Posts Tagged ‘ search-engine

30 Valuable Lessons Learned Using Social Media for Small Business 17 March 2010 at 6:39 am by admin

In this post Mark Hayward shares some great tips on social media for small business.

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Do you own a small business? How long have you been using social media as a marketing tool and what have you learned?

In a little over a months time I will have owned my business for just about three years. When I began using social media some thirty six months ago, I had no real marketing background experience, and I certainly had never written a blog post, interacted in a forum, or sent a Tweet.

My social media evolution began with a simple foray into blogging as a way to try and rank well for some keywords related to my business. From there I expanded to niche forums, review sites, FLICKR, YouTube, Facebook, and Twitter.

Man! Just trying to keep up can be intimidating and overwhelming.

However, my number one goal has always been to create a distributed social media footprint with all of my online marketing activities pointing back towards my small business website.

After almost three years of working hard, learning continuously, making lots of mistakes, and monitoring successes, below are thirty valuable social media marketing lessons that I have learned through my experience. I hope they help you:

1. Location is dead. We have now fully entered into the Interaction Economy.

2. It does not pay to engage in ‘pissing contests’ on business review sites or in forums.

3. When used properly, a small video camera like a Flip and a standard digital camera (or just an iPhone), can be like having your own marketing department.

4. Instead of trying to be everywhere in the social media space, determine what online activities work best for your business and focus your attention there.

5. Search Engine Optimization(SEO) is important but it needs to be combined with a well distributed plan for Search Engine Visibility (SEV).

6. Conceptualizing and then defining your social media goals can help to keep you on track.

7. Social networking sites can be a tremendous time suck. Use a site like Egg Timer to help limit the time you spend interacting online.

8. Get to know the online influencers in your small business niche, as well as, the social media pros.

9. There is gold to be mined with Twitter Search if you are willing to use it to listen, engage, and provide value.

10. Uploading well titled and tagged videos to YouTube and photos to FLICKR can drastically improve your Search Engine Visibility.

11. Consistent small business blogging pays the greatest returns.

12. Technology changes daily. Read often.

13. You should not fear customer review social sites like Yelp and TripAdvisor. Rather, you should embrace them.

14. Helping people online when they least expect it can bring you great rewards.

15. Even on your worst day, you have to remember that every interaction counts.

16. Spamming and jamming your business down the throats of potential customers only drives business away.

17. Not everyone is going to like you, so be prepared to get flamed and read negative reviews.

18. Turn negative reviews into a positive by using them to help better define who your ideal customer is.

19. Your backstory matters and weaving it into your online business persona is important.

20. Social media is a lot like exercise. Doing a little bit consistently everyday will produce better results than one eight hour marathon session per month.

21. The people who criticize you the most for using social media to promote your small business are the one’s who are most afraid of embracing change.

22. One of the easiest ways for small business owners to measure social media ROI is to ask every customer how they heard about your business.

23. When starting your social media marketing efforts for your small business you will get frustrated. Try to keep a long term outlook like six months to a year.

24. Don’t discount the power of niche forums that are related to your small business.

25. Use Google Alerts to see who’s talking specifically about your business and anything related to your business.

26. If you are using social media as a customer service tool, when something goes wrong (and it always does!), being sincere, humble, and apologetic will be greatly appreciated by your future potential customers.

27. Utilizing free email lists like Help A Reporter Out (HARO) can help you find valuable public relations and news opportunities for your business.

28. Social media in the short term does not work. You must be in it for the long term and be persistent, consistent, and committed.

29. Anyone who owns a small business can ‘do’ social media, but NOT everyone ‘does’ it. (And that is your true competitive advantage.)

30. If you have a spare hour or two everyday to aimlessly surf the net, or sit and watch T.V., then you have more than enough time to commit to using social media for your small business.

How long have you been using social media for your small business? What have you found works best?

Mark Hayward hates the snow and cold! Luckily, he owns a small business in the Caribbean. Mark is passionate about helping other small business owners avoid the online mistakes he has made. You can follow Mark on Twitter @mark_hayward and you can subscribe to his RSS Feed for weekly small business social media marketing tips.

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+ Bad SEO Advice for Real Estate Agents … from the NAR By admin 16 March 2010 at 9:45 am and have No Comments

It’s bad enough when vendors offer real estate SEO services and/or advice that isn’t worth a dime … but what about when the national organization that’s supposed to support real estate agents starts spreading around misinformation to its members?

