19,99 €
Proven, task-based approach to developing winning internet marketing campaigns If you've been seeking a practical, day-by-day, do-it-yourself plan for success in your Internet marketing, this is the book for you. The latest in the very popular Hour a Day series, this book gives you step-by-step instruction and clear action plans for all crucial aspects of successful internet marketing: SEO, website optimization, integration of social media and blogs, and pay-per-click strategies. Above all, it shows you how to use analytics effectively, so you can track and understand your results, then course-correct as you need. * Provides step-by-step instruction to help you design, implement, and measure an internet marketing strategy * Uses the empowering and winning approach that has made the books in the Hour a Day series top sellers * Breaks down intimidating topics into approachable, hour-a-day tasks * Covers key topics in step-by-step detail, including SEO, website optimization and usability, analytics, blog integration, social media, and pay-per-click strategies * Offers expert guidance from an experienced and well-known internet marketer, Matt Bailey Drive targeted traffic to your site, keep them there, and convert them into happy customers with this refreshingly practical, roll-up-your-sleeves guide!
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Seitenzahl: 942
Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2011
Table of Contents
Cover
Praise for Internet Marketing: An Hour a Day
Title Page
Credits
Copyright
Dedication
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Foreword
Introduction
Who Should Read This Book
What’s Inside
How to Contact the Author
Part I: UnderstandingToday’s Internet Marketing
Chapter 1: A Holistic Approach
The Fundamentals of Marketing
The Measure of Success
Make It Right
Who’s at Fault for Website Problems?
Bringing It All Together with Analytics
A Team Approach
Is This for You?
Chapter 2: How Search Engines Work
The Big Picture
Understanding the Vocabulary
How Search Engines Used to Work
Chapter 3: Rankings or Profit? Establishing Your Business Goals
Web Design by Alice
Search Rankings Are Not a Goal
Set Better Goals
Calculate the Value of a Lead
Measure According to the Goal
Part II: Month 1: Evaluate and Research
Chapter 4: Week 1: Evaluate Your Situation
Monday: Find Your Search Engine–Friendliness
Tuesday: Use Search Engine Tools to Check Your Website
Wednesday: Use Firefox’s Free Tools
Thursday: Follow the W3C Accessibility Checklists
Friday: Test Human-Friendliness
Review and Hands-On
Chapter 5: Week 2: Understand Basic SEO
Monday: Distinguish Bad Information from Good Advice
Tuesday: Optimize On-Page Factors
Wednesday: Optimize Content Structure for SEO
Thursday: Explore the Power of Off-Page Ranking Factors
Friday: See SEO in Practice
Review and Hands-On
Chapter 6: Week 3: Jump into Keyword Research
Monday: Call It What It Is
Tuesday: Develop Keyword-Research Skills
Wednesday: Understand the Buying Cycle
Thursday: Find Searcher Behavior Types
Friday: Organize for Optimization
Review and Hands-On
Chapter 7: Week 4: Leverage Principles of Sales and Marketing
Monday: Know Your Market
Tuesday: Create the Need
Wednesday: Anticipate the Objection
Thursday: Ask for the Sale
Friday: Don’t Muddy the Water
Review and Hands-On
Part III: Month 2: Develop Content That Converts
Chapter 8: Week 5: Understand That Content Comes First
Monday: Make Your Content Explode
Tuesday: Create a Customer Experience
Wednesday: Tell Your Story
Thursday: Provide a Return on the Customer’s Investment
Friday: Test Your Message
Review and Hands-On
Chapter 9: Week 6: Connect Your Content to Users and Search Engines
Monday: Understand Human Factors in Scanning
Tuesday: Create Concise and Memorable Content
Wednesday: Consider Your Site’s Credibility
Thursday: Create Accurate, Attention-Grabbing Headlines
Friday: Connect Human Factors to Search Factors
Review and Hands-On
Chapter 10: Week 7: Master the Science of Online Persuasion
Monday: Build a Logical Proof
Tuesday: Use Emotion to Convince the Reader
Wednesday: Communicate Credibility
Thursday: Test Your Persuasive Message
Friday: Plan for Misspellings and Plurals
Review and Hands-On
Chapter 11: Week 8: Improve Conversions
Monday: Call Visitors to Action
Tuesday: Make It Attractive
Wednesday: Overcome Obstacles
Thursday: Promote the Next Step
Friday: Implement Testing
Review and Hands-On
Part IV: Month 3: Develop Good Site Architecture
Chapter 12: Week 9: Create Effective Navigation
Monday: Consider the Home Page as Direction Rather Than a Destination
Tuesday: Categorize Subjects with Card Sorting and Tree Testing
Wednesday: Support Navigation with Information
Thursday: Lead with Links, Labels, and Alternative Navigation Techniques
Friday: Develop Using Wireframes
Review and Hands-On
Chapter 13: Week 10: Design for Accessibility
Monday: Get Familiar with Accessibility
Tuesday: Learn the Intricacies of Accessibility
Wednesday: Understand Color Blindness and Contrast
Thursday: Create Accessible PDFs
Friday: Accessibility Applied to Search
Review and Hands-On
Chapter 14: Week 11: Identify Technical Roadblocks
Monday: Check the Quality of Your URLs
Tuesday: Understand URL Rewrites
Wednesday: Use Redirects
Thursday: Uncover Duplicate Content
Friday: Utilize Robots.txt to Welcome Search Engines
Review and Hands-On
Chapter 15: Week 12: Remember the Important Details
Monday: Compare Tables and CSS
Tuesday: Create Better Error Pages
Wednesday: Test Your Site Search
Thursday: Consider Site Maps
Friday: Use Local and Mobile Marketing
Review and Hands-On
Part V: Month 4: Expand Your Reach and Measure Results
Chapter 16: Week 13: Build Links
Monday: Learn How Search Engines Utilize Links
Tuesday: Distinguish Various Link Types and Their Value
Wednesday: Understand How Link Development Mirrors Offline Networking
Thursday: Find Link Opportunities
