Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,558,173 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Search engine marketing, VoIP and other news from the telecom front.


Search Engine Marketing

Search engine marketing, or search engine optimization Designing a Web site so that search engines easily find the pages and index them. The goal is to have your page be in the top 10 results of a search. Optimization includes the choice of words used in the text paragraphs and the placement of those words on the page, both visible and hidden  (SEM and SEO (Search Engine Optimization, Search Engine Optimizer) See search engine optimization. , respectively), are terms you're probably hearing a lot lately. It's a field that is brimming brim  
n.
1. The rim or uppermost edge of a hollow container or natural basin.

2. A projecting rim or edge: the brim of a hat.

3. A border or an edge. See Synonyms at border.
 with activity these days. As with many tools, it's used well by some companies, and abused rampantly by others. On the one hand, most companies are working to legitimately increase their search engine rank to raise the profile of their companies. On the nefarious side, other companies and individuals are using unethical unethical

said of conduct not conforming with professional ethics.
 tactics to raise their own profiles--a practice known as search engine spam E-mail that is not requested. Also known as "unsolicited commercial e-mail" (UCE), "unsolicited bulk e-mail" (UBE), "gray mail" and just plain "junk mail," the term is both a noun (the e-mail message) and a verb (to send it). .

The complete picture of what constitutes search engine spam is beyond the scope of this column, but essentially it's a tactic to trick search engines into ranking your site higher than it would normally appear. Again, there is a gray area between what a search engine considers legitimate and what it considers spam. For example, in most cases, using tags and titles with intelligent naming conventions
For conventions governing Wikipedia article names, see Wikipedia:Naming conventions.
A naming convention is a collection of rules followed by a set of names.
 is a legitimate practice and won't get you in trouble. Deliberately using a certain few words over and over again on your site to artificially rank the site higher can be considered spamming, depending on the frequency of the practice, among other factors.

The goal of this column is to educate companies on what they should be doing to increase their search engine rank, while staying in the bounds of ethics, not to mention the law. I won't be teaching "tricks," but I will share observations about what works and what doesn't.

My first observation is that generally speaking, the sites that rank highest are news sites. Many blogs also rank very high. The reason for the high ranking See Google bomb.  has to do with the frequent updates that both these kinds of sites get.

Bearing this in mind, how do you leverage these ideas for your Web site that sells clothing? Without question, the most obvious way to do this is to keep your site updated with lots of apparel news and fashion tips.

Get creative in your thinking.

Let's consider that you are an apparel manufacturer and you launched a site that focuses on sales in the clothing business. Imagine having your site, or a spin-off The situation that arises when a parent corporation organizes a subsidiary corporation, to which it transfers a portion of its assets in exchange for all of the subsidiary's capital stock, which is subsequently transferred to the parent corporation's shareholders.  site, become the most important site people visit when they are looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 clothing sales. In other words Adv. 1. in other words - otherwise stated; "in other words, we are broke"
put differently
, you would have links to the Macy's Labor Day Labor Day, holiday celebrated in the United States and Canada on the first Monday in September to honor the laborer. It was inaugurated by the Knights of Labor in 1882 and made a national holiday by the U.S. Congress in 1894.  sales site and discuss what the best values are that week. Think of the marketing you can do to the people that depend on your site. You can offer coupons or promotions on this site for your own clothing line. The options are numerous.

Then there are blogs. Everyone seems to be blogging nowadays. Blogs are a great way to generate sticky content (World-Wide Web) sticky content - World-Wide Web pages that refer only or mostly to pages on the same website. This is important to some commercial sites who want users to keep accessing pages from their site because they receive advertising income from each hit.  that gets virally communicated. Think of a blog in the same manner as you would sending speakers to industry events. Many companies like to have speakers at events because it creates excellent exposure for the company and, more important, helps the company attract new customers.

Blogging works like speaking, but without the travel expense. It's important to discover, within your company, who makes a good blogger and who doesn't. Job title doesn't guarantee success as a blogger: There are many CEO-level people who don't posses a tight enough grip on grammar to blog well without the aid of editing by another person. These people should be identified and filtered before they blog. It's also important to understand that the more you blog, the more you blog, the more people will read it. There is likely an exponential relationship to readers versus number of blog entries per day. Feel free to visit my blog at richtehrani.com to see my latest thoughts.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

One thing worth pointing out is the legal ramifications ramifications nplAuswirkungen pl  of blogging. Who owns the content, and what about copyrights and redistribution, etc.? You will want to decide who owns your blog content and determine a copyright strategy. The legal world is still grappling with the concept of blogs, including what should and shouldn't be posted on them. For example, a flight attendant was recently fired from Delta for posting questionable pictures of herself on her blog, and in a separate incident, a Google employee was asked (apparently, quite politely) to remove a blog entry because he divulged compensation details as well as minutes from an internal company meeting. This ordeal was recounted in a blog entry titled "Oops" (http://99zeros.blogspot.com/2005/01/oops.html).

