Archive for the ‘educational’ Category

Perk up and Take Note

Friday, July 2nd, 2010

As of Thursday July 1st, 2010 the option for accessing free, unlimited, Wi-Fi Internet across North America took a significant bump in ubiquity thanks to the equally ubiquitous coffeehouse chain, Starbucks.

Starbucks announces free unlimited wifi
Starbucks announces free unlimited wifi

It used to be, if customers wanted access while sipping their piping hot Pike Place at SBX, they’d shell out $4 bucks (ouch!) for just two hours (what?) of access. To many patrons (slaves?) of the twin-tailed siren, this was a bit crazy considering every other coffeehouse in town offered free Wi-Fi access. For that matter, the library, the laundromat, McDonald’s and even the local hot dog stand offered free Wi-Fi. All things considered, you have to confess that Starbucks has really nice, clean, comfortable lobbies and the aroma of fresh rich coffee vs warm hot dog water and laundry detergent can’t really compete.

Just as clear water from a faucet and power from an electrical outlet flows; today fast, ‘free,’ reliable Internet access continues down the road on its journey to commoditization. Starbucks Wi-Fi, provided by AT&T, was one of the last paid vestibules to this increasingly common amenity. Thankfully, they’ve finally done away with paid Internet access and thrown open the Wi-Fi gates at over 12,000 locations in the United States and Canada.

So people can surf lolcats and tweet their “Double ristretto venti nonfat organic chocolate brownie frappucino extra hot with foam and whipped cream upside down double blended please” order (yes that’s exactly 140 characters of caffeinated awesomeness) but it can be so much more than that.

Think outside your cubicle. This is a refreshing change of scenery and a quick step away from the many distractions and interruptions of the office environment. What’s more, think quick fix business continuity on a shoe string! What if your office Internet connection is down or mind numbingly slow? On several occasions I’ve grabbed my laptop and made a beeline to a local java shop for better access (and coffee) and was able to continue to get my work done the way I like, in a caffeine fueled frenzy. Today, many office employees and knowledge workers of all types can easily enjoy complete access to everything they need to do their job from anywhere; the only requirement is a quality Internet connection.

Free Wi-Fi for everyone

Free Wi-Fi for everyone!

Laptops and netbooks are lighter, faster and more powerful than ever. Cloud computing and hosted solutions abound for many enterprise and business application needs. Combine these with the ever-increasing ubiquity of free, high speed wireless access and depending on how your business is setup, you could enjoy the same smart, flexible, mobile way of working, and that’s cool beans.

*Update: I tested the free Wi-Fi while remote working from a comfy leather arm chair at my local Starbucks and am happy to report the connection and speed were both solid.

Check the terms box and click connect and you're on.

Check the terms box, click connect and you're on.

Top Five Search Engine Optimization Factors: Factor #5

Monday, March 29th, 2010

By Guest Author Bev Mapes, Top Of The List

Our previous articles in The Vision indicated the top factors that help websites achieve high placement in search engines as:

Factor #1 – keyword focused anchor text in inbound links
Factor #2 – external link popularity
Factor #3 – diversity of link sources
Factor #4 – keyword use anywhere in the title tag

The final factor in this series: Trustworthiness of the Domain Based on Link Distance from a Trusted Domain.

If a site from a “Trusted Domain” links to your website, you are one (1) link from a trusted domain (the closest distance you can be to a trusted domain without actually being the trusted domain). It is beneficial to be as close to a trusted domain as possible.

If a site from a “Trusted Domain” links to a website that then links to your website, you are two (2) links from a trusted domain (still very close). Search engines continuously count how many links your site is from a trusted domain, and that affects your PageRank and search engine placement.

What is a Trusted Domain?

Determining what a trusted domain is represents the more complex portion of this factor. It is also one that is not completely known. In our first article in this series, we mentioned that the search engines “give hints at how their algorithms work,” but they don’t give many. The SEO community has some pieces to the puzzle, but not all of them.

