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This is a crucial point indeed. Many of the me-too services similar to Tumblr (e.g. Posterous where I have made this point and the founders said they are working on it) suffer from lack of good search. I do however think the next step isn't searching one network at a time but searching many at a time, meaningfully --> semantic web.
PS: You turn out posts faster than one can read or process. I am keeping up. Just.
InfoESource.com
http://seo.originalsignal.com/ ( OriginalSignal is a awesome aggregator)
For those who want to see Google Webmaster Guidelines (and others including one from SEOMoz) in Flash - visit us at
http://vizedu.com/tag/seo/
Another good SEO site is: http://www.seo-theory.com
Also interesting article about myths of SEO by @leeodden
http://allbusiness.sfgate.com/technology/softwa...
http://twitter.com/Adgenius
Watch the video on Marketing Over Coffee!
That is why I post the name of the article on which I link to in my twitters because every title has keywords in it.
I use search extensively in order to find potential new friends or potential new clients or just to see what's the word out there.
If I search for my name on Google the first 3 results are my websites but after that comes links to my social media posts or accounts and there are 4,060 pages containing my name.
So, yes, search is a part of social media. Basically you can benefit from the direct contact with your friends and followers by helping them and sharing good content but also you can benefit from search if you're using keywords in your posts
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jmacofearth - Dell Global Online
(On Google, there's 8 results as of today).
Would you say that traditional search and social media search dovetail each other? That is, in order for enterprises to fully optimize their web presence, should they understand the difference between them and how to best couple them?
Traditional search provides different results from social media search. I think that as social media becomes more mainstream, people will learn to use both methods to find their answers.
If I ask Where Can I Get a Purple Meatball Sundae in Philadelphia?, the results on Google would be vastly different than the results from, say, Search.Twitter. With Twitter or other social search, I get more immediate access to human brains. With Google, I get access to servers and alogorithms.
Time-sensitivity, relevancy and context/quality are different between the two kinds of search. Plus, Twitter searches potentially could link us to other people much faster to help spur further direct quering than you could get from a blog.
I'm not SEO expert. But I would think that social media search seems to extend how people find what they're looking for.
Optimizing on each is different also. With Google, we have pages of text to optimize serps. With Twitter, you've got 140 characters. But you could be tactical in your tweeting. Of course the problem with that kind of approach is that if it's not done right, it could disrupt your ability to hold quality conversations.
How much of a game-changer is social media search? How will the search aspect, and efforts to optimize, affect how social media is used?
This holds true for bloggers/publishers as well. Learn the basics of SEO, there are a ton of resources out there.
But where social becomes interesting as its relates to search, is in two places: reputation management and trust management.
SEO/SEM is important only as a function of driving traffic to your publication. Reputation/Trust managment squarely sits on the shoulders of user generated content, or social content. What I generate outside of my blog becomes as important as the content I generate on my blog itself. Why?
Because I am the sum of my parts. Each tweet I send, each photo I take, each video I upload allows potential clients and friends (anyone looking to create a relationship with me, or vice versa) helps to create trust and support my reputation/expertise.
Damn you Brogan! You have inspired me to write yet another blog post!
On the flip side, it's important to recognize that they are not the same thing. Neither is one merely a subset of the other. They both require specialized skills, and just because someone can do one, doesn't mean they're prepared to do the other well. The important thing is to recognize what each discipline is, educate yourself on what it can achieve and how, know what it can't accomplish, and be honest about which you are good at. Then, hire an expert to work with you to fill in the gaps if your skillsets aren't enough.
i think social media strategy should start from seo, but ill have more on that in a post later.
Jacob
http://thefuturebuzz.com/2008/09/13/blog-search...
http://www.sitefling.com/index.php
I really enjoyed it and I'm starting to use some of the tactics taught in it.
http://www.buzzstream.com/blog/seo-and-pr-are-m...
There's lots of talk among SEOs today about the fact that nothing moves the search results needle more than off-page factors, the largest of which is inbound links. The old methods of building phony links and trying to game Google just don't work any more (and if you want to bet on anything, bet that Google will just keep getting better at sniffing out illegitimate link building strategies). So how then do you increase your inbound links in today's environment? By creating great content and building strong relationships. Sounds like a big PR and social media strategy to me : )
http://www.highrankings.com/forum/
However, what SEOs consider "social media" is not the same as how many other marketers define it. SEOs tend to focus on whatever will give them links and traffic over building community, branding or relationships. This perspective is crystal clear by conference sessions, blog posts and forum threads on the topic within the SEO industry.
The opportunity for many of the digital marketing, interactive, PR and advertising efforts is to consider SEO as an additional channel when creating social media strategies. In the context of content publishing, social media efforts provide crawlable content (text, media) as well as signals (links) affecting how those assets are sorted in search results.
As the social web grows, the expectation for consumers in their information discovery and recommendation habits will increasingly involve a combination of what's available via search and social media. Just remember, if it can be searched on, it can be optimized.
Check out "How Does Social Media Affect Search?" for more thoughts on that.
I really enjoyed it and I’m starting to use some of the tactics taught in it.
Thanks..