Start Moving to HTML5 Now and Don’t Be Left Behind

It is time to leave rich media browser plug-ins like Flash and Silverlight and start adopting HTML5. Here are the advantages and opportunities for why Franchise Marketers should consider leaving rich media browser plug-ins like Flash and Silverlight and adopting HTML5:

Future is HTML5

  • Adobe and Microsoft have announced the discontinuation of their rich media browser plug-ins: http://www.technologyreview.com/blog/mimssbits/27328/
  • You’re essentially using HTML5 today. Unlike the failed XHTML 2.0 specification, HTML5 is an evolution of HTML4/XHTML 1.0. You know most of it already. There are 28 additional tags and a few new techniques, but you won’t be using a completely new mark-up language.
  • HTML5 is the future and is ‘mobile” friendly.
  • Firefox, Chrome, Safari, and Opera support HTML5 today.

These are some HTML5 Features you should be using RIGHT NOW without worrying about clashing with older browsers: JETBRAINS WEBSTORM.

Bottom line is that anything that allows simpler, cleaner code and cleaner simpler marketing is going to adhere better to SEO best practices, which the ElementsLocal software platform supports, and you should too.

Google Fresh – Blog and Update Social Media Sites Regularly for SEO Optimization

I have a quick update about what’s been happening that affects our Franchise Marketing clients, SEO Clients and anyone with a website.  Big news - GOOGLE’S big changes last week.

Google has updated their local search results.  They have dubbed their newest twist on search engine processes:  Google ‘Fresh’ Update – Google changed its algorithm. The Grey pinned results and several other things are now live. This is how it affects us:

They estimate this will affect about 35% of web searches. The change is meant to provide more ‘weight’ to the most relevant recent updates.   This serves to keep active, predominant and frequently attended to sites fresh on the search list.

Most of our clients are service based organization rather than news sites.  Google wants to produce near instant results for searches that are best answered with timely information, like baseball scores or TV shows.  They are still planning on delivering “best results” for searches that do not need near instant results.  I don’t believe that the service industry businesses or their keyword targets are going to fall into that instant bucket.

“For evergreen results, like recipes or how to change a tire, Google said the algorithm would know to show the best results no matter when they were posted.”

However, we have seen some of our clients with up to date websites get a boost in rank from this change almost imediately.

Integrate more social media into your website and post regular blog postings with unique content to take advantage of this algorithm change. BAKE freshness into your website and benefit with better SEO.

The week also included Google announcing that they can now index Facebook comments that are embedded into websites. A blog plug-in that allows users to use their existing Facebook accounts to comment on your blog and more timely blog posts should be something you integrate into your current marketing plans.

See Blumenthals article and / or the Google Blog Spot for more about the Google changes.

GOOGLE’S GRAMMAR MESSAGE: BAD SPELLING = BAD PAGERANK

Have you proofread your website copy lately? Not only do the typos and errors look unprofessional to your visitors, they also jeopardize your Google PageRank. Google announced last week that they’ve witnessed a correlation between sites with correct spelling boast a prime PageRank—and those that display poor spelling don’t rank as well. For further explanation watch this GoogleWebmasterHelp video. Need help? We have PPC and SEO experts eager to improve your PageRank.

Moving Toward the Cloud

Today, everybody seems to be talking about “the Cloud.” No, they’re not talking about some hot new indie band from Toronto-  they’re talking about one of the biggest trends to hit the tech world since the web itself. The term “cloud computing” is used to describe the practice of locating your software Cloud Computing applications and data on a network of servers, where they can be accessed from anywhere, at any time.

Cloud computing is rapidly becoming the best way to do business, because it takes full advantage of the “everywhere, all the time” nature of the internet itself. With cloud-based applications, there are no worries about whether one of your company’s computers is running at the moment, or how to log into one of your data servers. There’s no more looking for application installation disks, or upgrade codes. All of these time consuming tasks can be handled automatically for you, freeing you to do what you do best- offering great products and services to your customers.

