Veterans Day Google Logo Commemorates Holiday With A Portrait Of A Veterans Day Parade & Float

Today’s Google Logo commemorates Veterans Day with a portrait-styled image featuring soldiers atop a red, white and blue parade float. In the painting, parade onlookers watch a Veterans Day float with a prominently displayed American flag and a collection of men in uniform. Google’s…

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Last Chance! Take the 2013 Industry Survey #ShareYourVoice

Posted by jennita

Holy wow! Over the past two and half weeks we’ve gathered more than 2,500 responses from marketers across the globe for this year’s Moz Industry Survey. We’d like to send a huge THANK YOU to everyone who’s participated so far.

The thing is, we’d love to get at least 3,000 responses to insure we have a good set of data. We’re planning on closing the survey next week though, so if you haven’t taken it yet, please jump in there now (also, you don’t want to miss out on the killer prizes do you?).

#ShareYourVoice

Yes, while it’s super important for you to take the survey, it’s also essential for you to help us get the word out as well. We’d love to get your help by tweeting, plussing, facebooking, and even vineing (yea, I’m just making stuff up now), to remind folks to get in there.

The other day, I had the crazy idea that I would make a vine of me singing, aka “Sharing my voice” and tweet it out with a link to the Industry Survey. I asked a few other folks to jump in as well, and what happened next was pretty amazing!

Pssst! And if you make one, use the #ShareYourVoice hashtag, and I’ll add it to the page:

We’d love your help spreading the word as well. Would you create a video, image, or even just a tweet and get the word out?

Tweet #ShareYourVoice

Sneak Peek

Now, you didn’t think we’d ask you to help out without showing a bit of data now would you? I thought it was interesting to see the salary range of folks who’ve taken the survey so far. Remember though that people across the globe have taken this and this isn’t taking into account that someone making $30-40k in the US is different to someone making the same thing in another country.

Prizes

Don’t forget we’re giving away some great prizes as well! Cyrus laid it all out in the initial post, but here’s the rundown again:

Grand Prize: Attend MozCon 2014 in Seattle
Including flight, hotel, and lunch with an industry expert.

Two First Prizes: iPad 2

Ten Second Prizes: $100 Amazon.com gift cards

Well, what are you waiting for?

Sign up for The Moz Top 10, a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don’t have time to hunt down but want to read!

This I Believe: A Manifesto for a Magnificent Career

This I Believe was one of my favorite NPR programs. It’s raison d’être: “Americans from all walks of life share the personal philosophies and core values that guide their daily lives.” In honor of that spirit, I’ll take a step away from our mutual obsession with marketing and analytics and share with you the philosophies […]

This I Believe: A Manifesto for a Magnificent Career is a post from: Occam’s Razor by Avinash Kaushik

Predictably Vague: Statistics for Marketing, SEO and Conversion Rate Optimisation

Thank you to all of you who attended what was our most successful webinar yet! In this webinar, it’s all about the numbers. As marketers, we live in an age of increasingly complex data. Many of the tools we deal with day to day have complex maths at their core, and whether you’re doing CRO, […]

The post Predictably Vague: Statistics for Marketing, SEO and Conversion Rate Optimisation appeared first on SEOgadget.

5 ways to use Twitter for Community Building

Community Building is a brilliant way to start turning connections into customers. Twitter is a fantastic social network for community building so Sarah Bradley for State of Digital has put together an easy 5 step guide to start increasing your following, building relationships and converting customer using Twitter.

Post from on State of Digital
5 ways to use Twitter for Community Building

Social media and mobile technologies in bridging digital divides

Digital inequalities such as digital divides are a big issue in the information society, potentially influencing engagement in political, social, and educational life. They create marginalized, excluded groups who do not have access to the Internet, to information, or maybe to the necessary skills for using these devices and social applications.

The post Social media and mobile technologies in bridging digital divides appeared first on DEJAN SEO.

