domingo, 13 de octubre de 2013

Specialization Strategy

Last week, I reviewed ?Who Owns The Future?? by Jaron Lanier. It?s a book about the impact of technology on the middle class.

I think the reality Janier describes in that book is self-evident - that the middle class is being gouged out by large data aggregators - but it?s hard, having read it and accepted his thesis, not to feel the future of the web might be a little bleak. Laniers solution of distributing value back into the chain via reverse linking is elegant, but is probably unlikely to happen, and even if it does, unlikely to happen in a time frame that is of benefit to people in business now.

So, let?s take a look at what can be done.

There are two options open to someone who has recognized the problem. Either figure out how to jump ahead of it, or stay still and get flattened by it.

Getting Ahead Of The SEO Pack

If your business model relies on the whims of a large data aggregator - and I hope you realize it really, really shouldn't if at all humanly possible - then, you need to get a few steps ahead of it, or out of its path.

There's a lot of good advice in Matt Cutt's latest video:

It could be argued that video has a subtext of the taste of things to come, but even at face value, Cutts advice is sound. You should make something compelling, provide utility, and provide a good user experience. Make design a fundamental piece of your approach. In so doing, you?ll keep people coming back to your site. Too much focus on isolated SEO tactics, such as link building, may lead to a loss of focus on the bigger picture.

In the emerging environment, the big picture partly means ?avoid getting crushed by a siren server?, although that's my characterization, and unlikely to be Cutts'! Remember, creating quality, relevant content didn?t prevent people from being stomped by Panda and Penguin. All the link building you?re doing today won?t help you when a search engine makes a significant change to the way they count and value links.

And that day is coming.

Are You Flying A Helicopter?

Johnon articulately poses part of the problem:

Fast forward and we?re all spending our days flying these things (computers). But are we doing any heavy lifting? Are we getting the job done, saving the day, enabling the team? Or are we just ?flying around? like one of those toy indoor helicopters, putzing around the room dodging lamps and co-workers? monitors until we run out of battery power and drop to the floor? And we call it work.?...More than ever, we have ways to keep ?busy? with SEO. The old stand-byes ?keyword research? and ?competitive analysis? and ?SERP analysis? can keep us busy day after day. With TRILLIONS of links in place on the world wide web, we could link analyze for weeks if left alone to our cockpits. And I suppose every one of you SEOs out there could rationalize and justify the effort and expense (and many of you agency types do just that.. for a living). The helicopter is now cheap, fast, and mobile. The fuel is cheap as well, but it turns out there are two kinds of fuel for SEO helicopters. The kind the machine needs to fly (basic software and electricity), and the kind we need to actually do any work with it (seo data sets, seo tools, and accurate and effective information). The latter fuel is not cheap at all. And it?s been getting more and more expensive. Knowing how to fly one of these things is not worth much any more. Knowing how to get the work done is

A lot of SEO work falls into this category.

There is a lot of busy-ness. A lot of people do things that appear to make a difference. Some people spend entire days appearing to make a difference. Then they appear to make a difference again tomorrow.

But the question should always be asked ?are they achieving anything in business terms??

It doesn't matter if we call it SEO, inbound marketing, social media marketing, or whatever the new name for it is next week, it is the business results that count. Is this activity growing a business and positioning it well for the future?

If it?s an activity that isn't getting results, then it?s a waste of time. In fact, it?s worse than a waste of time. It presents an opportunity cost. Those people could have been doing something productive. They could have helped solve real problems. They could have been building something that endures. All the linking building, content creation, keyword research and tweets with the sole intention of manipulating a search engine to produce higher rankings isn't going to mean much when the search engine shifts their algorithms significantly.

And that day is coming.

Pivot

To avoid getting crushed by a search engine, you could take one of two paths.

You could spread the risk. Reverse-engineer the shifting algorithms, with multiple sites, and hope to stay ahead of them that way. Become the gang of moles - actually, a "labour" of moles, in proppa Enlush - they can?t whack. Or, at least, a labour of moles they can't whack all at the same time! This is a war of attrition approach and it is best suited to aggressive, pure-play search marketing where the domains are disposable.

However, if you are building a web presence that must endure, and aggressive tactics don?t suit your model, then SEO, or inbound, or whatever it is called next week, should only ever be one tactic within a much wider business strategy. To rely on SEO means being vulnerable to the whims of a search engine, a provider over which you have no control. When a marketing tactic gets diminished, or no longer works, it pays to have a model that allows you to shrug it off as an inconvenience, not a major disaster.

The key is to foster durable and valuable relationships, as opposed to providing information that can be commodified.

