Earning web traffic the old fashioned way


For many businesses, launching a website feels like the finish line.  You’ve worked hard to have a final product and you’re excited to move on to other things. Unfortunately, there is no simple finish line for web success.  It’s important to celebrate a website launch, but the true test of your website is how well it works for you in the long run (how many new customers, donors, or volunteers it brings in, how much you grow your email list, how many new leads you’ve gotten).  Having a site that works for you and makes you money doesn’t just happen on its own.  What was true for Smith Barney in 1986 in the above video (go to the 20 second mark) is true for keeping your website up to date now.  Old fashioned hard work pays off, even if the tools and strategies you must learn to use in the cutting edge of the web are far from old-fashioned.

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The Goal of your Website – How to Measure Success?

Since it’s World Cup fever for the next few weeks, I thought it might be appropriate to talk about Goals. In sports goals are how we measure success, websites are no different. Earlier in the month we talked about Measuring Social Media’s Success, in that post we began to explore how to measure the quality of visitors from social media sites through engagement statistics. What we did not talk about is the punch line of engagement statistics, mainly goals. What can be murky is deciding what goals are, defining them and tracking them.

How does a site visitor complete a goal? Ideally, you want to direct visitors through the most important areas of your site to a desired outcome, which can be anything from reading a particular piece of information, calling you or filling out a contact form. The easiest way to measure a positive interaction with your website,  is by creating a goal, which can then be tracked through Google Analytics.

How do I track a Goal in Google Analytics?

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How Do You Know if Social Media Is Working?

Before we talk about how to track success with social media we quickly need to touch on how to succeed in the first place. First, social media is… you guessed it, social! You can’t treat it as a new way to push the same old message. Much of what there is to be said on this can be found in my Breaking Down the Barriers blog post, but in a nutshell, social media is a chance to give your customers a more integrated online experience.

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Google Analytics Update: Your Internet Marketing Animated

Google Analytics is updating. The stuff they are adding to the tool is bending my brain. For those of you who are diving into your own analytics in support of a data-driven internet marketing strategy you will be very very excited. For those of you not in this category perhaps it is time to start.

And, of course, if you’d rather be taking care of the core aspects of your business (selling real estate or service or products) then be happy that your internet marketing team can now dig a little deeper and tease out a little more insight from Google Analytics.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UKsBTqqhVTs[/youtube]

This video example shows how you can look at the performance of a keyword for your website, tracked over time. How is this useful?

  • Quickly show relationships of valuable keywords
  • Show how value changes over time (perhaps in relation to market events or your own marketing efforts)
  • Show how customer interest changes over time (again, perhaps in relation to events or your own internet marketing)

I should note that this is just one of several new features that are being rolled out. And not even the juiciest (advanced segmentation is the juiciest or maybe the API or maybe…).

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How are your real estate customers using social media?

online_communities

Image by .mw via Flickr

Forrester research has recently updated its social media customer profiling tool to include data from 2008. Many of you in the real estate business have probably been hearing about blogs, Twitter, FriendFeed and other social media technologies for some time now. Some of you are even using social media tools to enhance your real estate business.

But the questions always remain: Are my customers using social media? Am I speaking into a void? I thought only teenagers used blogs

The Forrester Technographics Profile Tool

There seems to be a lot of information, both anecdotal and research-based, that talks about what specific tools or even kinds of tools people are using online. This makes sense because technology vendors need to demonstrate their relevance. There’s less information, however, about why people are using technology.

And the “why” question is important because it helps us to determine which technologies are relevant for our customers. Identifying why people use technology helps us all develop better services and products. Understanding why people use technology brings us closer to understanding how they self-identify.

The Forrester tool helps you understand why people are using social media technology segmented by age, country and gender. Now granted, this is a pretty broad segmentation and I’d sure love to have more psychographic than demographic information. But even so the tool is great to get a start on clearing up misconceptions about what types of people use social media technology.

The identities that the Forrester Tool breaks down are (from most-active to least-active):

  • Creators: The people who make social media.
  • Critics: The people who respond and comment on social media.
  • Collectors: The people who organize social media.
  • Joiners: The people who sign up and connect on social media sites.
  • Spectators: The people who look at and consume social media.
  • Inactives: They don’t do any of this stuff.

For a better understanding, here’s a slide show:

[kml_flashembed movie=”http://static.slideshare.net/swf/ssplayer2.swf?doc=social-technographics-explained-1205848868863165-5&stripped_title=social-technographics-explained” height=”355″ width=”425″ /]

Using the Technographics Tool to Improve Your Real Estate Marketing

Alright, you’ve gone over to the site, played with the pull down menus and seen the pretty charts. Lot of fun right? Well fun isn’t enough (especially these days) so let’s see what we can do with this kind of information to make your internet marketing more successful. Here’s a nice numbered-list to get us started

  1. Identify your best audience demographic
  2. Discover what your audience likes to do via the Technographic Tool
  3. Make changes to your internet marketing that reflect what you know about your audience

Identifying an audience demographic

Hopefully you already know something about the sorts of people you tend to work with in your real estate business. If you don’t, then perhaps you might want to use MSN’s demographic prediction tool. This will at least give you something to get going if you can’t hire a demographics consultant just yet.

