Posts Tagged ‘arnie kuenn’

Google’s Search Plus Your World? – Not in My World!

Monday, January 16th, 2012

Googles Search Plus Your World Not in My World

Last week, Google announced Google’s Search Plus Your World (can we just call it Search Plus?) and the whole internet marketing industry is a buzz. Or so it seems.

We all knew it was coming, so it’s not a big surprise that Google+ is now integrated with search results. Maybe the big surprise is the timing, since G+ still needs a lot more work to be a full-fledged social media hang out. (more…)

Arnie Kuenn

Arnie Kuenn is the president of Vertical Measures and author of Accelerate! Content Development & Marketing to Grow Your Business Online. Vertical Measures provides search, social and content marketing services, designed to help businesses improve their online presence and obtain more traffic and conversions.
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Getting to Know Vertical Measures with Arnie and Andi Kuenn

Friday, November 18th, 2011

Getting to Know You

In this special edition of the Vertical Measures employee interview series, owners Arnie and Andi Kuenn discuss the beginning years of VM, how the company got its name and what they find most satisfying about the business. (more…)

Michael Schwartz

Michael Schwartz is an Internet marketing strategist at Vertical Measures as well as an accomplished reporter, blogger and editor. He covers the link building beat.

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Link Building vs. Link Attraction

Thursday, September 29th, 2011

Link-Building-vs-Link-Attraction

It is probably safe to assume that your business objectives depend heavily on search engine rankings and exposure through links from other websites to your own. As readers of this blog know, a major contributor to search engine rankings is the number of quality links to your website. On top of that, links from reputable sites to yours help increase traffic to your site. Needless to say, links to your content provide a major benefit to your efforts. So you have to find a way to get people to link to it. (more…)

Arnie Kuenn

Arnie Kuenn is the president of Vertical Measures and author of Accelerate! Content Development & Marketing to Grow Your Business Online. Vertical Measures provides search, social and content marketing services, designed to help businesses improve their online presence and obtain more traffic and conversions.
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Journalists need to embrace search now more than ever

Tuesday, March 9th, 2010

 

Search and journalism share a symbiotic relationship.

Journalism needs search so writers’ articles get found, and search needs journalism to provide some of the freshest content in the SERPs.

But some journalists feel that search represents an inherent contradiction to their job of serving the public good by disseminating timely, accurate and interesting information. It doesn’t feel natural to deliberately try to appease Google and Bing, with some journalists feeling it borders on being unethical.

That was the response that Vertical Measures President Arnie Kuenn and I got from college journalists and professors when we spoke at the Associated College Press National College Journalism Convention in Phoenix as well as the News21 Spring Training at ASU a couple weeks ago.

As we explained the basics of SEO and started to talk about optimizing headlines at the News21 conference, we got a question about the “elephant in the room” from a veteran journalist who explained that there’s some “dismay” in journalism around focusing on keywords for the purpose of ranking in Google.

This is a very valid question, a debate that will continue to rage as search becomes more and more important in the world of journalism.

My opinion goes back to the main point of Arnie’s presentation: when people are searching for your keyword they will either find you or they will find your competitor.

It goes without saying that you want to do everything you can to ensure that they find you, and I don’t feel like you’re doing anything unethical so long as your headlines are not misleading like the sensationalized heds popularized in the days of yellow journalism. So long as your headline still encompasses the core meaning of your story, it’s just smart to optimize that headline by throwing in a keyword as close to the beginning of the title as possible.

In my other life as the chief blogger for the ESPN-affiliated Phoenix Suns blog ValleyoftheSuns.com, I recently did an experiment trying to optimize my site for Amare Stoudemire-related keywords in the weeks leading up to the Feb. 18 trade deadline, as the Phoenix Suns star forward’s name swirled in many rumors about a potential trade.

This strategy involved pumping out lots of quality content and then optimizing for long tail keywords such as “Amare Stoudemire trade rumors,” “Amare Stoudemire trade rumors 2010,” “Amare Stoudemire trade to Cleveland,” and you get the picture.

The results? After getting 12.3 percent of my traffic from search in my site’s previous history, I got a whopping 31 percent of my traffic from search during this time. In just over three weeks, I got about 86K pageviews and 58K uniques. In an average month I generally get about 40K pageviews and 30K uniques, so the increased traffic from search certainly made a major difference.

So hooray for me, now how can you replicate that?

