Archive for the 'portent interactive' Category

uw springboard

Wednesday night was Springboard at UW, a recruiting event for startups in the Seattle area. Here are the companies that attended:

All Star Directories
Alphabet Lane, Inc.
Atlas Accelerator
Benevia
Buerk Dale Victor, LLC
Carena
ek Real Estate Group (updated name)
Enerdyne Thermal Solutions, Inc.
Experticity
goChongo, Inc.
GridNetworks
Healia, Inc.
Jakoba Software
Junxion Inc.
Knacta, Inc.
Lilipip
Limeade
Local Marketers, Inc.
MapMate
Movaya Wireless
mPoria, Inc.
Ontela
PayScale
Portent Interactive
QL2 Software
Realnetworks
RIPL Corp.
SchoolSoft Corporation
SecondSpace, Inc.
sengWare
Shelfari
Sionic Group
Targeted Growth, Inc.
Titanium Ant LLC
Visual Ignition LLC
WebNav360
Whidbey Equity Group
Widemile, Inc.
Works Out Software
ZINO Society

Meeting all of these companies reminded me of the variety of firms starting up in Seattle. Zino connects angel investors with startups. Widemile does landing page optimization. Alphabet Lane does remodeling consulting. Second Space does… well, they won’t tell anyone yet.

Kudos to the UW Center for Innovation and Entrepreneurship for putting this on.

recruiting at university of washington this wednesday

UW has a thing called Springboard where they bring in startup companies to talk with students. The data:

January 24, 5:30–8 p.m.
LOCATION CHANGE:
UW Business School
Balmer Hall, Undergraduate Commons (Lobby Level)

I don’t know if they are letting everyone in, or just preregistered students. I will be there talking with potential recruits, so come along and say hello.

is it better to put some effort in to internet marketing or to stay home?

Ian shares his opinion on going halfway:

Search Engine Optimization. Doing ‘a little SEO’ to see what happens is like starting heart surgery then seeing if you feel better.”

How much can the front page of Google make for you? How about the top three spots?

Washington State University admitted 146 students to the Honors College this year. How many of them would have been influenced by a top ranking for ‘honors college blog?’ Not many.

Except, having that top ranking attract the kinds of students who are at the cutting edge of technology.

What about top billing for ‘washington honors college?’ Why is WSU #3, after the University of Washington (the cross-state rival) and Central Washington University (a much smaller college)?

Here’s a better question: David’s Bridal sells wedding dresses and bridesmaid dresses, and yet is not on the first page of Google for either of those phrases.

What?

An Honors College who doesn’t care enough to get a top spot in a non-competitive environment that would show their dedication to being on the edge? A dress seller that doesn’t want to be known as the leader in their categories?

For Bridesmaid dresses, Dessy is #1. Because they understood that it is worth the time and the money to be in the top 3 results on Google.

What is your excuse for not being top three? Or, to go back to the title of this post, why are you still #9? Did you get some success, and see sales pick up a little, and say “oh, that’s good enough for now…?”

the true stamp of success

I am so proud today. Our site has been totally copied by… somebody. As in, they took all of our site, replaced Ian’s and Portent’s name, and put it up on their URL.

So proud.

You could check it out, before I removed the link so I would not be in Google under his name.

Oh, they changed the image too.

Ian is less impressed than I that we have been ripped off. He even includes screen shots so, when the offender takes their site down, you can see just what they did.

Let me add that (name redacted) is the name they used for their president.

UPDATE: They have taken the site down, 90 minutes after Ian contacted the guy through LinkedIn.

UPDATE: The guy’s kid did it. Tough. Because now his name in google brings up my blog posts about him…

UPDATE: I have edited my posts, removing any links to him or the offending site, so as to not show up in Google for a search for his name. The guy contacted us asking us to remove the posts…

mission critical marketing: the three steps

Three factors to consider when evaluating internet marketing agencies:

1. Metrics- the agency must work with you to define what metrics matter for your firm and your situation. The metrics you use will change over the course of your campaign- you may start out using unique visitors, because that is all you can measure, and work towards measuring $/visit.

Case in point: google analytics offers 6 kinds of charts for unique visitor tracking. Which one are you going to use to measure success, or should you use all six?

2. Where to spend- podcasting is cool, but search engine optimization brings in the money. That statement is true 99% of the time. Your agency must help you understand the tradeoffs between differing priorities, such as making a name for yourself vs. moving more product.

Case in point: I can start a pay per click campaign and have traffic going to your site within 10 minutes. Or, I can work on your title tags and URLs so you get higher rankings in google, but you will not rise in the rankings for weeks or months. Internet marketing agencies should explain to you the tradeoff so you can make a good decision.

