OrangeSoda Internet Marketing Blog

OrangeSoda Becomes a Coveted Google AdWords Reseller

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OrangeSoda is pleased to announce a strategic marketing alliance with Google as a Google’s AdWords™ reseller. Google works more closely with their resellers help them optimize Google AdWords accounts for small or local businesses.

We manage paid search advertising for our clients on Google (answer to what is Google AdWords?), Yahoo, and MSN. This is one of the most efficient ways to advertise because your ad is shown when people are actively searching. Managing a campaign is a lot of work and to perform well you must constantly test and advertise (more on this in a future post).
To become a reseller, a business must meet Google’s requirements, including:

  • Employ a direct sales force that sells to local businesses
  • Have existing relationships with at least 500 customers
  • Demonstrate experience servicing and supporting local businesses
  • Share Google’s desire to provide a high quality user and advertiser experience

OrangeSoda is already a Google authorized company and this is a level up from that designation. Our clients will benefit from the extra resources we can utilize to maximize their campaigns.

According to Search Engine Land…”The level of support once one becomes an AdWords Authorized Reseller is fantastic…”


Post by Janet Meiners in OrangeSoda News, local internet marketing | 1 Comment »

Reviews Help Local Businesses Rank Higher on Google, Yahoo

The Local Search, SEO, and Rants blog by Stephen Espinosa has some helpful tips on how local businesses can get higher in search engines. Yahoo actually indexes the text of local business reviews.

So if you have reviews, there are more ways people could search and have your business show up at the top of the list.  This is important for local searches (a local search is when someone searches for a city and/or state along with a phrase, such as “dentist, orem, Utah”).  Google pulls reviews from other web sites and takes reviews into account when deciding where to rank sites.

Yahoo Local Business Reviews

Yahoo local business searches actually search the text of reviews. Example: Someone types in the words “cavity, needs filling, Provo UT.” They get back a list of dentists in Provo, Utah. If you’re a dentist that has reviews written about your practice, the chances are better that you’ll show up near the top, if you have some reviews written about your business.

Let’s say someone wrote a review that included the words, I had a cavity that needed filling” and this dentist fit me right in…the words “cavity” and needs “filling” will be bolded and that dentist will probably be at the top of the list.


Google Local Business Reviews

Google takes reviews on other sites for their results. They value reviews. Here’s a trick: Go to Google Maps, and type in your business name. Look for the competitors who rank above you. Click on the reviews tab, see what sources the reviews are coming from (Google pulls reviews from other sites). Other places Google gets reviews are from InsiderPages.comCitySearch.com, Judysbook.com, and Tripadvisor.com. They get other details (such as details about a business) from a variety of other sites.
Local Business SEO Tip: Ask your clients or customers to write an online review of your business. It’s one of the best tips your customer can give you.


Post by Janet Meiners in local internet marketing | 1 Comment »

Yelp for Local Online Business Reviews

Yelp is a great site for local businesses to get feedback and improve search results for their businesses. Most local business don’t realize how powerful online reviews can be. Reputations can be ruined online by a bad review (know RipOffReport?? Just try to get a negative report off your record!). At first you might not think twice about it but a bad online review can be devastating to your small business (see this example).

More people go online to find out about your business instead of looking in the phone book. A negative review could be one of the first search results that come up when someone types in your business name into Google. That’s why SEO for small businesses is wise - it’s a proactive way to manage your reputation on the Internet. You can create links in search results that go to trusted sites that speak well of your business.

Most local review sites don’t give you a chance to respond to a customer complaint. Yelp recently introduced some new tools so you can manage your business profile. You should claim your business at https://biz.yelp.com and then customize it.

Your gut reaction to a negative review can be to retaliate or react in a way that makes you look even worse. Here’s some practical advice to business owners - from Yelp.

This is great advice for blog posts or other forms of negative reviews that can become PR nightmares and catch you off-guard:

  • DON’T review your own business anonymously or get your friends to do the same.
  • DON’T overestimate the impact of a single negative review. It happens to even the best businesses. That said, if you see a trend of negative reviews, you may want to take this feedback and determine if there is a way to improve your business.
  • DON’T lash out at the people who have written negative reviews about you. Tempting as that may be, we see that backfiring in some cases as the Yelp community may up the ante and even engage in “vigilante justice” by spreading more negativity. Try to remember, “the customer is always right”.
  • DON’T offer incentives or payment for your customers to write positive reviews about your business on Yelp. This sort of “shilling” often causes ill will with both current and potential customers. In addition, these paid reviews violate Yelp’s Review Guidelines and will be removed.
  • DO review your own business, clearly stating that you are the business owner. Full disclosure is important here, and will be critical in earning the respect of the Yelp community.
  • DO take the feedback to heart but remember that each review is just one single opinion, sand it’s the entire set of the Yelp reviews together that really matters most.

comScore and Compete data puts monthly traffic to Yelp at 3.7 million and 9 million unique visitors.


