Archive by ‘admin

U2 Validates Benefits of SEO 11 March 2010 at 2:46 pm by admin

My worlds are colliding. I mean my “U2 world” and my “SEO world.” I try to keep them separate, but this story makes that impossible. Check it out on the Somerset County Gazette web site.

Apparently, a local/small business owner recently got a job fixing a broken GRAMMY Award that belongs to U2. The article makes several cheesy references to U2 song titles, but here’s the part that matters:

“…one of the band’s management team got in touch after typing in ‘trophy repairs’ into Google.”

SEO FTW!

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This is a post from Matt McGee’s blog, Small Business Search Marketing.

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+ SES New York 2010 Liveblog Coverage By admin 11 March 2010 at 2:13 pm and have No Comments

Look out, Big Apple. Search Engine Strategies is coming to town. As always, Bruce Clay, Inc. will be there with blue shirts and plenty of knowledge to share. We’ve got a bunch of ways to do that this year.

First up, on Monday, start the conference off right with SEO training. It’s an all-day class taught by Bruce and you get to take home a copy of the book I spent a year of my life on, SEO for Dummies All in One. Bring it with you to the rest of the conference and I’ll force my broken crippled hand to scribble something trite in it.

At the conference itself, you can visit our booth (#1217) or you can catch one of Bruce’s three speaking opportunities. I’m thinking the White Hat, Black Hat: Unconferenced session at the bar is going to be unmissable.

As for me? I’m liveblogging this time around and you’ll find my schedule below. Use it wisely to plan treats, bribes and icepacks for my hands.

SES 2010 logo

So, to recap…

Training:

Mon. March 22 Search Engine Optimization Training

Bruce will be speaking at:

Tues. March 23, 4:00 – 4:20 p.m.: Theater Presentation in the Americas Hall 1 exhibit hall – “What to Look For in an SEO Vendor”

Wed. March 24, 5:00 – 6:00 p.m.: SEO Super Tools

Wed. March 24, 6:00 – 7:00 p.m.: White Hat Black Hat: Unconferenced (This is a first-time, unique session, taking place in a bar.)

We’ll be in booth #1217 in the exhibit hall.

And I’ll be here:

Day 1: Tuesday, March 23

Time BCI Liveblog Coverage Session Description
9:00 a.m. Opening Keynote: The New Rules of Marketing and PR – David Meerman Scott Session Description
10:45 a.m. How to Become a Link Magnet Session Description
12:45 p.m. Post Mortem: Banned Site Forensics Session Description
2:00 p.m. Keynote Panel: Search Marketing: Analyze This Session Description
3:30 p.m. From Real-Time Search to Dynamic Discovery Session Description
4:45 p.m. Deep Dive Into Analytics: When Bounce Rate No Longer Floats Your Boat Session Description

Day 2: Wednesday, March 24

Time BCI Liveblog Coverage Session Description
9:00 a.m. Morning Keynote: Be Awesome: Ideas for Approaching Search Analytics Differently Session Description
10:30 a.m. Social and Search: Integrating Social Media and Search to Drive the Brand Session Description
12:45 p.m. Keynote Panel – Video: The Next Digital Marketing Frontier Session Description
2:15 p.m. Stretching Your Marketing Dollars: The Upside of Search Session Description
3:45 p.m. Behavioral Analytics and Search Data-Driven Marketing Session Description
5:00 p.m. Where Search and Social Media Collide: Real-Time Search and Twitter Session Description

Day 3: Thursday, March 25

Time BCI Liveblog Coverage Session Description
9:00 a.m. Morning Keynote – The Evolution of Search: End Users Signal The Way Session Description
10:30 a.m. Eye Tracking Research Update Session Description
12:45 a.m. 21 Secrets of Top Converting Websites Session Description
2:15 p.m. Spotlight on Fashion: Blogging for Style Session Description
4:00 p.m. Conversion Ninja Toolbox Session Description

SES New York 2010 Liveblog Coverage was originally published on BruceClay.com, an SEO tools provider.

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SES New York 2010 Liveblog Coverage

+ PPV Webinar Available for Download – $27,287.50 In 8 DAYS! By admin 11 March 2010 at 1:17 pm and have No Comments

$27,287.50 in 8 Days


If you missed last night’s PPV Webinar with Jonathan Volk, David Ford and Corey Bornmann, then you missed out big time. It was one of the best webinar I’ve ever attended. David and Corey held nothing back and even showed how they have earned $27,287.50 in affiliate commissions in only 8 days using PPV traffic. That is serious money! It was one of the very few webinars I’ve attended where I actually took notes.