First, use the Google AdWords Keyword Tool to see what people are searching in your vertical, looking for keywords with a good ratio of how much they are searched to competition. Google Trends can also help you find highly-searched keywords in your vertical, and both of these tools are a big part of the research stage of content development.

Also, think ahead and optimize long tail keywords that you know will be hot for a specific period of time ahead of time, like I did with keywords such as “Amare Stoudemire trade rumors 2010″ that would be dormant for most of the year but provided a lot of easy traffic during those three weeks.

Next, write content around what people are searching for, and here’s where it gets tricky. I have a journalism degree, so I know the goal of an ethical journalist (as I strive to be) is to report the news and nothing but the news.

By looking at my analytics and seeing that Amare Stoudemire-related stories were so hot during the weeks leading up to the trade deadline, I feel I was merely following the laws of supply and demand by supplying the kind of content my readership demanded. There’s nothing unethical about creating quality, timely content on topics people want to read.

A big part of the optimization process involves the headline, as touched on earlier. Optimizing for a public figure’s name that gets a lot of searches is often a smart strategy for news stories. You may notice some major newspapers such as the LA Times write different headlines for their print and online editions, often spelling out a public figure’s full name online for search purposes.

Since my site is a part of Google News, my articles often got top billing above the top natural results in a “News” section at the top of the SERP. With so many people searching for articles on this particular topic, there’s no question that this was a source of many of my clicks. 

There once was a time when journalists worried only about the print edition, with the online edition being just another way to display their regular product.

But with pageviews and uniques becoming everything in the online world of journalism, it’s just one more thing that has to change in the ever-changing industry of journalism.

Every journalist must decide for themselves where they draw their ethical line when it comes to optimizing content, but I see no issue with rearranging a couple words in a title of an article that you would write anyway to make your article easier to find than the one written by your competitor.

See below, for Michael and Arnie’s full presentation for News 21.
 

Vertical Measures Internet Marketing from News21 on Vimeo.

Michael Schwartz

Michael Schwartz is an Internet marketing strategist at Vertical Measures as well as an accomplished reporter, blogger and editor. He covers the link building beat.

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The Future of Education and Technology: EduRG Conference 2010

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

 

edurg conference photoThis weekend, Vertical Measures will be attending the EduRG Conference at the Phoenix Convention Center.  The conference is aimed towards advancing education through technology and innovation. The mission of EDU Research Group is to advance the quality of education by conducting research that assists the establishments in creating an improved academic environment, and help to match students with their optimum school. The event will feature an expo, workshops, and speakers, including keynote speaker Al Gore.  

Education is rapidly changing. From when a prospective student begins researching colleges to when they graduate from their selected university, most of the activities required to accomplish this will be conducted on their computer and online.
 
Vertical Measures will be presenting a workshop “Is Your Website Hurting Your Admissions?”. In this workshop Arnie Kuenn and Patty Adams will discuss why a school’s website should be used as a primary marketing tool, implementing search engine optimization strategies that can increase enrollment, decreasing cost per lead, cost per enrollment, and cost per start, using the right keywords to attract prospective students to their website, and increasing website traffic while improving lead to start ratio.
 
I wouldn’t be surprised, if many students have made their decision about a university before they even visit the campus. They want all of the resources required to make their decision available at their fingertips. Whether it be virtual tours of the campus, of campus housing, or even live online chats with academic counselors, this is where institutions are headed and some have already arrived.
 
The event will feature vendors with a variety of educational products and services. It’s a great opportunity for students, faculty, academic institutions, and businesses to come together and share their ideas and resources for moving education forward.  Students and faculty can attend the Student Expo for free and get the chance to meet with representatives from hundreds of institutions.
 
This effort also aligns with reducing schools’ carbon footprint. Imagine how many millions of tons of paper a large university goes through each year. Instead, they could place all school materials online, provide laptop rentals or discounts on laptops. There is an incredible amount of opportunity here for businesses to be the provider of those solutions, perhaps with partnerships.
 
The event takes place this weekend, February 27th and 28th at the Phoenix Convention Center. Be sure to register soon or recommend it to others that might benefit!
 
Readers: Text VM to 53137 and get more information about Vertical Measures. We’ll send you a valuable PDF with details on all our services and SEO facts and tips too!

 

Sarah Moraes

Sarah Moraes, Marketing Manager, heads the tactical planning and implementation of cross-platform marketing activities for Vertical Measures including; blogging, social media marketing, webinars, content marketing, email marketing and promotions. In addition, she published the Local Search Marketing for Business How-To-Guide, a part of the Vertical Measures How-To-Guide Series.

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