This I Believe: A Manifesto for a Magnificent Career

This I Believe was one of my favorite NPR programs. It’s raison d’être: “Americans from all walks of life share the personal philosophies and core values that guide their daily lives.” In honor of that spirit, I’ll take a step away from our mutual obsession with marketing and analytics and share with you the philosophies […]

This I Believe: A Manifesto for a Magnificent Career is a post from: Occam’s Razor by Avinash Kaushik

How to Track the Online ROI of Offline Advertising

Posted by GeoffKenyon

While I love online marketing and often times think that is a much better marketing investment than offline marketing and advertising, offline ads are important and add value. While we are going to see budget shift significantly from offline efforts to online campaigns, there is still going to be a ton of money going into offline ads.

Much of the value from offline advertising is actually online and is typically attributed to the direct channel. If an ad gives out a website URL, they almost always send visitors to their homepage. When ads don’t give users a website to go to, typically one of the search channels will receive credit for the value created by the ad. The KTM ad below is a prime example of a print ad that will create value, but the value will be attributed to either the search channel or direct channel if the user is already aware of (or simply searches for) the URL for KTM.

As you can see below, in 2012 82% of ad-spend was offline; that is a lot of visitors and conversions that aren’t being properly attributed.

This isn’t just a problem for companies with big ad budgets. In fact, this is more important for small businesses with smaller budgets because often times these expenses come out of the owner’s pockets. Real estate agents are probably the best example of why this is so important. If my friend Hailey is a real estate agent and if she wants to market her self and her properties, she has a lot of options. She could advertise on a big real estate site like Zillow, a niche site, through SEO or PPC, and it’s easy for her to track leads from these. It gets harder, though, when she invests in offline efforts like signs, door hangers, print ads, or any other form of offline advertising. Hailey, and almost all real estate agents, are doing their marketing campaigns on a tight budget, so it is critical for real estate agents (and professionals in many other industries) to understand exactly what is producing value and what isn’t.

The good news is that it’s actually pretty easy to figure out which offline ads are helping you and which ones aren’t doing anything.

Create a custom URL for your ads

The first step is to either buy a vanity domain or to create a unique landing page for each offline effort.

Depending on your niche and ad, it can be important to incentivize the user typing in the full URL (and not just stopping once they type in the homepage) if you are not going to use a vanity domain. This can mean offering the user a special promotion or gift. You would want to reinforce the offer with the URL as well, using something like /free-gift or /special-promo.

Set up redirects and campaign parameters

Once you’ve created your vanity domain or landing page, you’ll need to set up a 301 redirect to the page you want visitors to land on (your home page or a specific landing page) AND include Google Analytics campaign parameters (shown below by ?utm=*)

Adding Campaign Tracking Parameters

If you’re not super familiar with Google Analytics, this guide is a good starting point. If you need help creating the campaign URL, the Google URL Builder and GA Config are really useful tools. Keep in mind, while there are five different parameters you can use, the following three are required at minimum:

  • Source – This should be the specific source of the ad and referral such as “Seattle Times,” “For Sale Sign,” “Flier,” etc. The source parameter will allow you to assign conversions to a specific source.
  • Medium – The medium is simply the high-level channel that your effort is part of. Some examples of good mediums would be radio, magazine ad, or TV. When you consistently use the medium attribution parameter, over time, you will be able to see what high-level channels produce the best ROI for you.
  • Campaign name – The campaign name should refer to specific campaign you are running. You can use this to pull together ads across mediums and sources that are part of a larger campaign, or you can differentiate between different campaigns within the same source.

Track your ROI

At this point, you’ve done all the hard work and have everything set up for Google Analytics to be able to track visitors coming to the site from your ads as well as how many people convert in some form. You will be able to find the number of visitors from your ads under the campaigns tab in Google Analytics, and the number of conversions in the Ecommerce, Goals, or Events tab depending on how you are tracking your conversions.

The campaign view in Google Analytics is where you’ll monitor the success of your offline campaigns.

With this in place you will be able to better invest your offline marketing budget knowing that the channels and campaigns are going to give you the best online ROI.

Sign up for The Moz Top 10, a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don’t have time to hunt down but want to read!

AdWords Offer Extensions Get Shut Down In Favor Of Google Offers

In February, Google announced the limited release of AdWords Offer Extensions, which allowed advertisers to dedicate extra real estate in their search ads to promoting in-store coupons and discounts. Offer Extensions didn’t make much of a splash when they debuted, and now it turns out they…

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