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Pay-Per-Click (PPC) - SEO & Social Media Marketing


Facebook Internet Coup d’état?

Google is big, rich and global…
and Facebook is stealing their traffic.

If Facebook were to continue its meteoric takeover of Internet activity, some questions need to be asked as they relate to a company’s online advertising, marketing focus and resource allocation. First, consider these mind-numbing Facebook facts:

  • Facebook users approaching 600 million.
  • 50% of all users logon to Facebook every day.
  • Average users have 130 friends.
  • 1 in 4 pageviews in the USA is on Facebook.
  • 10,000 new websites integrate with Facebook every day.
  • If Facebook were a country, it would be the fifth-largest country in the world, after China, India, the U.S., and Indonesia.
  • In the United States, 54.7% of people ages 13 to 17 have a Facebook account.
  • There are more than 800,000 developers building applications for Facebook.
  • People are now using Facebook as if it were a search engine looking for personal recommendations.

In other words, if you have a Facebook page, why do you need a conventional website?

  • If the ‘Like’ button is becoming the new ‘Link’, why spend resources locating content-related links?
  • Why buy Google’s expensive Pay-Per-Click ads if Facebook’s are cheaper and possibly more targeted?
  • Why pay hosting fees for a website if your Facebook page(s) are free?

What if Facebook’s ultimate plan is an Internet coup d’état?  Think about it, if Facebook owns the eyeballs of most of the traffic on the Internet, could it not be argued that resources outside of Facebook are redundant and unnecessary?

I remember when we all trusted Google with their catchy corporate slogan “Do no evil”. However, individuals and even countries are now re-evaluating the trust they have in this global behemoth that tracks every click and even anticipates our next move.

Facebook, like Google tracks every word we type and uses our words, friends, links, likes and traffic patterns to deliver targeted advertising to us. Do we really want any company (or government entity) knowing that much about us?

cuffs Facebook Internet Coup détat?What if Facebook was successful in capturing the hearts, minds and eyeballs of most of the Internet traffic?  Would we still need Google or Bing?  Would we still need a website?  I don’t know about you, but I’ve learned enough from Google to know that I want to be the one to determine my company’s destiny and not place my public presence within the confines of any other company. i.e. the Facebook page.

Having raised all these questions, I’m offering no answers. Like you, I don’t know if Facebook’s ultimate plan is for world domination, or they just want to grow a profitable business that creates opportunities for members.  I have no crystal ball, but I have learned that blind trust should never be given freely, trust must be earned and that trusting relationship must be monitored.

Idle ramblings…stay tuned!

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SEO is more important than ever…

If you currently advertise online (i.e. PPC), or have plans to advertise in the future, you will want to read this interesting article, Companies that will rule 2011, by Josh Dreller iMEDIAconnection

“Search engine marketing, with its tiny, three-line text ads, was barely a blip on the radar 10 years ago. Now, the channel accounts for almost half of all online marketing revenue in the U.S. and has become one of the strongest return-on-investment media in the history of marketing.”  more…

The unique benefit of Pay-Per-Click advertising is that it permits us to place our ad in front of a person at the exact moment they are ready to buy. No other form of advertising or promotion produces such targeted results.  Implemented properly, PPC is the Killer App of advertising – if done wrong it is a very expensive and humbling lesson.

SEO makes PPC work

What you pay for a click is partly determined by the ‘landing page‘ that corresponds to your ad. Google assigns a ‘Quality Score’ to that page and the higher your score, the less you pay for each click. In other words, if your ad is touting ‘Organic Toothpaste” and you landing page is skillfully optimized for that term, you will spend less money and get more clicks. Search Engine Optimization isn’t just for websites in general, it is critically important for landing pages.

Another important quote from this same article, “A shift in advertising dollars will make social even more important“.

New technologies and converging trends mean opportunities for those willing to take the plunge and learn how to implement these things in their marketing mix.  For small brick & mortar businesses this presents a huge challenge.  Helping small businesses grasp these concepts and showing them how to leverage them for greater market exposure was the primary driving force behind my book,the SEO & Social Media Marketing Guide.

Optimizing the business website and social media platforms for ‘Local Search Marketing’ should be the #1 goal of every small business in 2011. As you begin this process be aware that making your site ‘mobile friendly’ needs to be one of your action items.  For more on this, see ‘Local Search’ – Is your website smart?

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Ben Franklin’s SEO Wisdom

Of course, you’ll almost certainly argue that Ben Franklin missed the computer age by a couple hundred years, but old Ben was ahead of the curve in many of the fields of study that occupied his time. Remember that he preempted Edison by more than a century with his electrical experiments and his financial and political advice remains timeless.

Mr. Franklin is a personal hero of mine. I’ve read his autobiography and other books about his life and accomplishments too numerous to list. Knowing his love for the printed word, I believe that Ben would have been an Internet enthusiast and most likely an ardent blogger had he been born during our digital age.

Beware of little expenses, a small leak will sink a great ship.
~ Ben Franklin

ben franklin seo wisdom Ben Franklins SEO WisdomBen is credited with a unique method of solving non-mathematical problems. When faced with a perplexing decision, he would draw a line down the center of a paper and list the pros on one side and the cons on the other. It was a way to compare arguments for or against a particular decision.  For our discussion, let’s imagine that Ben is alive and doing well and like every business owner, is faced with the challenge of how best to get traffic to his website, www.PoorRichardsBusiness.com.

It is my opinion that if Ben were to choose how best to spend his money promoting his website, he would compare the benefits offered by the only two options available.  Would he buy traffic using paid advertising or would he attract it using search engine marketing?

Ben, being an Internet savvy blogger, knows that he can buy paid advertising in the form of Pay-Per-Click (PPC), banner ads, newsletter sponsorships and other impression-based campaigns.  He also knows that when his money runs out, traffic screeches to an abrupt halt.

He is also aware that Search Engine Optimization (SEO) involves onsite and offsite tweaks that once in place last virtually forever. Traffic actually increases over time as search engines recognize and reward relevancy when updating their algorithms.  Ben’s a sharp fellow!

Using his infamous Ben Franklin problem solving technique, he prepares a list showing the benefits and rationale of using both options. I think his list might look something like this:

Paid Advertising

SEO

Costs to set-up One time charge
Expensive and ongoing Pay once, reap forever
Daily or monthly charges N/A
Budget determines reach N/A
Clicks can cost money Clicks are free
No long-term benefit Benefits continue forever
No brand awareness Builds brand awareness
No viral component Viral potential
Focused audience Focused audience
Immediate traffic Traffic rises over time

Patience in market, is worth pounds in a year.
~ Ben Franklin

Ben knows that to generate immediate traffic, buying it is the obvious decision.  However, he also knows that paid traffic can be exorbitantly expensive and when his budget is depleted his stream of traffic ends permanently.

In his “Poor Richard’s Almanac“, he often talks about saving pennies and investing frugally.  In all financial decisions he prefers the long-term approach because it always pays the greatest dividends. After studying his list he determines that optimizing his website to attract traffic is the best decision.

Ben made this decision because he also knows that if his blog is configured properly to receive maximum SEO benefit, he can get the search engines to recognize his new posts almost immediately.  Ben knows this because he was smart enough to invest a few dollars in a book, the “SEO & Social Media Marketing Guide“.

Drive thy business, or it will drive thee.
~ Ben Franklin

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