead of upload stories or changing HTML directly you would login to the administrator and publish your stories from there. If I do help out we don’t have to use that system, but I do recommend it because 1) multiple people can update the site; 2) you can easily grab email addresses from people interested in your org; 3) we can often add new features really fast. For instance I can add an online store in an hour or two; it uses a wysiwyg (what you see is what you get) editor so you don’t need to know any html — really a whole lot more.

Here are all the add ons to the base product:
http://extensions.joomla.org/

The main issue, though, is marketing. I assume that you want your web site to be found when someone types in
nh shelter
dogs for adoption
Or the like.
The business of making that happen is called SEO or search engine optimization. SEO used to be mechanical and very easy to do. Now the mechanical part is just the pre-requisite to the real work of web marketing. It’s very labor intensive (takes a lot of time, though the tasks themselves are not that hard).

Successful SEO is mostly about writing, writing, writing. There are tons of ways to get the word out about your web site, some of them really help you in the search engines, some less so.

I’ll help with either of these, my standing offer is here

A few things you might want to know about me:

I’m a low stress person, I don’t want to be a CARRIER either!

I’m just here to help, if this causes problems in the org don’t ever feel like you owe me anything, it’s your organization

Really good SEO skills are marketable. If you want training to market arnne it’s a great opportunity to learn for the doggies and then use it in your career.

I’m available when you need me, please don’t stress on my account.

Best,
Caroline

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Joomla 1.5.0 Beta Installation: Two Tricks

by Caroline on February 19, 2007

Joomla 1.5.0 Beta Installation: Two Tricks

1. Do NOT enter FTP information during the installation. Whatever bad falls out of that will be dealt with later. Or, enter it but if you’re site’s slowed to nothing you’ll have to find the “off” switch

2. During database creation just go and create the database and assign a user to it first, then fill in the info on the database installation settings page. It’ll save you the hassle of finding out that you can’t programmatically create a database.

Did I say two? Here’s a third.

Get the Joomla 1.5 beta here

But then upgrade from the Joomla 1.5 nightly build here

Before debugging anything always get the latest build.

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The domain name for local listings

by Caroline on February 13, 2007

Should I Name My domain 111aaaMyBusiness.com? My employer added “a” before the domain name. Is this good for high rankings? 
When your employer added the “a” to the internet name they used the alphabetical rule of phone book directories. One service people will use to find your site is the phone book, and the phone book lists entries alphabetically. By this logic the best name is 1aaaYourNameHere.com.    

Phone Book Directories
If the phone book directories were the only source of qualified site traffic you would do well to compete for aaa- and aardvark- prefixed names. The local online directories do have some of the market. Verizon Super Pages gives customers a choice to sort listings alphabetically. Its default listing, though, is not alphabetical. The initial sort is “Standard,” i.e., the most relevant according to MSN’s algorithm. 

The customer has to scroll to the bottom and choose “A-Z” to see an alphabetical listing. She can also choose “Distance” (from the customer-entered-location), which to me is the most logical sort for a list of kitchen designers.

Yahoo Local sorts by “Top Results,” listing those results that have keywords and other Search Engine Optimization (SEO) web site features closest to the terms the customer input.

Search Engines
Super Pages and Yahoo Local are just a small potential source of your qualified web site traffic. The Big 3 search engines will drive most of the real kitchen buyers to your site. Optimizing – and marketing – your site for the Google, Yahoo and MSN search engines, while keeping the local directories in mind, will cover 99.9% of your web site traffic universe planning. Since the local directories are showing the listing results in the same order as the search engines (most “relevant” first), the first letter of the domain name is not an important factor in getting good results. Neither the local directories nor the search engines display the listing results in alphabetical order by default.

Hyphenating the Domain Name
So now the question is: What is a good domain name? Some evidence exists that hyphenating a domain name yields greater results because there’s no question about the individual words. For instance, new-hampshire-kitchen-design.com might be better than newhampshirekitchendesign.com. The hyphens are harder for humans to remember (we expect the “all one word” type of domain name).

Search engines do examine the domain name and do give it some weight. They also examine the web site’s content, title and headline tags, incoming links from other sites and quite a bit more. The domain name’s keywords can affect search engine ranking, but if those domain name keywords carried a lot of weight sites like IBM.com would be penalized for not mentioning “computer” in the name.

