Ahora sí ! ahora sí seguimos en http://www.i-marketingconsulting.com/wordpress
Ahora sí ! ahora sí seguimos en http://www.i-marketingconsulting.com/wordpress
Publicado en 1, Marketing Digital Internacional
Para aquellas empresas que estais intentando hacer un posicionamiento en buscadores y directorios empresariales a nivel internacional, tener en cuenta Infospace.
Esta web ya existia, pero como veries en el artículo ha tenido interesantes mejoras.fuente: http://blog.searchenginewatch.com/blog/080104-063004Now that InfoSpace has cleared away other business lines and staff, they just re-committed to online search. The company aims to grow through white-label distribution, which includes over 100 partners so far. In addition, they seek growth through through consumer traffic — and that strikes me as quixotic at best.
InfoSpace embraces the current search ecosystem, from both organic and paid perspectives. Dogpile has garnered J.D. Power’s top satisfaction award for two years running. It’s a nice interface that fetches results from Google, Yahoo, MSN Live and Ask engines simultaneously. Beyond the organic search results, InfoSpace has ensured both Google and Yahoo ad sources through 2011.
Publicado en Marketing Digital Internacional
Etiquetado Marketing Digital Internacional
Des de que empezamos el proyecto de i-Marketing Consutling , estamos realizando campañas de marketing social, y ejecutando planes de acciones sobre facebook, digg, youtube, etc. Pero en otros muchos casos nos encontramos que el siguiente problema ( ver video ), pero aconsegamos alternativas como la que verás en el video.
The Secret Sauce of Social Media:
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Tags: marketingsocial web 2.0
Publicado en web 2.0
La empresa Hitwise, da a luz unos resultados que no me esperaba. Pensaba que en USA, el uso de Google esta estancado, y por lo visto no es así. Sino os lo veis claro, leer este artícula
Dominance continues with a six percent increase over last year
NEW YORK, NY – November 19, 2007 - Hitwise, the leading online competitive intelligence service, today announced that Google accounted for 64.49 percent of all U.S. Searches in the four weeks ending October 27, 2007. Yahoo! Search, MSN Search and Ask.com each received 21.65, 7.42 and 4.76 percent respectively. The remaining 49 search engines in the Hitwise Search Engine Analysis Tool accounted for 1.68 percent of U.S. searches.
|
Percentage of U.S. Searches Among Leading Search Engine Providers |
|||
|
Oct.-07 |
Sept.-07 |
Oct.-06 |
|
| www.google.com |
64.49% |
63.55% |
60.94% |
| search.yahoo.com |
21.65% |
22.55% |
22.34% |
| search.msn.com |
7.42%* |
7.83%* |
10.72%* |
| www.ask.com |
4.76% |
4.32% |
4.34% |
| Note: Data is based on four week rolling periods (ending Oct. 27, 2007, Sept. 29, 2007, Oct. 28, 2006) from the Hitwise sample of 10 million US Internet users.
* – includes executed searches on Live.com and MSN Search. |
|||
Google an Increasing Source of Traffic to Key Industries
Search engines continue to be the primary way Internet users navigate to key industry categories. Comparing October 2007 to October 2006, the Travel, Entertainment and Business and Finance categories showed double digit increases in their share of traffic coming directly from search engines.
|
U.S. Category Upstream Traffic from Search Engines and Google – October 2007 |
||||
|
Category |
Percent of Category Traffic from Search Engines, Oct-07 |
Percent Change in Share of Traffic From Search Engines, Oct-07 – Oct-06 |
Percent of Category Traffic from Google, Oct-07 |
|
| Health and Medical |
45.14% |
4% |
29.08% |
|
| Travel |
32.58% |
12% |
21.31% |
|
| Shopping and Classifieds |
25.80% |
1.9% |
16.01% |
|
| News and Media |
21.03% |
7% |
13.41% |
|
| Entertainment |
21.69% |
15% |
12.93% |
|
| Business and Finance |
17.02% |
19% |
10.36% |
|
| All figures are based on U.S. data from the Hitwise sample of 10 million Internet users.
Source: Hitwise |
||||
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Tags: marketingdigital internacional, google estadisticas usa
Publicado en Posicionamiento SEO/SEM
La empresa Hitwise, da a luz unos resultados que no me esperaba. Pensaba que en USA, el uso de Google esta estancado, y por lo visto no es así. Sino os lo veis claro, leer este artícula
Fuente : Hitwise
Dominance continues with a six percent increase over last year
NEW YORK, NY – November 19, 2007 - Hitwise, the leading online competitive intelligence service, today announced that Google accounted for 64.49 percent of all U.S. Searches in the four weeks ending October 27, 2007. Yahoo! Search, MSN Search and Ask.com each received 21.65, 7.42 and 4.76 percent respectively. The remaining 49 search engines in the Hitwise Search Engine Analysis Tool accounted for 1.68 percent of U.S. searches.
|
Percentage of U.S. Searches Among Leading Search Engine Providers |
|||
|
Oct.-07 |
Sept.-07 |
Oct.-06 |
|
|
www.google.com |
64.49% |
63.55% |
60.94% |
|
search.yahoo.com |
21.65% |
22.55% |
22.34% |
|
search.msn.com |
7.42%* |
7.83%* |
10.72%* |
|
www.ask.com |
4.76% |
4.32% |
4.34% |
|
Note: Data is based on four week rolling periods (ending Oct. 27, 2007, Sept. 29, 2007, Oct. 28, 2006) from the Hitwise sample of 10 million US Internet users. * – includes executed searches on Live.com and MSN Search. |
|||
Google an Increasing Source of Traffic to Key Industries
