Friday, January 13, 2017

Comment Marketing: How to Earn Benefits from Community Participation - Whiteboard Friday

Posted by randfish

It's been a few years since we've covered the topic of comment marketing, but that doesn't mean it's out of date. There are clever, intentional ways to market yourself and your brand in the comments sections of sites, and there's less competition now than ever before. In today's Whiteboard Friday, Rand details what you can do to get noticed in the comments and the benefits you'll reap from high-quality contributions.

Click on the whiteboard image above to open a high-resolution version in a new tab!

Video Transcription

Howdy, Moz fans, and welcome to another edition of Whiteboard Friday. This week we're going to chat about comment marketing. We talked about this actually five or six years ago, but it is time for a refresher because there are a lot of things that have happened in the world of online marketing, so this deserves a new take.

Comment marketing has not lost any of its power and influence. In fact, because fewer people are doing it today than were five or six years ago, especially in the digital marketing world, it's actually become increasingly influential. There's a limited number of blogs and communities in most sectors and spaces that have audiences that engage in the comments, but where they do, you find incredible levels of participation, of amplification, of opportunities for press and for links and for social following. I'll show you how that works, and then I'll talk about some tactics in terms of how to create great comments and a strategy to build around it.

How do comments help me/my site?

So, first off, why do comments help so much, and how do they help? Well, it turns out that if you leave great comments on other folks' sites, they may lead to visits to your website through your profile, through links that you leave, through people clicking on your profile and then following that link, which can lead to links in future posts by the authors of the site where you commented or in future content pieces created by people who read that site.

If they see that your comment is particularly insightful, it brings up a great example, shows off a resource that is sorely lacking, especially when you are either leaving links or commenting about things, if you do so in a very respectful, diplomatic way. For example, one of the best strategies, best tactics I've seen for leaving a comment with a link in it is to say, "Hey, I want to make sure that this blog accepts links in the comments, but I figured I should point to X. Editor, feel free to remove if links are not appropriate." So that way you're saying, "Hey, I recognize that dropping a link in a comment could be a little sketchy."

Or you could say something like, "We've actually been doing this on our site. If you go to our website, you can check out the link via my profile." So you're not even leaving it in there. You're saying go check it out from there, then you can see this other thing that I want to show off in relation to the content here. But those can lead to great links to your site in the future.

Commenting can also lead to indirect links through exposure and exposure itself, meaning things like you leave consistent quality comments, people start to recognize you. You sort of see that profile picture again and you go, "I know that brand from somewhere or I know that person from somewhere. I have some positive association with them adding value." That can lead to a better chance of engagement with you, your personal brand, or your corporate brand in the future, which can mean a better chance of future conversion.

It can also lead to social following growth. So you have lots of great comments. People will check out your social profile from your profile in those comments, and that can often lead to follower growth. You can, of course, juice this a little bit by choosing rather than linking to your personal site if you so choose, you could link directly to the social account that you are trying to promote or grow followership with.

So if you say, "Hey, I'm trying to grow my Facebook page. I'm going to make my Facebook page my profile link in here." That works just fine. That can grow your Facebook audience. That may be how you're best reaching your audience. Or it could be you're doing it on your website or through Twitter or Instagram or another way. But all of these things basically follow the same format. People see those comments. If they're engaging and they draw them in, it can lead to very good results.

What makes a comment great?

Basically, every single one of these start with you must leave consistent, high-quality, great comments. Greatness in a comment means a few things.

I. It's gotta be on-topic

Meaning that while you may have lots of very interesting things to share, if you go off topic, you will, even if you provide great value, tick off the moderators of the community. You will often turn off a lot of folks who are reading those comments. It's just not what people are there for. So you've got to keep it on-topic.

II. Respectful to the author and other commenters.

I say respectful because what I don't mean is you can't disagree. In fact, I think it is great to say, "Hey, I really love this post. I think you made some great points, but point number three and four that you made here or this one and that one, I disagree with and here's why. This is my experience or I have this data or I conducted this survey or I want to show you this information, go check it out over here." That is just fine. As long as you are respectful and kind, I think you're in a great position to disagree and to add value. Disagreement actually does add a lot of value.

