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Small Business SEM and Conferences - is it worth it?

If you’re just getting into search engine marketing for your website, you may be looking for a few different options for learning what you need to know to make it work.  You can take an online course or two, read blogs and research ideas, test things yourself….it’s really up to you and your own learning style.  I actually have had a few emails this week wondering if a conference would be worth it from the small business standpoint, and I think it can – if you go into it with a “game plan” and stick to it.

Conferences can be expensive.  First and foremost, the necessity to make it pay off is your primary concern.  I feel like I ALWAYS get something worthwhile out of a conference, be it a networking contact I make, a new idea for an old problem, or a new concept I’d never thought of before. 


There are a few things you can do to make sure your conference experience is worthwhile and productive.

  • Be humble about what you know.  If there isn’t a compelling session adjacent to it, I enjoy the SEO/SEM 101 type sessions.  I may KNOW most of the information, but there’s always a nugget of something new or theoretical that I hadn’t thought of.  Don’t assume you “know everything” about a subject so you don’t need to attend certain sessions.
  • Study the agenda beforehand and decide what sessions will meet your goals.  If you need to cover the basics, cover as many “beginner level” tracks you can.  Some conferences categorize their sessions by “beginner, intermediate, and/or advanced.”
  • Network like crazy.  Eat lunch and breakfast with a different table of people every day.  If you’re naturally shy this is hard, it took me awhile to understand that these people are just like me, and you can usually tell if they’re not interested in talking to you – which is pretty rare in this industry, everyone is very open.
  • Build Partnerships that last.  Meeting people and networking is a great way to build friendships and partnerships that will provide benefits down the road.  Don’t nag people for links, but find people that offer similar services, or complimenting services to yours and make plans to meet up or talk at a later date to work out some linking opportunities or guiest-blogging gigs.  Every little bit will help.
  • Use the exhibit hall.  Not only can you usually find good schwag at these things – fun stuff for the kids and the like, but pay attention to what the booths offer by way of services.  You could find an analytics partner that is just right for you, or maybe even an SEM company that will help you take the next step .
  • If you write a blog, conferences generate great content.  Write about who you talked to and about what, link to their blog or site, say their names.  This is a great way to establish a repoire with people and start to be part of the community.
  • Ask questions of the panelists.  If you’re interested in branding yourself in the SEM “sphere” say your name and your website before your question.  In the appropriate forum, your questions will be answered with actionable suggestions for accomplishing your goals.  Pay attention, write down what the panelists say and try it out.  It’s $500 an hour consulting, from industry leaders – this alone could be worth the price of travel and admission.
  • Understand that most of the panelists don’t get paid, they pay their own travel, and they’re there to help – so don’t waste the panelists’ time. If they answered the question in the presentation, don’t ask the same question (see “pay attention”) but you CAN ask them to elaborate on a concept or idea. 
  • Take advantage of the materials provided.  You will probably get access to a website with all of the presentations or a disc that contains the PPT slides.  Use it, over and over again, to help you not just the day you get back, but further down the road.

Some ideas for cost-conscious conference traveling

     
  • Decide where you’re going ahead of time.  For the most part, conference dates are given around 6-8 months ahead of time, even if you cant necessarily “register” at that time.  The earlier you book a flight, the better off you are.  Also the sooner you decide, the more likely you are to get a room at the discounted rate the conference negotiates with a hotel.
  • Watch for deals.  I just got an invite from my SES New York Linked In group to buy admission at a discount.  If you wanted to go, and were a member, you could receive this discount also.  Early Bird discounts are available also.
  • How far are you going, and for how long?  You may choose a conference within driving distance, and if so – maybe it’s not as important to stay at the conference hotel, as you’ll have your car available for transportation.  Check out the “parking rates” at the venue, sometimes these are prohibitive and it’s a better idea to just stay at the conference hotel.
  • Know someone else that wants to go?  Share the cost of the room and get a double. 
  • For some conferences, breakfast and lunch may be provided.  Breakfast may be some pastries and fruit w/ juice and coffee, but it’s free – and you can get filled up if you don’t require the blue plate special every morning.  Grab an extra orange or banana and a juice for a snack later.
  • Lunch is usually substantial – and filling.  It’s not gourmet, but the bar has been raised and the larger conferences do a pretty good job here.
  • Dinner is usually a social affair and you can generally network with enough people to make dinner out with a group worthwhile.  Most members of the search industry talk about it in their sleep, so you’re going to get good tidbits no matter where you are.

