Archive for August, 2012
Social Media: Using Yelp for Internet Marketing
Posted by Jason Shindler in social media on August 30, 2012
Like much of social media, Yelp is a challenge to work with because so much of what goes on is out of your business’s direct control. Though just because it is a challenge, it doesn’t mean you should ignore it. Here are some tips for working with Yelp:
- Have an accurate and complete business profile: This is the easiest part, because this is something you have a lot of control over. Be sure your address, name, Web site link, categories, descriptions and photos are all as complete as possible.
- Target clients/customers who are active Yelp users: Every business wants “5 star” ratings from Yelp users. Yelp has a system which helps filter the reviews to help make sure that people aren’t manipulating the system. No one knows exactly how they filter reviews, but it easy to make some educated guesses. They probably pick reviews that have a lot of detail and are from established users. So it is best to visit with your client base and research which ones would give you a nice review and are also active Yelp users. Then, just reach out to them and ask. You’ll find many people will be willing to help!
- Respond to Negative reviews: It pains any business to get negative reviews in a public setting like Yelp. You have to move past the hurt, and try to solve the problem. I advise reaching out both publicly on Yelp and privately to the customer. Publicly apologize for their negative experience and be sure to give the impression to other Yelp users that you take criticism seriously and are willing to try and solve the problem. Privately, offer a credit, free product, whatever is customary to help make the customer happy. It is important to not make the compensation tied to removing the Yelp review, but in many cases the compensation will help change or remove the review on its own.
- No need to advertise: Ethically and legally, Yelp can change the reviews on your service just because you advertise with them. If they are actually doing this, you’ll know because an Attorney General will investigate them for doing this.
What other tips do you have for managing Yelp?
How to Use LinkedIn Answers to Market Your Services
Posted by Jason Shindler in LinkedIn on August 29, 2012
Getting new people to be exposed to your service is a challenging thing to do. You have a sphere of people who you already know, how do you remind those people about your service? And how do you grow the sphere?
LinkedIn has a powerful set of tools that can be used to serve both of these purposes. This post will focus on “LinkedIn Answers” which business owners can use for free. This post is also self-referential, as we’ll use LinkedIn Answers to help promote it!
Step 1: Make sure you have invited all of the people you know to connect with you on LinkedIn and given adequate time for them to accept your connection.
Step 2: Write a post on your blog that mentions your service but most importantly addresses a question in your field. For example, if you were a Web site marketing professional, you might write an article on how to use LinkedIn Answers to Market Your Services.
Step 3: Go to LinkedIn Answers (under the more drop down) and post a question that your blog entry addresses. For our post entitled “How to Use LinkedIn Answers to Market Your Services” we posted the question as “How can you use LinkedIn to Market a Service?” Post it in the proper category — this post belongs under Marketing and Sales, Advertising and Promotion, Internet Marketing.
Step 4: In the description of the question put a link to your blog entry and explain that you have written this blog entry and you’d like input from people on the topic. For example for our post, we explained that we’d like people’s input on our idea and would like to hear if others have ideas on how to use LinkedIn to market services. DO NOT promote your service directly.
Step 5: After you ask the question, it will allow you to send the link to up to 200 connections. Pick 200 connections that you think would like to check in with and ask them to comment on your post.
This will help in several ways:
- People who are reading the question you posted will be exposed to you, your blog and your service.
- People who you invited to comment will be reminded of the type of service you provide.
That’s our approach, how have you used LinkedIn to market your service?
What is Backlinking? Why is it Important for SEO?
Posted by Jason Shindler in seo 101 on August 28, 2012

A drawing of “Link” from the “Legend of Zelda” video game by Alexis renee Mistrot. Backlinks don’t have much to do with video games!
Backlinking is about getting people to link to your site. Backlinks are also called inbound links or inlinks. When you convince another Web site to link to your Web site, you have created a backlink. Backlinks help tell a search engine that your site has credibility and has been acknowledged by others.
The reason this is important is because Google and Bing (the two major search engines) use the quantity and quality of links to your site on the Internet to determine how popular it is. For example, two businesses sell plumbing supplies. One has one link coming in, the other has 100. All other things being equal, Google will rate the 100 links site higher. Likewise, if one site had one link coming in, and the other also had one link but it was from a national magazine about plumbers, that would make the 2nd site rank higher.
For backlinks, quality is better than quantity. A few credible links are better than a bunch of non-credible links. All of these links effect search engine placement. Sites with more quality backlinks get placed higher than similar sites without them.
However, it is easy to overestimate the importance of backlinks. They are just one component of Search Engine Optimization (albeit, an important one!). It is also important to know that Search Engine Optimization is the first thing people think of when they hear Internet Marketing, but it is really just one of 11 different things you can do to market your Web site.
Post 100! What I’ve Learned Writing a Web Design & Marketing Blog
Posted by Jason Shindler in business tips, Curvine on August 27, 2012
It has taken me 4 years, but I finally got to 100 posts on Curvine’s Blog! Here are some things that I have learned:
- It is hard to make time to Blog. You really have to schedule it in otherwise it will never get done. Or hire someone who’s job it is to do it. 16 of the last 100 posts were done in the past month, which roughly corresponds to when I decided to make time to write often.
- Coming up with topics is a bit easier than I thought. Once you schedule time to create a blog entry, you pick up on conversations or articles that are blog worthy.
- Blogging helps me focus my thoughts. It gives talking points to use with potential clients and links to send clients who ask frequently asked questions.
- LinkedIn is a surprisingly good free way to expose people to your blog for the 1st time. Over the years, we’ve used the groups section and the answers section to help expose more people to the blog.
Here’s to our first 100 posts!