There are a number of ways to achieve this, but one good way is to offer something unique, as opposed to being one provider among many very similar providers. Beyond very basic SEO, the value proposition of SEO is to rank higher than similar competitors, and thereby gain more visibility. This value proposition is highly dependent on a supplier over which we have no control. Another way of looking at it is to reduce the competition to none by focusing on specialization.

Specialize, Not Generalize

Specialization involves working in a singular, narrowly defined niche. It is sustainable because it involves maintaining a superior, unique position relative to competitors.

Specialization is a great strategy for the web, because the web has made markets global. Doing something highly niche can be done at scale by extending the market globally, a strategy that can be difficult to achieve at a local market level. Previously, generalists could prosper by virtue of geographic limits. Department stores, for example. These days, those departments stores need to belong to massive chains, and enjoy significant economies of scale, in order to prosper.

Specialization is also defensive. The more specialized you are, they less likely the large data aggregators will be interested in screwing you. Niche markets are too small for them to be bother with. If your niche is defined too widely, like travel, or education, or photography, for example, you may face threats from large aggregators, but this can be countered, in part, by design, which we?ll look at over the coming week.

If you don?t have a high degree of specialization, and your business relies solely on beating similar business by doing more/better SEO, then you?re vulnerable to the upstream traffic provider - the search engine. By solving a niche problem in a unique way, you change the supply/demand equation. The number of competing suppliers becomes ?one? or ?a few?. If you build up sufficient demand for your unique service, then the search engines must show you, else they look deficient.

Of course, it?s difficult to find a unique niche. If it?s profitable, then you can be sure you?ll soon have competition. However, consider than many big companies started out as niche offerings. Dell, for example. They were unique because they sold cheap PCs, built from components, and were made to order. Dell started in a campus dormitory room.

What?s the alternative? Entering a crowded market of me-too offerings? A lot of SEO falls into this category and it can be a flawed approach in terms of strategy if the underlying business isn't positioned correctly. When the search engines have shifted their algorithms in the past, many of these businesses have gone up in smoke as a direct result because the only thing differentiating them was their SERP position.

By taking a step back, focusing on relationships and specific, unique value propositions, business can avoid this problem.

Advantages Of Specialization

Specialization makes it easier to know and deeply understand a customers needs. The data you collect by doing so would be data a large data aggregator would have difficulty obtaining, as it is nuanced and specific. It?s less likely to be part of an easily identified big-data pattern, so the information is less likely to be commodified. This also helps foster a durable relationship.

Once you start finely segmenting markets, especially new and rising markets, you?ll gain unique insights and acquire unique data. You gain a high degree of focus. Check out ?Business Lessons From Pumpkin Hackers?. You may be capable of doing a lot of different things, and many opportunities will come up that fall slightly outside your specialization, but there are considerable benefits in ignoring them and focusing on growing the one, significant opportunity.

Respin

Are you having trouble competing against other consultants? Consider respinning so you serve a specific niche. To specialize, an SEO might build a site all about dentistry and then offer leads and advertising to dentists, dental suppliers, dental schools, and so on. Such a site would build up a lot of unique and actionable data about the traffic in this niche. They might then use this platform as a springboard to offering SEO services to pre-qualified dentists in different regions, given dentistry is a location dependent activity, and therefore it is easy for the SEO to get around potential conflicts of interest. By specializing in this way, the SEO will likely understand their customer better than the generalist. By understanding the customer better, and gaining a track record with a specific type of customer, it gives the SEO an advantage when competing with other SEO firms for dentists SEO work. If you were a dentist wanting SEO services, who's pitch stands out? The generalist SEO agency, or the SEO who specializes in web marketing for dentists?

Similarly, you could be a generalist web developer, or you could be the guy who specializes in payment gateways for mobile. Instead of being a web designer, how about being someone who specializes in themes for Oxwall? And so on. Think about ways you can re-spin a general thing you do into a specific thing for which there is demand, but little supply.

One way of getting a feel for areas to specialize in is to use Adwords as a research tool. For example, ?oxwall themes? has almost no Adwords competition and around 1,300 searches per month. Let?s say 10% of that figure are willing to pay for themes. That?s 130 potential customers. Let?s say a specialist designer converts 10% of those, that?s 13 projects per month. Let?s say those numbers are only half right. That?s still 6-7 projects per month.

Having decided to specialize in a clearly defined, narrow market segment, and having good product or service knowledge and clear focus, you are much more likely to be able to spot the emerging pain points of your customers. Having this information will help you stand out from the crowd. Your pitches, your website copy, and your problem identification and solutions will make it harder for more generalist competitors to sound like they don?t know what they are talking about. This is the unique selling proposition (USP), of course. It?s based on the notion of quality. Reputation then spreads. It?s difficult for a siren server to insert itself between word of mouth gained from good reputation.