For this example, I’m going to use the demo prediction tool to look at the demographics for people searching for “Vermont Real Estate.” The tool tels me I’m looking mostly at a Female demographic aged 35-49.

Discovering what your audience likes to do

Using the information from step one, I fill out the Forrester Technographic Tool. The age demographics don’t match up perfectly so I choose the one that fits best: 35-44.

Turns out that, according to the Tool, my audience is using technology fairly average. They are most below-average as Joiners. They’re most above-average as Critics.

That’s nice. Now what?

Make changes to your marketing based on what you know

Ok, so the audience is unlikely to be Joiners and more likely to be Critics. Perhaps I will reserve some of the resources I would be spending on social networking sites (advertising and participating). Then I can take those resources and re-allocate them to online marketing initiatives which encourage feedback, ratings, comments and other participatory technologies.

Would I make changes to an entire business model based on data collected using MSN’s demo prediction tool and the Forrester Technographic Profile Tool? Nope. But I would use this to make tweaks and start deeper research into my audience.

The Tool is Updated: What are the trends?

Now that you have a sense of what the tool is and how you might use it to help out your real estate business, maybe you’re curious about trending of this sort of data. I heard about this tool being updated from Josh Bernoff (via Twitter of course) and he mentioned that the growth of social media adoption is in the 35-55 year old demographic.

Bernoff has a blog post outlining the changes between 2007 and 2008 in the use of social media. It includes a bar chart showing the changes in each of the categories. The biggest jumps are in Spectators and Critics. There is very modest growth in the Creators category. Here’s what he says about age demographics in his post:

Social activity is way up among 35-to-44 year-olds, especially when it comes to joining social networks and reading and reacting to content. Even among 45-to-54 year-olds, 68% are now Spectators, 24% are Joiners, and only 28% are Inactives.

This is important for anyone who continues to believe that their social media strategy should consist entirely of a Facebook “fan” page and should be run by the college intern. There are some great opportunities ahead using social media as part of your real estate online marketing plan. Do like Bernoff does and use data as your secret weapon.

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Track your search engine ranking improvement with a plugin for Firefox

Search engine optimization (SEO) is typically a pillar of any internet marketing strategy. Yesterday, I posted information about how you can save time assessing the effectiveness of your SEO efforts by using the Rank Checker for Firefox plugin. Another fan of Rank Checker decided it was time to make the search rank data a bit more visually appealing by creating a second plugin called Site Rank Reporter. It’s a handy way to visualize things, especially if you are charged with reporting to someone about the effectiveness of all your efforts to optimize your real estate web site.

The tool is quick to install, but comes with a few caveats.

  1. It’s only useful once you’ve collected multiple data sets. SeoBook suggests several days of data, but that would only be useful if you were tracking your work on a blog site that is indexed daily and therefore has a chance to improve daily. More realistic for a real estate web site would be monthly data. You can put Rank Checker on auto-pilot and then visit the data in a few months.
  2. Your .csv data files need to be named carefully, with only the date as the file name in one of these file name formats: MM-DD-YY, M-D-YY, MM-D-YY, or M-DD-YY.
  3. You can’t muck with the data that came from Rank Checker. Make a copy of the original file If you want to play with the data in Excel.
  4. The .html format of the data that you can save is nicely styled and saves you time from formatting the raw data in Excel.
  5. It’s not possible to save the graphed data unless you take a screen capture. And that graph is not labeled with the keyword — it’s displayed above in a list field. To make the visual representation more useful, I hope the developers will develop an output that is labeled and can be downloaded as a .gif file. That way, the file could be included quickly in a PowerPoint or other report to the folks who are footing the bill for all that search engine optimization!
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See how your real estate web site’s SEO is performing: use Rank Checker for FireFox

Are you tired of spending time typing in your preferred keywords on Google or Yahoo to see where your real estate web site is positioned on the search engine results page (SERP)? If you’re below page two, this can be a real time drain and take up a lot of your search engine optimization (SEO) time . If you have several keywords to check, it can be an even BIGGER hassle. Whenever you want to see if your efforts at SEO are paying off, simply use Rank Checker to get the data.

The folks at SeoBook have made our lives easier with a fantastic Firefox plugin called Rank Checker. I’ve been using this tool since July and couldn’t live without it. Even though it’s easy to install and use, SeoBook’s Aaron Wall has made it even easier by creating a 5-minute video to tech you how to install and use it. I highly recommend taking the 5 minutes to view it.

Five Tips to make Rank Checker even sweeter

  1. You can cut and paste your list of keywords out of a spreadsheet and add them all at once, or you can type them one at a time.
  2. Be sure to save your list of keywords to the preset folder. That way, you can run it any time you like with almost no effort.
  3. You can simply view the results on-screen, but even better is to download the .csv (comma separated value) file.
  4. Save that raw data file to it’s own folder as simply MM-DD-YY, M-D-YY, MM-D-YY, or M-DD-YY. (see tomorrow’s post to see why this is so important!) feel free to open the file in Excel and save it as a .xls file so that you can format and play with the information. Just don’t mess with the original CSV.
  5. Plan to run this once a month for three or four months so that you can observe the impact of your SEO efforts (changes to content, meta data, and inbound link building).

