29th October 2008

Why social media marketing?

Successful social media brings in lots of traffic. It act as a toolbox which contain communication, association and multimedia tools for sharing your content.

Question of use or not to use social media always occur in Business owners mind. Social media has both pros & cons in some way. So to clarify this question lets take a look at the following:

Security company FaceTime Communications has released results from a survey in which it asked over 500 IT managers and employees about their Internet and social media habits at work. The survey revealed that:

- 79% of workers use Facebook, LinkedIn or YouTube at work for business reasons, and of those business reasons, 54% cited professional networking, 52% said research, and 52% said learning about colleagues were what they used them for.
- 82% say they use social media sites for personal reasons

- 51% of workers use social networks at least once a day

- 62% said LinkedIn was their preferred network for business purposes while 55% said they prefer YouTube for personal reasons.
Based on this survey alone, there isn’t a whole lot of difference between the amount of people using social media for business reasons and those for personal ones. There is no clear cut answer to the question, “Is social media good for my business?” There are obviously pros and cons.

Pros

Networking:
From networking point of view social media is the best way to network with others. These are totally free. You do not need to pay any kind of payment for social media. If you are just launching your product in the market or trying to make famous your business, social media is a good way.

Brand:
Branding is also a good pro of social media. You can expose your brand by making your network with Facebook, Twitter, MySpace, YouTube, etc. and keep your already famous brand fresh.

Early adopters:
Participants tend to be early adopters—more likely to interact with vendors and offer feedback to improve your products and services. This is a significant, way to make relationships with others. This is an impressive and powerful way for building relationships with targeted audiences. Versatile way to make internal and external communities.

Cons

Time: Social media need time for frequent updation and monitoring of content. You have to spend precious hours on a networking or marketing strategy that may or may not give good results.

Decrease in productivity: This is also noted as a con of social media. The problem is, there isn’t really a tangible way to measure the amount of productivity reached by these efforts. ROI is not immediate and direct. Just like it is hard to measure brand awareness.

Social media by its very nature is individually oriented and not company oriented. It’s often hard to distinguish if an employee using social media like Facebook or LinkedIn is in actuality promoting herself instead of the company. How should a company manage employees directed to utilize social media in the company’s interests? It is a difficult question to answer but one that must be answered if social media is to go mainstream with business.

Variables

The truth is, there are a number of variables that come into play when deciding if social media has a place in your workplace. First off, who is using it? The positive/negative impact it can have is likely to depend on the role of the employee who is using it.

Which social networks/sites are being used? I’m not going to favor one or the other, but depending on what type of business you are in or what your goals are, Twitter might be more useful than YouTube, or vice versa. Different networks have different elements as well. For example, you may find commenting on a MySpace blog to be of some use, but also find that messaging “friends” does little to help you achieve your goals (again - or vice versa).

Apart from that, social networking is great thing.

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27th October 2008

Size of Keyword Density

Keyword density (the number of times that the selected keyword appears on a given page) is an important factor in SEO. So, keywords shouldn’t be over used. It should be enough to appear at important places.

Repetition of keywords make your site spam. Don’t use repeted keywords again and again.

Suppose you have 100 words on your web page (not including HMTL code used for writing the web page), and you use a certain keyword for five times in the content. The keyword density on that page is got by simply dividing the total number of keywords, by the total number of words that appear on your web page. So here it is 5 divided by 100 = .05. Because keyword density is a percentage of the total word count on the page, multiply the above by 100, that is 0.05 x 100 = 5%

Never exceed standard for a keyword density. It should be between 3% and 5%.

Apply this rule to every page of your site and to set of keywords that relates to a different product or service. If you want to check the density of keywords here is the simple way:

Copy and paste the content from an individual web page into a word-processing software program like Word or Word Perfect. Go to the ‘Edit’ menu and click ‘Select All’. Now go to the ‘Tools’ menu and select ‘Word Count’. Write down the total number of words in the page. Now select the ‘Find’ function on the ‘Edit’ menu. Go to the ‘Replace’ tab and type in the keyword you want to find. ‘Replace’ that word with the same word, so you don’t change the text. When you complete the replace function, the system will provide a count of the words you replaced. That gives the number of times you have used the keyword in that page. Using the total word count for the page and the total number of keywords you can now calculate the keyword density.

This is going to be just one of the many ways you can make your website rank much higher in the search engines overall and for specific keywords or keyword phrases. A lot of people may not even really think about this type of stuff and may have not realized what damage they are doing to the SEO side of things. Internet Submitter website can help you to fill in all the gaps.

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24th October 2008

Yahoo’s proposal for Firefox & IE

An announcement by Yahoo is of taking its popular Inquisitor plug-in from Safari and offering it for Internet Explorer and Firefox. When you will type some text in to search box ,Inquisitor helps you to give suggestions ,Like in Google you have Google Suggest for suggestions.

Inquisitor is a bit different from this because it will bring up specific websites as suggestions rather then providing suggestions for actual searches.

A post on the Yahoo Search Blog says:

Building on the work by the Yahoo! Research team in the paper “Information Re-Retrieval: Repeat Queries in Yahoo! Logs,” the algorithm that generates the personalized results has been enhanced to return more targeted results.

We’ve also included a bookmark-based retrieval feature for IE. So, if you are looking for a page you bookmarked a few months ago, say an expense report guide on your local Intranet, you won’t need to fumble around your hundreds of bookmarks and folders to find that page. A simple search in Inquisitor will bring it right up.

Is this going to be the revolutionary search feature Yahoo is looking for in its ongoing struggle to compete with Google? Probably not, but it’s a handy enough feature that some users will find useful. Clearly Safari users have already enjoyed it.

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