The National Association of REALTORS® offered up some SEO tips in its official magazine last month via an article titled “6 Weeks to Better Search Engine Results.”

real estate seo article

I like the idea behind the article — simplifying some of the low-hanging SEO fruit into tasks that can be worked on one week at a time. Good idea. But some of the specific advice is … well … not so hot. Frankly, some of it just exacerbates the same problems that have plagued real estate agents for years — namely, that so much of what they call “real estate SEO” is over-the-top and spammy.

Here are the six one-week tasks listed in the article:

  1. Week 1: Write Better Page Titles
  2. Week 2: Broadcast Your Links
  3. Week 3: Use Keywords Generously
  4. Week 4: Reword Outgoing Links
  5. Week 5: Develop a Site Map
  6. Week 6: Tweet About It

On the surface, that list looks … okay. Not great, not what I’d list, but not terrible. It’s when you get into the specific suggestions that things get ugly and real estate agents get misled. Let’s look at a few tips:

Real Estate SEO: Linkbuilding?

Under Week 2: Broadcast Your Links is this advice:

Develop a campaign to get other Web sites linking to yours. Focus on social networks and trusted real estate Web sites, advises Cheryl Waller, a real estate technology expert in Port Saint Lucie, Fla. One way to do this is by making thoughtful comments on real estate blogs and leaving your link as part of your blog post. “You don’t need 14,000 links to your site. What you do need are relevant links to your business from reputable Web sites that are trusted by search engines,” Waller says. This helps search engines deem your site as trustworthy, too.

Reality: Commenting on blogs can help with exposure, but it’s not a “campaign” and isn’t likely to make a search engine think your site is trustworthy, either. Worse, it’s something that too many people overdo and get wrong. A lot of real estate agents dropping links on each other’s blogs only adds to the perception that the entire industry is one big spam-fest. Consider these two comments that came in overnight on the Richland Real Estate Blog:

real estate comment spam

Not very “thoughtful,” is it?

Real Estate SEO: Keyword Density?

Under Week 3: Use Keywords Generously is this advice:

While it might seem like overkill to repeat certain keywords heavily throughout your site, the strategy really does work, says real estate and technology blogger Matt Rains, a practitioner with Keller Williams Atlanta Partners in Loganville, Ga. He suggests incorporating the top phrases that you want associated with your site—”St. Louis Historic Homes,” for example. For strategic ideas, try the Keyword Tool on Google AdWords. Using the tool, you can type a phrase that’s relevant to your business and immediately find out how many people search for that term each month. Your main keywords should appear at least 10 to 13 times per 700 words on a page, says Mark Menzella, who runs RE/Advantage, a real estate Web design company in Fairfield, N.J.

Reality: Keyword density is a myth. There’s no perfect amount of times a keyword should appear on a page to rank, because there are countless other factors that determine a page’s relevance and importance. Hearing “real estate Web design” people pitch this advice only reinforces the idea that real estate SEO is a joke. Better advice is what I said here: There’s no magic formula or perfect “keyword density” — write for your users so the pages are readable, but be sure to include the right search terms as you write.

Real Estate SEO: Twitter?

Under Week 6: Tweet About It is this advice:

“Now that tweets are indexed in Google, Twitter has become an important part of SEO strategy,” says Misty Lackie of Go Smart Solutions, a technology consulting firm in Grover Beach, Calif. So get a Twitter account if you don’t already have one, and create useful tweets that happen to include your business keywords and links to your site.

Reality: I love Twitter, but the SEO benefits of using it are neglible … especially if your tweets are going to “include your business keywords and links to your site.” Look below; does anyone think this is how to use Twitter?

real estate twitter junk

No human will click on the link in a tweet like that, and since the link is no-followed, there’s no SEO benefit from using Twitter this way, either. Twitter can be an amazing tool for local visibility, but it has nothing to do with Google indexing tweets (users are blind to real-time results). It has to do with being real and creative on Twitter, not spamming your keywords and links there.

Final Thoughts

If you’d like to see the whole article for yourself, it’s on Realtor.org. Sadly, it seems that nothing has changed in the two-plus years since I first wrote about real estate SEO being a disaster and a joke. Even more sad is that the bad advice is coming from the national organization that’s supposed to make life easier for real estate agents.

Advertisement: Try Site5 Web Hosting free for 30 days! 99.9% Uptime Guarantee and our customer’s love us!

