Tuesday, 28 June 2016

Best rules for choosing perfect domain for SEO ranking

  • Make it Easy to Type
    If a domain name requires considerable attention to type correctly, due to spelling, length or the use of un-memorable words or sounds, you’ve lost a good portion of your branding and marketing value.

  • Make it Easy to Remember
    Remember that word-of-mouth and SERPs dominance marketing (where your domain consistently comes up for industry-related searches) both rely on the ease with which the domain can be called to mind. You don’t want to be the company with the terrific website that no one can ever remember to tell their friends about because they can’t remember the domain name.

  • Keep the Name as Short as Possible
    Short names are easy to type and easy to remember (see the previous two rules). They also allow for more characters in the URL in the SERPs and a better fit on social networks, print media, and every form of offline marketing (including the essential Word-of-Mouth).

  • Create and Fulfill Expectations
    When someone hears about your domain name for the first time, they should be able to instantly and accurately guess at the type of content that might be found there.

  • Your Site’s Name Should Not Violates Anyone’s Trademark
    This is a mistake that isn’t made too often, but can kill a great domain and a great company when it does. To be  sure you’re not infringing on anyone’s trademark with your site’s name.

  • Brainstorm 5 Top Keywords
     In Digital marketing, when you first begin your domain name search, it helps to have a small set of terms or phrases in mind that best describe the domain you’re seeking. Once you have this list, you can start to pair them or add prefixes & suffixes to create good domain ideas.

  • Make the Domain Unique
    Having your website confused with a popular site already owned by someone else is a recipe for disaster. Thus, I never choose domains that are simply the plural, hyphenated or misspelled version of an already established domain.

Top trending strategies as to when to adopt social platform

 Digital marketing, social media fails were just one of the many topics that Marketing Land’s Tim Peterson discussed with the panel, which also included Karianne Stinson, Marketing Manager at Microsoft, and Ef Rodriguez, HTC’s Director of Global Social. Below is a collection of some of the great quotes and takeaways on a variety of hot-button social media topics that the panel covered during today’s keynote.
School of Digital marketing

1) Instagram ads

Karianne Stinson, Microsoft: “You have to think of Instagram as an awareness platform, top of the funnel. If you’re expecting people to buy from Instagram, I don’t think we’re there yet. I don’t think people on Instagram are gonna buy a Surface or a smartphone (from an Instagram ad).”
Ef Rodriquez, HTC: “We don’t do much with Instagram ads because it doesn’t offer the targeting we need. I need hard working, click-based CTAs and I can get that better on Facebook.”

2) Role of social media

Caitlin Angeloff, Docusign: “When you think of all the functions of social media, you think about the customer lifecycle. Sales is one part of that, but social media plays a part in every stage of the customer lifecycle.”
Paul Meyers, Pabst: “We don’t do billboards. We don’t do traditional TV spots. Social media is where we talk to consumers. One of our brands is Not Your Father’s Root Beer. There was a lot of consumer demand for us to launch that in people’s hometowns, but we’re limited in what we’re allowed to say about availability. So we had to wait for retailers and consumers to spread the word about when it was available in their area.”

3) Snapchat

Angeloff: “We’re testing Snapchat. Consumers have started to notice that we’re there. We have one staffer, Laurel, who’s learning it and training our team, and when that platform is proven, we’ll take it our more widely to our company. If we can prove that a channel works, we can fight for more headcount. We can say, this channel is more time-consuming, we need a dedicated person. Snapchat is very different — you can’t repurpose content for that channel.”

4) Social video

Rodriguez: “Everyone has a video offering — even companies who shouldn’t have one have a video offering. People want video content. The fact that there are YouTube stars making a career out of YouTube is proof of that. I can’t say enough about video; none of us should be able to say enough about video because there’s so much out there.”
Stinson: “I like video, but I hope we don’t go to all video. We still need a mix — video isn’t right for every story every time. It’s still going to be a big push and it’s the gateway to VR/AR and that’s going to get bigger.”
Meyers: “For 360 video, it’s important that you captivate your audience. If you’re just toying with 360, make sure that you’re really interested. I think there’s going to be a lot of terrible brand video produced in VR.”
Stinson: “Our first XBOX Facebook Live video was just Major Nelson talking. It doesn’t have to be highly produced; it’s just people talking in the moment.”
Angeloff: “Don’t treat live video any different than other video you create. Have a storyboard, think about the experience that you want your live video to look like.”

