Wednesday, 31 August 2016

Things you can do to improve your email delivery

School of digital marketing

Here are some Tips & Tricks to Stay Out of the Junk folder
Things you can do to improve your email delivery:
Don’t use false or misleading header information
Don’t use deceptive subject lines
Tell recipients where you’re located
Use Permission Marketing Techniques
Tell recipients how to opt-out of receiving future email from you
Identify the message as an ad
Use Spam Checkers before Sending Your Emails
Honor opt-out requests promptly
Monitor what others are doing on your behalf
Avoid Spam Trigger Words and Phishing Phrases
Avoid Large Attachments and Certain Attachment
Include a Text Version of Your Email if You Are Sending
Maintain a Good Text to Image Ratio
Hope the above article would help you to stay out of the Junk Folder

SOME COMMON SEO TOOLS

School of digital marketing

In order to reach the top the rankings of major search engines and stay there in 2015 and beyond, your website must deserve to be there  in digital marketing. It needs to be the best in class. It must offer the best user experience in that niche. So here are some free SEO tools that can help you achieve that goal
Keyword Research
Keyword Eye Basic
YouTube Keyword Tool
Übersuggest
Anchor Text over Optimization Tool
Convert Word Documents to Clean HTML
Copyscape
Robots.txt Checker
URI Valet
Title and Description Optimization Tool
Image SEO Tool
Schema Creator
Google Snippet Preview
Structured Data Testing Tool
XML Sitemap Generators
We hope that the above SEO Tools will help you in achieving your goals and get the desired results.

The new CEO of Google

School of digital marketing

The change comes as Google reveals a new operating strategy and the creation of an umbrella company called Alphabet. Larry Page says he will serve as CEO of the new company, with Sergey Brin taking on the role of president.
Former Chrome and Android head Sundar Pichai has become Google’s new CEO on 10th August 2015. It is a matter of pride for our Country
According to most media reports and interviews Pichai attended Jawahar Vidyalaya for Class X and Vanavani Matriculation for Class XII. However after Google’s CEO Larry Page made the announcement about Pichai succeeding him as CEO, several other schools started claiming Pichai as one of their own.
He first got his start in 2004 on Google’s tool bar before becoming a product manager on Google’s Chrome browser under Marissa Mayer. After Chrome launched in 2008, Pichai was quickly promoted to vice president.

Wednesday, 24 August 2016

Google's evolved logos.

School of digital marketing

Once upon a time, Google was one destination that you reached from one device: a desktop PC. These days, people interact with Google products across many different platforms, apps and devices—sometimes all in a single day. You expect Google to help you whenever and wherever you need it, whether it’s on your mobile phone, TV, watch, the dashboard in your car, and yes, even a desktop!
Google has introduced a new logo and identity family that reflects this reality and shows you when the Google magic is working for you, even on the tiniest screens. As you’ll see, they have taken the Google logo and branding, which were originally built for a single desktop browser page, and updated them for a world of seamless computing across an endless number of devices and different kinds of inputs (such as tap, type and talk).
It doesn’t simply tell you that you’re using Google, but also shows you how Google is working for you. For example, new elements like a colorful Google mic help you identify and interact with Google whether you’re talking, tapping or typing. Meanwhile, they are bidding adieu to the little blue “g” icon and replacing it with a four-color “G” that matches the logo.
Article  Credit: Googleblogspot