3. Measurement- What is better- a 50% increase in page views per visit, or 20% more visitors? Metrics is deciding what to measure, measurement is interpreting that data. Google analytics provides a huge amount of data. Your firm should help you understand what is important and what is not.

Case in point: For CASSIN, we just built their first website. They want to know what matters in terms of measurement. I said three things: unique visitors, average page views per visit, and referrals. Suit the measurement both to the site and the client.

Metrics, spend, and measurement. If the agency you hire can do these three mission critical tasks well, then good results are on their way. If they can’t, then no matter how good a game they talk, walk away. And always ask for references.

Thanks to Jory for putting me in the mindset of asking what is mission critical.

popularity, the herd mentality, and communicating value

If you want to learn about getting rankings and using rankings in your business, read more.

Thresher, a drink company, handed out cards that gave people 40% off their wine. You only get the discount if you have one of the cards, which you can print off if you know someone who knows about the deal.

Hugh talks about the success of the Thresher virus, noting that they both gained a lot of attention short-term and have the opportunity to get long-term value from this idea.

Some of that value come from Hugh himself, who shared the coupon on his blog. He told the story of the company, which if I remember correctly sells Stormhoek wine, which Hugh has an interest in. He used the story of what Thresher was doing to teach and inform his audience. And to amuse them- Hugh is a light-hearted blogger.

On my blog, look to the right sidebar, and you see the Top Posts list. This lets you see what other people think is important on my blog, though I don’t know how it is calculated.

I also show you my blogroll, which lists the top 5 blogs I think I relevant to the kind of people who read my blog.

Technorati does the same thing with their Popular page, where they show you the most popular searches, tags, blogs, videos, and more. They also have a Most Linked To Blogs page and a Most Favorited Blogs page. So they make it easy to see what other people think of other blogs.

Seth’s Squidoo is a directory of lenses about all kinds of subjects. He has a Top Lenses page so you can see what Lenses others are looking at. The editors at Squidoo also have the Lens of the Day group, so if you want an expert opinion on what lenses are worth reading, you can look there.

Lastly, YouTube has their Most Linked, Top Rated, and Top Favorited pages, as well as their Recently Featured page.

From Hugh telling you about wine to YouTube telling you about videos, you and they are depending on the herd mentality. That people believe that when most people think something is good, it probably is.

And this ranking has huge results. In search engines, the top 3 organic (main) results get almost all of the traffic. And the top 3 ads also get almost all of the traffic. On YouTube’s Most Viewed page, the most viewed video has TWICE the number of views as the second most viewed video.

On the Technorati most linked blog page, the top blog has more than twice the number of links as the seventh blog. On my blog, the top 2 most viewed posts of the last 30 days have more views than all other posts combined.

So two questions emerge. First, how do you get on that list when someone else controls the list of most popular/most linked/whatever, and second, how can you create your own list to better leverage community.

For getting on someone else’s list, Google is the simplest answer. Get in the top three for Google, and people will come to your site and believe you. For the search “100 fastest growing companies puget sound business journal” I have spots 1, 2, and 5. More through luck than knowing what I was doing, but I still have them and get traffic.

For “paypal bomb,” relating to the bomb that exploded on Halloween, I have spots 1, 4, and 5.

When I wrote about Digital Agency getting top billing in Google about an Ad Age story, Digital Agency then wrote about me writing about them writing about the Ad Age article.

So the first principle is, draw attention by having something to say, and saying it first. I went in depth into this here.

For using the herd mentality to your own advantage, use some version of ‘most popular’ lists whenever you can. The closest we come to this at Portent is our Case Studies page.

What would be better is a list of the rankings of all of our clients, with comparisons in each case to where they were a month ago and a year ago. So you could see how well they are doing overall and in relation to each other.

One company that does this very well is Amazon, with their product results pages that say “What do customers ultimately buy after viewing this item?”

My getting on the front pages of Google is largely a fluke most times that I have done it. To really demonstrate value, I would chose a keyword cluster and go after being on the front page for those keywords.

For example, I decided to show my past professors about blogs by getting to the top of Google for the phrase “Honors College blog,” which I am now 1st and 2nd for.

So pick a keyword cluster you can get to the top in for Google. Maybe for Technorati or YouTube depending on what you do. And while you try to harness the herd mentality on those lists, think up some of your own you can use to better communicate value to your clients.


Subscribe

Portent Interactive

Portent Interactive is a full-service internet marketing agency in Seattle. Check out some of our work in our portfolio. Want to hear more about our services? Email me or call me at 206 575 3740 (ask for Brian Keith), or leave a comment on my blog.