III. Provides unique value

Speaking of value, we are trying to provide unique value here. We want to provide unique value through our comments. When I say unique value, what I mean is you can't just say things that were already in the post itself, things that have already been mentioned in other comments, or things that are sort of common knowledge, anyone could find them out or they're instantly recognizable, they're sort of already known.

We want insight or tactics, help, context, examples, data, whatever it is that is not found in the original piece or through common knowledge. That's what makes a comment truly stand out. That's what makes people vote up a comment, click on the profile, go check this person out. They seem really smart and intelligent and helpful.

IV. Well-written

There are a few other items. We want to be well-written — so grammar, spelling, language issues.

V. Well-formatted

So you should use spacing and paragraphs, bullet points if they're available in the markup effectively to try and convey your point so that it doesn't just look like a bunch of jammed together words and sentences. If you have a very long run-on paragraph in a comment, it can turn people off from even starting to read that.

VI. Transparent

Finally — this is important — transparent. So you should not try and pull the wool over people's eyes in a comment. We want to not hide our intent or our associations. Even if you are doing comment marketing specifically as a commenting strategy to try and attract people, you can be totally up front about that.
You can say, "Hey, full disclosure, I work for company X, and I wrote this piece, but I think it's relevant and helpful enough that I want to bring it up here. So, with permission, hopefully I'm linking to it. Editor, feel free to remove this link if it's not appropriate. Here's why I'm linking to it and here's what the value is that it provides." Now you've been transparent about your intentions and motivations, your associations, what you're doing. You will get a lot more both forgiveness and leeway to leave comments that are valuable if you do that.


Building a comment marketing strategy

Final thing, if you've decided, based on the couple things we've talked about here, that comment marketing is something you want to try and engage in 2017, or for the future, I would urge you to build a true strategy around it, not just tactically say, "Well, maybe a couple of times I'll leave a few comments."

That's fine too, but you can get the most benefit from this strategy if you truly invest in it by following a process like this:

A. Determine the goals you want to get out.

So maybe that's build exposure to get links. Maybe that's to grow a social audience. Maybe it's to try and get influencers to engage with you so that they become brand proponents for you in the future.

B. Create measurements

You want to build some measurement around that. Comment marketing is tough to measure, very, very tough to measure because you can't see how many people saw your comment. You only see the results of it. But you can look at traffic and visits that are referred to your site from the site on which you left the comments. You can look at growth in your social following. You could look at new links from sites in which you engage with in comment marketing, those kinds of things.

C. Identify list of sites/communities for engagement

Then you should identify a list of the sites or communities that you want to engage with. Those sites and communities, it is best if you don't say, "Hey, I'm going to try and leave one comment this year on each of 200 communities." Not valuable. Pick the top 10. Choose to leave 15 to 20 comments on each of them. You want to build up a reputation in these communities. You want that consistency so that people who are in those comments and the authors of them, the influencers who write them, consistently see you in there and build a positive association with you.

D. Research

Then you want to do some research. I'm urging you not to comment the first few times you read through it. Go through the backlog, look through their archives. Read and see what other people have commented on, see what other people have enjoyed and appreciated, see what comments do well and get noticed, see what the community is like.

E. Create and alert system when new content is published

Then create some sort of an alert system. This could be subscribing to updates via email or using RSS or if you follow them on Twitter and you get pinged every time they launch a new post, whatever it is, because early comments tend to do best. Right when a post is published, if you can comment in the first, let's say, 30 minutes to 3 hours, that's the best opportunity you're going to have to be seen by the most people reading that post.

F. Use social to help amplify/spread your comments

Finally, I would urge you to use social media, especially Twitter because that's where most publishers are, to amplify and spread your comments, meaning you go leave a comment and it's really high-quality, then tweet, "Hey, I just left a comment on @randfish's post here about blah, blah, blah." Now I'm probably going to see that via Twitter, even if I don't see it via my comment alert that I get through email, and I'm going to know, hey, this person is not only promoting their comment, they're also promoting my post. That's great. Now that builds further engagement with the people you're trying to reach.


