home alex's blog landing page design ecommerce web design podcast

Alex Designs Blog

Monday, April 7, 2008

Automatically Improve Traffic from Social Networking Websites

  • Post a Comment
  • Email Post

improve social network trafficAre you getting (non paid) web traffic and leads from social networking websites? I am working on a comprehensive strategy to improve "Referring Social Network Traffic". The business goals of using social sites include building brand exposure, creating customer relationships and bringing traffic back to the original website. This works the same for personal branding and corporate web marketing plans. Now you can automate the delivery of content to each of the social networking websites and stay consistently activate. This results in improving your "Referring Social Network Traffic". The key is to make it really easy for customers to connect (friend) and find you on ALL of the social networks so the audience consistently increases. I think, all of your personal and/or business profiles need a consistent look and feel to ensure brand consistency.

Here are some things to think about:

  1. Your website or blog needs to have a "Social Networking" section. This area should be very easy to find and include clickable icons with text links. You can also use Lijit and automate the icons that show up on your website, plus track those subscriptions.

  2. Make sure your company or brand is easy to find in a search query on the popular social networking sites. This can be done by using target keyword phrases or tags in the personal profiles, business profiles and groups you create. Example: Facebook, MySpace, Twitter, YouTube, LinkedIn and ect should all have a consistent about me section in the profile messaging that includes target keywords.

  3. Companies need to move marketing dollars into video. This is especially important since YouTube is owned by Google. Video is an essential part of universal search. Naming and tagging your videos with keywords make them show up better in search results. Tip - Try TubeMogul and you can upload one video, then distribute it to ten sites at once, plus tag and track them all in once place.

  4. Automate the content updates for ALL social networking sites. For example, with Twitter you can update your status on Facebook, Twitter, Pownce, Tumblr, SocialThing, FriendFeed and more. You can also automatically make your new YouTube videos show up on Facebook. Plus automate your blog posts, events, Flickr photos to show up on your profile(s). This makes the company look active and keeps your audience's attention.

  5. Connect with your audience with automated marketing research. For example, with TweetScan you can track keywords on Twitter and create RSS feeds out of that content. So, you can be notified automatically (web or sms) when someone talks about your brand or even a competitors. Also, Google and Yahoo alerts are extremely helpful to track blogs, news and ect.

  6. Create viral content that is easily shareable. The biggest traffic drivers for me have been controversial articles that attract a lot of comments or people to Digg or Stumble.

  7. A custom email signature is an easy way to express that you are using social sites. Having this on your personal or business emails will help increase your fans and friends.

  8. [Addition] Widgets are great tools also, suggested by Justin Thorp. Widgets are a great way to deliver automated content, games and applications for a company or brand. Example: A health brand can create a widget for their audience to use on their desktop, Facebook, MySpace and personal start page or websites. Clicking links in widget and forwarding of applications will result in more traffic back to your site.

Who else is thinking about this?

Have you see other blog posts about the automation of content for social networking sites? Are you generating traffic from your social networking websites? Please post your ideas or feedback here.

I am testing this strategy across the web with corporate and personal websites to see which social networking sites bring the most traffic back to the original websites. Plus, I am experimenting with the best ways to get brand exposure, plus find ways to monitor the success in traffic, leads and conversions.

Labels: , , , , ,

  • Post a Comment
  • Email Post

5 Comments:

At April 8, 2008 8:38 AM , Anonymous Justin Thorp said...

Dude, the idea of making sure your content is shareable is a BIG one for me. It was a big reason why I joined Clearspring.

What is a widget? It's a piece of Web content that was made shareable.

How can a piece of Web content become viral unless it can be shared throughout the community or conversation?

Great post!

 
At April 8, 2008 1:33 PM , Anonymous Tom Finley said...

While I don't disagree that using social networking to elevate the findability of your site, I find this method of seeding links often mentioned in SEO sessions and feel that it is somewhat disingenuous, depending on the scenario.

For example, I'm a web designer and I use Twitter, Virb, LinkedIn, etc. If a byproduct of using those sites is that they link back to my own website, and contain carefully chosen keywords that point back to me, so be it. If I post links to tutorials on Digg or Twitter, and gain traffic and "link cred" so be it.

But if your target demographic is 50+ years old, and you're talking about using Digg and Tumblr, clearly geared toward a younger audience, to seed links to your boomer-oriented retail sites... well now, that's a different story. To me, that's not even a debatable gray area — that's gaming a system for profit, and therefore unethical.

And don't get me wrong, Alex — I like a lot of what you have to say and can appreciate the hard numbers you've been able to use to improve your traffic. I have no doubt you know your stuff.