Friday: Evaluate the Marketing Value of Your Links
Review and Hands-On
Chapter 17: Week 14: Add to Your Business with Blogs
Monday: Build a Business Case for Blogs
Tuesday: Understand the Architecture of a Blog
Wednesday: Develop Your Blogging Style
Thursday: Avoid Blog Design Pitfalls
Friday: Manage and Increase Subscribers
Review and Hands-On
Chapter 18: Week 15: Get Friendly with Social Media
Monday and Tuesday: Understand the Breadth of Social Media
Wednesday: Communicate Your Message Effectively
Thursday: Assess Your Resources
Friday: Enact Your Social-Media Plan
Review and Hands-On
Chapter 19: Week 16: Develop a Complementary Pay-per-Click Campaign
Monday: Understand the Advantages of PPC
Tuesday and Wednesday: Take Advantage of Keywords
Thursday: Take People to the Right Page
Friday: Measure the Right Thing
Review and Hands-On
Chapter 20: Week 17: Measure, Measure, Measure
Monday: Understand the Terms
Tuesday: Establish Goals
Wednesday: Evolve from Data to Analysis
Thursday and Friday: Develop Segments
Review and Hands-On
Chapter 21: Week 18: Analyze for Action
Monday: Set Up Goals and Analysis in Google Analytics
Tuesday: Analyze by Segments
Wednesday: Analyze Segmented Search Terms and Bounce Rates
Thursday: Segment Content
Friday: Turn Your Analysis into Action!
Review and Hands-On
Index
Praise for Internet Marketing: An Hour a Day
Matt Bailey is one of my favorite speakers at industry events because he delivers insights with intelligence and wit. He brings that same approach to this book in what is quickly becoming the next must-read for anyone interested in improving their business online.
—Brett Crosby, Director, Product Marketing; Google
I’ve seen Matt wow crowds at Internet marketing conferences for years. He wows, because he has a gift for making a subject that many find daunting and complicated, sound accessible and eminently doable. The fact that he’s been asked to write a book about his wisdom and experience speaks volumes. I hope to see many more volumes of Matt’s written work in bookshops and on slate devices for years to come.
—Mel Carson, @MelCarson – Microsoft Advertising Community Manager
If you are a small business owner, this book is for you. Even the most time-strapped technophobe can understand Matt’s easy-to-follow steps, implement his suggestions and drive qualified website traffic. You can pay someone thousands to “SEO” your site—or you can read this book and do it yourself. My advice: buy this book!
—Heather Lloyd-Martin, Past Chair, DMA Search Engine Marketing Council
CEO, SuccessWorks Search Marketing
Internet marketing is one of the highest ROI channels a business can utilize to grow it sales and drive its earnings. It is however a path many misunderstand. With Matt Bailey as your guide you are guaranteed learn the basics through to the more advanced techniques and find your way to mastering this high ROI marketing channel. Matt is an accomplished speaker, trainer, practitioner and now author and this book will most definitely educate you on everything you need.
—Matt McGowan, Managing Director, North America, Incisive Media
(ClickZ, Search Engine Watch and the SES Conference and Expo Series)
What a great book! I’ve taught direct marketing to over 10,000 professionals as educational director of the DMA Direct Marketing Institute. So many of my attendees are “accidental marketers”—business owners, middle and upper managers who were given marketing responsibility, and career changers hoping to update their relevance in today’s online world. This book will definitely be on my recommended reading list for future attendees. Matt makes the concepts easy to grasp and entertaining to learn.
—Beth Smith, Board of Directors, Direct Marketing Association; Owner, Smith Browning Direct; Educational Director and Instructor, Direct Marketing Association
Matt Bailey unpacks the mystery of SEO, site design, data and much else, in step-by-step directions, and plain English for the rest of us. No one else has approached the plain-English demystification of building an effective Web presence as cost-effectively and time-effectively as has Matt. This work is built on top of something like 15 years of experience in helping global majors and backyard amateurs be the best that they can be on the Internet. And maybe 5 years of teaching US Direct Marketing Association classes, and helping hundreds of students be the best they could be for themselves or for major companies in the US and abroad. If you have a struggling site and can’t figure out why it isn’t performing better, or if you just got your first PC and know your new business needs a Web presence, this book will more than repay you. It will build your business.
—Charles Prescott, Editor Prescott Report; Executive Director, Global Address Data Association; Director, Direct Marketing Association; Chair, Consultative Committee, Universal Postal Union
This book should be required reading for all business owners. At a time where everyone claims to be an Internet marketing expert, Matt is the real deal. He has provided a clear and concise guidebook containing all the tools and knowledge to help business owners quickly unleash the power of Internet marketing, In the sea of Internet marketing books, Matt’s book rises to the top for its clarity and focus on generating ROI for business owners.
—Eric Greenberg, Faculty Chair, Center for Management Development
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
So many people launch websites but lack basic technical and marketing knowledge to make them succeed. Don’t fall into this trap! Before you get started, read Internet Marketing: An Hour a Day. It’s a comprehensive resource filled with proven tips, tactics and marketing tools you can use to become an online success. Business owners large and small will benefit from this solid resource and the real-world advice Matt Bailey offers, you’ll find yourself turning to it constantly!
