Yes, This Link-building Tip is Definitely White Hat! :: Page Rank Do’s and Don’t!

Posted on Monday 17 November 2008

A couple of months ago I found a really clever and easy way to build thousands of links to any site (with your choice of anchor text). In the spirit of sharing I try to promote in this blog, here it is…
PAD your link-building regimen
There are thousands of software developers that provide their solution as […]
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Forums and Communities : Building, Management, and Optimization :: Web 2.0 News and Comment

Posted on Monday 17 November 2008

Moderator: Brett Tabke
Speakers:
Chris Tolles, CEO, Topix
Lawrence Coburn, President, RateItAll, Inc.
Roger B. Dooley, VP of Online Community Development, Hobsons U.S.
Brett Tabke, CEO, WebmasterWorld.com

Chris Tolles of Topix begins:

Topix is a local news aggregator. Turned it into a community around news. 40,000 local forums, 150,000 comments a day. Only provider of ZIP code local news on the web. Largest local forum provider on the web. Participation from people in over 20,000 US localities monthly. 15 million uniques a month. Roughly the same traffic as Digg.

Two equally big problems
1) Getting participation
2) Dealing with it - running and managing it is a huge nightmare

Product management 101:

How do you build a community? Provide something people want to use. Build around the people you know. Build around what you know.
Build something no one else has. ODP was the first directory powered by people.

Has to be easy to use, easy to find. Obvious keyword optimization problems. Building a strategy for being found. Topix optimizes for news. Must be easy to understand. Some communities are not clear what the focus is. Easy to see the unique value. Are you another site talking about Toyotas? What is your unique value? Ease of participation. Maximizing engagement. Let people participate without registration. Make it easy for people to come back. Give them a reason to come back. Facebook is amazing that 15% of users come back daily. Let the audience virally build your business. Passion about your product / service is key.

Dealing with participation: Your users are all trying to “get you”. Everyone on there is insane! Look for the attack on the system. A community is just another system. Assume people are out to get you. What’s the experience like if they get your voicemail? Phone calls at 2am? Look for these issues, and build it to deal with this. Have functionality to deal with complaints. Ways of managing and moderating what potential problems are before they happen. Have to take a long view on things. Building tools and functionality with expected issues that will happen.

Security is policy. Topix powers the forums for a Hartford newspaper. Had an incident where someone was hit by a car. Lots of racist talk. Was there a policy on this? No. Hard to do anything with a community unless you’ve built a policy/rules and stick with it. Need policies! The efficiency of the organization depends on it.

Don’t go down! If it’s growing, it let it go down. Tech matters - have a solid setup. Think about the technology you use. Look at your growth. Look at other sites and look at their solutions. That’s why Friendster probably went down.

Do as little as possible. If providing internet community services for free, limit your cost. If you are charging, people have expected value. Down drown in costs! But don’t abandon your community.

Killing posts - need a balance. Have a policy, and enforce it.

Brett Tabke:

Talks about Steve Job’s famous commencement address at Stanford. Main point is that you cannot connect the dots going forward, but can do it backwards. Brett is going to connect the dots in this presentation, of where he started, and where is today.

-WMW started in 1999. Before that, was SearchEngineWorld in 1997.
-Forum on ISP in 1996.
-Before that worked at Gateway 2000.
-In 85-89 was on BBSes.
-In 80’s programmed in assembly. Very community oriented, all about speed.
-First BBS community went on in 1984.
-First computer was in 1976. First program was on a Commodore PET
-First computer owned was a Commodore 64 in college.

Grew up in the 60’s - big Stark Trek fan. Dealt with social and cultural issues. If you run a forum, you must be culturally sensitive and must be PC. Built first search engine - JoeFarmer.com - an agriculture and farm search engine in ‘96. Went to lots of user groups, trade shows for Gateway.

Today, WMW focus is unique, easy to use. Required registration. No free email address registrations. Designed so that your words go high above the fold. Want members to feel important. Success = member on site time - member posts. More about relationships than content. Avoid visual distractions - visual noise. Avoided social networking stuff - but starting to add a few things this year. For WMW its all about the trust and long term relationship. Been the same site for 10 years. Standing on policy, even if meant losing friends. Subscription vs. advertisement model. Don’t care about raw page views, clicks, or membership sign ups. Concern is quality, secondary is converting users to subscribers. Now, biggest day ever for WMW was 200,000 uniques and 1 million PV’s during Florida update.