All right, everyone. Hope you give this comment marketing strategy a spin. If you have other tips, things you've seen be successful, feel free to leave a great comment in the comments down below, and we'll see you again next week for another edition of Whiteboard Friday. Take care.

Video transcription by Speechpad.com


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MozCon Local 2017's Full Agenda

Posted by George-Freitag

This is it. The full agenda for MozCon Local 2017 and LocalU Advanced Workshop on February 27-28. If you're a brand with a ton of locations or an agency with local clients, you're going to want to come to MozCon Local 2017. We've got an amazing line-up of speakers from some of the top brains in Local Search to help you put together the perfect local marketing strategy and get the most out of local search.

Come visit us in Seattle and learn about local search, SEO, citations, reviews, enterprise-level strategy, and so much more. Interact directly with speakers both during Q&A sessions and mingle with other marketers at the after-party.

Buy your MozCon Local 2017 ticket!

Day One: LocalU Advanced Workshop

Time Title Presenter
8:00 - 8:30 Registration, Snacks, and Coffee
8:30 - 9:10 Keynote: 2017 Local Search Ranking Factors Survey Results Darren Shaw, Whitespark
9:10 - 9:40 Link Brainstorming Panel Mary Bowling, Mike Ramsey, Darren Shaw, Lauren Polinsky, Paula Keller French
9:40 - 10:20 Lessons Learned Over The 8 Years Running My Agency Mike Ramsey, Nifty Marketing
10:20 - 10:35 Break
10:35 - 10:55 On-Page Optimization for Local Search - What You May Be Missing Mary Bowling, Ignitor Digital
10:55 - 11:25 Reviews, The Ultimate Assist Mike Blumenthal & Aaron Weiche, Get Five Stars
11:25 - 11:55 Beyond Keyword Research: Optimize Content for Relevancy with Proof Terms Paula Keller French, Search Influence
12:05 - 1:00 Birds of a Feather Lunch
1:00 - 1:30 Mobile First Tactics for Local Cindy Krum, Mobile Moxie
1:30 - 2:00 Breakout Session 1: Operational Processes of Local Search: Business Issues - Panel and Q&A Mary Bowling, Mike Ramsey, Darren Shaw, Lauren Polinsky, Paula Keller French
Breakout Session 2: Google My Business Problem Solving Willys DeVoll, Google & Mike Blumenthal, Get Five Stars
Breakout Session 3: KPIs That Really Matter for Local Businesses Ed Reese, Sixth Man Marketing
Breakout Session 4: Powerful Customer Content - Reviews, Testimonials, Case Studies Aaron Weiche, Get Five Stars
2:00 - 2:30 Breakout Session 1: Operational Processes of Local Search: Tools We Use - Panel and Q&A Mary Bowling, Mike Ramsey, Darren Shaw, Lauren Polinsky, Paula Keller French
Breakout Session 2: Google My Business Problem Solving Willys DeVoll, Google & Mike Blumenthal, Get Five Stars
Breakout Session 3: KPIs That Really Matter for Local Businesses Ed Reese, Sixth Man Marketing
Breakout Session 4: Powerful Customer Content - Reviews, Testimonials, Case Studies Aaron Weiche, Get Five Stars
2:30 - 3:00 Breakout Session 1: Operational Processes of Local Search: Ask Us Anything - Panel and Q&A Mary Bowling, Mike Ramsey, Darren Shaw, Lauren Polinsky, Paula Keller French
Breakout Session 2: Google My Business Problem Solving Willys DeVoll, Google & Mike Blumenthal, Get Five Stars
Breakout Session 3: KPIs That Really Matter for Local Businesses Ed Reese, Sixth Man Marketing
Breakout Session 4: Powerful Customer Content - Reviews, Testimonials, Case Studies Aaron Weiche, Get Five Stars
3:00 - 3:15 Break
3:15 - 4:30 Competitive Analysis and Creating a Marketing Plan Multiple Speakers
4:30 - 5:00 What We're Watching Q&A Multiple Speakers
5:00 - 6:00 Happy Hour!