crowd photo from ThisParticularGregsuitcase photo from Phineas H

On my Way to NYC Next Week

I’m headed to NYC next week for SES New York. Super excited as I’ve never been and we’re staying right in the middle of the action in Manhattan - not sure if you call that “downtown” or what. NYC is so huge, where is downtown?

Search Engine Strategies, NYC Logo

I’ll be moderating a panel on SEM Small Business Blitz featuring:

Instead of saying “yes you should do this” the panelists will be focusing on how to do things inexpensively and effectively! This ties in nicely to my Little Biz column over at SearchEngineWatch.com. I’m writing my column for publish next week and I’m going to talk about conferences and if they are worth it for the “little guy.” I think they are, and can be - if you understand what you’re looking for and go with the intent to find it. I’ll put the link to that article in THIS article when it’s posted next Tuesday. UPDATE - So SEW article will NOT be about conferences for small business owners - that’s located right here on SEOMom.com. SEW Article will be 30 Free things you can do to market your small business website. Link coming soon!

One of my goals for SES NYC is to find out more about SEO and User friendly navigation structures. I’ll probably attend and ask questions in the “Search Engine Friendly Design” session on day 2. Then Usability & SEO: 2 Wins for the Price of 1 on Day 4.

As the majority of my day is focused on SEO at Blizz, I was pretty excited to see a session on the Business Case for SEO Content Development. It’s amazing to see how HARD it is to get folks to write stuff for their sites. It’s the easiest way to help yourself, and one of the hardest things to get done.

I am also on the Social Media team at Blizzard, and it’s pretty fledgling - we’re moving into the space but cautiously so we do it the right way. I’m going to hit the SocMed sessions pretty hard, video, podcasting, content creation, etc.

5 Ways to Remind Yourself to Blog

reminderThis poor blog suffers from chronic neglect! Between work, kids, traveling and the husband - i feel like I just cant take on one more thing - but I have to stay focused and put my blog into the mix.

I sat here trying to think of things I can do to help myself write in this blog. I thought I’d share the list and ask my readers (er - thanks mom) to throw in any more ideas in the comments. Let me know what you think!

1. Leave sticky notes on computer - this only works if you read them - and i tend to buy the cheap ones so they dont stay sticky for long

2. Add it to your calendar - this one only works if you dont aleady have 50 other reminders that pop up with every reboot to remind you how behind you are

3. Write a reminder on the mirror - unfortunately with kids - the water splats and toothpase may obscure the message

4. Reward yourself with a treat if you blog regularly - of course - I’d want that reward to be food and I’m dieting - figures……

5. put your RSS feed into your Google homepage so the same damn 3 posts stare at you until you feel guilty enough to update your content.

PubCon 07 - SEOMoz SearchSpam Night!

SEOMoz SearchspamWe just got back from playing ”SearchSpam,” a role-playing game that is a reinvention of the Werewolf game with seekers,villagers and of course werewolves.  SEOMoz setup and sponsored the event and it was a TON of fun and I met some great people that I’ve corresponded with, or just read online.  Had a great conversation with Todd Mintz and Bill Hartzer - also finally met Dave Davis - I read his stuff at RedFlyMarketing a lot.

The game was fun and the SEOMoz team is so energetic and open - I really had a good time and they really are a model agency - what a great way to run a business and market yourselves as leaders in the space.  I lost constantly - but I didnt really care - I had a great time.  Thanks for putting it together Mozzers and well done

Google, Paid Links and White Fuzzy Bunnies

I love schtick comedy - I posted before about History of the World Part 1 and recently had a little daydream about Monty Python’s “Search for the Holy Grail” and paid links….just go with me, people.

