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If "The Internet Marketing Check List - Internet Marketing Strategy Every Website Should Do" is not shown property. Visit the source link above.
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The Internet
Marketing List: 59 Things You Should Be Doing |
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- If you have a
Flash introduction on your web site, delete it. If you don’t agree,
try this: Shove your head into a bucket of water. Stay in there,
not breathing, for 10 seconds longer than is comfortable. That’s
what you’re doing to your customers. Delete it, please.
- Check the load
speed of every page on your site. If any load in more than 10
seconds, fix it (2-6 seconds is far better). If your developer says
they can’t, and it’s not your own network causing the problem, fire
them. Here’s a good page
load tester.
- Check your site for broken links. You can use a tool like
Xenu. Fix those
links. Do not pass this step until you’re done. If it takes your
developer more than a week to do this step, again with the firing
thing.
- Make sure you have a user-friendly 404 error page, not the
generically nasty PAGE NOT FOUND message.
- Make sure you have a user-friendly 500 error page, too. A 500
error happens when some bit of database code you wrote late at
night decides it’s had enough with this world, and takes your web
site with it. That usually leads to something terribly informative
like “500 Error Connection Timed Out”. Maybe you can do something
better?
- Remove all inline javascript to a separate .js include file.
That will speed up page load times and may help you with search
rankings, too. Plus it appeals to code geeks like me, and we’re all
that matter, right?
- Set up
Google Webmaster Tools,
Yahoo! Site Explorer
and Live.com
Webmaster Tools. You’ll see your site from the search
engine’s viewpoint, what folks use to find you, and whether
there are any problems that might be hurting you in the search
engines.
- Set up an XML sitemap, too. Check out Sitemaps.org for an
overview.
- If you’re running an e-commerce site, hire a really good writer
to rewrite all your product descriptions. Those descriptions matter
more than you think.
- Get analytics set up on your site. You can’t do internet
marketing without it. Actually, you can, but you’ll suck at it. I
recommend Google Analytics. If your
developer says they can’t install anything, well, you know...
- In that analytics tool, make sure you can consistently track
conversions: Sales, or leads, or whatever else you want folks to do
when they see your site.
- Get a HackerSafe or ScanAlert logo on your site. While I
question their value, the search engines don’t. Nor do customers.
That sticker can get you more search engine ‘trustrank’ and improve
conversion rates.
- Put your full
address and phone number on each page of your site, for the same
reasons.
- Use Wordtracker,
Trellian
Keyword Discovery or something similar to find the top keywords
that folks use to find your products or services.
- Now find the top ranking sites for those phrases.
- Who links to them? Do a “link:” search on Google, or use
linkdiagnosis.com or Yahoo! Site
Explorer to build a list. Now go out and get those links!
- If two years ago some SEO hack advised you to put 100 links at
the bottom of your home page, delete them. They’re not helping you,
and they may be hurting you.
- If two years ago that same SEO hack advised you to write title
tags that read like this - “Wedding stuff and wedding things and
weddings stuffs and weddings things with more wedding items and
this is your place for weddings” - delete those too and write
something that doesn’t sound like Elmer Fudd suffering a mental
breakdown.
- If you have the same keywords in your keywords tag on every
page of your site, search your feelings... Do you really think the
search engines are that stupid? Change ’em, or delete the tag
altogether. The tag doesn't really help, and duplicating keywords
across all pages can flag you as an SEO spammer.
- Write a high-quality meta description tag for each page of your
site. That may not affect ranking but it’ll get more folks to click
on your search listing.
- Make sure your site uses correct semantic markup. Your
developer had better understand what that means. Don’t make me come
over there...
- Get your site totally standards compliant according to the
W3C code
validator.
- At the same time, make sure your site isn’t hideously
ugly.
- With those two items handled, you can now go to all the major
XHTML and CSS site directories out there, which list lots of
standards-compliant sites, and submit your own web site. If you get
in, you get great links from great sites. Do not
submit your site to any CSS or XHTML directories until you see a
happy green report on the W3C validator. Doing so wastes your time,
and the directory owners’. They’re liable to digitally tar and
feather you.
- Comment on other folks’ blogs. That gets you attention from
those bloggers. They may come look at your site, or just drop you a
line, or they may do nothing for a while. But you’re building
relationships you can use later.
- Do a press release a month. Chances are something cool
happened. Did you hire someone new? Create a new product? Complete
a new project? Win a prize? Brag!