Day Two: MozCon Local Conference

Time Title Presenter
8:00 - 9:00 Breakfast and Registration
9:00 - 9:45 Future Proofing Your Local Strategy: A Panel with Google, Bing, and Yelp Willys DeVoll, Google; Christi Olson, Bing; Nate Evans, Yelp
9:45 - 10:15 Are Words the New Links? Mike Blumenthal, Get Five Stars
10:15 - 10:45 The New Local Search Ecosystems & Citation Sources That Matter in 2017 Darren Shaw, Whitespark
10:45 - 11:00 Break
11:00 - 11:15 Analytics Quick-Fire: Integrating Google Data for Local Michael Wiegand, Portent
11:15 - 11:30 Analytics Quick-Fire: Implementing and Measuring the Local SEO Funnel Anita Bhati, STAT
11:30 - 12:00 Optimizing for Location-Based Search Ashley Berman Hale, Mobile Moxie
12:00 - 1:00 Networking Lunch
1:00 - 1:30 Local Link Building through PR and Outreach Rhea Drysdale, Outspoken Media
1:30 - 2:00 Crafting a Local SEO Strategy Greg Gifford, DealerOn
2:00 - 2:30 Think Locally, Act Globally: Local Strategy for Enterprise-Level Brands Heather Physioc, VML
2:30 - 2:45 Break
2:45 - 3:15 The Nitty Gritty of Getting Reviews Kate Morris, Craftsy
3:15 - 3:45 The Driving Data of Local Search George Freitag, Moz Local
3:45 - 4:15 Scaling Local with Google My Business Willys DeVoll, Google
4:15 - 4:45 MozCon Local 2017 Keynote Rand Fishkin, Moz
6:00 - 10:00 MozCon Local Afterparty!

Buy your MozCon Local 2017 ticket!

Speakers


Aaron Weiche

Aaron Weiche
Get Five Stars
@AaronWeiche
Session: Powerful Customer Content - Reviews, Testimonials, Case Studies

Aaron Weiche is the CMO for GetFiveStars.com, a customer feedback and online review platform. Aaron is a digital marketing veteran of over 18 years growing agencies small and large in executive and partner roles. Aaron has built and optimized hundreds of websites for companies and organizations of all sizes. He helped found the MnSearch Association, is a faculty partner at Local University, Google Analytics Certified, and speaks nationally on search marketing, social media, reviews, web design and mobile. Aaron also blogs on local digital marketing at AaronWeiche.com.


Anita Bhatti

Anita Bhatti
STAT
@anitabhatti
Session: Implementing and Measuring the Local SEO Funnel

Anita is the Director of Marketing at STAT where she leads a team of super talented folks obsessed with bringing valuable SERP insights to SEO experts. Prior to STAT, she took on the marketing challenges of a local yoga startup and a global SaaS company.


Ashley Berman Hale

Ashley Berman Hale
Mobile Moxie
@bermanhale
Session: Optimizing for Location Based Search

Ashley has been doing technical SEO for over 12 years and has a knack for figuring out what holds sites (large & small) back. She's a longtime Google Webmaster Top Contributor and started one of the most successful SEO meet-ups in the country.


Britney Muller

Britney Muller
Moz
@BritneyMuller
Emcee, MozCon Local

Originally from MN, Britney resides in Denver, CO where she does SEO & Content Architecture for Moz. Britney has been doing digital marketing for over 10 years and founded Pryde Marketing, a strategic Medical Marketing Agency, in 2013.


Christi Olson

Christi Olson
Bing
@ChristiJOlson
Session: Future-Proofing Your Local Strategy: A Panel with Google, Bing, and Yelp

Christi is a Search Evangelist at Microsoft in Seattle, Washington. Prior to joining the team at Bing Ads at Microsoft, Christi has worked at Point It, Expedia, Harry & David, Pointmarc, Microsoft (MSN, Bing, Windows), and the Altria Corporation. For over a decade Christi has been a student and practitioner of SEM; living and breathing through the evolution of search updates (both organic and paid) that have kept us constantly adjusting our digital strategies. Christi is passionate about digital and has spent her career helping businesses solve their marketing challenges and goals through studying and analyzing data to develop actionable insights and strategies.