Analogy time (aka. What I learned in photoshop class…….)

A group of people is moving down the road and they pass a few signs that say “dont go this way” and “road closed ahead” (aka - google’s warnings about paid links) but they keep walking in the same direction….eventually they get to the “roadblock” which in our analogy is a “harmless little bunny rabbit.”

They think about it - and then move forward - it’s just a harmless little bunny rabbit, right?

WRONG - IT’S GOT FANGS!!!!

We’ve been hearing and reading a lot about the FUD that Google has been breeding - Fear, Uncertainty & Doubt.  I sort of have a hard time “buying in” to that concept - Google isnt the government, they’re not by the people - for the people - so really they can do whatever they want - they’re not Google.ORG - they’re google.com and they’re definitely “for profit.” 

If they say don’t do it….there must be a reason.

For a long time Google (and Matt Cutts) have been saying, “dont buy paid links.”  We were warned, many, many times - and recently Google brought the hammer down

Now I dont necessarily think it’s “nice” and in some cases it’s not done judiciously - but really - it’s theirs so they can do what they want - and if we want Google traffic we play by the rules or we have to figure out a way to get around it (ie no follow all the links on your site.)  I think there are sites out there that can survive a major drop in Google traffic - our travel & tourism clients dont fit into that category.

 Moral of the story?  If you want to stay in the Google index, dont piss off the bunny.

THE CAVEAT and a ”glitch?” 

That being said they are still being a bit hypocritical w/ the dont buy paid links but TLA can buy adwords ads - even though Matt Cutts indicated that was a bit fishy during the “Are Paid Links Evil” session at SES San Jose.

Here’s a snap from tonight:

Internet Video and Travel Planning - a match made in heaven :)

The key to marketing travel online is to sell an “experience.” The old saying “A Picture is Worth a Thousand Words” is never more true than when someone is shopping on your hotel or vacation rental website. Now that new media is emerging and is easier to use and embed in websites, there really is no excuse for not taking advantage of videos to help you sell the experience you want every guest to have.

Today in HotelMarketing.com there is a great article about Internet Video and the Travel Industry that goes over the reasons WHY you should be marketing your hotel or travel website with videos. Some of the highlights include:

The Hospitality Sales & Marketing Association International reported on Sept 4, 2007 that a recent Travel Industry Association/Ypartnership TravelHorizons study found that two-thirds of online adult leisure travelers consume online video and audio clips.

The Wall Street Journal reported on Aug. 14, 2007 that Cisco says consumer video will be responsible for a significant portion of the Internet-based traffic increases from 2006 to 2011, with video streaming and downloads increasing from 9% of all consumer Internet traffic last year to 30% in 2011.

If you need some practical real world convincing, check out the results I got when I made a slideshow of not very good photos for a vacation rental client we have in Gulf Shores, AL -

Gulf Shores Condo Rental Result Yahoo

This was really not a very professional attempt, I was messing around with Windows Movie Maker and just took some pics off the client’s website and made a slideshow. I uploaded it to Youtube and 2 months later it was ranking #2 in Yahoo for a really competitive term. Yahoo is really proud of themselves for being able to include video in SERPS a la Google - so I’m not sure this will last - but the key seems to be to tag the video correctly. I put tags in the upload that were simple and not multi worded - condo, rentals, gulf, shores, alabama, al - that’s it - and we’re #2.

That same video is ranking #5 in Google Video search - which is above the fold and actually not bad for a video that is not that great in quality. I’m going to redo the video with better photos and see if I can get it replaced or remove the old one and get the new one ranking.