This is the second in a series of five posts this week on cool FireFox plugins to assist in optimizing your real estate web site. Yesterday’s post featured a Firefox plugin for easily adding images to your real estate blog. Tomorrow’s post will examine a cool (but somewhat tricky) plugin that helps Realtors visualize and report on the data they get from Rank Checker.

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Use analytics to make better real estate videos

Schematic of image orthicon tube.

Image via Wikipedia

Making videos for real estate is a time consuming process no matter how you look at it. And you want to be sure you’re getting the best results for the time you spend making, editing and uploading your property videos. Why not use analytics to listen to your customers and let them help you improve your real estate video mojo?

Google is now tracking “drop off” over at YouTube. I haven’t taken the time yet to play with this yet but it looks promising. Here’s why:

  • See how long people tend to actually watch the videos you post: make your videos the right length.
  • See if there’s a particular room/angle/whatever that tends to turn people off and make them leave: show only the stuff that works.
  • See if actual video outperforms slideshow-style video: show the right kind of content.

Of course, the downside is that you have to use the miserable YouTube video compression etc. I think I know how Google is making this analytics tool work and it isn’t incredibly complicated. Perhaps some of the other Flash-based video distribution sites will start offering analytics as well.

Anyone out there using analytics with their real estate videos?

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Tweetburner is another tool for social media measurement

Just a quick heads up: Similar to the Cli.gs service is Tweetburner. So far I’m finding that Tweetburner has a prettier interface with charts and all.

Also, it has my requested “time of day” style reports. So you can start to learn when people are paying attention to your Twitter posts

It does give you a slightly longer URL though (twurl.com vs cli.gs) so if you need every precious character then perhaps Cli.gs is the better choice.

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Cli.gs is a tool for social media analytics

For those of you who are happily using Twitter as a business tool, it probably won’t take long before you start to wonder if all those shortened links are doing you much good.

Certainly you can look in your analytics for Twitter as a referrer. But that won’t tell you much as the link itself gets passed along. Also, if you’re linking to a site for which you don’t have analytics access, you won’t know your level of influence (or your followership’s interest in the topic you posted).

Cligs similar to ListingNumber: a service that will give you a short URL along with some basic tracking information. You can track your link as folks pass it along from Twitter to blogs to wherever.

Just like comparing impression-based advertising with click-based advertising, you can measure your influence and the “quality” of your followership. What’s your click-through rate on Twitter? Use Cligs and find out: Clicks divided by followers. Sweet.

Another handy thing with Cligs is that they forward with a 301 redirect. This means that search engines will index your content directly. Pretty handy for SEO.
To make things easier, Cligs has a bookmarklet, so you can quickly shorten links and dump them into Twitter. Then all you have to do is watch the clicks roll in.

Simple, fairly blunt instrument.

What kind of insights might you discover by measuring click-throughs from Twitter?

update

Image by Josh Russell via Flickr

Well, as with most social networking tools and sites, there gets to be an obsession with how many followers anyone has. At first, that’s always the easiest metric to gather: “I have 70 followers, I must be important.” But if you post your blog link and no one clicks on it, maybe you’re just a blowhard and folks are ignoring you. Or maybe all those followers are spambots or something. Who knows.

Since you are tracking your click through on a per-post basis, you might also use Cligs to help figure out what interests your followership.

Using Cli.gs to help you listen to your audience

As of today I have 71 followers. So outside of random people clicking from the Twitter home page, if I completely overload the Interest circuits I’ll get all 71 of those followers to follow the link. Pretty unlikely, I’ll admit. Here are some real world examples from some recent links I sent out on Twitter:

  • 13%: A mention of the internet marketing intern position that is open at Union Street (incidentally, I added the USM careers page as a result of feedback I gathered from 4q… boy I’m a good listener)
  • 18%: Quick thoughts about some information that @jowyang shared
  • 20%: Union Street’s Groundswell Award submission.
  • 21%: A link to my old animation reel
  • 34%: A notice about AnalyticsView having a free options

Based on this raw data it looks like I can maybe count on about nine or ten folks to follow my links on a regular basis. And perhaps upwards 15 if it’s something that really gets them.

Suggestion for Cli.gs: Add the time of day the clig was created. Twitter, being mostly ephemeral, is very sensitive to time-of-day differences. We could, of course, Twitter-stalk all of our followers to identify when they are most likely to be active and then make your most important Tweets at that time… but the “time created” would probably be quicker and effective enough.

Update: Day after I posted this, Cli.gs updated their analytics interface. Now they have a graph how the Clig is used over time (at the resolution of one day). It would still be sweet to get a time-of-day chart for all Clig’s so we could identify what time is best to release our best Tweets.

Review of uses for Cligs in measuring Twitter

Here’s the rundown in a bullet list because everyone loves bullet lists:

  • Measure your influence
  • Find out what your audience’s interests are, based on what they click

What have I missed? How would you use the service?

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