Cindy Krum

Cindy Krum
Mobile Moxie
@Suzzicks
Session: Mobile First Tactics for Local

Cindy Krum is the CEO and Founder of MobileMoxie, and author of Mobile Marketing: Finding Your Customers No Matter Where They Are, which gets 4.5 out of 5 stars on Amazon. She is the leading Mobile SEO consultant, and is thought leader in the search industry. Cindy works with many top-notch, internationally recognized clients, assisting with mobile SEO, Responsive Design, mobile site migrations and site-speed optimization.


Darren Shaw

Darren Shaw
Whitespark
@DarrenShaw_
Sessions: 2017 Local Search Ranking Factors Survey Results, The New Local Search Ecosystems & Citation Sources That Matter in 2017

Darren Shaw is the president and founder of Whitespark, a company that builds software and provides services to help businesses with local search. He's widely regarded in the local SEO community as an innovator, one whose years of experience working with massive local data sets have given him uncommon insights into the inner workings of the world of citation-building and local search marketing. Darren has been working on the web for over 16 years and loves everything about local SEO.


Ed Reese

Ed Reese
Sixth Man Marketing
@ed_reese
Sessions: KPIs That Really Matter for Local Businesses

Ed has been helping companies improve their online marketing efforts through his agency, Sixth Man Marketing, since 2008. In January of 2016 Sixth Man was acquired by J.E.B. Commerce and is operating as their analytics and optimization division. He's a Faculty Member at LocalU and an Adjunct Professor of Digital Marketing at Gonzaga University. He's also an aspiring disc golfer with one tournament win under his belt and and active family (with two young sons) that keep him busy.


George Freitag

George Freitag
Moz
@georgefreitag
Session: The Driving Data of Local Search

George is the Local Search Evangelist and SEO Strategist for Moz Local where he helps brands, practitioners, and business owners alike get the most out of local search. Prior to Moz, George was the head of SEO at Portent, a digital marketing agency in Seattle.


Greg Gifford

Greg Gifford
DealerOn
@GregGifford
Session: TBD

Greg Gifford is the Director of Search and Social at DealerOn, a software company that provides websites and online marketing to new car dealers all over the country. Check out their awesome blog for more of Greg’s local search posts and videos.


Heather Physioc

Heather Physioc
VML
@HeatherPhysioc
Session: Think Locally, Act Globally

Heather Physioc is Director of Organic Search at global digital ad agency VML, which performs search engine optimization services for multinational brands like Wendy’s, Bridgestone, Ford, and Hill’s Pet Nutrition.


Kate Morris

Kate Morris
Craftsy
@katemorris
Session: The Nitty Gritty of Getting Reviews

Kate Morris is the Director of SEO at Craftsy and an Associate for Moz. She has been in search for 14 years with a soft spot for branding and user experience.


Lauren Polinsky

Lauren Polinsky
MGM Resorts International
@laurenpolinsky
Session: Link Brainstorming Panel

Lauren is an experienced marketer who pursues holistic, innovative changes for digital brands by providing content strategy recommendations rooted in SEO best practices. She's focused on SEO optimization strategies with have a background in both print and digital marketing.


Mary Bowling

Mary Bowling
Ignitor Digital
@MaryBowling
Session: On-Page Optimization for Local Search - What You May Be Missing

Mary has been involved in all aspects of SEO since 2003 and has always been intrigued by Local Search. With a background as a serial entrepreneur, she always tries to approach Local Search and internet marketing in a practical way and from a small business owner's perspective. Mary is an SEO practitioner and consultant, speaks frequently on Local Search at industry conferences and trains other individuals and groups in successful Local Search strategy and tactics.


Michael Wiegand

Michael Wiegand
Portent
@mwiegand
Session: Integrating Google Data for Local

Michael Wiegand is an experienced digital marketer of 14 years who specializes in analytics and conversion rate optimization for Portent – a Seattle-based Internet marketing agency. After attending Cal Baptist University, Michael began his career in direct marketing in 2002, in the healthcare and real estate verticals. In 2007, he joined Portent’s growing team of marketers and subsequently founded the company’s analytics division.


Mike Blumenthal

Mike Blumenthal
Get Five Stars
@mblumenthal
Sessions: Reviews, The Ultimate Assist, Google My Business Problem Solving, Are Words the New Links?

