May 30

In the UK, many people don’t realise just how important Internet Marketing can be for their respective business. It can literally help make or breaks a business. Marketing is an integrated communications-based process through which individuals and communities discover that existing and newly-identified needs and wants may be satisfied by the products and services of others.

Internet marketing also referred to as i-marketing, web marketing, online marketing, or e Marketing, is the marketing of products or services over the Internet. In another word, we can also say Internet marketing is targeted… you will reach your target market with internet marketing.

Click here to continue reading this story »

May 30

Joomla is a leading content management system (CMS) that has a lot of very loyal followers. Using a Joomla template along with the top 10 or 20 Joomla specialty extensions is a good way to get going quickly with a search engine-friendly site. The SEO (Search Engine Optimization) benefits of using a Joomla template are many, in fact, and can help get you the rankings while driving traffic to your site, too. Essentially, it’s about having good, usable, “sticky” content and then being able to “prove” to the search engines that your site should be indexed as broadly as possible. All you need to get started is Joomla and the following free extensions: Joomseo, Search Engine Friendly Patch, sh404SEF and Xmap/Joomap. Depending on your time, your abilities and your imagination, there are the “Good,” “Better” and “Best” ways to harness the Joomla SEO benefits. The “Good” way: Quick and dirty Joomla SEO Phil Brown’s great Joomseo extension takes the major pain out of optimizing a Joomla site when used with sh404sef and the sitemap components. It creates a lot of the required tags and meta tags that you need for good SEO results by using the titles of your content items for Page Title Tags. You save time and prevent errors because you no longer need to enter all this information yourself, manually. Joomseo will take care of this as well as many other important. Anything that moves you toward your SEO goal is valuable, especially if it’s automated and in the background like this maneuver. The downside, of course, is that creating SEO elements via a script won’t get you the best results as if you took the time to do it yourself. Your human mind works differently than computer processors, and your creative thinking and “life lessons” (experience) can be added in for great effect. You can always take a bit of time to tweak the Joomseo output, but that starts a process that may even defeat the reason for using Joomseo in the first place, which is to save time. You should use this option when you have no time to do it another way. This is, in fact, a great benefit, in that you can now apportion your project time to the most critical matters and still be confident that your tag business is taken care of decently. The “Better” way: Logical and thorough Joomlatwork’s Search Engine Friendly Patch is another excellent tool and works almost as well as the “Best” method for many applications. As in the “Good” method above, this options use sh404SEF and a sitemap to let you manually enter the Title Tags and all meta data for your articles, front page and all menu items. This option for optimizing a site is very logical, since you place all necessary SEO information precisely where (and, of course, when) it would be expected, right in the parameters of the specific articles or menus when you first set them up. Now, of course, there is a downside. For one thing, the SEF patch does not place nice with every other component. For one example, it has been tested with Virtuemart and it does not offer much help there since, through no fault of the SEF patch developers, shop items aren’t covered. In addition, it is technically more akin to a hack, since it overwrites some core Joomla files when used in these contexts. Just remember that when you update your Joomla install you will be overwriting (over-overwriting?) the files that you already changed with the SEF Patch. You can count on the Joomlatwork crew to release updates of their own right on the heels of any Joomla releases. Remember to keep things straight with your patching and repatching. The “Best” way The sh404SEF extension is an indispensable tool. Like SEF Patch it allows you to create Title Tags and other meta tags one at a time, but differs by letting you do it per URL or web address. The key benefit here is that the process is compatible with any other components you may have installed on the Joomla site because you are able to assign additional meta to your URL. That is truly clever. The sh40SEF extension needs no communication with other components to do its job. It just comes on the scene and straightens up the existing mess. The sh404SEF workflow is not entirely intuitive and may take some practice. After you write and publish content items you will check in with the sh404SEF component, view the list of URLs, select the appropriate one to modify and, finally, add tags. This can get confusing if your content is not right there in front of your eyes to refer to while creating the page titles and the rest. Still, this is the preferred option of many Joomla gurus and earns its “Best” rating for the reasons above-particularly the fact that all the URLs or addresses on a site can have custom Page Title Tags, meta descriptions and everything else. Very, very cool. Using Joomla templates with a few of the best, free extensions gets you a tremendous payoff in SEO benefits that you can’t achieve as elegantly any other way. The user community continues to put its collective creativity into this powerful CMS, and all of the components are evolving purposefully to give site builders a growing range of good, better and best ways to optimize their page rankings and results.