So we can conclude that domain names do not need to be alphabetical or contain keywords of your business in order to achieve a higher ranking. Companies that sell domains often advocate keyword-seo-friendly domain names. Search engine expert Quadszilla (despite the anonymity truly a savvy SEO) advocates using keyword-hyphenated-domain-names for better search engine result pages. Yet his domain – seoblackhat.com – is not hyphenated. SEO guru Rand Fishkin gives the keyword-domain-name (with or without hyphens) a 1/5th of 1/3rd weighting, i.e., keywords in the domain are one of five factors that in total make up 30% importance in Google ranking.

So the keywords in the domain name have some weight, and the value of a hyphenated keyword domain is debatable.

Keywords in Domain Names
One place that domain keywords do make a difference is when the keywords the user enters are an exact match to your domain. Type in a dream kitchen to see what I mean. But I checked Google and Yahoo keyword tools for nh kitchen designer, and they report that no one is searching for exactly that phrase. So the domain nhkitchendesigner.com will not be of much use in obtaining higher search engine results. 

Branding Your Domain Name
Last we have the issue of branding. Do you search for books at books.com or amazon.com? The use of descriptive phrases in your company name or domain becomes irrelevant in the face of good branding. Good branding raises positive awareness of your business in the hearts and minds of your public. When you create an image of your business as the resource for your target market the name of that business is part of the image. Prior to the success of Amazon.com, the word “Amazon” did not create an association to buying books. So if you will use excellent branding techniques for your business and your web site the business name will fuse with your popularity, but it will not create your popularity.

What Works on Google
Fishkin summarizes good Google search engine marketing. Yahoo and MSN are pretty easy by comparison. But Google drives as much traffic as Yahoo and MSN combined, so it can’t be ignored. The Google methods are, in essence, good branding. So if you want good search engine results in Google you will have to make your web site an authority site that has great content and that other, highly qualified sites link to. The name of your company / domain name becomes so small in this mix that the answer boils down to this:
- name your company and your domain according to what works in the offline world
- identify your target market
- write both offline and online magazine articles
- write a very focused blog
- answer very focused questions on forums
- employ the mechanical methods of SEO on your web site

Conclusion
In the end, your name will not drive traffic because of the name. It will drive traffic because your business and your name fuse to represent the logical place to go for the best answers to the problems you solve.

 

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PositionPilot.com Domain For Sale

by Caroline on December 6, 2006

PositionPilot.com Domain For Sale

$7,850

 

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Question: how to use cpanel to host multiple web sites, each of which has multiple domans associated with it.

Example:

Assumptions: Name server setup points all of these domains to the name server where site1domain1.com etc. are hosted; site1domain1.com has content in /home/site1domain1/public_html; site1domain1 is “main” cpanel site, a Mother Site.

site1domain1.com has web content for site1domain1.com
site1domain2.com has pointer to site1domain1.com

site2domain1.com
site2domain2.com has pointer to site2domain1.com

/home/site1domain/public_html:                       site 1 domain 1’s content
/home/site1domain/public_html/site1domain2: site 1 domain 2 is pointer to site 1 domain 1
/home/site1domain/public_html/site2domain1: site 2 domain 1’s content
/home/site1domain/public_html/site2domain2: site 2 domain 2 is pointer to site 2 domain 1

Answer:

site1domain1.com is the host cpanel’s “main” site. It has a public_html directory under which its web code resides. Make sure none of the following directory names exist under public_html:

/home/site1domain1/public_html:
site1domain2
site2domain1
site2domain2

Task #1:
Make site1domain2.com point to site1domain1.com

Go to Addon Domains. Enter
site1domain2.com
site1domain2
a password here
Click Add Domain

This action creates the physical directory /home/site1domain1/public_html/site1domain2

New Domain Name:
Username/directory/subdomain Name:
Password:
 

Point site1domain2.com to site1domain1.com 
Go to Addon Domains.
At Redirect Domain to URL select site1domain2.com
Click Setup Redirect
Enter http://site1domain1.com/
Click Save

In browser go to site1domain1.com, it should show content in public_html
In browser go to site1domain2.com, it should redirect to site1domain1.com

Task #2:
Make site2domain2.com point to site2domain1.com

This is different than task #1 because there we were redirect the main hosting site’s domain. Here we are creating an add-on domain, redirecting it from the main site to the site2domain1 content, and then creating a pointer URL that redirects to site2domain1 as well.