The search community “generally” agrees the following characteristics apply to a trusted domain:

  • A trusted domain is determined by search engine algorithms and seems to be “hand-picked” or “hard coded”
  • A trusted domain designation applies to the entire domain, not a specific page on a site
  • Trusted domains are generally older, high traffic sites that represent overwhelming authority or high expertise on a topic
  • While a trusted domain will have a high page rank, not all sites with high page rank are trusted domains

Examples of Trusted Domains

Some examples of sites that are thought to be trusted domains include:

  • Technorati, Stumbleupon, Digg
  • Wikipedia, DMOZ
  • Certain .gov and .edu domains
  • News sites, BBC
  • Big Brands

What Trusted Domains are Not

Often the definition of a trusted domain can be confused with:

  • A security certificate or “locked key” icon. This is NOT what the trusted domain factor refers to.
  • A trusted relationship with another domain, which allows users on one website to share services of a different website. This is NOT what the trusted domain factor refers to.

While SEO experts know a lot about search algorithms and how to achieve top placement, the trusted domain area is more vague than others. Even so, trustworthiness of your domain based on link distance from a trusted domain is the fifth most important search engine optimization factor according to the community of SEO experts.

Top Of The List LLC is an SEO firm in Grand Rapids, Michigan working with Micro Visions, a leading managed services provider. Top Of The List offers organic SEO packages which focus on all five top optimization factors, helping our clients achieve optimal search engine placement and drive increased target market traffic to their websites.

In addition to your website development or IT project with Micro Visions, you can improve your website’s visibility with our services. Contact Top Of The List at 616-460-6778 today!

Top Five Search Engine Optimization Factors: Factor #4

Friday, March 26th, 2010

By Guest Author Bev Mapes, Top Of The List

Our previous articles on the Micro Visions, Inc. blog indicated the top factors that help websites achieve high placement in search engines as:

Factor #1 – keyword focused anchor text in inbound links
Factor #2 – external link popularity
Factor #3 – diversity of link sources

Today we discuss the #4 factor: keyword use anywhere in the title tag. This factor is usually one of the easiest to optimize, since it involves simple changes directly on your website.

Where the Title Tag Displays on a Web Page

While it may sound like the title tag goes at the top of your webpage, it actually goes at the top of your browser window. For example, here is a shot of Micro Visions’ home page.

The title tag appears at the top of your browser window

The title tag appears at the top of your browser window

The title tag is emphasized in the picture below, and reads “Micro Visions Inc. – Your Objective Information Technology Advocate and Managed Services Provider”:

titletagexample

Emphasized title tag in the browser menu bar.

Other Locations a Title Tag is Displayed

The title tag also appears as the underlined “link” when your website places on a SERP (search engine result page). Here’s an example of a Google SERP for the term “objective information technology advocate,” which is a keyword phrase in Micro Visions’ title tag:

SERP

The searched term reveals Micro Visions at the "Top of the List" (get it?)

As you can see, Micro Visions comes up first on this term, and the searched upon term is even in bold in the title tag. Another thing to notice about the title tag displayed above is that part of it is truncated. Having longer title tags is your decision, but search engines will read up to 120 characters (including spaces) in that tag, so we tend to use as many as make sense for describing what is on that web page.

The Logic Behind Title Tag Significance in Search Results

Most website visitors who are looking for something using a search engine will click on a link that contains the same keywords they searched on. Search engine developers view this user behavior as very significant, thus, if you put targeted keywords in the title tag on your pages, it helps your site’s placement on those keywords.

More Tips When Optimizing the Title Tag

As with SEO in general, there are numerous details about every strategy, and knowing and implementing as many as possible is what makes one site place higher than another and thus be more visible online. Here are a few more of those title tag details:

  • Title tags should be unique per page. Time should be spent in identifying appropriate keywords, matching landing pages, and then optimizing the title tag for those keyword phrases.
  • Use appropriate keywords that describe what is on that page as well as the search terms users are querying.
  • Many CMS (content management system) website programs now have methods for you to add title tags yourself. If your CMS has this capability, you can do this yourself very easily.
  • The source code for a title tag is very easy, and looks like this:
  • < title >Put title tag contents here< / title >

On non-competitive keywords, title tag changes may result in placement without much more work, but on highly competitive keywords, the linking factors we discussed in earlier Vision articles are absolutely necessary. Combining appropriate links to optimized landing pages makes for powerful optimization.