US accounts for about 46% of WMW. Big challenges are the spammers, link droppers, name droppers. #1 problem = rogue spiders and bots from cable modem ISP’s.

One-offs - 4 days offline in 2005. Results? Uniques went up 15% and stayed up 15%.

Some problems in the blogosphere flat wrong about WMW and the bot issues.

3 rules of damage control 1) release early- tell your story. 2) release often - retell your story 3) tell the truth - never compound the problem. You can never correct and error that goes corrected and unchallenged.

Speed is key: When worked on a Commodore 64 speed was everything. WMW is consistently the fastest forum on the web.

Roger Dooley:

CollegeConfidential.com = A topical community - 1.7 million visits last month.

Why community? Nueromarketing - the intersection between brain science and marketing. Measurement of brain activity. Behavioral science. It’s important because 95% of our behavior is subconscious. People need help and communities solve that. People looking for answers. Some communities are purely social.

Community participation. Why do people spend so much time helping others? Why answer questions? Why moderate? Human brain is programmed for altruism. We get a little reward for helping others. Helping makes you “hot”. Members of the opposite sex rank helping others as a key desire.

Typical member cycle: Typically people start by needing help. Stumbled on the site perhaps on Google or through a friend. Then people start interacting. The same folks realize they can help others. Not everyone makes it that far, but very typical. With new arrivals - welcome if possible. Dumb questions are OK. Flaming is not away to build a strong community.

Long term members - recognize contributions, posting latitude, moderator status. Most important to community success.

Moderators - many thing of as TOS enforcers. In reality, they should be helpful, patient, tolerant, accepting.

Recruiting mods - long history in community. Mature behavior. Friendly, welcoming.

Rewarding volunteers - they are very important. Social norms vs. market norms. Market norms are doing a job for pay. Why do mods mod? They enjoy the community. Want to give something back. Experiments have shown that volunteers can be more productive.

Good rewards are anything that recognizes contributions.

Community death: Reasons for failure - emphasis on technology vs. members. Use of inexperienced community managers. Measuring the wrong metrics.

Last up is Lawrence Coburn, talking about “The social media river”.

Definition: “A constantly updating news feed of content that be tuned and customized the by the user”.

In the mid 90’s there was the BBS. Mid 90’s came the forum and message board. Still here to stay. 1999’s blogs were the new format for growing communities. Then the profile via Friendster and Myspace became dominant for discovering content. The big leap forward was the concept of the river - don’t have to go anywhere to find your content. Facebook was the big revolution in 2006. Aggregating friends activity. Twitter came along and took the concept of the river, and let people do it from any device. SMS, IM, etc. Reduced the concept to one single question. Friendfeed is the river for multiple sites - getting lots of buzz. Aggregates all the communities together.

Why the river works? Content comes to you. It’s always fresh. You have control of what happens in the river. Relevant to you, and can adapt to changing tastes.

There are 3 primary sources of content:

1) People - you choose to follow people and see what they are up to.
2) Media type - photos, app activity, video, status updates. Total control. On Facebook, you can tune your feed - to get more relationship info, etc.
3) Topic - not subscribing to a person, but a topic. Want to hear all posts about social media for example.

River monetization - trying to find an ad format that works. Problem is making it relevant. Some revolutionary concepts emerging. Google doesn’t have a format for this yet.

The river and widgets. This concept is a threat to widgets, because sidebar is becoming a distraction. Widgets need to find a way to get into the content.

Search vs. the river: MSN live is being revamped to go into the river. Yahoo! is working on this as well - called Yahoo! OS. If you are marketer, publisher, content provider - need to get it into the river.

Read more at sexywidget.com.

Live coverage provided by Avi A. Wilensky of Promediacorp, a Manhattan based online marketing agency.


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admin @ 7:05 pm
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Reputation Management Theory :: Page Rank Do’s and Don’t!

Posted on Monday 10 November 2008

Posted by developdaly

Search Engine Reputation Management (SERM) may just be a nicely packaged sales term to re-brand SEO as something more palatable for those not willing to spend money on the "vague" idea of SEO. Nonetheless, it has a specific goal to improve the reputation of someone or something in the search results, often achieved by a process of utilizing many domains to push down the negative results.