Differentiation is the aim of all businesses, no matter what the size. So, if one of your problems is being too reliant on search results, take a step back and determine if your offer is specialized enough. If you?re offering the same as your competitors, then you?re highly vulnerable to algorithm shifts. It?s hard to ?own? generalist keyword terms, and a weak strategic position if your entire business success is reliant upon doing so.

Specialization lowers the cost of doing business. An obvious example can be seen in PPC/SEO. If you target a general term, it can be expensive to maintain position. In some cases, it?s simply impossible unless you?re already a major player. If you specialize, your marketing focus can be narrower, which means your marketing cost is lower. You also gain supply-side advantages, as you don?t need to source a wide range of goods, or hire as many people with different skillsets, as the generalist must do.

Once you?re delivering clear and unique value, you can justify higher prices. It?s difficult for buyers to make direct comparisons, because, if you have a high degree of specialization, there should be few available to them. If you are delivering that much more value, you deserve to be paid for it. The less direct competition you have, the less price sensitive your offering. If you offer the same price as other offerings, and your only advantage is SERP positioning, then that?s a vulnerable business positioning strategy.

If you properly execute a specialization strategy, you tend to become more lean and agile. You may be able to compete with larger competitors as you can react quicker than they can. Chances are, your processes are more streamlined as they are geared towards doing one specific thing. The small, specialized business is unlikely to have the chain of command and management structure that can slow decision making down in organizations that have a broader focus.

Specialized businesses tend to be more productive than their generalist counterparts as their detailed knowledge of a narrow range of processes and markets mean they can produce more with less. The more bases you cover, the more organisational aspects come into play, and the slower the process becomes.

In Summary

There are benefits in being a generalist, of course, however, if you?re a small operator and find yourself highly vulnerable to the whims of search engines, then it can pay to take a step back, tighten your focus, and try to dominate more specialist niches. The more general you go, the more competition you tend to encounter. The more competition you encounter in the SERPs, the harder you have to fight, and the more vulnerable you are to big data aggregators. The highly specialized are far more likely to fly under the radar, and are less vulnerable to big-brand bias in major verticals. The key to not being overly dependent on search engines is to develop enduring relationships, and specialization based on a strong, unique value proposition is one way of doing so.

Next article, we?ll look at differentiation by UX design and user experience.

Categories: 

Source: http://www.seobook.com/specialization-strategy

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

Social Media Optimization with WordPress SEO by Yoast

Our WordPress SEO plugin handles optimization of your WordPress site for search engines and we dare say it does a very good job of it. Most of that is technical optimization, like our XML sitemap functionality and aids in content optimization, like your page analysis function. But there’s more to SEO than that. You need…

Social Media Optimization with WordPress SEO by Yoast is a post by on Yoast - The Art & Science of Website Optimization. A good WordPress blog needs good hosting, you don't want your blog to be slow, or, even worse, down, do you? Check out my thoughts on WordPress hosting!

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/joostdevalk/~3/ddq3zyZ60YM/

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

Bing Ads Express Manages Paid Search for Local Businesses

Bing has launched a new automated paid search program in 25 U.S. cities that makes it easier for local businesses to start PPC advertising. Claim your business, write an ad, select where you want it to run, and Bing's algorithms will do the rest.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/sewblog/~3/EV-KUBfIawA/Bing-Ads-Express-Manages-Paid-Search-for-Local-Businesses

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

6 Tips for Keeping Your Existing Customers Happy

One of the things that has always mystified me about internet marketers is that they seem to think that once they have found a customer, they don?t need to do anything in order to keep them. All too often, I see people who should know better deliberately destroying their e-mail lists either because they don?t […]

The post 6 Tips for Keeping Your Existing Customers Happy appeared first on Quantum SEO Labs.

Source: http://www.quantumseolabs.com/blog/marketing/6-tips-keeping-existing-customers-happy/

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

How to Avoid Drowning in Content (and 5 free tools to help) by @RyanHanley_com

Ever taken in a mouthful of water by accident? � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � �� Maybe you fell off the dock at a lake or didn’t jump high enough to get over a big wave at the beach… …if you’ve ever wanted to breathe […]

Author information

Ryan Hanley
Ryan Hanley is the founder of Content Warfare, a community and consulting firm dedicated to helping businesses grow their audience online. He is also producer to the Content Warfare Podcast, one of iTunes fastest growing podcast dedicated to content strategy. Connect with on Google+

The post How to Avoid Drowning in Content (and 5 free tools to help) by @RyanHanley_com appeared first on Search Engine Journal.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/SearchEngineJournal/~3/3Z-L4VJcPZE/

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

Online Marketing News: Viral Anger, Google Tosses Cookies, Bing Facelift, Offline YouTubing, Pinterest Adds Ads