Partnering

A quick way to further boost SEO is to partner with industry Web sites that can supply news to your site, or allow your blogs to be hosted on the partner's site. For example, going back to the apparel manufacturer example, you might approach Vogue and see if they will host your blog. Obviously, your blog will receive much more attention on such a prominent Web site than on your own. A magazine such as Vogue may charge you for this, but it would likely be worth the cost, depending on the fee and how important SEO is to your company.

Understand, though, that running news on your site gets tricky. On the one hand, it's a great way to generate traffic, but it's important that you establish controls on what runs on your site. If you are Saleforce.com, it's likely you don't want a Seibel news release boasting of their dominance in hosted CRM (Customer Relationship Management) An integrated information system that is used to plan, schedule and control the presales and postsales activities in an organization.  on your site. If you are Nike, you don't want to discover on your site that New Balance just shipped its ten millionth shoe.

As you probably realize at this point, SEO is not an issue that can be fully covered in one or two pages. What may be the best article I have ever read on SEO is contained in this issue of Customer Interaction Solutions[R], on page 58. It is titled "Beyond Search Engine Marketing--Increasing Post-Click Conversion Rates With Intelligent Search" by Jason Hekl of InQuira. It is a must-read, in my opinion.

IP Contact Center Race

I recently had a chance to make a site visit to a contact center in Indianapolis, Indiana “Indianapolis” redirects here. For other uses, see Indianapolis (disambiguation).
Indianapolis (IPA: [ˌɪndiəˈnæpəlɪs]) is the capital city of the U.S.
. The company, Finish Line, is a retailer that sells sneakers sneakers
Noun, pl

US, Canad, Austral & NZ canvas shoes with rubber soles

sneakers npl (US) → zapatos mpl de lona; zapatillas fpl 
 and some apparel, primarily via their hundreds of stores located around the country. What most impressed me is that this is one of those companies that really understands technology and how to use it to the company's advantage. The company's contact center consists of about 50 agents, all working diligently over VoIP. Finish Line told me that what they really like about VoIP is the ease of setting up new agents ... just one wire to the desktop.

Finish Line currently uses Interactive Intelligence solutions. They informed me they shopped around with Avaya, Cisco and other companies, and none could do what Interactive Intelligence does. Thus far, Finish Line reports they have seen no drawbacks to IP contact center technology, and they are looking forward to having wireless SIP-based phones so they can monitor agents on the go.

Google As Screen Pop

I recently blogged about the idea of Google getting into VoIP. Currently, there is a great deal of speculation about this happening, and the rumor started as a result of a personal ad Google ran regarding the need for dark fiber and a person who can manage it. Whether the rumors are true is anyone's guess, but what is worth thinking about is the fact that Google is slowly building desktop alternatives to Microsoft from desktop search to e-mail. Will VoIP integration with their current search, e-mail and address book products be the way Google jumps ahead of Gates' baby?

If you think about it, isn't Google in an interesting position to do a search on incoming callers? Imagine when your phone rings and the caller I.D. reads "Jim's Mortgage Company." Wouldn't it be interesting if, in addition to the call, you received a screen pop with the results of a Google search Google is owned by Google, Inc. whose mission statement is to "organize the world's information and make it universally accessible and useful". The largest search engine on the web, Google receives several hundred million queries each day through its various services. ? Imagine if Google organized all of the results by tabbing different results into related categories so you could click on a tab marked "Better Business Bureau," or "Legal Issues" or, on a positive note, "Case Studies," or "Customer Lists."