I’ve typically viewed the process of SERM (assuming the client is trying to improve the reputation of their name) as setting up profiles on various social networks, creating a blog surrounding an individual, submitting articles to various sites, linking all of the profiles and sites together, and then using the traditional techniques of SEO to build links & traffic.

I had a thought though…

Would it be better to compete with myself?

Instead of creating one network for my client, would it be better to create two or more networks that compete with each other, avoiding linking the sites together and, if possible, avoiding the overlapping of their content category (e.g., personal, professional, philanthropy, etc.)?

Basically, what I’m talking about is creating an online presence for John Doe and then creating another online presence for…John Doe! In reality, all of the content is about the same John Doe, but in Google’s eyes  it’s two different people because the sites aren’t linking between each other and the content is about different aspects of Mr. Doe’s life.

In the example below, the single network of sites is the typical method utilized. There is essentially one hub for the client and everything stems from there. The multiple networks of sites is an example of using two or more networks competing for the same keyword, competing with each other for the top search results.

Reputation Management Theory

This method of linking between sites accounts for Google diversifying results. The John Doe I’m trying to promote in the search engines isn’t the only important John Doe in the world, so Google has to account for other John Does. By diversifying the results the consequence is that the entire network of one individual is limited in what it can achieve in search results, thus the need to create multiple personas of networks for one individual.

Now this is just a theory of mine and is not fully tested, so I’m curious about whether other SEOs have attempted this method and with what success. The obvious pitfall in this method is creating more work for yourself. Rather than focusing all of your effort on one network, you have to double your effort, but it may be worth it in the end!

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admin @ 11:25 am
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WePc.Com Launches :: Daily Search Engine Optimizations News

Posted on Thursday 30 October 2008

For the better part of a year, we at FM have been working on an innovative new project with Asus and Intel. Today it launched. WePC.com is an experiment in crowdsourcing an entirely new piece of hardware, and I’m very proud of the work we’ve done together. Check out…



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admin @ 4:25 am
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Video Demographics :: Page Rank Do’s and Don’t!

Posted on Thursday 30 October 2008

Late last year I wrote about The Top 10 Video Sites and the demographics of each site. Well a new study by Forrester Consulting for Veoh Networks in August updates some of the demographic data about who is watching videos online.
The Forrester study showed that viewers who watch more than 1 hour of online video a week […]
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admin @ 3:31 am
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The Vicious Cycle of Poverty (Or Why Jessie Won’t Go to College) :: Blog-O-Sphere News

Posted on Friday 17 October 2008

This post is my contribution to Blog Action Day, joining thousands of other bloggers to write about one topic for a single day. This year’s topic is poverty.
It’s not yet dawn as Jessie prepares breakfast for her younger brother and sister. Her father has already left for work, so it’s up to her to feed […]
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admin @ 2:41 am
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Organising Your Keywords Into Topic Clusters :: Social Marketing News

Posted on Friday 17 October 2008

In my last post in this series I gave an introduction to the topic of content creation. Today I want to talk about something I call ‘topic clusters’.
What Do Keywords Mean?
Take a look at the following list of keywords

money saving tips
money saving ideas
save money strategies
money savings investments
how to save money

Hopefully, you’ll have spotted the odd […]
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admin @ 1:59 am
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Funny, Twitter and Google :: Expert Advice on Web Site Optimization

Posted on Friday 17 October 2008





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admin @ 1:59 am
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No-Go Area Digg: Top 10 Digg Criminals, Perverts and Mad Men :: SEO Times

Posted on Friday 17 October 2008

Crime Scene by freefotouk.
As a social media fan and Mixx user I’m appalled by the horrendous conditions people over on Digg have to work at: No pay, no regulated work hours and they can be fired any day for any reason.
Digg is really a no-go area for decent netizens.
That’s why only shady figures and downright […]
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admin @ 1:45 am
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Beanstalk Wins :: MSN/Live Search News

Posted on Tuesday 30 September 2008

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admin @ 1:34 am
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Sorry Google Webmaster Team, But I Gotta Call BS On This One :: Web 2.0 News and Comment

Posted on Tuesday 30 September 2008

Some direct evidence countering the suggestions Google Webmaster Central blog made yesterday.

