Friday, January 29, 2016

Title Tags, New Webmaster Guidelines, and More: Weekly Forum Update

seochat-wmw-cre8asite-threadwatch-roundupOne of the biggest pieces of news this week is that Google updated their Webmaster Guidelines page. Some changes were subtle and others were quite loud.

Our communities have been discussing this as well as John Mueller’s response that title tags “are not the most critical part of a page,” in a recent webmaster hangout.

On Cre8asiteforums, user iamlost has a great summary of what has lead Twitter to its recent financial troubles, and on SEO Chat users had an interesting discussion about direct answers in SERPs.

Let’s get to the breakdown!

John Mueller: Title Tags “Not the Most Critical Part of a Page”

You may not be surprised at all to hear this from Mr. Mueller. As Robert Charlton says on WebmasterWorld,

“…John’s comment about keeping titles ‘short and to the point’ is completely consistent with the trends that some of us have been observing.”

But the issue isn’t whether title tags are “critical,” but whether or not they’ve been deprecated.

Charlton goes on to say that he’s “been seeing enough pages ranking with bad or missing title tags,” that it leads to this question. And besides that, this announcement has opened up old wounds about how much control Google has over your SERPs listings. WebmasterWorld user aristotle writes,

“Re-writing page titles is one of the worst things that Google does. The author of the article chooses the title that best conveys what the article is about, then Google’s algorithm changes it to something that’s less accurate, and sometimes even totally misleading.”

Check this thread out for a familiar debate with new facts and terms.

Google Paid a Hefty Price for Default iOS Search

Specifically, about one billion dollars! Yowza! That figure was recently released in court documents for a case between Oracle and Google. It was almost buried by Google and Apple, but thankfully some journalists were able to get to it first and report it to the public.

Besides the flat fee, Google also pays Apple a revenue share of all ads clicked from Google SERPs. Certainly sheds a little light on how the biggest names in tech do business!

When the Only Inbound Links Come From Social Sites, What Do You Do?

Over on Cre8asiteforums, users are studying analytics data for “two very different local websites,” where the only inbound links come from a social network. User bobbb has some pragmatic advice:

“I know someone will reply do not put all your eggs in the same basket… Oh, and diversify. But if it works (for now) why fix it?”

Lots of great advice on analyzing traffic in relation to conversions and goals in this thread!

Direct Answers, the Knowledge Graph, and Their Impact on SEO

Since the Knowledge Graph was announced, SEOs have been wary of it. The potential exists, they say, for Google to steal traffic away from your site. Why would they click on a link if they can get their answer right in SERPs? B

ut on the other hand, a direct answer provides a link at the top of the SERPs… and Google says that whatever clicks you lose are negligible. Users of SEO Chat are debating what the real impact of direct answers are in this thread.

It’s a well-treaded discussion, but I haven’t seen it in quite a while – the focus lately has been more on Panda, Penguin, RankBrain, et. al. So it’s good to see this presented again with the latest information.

Facebook Opens Up its Audience Network

Facebook’s Audience Network, which allows advertisers to place ads in non-Facebook apps, is now in beta. WebmasterWorld user martinibuster calls the mobile ads,

“Appealing, not trashy. Look great on mobile.”

Facebook has been making some major bank with this network, and now it seems like a promising competitor to existing platforms. Give this thread a read and follow along as WebmasterWorld users test it out!

Google Has Updated Their Webmaster Guidelines

Surprisingly, the quality guidelines have been barely touched. But the Webmaster Guidelines received a slew of changes to make them more current for the state of SEO in 2016.

Of particular interest are the many changes to how Google says it handles images, alt text, and sitemaps. Check out Threadwatch for the details!

Twitter, Déjà Vu Titanic All Over Again

User iamlost shares a great article by Olivier Blanchard about the current state of Twitter. As iamlost summarizes it,

“If you’ve gone through a company ‘near death experience’… you have training aka experience to guide you the next time; if not, you need to step back, take a deep breath, and get back to basics… The thrashing Twitter aka Twitter’s CEO is doing is hastening its death…”

It’s true that Twitter is making many changes – some of them very superficial seeming. Is this the beginning of the end? How can Twitter correct their course?

Problems With Rankings? We’ve All Had ‘Em

Sometimes a commonly asked question results in a thread bursting with expertise. That’s what happened here when a user asked for help on SEO Chat.

User adenphoto undertook a total rebranding of their online presence recently. They used to do quite well, and would like to reach their previous heights. One of SEO Chat’s moderators, ThomasHarvey, has some on-page SEO advice that everyone approaching a rebrand can learn from.

Please subscribe to our weekly forum news here:

View my Flipboard Magazine.

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3 Resources to Help Invigorate Your Standard Content Routine

Copyblogger Collection - refresh your content creation routine

You’re probably familiar with “art imitating life” and “life imitating art.” I know I am.

We can apply this idea to content marketing, as well.

Your content may imitate life if it’s engaging, entertaining, and useful. You take recognizable, relatable elements from life and infuse them into your content to connect with your audience members’ worldviews.

But how can life imitate your content?

Well, winning content marketing is often the product of trying different experiments to see what works best for your message and your business. These experiments help you get to know your audience better and may help you uncover a new, more effective content strategy.

You see this in life when you try a new activity and broaden your outlook of what you thought was possible.

Today, we’re going to focus on techniques that could expand the types of content you offer your audience. This week’s Copyblogger Collection is a series of three handpicked articles that will show you:

  • How to use content marketing to sell your creative work
  • How to take your Pinterest marketing to the next level
  • How to determine if you should publish a curated email newsletter

As you work your way through the material below, think of the following lessons as a mini content creation course.


A Simple Content Marketing Strategy for Creative Folks

creative-content-strategy

In A Simple Content Marketing Strategy for Creative Folks, Rafal Tomal admits that he promoted his business the wrong way for a long time.

Just like many designers and artists, he built a portfolio and posted his work around the web. Then, he waited for feedback.

The problem with this method was the assumption that people — who are not design experts — would recognize his work as superior to the work of other designers and artists. Rafal soon realized he should focus on content marketing instead.

You’ll want to find out about the changes Rafal made to his strategy because it produced stellar results: with just six blog posts, he grew his email list from 800 subscribers to more than 5,300 subscribers between June 2014 and February 2015.


5 New Ways to Take Your Pinterest Marketing to the Next Level

get-more-from-pinterest

Beth Hayden wants to keep content marketers informed about the world of Pinterest marketing and the latest changes to the platform.

5 New Ways to Take Your Pinterest Marketing to the Next Level outlines how to take advantage of new developments on Pinterest.

The Pinterest user base keeps growing exponentially every year, so it’s likely your readers and prospects are already on Pinterest looking for the types of content and products you produce.


Do You Have What It Takes to Publish a Curated Email Newsletter? [Infographic]

curated-email-newsletter

Curating is essentially sifting through a mountain of information on a specific topic (news, health, HTML, entertainment, lifestyle, content marketing, etc.) and plucking out the best content.

To create a curated email newsletter, you package that curated content into an email message, add a brief commentary about each link, and deliver it to your email list subscribers.

Some do it daily. Others do it weekly. But why go through all the trouble? And do you have what it takes to publish a curated email newsletter?

Demian Farnworth will help you answer those questions and decide if this type of content is right for you … with a little guidance from his Aunt Ona.

Move one step closer to your desired results

Review this post (and save it for future reference) as you think about ways to produce the best content experience for your prospects and customers.