Click here to continue reading this story »

May 29

Our exploration of utilizing content to increase conversion rates began with analyzing statistics to uncover opportunities for improvement, followed by how to create and implement good content to compel visitors to take action. The natural next step is testing. Unless you do some sort of controlled, measurable testing, you will never know what changes in copy, titles, calls to action, color schemes, layouts, etc. increase your conversion the best. Simply put, you should test variations of your content elements in different combinations to see what achieves the highest conversion overall. It may be helpful to picture the structure of journalism, the formula for writing a news story – “who, what, when, where, how and why.” When you are testing new content elements, defining and controlling for the first four W’s (and the H) just might offer you the answer to the last one – “why” your changes get the results they do. The elements of change Before we look at the elements individually, you should get a feel for the number of variables involved in this undertaking. First of all, of course, there is the copy itself. You will need to consider not just the individual words in the copy, but its tone, purpose, goal, and of course audience. If you are a good writer, you can do the writing yourself. If you are not, then get a professional to assist you. Even if you feel you can do it yourself it may profit you more to hire someone else to do it. Not many business owners or employees have an extra 1-2 hours in their day, nevermind 4-6 hours, to write the content needed to succeed. Plus there are large opportunity costs – time spent writing is time stolen from focusing on core business objectives. There are lot more elements to test than just the copy and more kinds of “copy” (words) than just the main sales message. Besides the main copy you will have title tags, article titles, headlines, subheads, calls to action, etc. Besides the sales message there is informational content to help visitors educate themselves to their decision. A change to any one of these is a separate test. What you’re testing Making copy variations might include changing the wording to create more engaging phrasing or language, changing the format from short description to comprehensive information, or changing the tone from hard to soft sell or from technical to layman terms, etc. It depends on your situation and industry. Headline and subhead variations may involve wording, placement, font, even color. With the calls to action, you may be rewriting, or repositioning, tweaking aesthetics, or all the above. If you cannot define what you are testing, you simply cannot test. Determine which elements are relevant to your situation and goals. After you have defined your points, there is one crucial point to always, always keep in mind: only change and test one thing at a time. If you change more than one thing it is impossible to know which change actually impacted the results. How now? You should decide up front whether you are doing open- or closed-end testing, that is, testing that is always ongoing versus testing done for a certain period of time. Although, generally speaking, you always want to be testing and improving, it doesn’t have to be one, long, unending one. You may get better results doing a sequence of short-term tests. Before you change or test anything you need to establish a control and a baseline. Put together what you feel is a solid page to be your control, then gather statistics on it for a period of time to get a baseline number from which you can judge your progress. The number of elements and their variations you are testing will help decide which what testing method you use. Let’s take a look at two testing approaches: A/B testing and multivariate testing. In A/B testing you compare alternate versions of an element against each other to see which one is more effective. If A/B’ing one element you can see which version works best and move forward. If A/B’ing only a few elements with limited variations, combining and testing them against one another is pretty straightforward (e.g. two elements, each having three variations, gives you six possible combinations). If you are testing multiple elements that each have multiple variations, you are going to have a huge number of combinations, so you will have to be very methodical about making one change at a time and tracking the results. A/B testing is good because you can typically do it in-house with resources you have on hand, and it doesn’t require complicated data analysis, so ease and low expense put it within the reach of most companies. However, testing multiple elements requires diligence and significant time expenditure. Another way to test multiple elements is multivariate testing. Multivariate testing involves blending multiple variations of multiple elements in various combinations, then collecting and analyzing the data to see which combinations work best. Different elements impact conversions in different ways, so multivariate testing helps you see both which specific elements impact conversions the most and which combinations produce the highest conversion rates overall. Multivariate testing requires more technical savvy, planning, and upfront work, but can save you time and cover more ground by testing more items in a given testing period. It also gives you a very scientific approach to your conversion improvement and establishes a system for open-ended testing. On the downside, it focuses on one page at a time and doesn’t take into account the pages before or after your test page that may significantly affect conversion rates. The “who” matters, too You probably have at least a few demographics, and each demographic contains various subdemographics. Certainly you can test with your visitor population as a whole, but it may benefit you even more to target specific people with specific recipes to see what works best with each particular audience. You can do this using identifying markers, such as IP addresses, referring URLs, unique IDs, etc., or behavioral characteristics, such as frequency of visits, pages viewed, time between return visits, previous purchases, and so forth. Some visitors you really want to pay attention to are the search engine spiders. When you are doing A/B split testing or multivariate testing you don’t want the search engines to see a different page each time they come by. Be sure your system can identify the different spiders and show them the same