Top Of The List LLC is a Grand Rapids search engine marketing firm working with Micro Visions, a leading information technology and managed services provider. Top Of The List offers organic SEO packages which target all five top optimization factors, helping our clients achieve optimal search engine placement and drive increased target market traffic to their websites. Learn the fifth most important search engine optimization factor in next month’s Vision, or contact Top Of The List at 616-460-6778 today if you’d like to begin optimizing your website today!

Top Five Search Engine Optimization Factors: Factor #3

Thursday, March 25th, 2010

By Guest Author Bev Mapes, Top Of The List

Our previous articles posted on the Micro Visions, Inc. blog indicated the top factors that help websites achieve high placement in search engines as:

Factor #1 – keyword focused anchor text in inbound links
Factor #2 – external link popularity

Today’s article focuses on the #3 factor, diversity of link sources. This means that the websites which link to your website should be from unique root domains. Like so many other areas of the search engine optimization field, there are numerous details that surround that short summary of what “diversity of link sources” and uniqueness of root domains really means.

Here are some primary details about link diversity:

  • Link diversity involving the domain name itself – Sites linking to your site should be from a variety of domains. For instance, a site with 100 inbound links all from different websites is far more optimized than a site with 100 inbound links that come from a single blog. Diversify the sites that link to you!
  • Diversity of the root domain type – This refers to the type of domain, such as .com, .net, .org, .edu, etc. For International sites, achieving links from other countries is important.
  • The IP number – Every website is assigned an IP number, which is used in a technical way to ensure users arrive at the correct website when typing its domain name into an Internet browser. Companies that maintain the servers – called website hosts – receive a block of IP numbers, which they use to share among all the websites hosted by them. What this means to your link campaign is that websites linking to your site should be from sites that use a different website host than the one you use, else their IP number may be from the same “block” of IP numbers and not be as beneficial. For those of you who are tech savvy, here’s a free tool that will check the IP number of any website.

Almost all inbound links to your site are beneficial, so we do not recommend turning down link opportunities just because they are from non-diverse domains. However, keeping in mind this third top factor, diversity of links, can make those inbound links influence your site’s search engine placement even more.

Top Of The List LLC is an SEO firm in Grand Rapids working with Micro Visions, a leading IT and managed services provider. Top Of The List offers organic search engine optimization packages which continually focus on all 5 top optimization factors. This helps our clients achieve optimal search engine placement on highly competitive terms, and drive target market traffic to their websites like never before.

Learn the fourth most important search engine optimization factor in next month’s newsletter, or contact Top Of The List at 616-460-6778 if you’d like to begin optimizing your website today!

Top Five Search Engine Optimization Factors: Factor #2

Wednesday, March 24th, 2010

By Guest Author Bev Mapes, Top Of The List

If you read yesterday’s article about organic search engine optimization, you’ll recall the number one factor that helps websites achieve high placement in search engines is keyword focused anchor text in inbound links. You may also see these links referred to as back-links. This article focuses on the number two factor, while each of our next three newsletters will address the remaining top factors.

According to 71% of the experts surveyed in a recent nationwide survey, the number two factor that influences search engine optimization is:

External link popularity. If you thought we could move on to something else besides those incoming links to your site, it’s time to re-think the issue. Not only is the anchor text of top importance in those links, but the quality and quantity of the inbound links to your site (called “link popularity”) is second in importance to the anchor text.

Quantity refers to “how many links” are coming into your site, so in general, the more the better. If quality and quantity were separated in this popularity factor, we personally feel quality is the clear winner. We’ve seen websites with less than 200 quality inbound links placing at the top of the list on extremely competitive queries, and farther down the list are websites with over 1,000,000 non-quality inbound links. While many factors are involved in placement, this is too large of a difference to ignore when it comes to quantity vs. quality. Some links simply do not carry as much “link juice” as other links do.

