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Archive for the ‘Search Engine Optimization (SEO)’ Category

Distinguish and differentiate yourself from other candidates–and get that job–all with your blog!

My session at the 2012 Minnesota Blogger Conference.

Want to be that 1 in a 100 that lands an interview? Then manage your online reputation by blogging. In this session, learn how a blog can boost your SEO, demonstrate your expertise, present your newsworthy knowledge of your industry, make you an information source and build your professional network. And don’t forget, that if you write well, your ability to communicate establishes itself.

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Taking a cue from one of my students, Miss Angeleen, I’m just going to make a list of what I’d like to be writing about…

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Mashable.com--a blog for teaching

This week, I assigned my Promotional Communications students about 25 URLs to read or watch. I did this because I couldn’t find a textbook in June that adequately presented interactive media let alone grasped its importance.

As a teacher, it’s a lot harder to teach from a series of articles than to follow a publisher’s lecture outline. I know I’m doing well, when my students burst into my lectures and relate our discussion to their projects. Of course, they are supposed to do that, but I can tell when it’s spontaneous and genuine. The canned lecture outlines rarely produce this kind of excitement in class.

Today, we’ll be discussing Mashable.com articles about social media marketing. I love this site. Just about any question I have or my students might have about implementing social media policies is answered there. Except one.

What’s missing is the elusive “How do I get people to find me, if I’m only on the web?” By that I mean, of course, without any other traditional media, how do you get listeners, buyers, readers, etc.? I think the answer is that as a business you must participate first in what others are publishing. I.E. I read someone’s Tweet, comment on it, and then they follow me. Regarding my blog, are people or organizations just searching by tag or category and find my entries that way?

You have to start somewhere, I suppose.

Update…Mashable.com answered my question.

November 3rd, Mashable.com Tweeted: “5 Ways to Promote Your Social Media Efforts Offline” – by @sarahfkessler,” which linked me to a great article about how to use the offline or real world

Okay, it’s nothing earth shattering: Just use the Real World — creatively — to bring attention to your virtual one.

5 Ways to Promote Your Social Media Efforts Offline: Nov 03, 2010 -

“The real world is often overlooked when small businesses try to raise awareness of their online efforts. But with a few clear exceptions, people still do most of their living offline. Physical space can be as good of a place as any to advertise your website, social media accounts and blogs.

There are a bevy of creative ways to get your online properties in people’s offline views, and we’ve got the photographic evidence to prove it. These seven strategies will help you kick-start your brainstorm for the perfect offline efforts for your online strategy.”

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One of my favorite Twin Cities events – the Minnesota Irish Fair — and I’m only Irish by marriage. You can stand in one place and hear 5 different bands; watch some traditional sport, dancing, or animals; or eat and drink both classic and neo Irish foods — Irish Nachos anyone? Not to mention all sorts of literary, history and Irish-language tents. And it’s free — at least for now–thanks to the many sponsors.

Experience it all

Being a St. Paulite, I had no idea what or where Ahern’s Irish Pub hailed from–the primary sponsor of the event. So how did they do? Was their investment worth it?

As much as I bet they wanted their presence to be bigger, it was subtle — at least on the opening night. Yes, the first booth you encounter walking down the main aisle to Croagh Park – the main location for all non-music events–is the Ahern’s Pub booth, but unless you stop to look or have to stand in line for the ATM, you’d never know about the free Kid’s T-shirt or the no-fail contest to win an Ahern’s branded fan, pen, cozy or frisbee.

Ahern's Kids T-shirts

The T-shirts are cute and the kids in-the-know enjoyed coloring them with fabric markers. What great strolling advertising for a pub and restaurant that’s not offensive to families. Green Ahern Frisbees were a common site flying around or vainly keeping patrons dry during the occasional downpour.

Food and beverage ticket include a coupon for Ahern’s Irish Pub with each 10-pack of tickets sold. If nothing else, that should get savvy consumers across the river and into Ahern’s door vs. other Minneapolis Irish hotspots (Google search for Minneapolis Irish Bars). But whoops! What’s missing — Ahern’s Irish Pub doesn’t show up on the list, but Brit’s does and it’s not even Irish.

This could be a problem. Where’s Ahern’s Irish Pub marketing director? Establishing a Google presence is easy and absolutely necessary. But it gets worse, go visit their website (Ahern’s Irish Pub) are they open or is the site just not updated? Good points include the link FaceBook and the Irish Fair Banner which doesn’t link to the Irish Fair, but only a PDF about their sponsorship of the fair. If you read it, you’ll find out they haven’t opened yet! Just an important piece of information that needs to be obvious and not buried in text that only marketing profs read.

Give us an opening date. Publish a sneak peak at the menu. All the history is fun, but I’m not going to come visit unless I stumble upon your establishment or know what I’m getting into.

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