Post by Janet Meiners in local internet marketing | 2 Comments »

With Marketing Savvy Small Businesses Can Rock Online

Search Engine Land has a monthly column I like to follow called, “Small is Beautiful.” It talks about small businesses and their online marketing successes.
This month there’s an interview with small business owner who is a musician. Musician John W. Tuggle teaches private guitar lessons and tried making an ebook. He only sold about 5 ebooks in over a year - he was discouraged and ready to stop teaching.

He got help with his online marketing and leveraged new media like YouTube, podcasts, blogging, and Skype. Here’s the result of their work: http://www.learningguitarnow.com


Tuggle is doing well by making his local business global
. He teaches people all over the world. Small businesses should take note - by thinking bigger.

He teaches more than 40 students, including one in Portugal, and he has 10 students on a waiting list. His podcast has been downloaded about 6,000 times in a few months. YouTube has been a great success - 40,000 views of all his videos in three months and people also buy after seeing the video.

He had a web site but it wasn’t very effective,

“…I focused on looks instead of content. I didn’t know anything about keywords or SEO….the blog, in my mind, had to be an integral part of the site…Everybody is doing blogs now and when I learned how to tag, ping, and bookmark, I got more web site traffic in one day than my other site got in six months. Now that got me excited!”

Here’s the secret too - he creates new products based on research. Not just on his gut feeling on how it will do, but by first looking at the market. Search engine optimization (SEO) is market research - seeing what people are looking for online and creating or spinning your product so it matches what people are searching for.


About his guitar blog:

“I check HitTail and look at the suggestions and what I need help in ranking for. Then I determine what keywords I need to focus on and figure out what I can write about that will interest people, while at the same time help me to get searched or improve rankings.”


His Small Business Online Marketing Tips:

  • Create a good lesson or story for a blog post.
  • Insert keywords into the blog title and post.
  • Add pictures to keep it interesting.
  • Social Bookmark Posts (Digg, Delicious, Mixx, and Propeller, Slideshare and Scribd)
  • Identify keywords that are effective and use your keyword list in blog titles, Technorati tags, and YouTube videos.
  • Ping using WordPress.
  • Create a system that will let you bookmark social sites by pressing a button in your toolbar.
  • Submit blog to blog directories.
  • Spent 15 mins. a day finding friends on YouTube.

He also promoted his site on Yahoo! Local, Google Maps, and Merchant Circle. Read the entire interview at Search Engine Land.

It’s easy to get overwhelmed by the options, but hire help and be willing to keep learning and take a step at a time.


Post by Janet Meiners in local internet marketing | 1 Comment »

Getting your Business into Google News

Have you ever wondered how to get your local business news listed in Google News? I certainly have. Google News is the second most popular news site - Yahoo News is number one (by a long shot). I use one or both practically every day.
The difference between the two sites is that Google uses an algorithm to display results. Yahoo has real people look over your release. Both hold your news for 28 days. That’s why I prefer using a press release distribution service like PRWeb - it’s a permanent link in addition to the news link. Still there is value to both.


Google News blog just posted some tips for getting into or banned from Google News:

Here’s what they say about the timing of your release:

“whether you publish before, after, or in the midst of when other publishers post articles won’t affect your article ranking. Our algorithms take a number of factors into account when choosing the best articles in a cluster. Simply publishing the same story after another publisher won’t help. Additionally, our system is set up to detect duplicate content and promote the original source of a story.”

Here’s the rest of the tips about getting into Google News.


Online PR - an SEO Tool for Small Businesses

Often the small business owner doesn’t think in terms of news or as news as a way to getting into search engines. However, like most local internet marketing, there often isn’t a lot of competition. That’s partly because each local business is unique already. And because most local businesses haven’t caught on or don’t have the resources or know-how needed. And that’s precisely why we’re here.