For those who were not able to make the webinar, Jonathan has made the entire PPV session available for download. Trust me, you will want to download this! The information David and Corey present was simply awesome. I’m sure readers who were at the Webinar will be chiming in the comments about its awesomeness.

The PPV Webinar download is only available to people who downloaded Jonathan’s new Affiliate Marketing 101 guide. If you have the guide, then you should have received an email from Jonathan with the webinar download link. If you don’t have the guide yet, then go sign up for it and Jonathan will send you Affiliate Marketing 101 and the PPV Webinar.

Download Affiliate Marketing 101 and PPV Webinar

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+ Will Google Bring Us Tabbed Windows on TV? By admin 11 March 2010 at 11:20 am and have No Comments

There’s been some recent news about the possibility of Google working with the Dish Network to bring searches for television programming and YouTube videos to TVs, reported at places like the Wall Street Journal. The WSJ article tells us that besides actual tests of a Google settop box that allows searching for TV programming, [...]

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Will Google Bring Us Tabbed Windows on TV?

+ SEMPO Announces New Board of Directors By admin 11 March 2010 at 10:27 am and have No Comments

Just a quick note of congratulations to Bruce Clay and the newly elected SEMPO Board of Directors for the 2010-2012 term.

Bruce has been a passionate advocate of SEMPO’s mission of education, research and awareness during his first term on the board, and I know he is thrilled to have the opportunity to serve the search engine marketing industry for a second term.

SEMPO’s 2010-2012 Board of Directors:

Chris Boggs, Director, Search Engine Optimization, ROSETTA
Massimo Burgio, Founder, Chief Strategist, Global Search Interactive
Bruce Clay, President, Bruce Clay, Inc.
Dave Fall, SVP Product and Operations, Clickable, Inc.
Rob Garner, Strategy Director, iCrossing
Mike Grehan, VP and Global Content Director, Incisive Media
Motoko Hunt, President, Japanese Search Strategist, AJPR
Kevin Lee, CEO, Didit
Kristjan Mar Hauksson, Director of Search, Nordic eMarketing
Dmitriy Minenko, Online Specialist, Search Engine Marketing, Tourism British Columbia
Jeffrey Pruitt, CEO, Acendant
Margaret Willette, Search Marketing Manager, Intuit
Michael Y. Xu, SVP, Beijing Gridsum Technology Co., Ltd.
champagne poured into glass
CC BY-SA 2.0

Congrats again to the new SEMPO board, who take the reigns to drive SEM knowledge and growth beginning March 18.

Read more about SEMPO, its research, its member benefits, and its plans for the future in my interview with SEMPO’s current president, Sara Holoubek.

SEMPO Announces New Board of Directors was originally published on BruceClay.com, an SEO tools provider.

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SEMPO Announces New Board of Directors

+ How to Blog: How to Choose a Blog Niche [6 Tips] By admin 11 March 2010 at 8:56 am and have No Comments

Earlier in the week we looked at the importance of ‘niches’ when it comes to building profitable blogs. Today I want to extend the topic and gives the process that I tend to use when working out if I want to start a new blog in a particular niche. I hope you find it helpful.

Many factors will come into play when it comes to choosing a niche to blog about – but the following are those that I tend to pay most attention to:

1. Your Interest in the Topic

I started out blogging on topics that interested me – but as I began to see the potential to make money from my blogs began to experiment with topics that I had less interest in but which I thought would be profitable.

What I discovered in creating these blogs that had potential for profit, yet which I had little interest in, was that I couldn’t really sustain them. I had little to say on the topics and when I did write something I suspect that those who read my content could tell that it was a topic that I was not passionate about. As a result the traffic did not come, I did not become known for the topic, nobody linked up and the blogs were far from profitable.

On the flipside of this – the blogs that I did have an interest in and a passion for have flourished. My interest in the topic is not the only factor that made them successful but I suspect it is a fairly important one that underlies much of the success and profit that I’ve had.

One question to ask yourself in choosing a niche is ‘What are YOU about?’ Choosing a topic that reflects you means you’ll be in a position to be able to find enough to write about and you’ll write it in a way that engages with the topic and your readers.