What makes a quality link? Search engine algorithms evaluate over 50 different factors about an incoming page link to determine quality, and thus how much “link juice” it will pass along to the website to which it links. Here are just a few of those factors:

  • PageRank – In simple terms, PageRank is a “vote” from 0 to 10 which is assigned to every web page on the Internet. Pages linking to your site that have been assigned a higher PageRank, result in a higher quality link. This is sort of a snowball effect, since PageRank of any page is improved by all of the factors we are covering in this series of articles on SEO.
  • Relevance – When the site linking to your site includes similar words and terms – meaning it is relevant that your two websites are linking – it increases the value of the link. For example, a tire dealer site that links to an automotive repair site would result in a more relevant link than if that tire dealer site linked to a day spa.
  • The hierarchical page location of the inbound link on the external site – An easy way to measure this is in terms of “number of clicks” from the home page where the link resides. A link to your site from another site’s home page, or a page just one or two clicks away from the home page, is almost always more powerful than a link buried deeper into the site.

While almost all links to your site that come from external sources help your site, the popularity of the external website is the second of the top factors that can influence your site’s search engine placement on appropriate queries.

Top Of The List Search Engine Marketing, is a Grand Rapids based SEO firm working with Micro Visions Information Technology Consultants. We offer SEO packages and stand-alone link campaigns which continually focus on the number two optimization factor – obtaining popular external links. The results help clients achieve top organic search engine placement on highly competitive terms, and drive target market traffic to their websites like never before.

Be sure to check back next month to learn the third most important search engine optimization factor, or contact Top Of The List at 616-460-6778 today if you’d like to begin optimizing your website.

Read yesterday’s blog post for SEO Factor #1.

Top Five Search Engine Optimization Factors: Factor #1

Tuesday, March 23rd, 2010

By Guest Author Bev Mapes, Top Of The List

Optimizing your website so users can find it by querying appropriate search engines takes time, work, and strategy. The search engines give hints at how their algorithms work for organic search, but the real value comes from experienced search engine optimization (SEO) experts. SEO experts have numerous clients, and thus have their finger on the pulse of what is working and what is not working when it comes to achieving top search engine placement.

A recent nationwide survey conducted by SEOmoz that was sent to SEO experts revealed the top five search engine factors in achieving high placement. This article focuses on the number one factor, while each of our next articles will address the other four factors.

According to 73 percent of the experts surveyed, the number one factor that influences search engine optimization is (drum roll please):

Keyword focused anchor text from external links. Keyword focused anchor text is what the words say that form the link(s) to your website. For example, if a restaurant called “Swordfish Grill” has another site linking to it, does the user click on:

a. Swordfish Grill
b. For the best seafood in town, click here, or
c. Try Swordfish Grill, the best seafood restaurant in town!

Obviously if you were a seafood restaurant business, example c would help your site the most in search engine placement for “best seafood restaurant.”

While almost all links to your site that come from external sources help your site, obtaining links that have keywords in the anchor text is one of the top factors that can influence your site’s search engine placement for those terms.

Top Of The List Search Engine Marketing, a Grand Rapids-based firm working with Micro Visions, Inc. Information Technology Services, offers SEO packages which focus heavily on this number one optimization factor. The results help clients achieve top organic search engine placement on highly competitive terms, and drive target market traffic to their websites like never before.

Read the next article for the second most important search engine optimization factor, or contact Top Of The List at 616-460-6778 if you can’t wait to get started optimizing your website.

Getting Down to Business with Facebook Pages

Friday, February 19th, 2010

Facebook has some pretty awesome numbers; today they boast over 400 million active users, of which 200 million login every single day. Facebook users spend an average of 1 hour a day on Facebook and each user has an average of 130 friends. More than 60 million status updates areposted each day and 3 billion photos are uploaded to the site every month. But wait, there’s more. Enter the mobile Facebook user, or rather Facebook fanatic. Of those 400+ million users more than 100 million access Facebook via mobile devices (smart phones) like the iPhone, these uber users are twice as active on Facebook as the already impressively engaged non-mobile users.

In your Facebook

In your Facebook

No matter how you slice it, there’s a whole lot of Facebooking going on and it’s no wonder why businesses want to get in on this social network feeding frenzy.  So what is a business (brand, product, organization, public figure, artist or band) to do?

For starters, create a Facebook Page (http://ow.ly/19eM4). Having a Facebook Page lets a business exist in a fashion similar to a typical user profile and allows businesses connect and engage customers. Since your business page essentially acts like another friend to your connections, which in facebook lingo are called fans, bringing friends of those fans, that much closer to being fans of yours! Essentially this could be equated much like a giant ripple effect which keeps driving word-of-mouth to a wider and wider circle of fans, as your fans interact with your Facebook Page by commenting and linking to content on your Page (or posting on your Page depending how you have it configured) information spreads to their friends via News Feed.