Even if Google doesn't get into VoIP directly but chooses to work with other providers, wouldn't it be great to integrate this search functionality with caller I.D.? Imagine if Google connected such a system to its corporate search appliance A search appliance (SA) is a device which is attached to a corporate network for the purpose of indexing the content shared across that network in a way that is similar to a web search engine. . You could also have tabs for "Invoices Past Due," "Orders Sold" and "Notes." Imagine the data-mining possibilities inherent in this scenario. Business intelligence departments should be drooling drooling

the discharge of saliva from the mouth. A normal feature in some breeds of dogs such as St. Bernard, Newfoundland and English bulldog, presumably because of their loose, pendulous lips.
 at the prospect. You could have a range of vital content at your fingertips "Fingertips" is a 1963 number-one hit single recorded live by "Little" Stevie Wonder for Motown's Tamla label. Wonder's first hit single, "Fingertips" was the first live, non-studio recording to reach number-one on the Billboard Pop Singles chart in the United States.  when someone calls. You could literally know everything about the caller before you answer. Imagine getting a call from the purchasing manager A Purchasing Manager is an employee within a company, business or other organization who is responsible at some level for buying or approving the acquisition of goods and services needed by the company.  of GE and knowing her stock price just went up 10 percent a moment before she called. You might see all published articles that include her name. Imagine notifying her about the article that says she is a financial genius.

I am more enthusiastic now about the future of communications than at any time in the past. I see the true openness afforded by VoIP, and I see the ability for us to communicate in a much better way than ever before. What is different about communications today than at any time in the past is that any company is able to drastically alter the communications landscape and the way we think about communicating. Vonage popularized VoIP, Packet8 popularized videophones, and Skype showed you can have millions of people download your VoIP software in a matter of months with no marketing and no sales force.

Contrast this to 10 years ago, when innovation came from only large telecom companies and was sold to you as part of a closed system from a single vendor. The future of telecom, in my opinion, is VoIP 2.0, and it is everything we will be able to do now that calls travel over IP. Think of the power and control we will have when we are able to integrate any application we want with virtually any communications system In telecommunication, a communications system is a collection of individual communications networks, transmission systems, relay stations, tributary stations, and data terminal equipment (DTE) usually capable of interconnection and interoperation to form an integrated whole. . The Google example alone can likely improve contact center efficiency by a minimum of 10 percent if implemented correctly. The potential is there. We really need to keep an open mind and wait for the best and brightest to dazzle daz·zle  
v. daz·zled, daz·zling, daz·zles

v.tr.
1. To dim the vision of, especially to blind with intense light.

2.
 us.

Shameless shame·less  
adj.
1. Feeling no shame; impervious to disgrace.

2. Marked by a lack of shame: a shameless lie.
 Plug

Our Speech-World/IP Contact Center event comes to Dallas, May 24-26. This is the only event in the world focusing exclusively on IP contact center and speech technologies. These are the most exciting areas in the contact center business right now, and TMC TMC Technology Marketing Corporation (Norwalk, Connecticut)
TMC Texas Medical Center (Houston, TX)
TMC Traffic Message Channel
TMC The Movie Channel
TMC Traffic Management Center
 is excited to host a community of call center decision makers eager to improve the productivity and efficiency of their customer service. I personally hope to see you there. Please check out www.speechworld.com for details.

Sincerely,

Rich Tehrani

Group Publisher, Group Editor-in-Chief

rtehrani@tmcnet.com

For information and subscriptions, visit www.TMCnet.com or call 203-852-6800.
COPYRIGHT 2005 Technology Marketing Corporation
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:voice over internet protocol; meshed briefs
Author:Tehrani, Rich
Publication:Customer Interaction Solutions
Article Type:Column
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Feb 1, 2005
Words:1833
Previous Article:In contact centers, CRM & teleservices ... quality and marketing are not part-time jobs!(Publisher's Outlook)(Editorial)
Next Article:The TMC Seal of Approval.(2005 Recommended Vendor List)(Technology Marketing Corp.)(Brief Article)
Topics:



Related Articles
Franklin Telecom Helps Set Standard For Voice on the Internet; Tempest System Incorporates MGCP as Well As H.323.
VoIP Telecom Inc. Announces Rescission of Agreement With E-Vegas.Com Inc.
VoIP Telecom, Inc. Selects Clarent Corp. to Supply Products for IP Telephony Service Rollout in Asia Pacific.
VoIP Telecom, Inc And GoldWeb Technologies, Inc Announce Contract For Deployment Of TriStar 3G Network Integration Wireless Technology.
Nuera Communications Announces Expansion of its INSTA Solutions Program.
Convergence of voice and data creates new opportunities.
Nuvio Named Among Top 15 VoIP Companies of 2004 -- FierceVoIP Honors Nuvio as One of the `Fierce 15' Emerging Internet Telephony Firms of the Year.
Fonix Telecom Provides Enterprise and Corporate Customers with Fonix Fone VoIP Solution.
TeliPhone Inc. Signs Private-Label Distribution Deal With NCTel Telecom Inc.
Westcon Group and Firetide Expand Agreement to Deliver Competitive Wireless Mesh Solutions for VARs in North America.

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles