Google is the most popular and widely used search engine in the world. It’s also one of the hardest search engines to perform well on.
I’ll teach you key SEO strategies that we use at Sitening that will make Google do your bidding – all without leather or mind games.
Comments
bring it
jon-
this is easily the most promising title so far. i’m ready to move off the business end of this arrangement and turn the tables!
-jk
Yummy Techniques
Joey, I’m glad you’re interested. It should be fun and hopefully I’ll present some ideas and techniques you’ve never heard of.
-Jon
I prefer 'Ho'
People might think the word “Bitch” is derogatory… I prefer “Ho” - Make Google my Ho. My Ho needs to generate money for me!
This immediately caught my attention...
:) Great title! I use Google CONSTANTLY and learning to use it better would be great. I don’t think the title is derogatory at all, but maybe that’s just me.
Fun Title
Definitely not meant to be derogatory – just a fun title for BarCamp. I look forward to seeing you there Tiffany!
Case study? Example?
I think your presentation needed an example. I found it entertaining, but I’m afraid I might’ve gotten the wrong idea about some of your strategies.
With the mini review site idea, were you actually advocating the creation of pure astroturf sites to make your brand look better? With the cat food review example, I don’t think you made it clear to the audience that the review site would be tied to your brand somehow. And how could it? Why would users trust reviews on a site owned by a brand with a vested interest?
When you spoke about creating sites like cat-food-nutrition.com, cat-food-health.com, cat-food-keyword-here.com, each with keyword-specific content from your main site with the words “switched around” I actually got angry. These are the very sites that I, as a citizen of the Internet, go out of my way to exclude from my search results. They’re noise. Content pollution. I directly avoid such “keyword domains” because I know they are content-free or are duplicates of sites I’ve already seen. Contrary to your assertion, I’m much, much less likely to click a link with a domain like that. In fact, if I can tie that domain directly to a brand, I’m likely to hold that brand in lower regard.
I figured this was the modus operandi for anyone who’s been surfing for a couple of years. Am I in the minority? Did I horribly misunderstand your presentation? Or is this just part of the war between marketers and consumers?
What Part of the Title Did You Not Understand?
The presentation was about influencing Google’s search results, not making “your” personal Internet experience better. If you were interested in learning more about being a good netizen, you came to the wrong presentation.
As for the strategies, in my opinion, they’re good online marketing techniques. And if done well, can be effective and also non-spammy.
As for case studies, that’s not going to happen. My client’s privacy is much more important to me than offering you some sort of quantified/qualified proof in a 20 minute BarCamp presentation.
Lastly, whether you’re aware of it or not, a large majority of the content you use and appreciate online is produced and published SEOs. Most content online, like television, radio, etc… is driven by commercial interest.
Micro-sites could easily be informative, provide tips for taking care of your cat, etc… So it’s all about how it’s done. Certainly if you create multiple crappy brochure sites, then it’s not going to offer too much value to the user. However, if you create vertical micro-sites that are highly targeted and contain altruistic information for the consumer, then I don’t see how that is negative.
Impressions
“Case study” was a strong phrase. I wasn’t suggesting that you provide examples that would risk client privacy. However, I would have liked to see an example of a non-spammy informative mini-brochure site or brand-sponsored mini-review site. Perhaps you could have found an example created for a brand you haven’t handled?
The way the keyword domain and brochure site ideas were presented, especially when followed by the review site idea and the cat food example, left me with a sleazy feeling. I laughed at the cat review—it was entertaining—but I felt the idea of creating a brand-sponsored review site needed more legitimacy. Were you proposing the creation of an actual, full-fledged review site that would be updated over time with slightly biased information? Is this something ongoing that will need a human at the helm?
I agree. Met Life’s retirement advisor tool probably falls in that category.
To what degree do you suggest branding these vertical micro-sites? Do you present them as “Cat Grooming Tips Online”, “Cat Grooming Tips (footer: brought to you by Friskies)”, or “Friskies(TM) Cat Grooming Tips”? I didn’t get a good feel for whether the focus of these sites was on the information or the brand, or how well-linked to the brand’s web site they’d be.
You make some good points
You make some good points and the things we do for our clients (and things I’ve seen other people do) are hardly “spammy.” But I was very limited on time. So I went for the entertainment value vs. “best example ever!” And yes, I’m proposing a full fledged review site – albeit slightly biased – that would require copywriters, someone managing it and someone building links and exposure to it. That’s exactly what we’re doing for one of our clients right now and it’s doing incredible so far on Google.
As for your other question about micro-sites. I would probably focus just on the keywords, but it would be strongly branded by the company visually. In other words, you would know that this was a Friskies website. As for what you put on the site, it really depends on the strategy and how to best hit the target audience. If you had strong vertical products/services, and you felt you could actually sell better by concentrating the branding efforts onto individual micro-sites, then you could simply make the entire site a brochure. However, if it made more sense to capture traffic and links by providing altruistic articles, checklists, coupons, tools, etc…, while providing calls to actions and/or links to the main website, then that’s another good direction you could go.
As I’m sure you know, every company will have their own unique services/products and audience. So there’s really no cookie-cutter approach to which strategy is best and whether or not they should take the micro-site approach or not. My attempt was to simply throw out some ideas of things you can do to better influence your presence in organic search results on Google. If I had several hours to present these ideas and I knew the crowd actually knew a lot about search engine optimization, my presentation would have been much different, and I dare say “in depth”. With that being said, my presentation at BarCamp was intended to be fun, slightly provocative and to hopefully seed people with ideas of how they could approach their own online campaign.
Thanks
Thanks very much for engaging me and taking the time to provide more explanation here. I’ve got a much better feel for your direction now than I had when I left the room, and now I’m out of questions. =)
Thanks again.
Humble Request: Cease & Desist
Hello!
I’m sure there wasn’t any way for you to know this other than searching the phrase “Make Google Your Bitch,” in Google, but I’d ask that you please stop using a service mark that my company, Clever Agency, has in place since 2005.
I only request that you cease and desist using this service mark in the arena of making a profit from search engine optimization/marketing services, as it is expressly used by my company for exactly that purpose.
Unauthorized use of this service mark by yourself and your organization, to advertise or profit from SEO/SEM is causing confusion of my brand. I hope you would help to prevent further damages.
Thank you.
Humble Reply: Prove It
Hi Bobby,
Please send a copy/reference to your your federally registered service mark. I wasn’t able to find it in my USPTO search. It must be there somewhere, since you’re not allowed to use the SM or TM symbol unless it’s been properly registered with the United States Patent and Trademark Office.
Also, I don’t believe you’re allowed to include the registered trademark of another company in your service mark. However, I’ll do you the favor of contacting Google’s legal department for you just to make sure. I’m sure they’ll have an opinion on the matter.