Services
Web Hosting Dedicated Servers Forex Investment Web Design Voice over IP
Products
Clothing & Fashion Mobile Phones Electronics eBooks & Info Music & Movies
Shopping
Agenzy.Com Shopping Shopping - UK Couponzy.com Shopping - EU Shopping Info
Blogs
Real Estate Fashion Technology Business News

Posts Tagged ‘polls’

Problems at the polls? Send a tweet

Monday, November 3rd, 2008

Long lines, broken voting machines, and citizens who can’t vote because their names don’t show up on the registration rolls. A group of software developers and designers have teamed up with the blog techPresident to make it easier for voters to broadcast such issues far and wide–fast.

The Twitter Vote Report, as its name suggests, lets voters share experiences and resources via the popular microblogging service. The messages will then be aggregated and mapped so followers can “see” voting problems in real time via state-specific Google Maps, like the Colorado map at the top of this blog.

Twitterites can post to the Twitter Vote Report in a few ways:

Twitter Vote Report

• By Twitter: post a tweet that includes the hashtag #votereport and then other predetermined tags (“#wait:90″ means that the wait time is 90 minutes, for example; #machine would indicate machine problems).

• By text message: send a text message starting with #votereport to 66937 (MOZES).

• By phone: call the automated hotline at 567-258-VOTE (8683) or 208-272-9024 with any touch-tone phone.

• By iPhone/Android phone: download the iPhone App or find the “votereport” app in the Android marketplace.

Of course, the Twitter Vote Report is only one of many online election tools. From polling widgets to iPhone-based countdown clocks, election apps are more plentiful than California electoral votes.

Here is the original post:
Problems at the polls? Send a tweet

Share/Save/Bookmark

SEO Basics: Ensure Your Site is Crawlable

Wednesday, October 8th, 2008

Online Marketing Blog has always been about more than search engine optimization, covering digital public relations, social media marketing and plenty of other internet marketing topics. And yet, SEO is a core component of nearly every thing we do in our consulting practice.

For the web site owners  and marketers fairly new to the site optimization game, we like to offer tips based on common questions overheard in the course of providing SEO and internet marketing services.

Question: “Ensure your site is crawlable”  What would be, in your opinion, the basic conditions that need to be reunited for a website to be crawled?”

“Crawlable” means the links to and within your web site can be discovered and followed by search engine spiders.  Spiders or bots are programs that search engines send out to find and re-visit content (web pages, images, video, pdf files, etc). If a search engine spider cannot follow a link, then the destination page will either not be included at all, or exist in the search engine’s database but not be included in the universe of web pages available to search results.

A few of the common issues that can make it difficult for search engine spiders to crawl a web site effectively include:

  • Navigation links embedded in Flash – Spiders for most search engines do not typically crawl links within Flash files, although Google reports progress in improving Flash indexing
  • Navigation links embedded in JavaScript or Ajax – Again, spiders like Googlebot have historically had issues with crawling links embedded in JavaScript menus but have made some progress. Links within Ajax web pages are still problematic for crawling.
  • Embedding site navigation links within forms – Most search engine bots cannot fill out forms (except sometimes Google). If the user has to select and item from a drop down menu or fill in a form field to see content, that content is unlikey to be discovered and indexed by search engines.
  • Lack of authoritative links into the web site. Search engines discover new web sites through links. Links from one site to another convey important information about the link destination and influence rankings. A lack of relevant links to the home page and interior pages of a site coupled with other factors doesn’t make the site “uncrawlable” as it does unlikely to be crawled any time soon or often.

If your site has say, 500 pages, but only 350 are getting crawled and included in the search engine’s public index, that means 150 pages are not working for you to attract traffic.

To solve these issues you can:

  • Create navigation elements with search engine friendly CSS code that still offers much of the dynamic functionality often found in Flash, JavaScript and Ajax
  • Create alternative navigation with text links elsewhere on the web page, either in the footer and/or in breadcrumb navigation
  • Create HTML site map pages made up of 100 or less text links to important pages on your site. You can have more than one sitemap page for sites larger than 100 pages
  • Provide search engines with a XML site map list of all the URLs from your web site that you would like crawled. This does not guarantee all URLs will be included, but it can supplement what search engine spiders find on their own. There are also useful reporting options.