—Debra Mastaler, President, Alliance-Link.com
If you’re new to Internet marketing, you don’t know what you don’t know. Matt Bailey not only helps you understand what you don’t know, he also manages to take subject matter that can be very complex and breaks it into easily digestible pieces for a newbie. Reading this book is like going to kindergarten on page 1 and finishing the last chapter with an MBA. This book should be required reading for all online marketing managers and small business owners.
—Adam Proehl, Managing Partner, NordicClick Interactive
Internet marketing opens the door to business opportunities. It also an open door to potential pitfalls. The trick is to read Internet Marketing: An Hour a Day by SiteLogic’s President Matt Bailey so you can avoid the pitfalls, seize the opportunities, and get back home by six o’clock. Bailey’s book tells you what works, what doesn’t and provides a practical, day-by-day, do-it-yourself plan for success. It’s the first thing that I hand to new employees to get them up to speed. And I can’t believe that I’m praising a book written by a fan of The Ohio State University Buckeyes. I’m a Wolverine from the University of Michigan. But Bailey’s book is that good. So, I urge you to read it, despite the author’s tendency to remind me that we’ve lost “the game” for seven years in a row.
—Greg Jarboe, President of SEO-PR and author of YouTube and Video Marketing: An Hour a Day
I’ve known Matt as a terrific speaker at the Search Engine Strategies conferences, and someone whose opinion truly matters to me. He has always amazed me with his ability to take what might otherwise be complicated material and make it easily digestible for not only beginners, but also very engaging to those of us who’ve been in our Industry for years. In Internet Marketing: An Hour a Day, Matt does not disappoint. It’s truly a page-turner, delivering very sound advise that will save readers thousands of dollars from having done things “incorrectly”, by taking the time to read this book, first. I cannot recommend Matt’s advise strongly enough. It’s practical, easy to follow and understand and—should you follow the things mentioned here—lead you to the “promised land” of success from your Internet marketing endeavors.
—Mark Jackson, President / Chief Executive Officer, Vizion Interactive, Inc.
For years I’ve watched Matt enthrall audiences by presenting complex material with an engaging, easy-to-understand style. I’m happy to say that style imbues Internet Marketing: An Hour a Day. Matt takes a holistic approach that any site owner will easily grasp. By the end of the book, the reader has a complete picture of the tools and techniques that can supercharge the effectiveness of any website.
—David Szetela, Owner and CEO, Clix Marketing
This book represents an easy-to-read, step by step guide to effective Internet marketing. Whether you are a small business owner, a marketing manager, or an aspiring entrepreneur, Internet Marketing: An Hour a Day provides you with much needed direction and insight from one of the most respected and accomplished Internet marketing experts in the world—Matt Bailey.
—Kristopher B. Jones, Internet Marketing Expert and Founder of Pepperjam,
Author of “Search Engine Optimization: Your Visual Blueprint to Effective Internet Marketing”
Matt Bailey is truly a marketer’s marketer, known by tens of thousands of conference attendees and speakers all over the world, for offering years of clear and actionable advice. Suffice to say we’ve been looking forward to this book for a while. In it, Matt systematically illustrates the holistic, interconnected nature of all things online marketing. I particularly like the focus on achieving actual ROI, defining business goals, and targeting sales as well as basics like keyword research, social media and SEO fundamentals. Run don’t walk to pick up this book. There’s something in it for anyone ready to invest in heightening their understanding of the online marketing space as a whole. aimClear® plans on shipping them to our clients, so they better know how to work with our team.
—Marty Weintraub, President, aimClear®
Internet marketing in just one hour a day? Surely it can’t be done! Maybe most people couldn’t teach the broad topic of Internet marketing in just an hour a day, but most people aren’t Matt Bailey. Trust me, walk to the counter and buy this book. Your approach to Internet marketing will never be the same again!
—Andy Beal, coauthor of Radically Transparent: Monitoring & Managing Reputations Online, CEO & Founder, trackur
Matt’s new book is a perfect marketing campaign building tool for the new Internet marketer. Not only does it show step-by-step how to implement successful campaigns online, but it’s written in straightforward language that anybody building a business can understand. I only wish I had this when I started. I recommend highly that you buy this book today!
—Jon Rognerud, SEM Author, Blogger at JonRognerud.com and seoworld.entrepreneur.com
Matt has an intuitive knowledge of how to market online. The fact that he was able to corral his wisdom and turn it into a hands-on book that clarifies, simplifies and justifies marketing decisions is remarkable.
—Neil Feinstein, Director, Brand & Creative Strategy, True North Inc.
In a world of trivial taglines, meaningless marketing-speak, and unmeasurable noise-making tactics, Matt Bailey’s comprehensive guide to connecting online with real customers, on their level, with language, messages, and tactics they actually respond to, is like pure oxygen for your truth-deprived marketing brain. Matt knows what works, and how customers think. And he has the numbers to prove it.
—Andrew Goodman, Page Zero Media
I really love the way this book is written. It’s accurate (more rare than you think), conversational, and you can whiz through it like a good piece of fiction. I’ve been working in Internet marketing for as long as anyone can claim to be and Matt Bailey is still taking me to school. Internet Marketing: An Hour a Day is a triumph and perhaps one of the best compendiums of Internet marketing knowledge I have seen.
