Are Facebook Ads for All Businesses?

Facebook Ads. Are You Doing it Right?

Facebook Ads. Are You Doing it Right?
Recently a slew of articles have been popping up about the ineffectiveness of Facebook advertising. While we recently touched on this subject in a previous blog post, I thought I would explain why this statement has little credence when Facebook ads are done properly. If you’ve read any of our previous FB blog posts, you are aware that for Search Influence, Facebook yields a low cost per lead making it one of our most effective ways to drive leads to clients’ sites. With that being stated, I can proceed to explain (in a Clarissa-esque manner) why Facebook is effective and ineffective for some online marketers and industries.
[Read more]Posted on Thursday, November 18th, 2010
What Small Businesses Can Learn From Comics
Along with being a search marketing expert (that’s right, I said it), I am a huge fanboy (that means I like comic books A LOT). Very rarely do my two worlds meet but recently there was an article posted about the social media battle of rival comic companies Marvel Entertainment and DC (Time Warner) and I could not resist responding and explaining to how small businesses can win at social media. Despite my unending love for DC Comics, Marvel Entertainment does far better jobs at internet marketing. This post will explain how you can make your small business’s internet presence “marvelous”.
Posted on Tuesday, October 19th, 2010
Increasing Facebook Ads Performance with Images
Choosing the Right Images for Your Facebook Ads
In a previous Facebook Advertising blog post I mentioned the importance of selecting images for your Facebook ads. What I failed to do in that post was to fully explain that idea. Sure I threw out some fancy jargon about “magazine editorial ads”, but I wanted to take this time to show you three types:
1) Contextually Relevant
[Read more]Posted on Thursday, September 9th, 2010
Facebook Insights UI Problems
Why I Dislike Facebook Insights
As I was checking up on the performance of a few fanpage campaigns today, I was hit with the revelation that Facebook Insights is a terrible web metric tool.
What is Facebook Insights you may ask?
Here’s the abridged FB definittion: “Facebook Insights provides Facebook Page owners and Platform application developers with metrics around their content.
[Read more]Posted on Wednesday, August 4th, 2010
Fall 2010 Yahoo Will Show Bing Organic Results
Last week, Yahoo sent out emails explaining how the merger with MSN/Bing would effect paid search advertiser. The most interesting piece of information the email provided was about the transition to Bing search algorithm in early Fall.
[Read more]Organic Search Transition
To date, we’ve focused most of our communications to you on the paid search transition to adCenter. However, another key aspect of the Yahoo! and Microsoft Search Alliance is the transition of Yahoo! organic search results (those found on the main body of the page). Assuming our testing continues to yield high quality results, we anticipate that our organic search results will be powered by Bing beginning in the August/September timeframe.
Posted on Tuesday, July 20th, 2010
White, Gray, and Black Hats of SEO
What’s the Difference Between White, Gray, and Black SEO Hats?
When I was starting out in SEO, I was so confused by what the best practices were and I remember at my first search conference a speaker (I want to say it was Matt Cutts but it probably wasn’t) started explaining the “hats”. There are three different hats a SEO can wear and each color represents how clean they are with their search engine tactics.
[Read more]Posted on Thursday, July 15th, 2010
Yahoo! is an Entertainment News Site...Wha?
Yahoo Fails At Search, Tries Its Hand At Being A “Pretty Woman”

"Your Yahoo! May Look Different Today!"

"Your Yahoo! May Look Different Today!"
It is a sad day when search engines are reduced to stalking celebrities to keep themselves relevant.
That is the thought I had when I saw the latest Yahoo TV commercial. Since their merger with Microsoft was announced, Yahoo has been trying to carve out a niche for itself as a entertainment news site (seriously how many E!s, TMZs, OhNoTheyDidnts, and Superficials must we have! How are all the celebrity bloggers going to eat and stay in white MSpaint to draw on photos?). They are even going as far as to declared themselves THE NUMBER ONE visited site for such frivolous news – when in all honesty, they are including Yahoo Search,Yahoo Mail, and Yahoo Games (noticed I didn’t include the “!” because there just isn’t anything exciting about Yahoo anymore) into this data.
[Read more]Posted on Wednesday, July 14th, 2010
Facebook Local Search: Facebook Declares War on Google's Empire
Is Facebook the next evolution of Local Search?
We all knew it was a matter of time before Facebook started expanding into web search and they’ve finally done it by unveiling their own Facebook local search option: Open Graph search engine. What is Open Graph, you might ask, here’s what Facebook reps are saying, according to an allfacebook.com story:
[Read more]“all Open Graph enabled web pages will show up in search when a user likes them”
Posted on Tuesday, July 6th, 2010
Top 5 Chrome Plugins for Search Marketing
As a Search Marketing professional I’m always looking for new browser tools to help me with optimization. Over the last few months, I’ve become a huge fan of Google Chrome. It’s fast, light-weight, and has tons of user generated extensions for SEO, PPC, and SMO. Here is a list of the top 5 Chrome plugins any Internet marketer should have.
1) Chrome SEO – Probably one of the best free SEO add-ons I’ve used. It provides backlink info, as well as, keyword research tool, domain age, and traffic and rank. It has everything. Unlike some other SEO plugins, I never find myself disabling it because it’s chugging resources or constantly crashing.
[Read more]Posted on Tuesday, June 29th, 2010
You Know What Grinds My Google Gears?
“Google Gears – Improving Your Web Browser”
That is Google’s tagline for their open source project that stores data locally for web applications and runs Javascripts in the background. But as anyone who has used Gears will tell you, it’s buggy, especially when being used with Google applications.
For instance, Google Chrome comes pre-installed with Google Gears, however out of all the browsers that currently support Gears, it crashes the most. I’ve used Firefox and Internet Explorer with Gears and even though I still experience time-outs when downloading web app data and frequent Javascript slow downs, with Chrome I just get the “Aw, Snap! Something went wrong…” message practically every time I do anything Gears related.
[Read more]Posted on Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010