Each major algorithmic search engine supports the sitemap protocol and offers services/tools for webmasters: Google Webmaster Tools, Yahoo Site Explorer and Microsoft Live Webmaster Tools

  • Encourage inbound links from authoritative web sites to your home page as well as to important (and linkable) content within the site. Cross link with anchor text between pages and make it easy for customers and spiders to reach all areas of the site easily.

If you’re developing a new web site, it’s important to make sure your web developers are not only designing and planning the site architecture for functionality, user experience and ease of site maintenance, but also for search engines. Getting SEO consultants or good SEO advice at the very beginning of a web site project can save considerable headache and expense down the road.

For some vintage crawler SEO advice, check out this post on improving site spidering from 2006.

Sponsored By: 2009 Search Marketing Benchmark Guide All New Report from Marketing Sherpa

Save to del.icio.us
[StumbleUpon]
[Sphinn]
[ISEdb]
[Google]
[Mixx]
[Facebook]

Share/Save/Bookmark

Monday Links: Greeking, Linking, Fishing, Social, Mobile & Engagement

Monday, October 6th, 2008

1. Geeking with Jonathan, no wait, “Greek-ing with Jonathan Mendez with the speaker, the listener and the argument in “Lessons in Ad Persuasion from Aristotle“.

2. Proactive Profile Linking. Social profiles and profiles of any kind can provide benefits as part of a Search Engine Reputation Management effort since they can rank well on brand and company names. Profiles can also provide a source of crawlable links. It may serve a company well to secure the profile names before the competition does. Two tools that will quickly check user names at multiple sites include: usernamecheck.com and the social media keyword check tool from Solo SEO.

3. Opportunistic traffic fishing. It’s common knowledge that advertising, editorial/media and even trending topics on the social web drive search traffic. However, SEO efforts with content and links take time to see results. Or do they?  Combine keyword based social media monitoring (blogs, forums, MSM, Twitter, video, etc) with an authoritative blog, and you have an on-demand traffic source. When a topic relevant to your business and/or target market is warming up, publish corresponding optimized content via the channels picking it up.  High profile blogs, optimized press releases, social news and Twitter are examples of quick ways to distribute search friendly content. The key is to monitor, have channels for promotion and the ability to act quickly. If nothing else, you can use PPC ads to capture such traffic. This tip inspired by “Use the News for Cheap Pay Per Click Traffic“.

4. How should your company engage the social web? Take a look at these 237 examples of brands using social media with tactics including: blogging, social networks, online video, podcasting, widgets, crowdsourcing, microblogging, photo sharing, virtual worlds, wikis, blogger relations, social bookmarking, social news, brand monitoring, discussion boards, social PR and user ratings/reviews.

5. Directories have been a toss up but now Google’s shying away. Google dropped ODP and Yahoo directories from their published guidelines. “Directory Links Next? Google Drops Yahoo and ODP from Guidelines“.

6. Always add Google Analytics campaign tracking information to your Tiny URL when promoting specific content on Twitter- from “Twitter and Google Analytics: What to Track“.

7. Need to find links without no follow? Do follow search engine.

8. Objections to mobile marketing? People DO search and buy on the mobile web and with the number of cell phones outnumbering computers it’s only going to get better. “Common Mobile SEO Concerns and How to Overcome Them“.

9. Now that she’s left Forrester, what’s Charlene Li up to? She’s started a new company called Altimeter Group and blogging at The Altimeter.

10. Web analytics guru Eric T. Peterson and my pal Joseph Carrabis have posted the product of their collaboration on measuring visitor engagement in a new white paper, “Measuring the Immeasurable – Visitor Engagement” (pdf).

    Sponsored By: TopRank Consulting Why settle for second best? Call TopRank SEO Experts: 877 872 6628

    Save to del.icio.us
    [StumbleUpon]
    [Sphinn]
    [ISEdb]
    [Google]
    [Mixx]
    [Facebook]

    Share/Save/Bookmark

    BIGLIST SEO Blogs Update 100208

    Friday, October 3rd, 2008

    SEO Blogs

    Admit it. You’ve missed the BIGLIST. Well, we’ve have a nice bundle of SEO and paid search blog reviews for you to snuggle up to. Fire up your feed reader and grab a hot cup of joe.