That’s exactly what the ElementsLocal platform can do for your franchising business. Our completely web-based software service can project your national brand directly into every market in which you do business. You can trust that your brand, with its unique look and feel, and its unique products, services, and message, will be a click away from anyone, anywhere, any time that they are looking for what you provide.

From the start, ElementsLocal was built as a cloud-based software-as-a-service product, designed to enable a franchising business to attract customers to its existing locations, and to attract new franchisees to open new locations. ElementsLocal gives you the power to create and manage an entire fleet of websites that look and work exactly the way you want them to. Combined with our proven Search Engine Optimization and localized marketing expertise, ElementsLocal can help you rest assure that your franchise brand will truly be “everywhere, all the time.”

Two Recent Google Changes That Could Affect Your Website

It seems like Google is always changing things, but generally these changes are behind the scene changes in the algorithm that are generally too obscure and boring to people who are not search engine optimization specialists.  This time, these two new Google changes take place right in your face and they could affect how successful your website is when compared with your competitor’s website.

Sitelinks

The first change is a change to Google sitelinks.  When a website becomes popular enough Google adds additional links to your website below your website’s main listing.  This is supposed to help users more easily navigate your website by quickly locating the information on your website that they are looking for.  For instance, a search of a local museum may produce sitelinks that point users to hours they are open or contact and tour information as these are destinations that searches generally want to find quickly.

Google has now increased the number of sitelinks a website can have from 8 to 12 and also added and additional one line text snippet description of that page.  How can this affect your and your competitor rankings?  Well the new sitelinks now dominate the search results which is good for you should you rank at number one for the queried key term, but very bad for you if you rank number 2 or below.

new google sitelinksThe screenshot to the right (click to expand) shows the new expanded sitelinks as indicated by the red arrow.  The Google Place’s result for that specific company appears directly below the sitelinks as indicated by the blue arrow.  All of this pushes down all other rankings below the page fold.  As you can see indicated by the green arrow Yelp, the second place result it shoved way down to the bottom and this example only contains 6 sitelinks when the maximum amount available are 12.  When you think about below the fold results only receiving 10% of search result clicks, this is a major shift in how search results deliver traffic.

Google Related

Google is offering up a new extension for Internet Explorer & Chrome called Google Related.  This extension adds a bar to the bottom of your browser which should deliver additional relevant information to the web page you are currently on.  So the website for your local city may also include a map in the related bar, weekly weather forecast and cities nearby that you may be interested in travelling to.  Neat!

The thing is, Google does not distinguish between an information only website and a commercial website.  In the example website below I am at a local restaurant and when I hover over the additional data in the Google Related toolbar I can see a map to the location (purple arrow).  The next column lists reviews of the establishment taken from Google Places and links to more reviews around the web (green arrow).

In the last column of the Google Related bar, the column that commercial websites will take issue with, is a listing of “Related Places”.  That means when I simply hover my mouse that column I am exposed to local competitors who in this result all have a higher review rating than that of the restaurant whose website I am currently on (red arrow).  Say this restaurant paid a monthly retainer for SEO work or spent money advertising through PPC solutions.  That is an expense that can ultimately end up driving visitors with Google Related barinstalled in their browser to their local competitor’s Google Places page.  Not cool Google.

google related

Free Webinar on Effectively Leveraging Google Tools

Paul Segreto President & CEO of franchisEssentials teams with Jeremy LaDuque CEO of ELEMENTS Inc. to discuss how businesses and specifically franchise companies can use the free tools that Google offers to improve their online marketing efforts.

10 Things Franchises Can Do to More Effectively Leverage Google Tools
Tuesday June 21st, 2011 at 9:00 AM PST

Click Here to Sign Up Now

This webinar will cover Google’s tools for better productivity, improved local search results, mobile tools, analytics products and more.  This webinar will also discuss Google’s new ‘+1′ button which is brand new and a hot topic in SEO.