A small change in your standard content routine could move you one step closer to the results you’ve been waiting to see.

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Thursday, January 28, 2016

Introducing The Digital CMO: Corporate Marketing for Those Who Live in the Future

what's coming in corporate content marketing

It was somewhere in the middle of a conversation with Brian Clark at one of Content Marketing World’s parties when it all became clear to me:

While Rainmaker.FM has tremendous educational and inspirational assets for entrepreneurs, solopreneurs, and most general marketers, there’s no podcast that caters to the corporate marketer.

That’s not just true on Rainmaker.FM. In general, there isn’t a lot of blogging and podcasting in the corporate marketing space — whether that’s because of a gag order from the legal department or the time it takes to wrangle multiple agencies and channels.

But corporate marketers need help too.

Corporate content marketing strategies that work

In my day job, I run Speakeasy, a content marketing, social media, and promotions agency. Every day I talk with corporate marketers whose challenges and opportunities multiply with every new technique and channel available to them.

Whether it’s programmatic advertising; synthesizing content, SEO, and conversion; attribution modeling; or just getting all seven of their specialist agencies marching in the same general direction — today’s corporate marketer needs a lot of information and doesn’t necessarily have time to seek it out or consume it.

The corner office, or even the cube with a little window, can be a lonely place.

Engage with top corporate marketers

thedigitalcmoOn The Digital CMO we’re going to make it a little less lonely by helping you engage with top corporate marketers in a wide variety of B2C and B2B companies.

We’ll celebrate their wins, learn from their struggles, and learn the strategies that are working today.

Each week, we’ll start with a lightning-round review of hot news and topics in brand marketing for the week. Then we’ll settle in for a candid chat with our featured guest, who will be a senior-level corporate marketer.

We’ll be frank, informative, and challenging.

Get your ticket to the boardroom

Whether you’re a CMO or an executive-in-training, you won’t want to miss a single episode of The Digital CMO.

Subscribe to The Digital CMO on iTunes now

P.S. Want to nominate someone to appear as a guest on the show (even if that’s you)? Click here.

The post Introducing The Digital CMO: Corporate Marketing for Those Who Live in the Future appeared first on Copyblogger.



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Wednesday, January 27, 2016

Last Day to Get Inside Authority, our Advanced Content Marketing Training Program

doors close today - get advanced content marketing training and lock in your low price

At 5:00 p.m. Pacific Time today, the doors to our advanced content marketing training program, Authority, close again. We won’t reopen them until later this year.

If you’ve considered getting the support, training, and feedback that’s available to you inside this program but you haven’t joined yet, you may have a few questions.

In today’s post, I’m providing quick answers to the most common questions we’ve heard. And I’m happy to answer any follow-up questions you may have: just ask in the comments section at the end of the post.

What will I learn inside Authority?

Officially, Authority is advanced content marketing training.

But it’s much more than that.

Authority is a community of people of all stripes who use content marketing to promote something.

Inside Authority, you’ll find content marketers from every corner of the career world. Professionals like:

  • Small business owners
  • Freelance writers
  • Content consultants
  • In-house content creators

Not to mention bloggers, authors, entrepreneurs, copywriters, designers, developers, and so on.

Members stay up to date with what works now. And they get the support, encouragement, and resources they need to build their businesses with effective content marketing.

How much time do I need to dedicate to Authority every week?

We know you’re busy, so we’ve made our Authority advanced content marketing training extremely flexible.

We offer a weekly live session you can attend while it’s broadcast, or you can catch the replay whenever it’s convenient for you.

Our forum is available 24/7 for you to get answers to your most pressing questions.

Some weeks, you may not check out the session or participate at all. That’s okay: We know you get busy sometimes. We’ll be there when you have more time available.

At other times, you may discover you need to get yourself up to speed quickly on a content marketing topic. In that case, the vast Authority archive (250+ hours of education) is there to help.

You’ll discover sessions about:

  • The seven essential elements you need to make content marketing work for your business
  • How to develop a content strategy for your business
  • Productivity for content creators
  • Using images in your content marketing
  • How to use email marketing to create community and promote your products and services
  • How to format your content so it’s attractive and easy to read
  • Plus much more

Is Authority included in the Rainmaker Platform?

No, Authority is not included as part of the Rainmaker Platform.

Authority access was included as part of the Rainmaker Platform initial offering, and those who signed up while that offer was valid will continue to have access to Authority for as long as they use Rainmaker.

If you’re using content marketing to promote a business, Authority is the program for you.

The skills, support, and encouragement you’ll get when you join the community will help you build a solid business on a foundation of effective content marketing.

When will Authority open to new members again?

It won’t be anytime soon.

We don’t have an exact date — we only know it will happen later in 2016.

Why wait? Join Authority today and begin benefiting from the knowledge, feedback, and support you’ll enjoy inside the program.

How does pricing work?

Access to Authority for a full year, plus access to our extensive archive of more than 250 hours of education, comes at the low price of $399. For now.

The price will be higher the next time we open Authority. But when you become a member today, you’ll lock in the current low price for the lifetime of your membership.


Join Authority today: Doors close at 5:00 p.m. Pacific Time

Authority is our advanced content marketing education program. Inside Authority, we pull back the curtain on the topics, tactics, and strategies that don’t show up in public blog posts.

Try Authority on for size, risk-free

There’s no risk to joining Authority: our 30-day money-back guarantee means you can join and begin benefiting from the knowledge and the community right now.

If you discover you don’t want Authority, let us know within 30 days and we’ll refund your purchase no questions asked.

Click the button below to join Authority before the doors close at 5:00 p.m. Pacific Time today, Wednesday, January 27, 2016.

Get Authority

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Tuesday, January 26, 2016

CAN-SPAM 101: A Crash Course in Bulk Email Regulations

how to ensure your email message gets delivered

I met a woman at a networking event last year. I’ll call her Nicki.

Nicki and I chatted for a few minutes, and she struck me as smart and motivated. I liked her.

That was six months ago, and now Nicki’s emails are driving me insane.

After that networking event, Nicki added my name and email address to her mailing list. She didn’t ask if I wanted to join her list — she just added me.

And since then, about once a month, Nicki has been copying me on bulk email messages she sends to hundreds of people using her email’s “BCC” field.

None of Nicki’s emails have an “unsubscribe” link at the bottom, so I can’t opt out of these emails without personally writing to her and saying, “Please stop emailing me!”

Nicki’s email marketing strategy is a CAN-SPAM nightmare. She’s breaking the law on a regular basis, and I’ll bet she has no idea she’s doing it. It even gets worse.

Nicki’s emails are also so annoying that I’ve decided I’m never doing business with her or sending her any referrals. She’s lost a potential relationship with me by breaking email marketing regulations.

Nicki could be charged thousands of dollars for every email she sends that isn’t CAN-SPAM compliant. The way I figure it, Nicki could be charged more than $95,000 just for the emails she’s sent me in the last six months.

Ouch.

Don’t become a CAN-SPAM nightmare. When you follow these simple regulations from the government, you’ll make your prospects happier and steer clear of email-related legal problems.

What is the CAN-SPAM Act, and why is it so important?

George W. Bush signed the CAN-SPAM Act into law in 2003, and its regulations establish how we can build our email lists and distribute commercial email messages. CAN-SPAM stands for “Controlling the Assault of Non-Solicited Pornography And Marketing.”

The penalties for not following CAN-SPAM regulations are steep. You can be charged up to $16,000 for every email you send that’s not CAN-SPAM compliant. This is not a law you want to gamble with.

CAN-SPAM regulations give email recipients the right to ask businesses to stop emailing them and outline harsh penalties for marketers who don’t comply. They also forbid marketers from misleading or deceiving the people on their email lists.

Now, before we cover basic CAN-SPAM law requirements, please note that I’m not a lawyer and this article does not constitute legal advice. If you have questions about CAN-SPAM regulations, please consult the Federal Trade Commission’s website and/or your attorney.

CAN-SPAM basics for content marketers

I highly recommend reading the full description of CAN-SPAM rules on the Federal Trade Commission’s website, but here’s the CAN-SPAM Act in a nutshell.

To comply with CAN-SPAM laws, you absolutely must:

  • Tell your subscribers where you’re located. You need to include your physical mailing address on every email you send. It can be your current street address, a post office box, or a private commercial mailbox.
  • Provide an easy, free method for opting out of receiving future emails from you. Every message you send to your list must include a clear and easy-to-read explanation about how to opt out. Preferably, this explanation includes a link labeled “Unsubscribe.” Whatever your method, make sure it’s not hidden or misleading. Reputable email service providers offer a way to take care of this for you.
  • Use clear language in the “From,” “To,” and “Reply to” fields. Don’t make any false claims about who the email is from. Long story short: don’t say you’re Leonardo diCaprio if you’re not.
  • Honor opt-out requests within 10 days. If someone says he wants to be removed from your list, you must remove that person within 10 days of his request. Email service providers will automatically remove a subscriber from your list when someone makes an opt-out request — so if you use one, you’re all set.
  • If someone sends email messages on your behalf, monitor those messages carefully. If you have a virtual assistant or partner who sends out emails under your name, it’s your responsibility to supervise all email activities and immediately correct any problems.

You absolutely must not:

  • Add anyone to your list without permission. For example, if you meet people at conferences and exchange business cards with them, you cannot add those folks to your list. You also can’t add previous business contacts or colleagues, even if you personally email them on a regular basis. When in doubt, always err on the side of caution, and never add people to your mailing list if you haven’t expressly received their permission to do so.
  • Share or sell the email addresses on your list. The people who signed up for your list trust you to keep their information safe. Don’t betray that trust by sharing or selling the contacts on your list.

(Quick reminder: Using an email service provider can help you comply with many of these items. You can find out more about selecting an email service provider here.)

Why you absolutely, positively cannot cut corners when building your email list

As a smart content marketer, you know your email list is one of your most important business assets.

But many marketers are in such a hurry to add email addresses to their lists (and start promoting their products and services) that they either don’t learn the critical CAN-SPAM laws that can keep them out of legal hot water or they learn the laws — and then ignore them.

In order to build a loyal list of subscribers, you must follow the legal regulations that govern how we behave when communicating via email.

Remember: Don’t be like Nicki. Don’t randomly pick up business cards at events and turn those potential contacts into email hostages.

Review these CAN-SPAM rules, and make sure you follow them to the letter. You’ll keep your subscribers happy, and you’ll sleep better at night knowing the Federal Trade Commission is not going to come knocking at your door with a big bill.

Read other posts in our current email marketing series

Don’t miss any upcoming posts in this email marketing series! Subscribe to get Copyblogger blog updates.

Type your email address* into the box below and click “Join us!”

*We will never share, rent, or sell your email address to anyone.

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Monday, January 25, 2016

Explore Related Entities Using Google Suggest (Google Auto-Complete)

One of my favorite SEO developments for the past years was the switch from “strings” to “things” meaning that, instead of optimizing pages for the exact-match strings of keyword phrases, we now realize the benefits of optimizing the page for “entities” and concepts.

If you are willing to see the actual example of what I am talking about here, head straight to this awesome article by Bill Slawski and read through his thought process and results. It’s a story of one page which was struggling until it was turned into a resource mentioning the related entities and how it became a top-ranking page:

…rewrite the page, and ignore any concept of word counts….

Instead tell visitors about the famous people and places in Baltimore that showed its Black history…

…put the locations of these historical sites into the article so that people could visit them today. That was part of the goal of a Visitor’s Association website after all, to get people to visit…

At 3,300 words, this was one of the longer articles we had published on a client’s site….

Within a couple of months, this page on Black History that hadn’t been getting much traffic, was the 6th most visited page on the site. Even better, it was bringing actual visitors to the site.

The concept of related entities is quite easy when you deal with such clear topics as places, notable people, events, etc.

What if you are dealing with a more specific or, vice versa, more generic topics? How to identify those relevant entities without turning your article into a book?

One way is to use … Google

Google has been giving us a lot of cues as to what they consider related concepts lately (which also shows they are working in that direction) and it would be a shame not to use the data they are providing us with…

Use Google suggest to research entities and related concepts!Click To Tweet

Research Related Concepts

Here’s an interesting result I came across just recently. In this case, Google suggest isn’t completing my query, but instead it shows me  various neighboring and related topics right within the auto-complete drop-down:

google suggest results

Notice how Google is trying to expand your search by suggesting you:

  1. Synonyms
  2. Areas nearby

To see results like that you need to use a vague phrase and search it first. Then click in the search field to show Google you are somewhat at a loss. Google will show some very helpful suggestions!

Look into Entity Disambiguation

For some keywords that can describe different concepts, Google segments the phrase and explains each group right within Google Suggest:

They first started doing that with names:

Don’t forget to also read the following articles on Google Suggest:

The post Explore Related Entities Using Google Suggest (Google Auto-Complete) appeared first on Internet Marketing Ninjas Blog.



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Can You Spot the Expert? Test Your Knowledge of Google’s Content Quality Standards

the best way to get search engines to EAT (and serve) your content

Want to hear something scary? No, not scary like Five Nights at Freddy’s. More like disturbing. Alarming. Even depressing.

I used to write articles about:

  • How to protect yourself from necrotizing fasciitis
  • How to escape from an airplane safety slide
  • How to tell if you’ve been poisoned by sushi
  • Whether runners could benefit from platelet-rich plasma surgery
  • How much alcohol you should drink
  • Why the rate of concussions is higher among women

Now, what makes this admission scary is that I’m not a surgeon. And I’m not a nurse practitioner, physical therapist, or chiropractor.

In fact, I’ve never had any medical training in my life — nor have I ever slid down an airplane safety slide!

Horrified yet? Well, just wait. Because medical advice was not the only thing I used to freely dispense as a web writer.

I used to write articles about child injury law, start-up culture, buying an apartment in New York City, and so on. And I have absolutely no training, experience, or knowledge in any of those areas.

But what’s the big deal, you say? Journalists write about topics they’re not experts in all the time. They simply craft a story from expert sources and authoritative studies. What’s wrong with that?

Nothing.

However, the difference between what I was doing and what a journalist does is that I hardly had time to spell-check, let alone hunt down actual experts, studies, or statistics. Who would when you need to crank out 5 to 10 of these 500-word articles each week?

Sadly, the only knowledge I had was what I found online about these topics. Ah, the glory days of ghostwriting.

Uh, so what exactly makes an expert … an expert?

I wasn’t the only one creating this stuff.

Hundreds (thousands perhaps, maybe even millions) of more drones just like me were clogging up the Internet with shallow, water-thin content on every subject known to man … all in service to people who wanted to game search engines.

Fortunately, Google has since put the kibosh on such behavior through updates like Panda, Penguin, and Hummingbird. And, fortunately, they continue to refine those algorithms, most recently with what they call “Expertise-Authoritativeness-Trustworthiness (E-A-T)”.

expertise-authority-trust

That’s Google’s shorthand for what it takes to create high quality web pages and websites. As written in their Search Quality Rating Guidelines, released November 19, 2015:

“High quality pages and websites need enough expertise to be authoritative and trustworthy on their topic.”

These terms — particularly authoritativeness and trustworthiness — are not new to any regular readers of Copyblogger. But have you ever wondered what exactly an expert is?

In some cases, it’s easy to define an expert. For instance, the only person giving advice about knee surgery should be an orthopedic surgeon. Someone with the right training, the proper credentials.

But, according to Google, this is not the only type of expert. Pay attention, because you and I have got something at stake here.

Let me explain.

The rules behind the quiz

I don’t have a college degree in copywriting or content writing.

But because I produce those types of writing for a living — as well as evaluate applications for Copyblogger’s Certified Content Marketers program — it could be argued that I’m an expert.

And you, dear content marketer, are probably struggling with the same type of concern: what exactly makes you an expert?

Well, that’s what this quiz is all about. It’s designed to help you refine your sense of becoming an expert.

Before we get started, let me outline the rules:

I’m going to give you a scenario involving a so-called expert. Your job is to decide if the person described in the scenario is an expert or not.

After each scenario, I’ll tell you the correct answer — according to Google’s content quality standards — and go on to explain the reason behind the answer.

And just so we are clear: every single scenario I share below is a work of fiction, based loosely on real-life experience. But names, places, and incidents are the products of my imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons (living or dead), businesses, companies, events, or locations is entirely coincidental.

Now that we’ve got that out of the way, let’s get going. Ready?

1. Advice about a sports injury

Third-year University of Georgia, Athens economic student and ultra-marathon runner Heather Soso got tired of her chronic plantar fasciitis, a condition she’d been ignoring since her senior year in high school.

Naturally, she did what we all do when we want medical advice: she looked it up online.

She was amazed at the variety of amateur and professional advice available on treating and preventing the condition. Each approach might have some scientific support, but it was mostly anecdotal.

Which approach should she try? It was so confusing! But then she had a brilliant idea: she would try them all and blog about it.

Over the next year, she tried each approach and wrote dozens of articles. Her most popular page was about the six toe exercises that treated her condition successfully.

That’s right: six exercises for her little piggies.

So, what do you think: would Google consider Ms. Soso an expert? Her article on toe exercises authoritative? Trustworthy?

The answer is “yes,” because while her website’s topic is medical in nature, Google would view Heather as an “everyday expert” — someone with relevant life experience.

And because plantar fasciitis is not a life-threatening condition, Google will “not penalize the person/page/website for not having ‘formal’ education or training in the field.”

And this is true for other activities, such as cross-fit training, passing the GMAT, and even teaching SEO. If you’ve got everyday experience, flaunt it!

2. Retirement advice

Dee Dell, from Big Cottonwood Canyon, Utah, is frustrated to no end over the fact that so many Americans don’t have a retirement plan — and don’t even seem to care.

Furthermore, he believes this is not good for our economic future since this may mean that nearly 40 million people will be dependent upon a government that is already stretched thin.

This professor of business management and partner with MegaMo Asset Management is on a mission to encourage men and women over 40 to start saving — and he’s showing them exactly how to do it.

But because Dee is an impatient, aggressive man, his articles are often brief, rushed, and laced with profanity — but oh so much fun to read because of his passion for the subject!

This allows him to churn out four posts a week, but his company and busy schedule with the school keep him from updating the information in his content.

So, what do you think Google would think of Dee’s pages? Expert enough to be authoritative and trustworthy (since he’s got the credentials)?

It’s more than likely that Dee’s pages may not be of the expert variety despite his credentials. Google is explicit that financial advice should come from expert sources but also that the content “should be maintained and updated.”

That’s something Dee is not doing.

In addition, to improve his pages and be taken more seriously by Google, Dee should write in a professional style, go in-depth (even if this means he publishes only once a week), and have his content edited — possibly even reviewed by a peer as well.

3. Tree house building advice

After winning $8,047,882 in the Canadian lottery, former newspaper editor and math teacher Kimball Saddlechurn took it upon himself to scratch an itch he’s had since childhood: mastering the art of building tree houses.

But not just any tree houses — really high tree houses.

In the last 6 years, he’s built 14 multi-room tree houses more than 90 feet above the ground. It’s still not clear whether or not these tree houses are legal, but he could care less since he’s a multimillionaire.

Which got him thinking: $8 million may not last forever, so maybe he could pad his retirement nest by flipping his hobby into a source of income.

During a casual lunch of veal limone and rabbit gnocchi, his girlfriend told him about the benefits of content marketing. Intrigued, Kimball washed down his meal with a tumbler of Aultmore of the Foggie Moss, spread his laptop out on his indigo pajama bottoms, and launched a sleek website.

In his blog posts, he goes into great detail about the structure and safety of building a tree house that high off the ground. He offers multiple blueprints and considerations about weather conditions and tree types.

This is important, because there is not only money on the line (it takes thousands to build a tree house of this caliber), but lives as well, which makes this Your-Money-or-Your-Life content. (YMYL, for short.)

So, what do you think: would Google consider Kimball’s pages expert enough, especially given the financial nature (people will be dropping thousands of dollars to build a tree house) and risk to life?

Answer: yes.

The reason is that while Kimball is a hobbyist (a rich one at that), he’s got the right type of experience: 6 years, 14 tree houses, and, most importantly, no one has ever fallen out of a tree.

Besides, Google smiles upon the fact that Kimball writes in-depth articles (with blueprints at various angles to boot).

Now, exactly how much experience he needed before he became an expert is unclear. Was it the eighth tree house or the ninth? Maybe it was the fourth?

Here’s a moral I think you can get out of this: there is no perfect time to get started. As long as you are not dealing with lives and big money, you don’t have to wait until a certain number of years to launch.

This is equally true for activities like photography, dog sitting, and learning how to play guitar.

Just start publishing because there are advantages to having a website with age.

4. Advice on a forum

Morton Ambledowny Piff loves Quora — the question-and-answer site where community members ask, answer, and edit the responses. Morton particularly loves sharing answers about his speciality: North Korean culture.

So, it may come as no surprise that this 72-year-old widow and ex-Marine, who spent 37 years working for the government-run Foreign Languages Publishing House in North Korea as a publicist (his fluency in six Asian languages was a major boon), has one of the most popular posts on Quora.

In fact, the article — along with several others — are among the top-ranked in Google search results for a specific keyword phrase. But these top-ranked posts from Morton are not about North Korean culture; they’re about stage IV lung cancer.

You might be thinking, “Huh? How could a former North Korean publicist give medical advice on such a complicated medical topic? Shouldn’t YMYL content come from a medical professional?”

It depends.

See, Morton not only had the unfortunate experience of caring for a father who died of stage IV lung cancer, but Morton himself now suffers from stage IV lung cancer. And his Quora answers are all about his personal experience with lung cancer.

So would Google consider these posts authoritative? This is what Google writes:

“In fact, some types of information are found almost exclusively on forums and discussions, where a community of experts can provide valuable perspectives on specific topics.”

As long as Morton writes about living with and caring for someone with stage IV lung cancer, Morton is an “everyday expert.”

To some degree, he might even be able to write authoritatively about prevention and treatment, but those subjects should probably come from medical professionals.

5. Lifestyle advice

The 33-year-old Wiga Mikolajczak-Jefferson, usually one to agonize for long periods of time over a decision, knew the moment she laid eyes on Blake “The Mighty Thigh” Jefferson that he was her man.

Three days later she was married.

What she didn’t realize was that she’d be moving into Blake’s 251-square-foot bungalow.

But since she was an interior designer by trade and smitten to the bone over her boy, she decided to give it a try. And wouldn’t you know it: after several months of rearranging the bed, she fell in love with the simplicity of living in such a small space.

And because she was a recovering McMansion dweller, she decided to start an email newsletter to tell everyone else about her discovery and the advantages of living a simple, clutter-free life.

Over time, her newsletter attracted 22,000 readers, which made her kind of famous. Unfortunately, though, her blog posts weren’t getting very high search rankings.

Wiga didn’t respond well to this.

“Why are you treating me this way, Google?” she would cry in the dead of the night, shaking her fist.

“Don’t you understand I’m a professional interior designer, have 22,000 readers on my mailing list … and am married to the former NFL running back star Blake Jefferson? Don’t you know that?!”

Sadly, Google ignored her pleas. See, the problem with Wiga’s content boiled down to three things:

  1. Sloppy writing (she refused to capitalize “I”)
  2. Reams of rambling prose (she never got to her point, and when she did, she usually fell down another rabbit hole)
  3. Bunches of broken English

See, according to Google, lifestyle advice falls into the category of “future happiness,” so “advice on parenting issues … should also come from ‘expert’ sources which users can trust.”

And this type of content demands expertise (which she had, both professionally and personally), but it also demands clear, concise, and compelling writing. And it would help to think like a Google engineer, too.

Which, fortunately, means that Wiga can instantly improve the credibility of her content by simply hiring an editor.

A summary of what you should have learned

Let’s wrap this up with some tidy little principles about what we learned, based on section 4.3 of Google’s Search Quality Rating Guidelines:

  • When it comes to high quality medical advice, it “should come from people or organizations with appropriate medical expertise or accreditation.”
  • However, some topics, even medical in nature, only demand that you are an “everyday expert.” Google writes, “These ordinary people may be considered experts in topics where they have life experience.”
  • Aim for deep and detailed content no matter what you write about, but especially if you’re dealing with YMYL content.
  • Perform original research to help your content go deep.
  • Avoid redundant or duplicated content — and don’t steal content from other sites.
  • Edit your content. In other words, spell correctly, fix factual errors, and repair poor grammar.
  • Maintain and update your content on a regular basis.
  • Write in a professional style: clear, concise, and compelling. Be sure to avoid jargon.
  • Remain balanced, professional, and worthy of your audience’s trust.
  • Financial advice should come from expert sources.
  • Cover a topic comprehensively. Don’t aim for an arbitrary word count and stop once you reach it.
  • When giving “future happiness” advice, make sure you have the appropriate expertise (even if it is of the “everyday” variety) and make sure it’s professionally written.
  • Avoid the obvious. If 30 people have already reported on the Facebook Graph Search, then find something else to write about (unless you have information nobody else does).
  • Write content a professional print magazine would publish.
  • Spend an insane amount of time on detail.
  • Commenting on forums like Quora can get you attention and build trust — as long as your posts are encyclopedic, accurate, and easy to read.

Share what you learned in the comments below, and let me know if you have any questions or doubts about whether or not you are an expert.

I know this was somewhat of an unorthodox way to cover this topic, but my hope is that you had fun. Because I know I did.

I look forward to hearing from you.


Want to become a content marketing expert?

Authority is our advanced content marketing education program. Inside Authority, we pull back the curtain on the topics, tactics, and strategies that don’t show up in public blog posts.

The doors to Authority are open until this Wednesday, January 27, 2016, and then we close our doors again until later this year.

Click the button below to join Authority today before the doors close on January 27, 2016.

Join Authority

The post Can You Spot the Expert? Test Your Knowledge of Google’s Content Quality Standards appeared first on Copyblogger.



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Friday, January 22, 2016

Penguins, Pandas, and Algorithm Updates, Oh My! Weekly Forum Update

seochat-wmw-cre8asite-threadwatch-roundupGoogle’s recent core algorithm update, along with the discovery that Panda is now “core,” have really shaken the SEO beehive.

Let’s begin by making an important distinction: Google made a core algorithm update, yes, but it had nothing to do with either Panda or Penguin.

In an entirely separate event, Google announced that Panda is now part of its core ranking algorithm.

These two separate events somehow got tangled around themselves in knots this week.

Now that the dust has settled, we have some fantastic discussions about this and other topics to share with you!

Bing Keyword Planner Now Enhanced With Version 2

Let’s start off slow with a pleasant announcement from Bing. Version 2 of its keyword planner is now live, and it brought some new features to the table.

Competitive insights, benchmarking, custom ad groups, keyword bids, and more. It’s only available in the United States for now. You can find a link to the full features list, as well as a venue for discussion, over on WebmasterWorld.

Clearing Up Confusion About the Core Algorithm

When Panda was announced as being “core,” some confusion arose over what that meant. Many consider the core algorithm to be “automatic,” that is, they believe it updates in real time. Based on that, some speculated that Panda was also real time.

However, we now know that to be untrue. Check out an article from Search Engine Land, shared via Threadwatch, about Andrey Lipattsev’s comments on the matter.

“It is less about the functionality… and is more about how we perceive it,” he says.

Being core is sort of like Google saying that they trust Panda to take the car out to a party and be back by midnight.

Google Confirms January 2016 Core Algorithm Update Was Not Panda

Two announcements – Panda being core and an update to the core algorithm – happened very close to each other. This was another source of confusion online. If the core algorithm was updated, some wondered, did that also mean that Panda was updated? We know the answer now – no, it wasn’t. But there’s still a lot to discuss.

Some users of WebmasterWorld who have been eagerly awaiting a Panda update did see improvements. If they weren’t Panda related, what could they be?

“I don’t know whether the absence of Panda updates in this past weekend’s update is relevant at all to the question of reported Zombie traffic, but I suggest some re-examination of what we’re identifying as Zombie traffic might make sense,” writes user Robert Charlton.

Further, he asks,

“Any sightings, eg, of changes that suggest how RankBrain is being incorporated?” Ahhh yes… remember RankBrain and the Zombie epidemic? Here’s a thread with a lot to unpack!

Google Search Share is at its “Smallest Since 2008”

2008 was a very different time, but this year it seems oh so familiar. Google is not only at its smallest search share since that year, but Yahoo is also at its highest since 2009.

In this report on Threadwatch, you can check out a great article from Bloomberg and forum discussion from SEO Chat.

What we’re all watching for is whether Apple Safari also moves to Bing – that’d be a big change, since Safari has more than half of the mobile traffic in the USA!

For more about this year’s Bing vs Google slugfest take a look at this article on SEO Chat as well!

Penguin is Likely Weeks Away

Along with the confusion about Panda this week, there was some chatter about Penguin. On Twitter, Gary Illyes answered that Google is “aiming for launching Penguin this quarter, but we don’t have a more precise timeframe.”

Will a real-time Penguin finally be the death of negative SEO? What are your expectations, hopes, and fears? Share them with the users of SEO Chat!

And while you’re there, take part in the SEO Chat Penguin Update Betting Pool! We’re putting honor and forum points on the line to see who can predict the exact date of its announcement!

A Well and Proper Disavow

On Cre8asiteforums, user WPMuse brings an interesting question to the table.

“I came here looking for [disavow] tips due to all the rumblings that Penguin is going to update again,” they write.

But when analyzing their site, they discovered that many of the “bad” links were from sites that no longer exist, or the links don’t seem to exist, or they’re links in the code or content scraped by Reddit and other aggregators.

“How do you know what to disavow when most if it seems like BS? None of these links were garnered by any effort of the site owner,” they write.

There’s also a fantastic discussion to be had about scraping and how to protect your data!

Can Google Grab Meta Titles from External Anchor Text?

SEO Chat user ryandiscord is working on a side project. For this project, they disallowed all in their robots.txt. After this, they made some external links. To their surprise, the anchor text of those links was being used as the title of ryandiscord’s site in SERPs.

So, when Googlebot can’t read a website does it look to external anchor text to find a title? Interestingly, the answer may be yes according to Google’s guidelines. Check this one out for the full experiment and thoughts from our users!

Secret Onboarding for Fun and Profit!

Users of Cre8asiteforums are discussing the covert onboarding performed by Microsoft on its own users back in 1992. An article on The Next Web says that Minesweeper was a creative way of transitioning users away from the keyboard and towards the mouse. Same with Solitaire, but with new mouse functions.

User iamlost says that these techniques aren’t just fun – they could be useful, too.

“Let’s say you have an order form that requires multiple inputs… how about an obvious big green checkmark beside each completed input choice? It ‘says’ success! It encourages continuing, completing the order.”

How can you make the processes of your own website more fun, imaginative, and – therefore – profitable?

Google Testing App Installs Direct From Mobile SERPs

Let’s end our weekly update by returning to a popular topic from last week – the marriage of the mobile web and app traffic.

As a test, Google is opening the door for some mobile users to install apps straight from their search queries. WebmasterWorld admin engine wonders why Google would leapfrog the Play store like this.

“…I’m assuming the company has built in some sort of protection from malicious apps which might make it into the SERPs, but not get into the Play store,” he writes.

The “install” button seems to appear for everyone, but only select few users can do a direct installation. The rest are redirected to the Play store… for now.

Subscribe to our Flipboard to monitor top search and social threads:

View my Flipboard Magazine.

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3 Sources of Fuel for Sophisticated Content Marketers

copyblogger collection - stimulate your content marketing results

“Don’t worry; she’s nice” is a phrase a friend might comfort you with before you contact someone you don’t know.

Once you hear those words, relief sets in.

If we know “nice” is the preferable way to behave toward others, why is it that we all encounter many people who are not “nice?”

It’s a complicated question. Perhaps everyone has his or her own idea of what “nice” is. Regardless, you have the power to choose your behavior in any given situation. You can be a considerate, respectful person to other people.

“Considerate” and “respectful” are more concrete and less subjective than “nice.”

And while “nice” is a reasonable starting place, effective content marketing has precisely defined characteristics. It’s sophisticated and goes way beyond “nice.”

This week’s Copyblogger Collection is a series of three handpicked articles that will show you:

  • How to seduce blog readers and win clients
  • How to make winning infographics without risk
  • How to delegate content marketing tasks

As you work your way through the material below, think of the following lessons as a mini content marketing course for sophisticated content marketers.


No Blog Traffic? Here’s a Simple Strategy to Seduce Readers and Win Clients

seduce-readers-win-clients

Writing is hard work, so it can be quite disappointing if you’ve been writing content for your site for a while but it’s not attracting the right clients and customers to your business.

As Pamela Wilson said yesterday, “Content marketing results happen slowly, and they happen over time.” No one can speed up the process, but Henneke has a technique that optimized her own content strategy.

Check out No Blog Traffic? Here’s a Simple Strategy to Seduce Readers and Win Clients for a five-step plan that helps you cater to your audience’s wants and needs.


How to Make Winning Infographics Without Risk

infographic-asset-pillar

On the surface, infographics are powerful pieces of content because they’re entertaining and shareable. When you dig a little deeper, however, you’ll discover that the way you approach the creation of infographics can make a significant impact on your content strategy.

Demian Farnworth says:

I want you to think of the infographic like a pillar — a pillar that reaches back in the past and extends into the future. It reaches back to revive old content and extends forward to create more content.

In How to Make Winning Infographics Without Risk, Demian provides a tutorial that enables you to produce more enjoyable content in less time.


Content Marketing Is Easier When You (Partially) Delegate These 12 Tasks

Delegate content marketing

Charlie Gilkey wants you to spend more time on the content marketing activities you do best — those high-value activities that require your unique brilliance.

Sometimes it’s difficult to focus your energy on those tasks when you’re pulled in many different directions to manage everything on your content marketing plate.

Content Marketing Is Easier When You (Partially) Delegate These 12 Tasks reveals ways you can free up your bandwidth without sacrificing quality. Be sure to take Charlie’s 30-minute challenge at the end of the article — it could save you hours every week for years to come.

Move beyond “nice”

Sometimes you have to try new methods to see better results. Use this post (and save it for future reference) to help you fine-tune your content strategy.

How can you adapt the tips in these articles to meet your own content marketing goals?


Get advanced content marketing education

Authority is our advanced content marketing education program. Inside Authority, we pull back the curtain on the topics, tactics, and strategies that don’t show up in public blog posts.

The doors to Authority are open until next Wednesday, January 27, 2016. We’re inviting in a new group of members this week, and then we close our doors again until later this year.

Click the button below to join Authority today before the doors close on January 27, 2016.

Join Authority

The post 3 Sources of Fuel for Sophisticated Content Marketers appeared first on Copyblogger.



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Thursday, January 21, 2016

How to Take the Guesswork Out of Content Marketing

stop guessing and start knowing

Authority, our advanced content marketing training program, is open to new members this week only.

Why should you care? Read on.

Here’s the harsh truth about any marketing: there’s no magic switch you can flip to turn it “on” and make it start working immediately.

Marketing with content is no exception to this rule.

Content marketing results happen slowly, and they happen over time.

If you do it right, you’ll create content that continues to send you new prospects and customers for many years after you created it.

If you do it right is the operative phrase here.

Content marketing reality check

Too often, your content marketing efforts look like this:

  • You set out to create content that attracts leads to your business. It sort of works.
  • Then you hear about some new content marketing technique that promises to “revolutionize your business.” Maybe it’s infographics. Or SlideShare. Or webinars. Or Facebook ads. Or even marketing automation.
  • So you set out to learn this new thing. Because it’s #amazing. Right? It’s the thing that’s going to transform your business!
  • While you’re learning the new thing, the old reliable things are stagnating. That solid, effective content you could be creating gets ignored and abandoned.

Here’s the truth:

When you don’t know what really works, every new content marketing technique that comes along is a distraction.

Every new tool takes time and energy to learn.

In the meantime, you’re guessing at what will work. You don’t have time to investigate every claim, so you take a guess at what you want to try next, and you dive in.

What if you had a team of people sorting through the latest content marketing information for you? A team you trusted. A team whose skills you admire.

And what if that team packaged up their best information and delivered it to you every Friday for an hour or so in a fun, informative, private session?

And what if they gave you time to ask questions and get answers that are specific to your business?

Welcome to Authority (doors are open now)

Authority is our advanced content marketing training program. It’s where we present everything we’ve learned from the front lines of content marketing in a format that shows you how to apply it to your own business.

Here’s what we’ve got for you every month inside Authority

Monthly Master Class sessions

Once a month, we dive deep into a specific content marketing topic to help you master it so you can use it in your own business.

