December 2006

You are currently browsing the monthly archive for December 2006.

As 2006 comes to a close, several bloggers feel compelled to reflect on the last year and either list some of their best posts or the best posts on a particular subject like I did with the previous post on “The Best Blog Traffic & Monetization Posts of 2006“.

So here are the some of the posts that I’ve found so far.

Seth Godin has a post called “Your Favorite Seth Posts, 2006” where his readers can vote for the best post. He has some real gems in there. Most of the posts are focused on the topic of marketing in general but 99% of his posts on the list will change your mind about how you conduct business. One of my favorites that didn’t make the list is a video of him at Google.

Copyblogger has a post called “The Best of Copyblogger (According to Time Magazine’s Person of the Year)” You. I can’t say enough great things about this blog. The advice is extremely actionable. I have several of these pages bookmarked and read them over and over.

Darren Rowse of ProBlogger has a very long post called “Best of ProBlogger - 2006” where he reconstructs the entire year month-by-month.

Local SEO, Mike Belasco, has a post called “Top 10 Local Search Engine Optimization Blog Posts for 2006“. In my opinion this is an extremely relevant topic for most businesses in Hawaii. (The vast majority of business and services related queries will usually have a city or state in front of the query to keep the results relevant.)

The Official Google blog, Inside AdSense has a post called “Best of 2006” where they narrow down the Top 10 highlights, not listed in any particular order. It’s always good to get the story directly from the source.

Chris Boggs who covers the search news posted links to the “Top SEM Stories of 2006” on his new blog.

Lee Odden posts his “Top TopRank Blog Posts for 2006” as well as some other year end stats for his blog.

Eric Goldman and John Ottaviani posted on the Technology & Marketing Law Blog the “Top Cyberlaw Developments for 2006” as a two part post.

Update: I was just over at Todd Malicoat’s blog and found a few more worth mentioning in his post about his 2006 Predictions & Review.

Techipedia created a huge post called Internet Marketing Best [Blog] Posts of 2006: The Year in Review. All I can say is WOW! It will take me a while to digest this one. I’n sure I’ll find a few new blogs worth reading in the process as well.

Andy Beal posted the Marketing Pilgrim’s Top 10 Posts of 2006

Chris at 10e20 posted the 101 Biggest Stories in Search 2006. It’s a huge list. Wow! It’s a real walk down memory lane.

Friends ask me all the time about monetizing a blog. They either have a blog already or would like to start one with the goal of earning money. Graywolf probably has the best advice I’ve seen on the subject of monetization here at the very bottom of this post.

Graywolf’s advise is to not worry about monetizing the traffic at first and just focus on building traffic for the first six months or year. (People are much more likely to link to your blog if it does not have ads, and why bother setting up the ads if there is no audience to click on them anyway?) After it gets some links and regular traffic, then start placing ads on the site gradually.

There seems to be two main ways to go. You can focus all your attention on one blog that you hope will earn an impressive profit or lower the bar and create several, where the combined profit is impressive. The idea of only making a few bucks per day, but on many blogs sometimes never occurs to people. Both strategies work. It’s just a matter of personal preference.

Below are links on the subject that have been piling up in my Bookmarks so I thought that since it’s the end of the year, I would clean out that folder and post “The Best Blog Traffic & Monetization Posts of 2006″.

Enjoy!

Monetizing Blog Traffic

Copywriting Tips for Blogs

Blog marketing Tips

Blog marketing Tools

List of Blog Marketing Links

Blog Directory Links

WordPress Plugins
(Surprisingly… there is very little repetition between the lists)

John chow is asking people to review his blog and then he’ll post links to the reviews so everyone can read them. He’s also offering some sort of electronic devise as a prize for the best review.

I’m not interested in the winning anything but I honestly do like John Chow’s blog.

I subscribe to about 100 blogs on the subjects of internet marketing and advertising. There are so many daily posts that it would be impossible for me to read everything so I usually just look at the titles and only read the ones that promise something new and interesting. However there are a few blogs that I make a point of reading every single post. John Chow Dot Com is one of these blogs.

Topics vary greatly from day to day so you never know what you’ll get. The quality of the posts also varies greatly. Some days are much better than others. He also posts a lot of off topic stuff about his personal life which would be cool if he had a strange life or twisted sense of humor, but he’s just a normal Asian guy. I already know a lot of normal Asian people so those posts aren’t very interesting to me.

