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Social media links on your website - Don't Do It !

Urszula Richards - Sunday, March 11, 2012

A regular request from people who I have been building websites for is to 'put a Twitter and a Facebook' link on their website.

[photo credit - webtreats on Flickr]

When I ask these clients for their Twitter and Facebook profiles, I find out that they either don't exist, or I get the request: 'please set one up for me'. Some clients do have a Facebook page or Twitter profile, but there is pretty much nothing going on there.


So what's my advice?  Don't do it. Just. Yet.

It is like inviting people to a party, but when they arrive there is no one there - just you - putting up a few balloons. Its a premature invitation.


Just having links which take your guests and prospects to no activity in another space, not only draws their attention away from your website, but it does not give a good impression (you only get one chance to make a good first impression).


So if this is your first website, get that finished properly first before you start thinking about other spaces. It is not difficult or expensive to add those social buttons later.


If you have an existing brand and website, by all means start to create and use your social profiles. THEN place the links on your website - once there is something to invite people to.

You also need to decide which social media presence you should devote time to. Go to where your prospects hang out. 


There is no point devoting time to a Facebook page if your prospects interact on LinkedIn.

If you don't intend to devote time to social media at this time, its fine - you can't do everything at once. Resist the pressure to put those icons up. Be honest with yourself and put it into your marketing plan for when you are realistically able to devote time to it. 


Put your energy into other things which don't require constant effort and interaction that social media does, such as ensuring you have your business listing up in directories and in particular your Google Places listing. This one action will make a huge difference in you being found by others who are searching for you. But more about that another time.


So 'fess up. Have you been seduced by the need to have those cute little icons? Tell us your story ...

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Social media links on your website - Don't Do It !

Read More | 11 Mar 2012 by Urszula Richards

Getting Started in Content Creation - 5 quick-start tips

Urszula Richards - Saturday, October 24, 2009

Whether you are looking for relevant news to put up on your website, writing a blog, or looking at ways to establish that much needed earnt authority in your field to set you apart from your competitors, unique and expert content is the main way of achieving this.

It may give you a boost to remember that most people do not know what you do in your area of expertise - this is why you are doing what you do!  So your knowledge is very valuable to others (even if you feel it is ordinary).

If you are like the majority of business owners, when it actually comes down to creating content, you may simply freeze.

Start

Just start.  Don't wait till you 'know what you are doing, or can do it perfectly' (my favourite procrastination techniques).

While you may be in awe of brilliant content, you probably don't realise what it takes to get it to that state.  It would have been in concept stage, drafted, left to incubate, revisited, polished, 'feed-backed', revisited, edited, changed, trialled, and eventually published.  Other content may not have passed the test and been discarded.  So do not think that your first attempt has to be perfect, or that it will even make the grade.

Schedule content creation time

Make it a discipline.  Schedule writing/content creation time into your calendar, or set yourself a less formal deadline - 'by the end of the day I will have one article written'

Get inspired - 5 quick ideas

Is your ideas bank empty?

Here are some tips about how to get inspired and get creative.

  1. Write down the top 10 questions you get asked.  Base 10 articles around those responses.
  2. Get someone to interview you, and then publish the interview.
  3. Make a habit of spending 10 minutes at the end of the day noting down challenges you have solved in your work.  When you get time, review these and work out if there is a useful article in any of them.
  4. Interview a colleague and ask them what you have taught them.  Write about it.
  5. When doing research and keeping up to date in your field, share valuable information.

If you keep doing this, you will develop a body of content.  And remind yourself - you don't have to publish it.  But you will be surprised to see that after incubation, some great content can emerge.  And if you really are not good at it, you still have a stack of ideas to get someone else to write about for you.

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Getting Started in Content Creation - 5 quick-start tips

Read More | 24 Oct 2009 by Urszula Richards

Risk Management Strategy for your Online Marketing

Urszula Richards - Sunday, October 04, 2009
Have you ever wondered why you keep being told to use Twitter, Facebook, get your site 'seo'd', gather backlinks, join forums and write blogs?  Why can't you just pick one and go with that?

The science and practice of pointing traffic to your site is an ever changing one and the best risk management strategy is to have a range of strategies.