All in all - the time investment was small, didn’t take a lot of hard work or expensive software, and the ranking ability of the video is stellar. Embedding a good video on your website and optimizing the text around it can give your own website the same exposure. Google and Yahoo do not index videos on individual sites, only through Metacrawler and Youtube type sites - but the optimized text can help you rank in the web results for searches and bring visitors into your video page, where you have the opportunity to sell them on the experience.

Reservation Road - a case study in Movie Marketing on the ‘net

So Kevin, my editor at Search Engine Watch challenged us freelance writers to create internet buzz about the new Joaquin Phoenix movie, Reservation Road.  This has proven to be a bit of a challenge as we’re starting from a somewhat less than desirable position - I wrote about that on the SEW blog this afternoon.

 Debby Richman and I have been brainstorming and setting things up across the web like sites on Tripod, Wordpress.com, etc.  Our goal is to drive traffic to the Reservation Road website but honestly, there isnt anything there yet, it’s redirecting to the Focus Features homepage…not so hot but we’re working on it.  I’m learning a lot from Debby as I’ve never done anything remotely close to entertainment SEM - it’s been fun to see how it works differently from the long-term work we do with travel websites.

Have you seen the movie?  I love Joaquin Phoenix, hence the mention of him TWICE in one blog post.  I’m listening to the book and I think I want to see the movie, but I’m not sure how badly - its looking a bit depressing so far - I’m hoping it has one of those “life goes on and the moral of the story is everyone gets on with it” conclusions.

Little Biz at Search Engine Watch

SearchEngineWatch.com

So I posted links to all of my recent SearchEngineWatch articles over at the Blizz Newsletter - but I thought I’d post this here too - since it is all about  me and what better way to feed into my inner diva than to talk about myself some more….isnt blogging selfish? :)

Actually, I really enjoy writing this column, and having good editors makes it easier.  I think the challenge of it gives me something to look forward to and I’m always reading things and thinking, how can I make this a column?

Google Earth + Video = FUN!

I caught wiff of this over at Marketing Pilgrim and thought it was pretty neat.  The LatLong Blog at Google is reporting that they are showing geotagged videos in Google Earth.  So when you look at something like “Glenwood Springs, CO” and you click the YouTube button under featured content - you’ll see videos that have been uploaded to YouTube pop up all over the map.  Here’s a snap of what you’ll see.

Google Earth now showing Geotargeted YouTube Videos

 Then when you click the little youtube icons you see this:

You Tube Videos on Google Earth

This can be a great idea for marketing Vacation Rentals or something similar. 

 Good Move Google!

Rock the boat - Dont Rock the Boat…..Baby?

Recently we’ve seen a lot of controversy in the SEO world with people attacking Rand at SEOMoz for outing websites that have bought or sold links. (see here, here and here.) I think paid links is a hot topic right now, and everyone has come out with an opinion. But is sharing your opinion in an unconstructive -and negative - way the answer? Although I agreed w/ DazzlinDonna’s original point - we really dont need to be pointing blatant fingers - the uproar that ensued was almost overwhelming. Did he do it on purpose to create controversy? I tend to think no, but that’s just my opinion and that gets me back to my main point - Everyone has an opinion - and is it right to “share” your opinion and bash others in the process? I think sharing in a constructive way was great, and it was admittedly a poor choice, and he edited his post - but the attacks that happened afterwards seemed like they were completely unnecessary. I didnt really comment with a “hell yeah” or a “heck no” anywhere - and I felt somewhat like I was in the minority. Do you NEED to come out with an opinion on this stuff to be taken seriously in this industry? I don’t think so - but hey I’m the new gal here - what do I know.

So does one need to rock the boat to get the buzz? I guess because I’m not a huge fan of confrontation and I have no desire to fight it out with industry leaders I kept my mouth shut. Yet another reason I wont be a LinkBait Guru :)

It will be interesting to see the aftermath. Will there be “hard feelings” or will everyone get over it? The fact that people are willing to push the envelope is what keeps this industry moving forward, in my opinion. Calling someone out because you dont agree w/ them is great - if you can give reasons why you don’t agree other than - “I just think it’s wrong.”

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