    • SearchEngineWorld – One of several sister sites to WebmasterWorld, this long time search marketing site has been reinvented and active in the past few months featuring news posts by Lane R. Ellis as well as conference coverage and video posts with Brett Tabke and Vanessa Zamora.
    • PPC Blog – Giovanna Wall publishes this self titled sister site to Aaron Wall’s SEO Book site covering all things pay per click including each major ad platform, affiliate, contextual and local search. There’s also a nice collection of PPC focused tools.
      • Marketer Insight – This is an agency blog from the team at WebSiteBiz covering “current thinking and strategies related to improving online marketing” with search, social media and analytics focused posts from Eric Dudley, Kyle Bumgardner and Tom Dressler.
      • Cesar Serna – If you’re yearning for more on the technical/coding side of SEO, then Cesar’s blog can deliver with posts on tools including the Soxialize Twitter marketing tool. There’s also a “Black Board” Friday series of posts worth checking out. Cesar used to work with Greg Boser at Webguerrilla and is now focused SEO/SEM windows application and Wordpress plugin development.

      Remember, our hypothetical research says blogs with a BIGLIST BADGE are 78% more likely to impress the opposite sex. (link back optional)

      Sponsored By: Follow TopRank on Twitter Get daily updates, insights and links

      Save to del.icio.us
      [StumbleUpon]
      [Sphinn]
      [ISEdb]
      [Google]
      [Mixx]
      [Facebook]

      Share/Save/Bookmark

      Wrap Up of MIMA Summit 2008

      Thursday, October 2nd, 2008

      Great Hall at MIMA Summit
      The dust has settled, mountains of email have been sorted through and most of this year’s attendees of MIMA’s Summit, branded “FEED” are back into the swing of things.

      As you can tell from the photo above, it was a sold out event and a very big venue. Both keynotes were informative and entertaining. Rebecca Lieb’s presentation was covered by TopRank’s Jolina Pettice and while we didn’t post on Ze Frank’s amazingly entertaining presentation, you can pretty much get a feel for it from his presentations at SXSW last year and from what he’s presented at the TED conference.

      Those whose interactive marketing interests extend to the boob and penis humor category were likely satisfied by both keynotes as they touched on everything from jiggly French Maid “how to” videos to crowdsourcing creative phallic drawings.

      Despite the sophmoric humor, key messages were clear:

      • advertising is evolving as content
      • publishers are competing with advertisers
      • humanizing brands vs brands being human
      • internet access at the Depot sucks during a keynote
      • technology connects people and conversations
      • the social web creates new channels of dialoge and companies need to identify how to monitor and respond – how to engage with that feedback
      • you can be famous on the web and broke in the real world until people start paying you $10k to speak at conferences or “dance like an idiot and don’t sell anything”

      TopRank team members posted on a number of MIMA Summit topics and sessions:

      You can find other Summit blog coverage via Technorati and the MIMA blog.

      The Twitterati were active and enthusiastic during the Summit, making the designated hashtag, #mimasummit08 the most popular trending tag on Twitter’s search engine during the event.

      All in all, the FEED Summit was a good event for the Twin Cities interactive set.  Outside of the PPC session with Kevin Lee, it was fairly light on the search marketing content but that’s our self admitted bias for any marketing event. The networking was great thanks to ample breaks between sessions, a super lunch (really!) and the inevitable happy hour sponsored by Gage and Microsoft.

      Thanks to MIMA, it’s volunteers and most definitely, thanks to the superwoman event organizer, Jennifer Kane.

      TopRank Crew at MIMA Summit

      TopRank team members that attended the 2008 MIMA Summit included:  (LtoR) Thomas McMahon, Julie Brue, Jessica Cameron-Ruud, Lee Odden, Jolina Pettice, Susan Misukanis, Mike Yanke, Dana Larson and Ashley Bruce.  You can view other TopRank photos of the MIMA Summit on Flickr.

      Sponsored By: Digital Publishing & Advertising DPAC II Next wave of digital content & ads October 27th & 28th NY Marriott Marquis

      Save to del.icio.us
      [StumbleUpon]
      [Sphinn]
      [ISEdb]
      [Google]
      [Mixx]
      [Facebook]

      Share/Save/Bookmark

      Great product

      Subscribe