5) Trendjacking

Stinson: “There’s so much risk with it. I think it has to have something to do with your brand. Like, I saw so many brands jumping on National Donut Day recently, but you have to be really selective because it can make you look really uncool.”
Rodriguez: “We’re a hardware manufacturer based in Taiwan; we can’t lose sight of that. We know we’re not well known in the USA. People don’t know what our initials stand for. We don’t have a Super Bowl budget. We’re not super fresh, and we don’t have street cred or skate cred like Vans. So not all of the trends happening on Twitter are appropriate for us. [If you trendjack], don’t lose sight of how this is going to come across to someone who’s not going to give you the benefit of the doubt.”
Angeloff: “I see times when brands should be part of the conversation, but a lot of times it looks like they’re elbowing their way into the dinner table. For example, Microsoft and LinkedIn are both customers of ours and both are huge users of Docusign’s product. Had we been a little more nimble, I would’ve encouraged us to go out and ride that wave of conversation [when the acquisition was announced]. We have multiple areas where we would’ve been relevant and we could’ve trendjacked. Would it have been successful? I don’t know, but the data would’ve told us.”

6) Adopting new social channels

Stinson: “I signed up for Ello. I signed up for Peach. But I didn’t sign up my brands for those. If you’re in this room, you need to be on Snapchat at least personally. Our executives look to us to answer when they ask things like, Should we be on Snapchat?”
Meyers: “We weren’t on Snapchat when it first came out because it was really weird. We’re primarily using Snapchat now with geofilters around 21-and-over venues.”
Angeloff: “Snapchat is an emerging channel. We’d have to get way more adoption to say it’s worthy of continued investment. When we put a URL in a snapchat story, we do see a spike of traffic. The biggest thing is the toolsets — we don’t have to decide when something’s proven, it’s when the platform opens up an API and the toolsets can begin to support them.”
Meyers: “I put Old Milwaukee on Tinder three years ago. In Austin, there are three bars that sell Old Milwaukee. I put the beer on Tinder as a female interested in males and the account directed the guys to the three bars. Tinder shut that down in about an hour.”
When it comes to social media #fails, brands have to expect the worst. “Mistakes will happen even if you have protocols in place,” said Caitlin Angeloff, Head of Global Social Strategy and Operations at Docusign, during today’s Brands Talk Social Media keynote at Marketing Land’s Social Pro conference. Paul Meyers, the Director of Digital Marketing for Pabst Brewing, echoed that sentiment when he told the audience that some mistakes are bound to happen. “We have a process in place, but my team is five people and we’re dealing with 30 accounts that we manage.”

Source: Search engine land

Monday, 27 June 2016

Google launches it's new mobile friendly algorithm

School of Digital marketing
The new Google mobile-friendly algorithm is supposed to give an additional ranking boost for mobile-friendly websites in the mobile search results in Digital marketing.
Google has fully rolled out the second version of the mobile-friendly update today. Google Webmaster Trends Analyst John Mueller announced it this morning on Twitter, saying, “The mobile changes mentioned here are now fully rolled out.”
Google gave us a heads-up in March that they are preparing to boost the mobile-friendly algorithm in May, and clearly, that has finished rolling out today.
This technically is supposed to “increase the effect of the [mobile-friendly] ranking signal.” As we reported in March, Google said if you are already mobile-friendly, you do not have to worry, because “you will not be impacted by this update.”
As a reminder, the Google mobile-friendly algorithm is a page-by-page signal, so it can take time for Google to assess each page, and that is why it took some time to roll out fully. So depending on how fast Google crawls and indexes all of the pages on your site, the impact can be slow to show up.
Source : Search engine land

Saturday, 25 June 2016

All about rankbrain, panda & penguin

 
School of digital marketing

Following are the important key takeaways from Google AMA:

Authorship

In digital marketing, We have now learned that Google no longer uses authorship not even for in-depth articles. So now it is safe to remove the authorship markup from your pages, almost two years since Google originally killed off authorship markup. Yes, I know that sounds backwards, but although Google announced they stopped using authorship, they didn’t fully stop using it until now.