Search engines continue to be the primary way Internet users navigate to key industry categories. Comparing October 2007 to October 2006, the Travel, Entertainment and Business and Finance categories showed double digit increases in their share of traffic coming directly from search engines.
|
U.S. Category Upstream Traffic from Search Engines and Google – October 2007 |
||||
|
Category |
Percent of Category Traffic from Search Engines, Oct-07 |
Percent Change in Share of Traffic From Search Engines, Oct-07 – Oct-06 |
Percent of Category Traffic from Google, Oct-07 |
Percent Change in Share of Traffic From Google, Oct-07 – Oct-06 |
|
Health and Medical |
45.14% |
4% |
29.08% |
6.17% |
|
Travel |
32.58% |
12% |
21.31% |
23.54% |
|
Shopping and Classifieds |
25.80% |
1.9% |
16.01% |
6.52% |
|
News and Media |
21.03% |
7% |
13.41% |
11.01% |
|
Entertainment |
21.69% |
15% |
12.93% |
16.17% |
|
Business and Finance |
17.02% |
19% |
10.36% |
30.81% |
|
All figures are based on U.S. data from the Hitwise sample of 10 million Internet users. Source: Hitwise |
||||
Blogged with Flock
Tags: marketingdigital internacional, google estadísticas usa
Publicado en Posicionamiento SEO/SEM
Podeis seguir viendo nuestro blog en www.i-marketingconsulting.com/wordpress
Ahora hemos instalado wordpress en nuestro servidor, para poder optimizar el blog.
Saludos,
Xavier Rivera
CEO i-Marketing Consulting.
Comentarios desactivados
Publicado en Bienvenidos, Eventos - Jornadas, Marketing Digital Internacional, Posicionamiento SEO/SEM, web 2.0
Para estos, Google ha mejorado su herramienta de google adwords, para que un usuario medio puede realizar campañas de publicidad por mercados objetivos de una forma más senzilla y utilizando google maps.
Os dejo este artículo posteado por Adam Green
There have been a number of updates to Google Adwords and Google Analytics lately, so I thought the SEOmoz community might want a summary of them. For the most part, I am impressed with the new features and Google should be applauded for listening to their user base and responding with these additions.
- AdWords Geographical Targeting with Google Maps
Although geographical targeting is not perfect, this new mapping feature does make it easier for the average user. Google has introduced a new system where users can see targeted areas using Google Maps. I like this feature a lot because it allows me to see the surrounding towns and cities which I might want to include in my targeting for a particular local client. This is especially handy for those who manage clients outside of their geographic area.
Some new improvements include Google’s creation of “bundles,” where you can bundle together specific regions like Central America or Africa.
Where this system falls short, and this is a long standing issue with geo targeting, is the fact that a user sitting in City Example X, may not have an IP address registered to that location. Thus, when developing campaigns it can be a good idea to develop campaigns with the city keyword as a geographic qualifier and even test the effectiveness of the polygon targeting tool.
Here is what the map targeting looks like for a client looking to target the Toronto region in Canada:
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Publicado en Marketing Digital Internacional
El pasado mes de noviembre se realizó la “ Semana de la Internacionalización” organizada por el Consorcio de Promoción Comercial de Catalunya – COPCA.
La ” Semana” pretende ser espacio para el debate y la reflexión sobre la actualidad económica internacional y los escenarios mundiales de futuro, de intercambio de experiencias, conocimiento y buenas prácticas que impulsan la competitividad internacional de la empresa catalana.
Durante la “Semana” , se realizaron conferencias, tallers, y estubieron presentes los directores de las 37 oficinas que COPCA tiene alrededor del mundo.
Dentro de este evento, se habilitó el espacio ” Asesórate” donde un grupo de exportos de diferentes materias, ofrecian a la empresa unos 30 minutos de consultoria y análsis sobre los proyectos que estas estaban realizando.
Des de i-Marketing Consulting , Xavier Rivera, estuvo durante 3 días en este espacio, ayudando a las empresas a mejorar sus planes de marketing online, a optimizar su posicionamiento en buscadores, y dando información e instrucciones para llevar a cabo acciones en Internet que fueran rentables para la empresa.
Xavier Rivera ( izquierda ), asesorando a una empresa en planes de marketing online.
Publicado en Eventos - Jornadas
Etiquetado Xavier Rivera Semana Internacionalización
Esta guia os puede servir de ayuda sobre todo para convencer a vuestro jefe que el Marketing Social en Internet no es un broma.
fuente: www.seomoz.org Posted by randfish
I’ve been asked several times to give presentations on the basics of social media marketing, and have now refined my 15 minute introductory tour to the point where I think it’s fairly good (and I’m really damn picky about my presentations). The following presentation (in visual and text form) should be helpful for anyone trying to convince their bosses, team or cohorts that investing in SMM is a worthwhile pursuit. Enjoy!
SECTION I: What is Social Media Marketing?
Before we ask that, we really need to start with the goals of online marketing as a whole!
Guess What? Social Media Marketing Can Help with All of These Things.
How, you might ask?
The first step is social interaction over the web. Platforms like Wikipedia (in the Web 2.0 world) or even forums and chatrooms (way back in the ’90′s) let ordinary users reach hundreds or thousands of other web-savvy people.