54 Vote(s)


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admin @ 1:20 am
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Jason Gambert - Oh Yes, We Trust You :: SEO Times

Posted on Tuesday 30 September 2008

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Search Engine Optimization is not an exact science. It takes lot’s of work and research. Trial and Error. Read through our posts here and try to learn from our experience. We offer some of our insight… news and comment. Please feel free to share your thoughts, and ideas. The site does allow "follows" so post your links.

admin @ 1:14 am
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Link Building: The Future Of Relationships :: Web 2.0 World!

Posted on Monday 22 September 2008

The Future Of Linking

Link building is hard work.

Have you ever tried to get people to link to your pure commerce/commercial brochure-web site? You know how tough it is out there. The link economy has become so established, we’ve even got strategies built around the idea of never linking out. Once people perceive something to be valuable, they’ll think twice about just handing it over for nothing.

So what is an SEO supposed to do?

The key to linking in an environment where there is high value placed on links is to think of linking less as a process, and more in terms of building relationships.

Here are a few linking ideas designed to reduce the pain and increase the effectiveness of your link building campaign.

Relationship Link Building 101

The first step in your link building strategy occurs before your site hits the web.

If you’re thinking of launching a static brochure-ware site, and link building is part of your marketing strategy, think again.

Why?

There is less chance for relationship building.

Preferably, you want a site with plenty of potential for on-going community involvement and interaction.

Examples?

News Sites. Social sites. Blogs. Frequently-updated information sites. Teaching sites. Advice sites. Q&A. Wikipedia-style sites. The static brochure website will still have a place, but those sites with higher levels of user engagement will trump it.

Produce Really, Really Interesting Content

Posting what everyone else is posting is not interesting.

Look at what everyone else is posting and take a new angle on the the topic. Don’t just go one better, go ten better. Learn the lessons of The Purple Cow. Be worth remarking upon. People are hungry for unique, quality content.

They’ll link to you if you have it.

If your competitors are spending ten minutes on their posts, you spend a day. Spend a whole week. Cover areas no one else is covering. Make your posts game-changing posts. You’re going to need not one, but a consistent body of such posts. Think about the sites you link to. You need to aim to be better than those sites.

At very least, you need to offer a point of difference in order to be linkworthy.

Link Out

If you’re new, you’re going to need friends. You’re going to need influential friends.

A link out to sites run by influential people becomes an advertisement for your site in their referral logs. People will follow the links back to see who is talking about them, and if you’re got an impressive set of articles/posts, you’ll be on their radar in no time.

Give Forward

Most modern marketing is based on the idea of reciprocation. If you do something for others, without requesting something in return, most people feel they should reciprocate.

Give something valuable. Give wide. Give freely. Some of it will eventually come back.

Give nothing, and you’re guaranteed that nothing will come back.

Lose The Ads

The less commercial you appear, the more likely you’ll get linked to, especially from .edu and other authority information hubs. Few people want to link to sites plastered with advertising unless that site already has established authority.

You can introduce advertising once you’ve built up link authority.

Flattery Gets You Everywhere

Make people feel important. Make them look good. If you make them look good, they’ll want to point that fact out to others. They’ll do your marketing for you.

Look For Companies With “In The News” Pages

This tip flows on from flattery. Write about companies in a good light. To find companies that have “in the news” style pages, do a Google search for [your industry + “in the news”].

Use Meme Trackers

Monitor upcoming news stories. Use Google Hot Trends, subscribe to Google Alerts, and check out Twitter stuff like Twitter Search and Twitscoop.

Write stories about fast-breaking events that have little competition but high interest levels. If the meme gets big enough, news sites will look around for content to quote, and, given a lack of competition, hopefully they’ll quote yours.

Get Seen In The Community

Participate in answer sites, forums, article sites, Wikipedia, Squidoo, Amazon et al. Contribute something of real value. You’ll get direct links in some cases, but at very least you’ll raise awareness, which can translate into links down the line.

The Designer Angle

Get your site re-designed by a high profile designer who has a history of showcasing his/her work.

The cost of the design might be more than covered by the value of the inbound links and attention you receive, especially if the design is mentioned in trade bibles, like Smashing Magazine.

Old-Skool

Less about relationships, but good tools to have in the box.

Trade Links

Trade links, ask for links, beg for links. Hey, it still works, although it’s probably the least effective method, and most time consuming. Outsource this task, if you can.

List With Local Business Services

List with your Chamber of Commerce, Business Bureau’s, Government Advisories, libraries, and other appropriate institutions.