Mike grew up sweeping floors in his family retail business at age 7 and saw the challenges of local marketing up close from an early age. Before co-founding GetFiveStars.com and LocalU.org, he had been doing what we now know as Local SEO since 2005 and writing at his blog, Understanding Google Local, since 2006. He loves researching and understanding the issues that confront bricks and mortar storefronts and helping owners, agencies and franchises tackle the challenges of the ever changing local marketing world.


Mike Ramsey

Mike Ramsey
Nifty Marketing
@MikeRamsey
Session: Lessons Learned Over The 8 Years Running My Agency

Mike Ramsey is the President of Nifty Marketing and NiftyLaw. He is the author of Winning At Local Search, an international speaker, and a partner at LocalU. Mike founded Nifty Ventures in 2009, which has been recognized by Inc. as one of the fastest-growing companies in America.


Nate Evans

Nate Evans
Yelp
@nateevans84
Session: Future Proofing Your Local Strategy: A Panel with Google, Bing, and Yelp

Nate Evans, Sr. Manager of Business Development, focuses on growing Yelp's advertising partners program. Nate joined Yelp in 2008 and previously held prior leadership roles in local and enterprise sales. Prior to Yelp, he worked at Allison & Partners public relations, where he worked in the tech division with clients such as YouTube, Zinio & Parallels. Nate holds a B.A. in Mass Communications from the University of California, Berkeley.


Paula Keller French

Paula Keller French
Search Influence
@paulakfrench
Session: Beyond Keyword Research: Optimize Content for Relevancy with Proof Terms

Paula Keller French has worked to establish strategic digital marketing solutions for clients since 2009, when she joined Search Influence on the then 9-person team. Paula contributed to the company’s rapid growth by building and training a team of 30+ effective account strategists. Today, Paula plays online marketing matchmaker by identifying the right marketing solutions to match business goals to help companies in almost any industry optimize their potential, with a heavy hand in medical, legal, tourism, and home services.


Rand Fishkin

Rand Fishkin
Moz
@randfish
Session: MozCon Local 2017 Keynote

Rand Fishkin uses the ludicrous title, Wizard of Moz. He’s founder and former CEO of Moz, co-author of a pair of books on SEO, and co-founder of Inbound.org.


Rhea Drysdale

Rhea Drysdale
Outspoken Media
@Rhea
Session: Local Linkbuilding through PR and Outreach

Rhea Drysdale is Chief Executive Officer of Outspoken Media where she oversees the strategic vision and growth of the company, its clients, and team.


Willys DeVoll

Willys DeVoll

Google
@willysdevoll
Sessions: Google My Business Problem Solving, Future Proofing Your Local Strategy: A Panel with Google, Bing, and Yelp, Scaling Local with Google My Business

Willys Devoll is a content strategist for Google My Business and a member of the AdWords Content Strategy and Development team. He has also worked as a technical writer and content developer on Google for Work. In the past, DeVoll worked for Major League Baseball Advanced Media in communications, and at the Center for Spatial and Textual Analysis, where he contributed to research in the Literary Lab.

Buy your MozCon Local 2017 ticket!


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SearchCap: Google link command, mobile-first index & SEO problems

Below is what happened in search today, as reported on Search Engine Land and from other places across the web. The post SearchCap: Google link command, mobile-first index & SEO problems appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.


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Thursday, January 12, 2017

Fetch and Horror: 3 examples of how fetch and render in GSC can reveal big SEO problems

Columnist Glenn Gabe demonstrates why discovering how Googlebot sees your desktop and mobile content is essential to any good SEO audit. The post Fetch and Horror: 3 examples of how fetch and render in GSC can reveal big SEO problems appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.


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Google Extends Property Sets Reports in Search Console



from Google SEO News and Discussion WebmasterWorld http://ift.tt/2ih10BT

A simple checklist to prep for the Google mobile-first index

Columnist Bryson Meunier believes that for savvy marketers, the rollout of Google's mobile-first index will represent an opportunity -- not a threat. The post A simple checklist to prep for the Google mobile-first index appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.


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