2. The Popularity of the Topic

You can have all the interest in the world around a topic but if nobody else shares your interest you’re going to be fighting an uphill battle to build a blog that gets much traffic.

This doesn’t mean you need to choose the most popular topics going around – in fact they may not be a wise choice due to the competition also targeting those niches – however you will want to choose a niche that has some level of demand for content.

There are many ways to do research on this whether topics are popular – here are three that I use:

  1. Google Trends – do some searches on Google trends for keywords around your niches (and compare them) and you’ll see whether the topic you’ve chosen has been growing or shrinking and how it compares to other topics.
  2. Market Samurai – I’ve written about the potential ofhttp://www.marketsamurai.com/c/problogger(affiliate link but it gives you a free trial)tool for optimising posts on your blog for SEO – but it is also a useful research tool in looking at the popularity of topics – particularly the module that allows you to assess how many searches are being done on different tools in Google.
  3. Your Local News Stand – perhaps one of the simplest ways to look for popular topics is to head to a local news stand and look at what publications are being sold there. Not only look at the topics of magazines – but check out what is being written about as hot topics IN the magazines and you might find an emerging sub-niche to focus upon.

Ultimately you’re looking for topics that people are interested in, passionate about, want to learn more on and/or that people want to talk about and interact in a community around. There is an unlimited number of topics and ways to tap into them. Watch TV, talk to your friends, head to a local library, read a newspaper – see what people are into and you could just identify a topic worth exploring.

3. Competition

One of the factors that I see some bloggers failing to acknowledge in the choosing of a niche is how much competition (and how strong the competition is) in their potential niche.

The danger in choosing some popular niches is that you might be competing against some very powerful sites in those niches. While this isn’t always going to be a factor to stop you exploring a niche it should definitely be considered and it can perhaps help you to shape your niche to be something that will give you a competitive advantage.

There are a variety of ways of assessing the strength of competition in niches.

One of the simplest is to simply do some searches on Google to look at how many sites exist for keywords on your topic. This won’t give you an indication of the power of the competition – but it will give you some indication on the ’size’ of competition and it will identify some sites that you will want to be monitoring.

Market Samurai (mentioned above) is one tool that can take your analysis a little deeper. As highlighted in my recent optimising posts on your blog for SEO post it has a module that will not only show you how many competing sites there are but also how strong they are (around a number of factors). It’ll also identify what type of level you’ll need to get to in order to compete with them.

As you begin to assess your potential competition in a niche don’t be completely put off by niches with lots of strong competition. Instead as you analyse what other sites are doing look for opportunities in two areas:

  • ways to differentiate yourself – as you look at other sites look for gaps in the topic that they’re not covering or things that perhaps you could do that might differentiate yourself. Perhaps there is a sub-niche that everyone is ignoring, perhaps they all ‘look’ the same, perhaps they all approach the topic in the same sort of ‘voice/style’. These things could be things to explore in offering an alternative to the established sites.
  • ways to interact and leverage the competition – as you look at other sites look for places that you might be able to connect with, contribute to and leverage in the building of your own site. Perhaps the competition has the ability to submit guest posts or articles or perhaps they have a forum area for interaction. Find ways to be a genuine contributor to your competition and you might find ways to help build your own site indirectly.

4. Is the Topic Sustainable?

Another factor that I see some bloggers neglecting in the choosing of a niche is consideration of whether the topic is one that they’re able to sustain.

This partly relates to the interest and passion that the blogger has for the topic – but it also relates to the topic itself and whether it is dynamic enough to have content written about it on a regular basis.

  • Will it be possible to keep new content flowing on this topic?
  • If the blog will be a ‘news’ blog – is there enough news or developments happening on this topic to keep reporting on it?
  • If the blog will be a ‘how to’ type blog – Is the topic deep enough to be able to come up with enough tutorials or tips?

A number simple exercises to help assess the sustainability of a blog (depending upon the type of blog you’ll be developing):

  • Brainstorm topics – set aside 10 minutes to brainstorm topics for blog posts. Do you run out of ideas or are they flowing easily? This will give you an indication on how many posts you’ll be able to write.
  • List ‘problems/needs’ of readers – if your blog will be a ‘how to’ type blog list off problems or needs that your potential readers might have that you could tackle.
  • Google News – if your blog will be a ‘news’ type blog – check out Google News for your keywords and see how often news is breaking on the topic. Is there lots of news or is this a topic that only has occasional news breaking?
  • List Products – if your blog will be a ‘product’ related blog – do some research into how many products there are in that category and how often new products are released.