Linkbait

Link baiting is when you write content with the specific aim of attracting links. It works, but you’ve got to be careful with your pitch. Get the tone wrong for your audience, and you’ll put people off.

Try:

  • Top Ten Lists
  • Top Myths
  • Top 100
  • How To Do Something Exceptional With (Seemingly) No Effort
  • Courting Controversy
  • Be The First To Do Something
  • Being Outrageous

Press Releases

Almost all press releases end up in the web equivalent of the wastepaper bin, but if you can provide a fresh, newsy angle, there is significant potential for links.

Try combining link bait strategies with press release strategies. A local angle works well for local news services, who are often starved of local news.

Directory Listings

Keep the following criteria in mind when evaluating which web directories are worth your time.

  • They appear in the SERPs
  • Offer direct links - i.e they aren’t routed through a script, or no-followed.
  • High crawl frequency - check out the latest crawl date in Google cache. If the directory pages haven’t been cached in months, chances are Google may regard them as low quality.
  • Look for quality standards - Matt Cutts outlined Google’s view of a good directory. Directories that stay closest to these guidelines are more likely to be around for the long haul.
  • Beware of sitewide linking

For more detail, check out Web Directories…are They Relevant to SEO?

Share One Strategy

If you’ve reached this far, and thought “I know this stuff!” - great :)

How about sharing your single best link acquisition strategy with the community :)

The Future Of Linking

Links have been so important for so long now, but are things about to change?

In the dark, distant past - 1997 - the web was about publishing.

However, the web ecosystem is evolving into more of an interactive space, based on platforms.

As a result, we’re seeing a different kind of website emerge - it is more “place” than “brochure”. Think Facebook, YouTube, Wikipedia, Blogs, et al. We’re seeing more applications. We’re seeing more cloud computing. The web is becoming a place where we truly interact, as opposed to simply publish.

Google’s ranking models have, in the past, been based on publishing models - specifically, an academic citation model in the form of PageRank. This approach will become less effective at determining relevance as people move away from the publishing model and towards interaction and engagement.

Google realize this, of course. This is why I think Google will be adapting their model to monitor and gauge interaction. Interaction will become a new valuable metric as to a sites worth, which will flow into ranking.

In a recent post on The Official Googleblog, Google talked of how interaction will change how systems “think and react”:

“As we’re already seeing, people will interact with the cloud using a plethora of devices: PCs, mobile phones and PDAs, and games. But we’ll also see a rush of new devices customized to particular applications, and more environmental sensors and actuators, all sending and receiving data via the cloud. The increasing number and diversity of interactions will not only direct more information to the cloud, they will also provide valuable information on how people and systems think and react….. As systems are allowed to learn from interactions at an individual level, they can provide results customized to an individuals situational needs: where they are located, what time of day it is, what they are doing. And translation and multi-modal systems will also be feasible, so people speaking one language can seamlessly interact with people and information in other languages.”

Notice the frequency with which Google use the terms “interact”.

I think this hints at the future direction of search and ranking. Google will increasingly shift from measuring external popularity metrics, such as linking, to measuring the level of interaction, if they are not already doing so.

There have been three recent developments that search marketers should be aware of:

This all points to the increasing role of engagement metrics.

In order to positioned well in the future, you’ll need to think as much about the level and type of interaction on your site as you will as you will about link authority. This comes all the way back to my first point above - build a site with plenty of potential for relationship building.

Something to ponder :)

Further Reading:

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Search Engine Optimization is not an exact science. It takes lot’s of work and research. Trial and Error. Read through our posts here and try to learn from our experience. We offer some of our insight… news and comment. Please feel free to share your thoughts, and ideas. The site does allow "follows" so post your links.

admin @ 11:32 am
Filed under: phoenix search engine marketing firm
Thirty Day Challenge Update :: Link Marketing News

Posted on Monday 22 September 2008

I’ve not really posted as much as I thought I would about this year’s Thirty Day Challenge. In this post I’ll explain a little more about the philosophy of the 30DC, what you can expect to learn if you take part and what my plans are from this point on.
What is the 30DC Business Model?
In […]
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Search Engine Optimization is not an exact science. It takes lot’s of work and research. Trial and Error. Read through our posts here and try to learn from our experience. We offer some of our insight… news and comment. Please feel free to share your thoughts, and ideas. The site does allow "follows" so post your links.