You + Wikipedia = Your Content in Front of Lots of Eyeballs
SMM also involves the practice of viral content creation and promotion. By building content on your website that’s inherently alluring to a web-based audience, you can attract positive attention of all kinds.

In the example above, this singles map, showing the distribution of cities in the US with high/low men-to-women ratios, was “spread” across the web after it was promoted on Digg. The content’s creator, National Geographic magazine, hadn’t enabled the map to be visible in an online format, so the owner of a dating website actually re-published the image and built up a considerable amount of mindshare and relevant links.
Technical goals, like control of the search results to help with reputation management, are also a part of SMM’s appeal. You can push down negative listings, swarm competitors, and build high ranking pages that can drive secondary traffic to your site(s).

The image above shows the power of social media profiles – a search at Google returns pages and pages of my profiles at various sites where I’m a regular contributor (and plenty where I’ve barely contributed at all, too).
Social media’s power lies in its ability to engage the “right” kind of participants. Key influencers are heavily overrepresented in social media (and the blogosphere), and immense value can come from getting your brand/content/product in front of their eyes.

SECTION II: Why is Engagement with Social Media Valuable?
Because social media supports both branding and mindshare goals

See? Branding on the left, mindshare on the right.
Social media participation can also bolster your search marketing goals. The engines want to see high quality, frequent, editorial links pointing to your site as a pre-requisite to rankings. The social web allows marketers to reach audiences who can provide these valuable links, giving them an edge on their less social competition.
SMM is also, obviously, great for traffic and even conversion rates. Social sites like Digg, Reddit, and popular blogs drive tens of thousands of visitors, and while those users frequently won’t engage directly with your brand right away, they’ve now had a “branded experience” and are more likely to have positive associations and a brand memory in the future, both of which will serve to increase conversion rates.
SECTION III: Why Now? Why Has Social Media Suddenly Become So Important?
Because social media has suddenly become very, very popular.

The chart above shows that year over year, 2007 was a breakout for user-generated content and participatory sites. The bottom half tells the story of opportunity – social media marketers have an opportunity to contribute and shape the social web before the noise of millions of users makes a single voice impossible to hear.
A few quotes from studies performed in the last 2 years stand out, including:
Brand Advocates have emerged online as primary influencers, with at least a two to one rate of converting an actual friend or family member to buy the same product or brand…
…Brand Advocates are incredibly valuable to marketers because they are better connected consumers with a larger sphere of influence…
…Social Media is the Key – Study findings showed that Brand Advocates are taking full advantage of social media tools and actively leveraging them for product purchases. Through instant messaging, chat, community, photo sites and blogging, Brand Advocates are able to influence their vast online social circle…
Source: Yahoo! + ComScore Study on Brand Advocates - December 2006
Passionistas heavily engage with communities of like-minded consumers who use email, text messaging, and instant messaging significantly more than typical users, and are more likely to create and share user-generated content online such as photos, blog posts or videos about their passions. Because of their intense engagement around sharing information about their passions through digital media, Passionistas are natural brand advocates and 52% more likely than typical users to recommend or influence others about brands aligning with them.
Brands that stimulate conversation among passionate consumers will be rewarded through the credibility that comes from trusted word of mouth,” said Jim Kite, President of Connections Research and Analytics at MediaVest. “Accessing Passionistas online also offers the ability to track this valuable group’s media consumption habits, enabling brands to optimally – and accountably – leverage their advocacy power
Source: Yahoo! Passionistas Report – September 2007
If that doesn’t convince you, read on:


It’s not surprising for most Internet users to find that influencers of all varieties are heavily engaged with the web in general (and the blogosphere in particular), but it’s amazing to imagine that US influencers are actually trailing countries like China, South Korea, & Japan in blog engagement.
SECTION IV: How Does SMM Help with SEM?
Remember back to a time long ago when search engines weren’t too smart? There it is – just about 1997. Altavista and Lycos and NorthernLight were scanning keywords and meta tags, trying to sort out who repeated the phrase “dancing baby gif” the most.
Obviously, these primitive engines didn’t last long, and with the evolution and popularization of link-based algorithms, search engines became smarter. However, the gaming continued. Once search marketers learned of the biases towards links, the Internet starting flooding with “non-editorially given links” based on a desire to manipulate the rankings of the engines. These links were never intended to be clicked, and the motivations behind them weren’t to “endorse the quality or relevance of another site’s content.”

The “links as votes” algorithms could only persist so long as links were truly meant as votes – and with the Pandora’s box of PageRank spilling across the web, the search engines had to resort to better and more careful analyses of which links to count. Thus, they developed advanced algorithms for calculating trust, segmenting pages, watching for spikes of unnatural link activity, and generally cramping down on the search world’s less cautious manipulators.

With tactics like link farms, reciprocal schemes, paid link networks,and forum, guestbook, and blog spamming all going the way of the Dodo, websites that wanted to rank atop the engines needed to return to the roots of organic marketing. This re-ignited the age old conflict of the marketer vs. the trusted source – how does a company get their product or service in front of the right people to let it spread editorially?

This phenomenon brings us to a string of fundamental questions… and their answers
#1 – Who Creates Links on the Web?
Oh, right… It’s these guys:

I like to call them the Linkerati, but they are, in essence, merely an extension of the offline world’s influencers – journalists, traveling salesmen, and your neighbor Jessica, who always has some new remarkable product or company to tell you about. The Linkerati are powerful – they own the editorially given link structure of the web, and this brings us to our second question…
#2 – How Can Marketers Reach the Linkerati?
Oh, right… Social Media Marketing! Through the sites and blogs that Linkerati frequent and are influenced by, we can build a marketing campaign that uses content-based strategies to get in front of the right people. But, is getting in front of them enough? Can we play a passive role once our brand has been seen? Or, do we need to do something more – perhaps ask another question.
#3 – How Do Influencers Spread Content?
Oh right… We’re going to need to know this if we want our Linkerati to socially spread our ideas. Lucikly, I’ve got this handy bullet point list:
Not all of these are inherently trackable, but many of them are, and by measuring successes against failures in the online world, we’ll be able to get a sense of what plays with the Linkerati.
#4 – What Types of Content Are Likely to Become Viral?
This final question comes after months and years of experience and in many cases, its uniquely tailored to your specific industry or niche. Luckily, we’re not really going to leave you hanging – Jane’s new linkbait guide is out today, and although it’s part of our premium content, it does a fantastic job of explaining the ins and outs of why some content succeeds while others falter. In the interim, this chart is pretty useful, too:

Hopefully, you’ve enjoyed this social media basics presentation in blog format. For those who’d prefer, you can download the whole thing in Microsoft Powerpoint here as well.
p.s. I did not end up giving this presentation at Pubcon Las Vegas – instead, I asked the audience to vote between this and a more advanced walkthrough of social media sites, and more than 90% opted for the latter. I’ve asked that no one blog or reveal the contents therein, but we will have it available for download behind the premium content curtain at the request of a very smart audience member
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Publicado en web 2.0
Des de i-Marketing Consulting, ayudamos a empresas a mejorar su posicionamiento mediente la buena elección de palabras clave a posicionar y sobretodo sabiendo donde colocar estas palabras clave en la web de la empresa.
En esta artículo podeis ver muy claramente como poner vuestras palabras clave en vuestra web, para mejorar vuestro posicionamiento, y si no mejora, ya sabes a quién acudir
.
fuente: www.seomoz.com – Posted by randfish on Mon (12/17/07)
Keyword Usage & Targeting
Keywords are fundamental to the search process - they are the building blocks of language and of search. In fact, the entire science of information retrieval (including web-based search engines like Google) is based on keywords. As the engines crawl and index the contents of pages around the web, they keep track of those pages in keyword-based indices. Thus, rather than storing 25 billion web pages all in one database (which would get pretty big), the engines have millions and millions of smaller databases, each centered on a particular keyword term or phrase. This makes it much faster for the engines to retrieve the data they need in a mere fraction of a second.