RankBrain

Gary Illyes, after a lot of questioning from Danny Sullivan, explained that you cannot optimize or do SEO for RankBrain. He added there are no “scores” for RankBrain — although he did say he will continue saying what Google has said in the past, that RankBrain is a ranking factor, even though it has no score like page speed, Panda, Penguin and other ranking signals may have.

Panda

Panda, Google’s content quality algorithm, is still a continuous update. But that update still happens very slowly and takes “months” to fully roll out each cycle. Google continues to crawl the web and assign a score to the site, and it takes months for that score to roll out to the index. So although Panda is continuous, it is not real-time, and it is slow.

Penguin

In short, Gary Illyes will not give a timeline on when the next version of Penguin will be released. He said the team is working on it, and he doesn’t want to give a date because he was wrong too many times about the release date.

AMP, Assistants & Bots

Danny Sullivan asked Gary Illyes to tell SEOs something they should prepare for in the upcoming year or so. Gary Illyes gave the audience two things. He said that AMP is going to be big, and SEOs and webmasters should think now about getting ready for AMP.
He also said that assistants, bots and chatbots are progressing and developing, and webmasters should pay attention to that area. One has to assume he was referring to not just the Google Assistant news from I/O, but also around all the usage of chatbots and various bots being used these days.

Mobile index

Gary Illyes said Google is still working on a mobile-only index. The mobile-only index may be used for smartphone searches and be separate from the normal index. Currently, Google’s search results for desktop and mobile use the same index and almost all of the same ranking signals. Google is looking to separate some of them out. Google has told us in the past that they are experimenting with this, and Google is clearly still working on a mobile-only index.

Google Search Console more data

It looks like after three years since Google promised more data and longer history of data in the Google Search Console, it may be coming. Gary said that the team is working on it and that the lead of the Google Search Console team was very “direct” with his team about making sure to give webmasters more history with their search analytics and other data in the Google Search Console.
When this will happen is still unclear, but the message Gary delivered here was positive.

HTTPS Adoption

Gary Illyes said that 34 percent of the Google index is now HTTPS — which is a very big growth trend for HTTPS. He also strongly recommended that webmasters consider migrating their websites from HTTP to HTTPS sooner, rather than later.
Source: Search engine land

Friday, 24 June 2016

7 steps to plan and optimize MyBusiness API

 
School of digital marketing
Digital marketing has improved it's geographical interface through Google MyBusiness, but with some of the differences while using the API has been a concern. Until the day when Google addresses these gaps in the API, here is  comprehensive seven-step plan to help you work around these issues and optimize your use of the API.

1. Build a centralized record system

Retain all of your location information in a single place that can act as the source of truth when you syndicate out to Google My Business. Populate this system with localized content, such as store descriptions, photos of each location from inside and outside the building, local menus, offers, local page URLs and whatever else is relevant to the individual location and your industry. Be sure that your business categories are up to date and that the relevant information is filled out.
Thanks to the most recent update of the API, you can now manage your photos and designate a profile and banner image, something you had to do manually before. With local search continuing to grow in importance for Google, expect the number of localized options to increase with each future API update. If you want to take advantage of them, keep your database up to date.

2. Standardize all of your addresses

Use a broadly shared address validator tool that will scale with the number of locations you manage. I use USPS Zip + 4, but there are other tools out there like Melissa Data, SmartyStreets and Loqate.
Do yourself a favor and standardize your addresses up front to save time and effort later. If you don’t enter standardized addresses into Google My Business, don’t be surprised if it generates geocodes in the wrong state, or even the wrong country. Believe me, I’ve seen it happen.
Having standardized addresses is key to working around the inability to update geocodes through the API, as it will prevent you from getting bogged down in needless address errors and will let you focus on tweaking minor geocode discrepancies that inevitably arise.

3. Publish and confirm your source data

Confirm that your location data represented within Google My Business is consistent with your location data on record.

4. Address the most inaccurate geocodes first

Perform triage, then go into Google My Business and address the most critical location issues first. This will not be a quick and easy process, so plan on doing this over a period of time.

5. Manage your closed locations

Many people don’t do this step, and that’s a mistake. In fact, it’s one of the biggest mistakes a brand can make when managing local listings. If you don’t manage your closed locations, these ghost locations can haunt the search ecosystem and damage the data quality for your account by competing with nearby locations that are still alive and well.
Fortunately, the latest Google My Business API update added the matching functionality, which allows brands to get a better handle on identifying and correcting these issues.