17 Pinterest Metrics Every Brand Should Track ? If you?ve ever needed a cheat sheet on the top metrics to track, Branderati and Shareroot created this colorful and helpful Infographic. For more detail, visit SocialMedia Today who created a text version of the content. Google Buys Bump to Share Anything Between Your Phone and Laptop [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/OnlineMarketingSEOBlog/~3/dPfrIBYVJxk/

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

Creating Evergreen Interactive Content Using Live Data by @MarcusATaylor

Interactive live content is becoming an increasingly popular form of content marketing for site owners. With the ever-increasing need for brands to engage their audiences with high quality content, interactive live data to create content is becoming a weapon of choice for many brands to stand out from the crowd. But what makes live content […]

Author information

Marcus Taylor
Marcus Taylor is the founder of Venture Harbour, a digital marketing agency specialising in supporting brands in the entertainment industries.

The post Creating Evergreen Interactive Content Using Live Data by @MarcusATaylor appeared first on Search Engine Journal.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/SearchEngineJournal/~3/lOEn62Y4y6U/

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

Are You Wasting 25% Of Your PPC Budget? New Study Says You Might Be

A typical small business advertiser spends $1,200 a month on PPC, but wastes 25 percent, on average, according to a new WordStream study of 500 small and medium business Google AdWords accounts. Here are five optimization tips to avoid wasted spend.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/sewblog/~3/LaykF-ZhPWA/Are-You-Wasting-25-Of-Your-PPC-Budget-New-Study-Says-You-Might-Be

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

CMS, Commerce and Data: The 3 Pillars of Digital Experience

It?s an exciting time in which we live, with an amazing array of interfaces and ecosystems offering up new ways to connect and converse with customers. In the world of digital marketing, frontiers are shifting as technology becomes more ubiquitous and our relationship with digital devices ever more personalized. Behind every remarkable and successful connected [...]

Source: http://www.getelastic.com/cms-commerce-and-data-the-3-pillars-of-digital-experience/

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

Everything You Ever Wanted to Know about Split Testing

Okay, so maybe this isn?t going to be quite everything about split testing. I mean after all, in 1,000 words, there?s only so much I can talk about. However, I think that our readers will get quite a bit out of this examination of split testing. So, let?s get started. What�Is�Split�Testing�Anyway? If you already know […]

The post Everything You Ever Wanted to Know about Split Testing appeared first on Quantum SEO Labs.

Source: http://www.quantumseolabs.com/blog/marketing/wanted-split-testing/

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

Specialization Strategy

Last week, I reviewed ?Who Owns The Future?? by Jaron Lanier. It?s a book about the impact of technology on the middle class.

I think the reality Janier describes in that book is self-evident - that the middle class is being gouged out by large data aggregators - but it?s hard, having read it and accepted his thesis, not to feel the future of the web might be a little bleak. Laniers solution of distributing value back into the chain via reverse linking is elegant, but is probably unlikely to happen, and even if it does, unlikely to happen in a time frame that is of benefit to people in business now.

So, let?s take a look at what can be done.

There are two options open to someone who has recognized the problem. Either figure out how to jump ahead of it, or stay still and get flattened by it.

Getting Ahead Of The SEO Pack

If your business model relies on the whims of a large data aggregator - and I hope you realize it really, really shouldn't if at all humanly possible - then, you need to get a few steps ahead of it, or out of its path.

There's a lot of good advice in Matt Cutt's latest video:

It could be argued that video has a subtext of the taste of things to come, but even at face value, Cutts advice is sound. You should make something compelling, provide utility, and provide a good user experience. Make design a fundamental piece of your approach. In so doing, you?ll keep people coming back to your site. Too much focus on isolated SEO tactics, such as link building, may lead to a loss of focus on the bigger picture.

In the emerging environment, the big picture partly means ?avoid getting crushed by a siren server?, although that's my characterization, and unlikely to be Cutts'! Remember, creating quality, relevant content didn?t prevent people from being stomped by Panda and Penguin. All the link building you?re doing today won?t help you when a search engine makes a significant change to the way they count and value links.

And that day is coming.

Are You Flying A Helicopter?

