Archive for the ‘Marketing’ category

16 Tips for Ecommerce Holiday Season Success

October 21st, 2013

According to market researchers, retail ecommerce holiday sales this season are expected to top last year’s — by over 15 percent– with sales in November and December alone expected to reach $61.8 billion.

Contributing to the increase in online sales, more consumers are using mobile devices (smartphones and tablets) to research products, comparison shop and purchase items online on the fly.

Is your ecommerce site ready for the holiday rush? To find out — and learn how you can drive more traffic to your online business and increase sales this holiday season — check out these 16 tips from ecommerce and online marketing pros.

1. Don’t wait until the last minute to get your site holiday ready. There is nothing worse than getting on the back end of your designer’s schedule or paying to have your project expedited because you didn’t prepare. Have everything — any programming — ready to go by November 1st, Your landing pages, emails and ads need to queued up and ready to go when you know they’ll be most effective.

2. Make sure your teams, servers and partners can handle holiday traffic. According to the National Retail Federation, 139.4 million consumers shopped on websites over the four-day Thanksgiving weekend in 2012 — and several well-known online retailers experienced downtime and technical hurdles due to this overwhelming shopper response. To avoid losing sales, ensure your website can handle traffic increases, especially when large promotions hit. If you’re hosted on-premises, review your past performance metrics against your seasonal forecast and ensure that you have bandwidth and capacity for the expected spikes. Similarly, work with third parties and vendors, including pay-per-click advertising managers and email marketers, to ensure they can handle increased load  Equally important, work with warehouse and fulfillment teams to know when cut-off times are for shipping and ensure all feeds are properly updating inventory and pricing at the correct intervals.

3. Make sure your site is secure. Before the onslaught of holiday traffic begins, ask the following questions, Is your website administration and back end secure? Are your admins using two-factor authentication? Are you prepared for possible DDoS attacks? Also, be sure to monitor your Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) Certificate validity and expiration date, SSL provides the required cryptographic security needed to provide security to your customer communications. It’s important to test and monitor the certificate expiration for adequate customer experience.

4. Have a mobile version of your site. “Last Black Friday, one in four U.S. retail website visits were from mobile shoppers. This year it is expected to reach at least one in three. Given that the majority of mobile shoppers will abandon a website if it’s not mobile friendly, it’s essential to launch a mobile-optimized version of your website. To make sure your site is mobile friendly, make sure the site isbuilt to address unique mobile shopping behaviors and isn’t simply a re-skinning of your current site for mobile technology.

5. Stock up. Pay extra attention to inventory planning before the holidays. If your website runs out of products, you will lose out on holiday sales, as well as potential future sales from new customers.  Not only do you need a solid forecast of what products will sell, but you also need to make sure you have allowed sufficient lead time and factored vendor delays into the equation, she says. Late arriving goods put added pressure on your back-end operation, which can lead to shipping delays.

6. Make sure pages load quickly. Web performance expectations have evolved and users are demanding much more — a one-second performance delay can be the difference between a profitable and unprofitable year According to a Harris Poll, 44 percent of shoppers would cancel their online purchase mid-way during the final checkout process due to website delays and 89 percent of adult U.S. shoppers would simply stop shopping at an online store as a result of a poor website experience. The solution? Implement sophisticated traffic management and Web content optimization tools to improve performance and reduce webpage load times. Make your site load very fast, ideally less than 2 seconds per page load. A site that hangs for a few seconds before loading may lose visits from casual shoppers who are doing comparison shopping if competitors’ sites load faster. A fast, responsive site also makes it more likely that users will explore your site fully. And to avoid costly downtime, “make sure you have website monitoring tools in place which will alert you of sluggish performance. This is a step that often gets missed and is probably the most important. Do not wait for customers to alert you of any issues with your hosting infrastructure. You want to identify and fix it before they even realize it occurred.

7. Make products shareable. “Encourage your customers to share favorite products from your site across their social networks by integrating social media [Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, Google+] buttons on to pages. In addition, “show the likes, favorites and recommendations of other influencers within search results and help your customers find social mentions quickly by indexing content from various social sites in a separate tab on the search page. For visual companies, “Pinterest’s PinIt button is ecommerce gold.

8. Make checkout easy. When gearing up for the holidays, run a few short A/B tests on your cart-to-checkout process. This should be spearheaded by marketing, not IT, but the CIO should understand the importance and enable marketing to run these tests if they need IT help. You can get amazing wins with A/B and multivariate testing, and there’s lots of tweaks that can be made to prevent leaving money on the screen.

9. Optimize your copy. Do your listings describe your products or do they sell them? Features rarely make the sale, so you should seek ways to emphasize the benefits. If you carry products that aren’t unique to your store, use [unique] product descriptions to say something new and enticing. Besides the avoiding the SEO penalty Google puts on duplicated content, this is also a good way to make sure you are not just competing on price.

