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    Beanstalk's SEO News Blog

    At Beanstalk Search Engine Optimization we know that knowledge is power. That's the reason we started this SEO blog. We know that the better informed our visitors are, the better the decisions they will make for their websites and their online businesses. We hope you enjoy your stay and find the SEO news contained within this blog useful.


    March 14, 2012

    A Blogger’s Paradise

    FACT: People are still writing blogs. Despite suggestions that blogs are passé, it seems that more and more people are still writing blog content now more than ever. Blogging remains as an important avenue for consumer expression.

    blog pic

    Consumer generated blogs have been showing significant growth since 2006 when NM Incite began tracking them according to a published U.S. Digital Consumer Report State of the Media(Q3-Q4 2011) report.

    At the end of 2011, NM Incite, a Nielsen/McKinsey company, tracked over 181 million blogs around the world. This was way up from the sparse 36 million reported only five years earlier in 2006.

    In a report from NM Incite, the big three blogging platforms are Blogger (from Google), WordPress and Tumbler (in that order). These three sites received 80.5 unique visitors in October of 2011. The report did not separate readers from writers.

    It is estimated that the number of blog readers in the USA would reach approximately 122.6 million viewers accounting for about 53.5% of all internet users.

    blog pic

    It’s difficult to compare eMarketer’s audience of 122.6 million U.S. readers to Nielsen’s 181 million global blogs, but one can reasonably ask whether there are almost as many writers as readers.
    Jason Mudd, president of Axia Public Relations, thinks blogs are too difficult to keep up with.

    "People can swallow small bites of information from Twitter and Facebook much easier without having to read several paragraphs," says Mudd, whose clients include Blue Cross/Blue Shield, Verizon and Synovus.
    Mudd does follow some bloggers, but he does it through Twitter or Facebook, scanning the headlines they post and only occasionally clicking through to the actual blog.

    Though individual blogs do not have a large audience per se, they effectively add a combined reach for marketing campaigns. Women bloggers make for a large portion of the targeted audience for advertisers (especially CPG companies – Consumer packaged goods).

    • 70% are college educated (with a majority earning a degree)
    • 1 in 3 are mothers.
    • 52% of bloggers are parents with kids under 18 in the household.

    One only has to look to the emergence of Pinterest which had over 4.5 million unique visitors in October 2011, which was up 37 times higher than from the beginning of the year.

    Data from Google Ad Planner and Ignite Social Media, 60-second Marketer found that these users fell between the age groups of 25-34, 45-54 & 55-64, with 80% being female!

    The data collected also found that:

    • 92% of Pinterest’s audience also visited mass-merchandiser sites as well.
    • 36% of women are also more likely to trust ads on social media over the 26% of men.

    So what can you take away from this post? Keep blogging and try gearing your blogs and link building efforts knowing that women bloggers and Pinterest account for a huge portion of your target audience. Pinterest may just be the latest Internet fad but it is one that should not be ignored. Remember that Facebook was also considered a "fad" when starting out.

    SEO news blog post by @ 12:41 pm


     

    June 15, 2011

    When a Blog Ceases to be a Blog

    As a blogger for our Beanstalk’s website, I spend a lot of time perusing other site’s blogs to keep current with industry happenings and to further my knowledge of SEO techniques. I have seen a growing trend in the wake of the Google Panda algorithm update where blogs are becoming increasingly longer and more verbose.

    The Panda update from Google has challenged us all to ensure that we are producing unique and quality content on our websites and marketing materials. The importance and necessity of providing rich content both for rankings and to our readers cannot be understated. One could look at this paradigm shift and rationalize that more is better, and that churning out even more content is even better…right? On one hand you are providing your readers with great content and appeasing the Panda, but at what point does a blog cease to be a blog?

    So the question is: How we define a “"blog?" and when does a blog become an article?

    tldr

    This is the definition of a blog as defined by Wikipedia:

    "Most blogs are interactive, allowing visitors to leave comments and even message each other via widgets on the blogs and it is this interactivity that distinguishes them from other static websites. Many blogs provide commentary or news on a particular subject; others function as more personal online diaries.

    A typical blog combines text, images, and links to other blogs, Web pages, and other media related to its topic. The ability of readers to leave comments in an interactive format is an important part of many blogs. Most blogs are primarily textual…"

    It seems that many bloggers are losing sight of what a blog is and what it should be used for (something this writer is at fault for as well). A blog is a place where people can go to browse the headlines making news and grab the most pertinent details while sipping their morning coffee. They are able to interact with others and to distribute and share the story with others. Think of the front page on your local newspaper. Most people just want a quick headline and a few basic facts about the story. If we want more information, it should be no more than a click away.

    Any article that is over 1000 words is probably not getting read and accounts for a large percentage of TLDRs in blog comments. Even if the content is awesome and provides some really great information, in our attention-span deprived world, this no longer serves the reader, but is only seeking to appease the mighty Panda.

    Recent posts I have come across have been generating increasingly bloated posts ever since the release of the Panda. Some that I have come across are over 2500 words long with no less than 7 images! This is where I feel the definition of ‘what a blog post is’ breaks down. This should be an article; not a blog post. Articles are much better utilized for in depth analysis or topics that cannot be covered in a short blog post. People who are prepared to read an article have set their expectations, knowing that it will be a longer read and more intellectually intensive.

    While to some this may seem like splitting hairs or bickering over semantics, I want to reiterate the fact that you are losing your readers by weighing them down with too much information where they do not want it. I appreciate that it is a difficult balance to appease the Panda and your readers, but ultimately your readers are who you should be writing for; not for your rankings. Keep your writing your great content and wowing us with your wonderful infographics, but write them as articles and not as blog posts.

    SEO news blog post by @ 5:26 pm

    Categories: Google,seo articles,SEO Tips
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