Johnon articulately poses part of the problem:

Fast forward and we?re all spending our days flying these things (computers). But are we doing any heavy lifting? Are we getting the job done, saving the day, enabling the team? Or are we just ?flying around? like one of those toy indoor helicopters, putzing around the room dodging lamps and co-workers? monitors until we run out of battery power and drop to the floor? And we call it work.?...More than ever, we have ways to keep ?busy? with SEO. The old stand-byes ?keyword research? and ?competitive analysis? and ?SERP analysis? can keep us busy day after day. With TRILLIONS of links in place on the world wide web, we could link analyze for weeks if left alone to our cockpits. And I suppose every one of you SEOs out there could rationalize and justify the effort and expense (and many of you agency types do just that.. for a living). The helicopter is now cheap, fast, and mobile. The fuel is cheap as well, but it turns out there are two kinds of fuel for SEO helicopters. The kind the machine needs to fly (basic software and electricity), and the kind we need to actually do any work with it (seo data sets, seo tools, and accurate and effective information). The latter fuel is not cheap at all. And it?s been getting more and more expensive. Knowing how to fly one of these things is not worth much any more. Knowing how to get the work done is

A lot of SEO work falls into this category.

There is a lot of busy-ness. A lot of people do things that appear to make a difference. Some people spend entire days appearing to make a difference. Then they appear to make a difference again tomorrow.

But the question should always be asked ?are they achieving anything in business terms??

It doesn't matter if we call it SEO, inbound marketing, social media marketing, or whatever the new name for it is next week, it is the business results that count. Is this activity growing a business and positioning it well for the future?

If it?s an activity that isn't getting results, then it?s a waste of time. In fact, it?s worse than a waste of time. It presents an opportunity cost. Those people could have been doing something productive. They could have helped solve real problems. They could have been building something that endures. All the linking building, content creation, keyword research and tweets with the sole intention of manipulating a search engine to produce higher rankings isn't going to mean much when the search engine shifts their algorithms significantly.

And that day is coming.

Pivot

To avoid getting crushed by a search engine, you could take one of two paths.

You could spread the risk. Reverse-engineer the shifting algorithms, with multiple sites, and hope to stay ahead of them that way. Become the gang of moles - actually, a "labour" of moles, in proppa Enlush - they can?t whack. Or, at least, a labour of moles they can't whack all at the same time! This is a war of attrition approach and it is best suited to aggressive, pure-play search marketing where the domains are disposable.

However, if you are building a web presence that must endure, and aggressive tactics don?t suit your model, then SEO, or inbound, or whatever it is called next week, should only ever be one tactic within a much wider business strategy. To rely on SEO means being vulnerable to the whims of a search engine, a provider over which you have no control. When a marketing tactic gets diminished, or no longer works, it pays to have a model that allows you to shrug it off as an inconvenience, not a major disaster.

The key is to foster durable and valuable relationships, as opposed to providing information that can be commodified.

There are a number of ways to achieve this, but one good way is to offer something unique, as opposed to being one provider among many very similar providers. Beyond very basic SEO, the value proposition of SEO is to rank higher than similar competitors, and thereby gain more visibility. This value proposition is highly dependent on a supplier over which we have no control. Another way of looking at it is to reduce the competition to none by focusing on specialization.

Specialize, Not Generalize

Specialization involves working in a singular, narrowly defined niche. It is sustainable because it involves maintaining a superior, unique position relative to competitors.

Specialization is a great strategy for the web, because the web has made markets global. Doing something highly niche can be done at scale by extending the market globally, a strategy that can be difficult to achieve at a local market level. Previously, generalists could prosper by virtue of geographic limits. Department stores, for example. These days, those departments stores need to belong to massive chains, and enjoy significant economies of scale, in order to prosper.

Specialization is also defensive. The more specialized you are, they less likely the large data aggregators will be interested in screwing you. Niche markets are too small for them to be bother with. If your niche is defined too widely, like travel, or education, or photography, for example, you may face threats from large aggregators, but this can be countered, in part, by design, which we?ll look at over the coming week.

If you don?t have a high degree of specialization, and your business relies solely on beating similar business by doing more/better SEO, then you?re vulnerable to the upstream traffic provider - the search engine. By solving a niche problem in a unique way, you change the supply/demand equation. The number of competing suppliers becomes ?one? or ?a few?. If you build up sufficient demand for your unique service, then the search engines must show you, else they look deficient.

Of course, it?s difficult to find a unique niche. If it?s profitable, then you can be sure you?ll soon have competition. However, consider than many big companies started out as niche offerings. Dell, for example. They were unique because they sold cheap PCs, built from components, and were made to order. Dell started in a campus dormitory room.

What?s the alternative? Entering a crowded market of me-too offerings? A lot of SEO falls into this category and it can be a flawed approach in terms of strategy if the underlying business isn't positioned correctly. When the search engines have shifted their algorithms in the past, many of these businesses have gone up in smoke as a direct result because the only thing differentiating them was their SERP position.

By taking a step back, focusing on relationships and specific, unique value propositions, business can avoid this problem.

Advantages Of Specialization

Specialization makes it easier to know and deeply understand a customers needs. The data you collect by doing so would be data a large data aggregator would have difficulty obtaining, as it is nuanced and specific. It?s less likely to be part of an easily identified big-data pattern, so the information is less likely to be commodified. This also helps foster a durable relationship.