Google Adwords Turns 15: A Look Back At the Origins

School of digital marketing

Google AdWords Turns 15: A Look Back At The Origins Of A $60 Billion Business.
AdWords launched with 350 advertisers in 2000. Today, more than 1 million advertisers generate tens of billions in revenue for the company.
AdWords turns 15 this month. The official birthday is October 23, but Google is celebrating the milestone today. Google’s not much of a stickler for exact birthdays, though; the company marked AdWords’ 10th birthday on November 8, 2010.
AdWords indisputably changed the trajectory of online advertising with its self-serve keyword bidding system and propelled Google to become the multi-billion-dollar business that is now the cornerstone of the holding company Alphabet. In 2014, Google reported ad revenues totaling more than $62 billion.
The Launch of AdWords:
AdWords came out of a roughly month-long beta with about 350 advertisers in October 2000. With the launch, Larry Page, Google’s co-founder and CEO, said of the new ad product, “AdWords offers the most technologically advanced features available, enabling any advertiser to quickly design a flexible program that best fits its online marketing goals and budget.”
AdWords was actually Google’s second advertising program. The first, called Premium Sponsorships, launched just months before, in August 2000. A direct sales team sold the premium sponsorship ads on a CPM basis. The premium ads appeared in the top spot in the search results, while the AdWords ads ran in the right rail. In a matter of a few years, the AdWords self-serve system subsumed the premium program.
The Simple Days Of 20 Million Searches:
Not only did AdWords debut in a time when desktop reigned, Google was a significantly smaller engine then. In 2000, Google said users were conducting more than 20 million searches per day on google.com. Fifteen years later, the search engine handles more than three billion searches per day. More than half of those searches now come from mobile devices.
And of course now, advertisers can run campaigns on YouTube, the Google Display Network and Google’s mobile app network, AdMob, all through the AdWords interface. Google reported $16.8 billion in ad revenues across its platforms in Q3 2015, up 13 percent from the previous year. Google doesn’t break out how much of that ad revenue comes from search, but it’s a significant majority.
The Current Search Landscape: Yahoo-Google?
Overall, search advertising accounts for half of all internet ad spend in the US, which topped $27.5 billion in the first half of 2015, according to the IAB. That includes search ad spend on Bing and Yahoo, but Google maintains nearly 64 percent of search share on desktop and almost 90 percent of mobile in the US.
Bing achieved profitability last quarter, according to Microsoft, thanks in large part to Windows 10, but the search engine has very low market share on mobile. That’s where Yahoo hopes to make its mark with Gemini, though Yahoo is also now looking to Google (again) to supplement monetization on both mobile and desktop queries if regulators play along.
Challenging Display Environment:
While Google has managed to remain dominant in search, the company has faced mounting competition on the display side, in particular, with the shift to mobile and rise of both social app 
usage and investment in native display advertising. Facebook has overtaken Google in display revenue share, according to eMarketer. Facebook is expected to hold 25 percent share of display ad revenues in the US, compared to Google’s 13 percent share in 2015.
Transformative Changes: Google Shopping & Enhanced Campaigns
The two biggest changes to AdWords in recent years were the transition of product search to the paid version of Google Shopping in 2012 and the transition to Enhanced Campaigns in 2013, which effectively made mobile a must-do for advertisers. Product listing ads now make up a significant portion of retailers’ search spend on Google, and Goldman Sachs estimates roughly 20 percent of Google’s ad revenue now comes from mobile. (If you think I’ve overlooked a significant update, let me know on Twitter.)
In 15 years, Google has grown its AdWords advertiser base from the 350 that came along for the beta to more than one million. For more fun facts (the troubling manscaping trend notwithstanding), check out the infographic Google put together to commemorate AdWords’ 15th birthday below. Happy slightly belated birthday, AdWords.
Article Credit: Search Engine Land