10. Use video and 360-degree images. If you’re not already utilizing the power of videos and 360-degree photography, you should start, immediately. More than just a holiday trend, using videos and 360-degree images build customer confidence and increases time spent on site which dramatically increases your SEO, traffic, conversions and revenue. Dynamic images and videos will transform your customer experience by better showcasing your products — and [diminishing] the risk of returns.

11. Implement a holiday SEO strategy. “SEO takes time. So optimize your top performing pages [now], starting with the home page. Make sure you include several highly searched keywords while matching them up with your title tags and headers. And don’t forget to update your meta descriptions, the snippet of information that appears below your URL in search engines so Google gives your pages high priority when users are searching for those keywords. Introduce seasonal product pages on the same URL as many months in advance as possible to build up organic SEO juice before the actual buying period begins. If the products can’t yet be sold, have a ‘Coming Soon’ page and ask the customer to sign up to be notified when the product is available.Linking these pages from blogs and external content will help drive the organic SEO in time for when the product becomes available. By the same token, if your products are seasonal and only available from year to year (Christmas trees for example), keep the page URL the same or make sure you 301 it if it changes.

12. Staff up — and be ready to answer customer queries quickly. Fulfilling orders is a time-consuming process, especially for smaller ecommerce businesses. Hiring additional staff ensures that orders ship out the same day they are ordered. Calculate staff and machine capacity for the worst case scenario. Remember that scaling down in peak times is easier than scaling up during the holiday rush. And make sure you have people ready to answer customer emails, tweets, Facebook queries and calls. Holiday shoppers generally ask questions when they are ready to make a purchase. Focus your customer service strategy across all channels — Twitter, Facebook, 800 number and emails — and aim to answer questions in under 15 minutes, The faster you respond, the higher the conversion rate.”

13. Ramp up your email marketing campaigns — and add SMS marketing to the mix. Stage your email offers to begin approximately 4 to 6 weeks out. At two weeks out, begin to engage customers more aggressively with 50 percent off and free shipping deals. Save your best deals for the biggest shopping days (Cyber Monday, Super Saturday, etc.), and consider making them limited-time or limited-quantity offers to spur immediate action, he says. Just one word of caution: avoid running crazy sales too far in advance because you’ll risk cannibalizing your holiday season profits. Text message marketing can be a powerful weapon to reach shoppers as they visit your brick-and-mortar competitors. Holiday shoppers are very active, jumping between multiple physical stores to find the right product and best deal. Send text messages on holiday weekends with strong promotional offers and a link to purchase right away from an easy-to-use mobile website. There’s no better way to reach your on-the-go holiday shoppers and compete with the brick-and-mortar stores.

14. Run pay-per-click (PPC) campaigns. “Organic SEO takes months in advance to build, and promoting holiday SEO terms that far in advance will hurt your regular website traffic. A PPC campaign is perfect for holiday season, because you can switch it on and off as needed and see almost instant results.”

15. Incentivize customers to order early. Consider offering an incentive for early orders, For example ‘Buy your holiday gift purchase by November 30th and receive free shipping or Purchase a $50.00 gift card for just $45.00 if you buy before December 15th.

16. Offer free or discounted shipping — and provide shipment tracking. “A 2012 comScore study commissioned by UPS showed that 73 percent of shoppers expect free or discounted shipping, and 70 percent were willing to add more products to the cart to reach the free shipping minimum. So clearly stating your shipping costs and offering free shipping at an order minimum [or in general] will help you sell more. And provide tracking. Being able to tell customers when and where their package will arrive is another incentive for them to do business with you. So explore shipping technologies that automatically generate an email with tracking details as soon as a package is sent. Providing notification of shipment and a link to the current delivery status results in fewer phone calls from customers wondering about the status of their shipment, allowing you to spend more of your time fulfilling orders.

Need Help with Ecommerce. Please contact us today at Web Interactive  800 418 2358 or info@tccwebinteractive.com

For a free evaluation!

 

By Jennifer Lonoff Schiff

 

The Top 7 Content Marketing Trends of the Future

October 10th, 2013

Whether you realize it or not, chances are your business is already using content marketing as part of your overall marketing strategy.

With content marketing being arguably the most critical piece of an inbound marketing strategy, and with an estimated 60% of businesses employing some form of inbound in their marketing, we’re poised to see explosive growth in the way businesses ‘do’ marketing.

While consumers continue to tune out traditional, intrusive marketing communications, they increasingly crave the type of genuine, customer-focused information that content marketing delivers.

What is Content Marketing?

Before we get into my predictions for content marketing in 2014, let’s define content marketing. Content marketing is really about providing valuable information or content to current and potential customers for the purpose of building trust, branding, awareness, and positive sentiment. A successful content marketing campaign establishes you as an expert in your field, and that sets the groundwork for a long-term business relationship.