Once you start finely segmenting markets, especially new and rising markets, you?ll gain unique insights and acquire unique data. You gain a high degree of focus. Check out ?Business Lessons From Pumpkin Hackers?. You may be capable of doing a lot of different things, and many opportunities will come up that fall slightly outside your specialization, but there are considerable benefits in ignoring them and focusing on growing the one, significant opportunity.

Respin

Are you having trouble competing against other consultants? Consider respinning so you serve a specific niche. To specialize, an SEO might build a site all about dentistry and then offer leads and advertising to dentists, dental suppliers, dental schools, and so on. Such a site would build up a lot of unique and actionable data about the traffic in this niche. They might then use this platform as a springboard to offering SEO services to pre-qualified dentists in different regions, given dentistry is a location dependent activity, and therefore it is easy for the SEO to get around potential conflicts of interest. By specializing in this way, the SEO will likely understand their customer better than the generalist. By understanding the customer better, and gaining a track record with a specific type of customer, it gives the SEO an advantage when competing with other SEO firms for dentists SEO work. If you were a dentist wanting SEO services, who's pitch stands out? The generalist SEO agency, or the SEO who specializes in web marketing for dentists?

Similarly, you could be a generalist web developer, or you could be the guy who specializes in payment gateways for mobile. Instead of being a web designer, how about being someone who specializes in themes for Oxwall? And so on. Think about ways you can re-spin a general thing you do into a specific thing for which there is demand, but little supply.

One way of getting a feel for areas to specialize in is to use Adwords as a research tool. For example, ?oxwall themes? has almost no Adwords competition and around 1,300 searches per month. Let?s say 10% of that figure are willing to pay for themes. That?s 130 potential customers. Let?s say a specialist designer converts 10% of those, that?s 13 projects per month. Let?s say those numbers are only half right. That?s still 6-7 projects per month.

Having decided to specialize in a clearly defined, narrow market segment, and having good product or service knowledge and clear focus, you are much more likely to be able to spot the emerging pain points of your customers. Having this information will help you stand out from the crowd. Your pitches, your website copy, and your problem identification and solutions will make it harder for more generalist competitors to sound like they don?t know what they are talking about. This is the unique selling proposition (USP), of course. It?s based on the notion of quality. Reputation then spreads. It?s difficult for a siren server to insert itself between word of mouth gained from good reputation.

Differentiation is the aim of all businesses, no matter what the size. So, if one of your problems is being too reliant on search results, take a step back and determine if your offer is specialized enough. If you?re offering the same as your competitors, then you?re highly vulnerable to algorithm shifts. It?s hard to ?own? generalist keyword terms, and a weak strategic position if your entire business success is reliant upon doing so.

Specialization lowers the cost of doing business. An obvious example can be seen in PPC/SEO. If you target a general term, it can be expensive to maintain position. In some cases, it?s simply impossible unless you?re already a major player. If you specialize, your marketing focus can be narrower, which means your marketing cost is lower. You also gain supply-side advantages, as you don?t need to source a wide range of goods, or hire as many people with different skillsets, as the generalist must do.

Once you?re delivering clear and unique value, you can justify higher prices. It?s difficult for buyers to make direct comparisons, because, if you have a high degree of specialization, there should be few available to them. If you are delivering that much more value, you deserve to be paid for it. The less direct competition you have, the less price sensitive your offering. If you offer the same price as other offerings, and your only advantage is SERP positioning, then that?s a vulnerable business positioning strategy.

If you properly execute a specialization strategy, you tend to become more lean and agile. You may be able to compete with larger competitors as you can react quicker than they can. Chances are, your processes are more streamlined as they are geared towards doing one specific thing. The small, specialized business is unlikely to have the chain of command and management structure that can slow decision making down in organizations that have a broader focus.

Specialized businesses tend to be more productive than their generalist counterparts as their detailed knowledge of a narrow range of processes and markets mean they can produce more with less. The more bases you cover, the more organisational aspects come into play, and the slower the process becomes.

In Summary

There are benefits in being a generalist, of course, however, if you?re a small operator and find yourself highly vulnerable to the whims of search engines, then it can pay to take a step back, tighten your focus, and try to dominate more specialist niches. The more general you go, the more competition you tend to encounter. The more competition you encounter in the SERPs, the harder you have to fight, and the more vulnerable you are to big data aggregators. The highly specialized are far more likely to fly under the radar, and are less vulnerable to big-brand bias in major verticals. The key to not being overly dependent on search engines is to develop enduring relationships, and specialization based on a strong, unique value proposition is one way of doing so.

Next article, we?ll look at differentiation by UX design and user experience.