—Jeff Ferguson, CEO, Fang Digital Marketing
Most Internet marketing books are full of fuzzy techno-speak and even fuzzier business ideas. This book contains neither. Matt Bailey has the gift of simplifying Internet marketing without oversimplifying, honed from over a decade of public speaking and consulting. You won’t turn a single page without understanding exactly what to do to make your Internet marketing a success. I can’t recommend Matt’s book highly enough.
—Mike Moran, Co-author, Search Engine Marketing Inc., and author Do It Wrong Quickly
I feel that Matt’s book gives a comprehensive and holistic approach to all of the little details on Internet Marketing. It’s a phenomenal overview of best practices to remember while working on programming, content writing, usability and accessibility, and optimizing conversions by focusing on calls to action, design and overall ROI. I highly recommend this book for anyone engaging in SEO, site design, development or overall marketing on the Internet.
—Benu Aggarwal, Founder and President, Milestone Internet Marketing Inc.
Matt Bailey’s new book had me at “holistic”. A small business site owner wanting frank, logical, accurate and easy to understand help for their design and marketing efforts will enjoy this book. Bailey avoids the fluff and over-glorification of site management. Beginning with business goals, this book teaches, day by day, the reasons for adding usability and accessibility to search marketing practices. There’s instructions for those who hesitate to try PPC. With a constant tie back to sales and conversions, the book’s greatest strengths lie in the analytical sections. You’ll learn where, why, when and how as well as what to analyze. Each chapter topic is part of the whole Internet marketing wheel. If you’re new to online marketing or wish to brush up on certain areas, this book is designed to offer support, instruction and insider tips from a seasoned professional.
—Kimberly “Kim” Krause Berg, Usability/SEO/IA Consultant, Cre8pc; Search Marketing/UX Manager, LiBeck Integrated Marketing
In Internet Marketing: An Hour a Day, Matt Bailey goes back to the basics on why a company should be on the Internet, which business goals should be established and how they can be achieved. Even with significant experience in Internet marketing, you will find great insights in this book to make your business more profitable on the Web.
—Nicolas Malo, Web Analytics Consultant, Hub’Sales & co-author of “Web Analytics: mesurer le succès et maximiser les profits de votre site Web”
Matt Bailey provides a clear road map with step by step procedures to unravel the complexities of online marketing for small and medium sized business owners, all tied up neatly with a holistic overview of online marketing that anyone can understand.
—Anne F. Kennedy, International Search Strategist; Founder, Beyond Ink USA
Although we all know that the fundamentals of marketing really haven’t changed over the last few years, we still get drawn to new marketing toys and caught up in the “I have to have that” mode when, maybe, we really don’t. Matt’s book brings us back to reality and forces us to look at creating a strategy and analytical tools to really understand each channel’s possibilities and limitations. And, just think, we can do it in an hour a day!
—Matt Salt, Executive Director, Specialized Information Publishers Association
Matt stands out among Internet marketing professionals as one of the few who can teach effectively. He explains difficult concepts with grace and ease. You’ll love this book.
—John Marshall, CTO, Market Motive
Anyone who tells you Internet Marketing is easy is lying to you. It is extremely complex, with lots of factors to consider. Matt Bailey does a phenomenal job making the complex simple. He give you the master plan to follow so you can develop the core skills to drive traffic to your website, analyze what that traffic is doing and what you can do if you want to get that traffic to be persuaded to take more actions on your website. Good athletes develop good skills, great athletes master and practice the fundamentals over and over again. Internet Marketing: An Hour a Day is a must read and practice if you want to be great at Internet marketing.
—Bryan Eisenberg, Best selling author and professional speaker
Matthew Bailey has one important gift and critical talents. The gift is his tremendous ability to communicate. He has honed this over time, but it was given to him at birth—as a gift. On the other hand, he can take full credit for his talents: an unerring enthusiasm for online marketing, his dogged determination to stay current yet practical and his appetite for hard work. He has put in his 10,000 hours—and then some—to become a true expert in this field. His advice is not assumption or conjecture but the sort of knowledge that comes from one who has done the work, made the mistakes and has a desire to help others benefit from his experience. Buy this book and enjoy his gift, while you profit from his talents.
—Jim Sterne, Founder eMetrics Marketing Optimization Summit Chairman, Web Analytics Association
Matt Bailey has been educating audiences for many years with his conference speaking, seminars and workshops. As a thought leader in the space, his expertise and understanding of search engine optimization, usability and information architecture has helped many companies (large and small) to succeed online. This book encapsulates his vast knowhow of what it takes to market your products and services on the internet. Your journey to online marketing success is about to begin.
—Mike Grehan, Global VP Content: SES Conference & Expo - ClickZ.Com - Search Engine Watch.com
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Copyright © 2011 by Wiley Publishing, Inc., Indianapolis, Indiana
Published simultaneously in Canada
ISBN: 978-0-470-63374-8
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Bailey, Matt, 1969–
Internet marketing : an hour a day / Matt Bailey.—1st ed.
p. cm.
ISBN-13: 978-0-470-63374-8 (pbk.)
ISBN-10: 0-470-63374-3 (pbk.)
ISBN: 978-1-118-08719-0 (ebk)
ISBN: 978-1-118-08722-0 (ebk)
ISBN: 978-1-118-08721-3 (ebk)
1. Internet marketing. 2. Marketing. I. Title.
HF5415.1265.B295 2011
658.8’72—dc22
2011005433
TRADEMARKS: Wiley, the Wiley logo, and the Sybex logo are trademarks or registered trademarks of John Wiley & Sons, Inc. and/or its affiliates, in the United States and other countries, and may not be used without written permission. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. Wiley Publishing, Inc., is not associated with any product or vendor mentioned in this book.