Simply put, its primary focus is on building the relationship, not the hard sell.

Types of content that typically form a content marketing strategy include:

Blog posts

Guest blog posts

E-books

Email newsletters

PowerPoint presentations

Podcasts

Standard videos

Micro-videos (ie, Vine)

Social media posts

Live presentations

Webinars

White papers

If you’re looking for more tips on building a content strategy contactWebInteractive at 800 418 2358

So, where is content marketing headed? What challenges and trends can we expect to see in 2014?

1. Businesses Will Finally be Able to Define Content Marketing

As mentioned previously, almost 60% of businesses are already using some form of content marketing as part of their overall marketing strategy. However, I bet few of them would actually be able to define content marketing if asked to do so. Throughout 2014, I believe businesses will increasingly be able to explain what content marketing is, how it aligns with their larger business goals, and why it’s important. ‘Content marketing’ won’t just be a catch-all phrase used interchangeably with ‘marketing collateral’, but will have distinct importance within organizations.

2. The Top New Marketing Job Title Recruited and Hired will be “Director of Content”

With this increased awareness of what content marketing is and its importance, CEOs will be inclined to make investments in documented content strategies. Greater departmental and company-wide support will mean more of the budget being designated for content creation and dissemination, and companies being willing to invest in dedicated content marketing managers. Companies that don’t assign content creation and dissemination to specific people or departments will lose out. According to HubSpot’s 2013 State of Inbound Marketing Report, companies that clearly define marketing and sales roles in relation to content marketing experience significantly lower customer acquisition costs than those without marketing/sales agreements. Companies that continue to distribute responsibility haphazardly and diffusely will find their content marketing less effective and more costly than those who have a solid plan for content creation and distribution.

3. Mobile Content Marketing Strategies will Separate Winners from the Rest of the Pack

With the prediction that mobile will overtake desktop usage within the next 2 years, not incorporating mobile into a solid content strategy is no longer an option. Google’s recent rollout of its new algorithm, “Hummingbird,” along with the complete revocation of keyword data from Google Analytics, reinforce this prediction. Creating content that can be read ‘on the go’ will become increasingly important, which means mobile-friendly formatting, shorter and more actionable blog posts, and considering which devices your audience will be using to access your content.

4. Calculating Content Marketing ROI Will Spawn New SAAS Software and Companies

Because the results of content marketing are often spread out over time, tracking and measuring ROI’s is difficult. Businesses will need to come to terms with the fact that the results of inbound marketing techniques can’t always be measured on a case-by-case basis, but are often better calculated as a whole, over longer periods of time. SAAS software and companies will emerge with various attempts at helping businesses calculate the ROI of their content marketing efforts, and many CEOs delving into content marketing for the first time will demand visibility into the profitability of their efforts. As such, these SAAS software companies will flourish.

5. Businesses Will Look for Ways to Automate Their Content Marketing, and These Efforts Will Fail

While content marketing will never be fully automated, businesses will continue to pursue ways of making it more efficient and less labor-intensive. However, these attempts will result in lower quality content, which will cause entire strategies to backfire. Bad branding and sentiment resulting from poor-quality content will turn away customers rather than attract them. While there may eventually be a place for automation within content marketing, the strength of content marketing resides largely in its personal and customer-focused approach. Many businesses will swing too far in the direction of automation in 2014 before finding a more balanced middle ground.

6. Google+ and Slideshare Will Become Essential for B2B Content Marketers

According to the Content Marketing Institute, B2B marketers are using social media to promote content more frequently than they did in 2012. And with the predicted growth of Google+ in the coming year, I expect we’ll see it become an even more important tool for content dissemination and social sharing. This is largely due to its importance in Google Author Rank and Authorship, which I predict will be two of the dominant trends within the SEO industry by the end of 2014

Slideshare will also continue to be a key player when it comes to content sharing, if it continues to follow its current trend: 40% of B2B marketers currently used it for content distribution, as compared to 23% the year before.

7. Location-Based Content Marketing Will Provide Huge ROI for Brick-and-Mortar Businesses

With the rise of mobile device usage, GPS-enabled smartphones will increasingly utilize location and personal-preference information to provide flash deals based on a user’s current location. While this technology already exists, it will become pervasive by the end of the 2014. Brick-and-mortar storefronts that fail to adopt location-based content marketing strategies will see sales decline as their competitors cannibalize those sales with location-based flash deals, offers, and coupons. Tech-savvy businesses will gain a significant upper hand in 2014 as they capitalize on the mobile device trend by implementing mobile content marketing strategies.