Categories: 

Source: http://www.seobook.com/specialization-strategy

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

Recover from a Google penalty & learn ecommerce SEO best practice: see @Tim_Grice at #BrightonSEO

You can find Branded3?s Head of Search Tim Grice at Brighton SEO next month, where he?ll be running an unmissable one-day workshop on recovering from

Source: http://www.branded3.com/blogs/recover-google-penalty-learn-ecommerce-seo-best-practice-see-tim_grice-brightonseo/

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

Why your tests aren?t scientific

I read a lot of articles about A/B tests and I keep being surprised by the differences in testing that I see. I think it?s safe to say: most conversion rate optimization testing is not scientific. It will simply take up too much space to explain what I mean�exactly by being scientific, but I’ll publish…

Why your tests aren’t scientific is a post by on Yoast - The Art & Science of Website Optimization. A good WordPress blog needs good hosting, you don't want your blog to be slow, or, even worse, down, do you? Check out my thoughts on WordPress hosting!

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/joostdevalk/~3/Jb_LHGc38Jo/

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

Check Out the Choices on the Marketing Pilgrim Job Board

There are two primary choices in life: to accept conditions as they exist, or accept the responsibility for changing them.�- Denis Waitley The�Marketing Pilgrim Internet Marketing Job Board�is a great place to find those opportunities that will help you show what you can do. You can find the full listings�here. If you are looking for […]

Source: http://www.marketingpilgrim.com/2013/10/check-out-the-choices-on-the-marketing-pilgrim-job-board.html

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

Mea Culpa on a bad update + lessons learned

Last night I pushed out an update to our WordPress SEO plugin, version 1.4.8. It included a ton of changes including support for the new author stuff Facebook announced yesterday. We had been testing all the other changes in that release for a while already and all seemed fine, so I was baffled when I…

Mea Culpa on a bad update + lessons learned is a post by on Yoast - The Art & Science of Website Optimization. A good WordPress blog needs good hosting, you don't want your blog to be slow, or, even worse, down, do you? Check out my thoughts on WordPress hosting!

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/joostdevalk/~3/y5KyAH1_II0/

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

Google Keyword(Not Provided): High Double Digit Percent

Most Organic Search Data is Now Hidden

Over the past couple years since its launch, Google's keyword (not provided) has received quite a bit of exposure, with people discussing all sorts of tips on estimating its impact & finding alternate sources of data (like competitive research tools & webmaster tools).

What hasn't received anywhere near enough exposure (and should be discussed daily) is that the sole purpose of the change was anti-competitive abuse from the market monopoly in search.

The site which provided a count for (not provided) recently displayed over 40% of queries as (not provided), but that percentage didn't include the large percent of mobile search users that were showing no referrals at all & were showing up as direct website visitors. On July 30, Google started showing referrals for many of those mobile searchers, using keyword (not provided).

According to research by RKG, mobile click prices are nearly 60% of desktop click prices, while mobile search click values are only 22% of desktop click prices. Until Google launched enhanced AdWords campaigns they understated the size of mobile search by showing many mobile searchers as direct visitors. But now that AdWords advertisers were opted into mobile ads (and have to go through some tricky hoops to figure out how to disable it), Google has every incentive to promote what a big growth channel mobile search is for their business.

Looking at the analytics data for some non-SEO websites over the past 4 days I get Google referring an average of 86% of the 26,233 search visitors, with 13,413 being displayed as keyword (not provided).

Hiding The Value of SEO

Google is not only hiding half of their own keyword referral data, but they are hiding so much more than half that even when you mix in Bing and Yahoo! you still get over 50% of the total hidden.

Google's 86% of the 26,233 searches is 22,560 searches.

Keyword (not provided) being shown for 13,413 is 59% of 22,560. That means Google is hiding at least 59% of the keyword data for organic search. While they are passing a significant share of mobile search referrers, there is still a decent chunk that is not accounted for in the change this past week.

Not passing keywords is just another way for Google to increase the perceived risk & friction of SEO, while making SEO seem less necessary, which has been part of "the plan" for years now.

Buy AdWords ads and the data gets sent. Rank organically and most the data is hidden.

When one digs into keyword referral data & ad blocking, there is a bad odor emitting from the GooglePlex.

Subsidizing Scammers Ripping People Off

A number of the low end "solutions" providers scamming small businesses looking for SEO are taking advantage of the opportunity that keyword (not provided) offers them. A buddy of mine took over SEO for a site that had showed absolutely zero sales growth after a year of 15% monthly increase in search traffic. Looking at the on-site changes, the prior "optimizers" did nothing over the time period. Looking at the backlinks, nothing there either.

So what happened?

