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Archive for March, 2009

Getting Links From Niche Directories

2022052.jpgYour site looks good. It contains useful content attractively and logically laid out. What else can you do to encourage visitors to your site?

Whatever you offer, there’s almost certainly some way to differentiate it from others. If that’s the case, niche directories can help give you an edge over the competition. These directories are especially useful because they can help you build theme-related links.

A niche directory is made up of links that specialize in some particular area, or point to sites that offer a product for a non-general audience – an audience that usually has more money to spend, and more incentive to spend it.

Advantages of niche directories

Search engines are trying to place more emphasis on relevant anchor text and the thematic context of links coming into your site.

That means links from sites that are related to yours may end up weighing in your favor when it comes to getting a higher placement in the SERPs.

It’s also important for human visitors. People who actively look for niche directories are highly targeted visitors. When they come to your site, they’re likely to be eager to read your reviews, sign up for your newsletter, join your forum, and check out your products or advertisements. They may even be more targeted than a visitor who comes straight from a Google search, since they chose your site from all the sites in that niche directory.

Whether your ideal visitor is a classic car aficionado looking for that hard-to-find 1932 Ford carburetor, or an immunologist looking for the latest breakthroughs in hay fever treatments, they have this in common: They are both people who are searching for specialized goods and services, they’re motivated to spend, and they usually don’t mind paying top dollar.

Finding Niche Directories
It takes an extra investment of time to locate a directory in your niche. The vast majority of web directories combine many niches under one general umbrella site.

One way to locate such directories is to go to a large meta-search engine, such as Dogpile (www.dogpile.com), and type in “[niche name] + search engine.” Unfortunately, you will have to wade through a lot of junk to find what you’re looking for. Another, but more tedious method, is to hunt for niche portals and blogs that contain links pages.

Image and Multimedia Directories

If your site happens to specialize in audio, video, film, podcasts, art, photography, or drawing, you may be able to take advantage of excellent traffic opportunities from some of these directories.

In general, to get into these directories your site needs to actually offer images, audios, or film clips. While these are often the perfect “viral” giveaway, many affiliates won’t go to the trouble of developing their own royalty-free art or multimedia clips.

However, for those that do, some well-trafficked and high visibility directories are willing to consider including you in their listings.


The Fantastic Four – Web 2.0 Social Bookmarking Integration Ideas

3242466.jpgWe could write a whole month’s worth of posts exploring the possibilities and the potential problems in social bookmarking.

However, in this post, our goal is only to provide an overview of why this new concept is hot, and to inspire you to investigate further.

Here are four simple ways you can integrate social bookmarking features into your website now.

#1 – Use social bookmarking sites as content sources.
Social bookmarking sites are equipped with all the latest syndication tools, be it RSS feeds or HTML or Flash widgets you can grab that dynamically display the latest links on a given subject. Use these tools to enhance your site with a continuously updated stream of links, that are highly relevant to your product or service offering.

Remember, place these links carefully as helpful additions that strengthen your site as an authority on the subject. This will avoid creating a “link leak” which drives visitors away from your site onto non-monetized links.

#2 – Implement tagging on your site and take advantage of tag aggregators.
There are tagging plug-ins for almost all content management and blogging systems, which you can use to tag your pages and content. You can submit these pages to tag aggregators that display content tagged with the same labels from many sources.

If you have a blog, ping Technorati, which will pick up your posts and tags. Keep your tags relevant to your content. Both social software sites and users do not like spam!

#3 – Use social software sites in keyword research.
Because tags are chosen entirely by the users, tag-based sites are also free market research goldmines. You can tap into the minds of your target audience by studying what labels they use to tag products, pages, and sites on your chosen subject. Browse the many social bookmarking sites and pick up unusual tag (keyword) combinations or new product angles you haven’t thought about.

#4 – Add a social bookmarking tool to your pages.
There are plug-ins for most blog platforms and content management systems that display an “Add to ….” link on each page of your site. This enables users to quickly save your link as a bookmark on their chosen online bookmark manager. By using this tactic, every page will encourage users to save and share your site, hopefully resulting in free viral traffic from these increasingly popular services.


Affiliate Classroom Changes Name to Lurn, Inc.

Today is a big day for our company – and I wanted to share our exciting news with you!

We have changed our name Lurn, Inc. That’s a fun way of spelling “learn”, where U come first!