If all this wasn’t enough to make you spring into action, as more than 1.5 million local businesses already have, I leave you with a few interesting figures pertaining to Facebook Pages to light the fire. More than 20 million people become fans of Pages each day which averages out to 4 Pages/month/user and the average user writes 25 comments on Facebook content each month. Those could be fans of your Page, and comments about your products, service, brand or business which could be rippling out across each fan’s network of an average of 130 friends. That’s a lot of potential word-of-month for showing up and sharing good content with an audience that’s probably well worth the effort.

In future posts we’ll introduce other Facebook features such as Facebook Share and Facebook Connect which offer additional opportunities for increasing exposure and engaging your audiences.

*statistics used in the article available are available here: http://ow.ly/19f6t

Managing Updates Across Multiple Social Networks with HootSuite

Friday, January 29th, 2010

Many a friend, family member, colleague and client have asked how they can simplify posting updates to multiple social networks. Rather than individually tweeting on twitter and updating Facebook and LinkedIn, there are several options we can use to move updates from one social network to the others so that each of these disparate web communities are able to be updated simultaneously without the hassle of signing into each individually just to post the same update.

I prefer to “tie” my LinkedIn, Facebook, and Twitter accounts together using a slick web service called HootSuite.  HootSuite users compose a single update, check off the accounts to post, and send it. In a single click Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter are all automatically pushed the latest news, all from one place.

The free web service hootsuite allows users to post to multiple social networks at once, among many other cool features.

The free web service hootsuite allows users to post to multiple social networks at once, among many other cool features.

Additionally, HootSuite offers some other great features, like historical click statistics for displaying the most popular messages by respective referrers.  Another extremely helpful feature is the ability to compose and schedule pending messages. You can even schedule blog posts for Wordpress.com accounts.  There is also a link shortening service ow.ly that transforms links like this: http://microvisionsinc.com/blog/2009/10/solid-state-drive-technology-delivers-exciting-promises/ into a link like this: http://ow.ly/11VEt ; helpful when limited to 140 character tweets.

HootSuite statistics make tracking the number clicks and where clicks come from is easy.

HootSuite statistics make tracking the number clicks and where clicks come from is easy.

HootSuite is easily set up and convenient to use.  Since setting up my account I’ve used it almost every single day and can highly recommend this amazing, free, online tool for managing updates on all your social networks.

HootSuite has a beautiful interface that's easy to use.

HootSuite has a beautiful interface that's easy to use.

An Introduction to Podcasts

Friday, January 22nd, 2010

While visiting loads of friends and family during the recent holidays and while conversing with coworkers and colleagues in subsequent weeks, I have been floored by the number of people who tip their heads to the side with a vacant stare and shrug their shoulders when asked, “What are your favorite podcasts?” or, “Which podcasts do you subscribe and listen to regularly?” We’re talking complete befuddlement.

These reactions have compelled me to spread the news about this incredible technology and the amazing sea of solid content that friends, family, colleagues, and cohorts could be enjoying, both to educate and entertain. Even though “podcasts” have been around for nearly six years and have been steadily building popularity, podcasts are still more than a bit under the radar.

Now, if you want to be cool before this technological zeitgeist goes mainstream, here’s a crash course in podcasts to teach you most everything you need to know to…

  1. Be hip to a cool “new” tech
  2. Explore a sea of incredibly informative, entertaining, and educational content

It’s 2010, we have two computers per household, ubiquitous wireless broadband in every coffee shop across the nation, 1,000 songs in our pockets* and now we give you the podcast!

Some prefer to use the term netcast as “podcast” is a little misleading. Podcast was borne of the popularity of Apple’s portal media player, the iPod. Also, with Apple’s inclusion of a Podcast Directory in their iTunes software, podcast is by far and away the term you’ll most frequently hear. There’s nothing wrong referring to a podcast as a netcast or vice versa, just know they are the same thing and you can access them on any computer or portal media player, not just Apple’s iPod. I’m in the habit of calling them podcasts and will refer to them that way henceforth.