Final Thoughts

In 2014, businesses will need to increase their investment in content marketing. As a result, roadblocks to creating and executing content marketing strategies will continue to decline as CEOs and decision-makers morefully understand the importance of content marketing to reaching their business goals. Where do you see content marketing going in 2014? Do you agree that businesses will be more willing to invest in content marketing strategies? Share your ideas with WebInteractive today at 800 418 2358 or email us at

Web Interactive web development
A Division of the Computer Company, Inc.
info@tccwebinteractive.com

 

 

 

Jayson DeMers, Contributor

 

 

eManagerSite Tips for Selling on the Internet

September 10th, 2013

Can you make money on the Internet? Certainly. Thousands of other small businesses are making money right now in this medium. But if you want to set up shop on the web, it’s important for you to be just as professional, businesslike, and cautious as you would be in any other new venture. So I suggest taking time to get to know the Internet and to develop a strategy.

Here are vital tips that will give you a head start.

Get to know the Internet. Do plenty of exploring. If you’re already on the Net, you’re way ahead of the pack. I’ve run into plenty of people who are gung ho to advertise on the Internet before they’ve even got their own account. You need to know what you’re getting into. Work closely with a company that understands your vision. This is your business, and you should have a good feel for how it’s being promoted. You know your business better than anyone else. Because of that, you’re going to find dynamite ways to put the Internet to work –ways that no consultant or presence provider could ever think of.

Be a resource. Internet users expect information. So make sure your message is more than just hype. Add value. Be an information provider. Participate in online discussion groups, and be helpful. If you have a Web site, provide useful background information about your industry, your specialties, and your areas of expertise. You will become known as an expert on the Internet, and others — including potential customers — will be drawn to you.

Don’t send out unsolicited e-mail marketing messages. This won’t help your business and will just get recipients angry. There are much better ways to market your product or service like SEO search engine optimization and SEM search engine marketing. If you become a regular user of e-mail, you’ll see how annoying it would be if your mailbox got filled up every day with e -mail advertising. There’s nothing to be gained by this.

Use online discussion groups for “soft-selling.” Newsgroups and e-mail discussion groups can be fertile fields for marketing. But watch out. Most groups don’t tolerate commercial postings. Instead of barging in to hype your product, be a real participant. Lurk and listen. Answer questions and offer help. Include a “signature” block at the end of your postings to let people know how to get in touch with you. You’ll be surprised how often this will bring in leads from potential clients or customers.

Check your e-mail regularly. People on the Internet expect fast response. I recommend checking your e-mail messages twice a day. Respond as quickly as possible. This shows that you’re serious about your Internet presence and that you care.

Beware of “creativity.” I’m talking particularly about your Web site, once you start setting one up. Because the Web allows graphical presentations, it’s easy to get caught up in designing something you like — but that does nothing to sell your product. Make sure your site communicates and offers value to the user. Make sure it’s readable and that it’s easy to get around. Your Web site doesn’t have to be boring. You can be clever and you can be visual. But just remember this favorite advertising maxim: “If it doesn’t sell, it isn’t creative.” Keep your Web site changing, so people will come back. Repeat visitors are more likely to become clients or buyers, and they’re more likely to recommend your site to others. To draw users back to your site, you need to keep it changing. Update your material. Take advantage of new technology as it appears. Add new features, new resources, new information. Use correct spelling, punctuation, and grammar. I’m surprised how much poorly written copy I see on the Internet. Project a professional image by correct writing. Even if it’s a lowly e-mail message, double-check it for typos or vague language.

Include a clear call to action in your message. What do you want the user to do after he or she has followed your presentation? Purchase a product? Request a proposal and price quotation? Join a mailing list? Ask for more information? Let them know what you want them to do, and ask them to do it in clear, direct terms. Make it easy for them to respond. Set up a response mechanism — a direct e-mail link, a form to fill out, a button to click. The more direct and immediate the better. A phone number, a fax number, or a postal mail address is a second choice but better than nothing.

Promote your Internet presence through offline channels. Let your regular customers and the public know about your Internet presence. Put your e mail address and URL on your business cards, stationery, ads, brochures, packaging, and signage — anything you can think of. Send out press releases. Get the word out.

Marketing over the Internet and the Web can bring results in the form of  leads, direct sales, publicity, and image-boosting. Get to know the medium. Work up a sound strategy. Seek out appropriate online marketing methods that will get your selling message across while respecting other Internet users.

To help you start out selling in the internet contact webInteractive today and get a free evaluation. http://www.tccwebinteractive.com/

Call Us Today

800 418 2358

 

 

 

by Al Bredenberg

Rules of the SEO Game

September 4th, 2013

Yes, on-page SEO has become more important and yes, on-page SEO can make or break your chances at ranking high on Google SERPs. But what has changed is the way we perceive and behave toward on-page SEO.