However, I think there needs to be some clarification... Findability vs. SEO (at least, as SEO is commonly thrown around by questionable individuals) is about truly, organically organizing your content so that the people searching for it can find it, right? It's not about tricking the algorithms, though. It isn't organic if the bulk of your effort goes to spamming the hell out of comment systems and social networks to gain clicks.

I just think the key here, and I hope this is what you're saying Alex, is to run a tight ship by being consistent across the board, and use social networks for their intended purpose, but plan accordingly for a potential added benefit that might result in some extra search engine love.

 
At April 10, 2008 4:36 PM , Blogger alexdesigns said...

My friend @dstarh also recommended HelloTxt. This service enables you to update your status across all of your social networks and microblogs with a single click. View at
Hellotxt.

 
At April 14, 2008 2:45 PM , Blogger alexdesigns said...

Also testing Spongecell for event marketing. Create interactive event pages to engage your audience. http://spongecell.com/

 
At April 16, 2008 1:25 AM , Blogger alexdesigns said...

@Tom Finley - yes Tom, we are on the same page. I am not trying to "trick" the search engines in anyway. Your brand just needs to be findable able when you search facebook or even myspace. This can be done by creating groups around brands or subjects. Being Findable is key.

Look for more follow posts on this topic. I am doing a lot of tests with corporate companies to find ways to improve traffic on the cheap.

 

Post a Comment

Saturday, March 15, 2008

Did we meet at a conference? Stay in touch!

  • Post a Comment
  • Email Post

March has been a great month for conferences. Early in the month, I attended FOWA and Barcamp Miami, then this past week I attended SXSW and Barcamp Austin. This post is not going to be about the panels or anything I learned at the events. It is going to be about how I improved my networking skills and talked to more people than I ever have. If you go to a lot of conferences and you are very social, than you can probably ignore this, but here was my strategy to get the most out of the events.
  1. Fine tune your personal brand before the event
  2. Make a list of people you want to meet
  3. Don't pitch anyone, just talk to everyone about anything
  4. Find the best places to go, that aren't listed in the schedule
  5. Blog about your experiences and take a lot of photos or videos

Fine tune your personal brand before the event

Before I went to these events, I did have a chance to update my websites and fine tune my personal brand. I challenged myself to finally update my website and blog after a 4 year hiatus. This was important because I was also updating my business cards and my brand consistency didn't represent me well.

Make a list of people you want to meet at the events

The panels will educate you, the speakers will motivate you, but you will get the most from people you network with at conferences. I made a mental list of people I wanted to meet and I met them all, plus so many more. When you do meet these people, make sure you have something to talk about. Do you read their blog? Talk about it and give them feedback. Do you watch their videos? Tell them, they love hearing you're a fan. Seriously! To the right is a sample of the business cards I collected.

I admit, originally I was intimidated to meet some people. I thought that they would be egotistical and not want to talk to me at all. Not one person acted that way. Every single people I wanted to meet welcomed a great conversation. A lot of them even knew who I was from Twitter or my website. Here are a few of the people I was able to meet: Guy Kawasaki, Kevin Rose, Chris Brogan, C.C. Chapman, Paul Boag, Jeffrey Zeldman, Robert Scoble, Tim Ferriss, and Tommy Guerrero.

Don't pitch anyone, just talk to everyone (about anything)

We are all trying to market ourselves when we are networking, but don't pitch anyone, just talk to them. I find it annoying when I meet someone for the first time and they immediately try to sell me something. Keep that for trade show floor!. I experienced this a few times, either I was offered a job or they had a product to test/buy. This shut down the conversation and I moved on.

Find the best places to go, that aren't listed in the schedule

The best way to find the unscheduled events is to use Twitter. I found many unpanels and social parties this way. At these unscheduled events I was inspired a lot more than the normal panels in general. To find these events, you can track keywords using twitter, keyword search tools or just turn on notifications for specific people you want to meet.

Blog about your experiences and take a lot of photos or videos

If you really want people to remember you after the conference, make sure you blog about it. Exactly like I am doing here on this post. Also, take a lot of photos and/or video while you are there. Plus tag it with the right keywords. It is possible that your content may be reused on another blog. This could result people adding you as a friend on Flickr or just a traffic driver to your site.

For example, here is a video I took during a BBQ that was held by Robert Scoble during SXSW at the Salt Lick. I ended up meeting the Scobleizer at an unscheduled party the night before.

Did we meet at a conference?

Let me know and let's stay in touch!