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
This book is not dedicated to my wife.
As I thought about the dedication, I realized that I cannot dedicate something to someone who is such a part of everything that has culminated in the writing of this book. Stacey, my wife, is the core of the success of our business (SiteLogic) and of my success as a speaker, writer, and teacher. Without her, none of this would have been possible. She deserves as much credit as I, because I would not even be in this business had it not been for her sacrifices and belief in me.
No, it isn’t dedicated to her, because it is hers. Any success I have experienced is only because of her selflessness, sacrifice, and generosity. Thank you for all you have done, Stacey.
This book is dedicated to three men who have shaped me to be the person I am. Each one was instrumental at specific times in my life and taught me many things that would become part of how I speak, how I run a business, and how I treat people.
The first man is John Geib, my college professor.
John challenged me. He challenged me to think differently and find context to everything. When I thought I could coast through his classes, he made it difficult and yet also took the time to work with me and get to know me. His joy and passion in teaching is infectious, and I can only hope to be as enjoyable and engaging a teacher as he is.
The second man is Dennis Drennan, my former broker and employer when I sold real estate.
I like to say that Dennis taught me sales, but in reality, Dennis taught me about people. Dennis’ sales meetings were more about becoming better salespeople in character, rather than by tactics. His lessons in honesty, motivation, discipline, and humility have stayed with me.
Dennis, I still have the notes from almost every sales meeting you ran, especially when we used “The Greatest Salesman in the World” as the text. Your lessons have been guiding principles in building my business, and I only hope that I can run my agency half as well as you have run yours.
The last and the most influential is my father, Dr. Earl Bailey.
As a pastor, he taught me exposition: breaking down large concepts into words and feasting on their meanings, and understanding the verbs and the structure of the language, all of which enable a better understanding of the primary concept.
As a father, he taught me discipline and love and provided an example for me to follow, even though I didn’t always follow. It’s amazing how time changes your appreciation of lessons heard and lessons learned.
As a man, my dad teaches me perseverance in the face of unthinkable pain, every day of his life. Dad, I don’t know how you endure, but you do. What’s more amazing is that you don’t just endure; you flourish in the face of circumstances that would make even the bravest man crumble. You are my example and my inspiration.
Of course, I can’t mention my father without mentioning my mother, Judy. Mom, you instilled a love of reading in me, and it has been one of the most valuable gifts you’ve given. I thank you for the hours helping me with schoolwork, your gentle patience when I made bad decisions, and your unwavering support of my hare-brained ideas. I can’t thank you enough for your countless hours of babysitting your grandchildren in order that I could get this book done. I hope you are so proud of me and you’ll forgive me for that time I wrecked your car.
Acknowledgments
As with any project, this was done with the help of many people, all of whom have been amazingly patient and helpful.
First, to my family, Stacey and the girls. You have put up with so much absence in the past year between my traveling and writing. Thank you for your patience. I am looking forward to fishing with you again this summer and enjoying our time together. To Callie Ann, who was born about the time this project started, my name is Matt, and I’m your father. Stacey, sorry about being so busy the past year; I’m looking forward to regular date nights again!
I need to thank my colleagues at SiteLogic: Ben Bailey, Jackie Baker, Rich Grisak, Jerod Heller, Scott Norquest, Beth Kaboth, and Sheila Miklos. Your tireless efforts while I have been distracted with this book have been nothing short of amazing. I could not ask for a better group of people. You love what you do, and it shows—thank you for keeping the business running (and profitable) while I have been so busy!
A huge thank you to Avinash Kaushik, whose friendship I have valued over the past few years. Thank you for introducing me to the great people at Wiley and getting me started in this amazing process of writing a book. Thank you for agreeing to write the foreword; you’re the one who got me into this, so it seemed fitting!
Thank you to the great people at Wiley and Sybex for all of their help in this process, especially to two people who have been instrumental to this work: Willem Knibbe, you’ve been a great guiding hand throughout this process. Simply getting this book to happen took enough time; but you were patient, helpful, and a joy to work with. Candace English, thank you very much for your tireless editing. I can only imagine the amount of suffering my editor has to endure at the hands of my writing. Candace is able to communicate well with grace and candor, and I look forward to working with her again.
My technical editor, Michael Stebbins from Market Motive, was superb. Mike, I picked you because I knew you would be tough, make me cite my sources, and clarify areas where I simply assumed people knew what I was writing about. Thank you!
Chapter 12’s content on information architecture was developed with the help of Scott Meier and Jay Oldaker. Scott also produced the wireframe that is shown on the computer screen on the cover. Thank you for your assistance and helpful advice! You not only helped clarify my thinking on this chapter but helped me communicate the concepts much better and more efficiently.
Chapter 13 could not have been as effective without the willingness of Lee Laughlin, Glenda Jackson, Chris Hofstader, and Google’s Dr. T.V. Raman. Thank you for the input, the interviews, and the wonderful content that has helped educate thousands of web developers about accessibility over the years! Your time was invaluable.
A lot of content and examples in this book are a result of my time consulting with South Dakota Department of Tourism and Black Hills Tourism agencies and associations. I had some of the most fun I have ever had working with clients. In fact, I still refer to you as my friends, not my clients. Your hospitality and pride in your work provided some of the most enjoyable experiences in my professional life while visiting and working with all of you. I hope that some of my examples inspire more than a few visits to your beautiful state!