You can check out our new website at:

http://www.lurn.com/

I’ve also pasted a copy of a press release we sent about the name change below.

How does this name change affect you?

Well, for the most part, everything will remain the same for our clients, affiliates, students and partners. All of our product lines (including the Affiliate Classroom course) remain in tact and running ahead at full steam!

You’ll continue being supported by the same great staff and you’ll continue to receive the same great training tools and information you’ve come to expect from us. But, as the year goes on – you’ll see that we’ll be adding more support, more tools, more services and more training to help our students and our affiliates reach their personal and financial goals.

We’d love to hear what you think about the new name – please post your comments!

Stay tuned for more news on all of the great things coming out of Lurn this year!

To your continued success,

Lurn, Inc. (formerly Affiliate Classroom) http://www.lurn.com/

***** Copy of Our Press Release *****

Affiliate Classroom Changes Name to Lurn, Inc.

E-learning Content and Technology Provider Takes on a New Name to Encompass Expanded Offering and Vision College Park, MD –March 5th, 2009.

Affiliate Classroom, a leading publisher of educational tools for the interactive advertising industry, has changed its name to Lurn, Inc. The change comes as the company embarks on plans to expand offerings and broaden its vision. “We originally set out to provide training and best practices for affiliates. The name Affiliate Classroom made perfect sense,” said founder and CEO Anik Singal. “But in late 2008 as our executive team developed our strategic vision for the next two years, we felt limited by the name.

What we’re able to offer now is beyond simple how-to information for affiliates. Changing our name is strategically liberating.”

Along with new interactive marketing courses, in 2009 the company will add a comprehensive e-learning delivery and membership management platform to its offerings. This technology will offer third-parties the ability to launch and manage their own training and membership-based coaching and consulting package.

The company will continue using the name “Affiliate Classroom” to brand its online affiliate training course. Affiliate Classroom is currently undergoing a content and technological revision and will be re-introduced to the market in mid-2009.

Singal added, “We’ve been getting a lot of compliments on the new name. We think that it highlights our fun personality, while staying true to our vision of empowering our students to reach their goals through technology and education.”

About Lurn, Inc.

Formerly known as Affiliate Classroom, privately-held Lurn, Inc was established in October of 2004 and is a leading provider of content and e-learning technology for interactive marketers. The growing product suite includes courses, books, live seminars, digital magazines, online communities and applications for online marketers.

www.Lurn.com

Contact:

Rachel Honoway VP of Marketing rachel@lurn.com 301-944-0052 ext 714


9 Tips for Traffic with Keyword Rich Copy (Part 2 of 2)

21122617.jpgIn the first part of this blog, we learned about four key things you can do to turn your copy into traffic or sales. In the second part of this two-part blog, we will finish up and look at five more keys to helping you earn more sales!

#5 – …And Hit the Target “Blind”
Nine times out of ten you’ll find that the copy is already near-perfect for your purpose anyway. After all, Google is designed specifically to define relevance as what people want to read.

They’re not big fans of SEO designed to capture people by keyword tweaking and are always harping on writing naturally. That means that the words that would occur to a writer discussing a topic and those a potential reader uses to find them are likely to match pretty well spontaneously. Often, no special effort is needed.

# 6 – Play the Odds
Suppose you’ve written an article stating how fine a thing is the Gibson acoustic guitar. You’re likely to use those last three words somewhere in the first paragraph without any special thought towards SEO.

Now suppose someone wants to buy one. What are they likely to type in? Odds are high it will be something containing “Gibson acoustic guitar.” Their research goals, directed by their purchase desire, will drive their keyword use.

(That doesn’t guarantee you high ranking, or getting found, of course. Keyword optimized copy is important in SEO, but it’s not the end of the story.)

# 7 – Confirm and Re-write
You’ll want to check and confirm the utility and quality of your keywords and your  content. Do some searches yourself to see what comes up. Use Wordtracker, Yahoo!, or your favorite tool to verify the content in your copy. Find out how often someone really would use the keywords you included.

With that in hand you can go back through your copy — whether it’s an article, sales letter, home page intro material, or whatever — and see if the words you use really do match. It’s much easier to modify existing text to swap out a word here or there once you already have something.

Substituting a spider-tasty synonym for the word you used that means the same thing (but wouldn’t work quite as well) is easy now. Go through the first 200 words to ensure that the keywords that are in heavy use related to that topic really are in your copy. If not, swap one out of your text that means the same thing and pop in the new one.