Got the picture? Really it is about doing a little analysis of the topic to see if there is enough in it to keep producing new frequent and regular content. If there’s not enough – perhaps consider either another topic or a different format for your site (blogs tend to do best when they’re updated but you could create a more static site).

5. Is the Niche Profitable?

This won’t appeal to everyone as not all people want to monetize their blog but if it’s a goal to make money from your blog then you’ll want to assess the potential for profit before you start.

There are a few ways to get indications on whether a niche will be profitable – including:

  • Google Ads – do a simple search on Google.com for your topic/keywords. Look at what ads Google is serving for those keywords over on the right side (or above the search results). Doing some analysis of these ads can be useful on a few fronts. For starters they’ll show you if any advertisers are actively targeting those keywords. This is handy to know if you’re planning on running AdSense on your blog. It will also be handy to check out who is advertising as they could be potential direct sponsors of your site. The other useful thing to note is whether any of the ads are for products that have affiliate opportunities as they could be products you could promote as an affiliate.
  • AdWords Analysis – another related way to check on the value of a niche is to do some analysis of how much people are willing to pay as advertisers in the Google AdWords program. Just knowing there are advertisers is a healthy sign but they could all be just paying a cent or two to have their ads appear. Using the AdWords Keyword tool will give you a bit more of an indication of what people are paying to rank highest for their ads.
  • Affiliate Products – speaking of affiliate products – do a little hunting around to see if you can find any products online that have affiliate promotions that you might be able to promote. Sometimes this is as simple as Googling ‘keyword affiliate product’ but other times you’ll want to check out affiliate networks like Commission Junction or PepperJam (aff) to see if they have any relevant products listed for your niche.
  • Brainstorm Potential Products of Your Own – what could YOU sell directly to readers? As you’re pondering a niche it could be well worth while keeping in the back of your mind potential products that you might be able to develop to sell from your blog. These might include information products (e-books, training etc), membership areas (where people pay a monthly fee for extra teaching, community etc), personal services (coaching, speaking etc), a physical product relevant to your niche – or something else. More and more bloggers are turning to developing their own products as ways to monetize their blogs so keep this option in your mind from the beginning.
  • What are others in the niche monetizing with? – one of the quickest ways to work out whether there is potential to monetize a niche is to check out what other sites are doing to make money on that topic. Check out the biggest sites first and look at whether they run advertising (and what sort), whether they’re promoting affiliate promotions, what kinds of products/services of their own they sell etc. You might find that you come up with a quick list of things to start monetizing your own site with very quickly by doing this.
  • Market Samurai – I know that Iv’e mentioned Market Samurai already in this series but it’s a tool that also has a monetization module that allows you to look at the profitability of a niche. In fact there are a couple of tools within the Market Samurai system that are worth using when assessing the profitability of a niche. One is in the ‘keyword research’ module which gives you options to look at three factors including the Adwords value of the work, the SEO value and some assessment of whether people are searching with the intent of ‘buying’ or just surfing for ‘information on the keyword. The other module allows you to search for affiliate promotions relevant to your keywords (very handy).

6. What Else Do You Bring to the topic that You Can Leverage?

Previously when I’ve covered the topic of how to choose a blog niche I’ve stopped after exploring some of the above points. However there are almost always a number of other factors that individuals bring to certain topics that can make those niches more sensible choices.

I guess ultimately it comes down to looking at what you have at your fingertips that you will be able to leverage to help you get your blog up and running and working really well.

There are many factors that might come into play including:

  • Expertise/Experience – you might be someone with years of experience in the industry which would give you a real head start in the creation of content and also building authority and profile in the niche.
  • Contacts/Network – perhaps you already have some good contacts with other bloggers and web site owners in the niche that you’ll be able to leverage to help you promote your blog.
  • Established Sites on Related Topics – maybe you already have another blog, newsletter list, website, forum or site on a related topic that you could use to help you launch your new blog.
  • Repurpose-able Content – some people already have a lot of content written for other purposes that they can use as the basis for their new blog (for example I met one person recently who had been training in an area and who had already created hundreds of documents for offline use that could easily be used on a blog).

This list could quite easily go on and on. Essentially you need to do a bit of a SWOT analysis of the topic and see what strengths and opportunities that you uniquely have that will help you to get a leg up into this topic.