To the many others who I look forward to seeing at SES and other search conferences, you provide great conversation and brilliant ideas to consider. This is an amazing industry because of the people in it: John Marshall (who is always at the top of my list!), Brian Eisenberg, Jeff Ferguson, Annie Stickney, Andrew Goodman, Greg Jarboe (you too Jamie O’Donnel), Todd Malicoat, Christine Churchill, Sage Lewis, Chris Caputo, Ian McAnerin, Aaron Kahlow, Andy Beal, Ann Kennedy, David Szetela, Jessica Bowman, Jim Sterne, Joe Morin, Kim Krause-Berg, Li Evans, Mark Jackson, Rand Fishkin, and so many more. It’s at times like this that I need a roster, because I can’t possibly name the number of people I love to see at these conferences.
Of course, the SES conferences could not be what they are without a great team of people at Incisive Media that run a great show. You give me an amazing platform from which to speak, and I wish you the greatest success: Matt McGowan, Mike Grehan, Marilyn Crafts, and Jackie Ortez—thank you!
I also want to thank the fine people in Educational Services at the Direct Marketing Association: Ana Chernis, Michelle Tiletnick, and Jodi Sangster. Developing the two-day online marketing training for you helped me think through the structure of this book and use examples that have been tempered with great classrooms!
Finally, there are two women through whom I can trace the bulk of my business and success: Heather Lloyd Martin and Jill Whalen. Both of you recommended me early in my SEO speaking career, and I hope I have not disappointed. Because of the references and referrals you both provided, I can trace most of my current business and speaking opportunities back to the ones you offered me in the “early days.” I couldn’t ask for two better friends.
About the Author
Matt Bailey is the president and founder of SiteLogic, an online marketing agency. Teaching is his passion, because educated clients make the best clients. Matt accidentally discovered the SEO industry in 1995 by realizing that his websites were ranking well and drawing in visitors from all over the world. It was a natural fit, because he was already training local business owners in sales and marketing.
Prior to starting SiteLogic, Matt developed online marketing departments at two different agencies and also worked as a software sales engineer, which enabled him to learn technical skills that would merge with his marketing experience.
Heather Lloyd Martin of SuccessWorks says Matt has “an incredible ability to explain high-level search marketing concepts in a way that even ‘nontechies’ understand. Additionally, he has an excellent grasp of the various nuances that surround search marketing and clearly understands how to create a powerful, effective strategy.” According to Rand Fishkin, CEO and cofounder of SEOMoz, “Matt is one of the smartest, fastest-moving people in the industry. Matt is the type of guy who knows everything that’s taken place in the world of search and how to apply that information to achieve success.”
Bailey is a frequent speaker at many conferences and seminars. He is usually on the docket at the Search Engine Strategies conferences and also serves on the Advisory Board. He is a regular speaker at the Direct Marketing Association, Online Marketing Summit, Specialized Information Publishers Association, Specialized Equipment Marketing Association, and many international conferences.
Bailey teaches for multiple business education outlets. He is an adjunct faculty at Rutgers University, teaching multiple modules of the mini-MBA program in online marketing. He also teaches regularly for the Direct Marketing Association’s Direct Marketing Academy for Online Marketing.
Additionally, Matt is a member of Market Motive (www.MarketMotive.com), an online marketing training resource for professionals and businesses. Market Motive has been called the “Internet marketing dream team.” Matt has created many instructional videos covering multiple subjects of online marketing but focuses on teaching the fundamentals.
Bailey has also provided in-house training to many businesses and organizations. Google, Proctor & Gamble, Hewlett-Packard, ADC, Intuit, the State of South Dakota’s Department of Tourism and Black Hills Tourism agencies and associations, Randall-Reilly Publications, American Greetings, and Eaton Corporation are just a few of the organizations that have benefited from Matt’s expertise.
Matt attended Malone University in Ohio with a concentration in journalism and communications and also served in the Army National Guard for 11 years. After graduation, he worked in selling real estate, where he first started to develop websites and learn online marketing skills that would form the rest of his career.
Matt resides outside of a small town in rural Ohio with his wife, Stacey, and his four daughters, Caitlin, Madeline, Miranda, and Callie Ann. They also have four cats, one dog, a turtle named Vera, and a yet-to-be-named goldfish. The favorite family activities are fishing and swimming in the backyard pond and watching the surrounding wildlife.
Foreword
John Wanamaker famously said, “I know half of my advertising is wasted; I just don’t know which half.” I have always believed that this sentiment finally will be obsolete in the age of digital marketing where we have a near-magnificent capacity to measure the return on investment. Yet that is not so. We remain a people largely driven by faith, surrounded by horrible websites and so-bad-I-would-rather-jump-off-a-building customer experiences.
That reality is also the reason for my childlike delight at Matt Bailey’s beautifully written book on Internet marketing. In specific, strategic, tactical ways it helps us deal with Mr. Wanamaker’s conundrum.
Many books cover Internet marketing in silos (both of mine focus just on the pure joy of Web analytics). Matt has done a wonderful job of covering the space from end to end. Search engine optimization? Check. Usability? Check. Technical solutions? Check. Social-media strategies? Check. Conversion optimization? Check. And so much more. As a small, medium, or large business owner, you’ll—finally (!!)—get the end-to-end view of what it takes to be truly successful on the Web.