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

Bad SEO Advice for Real Estate Agents … from the NAR

Related posts:

  1. Real Estate Marketing 2.0
  2. Real Estate: SEO Disaster / SEO Opportunity
  3. How Should a Real Estate Agent use Twitter?

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Bad SEO Advice for Real Estate Agents … from the NAR

+ Friday Recap: Pop-Up Video Edition By admin 12 March 2010 at 5:04 pm and have No Comments

Are you in the mood for some videos? My collection of odds and ends from surveying the Web this week came up heavy on the videos. Nevermind the stats that people have been viewing fewer videos online lately, according to comScore. I bet we can edge that number back up with this blog post alone! :P

screen shot from SEO interview video

At SMX West last week, Jennifer Lopez of SEOmoz and Dana Lookadoo of Yo! Yo! SEO interviewed a handful of attendees with a series of five questions. I was honored to be asked to join in, though completely petrified at the prospect of being stumped on camera. Note the visible sigh of relief as I answer each question. Otherwise, it’s super entertaining to hear these notable Internet marketers’ answers!

One of the featured interviewees in the video above is Ian Lurie, who, among other things, is the blogger at Conversation Marketing. On his blog, Ian takes a cue from Lindsay Lohan, who is suing E-Trade for using a character named Lindsay in their Super Bowl commercial. To avoid Ian’s litigious wrath, avoid all words that contain the letters “I”, “A” and “N” in succession. Thankfully, my name squeezes through the censors by a hair!

Ready for another video? Bruce sat down with WebProNews while at SMX West to talk about everything SEO under the sun. Attracting links, driving conversions with social media, the inner workings of local search, the effect of page speed, and optimizing for personalized search are all on the agenda in this 20 minute interview. If you’ve ever wanted to pick Bruce’s veteran SEO brain, watching this interview may just scratch that itch.

Microsoft Advertising released a whitepaper on the effectiveness of digital advertising for brand campaigns. Microsoft’s research proves a connection between the amount of time a user spends with an online ad and that user’s interaction with the brand, including visits to a site, pages viewed and time spent on-site. Not bad to have this research at your disposal when a client wants to know “Why SEM?”

While we’re on the subject of ads, Huffington Post has compiled a gallery of Google ads that bring on the lolz. Looks like eBay’s the market leader for auctions on virgins, lost children, and wives. I believe it. (Susan thinks this issue was addressed years ago, but stay on the lookout for AdWords oddities!)

Next video! What is the state of the Internet, you ask?

JESS3 / The State of The Internet from JESS3 on Vimeo.

After weeks of hyping an upcoming product that would revolutionize the Internet forever, Cisco announced it was upgrading its routing system to “CRS-3″. SiliconANGLE gives us a recap of industry analysis, and from the look of it, no one’s all that impressed.

The jet packs are here! The jet packs are here! Thanks to Martin Aircraft’s persistence, for just $86,000 you may soon be able to have your own personal flying device. Just a matter of time before hover crafts and sky highways, I tell you! [Yay, we're finally in the future! --Susan]

If you lost your iPhone, would you consider it a tragedy? Ever cuddle up with your iPhone before bed time? According to a survey of 200 students, 75 percent of iPhone owners have an inappropriate relationship with their phone. That’s crazy talk. I mean, just the other day my iPhone and I were at lunch and you’d never believe what we saw a Nexus One and its owner doing! In public!

Susan’s posted her SES New York liveblogging schedule and we’re both excited to hear what the day 3 session Spotlight on Fashion: Blogging for Style will reveal. Here’s one real-world example of fashionable tech: a Vivan Tam designed digital clutch. It matches so well with my pretty, nifty things aesthetic.

As does IdeaPaint. Talk about nifty! IdeaPaint is paint that lets you dry erase. Make every surface in your home or office your creative drawing board — literally! I’ve ordered up the free sample and will let you know once I try it out!

Here’s another special offer worth sharing around. Search & Social Spring Summit is coming up in Tampa, Florida on May 3 and 4. Susan attended last year and found the intimate event to be one of the best search marketing conferences she’s ever attended. The team at Search & Social wants everyone to be able to enjoy this high-quality educational experience, so they’re offering a 15 percent discount on the conference pass when you use the discount code for Search Engine Journal readers. I guarantee every penny is worth it.

If that wasn’t enough, it just so happens that Tampa is #44 on The Daily Beast’s list of America’s craziest cities! Did your city make the cut?