Most SEOs tend to think of on-page optimization as a very specific technical influx of code. You know the drill: meta tags, canonical URLs, alt tags, proper encoding, well-crafted, character-limit-abiding title tags, etc.

Those are the basics. And at this point, they are very old-school. They continue to appear on the on-page SEO checklist, but you know that the whole demography of SEO has changed vastly, even though the basic premise has remained the same. Because of that change, the way you perceive on-page SEO has to adjust as well. That’s what we’re going to look at now.

If your website isn’t properly optimized on-page, your efforts off the websi(link building, content marketing, social media) probably won’t yield substantial results. Not that they won’t generate anything at all, but more than half your efforts may end up going down the drain.

There’s no clear rule book that says: do X, Y, and Z in on-page optimization and your rank will rise by A, B, or C. On-page optimization is based on tests, analytics and errors. You learn more about it by discovering what doesn’t work than what does.

But of all the things to keep in mind, there’s this: If you don’t take care ofyour on-page SEO, you’re likely going to fall or stay behind: in rankings, in conversions, and in ROI.

But first let’s clear this one up: Why the fuss about on-page SEO? After all, there’s a ton of material available about it already.

The changing demography of search engine algorithms has altered the factors playing in to how one chooses to perform SEO. You can no longer think in terms of keywords and inbound links alone. Similarly, you can no longer think in terms of the meta and alt tags alone

On-page SEO isn’t just about how your site is coded. It’s also about how your site looks bare-bones (the robot view), and how your website responds to different screens. It includes load times and authority. And with the direction that Google is headed in 2013 and beyond, it’s clear that on-page elements and off-page elements must line up and agree with each other in a natural, clear, organic manner. That’s why we need to reevaluate on-page SEO a little more carefully.

1. Meta Tags Are Just the Beginning

We’ve known and used meta tags since their arrival. The meta “keyword” tag is long-gone, as an SEO ranking factor, but a lot of heat has been generated in discussions about the utility of meta description tags from an SEO point-of-view. More significantly than SEO ranking factors, is the fact that meta description tags provide an opportunity to affect how your website is displayed in search results. A great meta description tag can get your result clicked before the guy ranking above you. It’s still good practice to use keywords when you can, along with geographic identifiers (when applicable), but first and foremost should be the intent to attract clicks from humans.

2. Canonical, Duplicate, Broken Links, etc.

Google’s robots have become very smart, to the point where broken links and duplicate pages raise red flags faster than a bullet. That is precisely why you’ll find canonical links (and their corresponding codes) to be highly important. Broken links and dupes aren’t just anti-SEO. They are anti-user too. What’s your first reaction when you click on a link that just shows a page error?

3. The Robot’s Point of View

Text remains the most important part of any website even today. While Google does rank some videos and media higher than others for certain keywords, well-formatted and content-rich websites still rule the roost.To get a view of how your website looks to the crawlers, you can disable the javascript and images (under Preferences/Settings of your browser) and take a look at the resulting page. Though not totally accurate, the result is pretty much how your website looks to the crawler. Now, verify all the items on the following checklist:

  • Is your logo showing up as text?
  • Is the navigation working correctly? Does it
    break?
  • Is the main content of your page showing up
    right after the navigation?
  • Are there any hidden elements that show up when
    JS is disabled?
  • Is the content formatted properly?
  • Are all other pieces of the page (ads, banner
    images, sign-up forms, links, etc.) showing up after the main content?

The basic idea is to make sure the main content (the part you want Google to note) comes as early as possible with the relevant titles and descriptions in place.

4. Load Time Averages and Size

Google has long noted the size and the average load times of pages. This goes into the ranking algorithm by most counts and affects your position in the SERPs. This means you can have pretty good content on your website, but if the pages load slowly, Google is going to be wary of ranking you higher than other websites that load faster. Google is all for user satisfaction. They want to show their users relevant results that are also easily accessible. If you have tons of javascript snippets, widgets, and other elements that slow down the load times, Google isn’t going to award you a high ranking.

5. Think Mobile, Think Responsive

This is one of the most hotly discussed topics in online marketing today. From mobile ads and local search to market trend in desktop/tablet consumption, it’s clear that moving toward a mobile website is the wave of the future. When you think of a mobile/responsive website, how do you go about it? Responsive as in CSS media queries, or entirely new domains like “m.domain.com”? The former is recommended often because this keeps things in the same domain.

6. Authority & AuthorRank

The author-meta gets a new lease on life with Google promoting the AuthorRank metric. It’s a little more complex than that now, however. You will have to enable rich snippets for your website, make sure your Google+ profile is filled up, and link them up with your blog/website. AuthorRank has emerged as a very important and tangible metric that affects page rank, and is one of the on-page SEO tactics you should definitely do. Not only will it improve your rankings, but it will also improve your click-through rate in the SERPs.

