Local Internet Marketing – Getting Found Online

by Dayo Adeyemi on July 13, 2010

It is when your site ranks for keywords related to your product or service in your geographic area.

If your business does not show up on Google, you are basically invisible to the world. And, if your business can’t be found on the first two pages of Google, you (almost) don’t exist because 83% of Google searches do not make it past the bottom of Google’s second page.

You need to know how to dominate your local competition with a high ranked, fully optimized listing in the prominent Google Places/Google Maps search engine results.

There are steps needed to optimize your Google Places listing through several simple techniques that work together to create an overall, competition-crushing strategy. The combination of these techniques is greater as a whole than is the sum of its parts…and while you can surely skip some of the seemingly small techniques that make up part of this strategy, it will subtract from the dominance you gain by employing all of the steps together.

Local Search Marketing consistently ranks among the highest return on the investment of your marketing dollars. The statistics speak for themselves:

* 1 billion local searches are performed each month.
* 63% of people look online for local small businesses.
* Yellow Page Usage is down 30% since 1999. (when is the last time you opened the yellow pages?

Look out for my book titled Getting Found Online comming soon leave a coment to be notified first

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Get more tips like this and learn about the full range of social media marketing platforms, tool, techniques, and strategies from Dan Zarrella’s book “The Social Media Marketing Book,” published by O’Reilly.

If I could give you only one piece of Facebook marketing advice, it would be: People have profiles. Brands have pages.

Social networking profiles represent people. From your Facebook profile, you declare personal relationships, grow your network by manually accepting friend requests, and discover other people in your network to add as friends.  Your Facebook profile includes facts about you including your favorite movies, what schools you went to, and your favorite quotes.

Your brand isn’t a person. It doesn’t have a favorite quote or book. You can’t friend a brand, and it certainly can’t friend you back. Brands don’t have friends. Brands have fans. Fans have discussions about your brands, share news about them, and share information about your brands with others.

Facebook: The Favorite Social Network of Businesses’

A new Business.com study of 3,000 businesses showed that 83% of respondents named Facebook as their favorite social network to engage with customers. However, marketing on Facebook hasn’t always been so easy for brands. When Facebook first began to catch on with businesses, it experienced a gold rush of brands who joined solely to social media market. Just like nearly every other social network, the relationship between people and brands got a little messy. Remember, people you’re trying to reach have probably been using Facebook more often and for longer than you have. Unless your approach is pitch perfect you may end up doing more harm than good.

Profiles are for People. At this point in Facebook’s community’s development, you do not want to keep a profile if you are a brand. Keeping a brand profile is a surefire way to come across as totally out-of-touch. And worse, even if you were to pull off a successful corporate profile, Facebook has been known to suspend profiles for “too much marketing activity.”

Groups are for People. Groups really aren’t suitable for a serious marketing effort. They originally were created as a place for like-minded people to communicate outside of their immediate network and never were intended for brand use. There is very little time and energy required to make one and consequently, users do not value them as much as pages. How many I-lost-my-cellphone-so-I-need-all-your-numbers-again groups have you been invited to?

Pages are for Brands. After setting up a page for your brand on Facebook, use applications to pull in content from your blog and Twitter account (you do have those too right?) to keep your page full of fresh, frequently updated information. Resist the urge to turn your page into a watered-down version of your website. Include some offers, media or conversation on Facebook that does not appear anywhere else. Retail brands like Victoria’s Secret are especially talented at this. I recommend viewing their Victoria’s Secret Pink Facebook page and see how their brand interacts with fans.

So, what if you have a profile page or a group set up for your brand already? In some cases, businesses who’ve launched a successful profile or group prior to Facebook pages can contact Facebook to have them migrate their contacts to their new Facebook page. This is definitely something you consider if you’ve got a lot of group members or friends that you don’t want to lose when you transfer your brand to your new page.

Check out Dan Zarrella’s  new book for more great ideas on the best ways to leverage Facebook and other social platforms in your business.

Read more: http://blog.hubspot.com/blog/tabid/6307/bid/5328/on-facebook-people-have-profiles-brands-have-pages.aspx#ixzz0tQXvztt8

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You Oughta Know Inbound Marketing

June 30, 2010

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Why Viral Marketing is so Important

June 22, 2010

Internet marketing gurus always talk about building your mailing list. Mailing lists are important because it is true that the money is always in the list.
Most of the time, some Internet marketers will beg other marketers (especially those with a bigger list size) to promote their products, do an ad swap or help them to [...]

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Getting the most out of Facebook and LinkedIn

June 21, 2010

I recommend: Register first at LinkedIn.com and don’t skip anything. Creating a complete online profile, which is essentially a form of resume, is key to enjoying all the possible connections. Put in your current job, all past jobs by date, all schools, any clubs, etc. Why? Because then LinkedIn can show you every [...]

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