• SEO 27.06.2009 No Comments

    Posted by Sam Niccolls

    (NOTE FROM RAND: Please welcome Sam Niccolls, SEOmoz’s newest addition to the consulting team – we hope you all like him as much as we do!)

    A lot a marketers focus optimization efforts at the bottom of their conversion funnels. One effective way to examine conversion rates at the bottom of the funnel is to create a custom segment that excludes visitors who bounce. As this segment gives you a view of your engagement data that only shows interested visitors, this is a great way to inform site changes. After all, these visitors are the ones who are most likely to convert into paying customers.

    But what about the top of the funnel? Are too many of your visitors leaving on arrival? If so, delve deeper into which pages are causing you the most bleeding. And don’t get too far ahead of yourself with site changes before you first identify your highest volume SEO entry pages. To make site changes without looking the top of your conversion funnel is to rent a tux before finding a prom date. It costs a lot and it leads to embarrassment.

    Yet many sites still don’t think of pages other than their homepage as landing pages. It is not just pimple popping amateurs making this mistake, either. Numerous startups and online retailers, who get 80% of their overall traffic from Google, fall into the trap of designing individual product pages that rank well, drive 50-60% of their overall traffic, yet have bounce rates over 75%.  

    Avinash Kaushik, Google’s Analytics Evangelist, always says your homepage is not a golden door through which all your visitors will pass. And he’s right. Search engines have flipped the funnel. Every page that drives traffic is a landing page. But just because Google decides your homepage doesn’t mean you can’t optimize the performance of your lower level pages. Do you have underperforming product listings, profile pages, articles, or other entry URLs?

    If so, here’s a quick checklist to revamp your lackluster landings:  

    1) Reassuring Policies
    If you have reassuring polices, whether they are privacy assurances, guarantees, rebates, returns, or whatever else, tell your first time visitors about them. These don’t have to be flashing lights or neon arrows, but look at how scannable your "deep content" pages are. Two things that can be tremendously effective are graphics and icons. In the absence of any images, however, a single line saying "We never sell your personal information" can do a lot. And don’t bury these reassurances at the bottom of the page. Put them at the top of the page, or next to your e-mail collection field (if you’re collecting e-mail from the page).  
    point-of-action-assurance

    2) Testimonials
    You have raving fans, right? I’m sure there are at least a couple in the woodwork. Why not let them sing your praise as part of your introduction to your visitors? Landing page optimization is not a cocktail party. It’s okay to brag a little. Especially if it means improving your bottom line. Amazon does a great job of prominently exposing five star reviews on their product level pages, as does Yelp. Both are good examples to look at.

    3) No Credit Card Forms
    Single page forms are one thing if you are running a free trial period. Just last week I saw some massive returns for an e-commerce site off of some landing pages they created for an SEM campaign where they offered a 14-day free trial. But SEO landing pages are different. They are typically part of your internal site navigation. Plus, they are really more like first dates than "take it or leave it" offers. For this reason, don’t be too forward. Show some leg and entice your visitors to click a second time, but save the credit card forms for further down the funnel. I am not saying you can’t open the kimono later, but buy your visitors a drink first.     

    4) Email Collection
    If you have a newsletter, blog, or another way that you maintain an ongoing conversation with customers, you should offer a field for people to subscribe via e-mail and RSS. This might not impact bounce rate significantly, but this type of e-mail collection is inexpensive and it is a great way to increase user retention. Several websites whose sign up button treatments I like are Futurenow, Mint’s Blog and Fred Wilson’s Blog. As you can see, Mint doesn’t show a graphic for "sign up by e-mail," which is a wasted opportunity. More than likely e-mail will comprise the majority of your subscribers. So make e-mail sign up as easy as possible. 

    5) Look at Bounce Rate by URL
    Unless the volume warrants it, don’t analyze individual URLs; analyze URL structures. For example, say you have an article subfolder on your site –  http://www.yourdomain.com/articles/title-of-post. Rather than looking at each individual article, run a landing page report and look at your pages in aggregate. As a sum, what pages are hurting or helping you the most? Where are you retaining visitors? Where are you losing them? If you can learn anything from your most effective pages, apply those learnings to your least effective pages. Whatever your RegEx writing tells you, focus on making the most global changes possible. In other words, change things that will have the greatest, most immediate impact such as headers, persistent a or c columns, and first time user treatments.  

    Whatever you glean from your landing page analysis, abandon the myth of the golden homepage. And if you are not thinking of your "deep content" pages as landing pages, identify your biggest opportunities and let your design team go to work. There is probably a lot of low hanging fruit. Besides, if you don’t, you might find your website dateless at the conversion prom, and nobody wants to be standing in the rain with a wilted dandelion boutonniere. That’s a fate I wouldn’t wish on the worst of websites, not even Danny Dover’s favorite domain.

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  • Money 27.06.2009 No Comments

    New IcyBlue Three Column Blogger Theme

    IcyBlue is a new 3 column clean and neat blogger template by Simran from TricksDaddy.

    Features

    • Neat and clean layout
    • 3 columns in body layout and footer
    • Professional style theme
    • Best for technology related blogs
    • Faster Loading
    • and more..!