Here are some of his favorite topics:

In all fairness, I’m only interested in internet marketing. The other posts about credit cards, food, etc are probably pure gold to someone.

What I like the most about John Chow is that he likes to try new stuff. In many cases, he will post about the new idea that he’s trying today and then post an update to let us all know what happened and what he learned. It’s great stuff. Most people just pose a general idea or what the best practices are but don’t get too specific. John seems comfortable giving us details and the numbers. I love that kind of stuff. If you don’t read his blog, you should.

In real life, a great picture is easily worth 1,000 words but search engine robots are almost completely blind to the beauty of great Hawaii photography so the photos in most cases need to be supported with text.

Many of the Hawaii photography and photographer websites that I’ve seen rely very heavily on beautiful Hawaii imagery. Some of these websites are beautiful Flash based presentations and galleries where the images speak for themselves but is almost invisible to a search engine robot.

So… What does Google have to say about the matter?

Vanessa Fox from Google participated in a panel at SES Chicago called “Images & Search Engines”.

You can get a recap of the session at the Search Engine Roundtable as well as from Lisa Barone at Bruce Clay, Matt McGee from Small Business SEM and Liana Evens who was on the panel.

Vanessa Fox from Google who was also on the panel actually just posted about this on the Official Google Webmaster Central Blog the other day.

You should follow those links to read the entire posts but here is the list of points that Vanessa makes and my own comments below each point.

  • Don’t put the bulk of your text in images. It may sound simple, but the best thing you can do is to put your text into well, text. Reserve images for graphical elements. If all of the text on your page is in an image, it becomes inaccessible.

[Me] Don’t use pictures of text. Sometimes you will want a fancy or non-standard font that looks cool or has beveled edges and a drop shadow, etc… but try your best to resist. This can also include menu bars and navigational elements. In most cases a simple text link works better than linking an image or part of an image to the target page.

  • Take advantage of alt tags for all of your images. Make sure the alt text is descriptive and unique. For instance, alt text such as “picture1″ or “logo” doesn’t provide much information about the image. “Charting the path of stock x” and “Company Y” give more details.

[Me] I believe the primary word used in this point is the word “Unique”. This can be harder than it looks. If you have a gallery of 20 images of Diamond Head, you will need to say something different every time. Whatever you do, don’t use the same alt text on every picture. Make each one significantly unique. For example you could use: “Diamond Head from Kapiolani Park” and then use “West Side of Diamond Head” for two very similar photos. (Don’t use a minor change like Diamond Head 1, Diamond Head 2, etc…)

I screwed up on this one a few years ago. I used my name in as part of a copyright notice on every single image on my website and quickly went from being #1 for my name to nowhere until I changed the alt text. I wasn’t thinking about SEO, I just didn’t want people to steal my pictures. It was a stupid mistake. The fact that about 20 images on my website had the exact same alt text was enough to penalize the entire website for the words contained in the tags. (Lesson learned)

  • Don’t overload your alt text. Be descriptive, but don’t stuff it with extra keywords.

[Me] Don’t stuff an entire paragraph into the alt text. Keep it down to about three to six words. (Don’t repeat the same word six times either)

  • It’s important to use alt text for any image on your pages, but if your company name, navigation, or other major elements of your pages are in images, alt text becomes especially important. Consider moving vital details to text to ensure all visitors can view them.

[Me] Here Vanessa talks about the use of alt text on navigational elements. Any time you hyperlink an image, it should have the alt text. The alt text in this situation should not describe the image but the destination page.

The Text Only version of Google Cache shows alt text as if it were the anchor text of a simple text link. Many people believe the alt text of an image link can influence how Google views or ranks the page being linked to. Again… Don’t over do it. If you are using images instead of text links in your primary navigation… You should likely reconsider that strategy, especially if you are using one large image that has several hot spots.

  • Look at the image-to-text ratio on your page. How much text do you have? One way of looking at this is to look at your site with images turned off in your browser. What content can you see? Is the intent of your site obvious? Do the pages convey your message effectively?

[Me] Here is a handy text only browser that I like to use called the SEO-Browser.

The SEO-Browser basically turns the images off. Did your best information and primary navigation disappear or is it still easy to navigate the site and use?

Here are two more great links on the subject.

Aaron Wall from the SEO Book blog wrote about the subject of optimizing a page so the images rank highly in Google Image search.