Post by Janet Meiners in Google News, local internet marketing | No Comments »

Call Tracking Meets Local Internet Marketing

OrangeSoda local internet marketing offers call tracking services for local businesses so you always know who is calling. We provide detailed reporting so you can see who’s calling, here are some stats we track:

  • who called and when they called (including if it’s a person or a business)
  • the phone number called
  • number of rings before call was answered
  • Call duration

Internet Marketing and Call Tracking ROI

Businesses are interested in Internet marketing for many reasons - metrics, measurement, tracking, ROI…the list goes on and on. The real reason search engine marketing works is more than just Return on Investment (ROI). It’s the fact that you can track exactly what brings the best results.

Some Customers Still Prefer to Call First

We may forget that there is still a percentage of the world that prefers to order by phone. They prefer to talk to someone before ordering from a website. Of course it depends on the industry you are in but there is no doubt that having a phone number can’t hurt.


Service Businesses Depend on Phone calls

Service businesses already realize the power of a phone call because you can’t go to a dentist via a checkout button. You can’t get your carpet cleaned by filling out a contact form and you certainly can’t get your back aligned via email. So a phone number is still very much a necessity. If you are an ecommerce company or anyone doing any type of internet marketing for your business, you shouldn’t forget the power of a phone number (and the calls that result).


More Customers Find Local Businesses Online and Then Call

With the continued growth of Local Search, it’s more and more evident that search engine users are looking for the contact information of their local restaurant, attorney, pizza place, video game store etc. Tracking each and every call that your website generates can only help a business owner realize the value of their internet marketing.


Call Tracking Number Lets You Measure Calls from your Web Site

You can set up a phone number exclusively for your website. Then you can know you’re getting 20 calls a week and that 1 in 3 calls lasts more than 1 minute tells you something. Questions are being asked and appointments being made. Your call tracking number you can match your call tracking montly report with your appointments for the month and see where the names, phone numbers, etc. match up. That’s called more business.


Call Tracking and Ecommerce

Ecommerce businesses can keep track of phone orders. With a call tracking number, you can see how your internet marketing efforts impact your website conversion rate. You can see if your phone orders have increased by X percentage, and that means making better decisions on your internet marketing success.


Call Tracking for Other Small Business Marketing

You can get the exact same metrics and results driven marketing by implementing call tracking for your offline marketing. Just add a trackable number to your billboard, newspaper ad, Yellow Pages listing, radio ad, magazine ad, etc. It doesn’t matter how or where you market, you need to track results and call tracking is the piece that unifies your different marketing campaigns.


Post by Chris Finken in local internet marketing | 3 Comments »

Search Engine Marketing Industry Stronger than Expected

The Search Engine Marketing Professional Organization or SEMPO says the search marketing industry has healthy growth, despite any worries about a recession in the US.

Their 2007 State of the Market survey talks about how “print magazine advertising, website development and other marketing functions…” are growing “as marketers essentially shift the portions of their spending pie, following consumers as they increasingly rely on search engines to conduct pre-purchase research.”

The data is based on questions answered by 867 search engine advertisers and SEM agencies.

Here are key findings about the state of the search engine marketing industry:

  • The North American SEM industry grew from $9.4 billion in 2006 to $12.2 billion in 2007, exceeding earlier projections of $11.5 billion for 2007.
  • North American SEM spending is now projected to grow to $25.2 billion in 2011, up significantly from the $18.6 billion forecast a year ago.
  • Marketers are decreasing their spend on print magazine, website development, direct mail, and other marketing campaigns into search engine marketing.
  • Paid placement captures 87.4% of 2007 spending; organic SEO, 10.5%; paid inclusion, .07%, and technology investment, 1.4%.
  • Google AdWords remains the most popular search advertising program (with almost 90% saying they advertise on Google).

Post by Janet Meiners in local internet marketing | 2 Comments »

Kelsey Group on the Local Search Engine Marketing Industry

The Kelsey Group recently blogged about the local business search marketing industry. As I’ll blog about in the next post, the local internet marketing market is growing even faster than expected. More local businesses are going online, shifting their marketing budgets, especially to paid search.

Here is some good news from search engine marketing companies that focus on small businesses:

Also, OrangeSoda’s CEO Jay Bean made the 2008 list of the vSpring Capital Top 100 Venture Entrepreneurs, also known as the v|100. vSpring is a venture capital group that provides early growth funding. Looks like they haven’t put the full list on their web site yet, so find it here.


Post by Janet Meiners in OrangeSoda News, local internet marketing | No Comments »

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