    Screenshot
    New IcyBlue Three Column Blogger Theme

    Demo | Download

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  • Money 27.06.2009 No Comments

    Contest Prize:Asus Eee PC Netbook with Intel Celeron Processor!

    • Intel Celeron Processor 353
    • 160GB Serial ATA hard drive
    • 1GB DDR2 SoDIMM Memory
    • 8.9″ WSVGA widescreen display
    • Built in webcam and 3 high-speed USB 2.0 ports
    • Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition Operating System

    Contest URL:
    http://reviveyourlife.com/uncategorized/ryl-is-giving-away-a-free-asus-netbook/

    Deadline:
    Friday, 31st July 2009

    How to Enter:

    Required:

    • Subscribe to ReviveYourLife.com to receive free email updates when new content is posted. Simply enter your email address in the Live Updates from RYL box in the right sidebar of the homepage at ReviveYourLife.com. To receive credit for this entry, the email subscription must be activated by accepting the subscription confirmation email sent to your inbox.
      (ONE Entry Point)

    Optional:

    GOOD LUCK!

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  • Money 27.06.2009 No Comments

    Show Adsense Below Post Title in Blogger!

    You might have already seen Adsense placements below post title in most of the websites and blogs. It is said that showing Adsense Ads below post title will improve its Click Through Rate (CTR)!

    This post explains how to place an Adsense Ad below post title in Blogger. It’s very easy, just do the following simple steps:

    1. Firstly, you need to encode your adsense code. Go to centricle, paste your adsense code in the box, and click Encode. Copy the encoded codes.

    2. Now go to Blogger Layout page – click Edit HTML – then check Expand Widget Templates.
      (Don’t forget to back-up your template)
      Show Adsense Below Post Title in Blogger!
    3. Then Search(Ctrl+F) for
      <data:post.body/>

      and

      • Blogs with Read More/Post Summaries hack:
        Paste that encoded adsense code just before the second occurrence of <data:post.body/> in your template.

      • Blogs without Read More/Post Summaries hack:
        Replace <data:post.body/> with the the following code:
        <b:if cond=’data:blog.pageType == "item"’>
        Your Encoded Adsense Code
        </b:if>
        <p><data:post.body/></p>

    4. By default, the adsense ad in your post will be displayed above post body as shown below:

      Show Adsense Below Post Title in Blogger!

      If you want to bring together the adsense ad and post body together(as shown in the image below), you need to add the following extra codes in Step-3:

      <div style=”float:left;padding:5px;”>
      Your Encoded Adsense Code
      </div>

      Show Adsense Below Post Title in Blogger!

    Hope this post was useful! Drop Comments! Best Wishes!

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  • Be Blogger 27.06.2009 No Comments

    Robby G is a blogger from ShiteILike.com and explains the benefits of pushing your blog through good and through bad.
    I was doing some research recently, wondering if my blog would ever take off and what it really depended on. I was a little bit discouraged about writing lots of content for two months on my [...]

    Post from: Blog Tips at ProBlogger.

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    Perseverance Will Save Your Blog

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  • Be Blogger 27.06.2009 No Comments

    Today Alexandra Levit shares some tips for getting your company/employee to pay you to blog.
    I recently read that for every person who starts tweeting, another blog dies. But here’s the thing. Back in 2004, blogs were dismissed as a fad, and today there are billions of them. Blogging is not going away anytime soon.
    You might [...]

    Post from: Blog Tips at ProBlogger.

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    6 Steps to Get Your Company to Pay You to Blog

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  • Be Blogger 27.06.2009 No Comments

    When it is done properly, creating and organizing your own Blog Carnival is a practice that can be truly rewarding. This is especially true if you are trying to increase your blogging experience, and by proxy, your traffic. The Blog Carnival is one of the finest innovations in the blogosphere to date, as it is [...]

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  • SEO 27.06.2009 No Comments

    Posted by great scott!

    This week, Rand is joined by one of our in-house data geniuses, Ben Hendrickson, to talk more about some of our recently released correlation data to support guidelines for SEO best practices.

    While correlation doesn’t always equal causation, it’s still very interesting to look at the attributes and features high ranking sites tend to have in common.  Comparing this data to known and accepted SEO practices can help to reinforce widely held notions or give us some insight into how the algorithms are changing; both important areas of analysis for successful online marketers.

    SEOmoz Whiteboard Friday – Correlation, Causation & SEO from Scott Willoughby on Vimeo.

    Want to learn even more about what Ben discovered in our data correlation analysis?  He’ll be presenting his detailed findings at our SEO Training Series Seminar right here in Seattle, August 24th & 25th.

    Do you like this post? YesNo

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  • Be Blogger 27.06.2009 No Comments

    The following is a ProBloggerDeal – exclusively for readers of this blog. For notification on Twitter of other deals, discounts and competitions for bloggers follow @ProBloggerDeals.
    A few mont Ninja Affiliate Plugin for WordPress. The promotion was so popular and I’ve had so much positive feedback from readers about the plugin that I asked MaxBlogPress [...]

    Post from: Blog Tips at ProBlogger.

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    Get 30% off the Ninja Affiliate Plugin for WordPress – Limited Time Offer

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