Sign-up now because there is limited seating and spots are filling up quickly.  For more information on this free webinar, please visit our webinar information page.

How Can Franchises Take Advantage of Everything Google Offers?

Google is the most popular search engine in the world for a few good reasons. Its simple uncluttered interface, vast number of webpages and great results are among the top reasons.

But that’s not all Google has to offer and we find Franchise businesses using Google more and more to market and advertise, enhance their social media and mobile marketing, analyze their website traffic and even optimize and split test how effective the conversion is on their websites.

So ELEMENTS has decided recommend some of the hottest Google tools we see Franchises using today. ELEMENTS will also be conducting a FREE webinar on this topic on June 21st (click here to sign up >>).

Local Search & Advertising

1) Google Places

One of the largest impacts to the local search arena stems from Google Places, an online local directory of businesses. Most importantly, Google Places is no longer a separate search product anymore. Google now displays Google Place’s search results blended directly into Google’s general or “Everything” search when the search terms indicate that the end user might be looking for a product or service that can be satisfied locally.

Google Places Local Blend

Franchises now must ensure all of their locations are setup properly and optimized in Google Places in order to show up when people perform searches that can be satisfied locally.

2) Google AdWords Location Extensions

AdWords is Google’s PPC (Pay Per Click) advertising platform. Google has added location extensions to their AdWords system which allows the owner of the advertisement to display their advertisements to specified locations. Location extensions help make the consumer aware that the product or service they are looking for can be fulfilled locally.

3) Google Keyword Tool and Google Trends

By using Google’s free Keyword Tool, companies are better able to determine what keywords people are searching for and which keyword term targets would just waste their website’s valuable real estate. To receive top rankings in Google a company must play by their rules, expand their offerings and monetizing the marketability of their products or services. Getting traffic is great, but converting traffic into sales or leads is the true goal of the SEO game.

The Google Trends Tool can help your company determine search traffic trends when comparing multiple sets of keywords. For example, the following search comparing Netflix, Block Buster and Hollywood Video shows the dramatic difference in searches for those three businesses:

Google Trends

Social Media

4) Social Signals Effect Rank

Recently both Bing and Google have admitted that mentions of and links to web pages found in public social media postings can positively effect a website’s search engine rankings. The idea behind this is that social media users will share links to websites that they trust and enjoy so the more users sharing these links through social media the more perceived value these websites have. However, not all social media personas carry the same weight. Search engines look at the “social authority” of the user that shared that link and give more value to links shared by users with more credibility.

5) Google +1

At the time of this publication Google +1 is currently in beta testing mode. The idea behind Google +1 is to use one’s social network (Google contacts) for recommendations on which search results they found the most for their own search queries. So if your friend marked a result as valuable, there is good cause for the Google search engine to think that you might like it as well because you both exist within the same social circle.

Today (June 1st), Google has launched their +1 Button which can be added to any website to encourage friend recommendations in the same way that Facebook users can currently “like” a website page. In a way, Google is leveraging its’ entire user-base as quality control staff. While Google states that under the current system recommendations only come from the user’s social network, we can foresee a time when Google will recommend websites from outside of your social circle based on the number of +1’s a website has received and the perceived social authority of the rankee.

Click here for more information on the +1 Button.

6) Google Places Reviews

Earlier we discussed the importance of Google Places to local search. Perhaps the most important factor in getting a Place’s page to rank well is the number of positive reviews a business has in relation to their local competition. The reviews found on Google Places can be drawn from several places. One such place is the social review website Yelp. Google also has its’ own social review system (formally called Hotpot) which has now been integrated directly into Google Places. Both Yelp & Google Places allow users to track reviews and interact with their friends within their social network. According to Google, they now have millions of users rating places more than a million times per month.

7) Google’s Realtime Social Media Search Results

Alongside their Everything and Places search Google has various other search types. One of these variant searches is Google’s Realtime search. Google’s Realtime search results display “up-to-the-second” updates from various social media outlets including news articles, blog posts and Tweets. The search result page is no longer a static listing, but instead updates when a new post relevant to your search query is detected by Google.