- Get someone who can write to create that press release.
Bragging doesn’t help if you sound like an idiot.
- Learn to use Google Reader. Subscribe to the top internet
marketing blogs. Read them a lot. For a hint you can look at the
AdAge 150 list.
- Go to Google blog search. Search for your own brand name. Then
subscribe to that search result in Google Reader (you’ll find a
little RSS link on the search results page). That gives you a quick
look at what folks are saying about your company.
- Do the same thing for your own name.
- Then subscribe to who’s linking to you on Technorati, for the
same reason.
- Go to local directories like Yelp! and make sure you’re listed.
Hey, it’s a link, right? Plus it’ll give you one more place to
manage your reputation.
- Be sure your company information is up to date in Google,
Yahoo! and Live’s local search tools.
- If you’re a local business, ask your customers to review you on
one of the local sites: Either on the search engines or on the
other sites. This will boost your ranking in local search results.
Beg, plead, bribe. It does require work on their part. And don’t
worry if you get a few negative reviews, either.
- Start working on Yahoo! Answers. This is an
opportunity to make yourself an expert, and get some links at the
same time. Spend no more than an hour a week. Read Matt McGee’s
excellent
article on the subject to learn more.
- Invite people to subscribe to your house e-mail list. If you
don’t have one, start one. This continues to be one of the most
neglected facets of internet marketing.
- Make sure there’s an easy way for folks to sign up for that
list.
- Remove any extra fields from your subscription form. All you
need is their e-mail address.
- If you require registration during checkout, get rid of
it.
- If you’re automatically opting folks in to your e-mail list,
stop.
- When you receive customer requests via e-mail, answer them.
Fast.
- Remember that house e-mail list I got you to start building?
Starting sending out a quality offer to that list, once a month.
See how it works. Keep testing different types of subject lines,
creative, offers and such. Always strive to beat your last best
performance.
- Now you’re ready for some real online marketing (yes, all this
was a warm up). Create a landing page for the best offer you’ve
got. Follow best practices. Read Marketing Sherpa’s Landing Page
Handbook for the best information you’ll find.
- Create 2-3 headlines for that page.
- Write a few different versions of body text for the landing
page.
- And finally use a couple of different images.
- Then use a multivariate testing tool like Google Website
Optimizer (if the budget’s tight) or Widemile (if you want the best
possible result) to test all those headlines, copy versions and
images and find the best ‘recipe’.
- Create 2-3 pay-per-click ads on Google Adwords and/or Yahoo!.
Point those ads at the landing page. Be sure to use whatever
tagging mechanism your analytics software requires, so you’ll know
which ad generates which clicks.
- Now start that test!
- Pick the 3 things you learned from that test, and apply them to
the rest of your site. Did one call to action work best? Create a
button to put everywhere on the site. One type of photography? Use
that, too. You get the idea.
- Did conversion rates go up? Cool! Now make sure you’re earning
a good return on those PPC ads. Increase your spend and broaden
your campaign, always watching out for ROI.
- Now you can create landing pages for all those house e-mails
you’re sending out. Since you already know which subjects work
best, and which kinds of offers, you can start with a good
foundation and find the best possible landing page.
- Borrow your neighbor’s DVCam. Put it on a tripod. Film yourself
talking about one of your products, or explaining how to use one of
them. Post it on YouTube and then embed it on your site. No, you’re
not Scorcese. But it’s more exposure for you, in another
venue.
- Are you still using Yahoo! Answers? I hope so. Don’t make me
come over there AGAIN.
- Create a MySpace page for fans/hobbyists/enthusiasts/students
of your product or service. Don’t brand the page that heavily.
Focus on the type of product or service. Attract folks who want to
know more. Then wow ‘em with your knowledge, and build a circle of
friends. Now you can announce offers and such to them, too.
- Do the same thing on Facebook.
- Find any industry-specific social networks that are relevant to
you. It’s easy: Go to Google and search for “‘your product’ social
network”. Bet you find some. If you do, join up.
- Take all the cool stuff you’ve learned by testing offers, and
newsletters, and keywords, and ads, and landing pages, and revamp
your site. Then announce your new, improved site to all your
customers, and subscribers, and MySpace friends, etc..
- Whew! You’re done. Congrats! Now, go back to step 1, and repeat
the process. Because you’re never
‘done’.
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