admin @ 11:05 am
Filed under: phoenix search engine marketing firm
What Does the Stock Market Implosion Mean for Your Online Business? :: Social Marketing News

Posted on Monday 22 September 2008

Posted by randfish

The news this week is pretty dire. On the heels of the US Government’s bailout of Freddie Mac, Fannie Mae and AIG Financial, stock markets in the US, Russia, Japan and elsewhere are suffering tremendous losses. The NYTimes paints a linkbait-worthy, interactive picture of the financial industry’s collapse. If you’re anything like me, this news brings on some anxiety and fear - neither of which are good for startup businesses or those seeking to grow. Thus, I figured it would be worthwhile to give a brief synopsis, discuss the causes and symptoms and make some predictions and suggestions for the search industry and those in online marketing on how to weather and even prosper in the upcoming storm.

First, there’s a number of items causing the turmoil:

  • Subprime Mortgage Crisis - This BBC interactive graphic piece does a good job explaining the problem, but in essence, lenders discovered that by leveraging the bond market, they could issue loans to far less credit-worthy borrowers at higher, variable-interest rates. With far more people able to afford mortgages, housing prices continued to rise from their already high levels in the early 2000s. From there, the path was obvious. Interest rates and foreclosures went up (due to both the insolvency of some less-than-ideal borrowers and the rise in variable interest rate loans), making houses unaffordable. Defaults led to price drops which led to more homeowners finding the price of their mortgages higher than the value of their homes and walking away. This spiral led to even more price falls and defaults, which eventually took their toll on the investors in the subprime mortgage bonds (and the banks that issued them).
  • Gas & Energy Prices - High oil prices stem (most probably) from rising demand in emerging economies, middle-east conflicts, natural disasters and an enormous increase in speculation about so-called "peak oil" (the point at which Earth’s accessible oil supplies start to dwindle).
  • Inflation - Gas prices impact an incredible range of goods and services, including virtually any product requiring transportation. Higher oil prices also drive up energy prices, which cause a rise in consumer and business costs across the board.
  • Bankruptcies/Insolvencies of Financial Sector Firms - The events surrounding Freddie Mac, Fannie Mae, Lehman Brothers, AIG and Merril Lynch all contributed to the last 7 days of upheaval that resulted in an extreme confidence drain on investors.

Second, there’s the immediate results on Wall Street and other trading markets worldwide:

  • On Monday, September 8, the Dow Jones Industrial Average sat at 11,510. As of Wednesday the 18th, it had fallen to 10,609, a loss of 9.2%.
  • Traders rushed to buy "safe" investments like gold and Treasury Bonds, despite the extremely low rates of return on these vehicles.
  • Russia’s Micex index fell 25% (and lost $425 Billion USD in value) in what’s being called the "biggest financial crisis since the default of 1998."
  • Asian markets suffered tremendously as well from Australia to Japan to Hong Kong and beyond.

Third, there’s the longer term issues that arise when stock markets plunge and investment capital turns risk-averse. Sadly, the confidence (or lack thereof) of investors often turns into a domino-like effect:

  • A Higher Cost of Capital - Lending rates will rise to account for the greater riskiness, meaning capital will be less available to grease the wheels on financial transactions of all types.
  • Lowered Investment in Businesses - Business owners and investors will reduce their inputs, meaning business opportunities will go un-exploited due to potential riskiness. Startups will have a tougher time getting funded and those who own companies will be less likely to expand or make significant purchases.
  • Job & Wage Cuts - As companies look at ways to save, they’ll inevitably hit on employment, causing a rise in unemployment. This has the added impact of further damaging the economy as those without jobs will contribute far less to the economy as a whole.
  • Higher Borrowing Costs - In addition to making private ventures more costly, this will have an extra impact on the already suffering housing market and probably hurt the economic picture even further.
  • Lower Spending by Consumers - When investors and businesses tighten their belts, consumers almost always follow. Once again, with consumer spending dominating economic activity, particularly in a rough housing market, this is sure to incite further declines in the world’s economic forecast.

If the outlook sounds grim, that’s because it is. Many of the financial analysts you’ll see in the media are parroting similar lines - they’ve never seen it this bad before. Of course, that kind of quote makes it’s way into nearly every media article on financial downfalls; it makes for a more dire piece that way, and the financial media feeds off bad news (case-in-point: WSJ’s soaring traffic over the last week).