After you’ve found the answer to that question, take a moment to answer a few more in the name of feeding the hungry? FreeRice asks you questions, and for every one you get right, 10 grains of rice go to the World Food Programme. You can even pick your category: art, chemistry, English, geography, languages and math. To be honest, it’s so much fun you might actually forget it’s for a good cause. [The language options are good to see how much high school French you remember. Surprisingly, I can still tell my ils from my nous. --Susan]

Here’s another warm and fuzzy. As Susan noted when she shared this with me: zombie elephant! The elephant baby that zoo staff believed had died in its momma’s womb made a surprisingly lively entrance into the world this week. May you grow humongous and prosper, little pachyderm!

And for your final video I present a little story we can all relate to:

Where the heck did that come from?! Have a great weekend!

Friday Recap: Pop-Up Video Edition was originally published on BruceClay.com, an SEO tools provider.

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Friday Recap: Pop-Up Video Edition

+ Two More Studies Confirm: People Research Online, Buy Locally By admin 12 March 2010 at 7:24 am and have No Comments

This isn’t exactly news anymore, but it’s worth noting that two more reports this week confirm the idea that consumers tend to do their research online prior to buying offline/locally.

The first is a Kelsey Group study that indicates 97% of consumers use the Internet to research products or services in their local area. What specific online research tools do they use?

  • 90% use search engines
  • 48% use Internet Yellow Pages
  • 42% use comparison shopping sites
  • 24% use vertical sites

If consumers are starting the local buying process online, this reinforces the value of great local content, local SEO, and local visibility in general. In fact, according to the study, consumers use 7.9 different media sources for research when looking for local products and services. That speaks to the importance of being visible on a number of channels — your own site, your blog, Google Maps, Citysearch, important industry sites, and so forth. Diversity of presence makes a big difference.

The second report comes from local product search engine Milo.com in the form of a large infographic that breaks down the percent of online vs. offline buying in a number of industries. The conclusion, based on US Census data, is that less than 5% of retail sales happen online.

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

Two More Studies Confirm: People Research Online, Buy Locally

Related posts:

  1. Search Online, Buy Offline Has a Long Way To Go
  2. Stats, stats, and more stats
  3. MSN Studies Searcher Behavior

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Two More Studies Confirm: People Research Online, Buy Locally

+ SMX West 2010 Photos By admin 07 March 2010 at 1:13 pm and have No Comments

Last week’s SMX West conference was a unique one for me. I didn’t get to sit in on many sessions as an attendee because we were a bit short-handed at Search Engine Land, and I was pretty much working constantly on a variety of things for SEL. I live-blogged the keynotes, did the daily coverage roundups, wrote up a bunch of news stories from the conference, and kept up with the daily SearchCap articles.

I also managed to shoot a few photos here and there, and those are now finally on Flickr. You can either see the set on Flickr.com or just use the slideshow embedded below.

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

SMX West 2010 Photos

Related posts:

  1. SMX West photos finally online
  2. Coordinating 3 Sessions at SMX West
  3. How to Put Your Flickr Photos into Yahoo News

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SMX West 2010 Photos

+ Speaking at Search Engine Strategies – SES New York By admin 05 March 2010 at 7:41 am and have No Comments

In a couple of weeks I will be heading out to New York with Becky to attend and speak at SES New York. New York is one of my favourite SES conferences to attend and this year promised to be another great show.
The Search Engine Strategies conference runs from Tuesday 23rd March to Thursday 25th [...]

Speaking at Search Engine Strategies – SES New York is a post from: Dave Naylor’s SEO Blog.

Related posts:

  1. SES New York 27th Feb – 2nd March
  2. Search Engine Strategies – London
  3. Search Engine Reputation Management PT II

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Speaking at Search Engine Strategies – SES New York

+ How a Search Engine Might Weigh Pages with Relevant Annotations Higher in Search Results By admin 24 February 2010 at 9:48 am and have No Comments

One of the words that often appears when someone describes how search engines work is relevance. A search engine attempts to show searchers web pages and other results that might be relevant to the words that they used when they perform a search. Yet, there are a number of different ways that you can [...]

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How a Search Engine Might Weigh Pages with Relevant Annotations Higher in Search Results

+ How To Become a PPC Professional with PPC Ian By admin 23 February 2010 at 9:15 pm and have No Comments

PPC Ian


Judging by the number of readers who downloaded Jonathan Volk’s guide to affiliate marketing, I say there is a ton of people wanting to know more about Pay Per Click and search engine marketing. While there is a ton of money to be made from using PPC to send traffic to affiliate offers, there’s also a ton of money to be made by running the PPC campaigns for large companies and individuals. This is where Ian Lopuch of PPC Ian comes in. If you’re looking for a PPC career, his blog is a good place to start.