# 8 – Check It For Sense
When you’re done with that stage, read it over to make sure it still makes sense from a human point of view. You have to attract visitors, but you don’t want to drive them away with senseless sentences once they get there.

Do the same exercise with the rest of the copy. While it’s true that search engines focus heavily on the first sentences, paragraph, and/or 200 words or so, that’s not all they check.

Spider designers are devilishly clever. They sometimes check the last paragraph as well. From both the search engine and the real reader’s points of view, the copy has to read well throughout. You don’t want to lose either at the end. After all, that’s often where you’ll tip the undecided into a sale.

# 9 – Test, Test, Test
Don’t regard your copy as ever “finished.” It may read well today, and that will last you for a while. But six months or a year later, things will have changed. Different products require a different focus, even when the copy is general enough to cover them all.

Consumer tastes change, both in products and the way they want to find out about them. A fresh phrase today is a tired cliché a year later.

The only way to know for sure whether your copy is still effective from a keyword perspective is to observe the results. Monitor the traffic, put up different pages on the same topic with slightly different wording and note the difference. It’s a never-ending effort to keep those visitors coming, and coming back.

But the reward is never-ending sales.


9 Tips for Traffic with Keyword Rich Copy (Part 1 of 2)

22412320.jpgOk, we confess. No content alone will make you rich unless you are J.K. Rowling or Dan Brown.

(Come to think of it, even they need good marketing, too.) But both anecdotes and studies agree: if you want traffic, you need good content.

In this two-part blog, we will look at nine key things you can do to turn traffic into sales.

Let’s begin:

#1 – What Is Good?
But from the perspective of that all-important first step — getting the traffic — what constitutes “good?”

Most spiders will read only about the first 200 words of a page before moving on. During that scan the robot picks up the basic information that the search engine algorithms later turn into a ranking decision. That means, you need to pack your punch into those all important first few paragraphs.

The first sentence or two should contain keywords that reflect the message you want to plant uppermost in your visitor’s mind. That makes writing keyword-rich copy an exercise in psychology. (But you knew already that is 50% or more of marketing.)

Fortunately, no advanced degree is necessary to gain the needed insight, just common sense and some experience, along with a few helpful tools.

#2 – Picking Keywords
Over 90% of searches are done with one or two keywords typed into the box. Single keyword searches make up most of that 90%, but mix it up. Use some single keyword terms in a sentence and sprinkle some double keyword phrases here and there.

But which word or two is best? Think about what you would use to search for, say, an acoustic guitar. Then ask a few friends; that will give you a perspective that might not have occurred to you. (You might be odd!) Then, use a tool like Google’s free keyword tool and get a wider viewpoint.

In short order, you’ll have a list surrounding your topic that will make for potentially great spider food. But you need to turn that potential into reality. When you do your analysis, keep in mind the actual relationship between what you offer and that keyword.

Just picking “guitar” or “acoustic guitar” might be too generic, it depends on exactly what you pre-sell. Are you an affiliate for an instrument merchant, or are making income directing traffic to an instructor, or offering MP3 downloads? The nature of your business will heavily influence how you refine that list of prospective keywords.

#3 – Change Them Often
Whatever your business, it isn’t static and it exists in a dynamic environment. Products, the state of information about them, and every other variable online are constantly changing. Competitors rise and fall in the marketplace. Sears, at one time, was the largest retailer on the planet. Wal-Mart supplanted them long ago. Microsoft was unbeatable 10 years ago, now they’re struggling to compete.

That means you need to keep the keyword-rich copy you write relevant to what is happening now, not six months ago. Here again something like Wordtracker or Google’s free External Keyword Tool will help to keep you up-to-date.

#4 – Writing Copy Aim Sideways…
Keywords are absolutely essential to moving your copy beyond interesting into profitable. But, that doesn’t mean that you should necessarily focus on keywords directly when first creating your text. Philosophers sometimes suggest that aiming straight at happiness may cause us to fall short of it. But re-directing attention to other things leads us
there.
That indirect approach is equally appropriate in writing website content. At least during the first draft (and you should always do at least two), just focus on your topic. Convey the information that needs to be there and don’t think about whether the words you choose are good spider food. Then, after you have it in good shape, do your keyword research to prepare for a final draft.

To read the second half of this blog, and the next five tips for turning your traffic into sales, please stay tuned for Wednesday’s blog!