What about the Internet/Search World?

There’s some good news here. Tech stocks have not been hammered the same way those in the financial sector have. Google, Yahoo!, Microsoft, Apple, IBM and other mainstays are actually surprisingly cash-rich, and have fairly solid fundamentals. The online ad market may be weakening, but the trend towards greater Internet usage is accelerating at a tremendous pace in the developing world (and Google’s lending a helping hand there) as well as continuing a slower but visible rise in developed nations.

There’s a number of factors that make me believe, personally, that the Internet is actually a very good place to ride out this type of a storm:

  • Web businesses in general have virtually no connections to the real estate / financial markets directly (though they certainly can be impacted by general market downfalls caused by the recent insolvencies).
  • Web adoption is rising around the world (though it has tapered off slightly in the US), and broadband continues to drive increases in usage.
  • Higher gas prices make using the web a more attractive alternative activity.
  • A downturned economy means more people seeking bargains, and the web has become the best resource for that pursuit. Price sensitivity and web usage have been linked in the past, and I suspect that trend will continue.
  • The generations emerging as the majority of the workforce will soon be digital natives and this spells tremendous new opportunities for the web as an economic force.
  • Search demand isn’t dropping. Just because investors are running scared and buying gold, silver and t-bills doesn’t mean the world’s digital population is going to stop performing searches. There might be less discretionary spending, but my guess is that such a larger fraction of it will be performed online in the years to come that it will outweigh the potentially lower conversion rates.
  • SEOmoz’s own conversions haven’t dipped at all in the market turmoil, suggesting that folks are turning to SEO and finding value. In fact, cancellations of PRO memberships have actually dropped as well. Granted, this is hardly a macro symbol of the online marketing world, but it does suggest that businesses continue to allocate budgets towards SEO. We’ve also gotten a solid number of requests for consulting work, adding further credence to this prediction.

Recommendations of Internet Marketers and Web Startups

I’m certainly no seer, but I do have a bit of experience in this field. From 2001-2003, Gillian and I weathered an ugly storm of a downturned economic climate, lack of investment opportunities and a market that generally despised anything "dot com," and yet managed to build a successful company from the ashes. I’ll share my best suggestions below:

  • Snap Up Cheap Talent - if the job market does turn south, that spells opportunity to grab some great people, often at less exorbitant salaries than in an up-tempo economy. Some smart startups in NYC are already jumping on the tech talent lost in the last week.
  • Invest in Easy-to-Test, High ROI Projects - Rather than taking the "let’s sit this one out" approach, I’d suggest taking a slightly riskier route and investing in projects where you can quickly and easily determine potential ROI. Stagnation is not only bad for business, it’s bad for the economy as a whole, and those who generally come out on top in business as a whole are the same ones with the guts and brains to invest in smart projects when times are tough.
  • Market in Trackable Ways - Networking can be tough to measure, as can brand marketing, TV ads, print media and other non-electronic forms of advertising. If you’re going to cut back, do so in these arenas and re-invest somewhere you can watch your money grow in exceptional detail… like SEO, PPC, E-mail marketing and web advertising. With every click tracked, you’ll know exactly what you’re spending and how much it’s earning you.
  • Watch your Burn Rate - With investment and even credit hard to come by, it’s a good time to review the soundness of your financial picture and outlook. Check your balance sheet and cash flow statements and be sure you can weather 6-12 bad months. If you can’t, you’ve got two options - invest in growing quickly or find ways to cut expenses. The former may seem riskier, but if done right, it’s much more appealing and potentially smarter than trimming budgets and people (as you’re often also cutting into sales when you scale back).
  • Make sure Your Business is Your Passion - This is always true, but in times of economic turmoil when you might have to work longer, harder hours and miss out on some of life’s luxuries, the best cure is to love what you do. Chris Anderson even gives you a better shot at succeeding than the pros :-)
  • Start Your Own Business - The ease with which anyone can start an online business makes it an incredibly attractive prospect and if your’e reading SEOmoz, you probably already know a hundred ways to earn a living off the web. Find your niche and dive in - it’s a surprisingly low cost investment, even if it doesn’t work out.

Looking forward to hearing from you about how you plan to weather the stock market storm on the web.

p.s. I’m taking a few extra days off after my wedding last weekend, but should be back to more regular contributions on the site on Wednesday the 24th.

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