Archive for the ‘Public Relations’ Category

Ireland is Depressed! Just ask Google

Tuesday, May 3rd, 2011

Banking crisis, Depression, Recession, The death of the Celtic Tiger, No more fun – ever. How do I know that you are all feeling like this today? Google told me!

Google’s autocomplete feature relies on search volume and content volume (and probably a few more things) to suggest search terms as you type. The result is this…..

Google Autocomplete results for Ireland is

Woah, that's a lot of negativity. Cheers Google.

Google Autocomplete bad for brand management

It is all very amusing when you get results like that, but I would not be happy if I was Starbucks right now.  The Autocomplete results for “Starbucks coffee is” are as follows…..

Starbucks Coffee Google Autocomplete

Is Starbucks coffee really that bad?

Google Autocomplete Manipulation

It is possible to manipulate the results for Autocomplete.  However, Autocomplete manipulation falls squarely into the Black Hat list of SEO options.  I would have to think that it would be worth the risk for Starbucks though.

Google Autocomplete Fail

Want to see more Google Fails?  Try looking up “google is” or “i really hope you get “

Social Media Strategy – What’s yours?

Tuesday, December 7th, 2010

Social Media strategy is vital to your online success. Why does your company have a facebook page?  Why do you post to Twitter? Somebody once wrote:

Planning without action is futile. Action without planning is fatal!

Online marketing is just like offline marketing.  There has to be a purpose.  There are a great many companies who put considerable resources into their offline marketing efforts, spending a lot of money on advertising in press/television, cultivating good contacts in PR and in the media in general.  Many of these same companies fall down in their online marketing planning.  Why?

5 reasons why online marketing campaigns with social media are not properly planned

  1. Lack of understanding about Social Media.
  2. Social Media is largely free – people think more about what they are doing when money is involved!
  3. The abyss between the marketing department and the IT department.  – often the marketing people do not have the technical skills and the IT people do not have the marketing skills.  Online marketing falls into the chasm between these two sets of people.
  4. Sheep syndrome. – Competitors are seen to be “on facebook” etc and the company jumps on board, just to “keep up”.  The fear of being left behind is the motivator.
  5. Bad advice. – I wish I got paid every time I hear somebody say “Get on Facebook!”.  Why?  What are the goals behind it?  How will it benefit the business?
Social Media strategy flow chart

A clear plan is vital for Social Media. It is a key part of your online marketing process

Branding V Marketing

I’m very aware that branding is part of marketing, but for the purposes of this little debate I am making them two separate entities.  Here is why.

  • Branding is concerned with getting your company name and message out there.  The more people that are familiar with your brand the better. Familiarity breeds trust.
  • Marketing is concerned with selling your products or services.  You want to identify and target people who are potential customers.

This highlights two possible approaches to planning your Social Media Strategy.  You can

  1. Aim to reach as many people as possible regardless of whether they themselves are likely to become future customers.  This is done just to create brand awareness in the wider population.  It is the equivalent of sponsoring events, or billboard advertising in the offline (real world).
  2. Aim for a specific demographic of people who you have identified as being likely to be future customers.  Here you are really selling as directly as you can, not putting effort into areas that are unlikely to yield sales.

How does this affect your approach to say Twitter for example?

Quantity V Quality in Social Media

Well in the case of Twitter, you would be linking to as many people as you can to increase brand awareness, having a “more the merrier” approach to building connections.  You can see this often on twitter where people have 1,000 people following them but are following 5,000 people.  The theory is that the more people you follow, the more will follow you in return.  Interaction with these people is minimal or non existent.  Used like this, Twitter is not a Social Medium, it is a branding portal, and in my opinion of little benefit in the majority of cases (although as you may have read in previous posts on Twitter integration it is a useful intermediary tool).