In addition to an in-depth webinar presentation, you’ll get downloadable materials that will help you apply what you’ve learned.

Authority Business Coaching sessions: the “sleeper” hit

Last fall, we started something new. We began hosting Authority Business Coaching sessions every month.

Authority members fill out a simple application and we select one person to sit in our friendly “hot seat.” The member gets targeted advice to help them solve a business challenge.

It’s a little like what you’d experience in an expensive mastermind group, if you’re familiar with those. (But without the big-ticket price tag.)

Since many of us have similar business challenges, every member benefits from lessons shared during Authority Business Coaching sessions.

That’s why they’re our most popular new content on the site. Members love them, and you will too.

Live Q&A sessions

Ever wish you could ask Rainmaker Digital staff a specific business question? Here’s your chance.

Every month, Authority hosts a live Q&A session where you can submit your question and get it answered by members of the Rainmaker Digital team. We’ll provide guidance, resources, and recommendations to keep you moving forward with your content marketing and your business.

Behind the Scenes sessions

On the last Friday of the month, we invite a successful business owner to drop by and share their “secret” tips for how they’re using content marketing to grow their audience and their profits.

You can attend live, ask them questions, and learn from their successes.

Occasional bonus sessions

We like to throw in wild card educational content once in a while to keep members on their toes. :-)

The latest bonus session? “How to Style a Post,” where I walk you through a step-by-step process to make your content look friendly, inviting, and readable.

You’re invited to our private forum

It’s not easy to do what we all do: we’re juggling marketing our businesses with running our businesses. Or we’re looking for new ways to attract an audience for our employer.

Either way, when we talk about work with our friends and family, we get the big, blank stare in return.

The quizzical look.

The “that’s nice” response.

You’ve heard it before:

“What do you mean by ‘building a list’ dear?” or “Why did you just ask me to tell the kids dinner is ready with a ‘call to action?’”

One of the best aspects of our Authority program is we’re all in it together.

We’re a community of content marketers and business owners. We’re writers, coaches, artists, engineers, bloggers, designers, developers, teachers, financial consultants … you get the idea.

We’re a diverse bunch. But we’re all using content marketing, and we’re all getting really good at it.

What that means for you is that when you join us, you’re joining a wide-ranging group of smart people who will “get” you. We’ll understand your jargon and your challenges.

Even better, we can share what’s worked for us so you can learn.

And you get ongoing access to editorial team leads from Rainmaker Digital:

  • Sonia Simone, Co-Founder and Chief Content Officer
  • Pamela Wilson, Executive Vice President of Educational Content
  • Stefanie Flaxman, Editor-in-Chief
  • Demian Farnworth, Chief Content Writer
  • Jerod Morris, Vice President of Marketing
  • Plus other special guests from our company and beyond

We’re on the front lines of the content marketing world. We stay up to date so you don’t have to.

We bring you everything we’ve learned so you can feel confident that you’re applying industry best practices to your marketing efforts and your business.

You’ll get keys to the extensive Authority archive

In addition to our ongoing education, Authority boasts a substantial archive of valuable content designed to help you in almost any aspect of your business.

You’ll find more than 250 hours of education from people like Brian Clark, Chris Garrett, Pam Slim, Darren Rowse, Chris Guillebeau, Laura Roeder, Jon Morrow, and many more.

This is one archive you’ll want to get lost in.


Join today: doors close January 27, 2016

The doors to our Authority program are open until next Wednesday, January 27, 2016. We’re inviting in a new group of members this week, and then we close our doors again until later this year.

Get Authority

Try Authority on for size, risk-free

There’s no risk to joining Authority: our 30-day money-back guarantee means you can join and begin benefiting from the knowledge and the community right now.

If you discover you don’t want Authority, let us know within 30 days and we’ll refund your purchase no questions asked.

Click the button below to get Authority today before the doors close on January 27, 2016.

Get Authority

Question Authority

Do you have questions about the Authority program?

We’re happy to answer them in the comments. Doors are open for one week only, so ask today.

The post How to Take the Guesswork Out of Content Marketing appeared first on Copyblogger.



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Wednesday, January 20, 2016

The #1 Conversion Killer in Your Copy (and How to Beat It)

easy ways to send the trolls away

What makes people almost buy?

What makes them get most of the way there and then drop out of your shopping cart at the last second?

What makes them stare at your landing page, wanting what you have to offer, and yet, ultimately, close the page and move on to something else?

It turns out there’s a hideous troll hiding under the bridge. Every time you get close to making a sale, the troll springs out and scares your prospect away. Get rid of the troll and your copy will start converting better than it ever has before.

The ugly, smelly, dirty, bad-mannered troll is prospect fear.

And it’s sitting there right now, stinking up your landing page and scaring good customers away.

Fear of wasting money

Remember when you were a kid and you went to that rinky-dink carnival that came through town? After eating all the cotton candy you could manage — and throwing it all back up again on the Tilt-a-Whirl — you checked out something called the midway.

Remember that persuasive fellow who convinced you to spend a whole month’s allowance throwing softballs at those damned milk bottles?

It looked so easy. He showed you exactly how to do it. Toss the softball, knock over the milk bottle, win a cool stuffed animal for a prize. Simple.

You spent quarter after quarter trying to do it yourself.

When all your quarters were gone, you got an inkling. It looked easy, but if you were actually standing at the throw line, it was pretty close to impossible. Now the carnival guy had all your money, and you didn’t even have an ugly green plush monkey to show for it.

The troll is born.

Fear of mockery

When the sting of the carnival wore off, you were innocently minding your own business and ran across an ad for a fascinating product called Sea-Monkeys.

They were little people! With tails! They looked pretty awesome on the cover of the package. You begged your parents to get them for you and told everybody you knew. Your little brother. Your best friend. Your entire third-grade class.

This was going to be so cool. The ad said you could even teach them to do tricks. You planned on getting them medicine, vitamins, special formulas, everything they needed to be the happiest pets ever.

You followed the instructions to the letter. You waited breathlessly. You told anyone and everyone how amazing this was going to be.

It turns out Sea-Monkeys are just brine shrimp. In no way do they resemble little people. They resemble fish food, which is what they are.

Your little brother, your best friend, and your entire third-grade class now thought you were an idiot. And they delighted in letting you know that at every opportunity.

The troll gets a little bigger.

Fear of feeling stupid

Every time we’re betrayed by a sleazy salesperson, we toughen up just a little. The troll grows. Our mistrust grows and our inclination to believe shrinks.

And then a content marketer shows up with a helpful article or podcast episode that will solve a problem that’s been really bothering us. Let’s call that content marketer … you.

We want to believe you. We want to get the benefit from what you have to offer. We want to have something — anything — work out the way it was promised.

We would love to be able to trust our own judgment.

But the troll keeps whispering in our ear, with his truly horrendous breath, how stupid we’re going to feel when we fall for that again.

How to kill the troll

Trustworthiness, lots of high-value content, and just plain old decency are your best weapons to combat the troll.

Everything on your site needs to show you can be trusted: Real contact information. Your photograph. Thorough responses to FAQs. Clear, reasonable calls to action.

Every detail matters, including hosting your site on your own domain and publishing content on a consistent schedule. Everything you do needs to build trust and kill the troll.

Unless you sell to 10-year-olds, your prospect has likely been kicked around many times by unscrupulous (or incompetent) businesses. Give the prospect any tiny reason to mistrust you and memories of all those wretched old experiences come back.