Sleep On It

My last advice on choosing a niche for your blog is to take your time and don’t act too hastily. While you don’t want the process to drag out too long – I look back on the 30 or so blogs that I’ve started over the years and wish I’d taken a little more time going through this process. I went through a phase where I impulsively started a series of blogs that I quickly knew were not right for me – if I’d only given the ideas a little time to breath I might have discovered before I started that perhaps there were better ways to use my time going forward.

So take your time – share what you come up with with a trusted friend or two – do a little research into the topic and then, when you’re ready and are in a good position to make a decision – ACT!

Also keep in mind that you might need to go through this process with a number of topics before you find one that fits for you. You’re unlikely to find a topic that fits all of the above criteria perfectly – but hopefully something will stand out to you a little to help you make an informed decision.

Questions for Discussion:

  1. What other factors would you say come into play when choosing a niche?
  2. If you already have a blog – what were the most important factors for you in choosing that niche?

Post from: Blog Tips at ProBlogger.

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+ Let’s Meet at SXSWi! By admin 11 March 2010 at 5:56 am and have No Comments

SXSWi.pngAs this post goes live I’ll be in the process of arriving at SXSW Interactive in Austin Texas.

I was fortunate enough to at SXSWi two years back and it was one of the best conference experiences that I’ve had – so I’ve made it a priority this year to return.

My schedule is pretty open. The main thing that I’ll be doing is a book reading this Friday night. I’ll be talking about some of what Chris and I have included in the 2nd edition of the ProBlogger book (due out next month).

The book reading is on at 5pm, Friday 12 March on the Day Stage. I hope you’ll come!

For those of you involved in the Third Tribe there is a drinks/meetup the next evening (on Saturday 13th from about 5.30pm) at a bar called ‘Lovejoys’ at 604 Neches Street (2 blocks north of the convention center).

Note: I originally thought that my reading was on Saturday and we’d do one after the other…. but I messed up the time so the book reading is Friday and the Drinks/Meetup is Saturday. Sorry for the messing around 3rd Tribers.

Other than that I’ve got a pretty open few days and am looking forward to checking out a few panels and keynotes and doing as much networking as possible. If you’re at SXSWi I’d love to meet you – feel free to come up and say hi any time!

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+ What Does Advertising on Yelp Get You? By admin 10 March 2010 at 11:43 pm and have No Comments

That was one of the topics of Luther Lowe’s presentation Tuesday at the annual SearchFest conference in Portland. Lowe — Yelp’s Manager of Business Outreach — gave a generally clear description of what the company says are the benefits of advertising on Yelp. I say “generally” because he said that advertising on Yelp gets a business owner “SEO,” but he really meant to say “visibility.”

These are not the same examples he used during the presentation, but they show the same points he made.

1. Visibility on Yelp search result pages

Advertising on Yelp gives a business the opportunity to show up above the regular search results for category/city combinations, like this search for dentists in Los Angeles.

Yelp advertising 1

2. Visibility on other business profile pages

A Yelp ad may show up on a competitor’s business profile, like in this example here.

Yelp advertising 2

3. No competitor ads on your profile page

Using the example above, no competitors’ ads will show up on the profile page of that dentist because she’s advertising. She’s essentially paying to keep competitors from advertising on her profile page. But note that Yelp still does show other competitors on the page under a “People Who Viewed This Also Viewed” heading.

Yelp advertising 3

4. Added content options

Yelp advertisers can also add extra content to their business profiles, such as a photo slideshow and an extra content spot to post alerts or discounts.

5. Promote a “favorite review”

Yelp sponsors can also choose one review of their business and mark it as a “favorite.” In doing so, that review will show up first on the business profile page, as seen here.

Yelp advertising 4

Lawsuits: The 800-lb. Gorilla

Before his presentation, Lowe called out the 800-lb. gorilla in the room: the recent lawsuits from small business owners who claim that Yelp has offered to remove negative reviews in exchange for payment. I don’t recall his exact wording, but Lowe rejected the claims of the lawsuit, saying that the alleged behavior — if it were true — would cause Yelp to lose the trust of its users and advertisers.

But from several conversations I’ve had at conferences over the past two weeks, that trust is on shaky ground with some. This isn’t the first time Yelp’s been accused of taking money to remove negative reviews (see Yelp and the Business of Extortion 2.0 from last year), and some are wondering if the phrase “Where there’s smoke, there’s fire” is appropriate.