7. Design Shouldn’t Be the Last Thing On Your List 

Ironically, I had to write about this as the last thing because many people remember only he last thing they’ve read in an article. Hardcore SEO people regularly overlook the importance of design. Aesthetics and readability stem directly from the design of a website. Google is good at figuring out what shows “above the fold” on websites, and Google explicitly recommends that you place content above the fold so your readers are treated to information rather than ads. On-page SEO isn’t only about the meta code and the canonical URL. It’s about how your website connects to the user and to the robot. It’s about how you make sure your website is accessible and readable, and still has enough information under the hood for the search engines to pick up easily.

Need help on your SEO project let us offer you a free evaluation.

WebInteractive

800 418 2358

Is SEO Still Standard Operating Procedure?

August 20th, 2013

Search engine optimization, otherwise known as SEO, has been used since the inception of the internet as if it were the holy grail of online success. But what is SEO really? More importantly, what has it become? Is it simply a matter of optimizing your website? Or, has it grown to include a number of other parameters? SEO is no longer just one thing. It has grown to mean so much more.

Let’s look at how search engine optimization has evolved in order to become Search Engine Marketing (aka S.E.M.). Also let’s look at how you can improve your search ranking. This includes techniques designed to insure a strong ranking position. Best of all, you can accomplish all this without resorting to tricks, gimmicks or deception that attempts to hoodwink the search engine spiders.

Before the turn of the century, achieving search ranking was relatively simple. You selected a keyword relevant to your business, created a website and added the desired keywords to your content. You made sure you included the keywords in Meta and Alt tags. Then you posted your web pages to the top 100 search engines and directories. If you choose your keywords carefully, you soon showed up on page one of Yahoo, AltaVista, and other search engines.

Today it isn’t so simple. The major search engines such as Google, Yahoo and Bing are mostly concerned with quality content, delivered on a timely basis. Google has even admitted that it no longer even gives Meta Tags a second glance. This content needs to be diversified (web pages, blogs, social media, videos etc…) and it needs to be highly relevant to the keyword or phrases that are searched. Today if you meet these criteria you will do well in organic search, (assuming your competition is not better at it than you). If you ignore these items then your chances of showing up on page one are slim at best.

Is web page optimization still important? My answer is yes. Google and all other search engines still prowl websites as part of their ranking algorithm. Today, on-site optimization only accounts for about 25% of the overall score. However,  it is still very important. If this on-page information is incorrect, missing, or doesn’t match the content, search engines will either ignore or misinterpret your content and rank you low or not at all. Either way it means bad news for your website. Make sure your on-page information is formatted to match the content and desired keywords. Otherwise your quest to be on page one will end before it begins.

Search Engine Marketing is much more comprehensive than Search Engine Optimization. It includes all your websites plus your blog posts, social network posts, any PR posts, all pod casts and video posts. In essence, S.E.M. encompasses all web postings of any kind. Yet it also means more than this. S.E.M. is also a methodology designed to meet the search content requirements that provide high ranking. In other words, your success or failure is predicated on doing what the search engines want, not trying to trick them into giving you better ranking. When trying to rank highly on Google, Google loves mixed media, which includes video, photos, podcasts, and more. The reason they do this is due to the fact that Google is looking to determine who is serving the public the best content for any specific search. The google bots evaluate your content for relevancy, usefulness, quality, consistency, timeliness, connectedness, positive feedback and diversity of format (web pages, blogs, social media, videos etc…). These are some busy bots.

A decade ago posting a properly optimized websites was all it took to achieve ranking. Today’s internet audience is far more savvy and sophisticated. Today’s web surfers prefer video and photos to text, provided they can find it. If you have a video on page one above the fold, it has a high probability of being viewed and acted upon. We know that statistically, videos will receive 80% of all clicks if they are highly visible. However, videos are not the be all end all of search results. Blog posts can also garner strong position in Google rankings. The same is true for social media posts that that have a high sharing factor (gone viral). Google also loves web pages that receive lots of positive ratings (especially Google Local or Map pages with Google +1 ratings and four or more stars.

The bottom line is that while SEO is not dead, it has changed so radically in the past few years that the rules of the game have changed. If you want to win, you need to adjust your approach and start creating compelling content that both the search engine bots and the public want to view.

Want to start a SEO/SEM campaign that will give your website traffic and sales?