Summary of tasks:
Create site2domain1 add on domain, redirect it so it displays site2domain1 content, create site2domain2 add on domain, redirect it so it lands at site2domain1.com

Create physical directory /home/site1domain1/public_html/site2domain1
Go to Addon Domains. Enter
site2domain1.com
site2domain1
a password here
Click Add Domain

Create physical directory /home/site1domain/public_html/site2domain2
Go to AddOn Domains. Enter
site2domain2.com
site2domain
a password here
Click Add Domain

 

Go to AddOn Domains
At Redirect Domain to URL select site2domain1.com
Click Setup Redirect
Enter http://site1domain1.com/site2domain1.com
Click Save
Go to AddOn Domains
At Redirect Domain to URL select site2domain
Enter http://site1domain1.com/site2domain1.com
Click Save
 

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Menu, Module, Menu-Module Connections in VirtueMart

by Caroline on October 17, 2006

How to ensure your module is loaded even if it means creating phantom menu items:

 I debugged a VirtueMart site today in which some of the modules were not loading as expected. The problem turned out to be inaccurate menu items. That problem was not evident because the menu items were never actually used. They existed just to support the modules, not as navigation.

Here is a step by step on how to support modules that don’t have navigation menus.

Given a web site section full of static items, the items might have internal content links among themselves with no outer navigation structure. If a module loads those static content items it must do so through a menu item. But within the context of one static piece pointing to another, the content might just use internal links.

The problem arises because all of the other modules on the page know whether to load or not based on an association with a menu item. Those internal static pages didn’t have menu items associated with them. Therefore when the static pages loaded they landed on a blank pages with no other modules present.

To fix this scenario I created a phantom menu that was marked “published” but which loaded into a non-existent module area. The steps to fix the issue are as follows:

In the menu manager, create a new menu (StaticMenu)

Within that menu, create a new Link to Static Content

Choose the static content and give the menu item a name

After saving that menu item you will get the address of that item in the menu item editor, for example:
 index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=41&Itemid=

Throughout the static content, whenever you want to refer to that item, use the index.php address just discovered.

Repeat for each static item.

Go to the site modules menu. Ensure that the StaticMenu is published but is assigned to a module area that the template doesn’t use.

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VirtueMart Product Details Page SEO Title Tags

by Caroline on September 27, 2006

 In administrator/components/com_virtuemart/html/shop.product_details.php, add the category name to the page title

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VirtueMart Category Page SEO Title Tags

by Caroline on September 27, 2006

In order to set keyword-rich title tags on a VirtueMart category listing page:

In administrator/components/com_virtuemart/html/shop.index_sdm.php (your mileage may vary on file name), add and initialize a $title variable in the top:

After setting the category name, append the category to the title:


This presumes your shop.index page calls

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Letter to a client about the awful search engine truth

by Caroline on September 27, 2006

Hey [well respected client name] -

I want to show you something interesting. I have to update my web marketing mantra to say links links links before I say content content content. I know incoming links are important. I know that aged, high quality, authoritative links are better than new, low quality, spammy links. But what I think I’ve been in denial about is that, for right now, links are beating content.

Google assigns page rank to everything it indexes. 0-10 where 0 is banned or not yet trusted and 10 is god status. Now check this out. This page has a page rank of 4

http://www.umdum.com/dir/46297.php

Even before Loren (page owner) added the princeton link the page had a PR of 4. I’ve got scores of highly relevant content on my site but I let my marketing go for 1.5 years and fell off the map, I only have a PR 3 and this page with no content has a 4.

So this was all coming on me like a sneeze yesterday when I wrote you the note with some good back linking tasks.

I KNOW google will fix this, the whole point is to index authoritative content, not well-respected white space. So content will be king, but I have to admit after discussing this with the site owner as well as a very well respected internet marketer that this is today’s realty, links trump content.

 

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The newer new SEO - Authority Sites

by Caroline on September 19, 2006

Google owns 60% of the search market and they’re the most academically inclined of the big 3 (Yahoo, MSN and Google). Google’s job is to provide spam-free content results. They know they’re not doing that now.

A good book on the subject is Authority Site Guide by Content Desk. I am impressed with this book but can’t yet endorse their product as I haven’t looked at it yet. I am loving the book. Google’s been publishing quality guidelines for years and this book describes how to build a quality (Authority) site.

It’s on target.I feel validated.

Some of Content Desk’s Authority Site comments I really like:

Choose a niche and subdomain the sub-niches:

smalldogmall.com: small dog stuff
Poodle.smalldogmall.com
Boston-Terrier.smalldogmall.com
Chihuahua.smalldogmall.com

Promote Interaction
Foster visitor comments
Give ability email and print the story

Incorporate a Reverse Ratio Advertising Policy
The more generic topics have less advertising surrounding them; the specific areas within that topic have more ads on the same pages. Monetize after you’ve filled a need. Don’t advertise on the home page.