consistent page. After you have finalized your changes, remember to channel them to the new page. The “when” of it You could do an A/B test of your body copy, with Copy A for a month and Copy B for a month, and accrue and analyze those figures. Or you could set up A/B split testing, whereby Copy A and B are called up on successive page landings. Split testing is efficient because you can run the test in half the time and you lessen the impact of seasonality in the comparison. Whether doing A/B or multivariate testing, you want to make sure you allow enough time to gather sufficient data to draw useful conclusions. Timing is also important in establishing controls for your testing, particularly when making a succession of changes in A/B testing. Put the best, most creative effort first, which often (but not always) means the new body copy. As you monitor performance over a set amount of time and proceed from change to change, having a regular timing schedule will put you in a better position to tell what change had what effect. Also, be mindful of any seasonality when it comes to your industry. For example, if you sell flowers, data spikes around Mother’s Day and Valentine’s Day will naturally skew your results, so you have adjust for them or avoid those times. On the other hand, if your business can allow for it, you may want to target those days for specialized testing precisely because the high volumes and focused environment give you excellent data. The “where” factor It is not just the makeup of your elements that effects conversion rates, but also their position the page. Where is the copy most effective on the page? Do you place your lead form or products above the copy, below it, in the middle, or somewhere along one of the sides? It all depends on your industry, your situation, your audience, and what you want visitors to do. You have to try different formats and layouts to see what works best. The “where” factor may affect the call to action more than any other element. Whether it is a button to click, a product to buy, a lead form to fill out, or something else, the placement of the call to action and how many times it appears on the page can impact conversion rates tremendously. Don’t be shy about putting it in several places on the page. The call to action has both incentive and convenience aspects. You want it to be compelling enough to entice people to take action just by viewing it. But you also want it in several places so that no matter where the visitor is on the page they can take action if your copy compels them to do so. Another “where” is where the test page exists on your site. The pages that visitors saw before they got to the test page will impact your conversion. If the pages pointing to your testing page have misleading messages, no amount of changes on your test page will give you a clear picture, fix your problem, or give you the optimal conversion rates you want. Summing up The wildcard in all this is that your visitors are becoming more sophisticated every day, that is, they are constantly changing. You are working with a moving target. In addition to all the other business reasons, this in itself is reason enough to be continuously testing and improving. There is an art and science to all testing: an art in composing creatives and changes, a science in analyzing the data, and both in making the adjustments. The fact remains that you are dealing with humans and human emotion – how people perceive your pages (and thus your site) and whether they are compelled to follow your call to action. What visitors do may be tracked statistically, but why they are doing it is based on very human factors. Despite the qualified, quantified results you will get from testing, never overlook your own instincts and insights. Don’t go horoscope on it; just remember that your mind works in more ways than you know. While you are testing, test your own hunches about copy, placement of page elements, title tags, or calls to action. When you consider results, you must also allow yourself the freedom to make unexpected connections among data points, as well as the leeway to challenge preconceived notions about what the results “might have” or “should have” been. Gather and analyze the hard numbers and facts, but also include the art and psychological side, because it is emotion that drives people to take action (and thus convert). Remember, we are dealing with human beings, not robots, and people are nothing if not unpredictable, fickle, and confounding. Control your tests as closely as you can, identify and define your elements, run clean and clear tests, review the results, analyze the data, but also use your insight and intuition to figure out how to trip those emotional switches in people. Don’t use statistics only to force human emotional response into tidy rows, neat columns and pre-defined boxes. One of the advantages of “thinking outside the box” is that you won’t paint yourself into any corners.

About The Author
Matt Tuens is a copywriter for Beanstalk Search Engine Optimization, Inc. Beanstalk offers expert search engine optimization services, consulting, link building and SEO copywriting services. Visit online for more information.

Article Source:http://www.articlesbase.com/seo-articles/writing-for-conversions-testing-new-content-942919.html

May 29

Any person owing a business very well understands the importance of internet and having an online presence for the success of the business. At present times, no matter what kind of information an individual seeks, he/she uses the search engines to find out relevant and most useful information about the same. Here comes in the importance of having a well designed and optimized website with relevant and fresh content. The growing demand and importance of well drafted content is also increasing the demands for creative web content writer.

While it is important for a business to have an attractive and professional looking website to start off, content is considered to be the king. In order to reach out to the maximum number of potential customers globally, it is essential for businesses to have a potential website with fresh and relevant information in it. Well drafted and unique content also helps websites to achieve higher ranks in the leading search engines and reach out to more number of targeted audiences. In order to get creative and effective content developed for the website, most of the businesses have started to hire the content writing services.

Click here to continue reading this story »