Matt is uniquely qualified to write this book, primarily because of his deep, long list of in-the-trenches, pull-up-his-sleeves-and-roll-with-the-pigssuccesses. He has delivered his life lessons, igniting the passions of hundreds of conference attendees. He has consulted with some of the top companies on the Web and helped them rethink their digital strategies. In this book, he shares his hard-won intelligence with grace and uncommon wit.
There are three things I hope you’ll take away from the book:
God created the Internet so that we could fail faster. Our offline existence makes us risk averse because in that world it is expensive to fail, and it takes a long time to figure out that we did. Not on the Web. Take the advice from this book, no matter how strange you think it is, and implement it. It takes just hours or days to fail or succeed on the Web. Leverage that gift to glory.If you don’t know where you are going, any road will take you there. Leave that for the lame. Put in the blood, sweat, and tears required to create business objectives, drill down to specific goals, identify marketing strategies that have a direct line of sight to those goals, and measure outcomes. Rinse. Repeat.Embrace customer centricity like it was your long-lost love. On the Web you can accomplish the impossible: delight customers and get high conversions! You don’t have to pick either/or. Learn to solve for both because it is good karma and it is a fantastic long-term business strategy.The Web presents an incredible opportunity to fulfill your personal professional goals and achieve remarkable results for your business. With this book in hand, I am confident your journey will be smoother, faster, and more productive.
Good luck!
Avinash Kaushik
Author: Web Analytics 2.0 and Web Analytics: An Hour a Day
Analytics Evangelist, Google
www.kaushik.net/avinash
Introduction
While I was growing up, my father was the pastor of a large church. I learned my teaching style from watching him preach week after week. He was known as having an expository style of teaching, meaning that he would cut away large portions of information and focus on a small amount of text, thereby allowing careful analysis of each part and an understanding of how it makes up the whole. He would prepare by studying that small text, researching the verb forms and language construction. When he taught, he drilled down into the details of what the author was writing, and by focusing on such a small text, it made everything else clearer. I took the same approach when developing my teaching style, because my father’s example enabled me to grasp technical issues and break them down into understandable parts.
As I became more involved in online marketing, I quickly saw that this field was full of so many factors that were necessary for online success. When surveying all of the factors, most people become intimated or even overwhelmed by the sheer amount of information that one needs to know.
I found that many marketing managers and website owners simply wanted an understandable guide to help them know what is important and what they need to do in such a fast-changing online marketplace. Most explanations were too technical, when all they wanted was a “what do I need to do” approach. As a result, most marketers’ goals were not clear or were immeasurable. If there is no clear purpose in strategy, tactics, or even the primary goals of a web strategy, then the goals are unclear, misunderstood, or simply nonexistent. This book is my response to that.
Like my father, I find that the best way to understand an overwhelming amount of information is to focus on a small part at a time—to evaluate and learn one discipline and one technique at a time and then understand the role that it plays and the importance and relevance to the overall campaign. As one gains an understanding of each part of online marketing, a clear pattern emerges, you begin to see similarities and consistent patterns that were previously hidden. However, these patterns and similarities were hidden because they cannot be seen when considering the whole but only by examining each piece.
As the patterns emerge, marketers can then begin to understand the factors and tactics necessary for successful campaigns and understand that the roles they play provide context to the big picture of marketing. Once the context of each part in relation to the other is in place, the intimidation factor disappears. The holistic development of the online marketer is developed by understanding the small roles that make up the entire process.
As the marketer starts to operate in this new understanding of the smaller factors, they will begin to see a strange consistency among them. Even though there is so much information, so many details, there is an overarching familiarity. There are consistent themes among each discipline, and those consistent themes will contribute to a fresh understanding of the entire process. Understanding the smaller factors enables you to understand the priorities from a high level, because one can now understand how each part may be affected by a single, small change.
I hope this book helps to reveal the smaller factors and place them in context. By scrutinizing the major factors in online marketing and comparing them, marketers can better understand the business of online marketing. It is my sincere hope that this book will make people better marketers, not just marketers who can do better online marketing.
Who Should Read This Book
I am making certain assumptions regarding the reader:
You have a website or are getting ready to build a website.You are responsible for marketing that website.You “wear a lot of hats” in your company, or you run the entire business and do not have the time to dedicate to running a site full-time.You are familiar with basic analytics and website terminology.You want to make more money with your website.This book is intended for the business owner or a marketing manager who needs a comprehensive overview of how everything works together in the marketing, design, development, content development, link building, and analytics strategy.
Somehow it all has to make sense, and priorities need to be placed on these activities, but how does you know what to make a priority and when? This book will cover how to make everything come together into a simplified, strategic plan to improve your Internet marketing campaigns, your website, and your marketing skills.
What’s Inside
Here is a glance at what’s in each chapter:
Part I: Understand Today’s Internet Marketing
Chapter 1: A Holistic Approach sets the stage for how the book will unfold and introduces some of the concepts for the following chapters. All parts of Internet marketing are related and affect one another.
Chapter 2: How Search Engines Work provides an overview of the technical requirements of search engines. Myths are also dispelled so you understand what you can do to improve your rankings.
Chapter 3: Rankings or Profit? Establishing Your Business Goals starts with the most foundational part of marketing, creating the goals for your campaign. Without goals, there is no measurement and no ROI.
Part II: Month 1: Evaluate and Research
Chapter 4: Week 1: Evaluate Your Situation helps you perform a self-diagnostic on your website. Get familiar with tools that can help you identify problems on your website and test search engine friendliness.
Chapter 5: Week 2: Understand Basic SEO introduces you to how you can increase your search engine rakings, which increases the number of visitors you can attract. This week’s discussion breaks down the structure and elements of website pages and how to develop consistent information.