Here is the list of image ranking factors Aaron posted.

  • File name
  • Image alt text
  • Image title
  • Text near the image
  • Image age
  • Click streams
  • Trust of site image is on
  • Links referencing the image

This post also has some excellent comments. The surrounding text may also contribute significantly to the ranking. (This is why all images should always at least have a caption.) The title of the page may also be a contributing factor.

I’ve saved the best link for last. Tony Hill posted an excellent tutorial on exactly how to design a Gallery Page. I haven’t tried this technique myself but every point he makes is consistent with what I’ve read elsewhere. Tony however turned the best practices into an actionable item that every photographer should read.
Keep checking back. I’ll try to cover more on getting traffic to the website in another post soon.

Aloha,
Dave.

Michael Jensen over at SoloSEO just blog tagged me so I’m required to list 5 things that most people don’t know about me, and then tag five more people.

1) I grew up in Roswell New Mexico. (Yes… The place where the UFO crashed) I lived there until after I graduated from High School. I later moved from Roswell to Denver to go to art school.

2) I moved to Hawaii on an impulse. In 1998, I was working for my friend Todd Robertson in Denver doing 3D animation & technical illustrations when he decided to move to Hawaii on an impulse after returning from vacation. So… I had to make a choice. Be unemployed in Denver or Honolulu. (I chose Honolulu) About three weeks later… I had sold or given away almost all of my possessions, purchased a one-way ticket to Hawaii and landed in Honolulu with my computer, a duffel bag, a backpack, a box and about $250 in cash.

3) I collect “Magic The Gathering” game cards. (Great game) I used to play all the time back in 93-94 and spent a small fortune collecting the cards. One-by-one, all my friends stopped playing the game and sold their cards. (To me) I stopped playing as well but for some reason I never sold my cards or completely quit collecting them. (That’s what was in the box I moved here with) I hope to play with my boy in a few years or as soon as he’s old enough to play the game. (I sincerely hope he wants to play Magic and not Pokemon or Yu-Gi-Oh!)

4) I was a Hippy. Most people don’t believe me when I tell them this, but… Back in art school… I was a huge fan of Phish & The Grateful Dead. I’ve seen both bands at least 20 times each. Back then I had some seriously long hair, made my own Tie-Die, T-shirts, collected bootleg tapes, the works. I don’t listen to them very much anymore but I’m still a big fan.

5) I met my beautiful wife Alice online. It’s a long story but… My friend mike posted a profile for me with his AOL account in an effort to help me get my mind off an ex-girlfriend who I had broken up with. We got along great and got married about a year later in 2001. We have a three year old boy named Shane and things are going great. (Shortly after that, my brother & sister both met their spouses online.)

Bonus Fact) My wife and I are Buddhist. Just like Christianity, Buddhism is not a single monolithic religion. There are many different variations. We belong to an organization called SGI (Soka Gakkai International) which is a very popular variation in Japan.

So… Who am I going to tag? Solo SEO has a “Blog Tag Tree” of people who have been tagged so far but there are quite a few great people still out there who haven’t been tagged yet.

Christoph Cemper, Mike Belasco, Brian Vuyk and Everett Sizemore… Tag! You’re It!

One of my readers asks, “I am curious what it would take to get on the first SERP for Hawaii Wedding photographer.”

It’s a simple question but the answer can be more complicated than you would think so I’m going to outline a few things that he can do in several posts in an effort to break it down into bite sized pieces.

First of all, I would like to take a look at the question being asked. My assumption is that his real goal is to economically increase the relevant traffic to his website and assumes that the #1 organic listing in Google will solve that problem. (It probably would)

However… There are other ways to economically drive relevant traffic to a website. If you pursue these alternative routes, you will usually find they also help you rank better in the search engines.

First I’ll be giving some basic SEO advice for how a Hawaii Photographer website should be built to please your two primary audiences, people and search engine robots.

After that… I’ll be covering alternative ways to drive traffic to a photography website which should also help the website rank better as a result.

One of the main things to remember about Internet Marketing is that it’s usually a long process. It’s a lot like working out or loosing weight. You need to be diligent and consistently work on it every day over a long period of time. Rarely have I seen someone make a small change that rocketed them to the top of the SERPS. Most people who are successful at driving traffic to their website tell me they have been actively marketing the website for several years to get to where they are.

That’s all for now,

Aloha,
Dave.