These real-time searches can be beneficial for businesses looking to leverage current trends in their marketing efforts or for franchises looking to react quickly to protect their brand when trouble arises.

8) Google’s Algorithmic Changes that Recognize Brands

Social media mentions of a company name will pass along a brand impression for that company. The more mentions of a company’s name Google can find the more likely it is to treat that business as a notable brand. Brands have become an important factor to Google when determining search engine rankings because Google now considers brand name products and services as more trustworthy and therefore ranks brands higher than their non-branded competition.

Franchises can leverage social media to expand their company’s brand impression. Companies should encourage their employees to create personal LinkedIn profiles and link them to their company. Facebook posts & Twitter tweets can now be found in both Google’s Realtime search and its’ Everything search giving more exposure to a company’s brand name than franchises with inactive social media accounts that are not engaging existing or potential customers through those social mediums. Serious and authentic blog commenting with a mention of your company’s brand is just another social media outlet that can garner your brand’s name more exposure.

Aside from social media there are other very useful ways to expose your brand’s name to consumers. Successful offline advertising can have a positive impact on brand recognition. Franchises could even publish an eBook or two about franchising and about their brand which not only will receive mentions from social media and traditional media sources like press releases, but these books can also be found in online libraries like Google Scholar.

Mobile Marketing

9) Google Mobile Location Based Ads

Google AdWords offers location centric mobile advertising to allow local businesses to target leads based on the user’s immediate location. These location based ads offer the interested user an expandable map with turn by directions and a click-to-call phone number. There is some chatter at Google about other new “rich ad units” for mobile coming down the pipe to further leverage the mobile platform, including ads meant specifically for tablet devices.

10) Google Places Offer Mobile Coupons

When customers find a specific local store or service on Google Places through their mobile device, that business can offer digital coupons directly to that device in order to convert that lead into a walk-in customer. Owners of the devices can then show the business their coupon directly on their phone without having to print it out on a piece of paper. One of the best benefits of Google Place’s mobile coupons is that the coupons get distributed for free, unlike many offline paper distribution methods.

Traffic Metrics & Conversion Optimization

11) Google Analytics Traffic & SEO Metrics

Google Analytics is a free traffic reporting tool that allows companies to tunnel deeply into their visitor and website metrics in order to better determine the success of their website. Just some of the valuable visitor and search metrics one can obtain from Google Analytics are the most popular pages on your websites, the keywords that are driving search traffic to your websites, what external websites are sending your website traffic and the level of engagement of your website.

Google Analytics has completely changed how businesses look at their website’s statistics. This free hosted solution makes adding metric tracking to your website a breeze and provides in depth reporting second to none. Along with these valuable benefits, Google Analytics also allows companies to integrate their Google AdWords & Google AdSense campaigns into its reports, to set goals with varying values for conversion tracking and to build custom scheduled statistical reports.

In the franchise space specifically, ELEMENTS has begun using Google Analytics to provide rollup reporting across an entire franchisee network of websites as well as offering franchisees access to their own individual Google Analytics reports.

12) Website Optimizer for Conversion Optimization

The success of a website cannot purely be determined by the number of visitors to a website alone. Most websites have conversion goals like a checkout through their shopping cart or a newsletter sign-up for future targeted marketing. This is where conversion optimization comes into play.

Conversion optimization is the process of altering a page on a website in order to increase the amount achieved goals. Sometimes this can mean changing the call to action text or adding a big green button to the page. Conversion optimization is an art form but with Google’s Website Optimizer almost anyone can learn how to better their conversions on any given page.

In its simplest form, Website Optimizer allows you to create to competing pages and then it splits the traffic between the two pages and determines which page has the best conversion or goal achievement ratio. Website Optimizer also allows a company to alter individual page snippets in order to determine which of these snippets on the page lead to the most conversions.