Conversely, you could plan to only follow people with which you actually wish to communicate.  People can still follow you, but your account is not swamped with lots of tweets that you don’t want to read.  The intention is to interact with the people you are linked to.  This is true Social Media.  A great example of this being put to use is in the case of radio presenters like @SeanMoncrieff on Newstalk.  Used in this way Twitter becomes a communication channel.

Which suits your business?  The first option can be done with little investment (time) but the second can be highly intensive in terms of time commitments.

Could you integrate twitter into your website and use it as a open communications tool where people can ask about your products and services?  Who would man it?  What damage could be done to your companies reputation if it is not implemented well?  Is it necessary or is the telephone a good enough communication channel?

Social Media Pitfalls

I am an advocate of Social Media for business.  That does not mean that I am blind to the potential PR disasters that await companies that do not plan their Social media strategy.

What if that disgruntled employee decides to write something damaging about the company (on company communication channels in particular – eg. blog / twitter / facebook).  Worse still, it could be an ex employee who finds his or herself with access to company Social Media even after they have been dismissed.

It is not just disgruntled employees you have to worry about.  It could be well intentioned posting by a member of staff that erupts into a PR disaster. It could be a simple misunderstanding that blows out of all proportion, or some inaccurate information about your company (like incorrect pricing) that leaves you having to clean up an awkward mess.  Indeed, where employees are posting using their real names it could be simply something they have on one of their own sites like their own Facebook account that gets found and spread.  If you are a healthcare company and your employee has accessible pictures of a drink and drugs party on their facebook page then it could be a problem for the company.  Your HR department probably does a search on potential employees, your competitors might too.

What is your company policy on dealing with anonymous posts that ridicule your company or your products or services.  Dealing with slander in the press is a much easier prospect than dealing with it online.

Would you even be aware if somebody started an online campaign to slight your company? In this instance there is a simple fix – google alerts.  Set up an alert for your company name and you will know whenever somebody mentions your company online.

This post is getting a bit long, but I’ll be posting again soon.  I want to talk about blogging and where it fits into your Social Media Strategy next.

A touch of humour

If you are really finding it hard to come up with a social media strategy you could always try this site: http://whatthefuckismysocialmediastrategy.com/

SEO Tips Revealed on Facebook

Wednesday, July 21st, 2010
Scam advertising for SEO on Facebook?

Top SEO tips or a scam advert on Facebook?

For the last few days I have been seeing the ad on the right showing up in Facebook.  It offers 50 top SEO tips from 8 experts.

Naturally, since SEO and online marketing are my business, I was curious.  So I clicked on it.  I have to say I am appalled.  I do not know who I am more appalled with to be honest.   The creator of the ad or Facebook themselves.

The page it links to offers 5 SEO tips… and I really hope these are not the top 5 SEO tips!

There is no mention of a company name or registered business number.  There is just a form looking for your email address.  In return for your email address you will receive the other 45 SEO tips.

More worryingly (is that actually a word? spell check doesn’t seem to mind), A lookup of the web page using Whois (http://whois.domaintools.com) shows that the site is registered to “WhoisGuard”.  In other words whoever is behind this site is hiding their identity by going through a company that does just that for them.  Alarm bells going off for anybody else or is it just me?

I was in the middle of writing a post about PPC ads on Facebook and Google when I stumbled across this.  Needless to say, it may well colour my findings in relation to which is the best bet.  Do you want to advertise your company in a place that could very quickly become known for scam advertising?

Lets address the actual SEO tips on the page (I’m not publishing the url because I don’t want to be responsible for any traffic going there).