Well, when keyword data isn't shown, it is pretty easy for someone to run a clickbot to show keyword (not provided) Google visitors & claim that they were "doing SEO."

And searchers looking for SEO will see those same scammers selling bogus solutions in AdWords. Since they are selling a non-product / non-service, their margins are pretty high. Endorsed by Google as the best, they must be good.

Or something like that:

Google does prefer some types of SEO over others, but their preference isn?t cast along the black/white divide you imagine. It has nothing to do with spam or the integrity of their search results. Google simply prefers ineffective SEO over SEO that works. No question about it. They abhor any strategies that allow guys like you and me to walk into a business and offer a significantly better ROI than AdWords.

This is no different than the YouTube videos "recommended for you" that teach you how to make money on AdWords by promoting Clickbank products which are likely to get your account flagged and banned. Ooops.

Anti-competitive Funding Blocking Competing Ad Networks

John Andrews pointed to Google's blocking (then funding) of AdBlock Plus as an example of their monopolistic inhibiting of innovation.

sponsoring Adblock is changing the market conditions. Adblock can use the money provided by Google to make sure any non-Google ad is blocked more efficiently. They can also advertise their addon better, provide better support, etc. Google sponsoring Adblock directly affects Adblock's ability to block the adverts of other companies around the world. - RyanZAG

Turn AdBlock Plus on & search for credit cards on Google and get ads.

Do that same search over at Bing & get no ads.

How does a smaller search engine or a smaller ad network compete with Google on buying awareness, building a network AND paying the other kickback expenses Google forces into the marketplace?

They can't.

Which is part of the reason a monopoly in search can be used to control the rest of the online ecosystem.

Buying Browser Marketshare

Already the #1 web browser, Google Chrome buys marketshare with shady one-click bundling in software security installs.

If you do that stuff in organic search or AdWords, you might be called a spammer employing deceptive business practices.

When Google does it, it's "good for the user."

Vampire Sucking The Lifeblood Out of SEO

Google tells Chrome users "not signed in to Chrome (You're missing out - sign in)." Login to Chrome & searchers don't pass referral information. Google also promotes Firefox blocking the passage of keyword referral data in search, but when it comes to their own cookies being at risk, that is unacceptable: "Google is pulling out all the stops in its campaign to drive Chrome installs, which is understandable given Microsoft and Mozilla's stance on third-party cookies, the lifeblood of Google's display-ad business."

What do we call an entity that considers something "its lifeblood" while sucking it out of others?

Categories: 

Source: http://www.seobook.com/adwords-provided

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

Analysing The New Softer Panda Algorithm & Authority Sites

Back in May Matt Cutts talked about how Google was looking to use additional quality signals to help certain authority sites rank higher in a

Source: http://www.branded3.com/blogs/analysing-the-new-softer-panda-algorithm-authority-sites/

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

Securing the Future of SEO: Global Brands & 5 '(Not Provided)' Solutions

SEO has changed forever. Authority, relevancy, and influence will dictate how we optimize going forward. Future SEO revolves around these three centers of excellence. Here are five top tips from brands on dealing with secure search.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/sewblog/~3/WWhi8g1Skfs/Securing-the-Future-of-SEO-Global-Brands-5-Not-Provided-Solutions

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

Twitter Analytics: A Beginner's Guide

You'll find some very useful information in Twitter Analytics, including timeline activity, follower demographics, and website analytics. Here's what you can learn from the official Twitter Analytics, as well as some alternative options.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/sewblog/~3/pqDFuqRMoVo/Twitter-Analytics-A-Beginners-Guide

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

What Part of A Web Page Gets the Most Attention? [Infographic]

Chartbeat unveiled findings this week on where Web users’ attention falls on publisher pages — it’s not the top of the page, but the space just above the fold that gets the most eyeball action. While this has direct application for advertising, it should catch our attention when thinking about placement of calls to action [...]

Source: http://www.getelastic.com/what-part-of-a-web-page-gets-the-most-attention-infographic/

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

Conversion And Optimization Strategy With Syed Balkhi (Video) by @skooloflife

In this interview I catch up with Syed Balkhi from WP-Beginnger. He’s been building web sites since he was 12 years old. Here are some f the highlights from our chat:   How to Make the Transition from Small Clients to Big Ones Why Tutorial Based Content Is so Valuable The Role of Positive Psychology […]

Author information

Srinivas Rao
Srinivas Rao is the host and cofounder of BlogcastFM where he's interviewed over 300 bloggers, authors, and entrepreneurs. Pick up his free guide on How to Repurpose Content for Profit and Fame.

The post Conversion And Optimization Strategy With Syed Balkhi (Video) by @skooloflife appeared first on Search Engine Journal.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/SearchEngineJournal/~3/c5Kylo8GUOo/

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here