SEO uses to increase connections

School of digital marketing

On a fundamental level, effective search engine optimization (SEO) is about creating connections with your target audience. Columnist Ryan Shelley shows how personas can help you achieve these connections:
Why do companies invest in SEO? Is it to generate more traffic? Leads? Brand identity? All of these are good reasons to invest in search, but I believe the reason so many invest comes down to something much more important.
SEO, at its core, is about creating connections. Connections are what fuel growth. Businesses invest in SEO for the opportunity to create a connection with their target audience — without these connections, there can be no traffic, leads, brand exposure or sales.
But how can we use SEO to create these connections? Furthermore, how can we use it to create the right connections?
Before you can reach an audience, you have to define it. Persona profiling is something that has been used for decades in the marketing industry, and mapping out who your audience is will give you a deeper insight into how to most effectively reach them.
We’ve all heard and read about the importance of “user-focused SEO strategies,” but how many of us are really putting them into practice? In order to deliver real results that make a lasting connection, we must learn to define our audience and create a strategy based on them.
What’s a persona, and why should I care?
According to HubSpot, a persona is “a semi-fictional representation of your ideal customer based on market research and real data about your existing customers.” In short, it’s a sketch of the person(s) you are trying to target.
Now, when I ask a client who their product is for and the answer I get back is “everyone,” I know we have some work to do. Here’s a little piece of advice: Your product isn’t for everyone, but it is for someone. So find out who that someone is and share it with them.
Take this site, for example. It’s not for everyone. My mom doesn’t even come here to read my articles. Why? Because she doesn’t care about SEO. But there are a ton of search professionals who come here every day to get the latest news, tips and more. The search professional is a persona that represents this site’s target audience.
The better we can understand who we are trying to reach, the better we can plan, strategize and more effectively execute our work as SEOs.
How do I get started?
While persona research has come a long way over the years, in my opinion, it still has a long way to go. Market research and data are great, but these aren’t always the most reliable source of information.
To truly understand your audience, you have to break down every aspect of their lives and try to find common connections. These commonalities will help give us clues not just into what they do, but why they do it.
Now, I know some of you may be thinking, “I thought this was about SEO, not psychology,” but stick with me. Taking the time to do this work will help you create a more contextualized strategy that returns a much greater ROI for your clients.
Following are three core areas I recommend you research when developing your personas for SEO:
Demographics
Most of the demographic information is going to be found via marketing research and data. But here’s the thing: You need to ensure that this information is accurate and up to date. Read more than just one report, and make sure you check the date of the research findings. Things change fast, and it would be a shame to base your entire strategy on outdated information.
When defining persona demographics, you want to be sure that you have a good understanding of the following:
  • How would they describe themselves? Mom, Dad, Student, Athlete, Entrepreneur?
  • Where do they live? Rural, Suburban, Urban?
  • What’s their age range? Baby Boomers, GenX-ers, Millennials?
  • What industry are they in? Engineering, Healthcare, Finance, Media?
  • What is their level of employment? Management, Upper-Level Executive, Sales Associate, Consultant?
How does this help your SEO? 
A site that is directed toward the needs of stay-at-home moms will need a much different approach from one directed at Millennial entrepreneurs or C-Level executives in the banking industry. Understanding these basics about your audience will help you create better content, title tags, meta information and more.
Social dynamics
Humans are social creatures; just look at the massive impact and expansion of social media in the past decade as proof. We are also afraid of being seen as the “outsider” in our social groups, so the people and groups we associate with have a lot of influence on how we think and act.
When exploring the social dynamic of your persona, here are a few good questions to ask:
  • Who are the peers, subordinates, superiors, and outsiders with whom they frequently interact?
  • What are some brands that influence them?
  • What groups/organizations are they a part of?
  • What types of media are they attracted to? (Social, TV, internet, magazines)
  • What do they do for fun?
How does this help your SEO? 
Again, these social dynamics can help us contextualize our approach. Where this really comes in handy is in link building. Finding where your personas “hang out” can lead to creating new linking opportunities you may have never uncovered in your original prospecting. Related niches are a great way to cross-promote and build a network with other businesses looking to target a similar audience to yours.
For more on this, check out my last post, “The art of link building: Why creating a connection is the key to success.
Empathy mapping
“Okay, I get demographic and social dynamics, but empathy? Come on, man. You’re taking this too far!”
Am I? If our goal is to create meaningful online connections that deliver real business results, the only way we can influence someone to move is by connecting and sharing our message in a way that resonates with their worldview. A great tool to do this is called the Empathy Map by Xplane.
The goal of empathy mapping is to quickly capture the perspective of your audience. The Empathy Map addresses the following key points:
  • What do they SEE? What’s happening around them?
  • What do they SAY? To colleagues, friends, their boss?
  • What do they DO? What’s their attitude and behavior?
  • What do they FEEL? What are common emotions they experience?
  • What do they HEAR? What do their friends, boss, family and others say?
  • What do they THINK? What really counts? What are they worried about? What do they want to achieve?
How does this help your SEO? 
Having a better understanding of how your audience views and interacts with the world will help you create messaging that resonates with them on a personal level.
We all know the importance of content when it comes to SEO. But it’s not about how much content, it’s about the right content. By truly connecting with your audience through content that speaks to their deepest needs, you’ll increase engagement, shares and more — all of which, in return, impacts traffic, leads, brand identity and so on.
Start creating your persona profiles
I hope this post helped explain and encourage you to think deeper about the person behind your SEO strategy.
By defining your audience, getting to know who they are and understanding what moves them, you will be able to create a strategy that more effectively draws them into a connection. And at the end of the day, isn’t that what we are all after?
Source: Search engine land

google-controls-65-percent-of-search-bing-33-percent-comscore

School of Digital Marketing

In the simplest terms, the world of organic search is roughly two-thirds Google, one-third Bing. Those are the July 2015 “powered by” numbers provided by comScore for the US search market.

In terms of non-network share, Bing saw a tiny 0.1 percent gain in July, and so did Ask. Google was flat with 64 percent, unchanged for the past three months. Yet Google’s market share is down from 67.6 percent a year ago.

comscore july 2015 search rankings
Bing and Yahoo combined in July accounted for 33.1 percent market share. AOL will soon be a Bing-powered search property. If that were the case today, the share of Bing and Bing-powered searches would represent 34.3 percent of all query volume.
Source: Search engine land