There’s an old joke that a second marriage is the triumph of optimism over experience. In fact, that’s exactly what happens every time you make a sale, especially to someone who hasn’t done business with you before.

So, let’s declare war on the trolls.

Prove you’re extraordinarily trustworthy by demonstrating your value, putting your customers first, and keeping your promises.

The troll is tough and hard to kill. But with dedication and commitment, we can chase him off once and for all.

Editor’s note: The original version of this post was published on May 29, 2009.


Want to learn more about conversion?

The moment of conversion happens when your content marketing efforts pay off and a prospect decides to become a customer.

Getting to that moment of conversion isn’t simple, but we’ll help make it easier with our free course. Click the button below to learn more.

Register for free: The Copyblogger Conversion Series

The post The #1 Conversion Killer in Your Copy (and How to Beat It) appeared first on Copyblogger.



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Tuesday, January 19, 2016

A Champion of Creative Play

hero's journey - an advocate for creative expression

Life was simple when we were seven, wasn’t it?

A puddle and some pebbles, crayons and paper, a piece of chalk and a sidewalk — that’s all we needed to keep us happy and amused for hours.

But somewhere along the way, most of us lose this sense of joy in simple creative pleasures.

Today, you’ll learn about Melissa Dinwiddie’s quest to bring creativity back into your daily life.

Melissa’s story is this month’s Hero’s Journey feature. We’re tapping the collective wisdom of our community members to bring you reports from the front lines of the content marketing world. Read all of the Hero’s Journey posts here.

Here’s Melissa to share her journey in her own words.

How Melissa champions creativity

Melissa Dinwiddie: My business is Living a Creative Life — that’s the name of my blog, and it’s also what I do and what my business helps other people do.

I call myself a Happiness Catalyst and Creativity Instigator.

I help people switch their creative taps to the “on” position and turn their lives from grey to full color.

Really, I help people play again, and return to the joy, freedom, and happiness of a four-year-old playing in a sandbox, back when creative play was a normal, daily part of life.

Reminding us to make time for play

Melissa Dinwiddie: For most of us, creative play gets tamped down pretty early.

The school system trains us how to please an authority figure (the teacher), rather than how to push creative boundaries.

We’re taught to believe that creative expression is reserved for an elite minority, so we get divided into two camps:

  1. The artists (painters, musicians, writers, filmmakers, etc.)
  2. The rest of us

My mission is to disrupt this status quo and empower people to reclaim their innate creativity and innate right to create and play.

Creative expression is one of the fastest routes to happiness and self-fulfillment.

Through my programs and products, I give people practical tools and inspiration to quiet the self-doubt gremlins, hurtle past fear, and get on with the business of creating, regardless of medium or genre.

I offer ebooks, online courses, in-person workshops and retreats, private coaching and consulting, and I run a membership community, the Creative Sandbox, which includes access to a wide spectrum of my online offerings plus direct access to me.

I also love public speaking, especially my signature keynote, which combines original music and storytelling so that it’s more of a one-woman show than a typical speech.

A creative drought that led to a business idea

Melissa Dinwiddie: I started Living a Creative Life because I’ve suffered through long stretches of creative “stuckness” myself.

In fact, all through my teen years and up through my late twenties I believed I was not creative!

On the surface my life was fine, but underneath it was grey, low-grade misery. It’s only with hindsight that I can see that my unhappiness was largely due to my false belief that creative expression is reserved for the select elite, not regular people like me.

When I finally came back to art as an adult, it was like that moment in the Wizard of Oz when Dorothy steps from the black and white of the Kansas farmhouse into the Technicolor of Oz.

I fell in love with making art and actually grew a business around my art as a calligrapher and ketubah artist (a ketubah is a Jewish marriage contract).

But over the years of building up that business, I became so mired in perfectionist paralysis — and the need to make money from everything I created — that I completely stopped making art for the joy of it.

Art became just a job, and I got seriously burned out.

When I finally found my way back to my creative spirit, I realized that my experience was not unique.

My big vision is to change the conversation around creative expression and play — and get people to start (or return to) creating for the joy of it.

Chunking down education to reach new markets

Melissa Dinwiddie: I used to run a three-month signature program, in which I taught everything I’ve learned about how to bust past fear and self-doubt in order to get creating, share your work, and live the full-color life you really want.

It was life-changing for the people who went through it — and the testimonials were off the charts — but it was always hard for me to fill it.

Something was off — the positioning and messaging were attracting people who didn’t have the resources to pay for a long-term, high-touch program, and it was so deflating to have disappointing launches over and over.

Earlier this year, I worked with Breanne Dyck, who helped me assess my business from the ground up — who my ideal clients really are, the arc of the customer journey, what my customers need at each milestone along that journey, and how my strengths and preferences intersect with their needs.

Breanne’s coaching was instrumental in helping me see how I could still put the same content out there, but in smaller chunks and different formats that are easier to sell because they’re more specifically targeted.

As a result, I’m able to create as much — if not more — transformation in my customers, and it doesn’t feel like I’m swimming upstream all the time!

A test, the result, and the birth of a new product

Melissa Dinwiddie: Last August, I started a pilot program for the Creative Sandbox and invited a group of past clients and customers to join.

The idea was to create a membership community as an ongoing revenue source, but I wasn’t sure if it was possible for such a thing to be fun and inspiring for me — something that would energize me, rather than sucking me dry.

The five-month pilot went so well that I officially offered a year-long membership for 2016.

It’s a wonderful “lab” for me to develop and test out new products and programs (which members get to participate in for free), and it’s a great entry-level way for my customers to have direct access to me.

And the community is amazing. I feel very blessed that I’ve attracted such generous, wonderful women!

The Rainmaker Digital products Melissa uses

Melissa Dinwiddie: My ketubah website runs on the Genesis framework, and I host several websites with Synthesis, which I switched to when Bluehost was no longer serving my needs.

Then last April, I moved Living a Creative Life to the Rainmaker Platform.

I liked the idea of having a single platform to host my website and blog, protect my members-only content, and provide audio hosting for my podcast, Live Creative Now.

The kicker that finally got me to bite the bullet and make the move, though, was when I realized I was spending more for WordPress support to deal with plugin incompatibilities than the Rainmaker Platform monthly fee!

Plus, the customer support has been stellar.

Melissa’s creative growth plans

Melissa Dinwiddie: Right now, I’m working on increasing my opt-in rate and growing my email list. To that end, I’m creating a series of free, how-to demo tutorials — sort of “art for non-artists (and artists, too!)” — so we’ll see how that converts.

I’m also excited to see how the Creative Sandbox membership community will evolve as I learn what my members’ wants and needs are and create new things to support them.

Meanwhile, my Big Goal for 2016 is to grow my public speaking into a significant revenue stream. I’m a performer — singer/songwriter and storyteller — so it’s a natural evolution for me to use the stage as a platform to spread my message.

I’m especially excited to speak at schools and colleges; I want to catch kids while they’re still young and their ideas about creativity may still be somewhat malleable.

Every time I can help even one person keep — or get back to — that creative urge I was cut off from for so long, it feels like all the suffering I went through had a worthwhile purpose.

Find Melissa Dinwiddie online …

Thanks to Melissa for appearing in our Hero’s Journey series.

Do you have questions for her? Ask them in the comments below.

We’ll be back next month with another story to teach, inspire, and encourage you along your journey.

The post A Champion of Creative Play appeared first on Copyblogger.



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