Web Marketing Articles We Are Reading
Posted by Jason Shindler in business tips, Curvine on August 24, 2012
Here are a few pieces we’ve come across that are worth a read:
- Marketing is Most Certainly Not Dead: “there’s a strong and vibrant army of marketers that have always learned and adapted to each impending change. These are the people that have long understood the value of blogging, have long understood the value of educational content, have long understood how to integrate social with email, have long understood how to segment and match leads, and have long understood it’s all about the community”
- Microsoft’s ‘Meh’ New Logo: TechCrunch interviews a graphic design expert who talks about “how much this particular graphic design job could have cost the tech giant (hint: Vit says that whatever price you think would be reasonable you should probably “add a zero” to).
- A simpler way to re-connect with your website visitors: “Remarketing with Google Analytics helps you create remarketing lists based on certain audiences who visit your website and show interest in your products” This is a great tool to target people who have been to your site once so that they can receive additional advertisements about your product or service.
Great Company Logos: How Important are they?
Posted by Jason Shindler in business tips, Curvine on August 23, 2012
Microsoft announced its new company logo today. That got me thinking: how important is a great company logo to the success of a business?
When my firm helps businesses with logos, we often spend as much time on the logo as we spend on the entire Web site. Clients are almost always interested in getting the color, font and symbol exactly right — and they will review multiple variations of the logo to accomplish that task. They will spend weeks or even months trying to find that great company logo.
For people who feel the logo is very important, they will say that the logo is the first thing many people see of the business. They will also say that once you have one it is hard to make changes to it. Others who don’t do much with logos will say that good customer service, relationship building, proper pricing and other factors more directly related to the product or service are much more important than a logo.
The fact is they are both right: people don’t buy products and services based on a logo. But, a logo can be one piece of building a cohesive brand that makes people more likely to purchase.
What do you think? How important is a great company logo?
Tip: Find a Vendor to Perform Strategic Internet Marketing Services
Posted by Jason Shindler in business tips, Curvine on August 22, 2012
A lot of businesses need help finding a vendor to help them get the word out about their services and products. Most don’t even know it.
The first thing many people think of is to find someone to do “SEO” (Search engine optimization). Without knowing what exactly that is, businesses spend thousands of dollars chasing specific keywords in search engines. SEO can be a great technique, but it isn’t the solution to all business marketing challenges.
The solution is to find a vendor who performs Strategic Internet Marketing Services (SIMS)? SIMS involves learning about the business and strategically selecting the right tools and services to achieve the businesses goals. A great analogy would be to select SEO is like the hammer, and SIMS is like the tool chest (which includes the SEO hammer, but many other tools). When all you have is a hammer, all of your problems are nails.
Strategic Internet Marketing Services goes by many different names and so do firms that only offer one service, so it is important to be able to distinguish one from the other. Strategic Internet Marketing Services Firms offer:
- More than one service
- Focus on providing a marketing service, as opposed to a product.
- Can name types of firms that wouldn’t benefit from their services (as opposed to saying: everyone could use SEO!
Have you come across these types of firms? Post in the comments.
WA Sales Tax in Magento
Posted by Jason Shindler in business tips, Curvine on August 21, 2012
Charging the correct sales tax in Magento for WA state customers (for vendors with a presence in Washington state) is a bit tricky. There are three options:
- Use a plugin: This would be the easiest approach, but it essentially isn’t an option. The only plugin that seems to fit the bill is apparently defunct. It is mentioned in this post, but the link to the software no longer works.
- Find a 3rd Part Vendor. There is a monthly cost associated with this approach, but using someone like Avalara is probably the only way to get sales tax exactly right in WA and many other states.
- Plug in your own tax rates. The way to do this is to go get the WA DOR sales tax tables, and modify it to match Magento import specification. Their are two major issues with this approach — some zip codes have multiple rates and you’ll have to filter out the lower of the two rates to avoid charging sales tax that is too low, and you’ll also have to maintain this over time, as the data changes every quarter.
Web Hosting Companies Need to Take Security (More) Seriously
Posted by Jason Shindler in business tips, Curvine on August 20, 2012
I was helping a company today with a problem with their Web site and found it necessary to reset the client’s password. I couldn’t find the button to do it myself, so I chatted with the support staff online. They were more than willing to reset my password once I provide the client’s name and their mailing address.
Of course, their mailing address is on the Web site and the client’s name was easy to figure out with a Google search. The irony was I was resetting their password because their old password had been compromised! Little did I know how easy it would be to compromise an account.
I really can’t believe it is 2012 and security is still this lax. It isn’t just this one company (who I am intentionally not naming), it is everywhere, even at large companies like Amazon and Apple.
Here are some best practices for authenticating clients:
- Have them verify their identity with information that is non-public. The last 4 digits of the credit card number last used to make a payment, last 4 of a social, the answer to a security question or questions all sound like good options.
- Offer to call back the phone number used during sign up. This won’t work in all situations but is an easy way to make sure people are who they say they are without asking any questions.
- Send an email to a known good email address and await a reply.
And here’s a quick tip to Web hosting purchasers: try calling or chatting with support and seeing how easy it is to reset your password. If it is too easy, switch companies!
Evaluate your Progress with Google Webmaster Tools Authorship
Posted by Jason Shindler in business tips, Curvine on August 17, 2012
A few weeks ago, I wrote about hooking up your blog to Google’s Authorship program. Once you’ve done this, it is good to check in on your progress and see how Google is using the content you submitted.
Google’s Webmaster Tools Authorship Lab page has some great information. It allows you to see which URLs have shown up in search results, approximately how often then appear and how many clicks they get. You can easily chart your progress over time.
What can you do with this information?
The key is to review the data and learn which articles you are writing are generating the most interest, and try and add similar content to as to build on that. So if you article on the shipping strategies generated a lot of traffic, perhaps another article on a similar topic might do the same.


