Posts tagged linkedin

Buy Your Way To The Top, With LinkedIn Job Seeker "Premium" Accounts

In this past week, LinkedIn announced its Job Seeker Premium Account. If you want to pay extra money every month, LinkedIn will push your name to the top of the hiring manager’s list as a “Featured Applicant.” It’s clear how this benefits LinkedIn; it creates more revenue. It’s also has obvious benefits for applicants. In addition to the “Buy your way to the top” feature, it also provides them with more InMails, a webinar for job seekers, and other benefits. But what about for hiring managers? I’m not so sure. When I’m hiring, I want the best applicant. If someone has paid additional money for a more expensive account, it tells me they really want a job, and that they have the extra money. But it certainly doesn’t mean they will be a better employee, or better suited for a particular job. I would greatly prefer a service that provides me with a ranking system on my applicants that is based solely on their qualifications.

Content Is King - Part II

When talking about content, the first premise to consider is that for most companies, competing online via “new technology” has become more and more difficult. The truth is, regardless of company size, there can only be a select few winners in the contest to be the best “technology-driven” business online.

True, the technological lead sometimes changes hands, like it did away from AOL and MySpace to the current leaders in their respective fields. But those occurrences are becoming rare. Companies such as Google have gained so much mass, brand equity and momentum that it may be years before they are supplanted in any meaningful way. They won’t be handing off their lead in many categories anytime soon.

No, the way to compete today is by becoming a purveyor of content. Drive traffic to your website, platform or service by creating and sharing valuable information to your target audiences. Fill a niche market. Find a group or segment with unmet needs, and fulfill them.

And this is exactly what AOL and MySpace have done. AOL bought the blog network Weblogs, home to many popular blogs, such as Engadget and Joystiq; and they now employ over 3,000 freelance writers and more than 150 full-time journalists. And the AOL portal is still popular, and drives traffic to their many in-house publications.

MySpace decided to become a home for music and celebrity content.
The platform is no longer about networking with friends, passing that baton to Facebook some time ago. They simply couldn’t keep up with the technological lead and overall user experience offered by Facebook.

So, MySpace is now focused on a wide variety of entertainment channels, and features a huge supply of new music and music videos. Their plans to offer Facebook Connect functionality clearly show how re-focused their business plan has become. They couldn’t beat Facebook in social networking technology, so they shifted to becoming a content provider.

So becoming a “destination” is the key to competing online, for almost every small and mid-sized business, and even for most large corporations. It should also be noted that we’re obviously talking about a continual and ongoing process for creating content, not a singular campaign or event.

And when analyzing the examples above, it’s easy to understand why content must also be “fresh.” Ask yourself the question: Would you read the exact same newspaper two or more days in a row? Probably not. You need to view your web content in the same manner.

Without ongoing content being added to your website, readers have no incentive to return. And though your website may be highly-ranked today, without fresh content being added the search engines will (eventually) simply move on to sites with newer information.

Ideally, this means you’ll have new content every time the search engine crawler (for SEO newbies, an automated program used to review websites) visits. You need to show the engines that your site is being actively monitored and managed, obviously a good thing in their eyes. This ensures the crawler always has fresh content to index, and new links to explore. It won’t ever see your site as “stale”, and decide to drop it in the rankings.

So, think about your web content as accomplishing two equally important goals:

1. The first is to provide clear, compelling information about your brand, products and services, to influence the buying behavior of visitors.

2. The second goal is to attract (and keep) the attention of the search engines, to build your potential audience and prospective business going forward.

Knowing exactly what keywords to focus on within your content is a conversation for another day, but SEO pros can analyze your business and let you know which words are the ones you should include in your content. But, once these keywords have been established, where can you find source material that can assist you in writing your web copy?

There are a number of effective strategies that you can use to generate your content. First, look around your desk or office, and you’ll probably see some marketing materials or sales tools that you have used to educate and solicit new business. This is an excellent place to start. If you send an email newsletter, or print and distribute a traditional version, that information should be shared on your website as well. Writing and distributing press releases online is another good strategy.

After you have found source materials, how do you share your content? Creating standard web pages is obviously one possibility. Starting your own blog and either writing it yourself, or hiring a freelance writer to assist you, is another winning strategy. A well-written blog can establish you as an expert within your business category; a “trusted advisor” that readers will consult with before making purchasing decisions. And having your own blog provides you with an open forum to share new developments and news items, sales, discounts and special promotions with your readership.

A blog also allows you to receive comments from your readership, which creates a more collaborative and interactive environment. This type of feedback is vital to understanding the changing wants and needs of your customer base, and responding appropriately.