More on this later……….

 

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Derivative blog monkey

by Caroline on August 29, 2006

I always say that when writers write about writing it’s time for me to stop reading. This blog about a blogging tool is worthwhile, though, because it involves shiny things.

 Latest addition to Web Programming Answers is the notable plug-in that prints purdy pictures across my fine fine blog template. And when you click one you can save my articles to social networking services and tell the world (or social networking services) what you like about this web site.

And now: shiny things:

Notable bookmarklets

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Affiliate Marketing First Month Wrap-Up

by Caroline on August 1, 2006

I built AnimalImages.biz out of animal posters and books from All Posters  and Amazon. The expenses were a few domains and hosting. Cost: $97

 Eventually I’ll pay our writer, too. Cost: $150

Seach engine optimization efforts were minimal and included directory submissions. I bought pay per click on Yahoo, where our ads got 12,632 impressions and 41 clicks averaging the 2nd position on Yahoo’s search page.  The doorm-room.net Yahoo keywords include “college dorm room checklist,” “dorm room picture,” “dorm room” and “dorm room decorating.” These had the most impressions. Cost: $73.86.

Amazon's big adventure The first change I made was to get off the animal images and onto the dorm room marketing angle. I am now marketing dorm-room.net, college-dorm-room.com and dorm-room-decor.com.

All Posters Big Pay Day July intake:
All Posters: $3.82
Amazon: $0.00

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AnimalImage.biz dorm room marketing

by Caroline on July 13, 2006

Affiliate Marketing Experiment
AnimalImage.biz is our first full-blown affiliate-driven ecommerce venture. It is powered by Amazon Associates Program and AllPosters.com Affiliates Program. Today I am adding linkshare.com animal magazines.

Animal Image Target Market: Dorm Room Decor
The site’s marketing target is the young girl going to college. Girls — much more than boys — will express their homesickness and actually try to do something about it. So our marketing strategy validates the girl’s experience and offers inspiring animal posters as a remedy.

Visitor Stats
We launched on July 8 2006. As of yesterday AnimalImage.biz had 34 search terms on Yahoo centered on the “dorm room” theme. To date (July 13) the ads have 3,244 impressions and 13 clicks. Today I updated the marketing copy on 8 ads. I believe some of them must have bee written in my sleep. I also need a lot more copy on the site itself but that is taking some time outside of my control. My web stats indicate that following # of unique visitors starting July 8: 40, 26, 34, 52, 8.

Promotion Activites
I launched the site on v7n.com forums by way of asking for feedback. I used OnlyWire and a few other tools to ping this post: Animal Image .biz (animalimage.biz) launched. I also submitted the site to some free search engine submission services, Yahoo, Google and MSN.

college-dorm-room.com, dorm-room-decor.com, dorm-room.net
The Search Engines are rewarding keyword domains so today I added and 301-forwarded some good college dorm room domains. college-dorm-room.com, dorm-room-decor.com and dorm-room.net are not meant for human consumption, they exist for the search engines.

July 12 2006 AnimalImage Revenue Results
$0.00

 

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Affiliate Experiment with LinkShare

by Caroline on July 11, 2006

Today we’re monetizing the blog with LinkShare affiiate links. I chose techie and game links because I assume my audience is techie and game-ie. The LinkShare program is straightforward to join. The interface is similar to commission junction, easier to read.

I placed some links on the sidebar and some are over this article. I’ll report back on AdSense vs. LinkShare success.

By the way. Like this blog? Please click a link.

 

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eSyndicat web directory software

eSyndicat is an open source link directory software package. It’s easy to use. Visitors can submit links or you can add them on the back end. It has unlmited categories and subcategories. It allows you to run AdSense, search the links and display new and popular entries. I had no trouble finding a nice, clean template.

 

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decorate your dorm room with www.animalimage.biz dog posters, dog books, dog magazines, cat posters, cat books, cat magazinesJoin us as we experiment with a brand spanking new affiliate marketing site. Today we added dog magazines, dog books and dog stories to our dog posters. The content comes from amazon.com and allposters.com affiliate programs, and our newest writer Castina Watson. Until we figure out exactly how we want to reproduce the results the site is not using a database. The pages are simple table cells that include individual files containing affiliate code.

The Yahoo ad program is setup, were waiting for editorial release. The theme is “decorate your dorm room with animal posters.”

We will be adding internal cross linking to make it easier for the visitor to stick to the site.

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