Contact the Computer Company at 800 418 2358 http://www.tccwebinteractive.com/search_engine_optimization.htm


Written by Carl Weiss

Let the Computer Company Design an E-commerce Website for Your Business

August 6th, 2013

Nowadays, the online website ecommerce store has become very important and no one can ignore it, as there is almost nothing that can be done in the real world without being able to do it online as well. An important aspect regarding the Internet is its financial potential and the supreme proof is the annual amount of money invested in it, which is constantly rising and it seems that the global crisis has sped up this process. The concept of “e-commerce” is widely spread but its history is very short, we are talking only about a few years! Any online store presents many things in common with the real stores and the main element is the necessity of selling in order to obtain profit, which is the life blood of any commercial existence. Definitely, there are many advantages in having an online store than a usual one but there are also some disadvantages. The layout of an e-commerce website isn’t special nor does it have some features which make it more complicated but it has a clear purpose: it should sell.
This statement might not be saying anything to a business owner but thinking in a logical manner the result must be valid and important. First of all, an e-commerce website should sell the products to the visitors so to be successful you need traffic; a well done layout attracts the attention of the visitors and here comes the first major rule of creating a good e-commerce website:

The overall design should match the products

Any website needs a good design and this category follows this rule but it also has to reflect the main features of the seller. The power of example is great. Think of a design for an online store which sells women clothes and one which sells widgets: the first one needs a very fine color scheme, huge collection of images with no highly complicated menus while the second should be modern, almost sci-fi, with powerful color schemes and many technical details. These are different and thus they need different approaches.

The design should emphasize the products

The specificity of the e-commerce website is the fact that the design shouldn’t highlight only the content as in other online presences, it should put the products in the spotlight and this means using a lot of text and images. Any designer should know that a good design is the one which isn’t necessarily noticed but makes the navigation easily and subtle. If the client is the one who is always right then here the product is the only one which matters. A lot of websites have lost many clients because the products aren’t highlighted enough or the images of these aren’t relevant, but here comes another great rule to keep in mind:

High quality images attract high quality clients

Marketers have studied the ways of making an online store more efficient and more
profitable and one of the main reasons of the loss of sales was the lack of information about the products. We all know that a hundred words is the equivalent of a single image and this statement is taken into account when designing a commercial layout. The relevant images, showing many perspectives should replace the natural touch in a mall or hypermarket in a successful manner and this is difficult…you believe in what you see, don’t you and an image can’t replace your eyes. In order to gain clients and to make them buy and not just visit, the high quality images of your goods are important and failure is near if someone neglects it.

Usability and accessibility are vital

An e-commerce website needs a layout which should help the potential customers in
any situation else they will be naturally attracted by other e commerce sites. Nothing can be more disastrous than a layout where it is hard to find the shopping cart or one in which the information about the shipping is missing. When somebody creates the design of an online store the usability and the accessibility are the major facts to keep in mind; some specialists considers that even the aesthetics may be ignored but not these. The sales are in direct relationship with how accessible and universal a website is and, clearly, it is decisive. A FAQ and a contact page are signs that the website is serious as the help of these is invaluable. These are various metric systems in each country and, in order to have more clients, all the dimensions should be offered to
satisfy any preferences. These should be visible and easy to understand and, eventually, to transform for people from all around the world and it means that
the written content should pay attention to this kind of audience. Online stores with local public targets shouldn’t worry too much about the universality factor but it is highly recommended to pay attention to it.

The navigation menu is the key of success

Usually, people visiting an online store aren’t very decided to buy something; they
check all the products, see others even check out other similar stores and finally they make a decision. They navigate the entire website and they always need to know where they are and how to get to another category. In this case, a functional and well established navigational menu is required and nothing can scare away your potential customers than a complicated or difficult to use menu. Anyway, every online shop has its specificity and a general tip remains a generality and nothing more. A solution to understanding better what an e-commerce website should be like and how to design it is to see the best examples.

Please contact us for our portfolio and what The Computer Company can do for your  profits and your on-line store

800 418 2358

info@computercompany.net

Cloud Gaining Traction in Government, Education Markets

June 27th, 2013

Cloud computing is gaining momentum in the government and education space. Software as a Service offerings are growing rapidly, driven by the education software developers seeing an opportunity to gain new customers. We’re also seeing many of our clients re-architecting their infrastructure to take advantage of SaaS and cloud-type offerings. It’s largely about speed of deployment and flexibility in getting to applications. But many of the same issues that inhibit cloud issues in the business community also impact government and education. Most notably, prospects express concerns about security and availability, especially when the infrastructure is carrying sensitive personal information. Therefore, assessing the relative sensitivity of the respective agency is often one of the first steps in evaluating the feasibility of proceeding.

Government and education departments, that are not guided by as many compliance regulations are taking advantage of the cloud as fast as they can, we are seeing the same thing with managed services in that space. It costs them too much money to continually build out these networks and to operate them, so they are looking for new ways to gain efficiencies. It’s happening in education, and it’s happening in government.

The major players in the infrastructure-as-a-service (IaaS) space, including Amazon Web Services, Google, HP and Microsoft are actively marketing their government cloud practices. Amazon lists NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, the Recovery Accountability Transparency Board and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory among its cloud clients.