One suspects that, as long as Yelp offers a way for business owners to manipulate reviews in exchange for advertising (see #5 above), they’ll continue to run the risk of lawsuits — no matter if the lawsuits are justified or just the result of misunderstanding.

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This is a post from Matt McGee’s blog, Small Business Search Marketing.

What Does Advertising on Yelp Get You?

Related posts:

  1. Yelp.com: New player in Local Search
  2. Yelp is Growing Like Gangbusters
  3. Are Yahoo and Yelp Dating?

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What Does Advertising on Yelp Get You?

+ SearchFest 2010 Photos By admin 10 March 2010 at 10:52 pm and have No Comments

The 4th annual SearchFest conference is in the books, and this one was a lot different than previous SearchFests. The venue was bigger, the crowd filled it, and — for the first time — there were three tracks running concurrently. I’m hoping to do another post on one content-related element from the show, so this post is only going to be a link to my Flickr photoset and an embedded slideshow below. (Disclaimer: The lighting made photography exceptionally difficult, so don’t be alarmed if some of these look … different.)

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This is a post from Matt McGee’s blog, Small Business Search Marketing.

SearchFest 2010 Photos

Related posts:

  1. SMX West 2010 Photos
  2. SMX West photos finally online

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SearchFest 2010 Photos

+ Bruce Clay, Inc.’s Upcoming Appearances By admin 10 March 2010 at 5:44 pm and have No Comments

On today’s episode of SEM Synergy, Susan, Christopher Hart and I covered a range of Internet marketing topics, including our SMX takeaways (check out our special edition SMX West SEO Newsletter!) and the nationwide battle for Google Fiber.

We also talked about where the Bruce Clay, Inc. team will be in the coming months. From coast to coast to way down under, there are a number of events Bruce and crew are looking forward to being a part of.

Search Engine Strategies New York

Bruce will be a speaker at several sessions at this conference, taking place March 22-26 at the Hilton New York. Susan will be liveblogging the event, so look for her blogging schedule to hit the blog later this week. Bruce Clay, Inc. will be setting up shop in the expo hall in booth #1217, where you’ll be sure to see Chris Hart’s smiling face.

And along with in the booth, you’ll find Bruce all over the conference. On Monday, March 22, Bruce will present a one-day SEO training class. On Tuesday, March 23, Bruce will explain “What to Look For in an SEO Vendor” during a theater presentation in the exhibit hall.

And Wednesday, March 24 is sure to hold more must-see moments than I can count when Bruce speaks on SEO Super Tools and White Hat Black Hat: Unconferenced. The latter is a new take on a search conference classic, bringing the white hat/black hat debate and advice outside the conference hall and into the bar. Madness is sure to ensue. [Same old "debate", now with more tequila! --Susan]

ad:tech San Francisco

The digital marketing conference ad:tech is about to get its world rocked with a full-day SEO training class taught by Bruce. The conference taking place in San Francisco April 19-21 starts with a bang as Bruce presents a live, one-day, soup-to-nuts class on search engine optimization methodology and best practices.

We’re really excited about this opportunity to bring SEO awareness to an audience and conference that has traditionally been light on SEO education. Considering SEO’s growing place in the marketing mix, the attention is well deserved.

SEO Training in the U.S.

SEOToolSet Training logo

In May, standard and advanced SEOToolSet Training will be hitting both coasts of the United States. East Coasters can attend the three-day standard course happening May 3-5, the two-day advanced certification course taking place May 6-7, or both! This class will be held at the Garden City Hotel in Long Island, New York. West Coasters can get the same full-spectrum SEO training treatment from May 10-14 in Simi Valley, California at the Posada Royale Hotel.

SEO Training in Australia

Bruce Clay Australia will be presenting one-day SEO training classes across Australia in the coming months. Course attendees will walk away knowing the keys to site relevance, keyword research, site architecture, and spam avoidance. In Brisbane on April 7, head to the Novotel Brisbane; in Melbourne on May 12, check in to the Stamford Plaza; or visit Sydney’s The Menzies Sydney on June 9.

So that’s where you’ll find the Bruce Clay, Inc. crew in the next few months. If we’re coming to a neighborhood near you, be sure to stop by and say hi or just sit back and enjoy the show!

Bruce Clay, Inc.’s Upcoming Appearances was originally published on BruceClay.com, an SEO tools provider.

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