Chapter 6: Week 3: Jump into Keyword Research is the foundation of nearly every Internet marketing venture. Keyword research helps you find relevant search terms, find the voice of the customer, uncover market trends, and gain an advantage over your competitors.
Chapter 7: Week 4: Leverage Principles of Sales and Marketing presents important techniques to implement into the content development of your site. You can increase your sales and leads by implementing a few simple writing techniques that will lead your visitors to action.
Part III: Month 2: Develop Content That Converts
Chapter 8: Week 5: Understand That Content Comes First continues with the development of active content that engages visitors. Case studies and examples show how any type of business can find effective ways to communicate benefits, tell a unique story, and improve their marketing.
Chapter 9: Week 6: Connect Your Content to Users and Search Engines ties together the importance of effective content and search engine visibility. Well-developed and structured content can appease both the needs of the search engines and the visitors. This week you’ll learn how to increase sales and rankings with an understanding of human factors.
Chapter 10: Week 7: Master the Science of Online Persuasion offers the classic persuasion techniques of logic, emotion, and credibility. Implementing these techniques online results in a convincing approach to change your visitors into customers and clients.
Chapter 11: Week 8: Improve Conversions goes to the bottom line of improving Internet marketing performance. Sometimes simple changes—making clear calls to action and considering visual contrast, for instance—can have big results.
Part IV: Month 3: Develop Good Site Architecture
Chapter 12: Week 9: Create Effective Navigation covers creating effective navigation in your website, because this is the primary means of developing a clear structure of information for your visitors. Both usability and technical factors are explored as a means to increase the effectiveness of a navigation scheme.
Chapter 13: Week 10: Design for Accessibility covers the aspects of accessibility in your website design. By accounting for assistive technology, color blindness, and contrast, you will also create a more search-friendly site that is easier for all of your visitors to use.
Chapter 14: Week 11: Identify Technical Roadblocks discusses factors that may inhibit or prevent search engines from “seeing” your website. As one of the more technical chapters, it explains to marketers the value of understanding technical factors in website management and marketing.
Chapter 15: Week 12: Remember the Important Details covers all the small items that tend to be left behind or forgotten in developing and managing a website. This chapter emphasizes tools for promoting a locally based businesses, as well as on opportunities for additional visibility in the search engines.
Part V: Month 4: Expand Your Reach and Measure Results
Chapter 16: Week 13: Build Links covers the importance of various link types, because they are the foundation of your visibility. Links are like word-of-mouth referrals online and will contribute to your credibility, as well as increase your search engine rankings.
Chapter 17: Week 14: Add to Your Business with Blogs gives you ideas about how a blog can enable your business to reach visitors far beyond the traditional website. By engaging with visitors on a personal and active platform, blogs generate more visitors, more search engine ranking, and more links to your website.
Chapter 18: Week 15: Get Friendly with Social Media addresses the concerns many marketers have about utilizing social media. Social media may scare or concern some marketers, because the ROI is largely undefined, and so many opportunities are available. This chapter focuses on building a campaign that is specific to your business and developing for the social media site that best suits your marketing message.
Chapter 19: Week 16: Develop a Complementary Pay-per-Click Campaign further builds your marketing efforts and increases your reach. The simple steps to starting your pay-per-click campaign and mistakes to avoid in this chapter will enable you to be confident as you set up a paid campaign to assist in or become a major part of your overall marketing.
Chapter 20: Week 17: Measure, Measure, Measure is based on the fact that measurement is the only sure way to know whether you are successful in your marketing efforts. Every change that you make to your marketing, design, and programming can be tracked for results in your analytics. However, most people track the wrong numbers or have no idea what reports are important. This chapter covers the “what do I track?” question.
Chapter 21: Week 18: Analyze for Action gives you a clear understanding of what analytics can do and of how to start taking action to find what works and what doesn’t and how you can develop a specific plan for improvement. Suggested reports for segmentation, content evaluation, and technical troubleshooting will provide the starting blocks for you to customize Google Analytics to your business.
How to Contact the Author
I welcome feedback from you about this book or about books you’d like to see from me in the future. You can reach me by writing to [email protected]. For more information about my agency and marketing advice, visit my website at www.SiteLogic.com.
Sybex strives to keep you supplied with the latest tools and information you need for your work. Please check the book’s website at www.sybex.com/go/internetmarketinghour, where I’ll post additional content, updates, and corrections to this book should the need arise. There you can also find a presentation on analytics that I presented at Google.
Part I: Understanding Today’s Internet Marketing
Developing a book on Internet Marketing is a tricky prospect. There are so many “flavors” of internet marketing, and this is no exception. The purpose of this chapter is really to introduce you to the flavor of the rest of the book, the over-arching theme that will resonate throughout each chapter. That is, everything starts based on your business goals, all of the “parts” of online marketing are interdependent, and everything must be measured in order to have a complete view.
Chapter 1: A Holistic Approach
Chapter 2: How Search Engines Work
Chapter 3: Rankings or Profit? Establishing Your Business Goals
Chapter 1
A Holistic Approach
Marketing is evolving at lightning speed with website design and usability advances, search engine optimization, and pay-per-click marketing techniques, website analytics, and social media initiatives all competing for a busy marketer’s attention. But one important core principle remains constant: the need for an integrated approach. In this chapter, you’ll learn the core tenets of a successful, coordinated, integrated approach that involves not just marketers but your whole organization.
Chapter Contents
The Fundamentals of MarketingLesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