  1. Put your main keywords in the TITLE META TAG of your page. Separate your keyword phrases with the “|”or “-” character. Your page title makes a huge impact to your SEO ranking.
    This is misleading. Yes the title tag is extremely important.  The number of characters should be kept down below 70 and the text should be enticing to humans (who are the traffic you want) as well as search engines.  Try to keep your keywords / phrases near the beginning of the title. As for separating with the “|” or “-” characters… that has ZERO impact on SEO and is purely for how it looks.
  2. Focus on targeting KEYWORD PHRASES rather than single word keywords. There could be millions of pages on the Internet that contain a single-word keyword and searching for one brings untargeted results. If your page is about hair care, then that’s the keyword phrase you want to focus on.
    Badly worded, but the essence of how this works is that the longer the keyword phrase (eg. “SEO tips revealed” – 210 thousand competing pages on Google), the less competition there will be for it (eg. “SEO” – 204 million competing pages on Google).  You should not abandon single word keywords.  It is just easier to rank for longer tailed keywords.  In their example targeting just the word “hair” would make sense too if you ask me!
  3. Get links from authority sites in your industry linking back to your site. Submit your site to quality directories such as Yahoo, DMOZ, Business.com, Aviva, and Best of the web.
    Oh God!
    This used to be great advice…. DMOZ in particular.  But Google have announced that they will not be using DMOZ any more as part of their ranking algorithms.  In general, if you are doing your SEO in 1984 then this is great advice.  For those of us in the here and now, while not detrimental, listings in directories has very little of the impact it once had.
  4. Get quick links back to your website by posting comments on relevant blogs. With your comment include a link back to your site. Use one of your main keywords as your link text.
    (Banging head against wall). Anybody who has ever owned a blog will be aware of just how much spam appears in the form of comments.  If you were creating a search engine algorithm, and were aware that 99% of blog comments are spam, just how much weight would you give to a blog comment in terms of it helping a site to rank highly?  Search engines are not developed by a spotty 14 year old kid in a bedroom, they have teams of doctors working on them… point being, they are not stupid!
  5. Include the META Keyword tag in the HEAD section of the HTML source code of your website but keep your the keyword list to less than 10 phrases.
    Where is my Stone Washed Denim Jacket?Yes friends, the 80’s must be back!  I shall make this short.  Google ignore the meta keyword tag! (and if you’re in Ireland, then frankly Google is the only search engine that matters).

This is the 5 tips that they showed in order to entice you to sign up for another 45 of the same?  Come on… it’s just an email grabbing scam.. surely!  Obviously I don’t know what their intentions are, but bad advice and hiding your identity do not make me trust easily.

Facebook, what are you doing?  Do you not vet your advertising clients in any way whatsoever?  Or is it just a case of get the money in and make your targets?

Online Marketing In Ireland

Saturday, July 10th, 2010

Online Marketing in Ireland is relatively advanced.  That is to say, it is advanced compared to other countries.  Recession has made companies keener, and they are exploring new ways to promote themselves.

Online Marketing Ireland. Webshed

Online Marketing.... the virtual business card in the face!

The last year alone has seen a substantial increase in online competition.  The internet is always evolving.  Social media for online marketing has very much been the “buzz word” in Ireland for the last while.  It started with blogging and social bookmarking, but companies are now seeing the worth of Facebook and Youtube to their efforts.

Online Marketing concerns much more than just social media though.  The pace of change is very fast too.  Mailshots still have their place, but increasingly they are seen as just more spam and of limited worth or even detrimental.  This of course depends on how it is done.

Viral marketing – the creation of material that spreads by itself (usually because it is amusing or shocking) – has also moved more from it’s inception as email based, to youtube and social media as its main means of propagation.  This reflects how people are now using the internet rather than the decline of email as a marketing tool.

The line between Public Relations (PR) and Marketing is becoming increasingly blurred.  In Ireland, the enthusiastic headlong rush towards promoting your business online has been slowed a little by the realisation that it is necessary to control your brand online too.  It is necessary to be on top of what is being said about your business online..

Search engine optimisation (SEO) is a major part of online marketing.  After all, you could have the best site in the world, but if it does not show up in a search then it may as well not exist!

This blog will explore online marketing in Ireland and keep you up to date with the latest trends and marketing strategies.  Subscribe to the RSS feed to keep updated!