Labels: , , , , ,

  • Post a Comment
  • Email Post

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Monday, March 3, 2008

Redesigning your personal brand in a weekend

  • Post a Comment
  • Email Post

This post was supposed to be live last Monday, but missed the chance. In anticipation of some of the conferences that I am going to. I decided to (finally) change the homepage design for Alex Designs LLC over last weekend, plus create some new business cards. I am very self-conscious of my own design work, so I didn't want to do anything that was over the top. Just keep the design simple and meet my objectives.

The objectives of my personal brand are:

  1. Improve the exposure of my brand and my blogs through RSS
  2. Show off some of the great work my company has been doing
  3. Stream my connections through social networks
  4. Improve my network of peers and social friends
  5. Launch new initiatives

Keeping it simple and accessible

My old site was built in 2003, plus I built that one in a weekend as well. But it was probably one of the first sites that I built in CSS. So the code was pretty bad. Now the code is not 100% perfect yet on this site, but it is a lot cleaner and it getting closer to being valid. So far I fixed all the layout bugs. Then I can do a mobile version too.

My Challenges

  1. Merge 3 areas of interest into my personal brand identity
  2. Promote 3 different RSS feeds
  3. Try not to screw up my search engine rankings
  4. Anticipate Launch a podcast
The 3 areas of interest I focus on are Landing Page Design, eCommerce Web Design and then my blog, which covers anything I am interested in. By focusing on these areas as separate sites, I have built my niche in 3 separate verticals. This help when your readers are various types of marketers/consultants, business owners and my peers. Each of the sites are blogs dedicated to the keywords for each of the topics. This should help with search engine optimization and helping people choose what they want to read or subscribe to.

Create it quickly and build from there

My theory has always been this way. I really just didn't want to spend a lot of time on this rebranding exercise. It is just a foundation for me to build on and it works for me. Since I put this new deisgn up last weekend, I have already started a new podcast and added it to my navigation. Even the podcast I put together very quickly. Yea, I am not the best speaker, but I needed to jump into it and get it out there. Then build on my podcasting skills as well.

Have any thoughts? Give me your feedback...

Labels: , ,

  • Post a Comment
  • Email Post

1 Comments:

At March 6, 2008 10:17 AM , Blogger walhus said...

Geek News Central ( http://geeknewscentral.com ) and AustinCast ( http://austincast.com/sxsw ) are doing interviews at SXSW with attendees, panelists and trade show exhibitors. GNC has a series running on itunes now of CES 2008 interviews if you want to see a sample of what we do.

We'd like to interview if possible by phone or skype before SXSW and in person during SXSW. If this is agreeable to you please send us either your phone or skype id and a good time to call or skype you. If you have skype with video that would be perfect.

Interviewers are myself, Dina Knight and Cheryl Hill. My email is walhus@gmail.com and the cell phone number is 512.699.4000. My skype id is walhus

I hope you can do this!

Thanks,

Paul Terry Walhus
http://austincast.com/sxsw
http://justin.tv/austintexas
http://geeknewscentral.com

 

Post a Comment

Saturday, February 2, 2008

Social media screen names are the new domains names

  • Post a Comment
  • Email Post

Last year, I was having a conversion with my friend Droze about the ridiculous amount of new web applications coming out every month. Yet, I told him that I sign up for them all. Why, because screen names are not just your handle or usernames anymore. A screen name is really your personal brand. Similar to a domain name, you need to register your brand or it will get jacked by someone else. Maybe even a competitor.

Then I was surprised when I read that the Twitter feed from Seth Godin is really not the best selling author. He mentions how he doesnt even use Twitter. It was interesting to hear that someone else was using his name, even though it wasn't for anything negative, but it easily could have been. Everyone else thought it was him, he has 1,417 followers and they are using a picture of him.

So whenever a new service comes out and gets popular I immediately sign up using my company name as the screen name (AlexDesigns). Here are a few examples:

http://twitter.com/alexdesigns
http://linkedin.com/in/alexdesigns
http://9rules.com/my/alexdesigns/
http://del.icio.us/alexdesigns
http://myspace.com/alexdesigns
http://vimeo.com/alexdesigns
http://virb.com/alexdesigns
http://ma.gnolia.com/people/alexdesigns

On the following, I was too late to get the correct URLs I wanted:
http://flickr.com/photos/alexharris/
http://youtube.com/alexdesignsllc

So as the next big thing comes out, it doesn't hurt to just snatch up your screen name. Else you have some impersonators when you become famous too.

Labels: , ,

  • Post a Comment
  • Email Post

1 Comments:

At May 6, 2008 6:54 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

my name is alex also!

 

Post a Comment