Nearly one-third of the federal government’s IT budget is spent on maintaining and upgrading older infrastructure, and the same ratios are substantially true for state and local governments.

More RFPs are being based around hosted voice, hosted call center, and things of that nature. They are actively utilizing these services in the procurement process because they see cost benefits in consuming technology on a per-seat, per-month basis.”

The city of Boston announced that Google and Appirio had been granted a contract to move all city workers and schools to a unified messaging and collaboration platform based on Google Apps by the end of the year. The city claims nearly 75,000 email users, including accounts for its 57,000 public schools students. The move is expected to cut expenses by more than 30 percent per year.

A number of government agencies in major cities have made similar moves to the cloud. Last year, the Chicago public school system made a similar transition to the cloud, in a move expected to save $6 million over three years.

Some of the savings realized by local government agencies comes from the reduced need to maintain high-end staff. As the technology moves forward, it’s harder for public-sector entities to keep the necessary skill sets within their four walls. So when they deploy a premises-based solution, they often find themselves struggling to support it.

Want to know more about saving your IT dollars, please contact

The Computer Company
800 418 2358 x 127

 

 

 

 

Written by Ken Presti

 

2012 Marketing Predictions

January 9th, 2012

1.) The Move on Mobile.
Picture yourself driving in your car with your family. You decide to go somewhere to eat, or see a movie, or go shopping. Out comes the phone, and the search begins. This is becoming an everyday experience for many of us. This is important, why? Your business needs to be present where your prospects and customers are. Today, customers expect to be able to contact you, not only by searching your website, but also on their phones or tablets. In 2012 websites need to be tailored for the phone environment.

2.) Video in, Flash Out.
Ok, Flash is not really out. It just sounded good in the title. Flash will continue to be used on websites, and serve the purpose it has for the last 10 years… make stuff cool! But Video is coming on strong! Studies have shown that using video for product showcasing has increased sales.

3.) SEO will continue to grow.
Organic and paid search will to grow in 2012. Sorry, the phonebook in not coming back. (Not even sure where we keep ours!) Seems that 90% of the websites give very little attention to Search
Engine Optimization, but that is to their loss. The other 10% are easily found, and are bringing in the business.

4.) Look for more integration of traditional media into social campaigns.
While social is decent at serving to build credibility and increase communication, it doesn’t always translate into business profits for many companies. Social is still primarily for friends
talking to friends, if your business fits in with that, it can help boost brand. But social does brands get fans involved in the conversation, and can spread the word about product benefits.

The First Program of its Kind in the Nation for Children with Visual Impairments…

October 6th, 2011

Windsor-based CRIS Radio is now the first program of its kind in the  nation to provide on-demand audio versions of children’s books for  children with visual impairments, learning disabled or physically  disabled.

The program developed with The Computer Company Inc., will serve the approximate 72,000 children in the state of Connecticut who are eligible for the program.

With publications focusing on science, technology, the environment, math and entertainment, including popular magazines like Sports Illustrated For Kids, CRIS’ on-demand system can be downloaded by consumers directly from CRIS’ website to personal computers, mp3 players, smartphones and tablets.

The  hope is that “the programming will help students achieve independence  with homework, provide a teaching tool for parents and educators, and  offer students timely access to current events,” according to CRIS  representatives.

CRIS is the only radio-reading service in Connecticut that provides content for the blind, learning disabled and physically challenged. The 32-year-old program relies on the work of volunteers to deliver information to its audience.

http://windsor.patch.com/articles/cris-radio-goes-on-demand-for-kids

The Computer Company and CRIS Radio launching on-demand kids’ content

September 20th, 2011

Some 72,000 Connecticut children with special needs will be among the nation’s first with on-demand audio-text access to children’s programming via CRIS Radio in Windsor, officials say.

The content, which includes kids’ magazines such as National Geographic Kids, Big Backyard, Ask and Muse, also will be available as podcasts on smartphones and as downloads from CRIS Radio’s Web site, www.crisradio.org, said CRIS Executive Director Diane Weaver Dunne.

State and local education, business, and nonprofit leaders will be at CRIS’s Windsor broadcast center on Monday at 3:30 p.m. to officially launch its on-demand children’s programming service.

The programming will help students achieve independence with homework, provide a teaching tool for parents and educators, and offer students timely access to current events, Weaver Dunne said. The service will cost from $5 a month to $30 annually.

Nonprofit CRIS Radio is the state’s only radio-reading service for people who are blind, learning disabled or physically challenged.

CRIS says it partnered with The Computer Company in Cromwell to develop the kids’ on-demand service, and collaborated with nonprofit literacy organization Everybody Wins CT! to test the new programming in Hartford schools.

Story from: http://www.hartfordbusiness.com/news