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search engine optimization

Over the past year, the team at NCI has been developing a social marketing service under the umbrella of Digital Sherpa for local advertisers. The service was launched commercially into the multi-family market last August and into the home design market in December.

Our attention over the past months has been focused on executing on our value proposition for our clients. The core of the proposition is to leverage social media tools and content creation and curation in order to expand a customer’s digital footprint. The outcome is increased web traffic through improved Google juice and increased connectedness with their community of interest.

To execute these propositions at a low monthly price to our customers while delivering measurable results, we’ve been building and fine-tuning our business processes and bringing on board a group of talented and enthusiastic professionals excited to pioneer the next wave of internet marketing.

Our activities attracted the attention of a leading analyst in the local media space, Peter Krasilovsky, who heads up the Marketplaces advisory service at The Kelsey Group. Peter asked to look under the hood and has issued summary report about DigitalSherpa.

Here’s how he framed the report in his alert to clients:

Will vertical advertising be replaced, in whole or in part, by search engine optimization? That’s the question companies are grappling with as they consider that many leads are coming from articles and other media that rank high in search results.

NCI, the publisher of The Real Estate Book, Apartment Finder and other publications, isn’t waiting to find out. Throwing worries of cannibalism to the wind, it is building social media content for its advertisers, placing highly contextual articles, abstracts, photos and video on advertiser blogs, Facebook and Twitter.

In his report, Peter poses 5 key questions about the Digital Sherpa service:

  1. Will “content” be a compelling proposition of potential clients, even though the big SMB bets for 2010 are reputation and presence management?
  2. Will DigitalSherpa experience the same high churn that other local internet ad services have experienced with SMB’s?
  3. Can DigitalSherpa develop effective content?
  4. How much content does a service need to develop in order to deliver results to its clients?
  5. What impact will creating DigitalSherpa have on our core customer relationships?

These are great questions. I’m not going to take a stab at answering them now. With close to 1000 clients currently, we’ve going to have data-driven answers to the questions in fairly short order. That will be the time to see how things shake out in this social media marketing experiment.

The Kelsey Report advisory alert is available to subscribers here. If you have questions for Peter, you can find him at his blog, The Local Onliner.

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A good website, and even a moderately active blog, isn’t the solution to making an internet marketing program work. Nor is investment in Search Engine Marketing or Search Engine Optimization.

The key is building a social media footprint, says Mark Hayward in a guest post for ProBlogger.

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You have a polished website for your small business and even a professional blog where you publish posts a couple of times per week, and both are meant to help spread your story and bring more sales.

However, you are a bit frustrated because based on your initially optimistic website and blog marketing expectations, for some reason the customers just aren’t coming.

Hayward’s epiphany was recognizing that creating a social footprint would increase awareness among consumers and traffic to his site. Both of those would be good thing.

The ultimate goal is to establish the online identity of your small business and to proactively manage your reputation.

If for nothing more than the simple fact that, the more locations we (the customers) can find you, the more we can begin to understand and trust what you’re about. The end result being, we are more likely to purchase your goods or services.

Hayward lists five easy steps to building the social footprint. The key is consistency: once you start, you’ve got to maintain the presence. Think of it as constant outreach into your market. That’s the critical component to success.

You can find Hayward’s post here.

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A look at critical success factors on the local web: SEO, service & reach

May 1, 2009

An interview with Local.com CEO Heath Clark by The Wall Street Transcript points to three key success factors in building a business on the local web.  Beat on SEO over and over to drive traffic, provide a simple service and create as broad a reach through multiple networks as you can.  It’s not enough to [...]

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Simplify things too much and you’ll make mistakes

February 24, 2009

Real estate agent marketing needs to work for the entire market, not just a small section: Don’t make the problem too simple and hurt your business long-term

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