Of course, we cannot ignore the massive amounts of new content generated on social media, including Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn. These networks also allow for a back and forth conversation with your most loyal customers and biggest brand champions, as well as your prospects. Your content communicates directly with your network, providing the opportunity for feedback, and also the opportunity for current customers to spread the message about your business with their other connections.

Hopefully this post helps to explain the vital importance of your web content now, and going forward. In future posts, we will explore some winning tactics that you can use to successfully create and share what you have created.

blogging

So How Many Blogs Are There, Anyway?

I’ve been searching recently to answer a question that many who are considering new online programs have asked: Just how many blogs are there, anyway?

Let us start by saying that hard, reliable data is difficult to find! Many of the services or engines that track individual blogs, especially Google, don’t share their information. Even for those that do share data, it’s still impossible to know if their lists are all-inclusive, or how many “dead” and zombie, or “sleeping” blogs they contain.

“Dead” means just what you probably think it means - the blog has been permanently abandoned or discontinued. Unfortunately, this is the fate of many blogs.

Zombie or “sleeping” blogs are terms I just made up, because they seem to fit so nicely - blogs that are temporarily dormant, but will be revived by their owners at some point in the future.

So, you want a number, right?

Well, the current estimates say there are about 450 million “active” English language blogs right now, but that number varies according to the source. Technorati estimated over 200 million blogs at the start of 2009, with exponential growth since then.

Of course these numbers change every day however, as new blogs are started by the thousands (or tens of thousands) every day, and a large number of blogs have also reached the point of where they could be defined as “abandoned” and should be subtracted. When including non-English in the total number, especially those in Chinese Mandarin, and there may be over one billion blogs worldwide.

This equates to 1 out of every 6 people in the world with a personal blog!

This is often because many business blogs, those written by small business owners or others who are responsible for specific company blogs discover that finding topics to write about, finding the time to actually write the posts, upload them, and adhering to an established publishing schedule is a lot harder than it seems at first.

This is often the point where blog copywriters or other marketing freelancers are asked to step in and help with writing services, at least by those companies who (wisely!) wish to continue with the benefits that are being generated by their blog. The fact is that blogs - especially those that have been around for a while - can generate significant SEO value and traffic to businesses and their websites…and allowing them to become “abandoned” in the eyes of Google or other search engines (and therefore no longer relevant in rankings) is quite a shame!

(If you find yourself in this situation, take just a moment and visit our blog management page to see how we can help keep your blog active, so it continues to generate the valuable traffic to your website.)

How many people read or follow all these blogs?

This question is just as difficult to answer, because once again there is no reliable tracking mechanism. But certainly we are talking about many hundreds of millions of people, maybe 500 or 600 million total . If you include non-English blogs again, we can easily assume a number well above a billion people (remember, there might be a billion bloggers!) perhaps even more than 2 billion - or about 1 out of every 3 human beings on the planet.

With such a massive number of worldwide readers, it should go without saying that an active blog can be absolutely VITAL to establishing a strong web presence for your company or brands.

Blogging also allows you to regularly share “fresh” content, the kind that has become key to solid search engine rankings from Google, Bing and other search engines…whose web crawlers are constantly seeking out and indexing new content.

Your blog is also a great source of fodder to utilize in social media like company Facebook, Twitter and other networks.

In fact, it can be hard to conduct a social media campaign without a blog, with the other alternative being the addition of new stand-alone pages to your website.

Why is this? Facebook updates you are limited to 440 characters; Twitter only allows 140. There simply aren’t enough characters to communicate many marketing messages, detailed special events, sales promotions or educational content. This type of long form information is best shared via your blog (or through another page on your site, as noted), and then shared through your various social media platforms.

With so many blogs already, you might ask “should I even bother with my own?”

Your answer should be… Yes!

Sure every niche has a few very popular A-List bloggers. Guy Kawasaki comes to mind right away in the field of communication technology. John Mauldin is another, this time in the financial analysis and investment category. And Chad Ochocinco is one of the many popular athletes that are on Twitter and Facebook as well as blogging regularly. There are many (many!) others in every field or industry you can name.

But because of the low barriers to entry, almost anyone can begin blogging. And even those who don’t have the time and resources to blog themselves can still hire firms like ours to help them develop their own ideas and voice.

And as noted, some of the blogs that exist today won’t exist tomorrow.

So if you stick to your blogging plan, eventually you will gain on your competitors just through perseverance!

This means there are many voices, and while certainly not everyone will achieve A-List status, each one can attract its own share of attention, and contribute to the ongoing conversation which is the web today.

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Need Help With Your Next Writing Project?

Contact me directly at: [email protected], call (314) 494-3494

or visit our Contact page and fill out the brief form.

Jim



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