Obviously, if you want your page to have a chance of being listed in the search results for “dog,” it’s extremely wise to make sure the word “dog” is part of the indexable content of your document.
Kewyords also dominate our search intent and interaction with the engines. For example, a common search query pattern might go something like this:

When a search is performed, the engine knows which pages to retrieve based on the words entered into the search box. Other data, such as the order of the words (“running shoes” vs. “shoes running”), spelling, punctuation and capitalization of those terms provide additional information that the engines can use to help retrieve the right pages and rank them.
For obvious reasons, search engines meaure the ways keywords are used on pages to help determine the “relevance” of a particular document to a query. One of the best ways to “optimize” a page’s rankings is, therefore, to ensure that keywords are prominently used in titles, text and meta data.
The Myth of Keyword Density
Whenever the topic of keyword usage and search engines come together, a natural tendency to use the phrase “keyword density” seems to arise. This is tragic. Keyword density is, without question, NOT a part of modern web search engine ranking algorithms for the simple reason that it provides far worse results than many other, more advanced methods of keyword analysis. Rather than cover this logical fallacy in depth in this guide, I’ll simply reference Dr. Edel Garcia seminal work on the topic – The Keyword Density of Non-Sense.
The notion of keyword density values predates all commercial search engines and the Internet and can hardly be considered an IR concept. What is worse, KD plays no role on how commercial search engines process text, index documents or assign weights to terms. Why then many optimizers still believe in KD values? The answer is simple: misinformation
If two documents, D1 and D2, consist of 1000 terms (l = 1000) and repeat a term 20 times (tf = 20), then a keyword density analyzer will tell you that for both documents KD = 20/1000 = 0.020 (or 2%) for that term. Identical values are obtained when tf = 10 and l = 500. Evidently, a keyword density analyzer does not establishes which document is more relevant. A density analysis or KD ratio tells us nothing about:
- the relative distance between keywords in documents (proximity)
- where in a document the terms occur (distribution)
- the co-citation frequency between terms (co-occurrence)
- the main theme, topic, and sub-topics (on-topic issues) of the documents
Thus, KD is divorced from content quality, semantics and relevacy.
Dr. Garcia’s background in information retrieval and his mathematical proofs should debunk any notion that keyword density can be used to help “optimize” a page for better rankings. However, this same document illustrates the unfortunate truth about keyword optimization – without access to a global index of web pages (to calculate term weight) and a representative corpus of the Internet’s collected documents (to help build a semantic library), we have little chance to create formulas that would be helpful for true optimization.
However, keyword usage and targeting are only a small part of the search engines’ ranking algorithms (as we’ve discussed in Section I: Retrieval & Rankings), and we can still leverage some effective “best practices” for keyword usage to help make pages that are very close to “optimized.” Here at SEOmoz, we engage in a lot of testing and get to see a huge number of search results and shifts based on keyword usage tactics. When we work with our clients, this is the process we recommend:
An optimal page for the phrase “running shoes” would thus look something like:

Keyword usage is NOT an exact science, and it is certainly valuable to engage in testing, tweaking and experimentation on your own sites and pages. Just keep in mind that user experience shoud never be sacrificed for the sake of optimization – search engines want the same things as humans, and generally speaking, if your page can earn one or two extra links by providing great content, this will far outweigh any benefit from stuffing an extra keyword repetition. SEOmoz’s Term Targeting tool is designed to help accomplish precisely this feat and provides a grade to indicate how well (or poorly) a particular page is following the above suggestions.
As you perform keyword targeting, remember that search engines have advanced semantic analysis abilities – this means that they can not only detect whether your page has the right keywords on it, but whether that page is actually targeting the proper subject(s). Thus, embedding keywords as we’ve described above with perfect precision on a page that’s actually about laser hair removal is going to be immediately apparent to the search engines. Instead of merely inserting keywords on a page and expecting rankings, make sure that the document itself contains high quality content describing or on the topic of your keyword of choice.
In the next installment, I’ll finish up the basics of search-engine friendly design and cover:
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