6. Publish, publish, publish

Google My Business provides brands with unprecedented accessibility that allows for updates to take place in near-real time for those able to use the API. Take advantage of it.

7. Monitor local listings

Be sure to monitor the health of your individual listings. Unfortunately, the current version of the API doesn’t allow you to pull search analytics to monitor this information, so here’s how to work around it:
  1. Prioritize your markets. Since you have to pull analytics directly from the business listing manually, it’s best to prioritize key locations that are representative of your highly desired individual markets or regions. Check the location insights of your high-value market locations first, then work down to lower priorities, depending on the time you have.
  2. Check local rankings. For the record, I don’t advocate tracking rankings or using them for performance metrics, but they can serve as a useful proxy for assessing the health within a given market. Local ranks are prone to changing, but you have to work with what you’ve got.
  3. Listings traffic. Utilize your local page URLs and add UTM tracking to understand traffic patterns to your local listings. This will give you a better understanding of how engaged users might be.
If you follow the seven steps above, not only will you optimize the Google My Business API, but you’ll also address the API’s issues regarding geocoding and pulling traffic information for a given location. Here’s looking forward to whatever the next version of the API will bring.
Source: Search engine land


Wednesday, 22 June 2016

Top social media marketing classes in pune

School of Digital Marketing is an institute condensed entirely on the scope of SEO, SEM, SMO, Email Marketing and Google Double Click. They are a Google Partner for Adwords Certification. With comprehensive and strategic planning of digital marketing! Placement and advertisement. With the successful completion of 3 years in the industry it caters to multinational and mid level companies, helping them build their online presence with their SEO Experts.
Social Media is the process of gaining traffic or attention through social media sites.Using social media for marketing can enable small business looking to further their reach to more customers. Your customers are interacting with brands through social media, therefore, having a strong social media presence on the web is the key to tap into their interest. If implemented correctly, marketing with social media can bring remarkable success to your business.

Tuesday, 21 June 2016

Search Engine Optimization - Process to come on top

Search Engine Optimization is a process of increasing the visibility of your website in major search engines. Many people think that for learning SEO, you need to have technical knowledge which is completely wrong assumption in the market.. You just need to know the basics of HTML which is covered in the course content. Why Website owners go for SEO? Let me give you an example. Lets say you are searching for a keyword in Google and you get a lot of websites in the ranking. The next what you will do is click on the website which comes in the top 3 or top 5 positions. So lets say if there are 100 people who are searching for the same keyword in Google, the website which is coming in the top position will get a lot leads. This is the benefit of doing SEO. SEO Rankings are not fixed. It keeps on changing.  We do provide SEO training in pune at our tilak road institute and the other institute is in dadar (Mumbai) Below are the details of the whole course content.

Monday, 20 June 2016

The biggest deal of Microsoft


LinkedIn is the world’s largest and most valuable professional network and continues to build a strong and growing business. Over the past year, the company has launched a new version of its mobile app that has led to increased member engagement; enhanced the LinkedIn newsfeed to deliver better business insights; acquired a leading online learning platform called Lynda.com to enter a new market; and rolled out a new version of its Recruiter product to its enterprise customers. These innovations have resulted in increased membership, engagement and financial results.
To know more on visit: School of Digital Marketing

Tuesday, 7 June 2016

Homeopathy has been a proven treatment for most of the diseases around the world. Acne has been one of the diseases that can be cured through homeopathy more efficiently.

Acne is the most common skin condition especially of the young age group, which is not only painful but also leads to many other social disturbances.
It mostly begins in teen age and its incidence tends to reduce as the years pass.
In Acne Vulgaris, the sebaceous glands get infected and several small or large eruptions develop especially on the face, neck and back.
With the help of homeopathy, it is possible to get rid of this painful acne with minimal recurrences.

Types of acne

  • Acne seems on the skin as occluded pores, additionally referred to as blackheads or whiteheads.
  • Tender red additionally referred to as pimples or zits,
  • Pustules containing pus), and sometimes as Cysts (deep pimples, boils).
  • Scarring in some patients.
  • Pigmentation of the skin
  • Click to get details of Homeopathy treatment for Acne