Who Is PPC Ian?

Ian Lopuch is the go to guy in corporate Silicon Valley when it comes to pay per click search engine marketing. When it comes to pay per click as a career path, Ian says there’s nobody more knowledgeable, accomplished, and well known than him. The goal with PPC Ian is to impart his knowledge on you.

PPC IanMy greatest sense of accomplishment comes from mentoring others and I sincerely hope to boost your personal career in PPC with my no-nonsense tips and strategies. Beyond tactical PPC, my goal is to detail “the game” and how to win it (and by winning I mean making as much money as possible, getting promoted rapidly, and building up fame around your own name). In this article, I’ll discuss my unique story, why I decided to launch PPC Ian, and how PPC Ian differs from other blogs in the space.

Ian doesn’t know this but our paths had crossed before. He got his search engine marketing career started at NexTag. I had a business relationship with NexTag during the time he worked there. NexTag is one of the biggest PPC and media buyers in the business. In fact, NexTag claims they’re the Internet’s biggest media buyer. It was a great place for Ian to learn how things really work in the PPC and SEM world. Since then, Ian has worked for dozens of companies and clients and is currently the Director of SEM at a large public company.

Want a Career as a PPC Professional?

If the idea of being a Pay Per Click professional appeals to you, then you’ll want to download PPC Ian’s eBook featuring his Top 5 PPC Career Tips. The eBook is free and can be downloaded at the PPC Ian home page. More PPC and SEM career advice can be found at the PPC Ian blog. Some of the more interesting posts include:

As good as the blog posts are, the real gem of Ian’s work is in his free book. The five tips he gave were stuff I never though of and would really help me if I choose to pursue a career as a PPC professional. Even if that is not your career choice, the ebook is still worth downloading because the information can be extended into other areas.

Just as I was finishing up this review, Ian posted a video introducing himself. It’s clear to me that Ian understands branding just as well as he understands PPC marketing. And he’s a Mac user to boot. I’ll be adding PPC Ian to my RSS reader.

Discover the SECRETS I’ve Learned to go from zero a month to over $40,000 a month from blogging. Download Make Money Online with John Chow dot Com for FREE!



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How To Become a PPC Professional with PPC Ian

+ How To Forward a Domain To Popular Clickbank Products By admin 22 February 2010 at 11:34 am and have No Comments


When Shoemoney launched Shoemoney System on Clickbank, I decided to created a separate domain name to promote it. Most affiliate marketers just promote the link to the sales page using the affiliate ID/link provided to them. However, there are several advantages to setting up a separate domain name and forwarding it to the sales page, especially if you’re using PPC advertising.

The Ultimate Cloak

unless I tell you, it’s impossible to tell if a domain is just a normal site or a cloaked affiliate landing page. Whenever possible, you should always cloak your affiliate links to prevent lost commission by people typing in the URL instead of clicking on the link. For example, my affiliate link to Shoemoney System is http://www.shoemoneysystem.com/secret-code.php?c=ttznet. Instead of clicking the link, some will simply type shoemoneysystem.com into their browser and bypass my affiliate link. Yes, there are people who’ll do that and it will cost you money.

Sometimes, people do that thinking they’re doing you a favor. Have you ever typed in the URL of a Google ad instead of clicking on it? Many people do this thinking they’re saving money for the advertiser, when in fact the advertiser was an affiliate and by typing in the URL, they may have saved him 10 cents but cost him a big affiliate commission.

Google AdWords requires the final URL be displayed at the end of the ad. Often time, this is just advertiser’s landing page without your affiliate ID. If someone just types the URL, he’ll end up on the advertiser’s page but you won’t get a commission if he buys something since your affiliate ID got bypassed. Setting up a separate domain name prevents this problem. If fact, you want them to type in the domain name now instead of clicking on the ad. This way you save money on advertising and make an affiliate commission!

How To Forward a Domain

I use GoDaddy to handle all my domain names. One reason for using them is their awesome domain manager, which allows me to forward a domain name to another site and cloak it. To forward a domain, log into the domain manager of your GoDaddy account, check the domain you want to admin and click the forward button.