Have you heard of, or experienced the Google cold shoulder?  Where your rankings and traffic have happily been flowing your way and then...nothing?  You may be racking your brain to find out what you did to get punished, and even if you work it out, it can take some time for any fixes you make to take effect.  It can take much longer if you have no idea why you have been punished.

What about the social media sites which have been sending interested people your way?  What if they get acquired, have a policy shift or simply disappear?

Diversifying your marketing efforts not only protects you from the 'all your eggs in the one basket' scenario, but allows for a choice of most appropriate medium for particular promotions and communications.

What if you have a sudden wonderful PR opportunity and want to capitalise on the viral nature of Twitter?  You would want to have some followers to tell.  And they need to have a reason to engage with you in the first place; they won't suddenly be interested if your promotion is the first time they have ever heard from you.

By working towards creating diverse portfolio of online marketing activities, you will have at your disposal fast (and generally short lived) marketing options, slow and solid link building and the benefits which only accrue with longevity which will eventually kick in, so long as you don't put off starting!
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Risk Management Strategy for your Online Marketing

Read More | 04 Oct 2009 by Urszula Richards

Tagging for fun and efficiency, marketing and Google

Urszula Richards - Saturday, October 03, 2009
Tagging is an extremely easy and powerful way of organising your content, and an essential part of marketing it. 

But what is it?  Essentially it is a way of categorising your content. Tagging... keywords...categories....all fall within information and knowledge management.

You may already be doing it - tagging your blogs, tagging your YouTube clips, tagging your Delicious bookmarks, tagging your Ever-notes, tagging your photo library.  Every social media site, and many of the software programs on your computer will have tagging functionality.

It is used to firstly categorise and then easily find any public or private content or information which you have decided to keep.  As an added bonus, it is a great keyword hook in those cases where you want your content to be indexed and found by Google as well as humans!  It adds weight in Google's eyes to your content by showing that you have bothered to categorize it.

So how should you create tags?

The more RELEVANT the tags you create for a particular piece of content, the more likely it is that you and others will find it when searching for this information. If you have keywords which you are specifically targeting, make sure that one of your tags reflects these keywords.

How should I tag THIS article?   

This is what I have come up with so far....
tag, tagging, social media, information management, knowledge management, online marketing

Note that I have put in both the words tag and tagging - as I want anyone typing in either word to find this article.  I also like to create a tag with the broader category or multiple categories I think that the article could come under, which is why I included social media, information management, knowledge management and online marketing.

Here is an example of how I have tagged this content in Evernote - where I keep all my content ideas and a record of all my writing...


Important: understand and work with your tag separators.  A tag separator is how the program you are using defines the separation between tag keywords.  Be very clear about what the tag separators are within the specific context you are in.  Some programs use a space, others a comma (this is most common), and others a semi-colon.  

See the examples below about how the above tags would be entered in these three examples using the different separator types:

Comma separators:

tag, tagging, social media, information management, knowledge management, online marketing

Semi colon separators:

tag; tagging; social media; information management; knowledge management; online marketing

Occasionally, tags will be only defined with a space.  Be careful in this situation to keep tags which have more than one word together by inserting an underscore, or don't leave a space between a tag phrase.  See example below:

tag tagging social_media information_management knowledge_management online_marketing or
tag tagging socialmedia informationmanagement knowledgemanagement onlinemarketing


Most tagging systems operate with predictive text, meaning that once you have entered a particular tag, it may suggest this tag when you next go to type in a similar tag.  Certainly my Delicious and Evernote tagging systems remember tags I have entered, and in the case of Delicious (and many other programs), tags which others have used to tag that particular content also pop up.  It is a good idea to pay attention to these suggested tags, as it shows you exactly what others have used to tag that content.  Obviously this is for existing content which has already been in the public domain and not content you have only just created.

One final point.  Tagging is a discipline.  Do it with any content you may want to access again.  Apply the 'do once' rule.  When you have content which is useful, tag it straight away.  You will then not waste time looking for it again.  And remember that you can always go back and add more tags which you think are more appropriate, or remove ones which you think are not relevant.

What other tips for tagging do you have?
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Tagging for fun and efficiency, marketing and Google

Read More | 03 Oct 2009 by Urszula Richards

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