What is a podcast?

Wikipedia has a great explanation: “A podcast is a series of digital media files (either audio or video) that are released episodically and downloaded through web syndication.” It’s like television or radio shows produced for distribution on the web via a subscription.

The audio and video quality will vary, depending on the equipment the podcast producer uses, but one thing is true of all my favorite shows: The content is top notch and delivered with pure passion. 95% of all podcasters produce their shows as a labor of love and from a desire to deliver a solid show that entertains, informs, and educates. Don’t take this the wrong way; it’s not as if every other podcast is a high school kid with a web camera playing Mister Wizard in the basement. Many podcasts are produced by people (or a team of people) with talent and production quality rivaling mainstream media. Some content is even in high definition and starring talent that gives professional broadcast journalists and television anchors a run for their money. Mainstream talent often guest stars on podcasts and some even produce podcasts themselves! You will be amazed at the content and production quality of podcasts available. Moreover, many of the major networks and mainstream broadcast providers such as NPR, PRI, ESPN, CNN, NBC, ABC, CBS, FOX, Discovery, G4, Newsweek, BusinessWeek, the New York Times are available.

Whatever you’re into, whatever you want to be more clued-up about or entertained by, it’s out there; hobbies, health, fitness, video games, business, sports, news, cooking, movies, automobiles, comedy, writing, television, acting, film making, science, technology, politics and the list goes on. As with the internet, there’s no end to what’s available.

Where to find podcasts

iTunes software is available free for download for both Mac and PC and has a beautifully organized directory of 100+ thousand free audio and video podcasts available for download inside their Podcast Directory in the iTunes store.

The iTunes Podcast Directory

The iTunes Podcast Directory

Download iTunes here: http://www.apple.com/itunes/download/

Another excellent, free open-source, podcast client is miro: http://www.getmiro.com/

The Miro Player

The Miro Player

Once you have one of these “podcatchers,” software built to find and subscribe to podcasts, you can browse genres or search for topics in their podcast directories, read descriptions, reviews, and sample episodes. When you find one that interests you, subscribe to it, and when a new episode is released iTunes will automatically download it for you!

New podcasts in my iTunes library

New podcasts in my iTunes library

How to watch/listen to Podcasts

Options abound for watching and listening to podcasts, but here are the main three:

  1. Podcatcher software like iTunes, Miro, or others
  2. Portable media devices like an iPod, Zune, or others
  3. Web browser on a computer to play episodes right from the web page

If you want to take the podcasts with you wherever you go, you’ll need an iPod or other portable media player such as a Zune (Microsoft only). This is one of my favorite ways to consume podcasts. I grab my iPod packed full of new shows and hit the treadmill or road, learning about all the lastest tech news and video games, movies, and book reviews. I watch most of my subscription video podcasts on my laptop, since it’s hard to run and watch a video podcast. For some podcasts to which I don’t subscribe but on which I occasionally find content of interest, I’ll just watch or listen to a few episodes right from the podcasts’ website, picking and choosing what I want to catch up on.

No matter how you listen to your favorite podcasts, I urge you to explore the podcast directories and find some favorites. Begin enjoying the content podcasters pour into each and every episode they produce.

Here are few staff recommendations worth checking out:

  1. This Week in Tech (TWiT)  - weekly audio podcast on all things tech
  2. MacBreak Weekly – audio podcast about all things Apple Computer (iphone, iPods, OS X…)
  3. GeekBrief.TV - quick video podcast geared towards gadgets, tech news and other geekery
  4. Grammer Girl’s Quick and Dirty Tips for Better Writing – excellent audio show on grammar if you want to know the difference between “affect” and “effect”, “loan” verses “lend”, “shall” verse “will” or when to use “which” instead of “that” or what the difference between “biweekly” and “semiweekly”
  5. Inside Home Recording – all about home studio recording
  6. Podcast Academy – a podcast about how to podcast, great podcast education
  7. Net@Night – covers what’s happening on the Net right now like cool sites, web services and viral videos
  8. Notes in Spanish Inspired Beginners – an awesome free way to learn Spanish
*Actually today an iPod has the capacity to hold over 40,000 songs, or audio podcasts as it were.