Upcoming Webinar: How to Hyper-Localize

ElementsLocal™ a leader in content management systems for franchise marketing is offering a free webinar on how franchise companies can leverage local online marketing  to increase local leads, improve search engine rankings, reduce their pay-per-click advertising expense, increase brand awareness at the local level and how to optimize social media at the local level.

We hope that you’ll join us but seating is limited so we recommend signing-up ASAP.

ELEMENTS Local Marketing Webinar:

“Franchises and Online Local Marketing: Learn How to Hyper-Localize”
Wednesday, April 27th @10am PST

Click Here to Sign-Up Now!

Google’s New Analytics

While it’s still in Beta, the Google Analytics dashboard is getting a facelift and it’s not all just cosmetic. There are two changes that really interest me, the addition of widgets and the ability to have multiple dashboards.

I have signed up for the beta, but it could take a while until I get access so for now I’m going off of the screenshots I found over at BlogSpot.

google analytics add widget google analytics delete dashboard

From my understanding the widgets will allow you to customize the look and feel of the dashboard.  So you could put in a timeline of views right near the top of the dashboard for those clients most interested in brand awareness or a pie chart of goal success for those clients most interested in goal conversion.  Then with the ability to create custom dashboards you could create both dashboards mentioned above for a single customer in different tabs.

I’m eager to test out the widget options and I’m curious to see if Google will add any new functionality beyond standard charts & graphs and how they work with advanced segments.  For now I’ll watch my inbox for acceptance into the beta program of the new Google Analytics and I’ll report what I find when I get approved.

Google’s Farm Update & How it Affected Franchise Traffic

At the end of February Google released an update to their algorithm that was supposed to penalize and deter content farms (sites that reproduce content from other websites or use low quality content purely for the sake of higher search rankings).  Google claimed that this would affect almost 12% of all US queries.  Some SEO experts have dubbed this algorithm change the “Farm” or “Farmer” update.

Now I’ve seen recent articles out there about the short term effect of the Farm update so I decided to check out some of the Google Analytics I have access to inGoogle Analytics Update Example order to see how a variety of our clients are fairing.  I got a mixed bag of results as you can see in the examples to the left.

While I saw several examples of traffic spiking, falling, bouncing or remaining consistent throughout our network of individual domains more often then not our domains took a noticeable of a dip after February 25th (31% as seen in the bottom example shown) followed by an immediate traffic increase (again in the bottom example shown an increase of over 50% above the average daily traffic). 

It’s all interesting, but what does it really tell us?  A highly trafficked website receives traffic from a variety of sources so a dip in a single traffic referrer - in this case Google - might not show much of a traffic loss.  A small website like our new affiliate blog which receives 90% of its’ inbound traffic from Google would definitely show an impact, but the low traffic volume means that we can’t trust the traffic drop to be directly correlated with the Google Farm update.

For the most part at ELEMENTS we focus on franchise companies which generally have hundreds of websites across the board and we are able to track those websites as a whole.  So how will traffic to 700+ like websites be affected by the Farm update?  Let’s find out.

Franchise A

franchise A traffic

Franchise B

franchise b traffic

Looks to me like there was very little if any effect at all on the overall franchise traffic for these two clients following the February 25th update roll out.  Other franchises I looked up had less than a 10% degree of variance after the Farm update, so thankfully not much changed across our franchise networks.

So who wins and who loses with this new rollout?  That remains to be seen.  Some have reported (EZineArticles for one)  a loss of up to 40% of their traffic since the Farm update went into effect and Mahalo.com which describes itself as a knowledge sharing service has reportedly laid off 10% of their staff in response to the significant dip in traffic & revenue resulting from the Farm update.  On the other hand possible content farms themselves, eHow and Wikipedia are reported to have seen a traffic boost from the update.  My take is that websites with a strong offline brand (perhaps even some online brands) are not going to see much negative effect from the latest update.