How To Forward a Domain

Enter the affiliate URL you want the domain to forward to, choose the Forward with Masking option and enter the information for the title, description and keyword tags. Click OK and the domain should forward to the affiliate landing page within an hour.

Once the domain has been forwarded, you can send traffic to it using whatever means available to you (blog, social media, PPC, PPV, etc). The person clicking or typing in the link won’t see any hint that the landing page has your affiliate ID built into it. No more lost commission due to typed in traffic!

Another advantage of this set up is eventually, Google will index the page in its search engine so you could be getting free search engine traffic in the future.

If your domain provider doesn’t offer cloaked forwarding, you can create a new site for the domain name and then pull in the affiliate landing page using a full page iFrame. Here’s the code for that.


facebook marketing, internet marketing, google adwords, shoemoney media, shoe, elite retreat, google check, shoemoney canada, how to make money, money, free, video, videos, marketing, internet, viral  marketing”>





Change the information to whatever product you’re promoting. The problem with setting up a separate site with a full page iFrame is you will have to pay for hosting the site. GoDaddy doesn’t charge to forward a domain with masking to another site.

Ideal for Clickbank Products

Forwarded domains are ideal for Clickbank products because most of the advertisers won’t have any issue with you using their names. If you try to create a domain name with Dell in it to sell Dell products, you can expect an email from Dell’s lawyers (you can’t even bid on the Dell keyword).

If you do plan to set up a cloaked domain with the advertiser’s name in it, I would still ask before doing it. Like I said, most will not have any issues with it but it’s better to be safe than sorry.

Discover the SECRETS I’ve Learned to go from zero a month to over $40,000 a month from blogging. Download Make Money Online with John Chow dot Com for FREE!



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How To Forward a Domain To Popular Clickbank Products

+ Take a Ride on the Yahoo! News Cruise By admin 18 February 2010 at 5:21 pm and have No Comments

Hehe! Hehehe! …Ahem. Hi. Sorry. Excuse the giggling. I’m just so amused by the repeating vowel sound of “Yahoo! News Cruise” in the title up there.

cheese and wine

Holey cheese, I’m such an English nerd. [Like swiss? --Susan] (Yup! It is National Drink Wine Day, after all. Gotta make sure your curd is fully stocked!)

Anyway! Yahoo!’s had a fist-full of announcements in the last few days and I wanted to seize on the occasion to give #2 a little face-time. When the opportunity arises!

Yahoo! and Microsoft Tie the Knot

The outcome Microsoft and Yahoo! had been hoping for has finally come through. The U.S. Department of Justice and the European Commission have cleared the companies for the search partnership they’ve been angling for since July 2009.

Microsoft has posted an FAQ on what the deal means for the search engines. To sum it up, Bing’s powering both Yahoo! and Bing search results and ads, and Yahoo!’s still doing its thing as far as how it displays and organizes results. This may be why they held a press conference last week to announce…

News Flash: Yahoo! is (Still) a Search Engine!

Last Wednesday, Yahoo! held an event called SearchSpeak to make a few announcements to the media. The gist? As put by Yahoo!’s new VP of search products: “Yahoo! has been in search, is in search, and will continue to be in search in the future.”

Wait, so Yahoo! still does search? Good to know.

Okay, in all seriousness, Yahoo! doesn’t exactly get the same kind of attention as rival Google, so good on them that they held a press event to talk about updates and new features. Google’s constant barrage of announcements keeps them in the media spotlight and could be seen as a PR strategy to be emulated. Not that Yahoo! didn’t know that media attention is good before Google came around. In fact, I’ve always thought of Yahoo! as an innovator, not bogged down by trend chasing. So it was with much surprise when I came across this…

Yahoo! Mail is Buzzing, Too

On signing in to Yahoo! Mail this morning, an industry friend found something new waiting for her:

screen shot of Yahoo! Mail

Her comment: The interface change seems obviously competitive with Google Buzz — I wonder if they had it planned before, or if this was just a super fast development/deployment.

Yep, Yahoo!’s mail product is chock full of social features, a lot like Google Gmail’s Buzz. But here’s the crazy part. It’s a feature set that Yahoo! announced in August 2009! Man, even when Yahoo! is on the cutting edge they get profiled as copy cats. Sorry, guys. Godspeed in your Microsoft partnership and keep fighting for media attention. You know at least one person out here’s listening.

Take a Ride on the Yahoo! News Cruise was originally published on BruceClay.com, an SEO services company.

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Take a Ride on the Yahoo! News Cruise