Morettini on Management

General Management and Marketing Advice for Software and Tech Companies

Category: Marcom

Google Sitemap Creator

There are a great many different avenues to creating a website optimized for Search Engine Optimization (SEO). We’ve covered many aspects of this very important marketing activity in several past columns. Let’s talk about one more today, creating a sitemap for your site.

Many websites have historically had a page containing an index, or map, of every page available on your website. The reason was to provide a master index for the human eyes that were surfing your site. It was always considered to be most helpful for very large sites, as a way to efficiently find exactly what you were looking for. That rationale for creating a site map still exists today.

But there is now an additional reason for creating a sitemap, and it is possibly even more compelling.

Google has enacted a program that allows webmasters to make it easier for the Google Bots to successfully find, surf and index their sites. They call it Google Sitemaps. It is essentially a specialized form of the old sitemap concept, this time utilizing an XML format rather than plain old human language. By using this special XML format, you enable the Bots to easily “read” what your site looks like, so it will know how scan the site, and (hopefully!) index it fully. Google has built in some ability to troubleshoot your site by viewing it from the Bots perspective, allowing you to fix any issues that might prevent your site from appearing in the index. Things like flash, frames, etc, if they are issues, by participating in Google’s program you might become aware of the issues and be able to fix them. I believe that Google is also working with the other major search engines to make this a standard.

There are some nice things that drop out of creating a Google sitemap. You can tell the Bots what the most important pages are, how often the site is updated, etc. Supposedly this is simply a way to make it more efficient to get your site indexed (IF the Bots decide it is worth indexing), and doesn’t give your site any preference with respect to actually GETTING indexed, or WHERE your site might fall in the rankings. But it’s Google, so you never know! They are after all, the “international company of mystery.”

There are many good free Google Sitemap creators available on the Internet. I’ve used a couple of them without incident. Here’s one of the newer ones that I’ve run across:

XML-Sitemaps.com

Give it a try and let me know what you think.

Phil Morettini
PJM Consulting
www.pjmconsult.com

Overture and its Bid Tool

I wanted to tell you quickly about another very useful tool for Search Engine Marketing. It’s the Overture Bid Tool, which you can access from several different places. I’ve linked a site above that is accessible to anyone; if you are currently doing business with Overture, you can of course access it from within the Overture site.

For those of you who don’t know, Overture is the Pay-Per-Click (PPC) division of Yahoo. Overture was the pioneer in the PPC business, and was later purchased by Yahoo. It is now officially known as Yahoo Search Marketing, but many people still know it as Overture, so the brand has stuck around. It’s a direct competitor to Google Adwords; although it was the pioneer, Overture’s technology has fallen behind Google. Yahoo has a big new upgrade of the service which will be available soon (it was supposed to be released by now, but was delayed). It is supposed to help Yahoo get back in the game and catch up with Google in the PPC business–we shall see. Google surged ahead of it with superior technology that it released at a far faster rate. There may be quite number of you who have utilized Google Adwords but have never tried Yahoo/Overture, since the general perception is that is “where the action is”. These days with the extreme competition for good keywords on the Adwords platform that may be a dubious strategy, but that’s a discussion for another time.

One of the features where Overture has maintained some functionality not available on Adwords is the Overture Bid Tool. This tool is of great use for Search Engine Marketing, in general. It’s very easy to use: you simply type in any search term that you are interested in, and the Overture Bid tool will return a list of advertisers for that the keyword or phrase, with the exact amount that they are bidding.

This can be very valuable in a number of instances. You might for example, use it to scope out a new market, to see if PPC advertising will make economic sense. You can use it to get an in depth view of the marketing strategy of your closest competitors. In a more global view, it can give you an quick overall picture of the competitiveness of a market segment. In many markets, PPC spending can be an excellent proxy for how competitive a particular market space is. So if there is brutal bidding on Overture, you can expect the SEO competition will be almost as bad, and even traditional marketing channels have a good chance of being pretty clogged up as well. And since Overture doesn’t have the volume of Adwords, the bids tend to be lower–so you can expect the competition on the Adwords platform is even worse.

Give the Overture Bid Tool a try–use it for whatever purpose that you like. It’s free, and easy to use. Let me know what use you found for it.

Phil Morettini
PJM Consulting
http://www.pjmconsult.com/

Maintaining and Editing your High Tech Blog

Blogs have become important marketing tools for many companies these days. Of course, being in the forefront of technology means that software and tech companies are early adopters of business Blogs. Whether it’s for marketing purposes as an online newsletter, to obtain feedback from the customer base, to have dialogue with potential clients, or to simply add interesting content to your website thereby increasing its “stickiness”, business Blogs are all the rage.

It’s challenging enough to come up with the content to include in your Blog. What you don’t need is difficulty in implementing that content, quickly and easily, into your Blog.

Unfortunately, some of the standard tools provided by the Blog software companies and services leave a bit to be desired. I use Blogger by Google as the infrastructure to my own Blog, Morettini on Management. I am generally happy with Blogger, as it has most of the features to meet my needs, and is generally stable.

But one area where Blogger is weak is in tools for creation and editing of Posts. The biggest problem is that the tools are browser-based. That’s a good thing in general, but when I’m trying to quickly write a serious document of any length, the lag time between typing and appearance on the page can be maddening. In addition, the editing tools aren’t exactly “feature-rich” with respect to formatting issues. For this reason, I prefer to use an offline editor, to create and publish my posts.

Luckily, there are some add-on tools out there to make your life easier. I use an MS Word add-in provided by Blogger itself, called Blogger for Word. It integrates in smoothly with Microsoft Word, and adds a few menu items to Word which enable “one-click” posting. Using this tool, I can create Posts like I do any other document in this venerable word processor, and simply post to my Blog with a single click. All the formatting that I use in Word is maintained when the document is posted to the Blog. It works great!

If you don’t use Blogger, there’s also a similar, but more general tool available: w.bloggar. This tool is an editor that can be used to post to a number of the well-know Weblog systems that are available. Currently, w.bloggar is compatible with all Weblog Systems that implements Blogger API, metaWeblog API, MovableType API and b2 API; all based on the XML-RPC definition. I haven’t used w.bloggar yet personally, but it looks pretty slick.

Both Blogger for Word and w.bloggar are available for free, although w.bloggar appreciates donations. Try them out and send me your own review.

Phil Morettini
PJM Consulting
www.pjmconsult.com

High Tech Article Marketing on the Internet

Many companies these days have a focus on Online Marketing, for pretty obvious reasons. The Internet has grabbed a hold of most markets, and is now the main source of information in most industries. In many it has also quickly becoming the actual center of revenue, via e-commerce activities on company websites and online retail sites.

But like most marketing methods, competition quickly clogs up the available channels of reaching customers. This is especially true for the fast moving software and high tech markets that PJM Consulting addresses. Time to market and to the customer’s wallet is at a premium, when every company is attempting to establish themselves as the leader of an embryonic market. As a result, it’s getting harder all the time to reach the top of the organic search engine listings, and the cost of an Ad in PPC engines such as Google Adwords and Yahoo Overture continues to climb. Downloadable white papers work in B2B markets, if they are well targeted and written, but there is plenty of competition these days in this area as well. And most of you are aware of the declining economics of direct email, with the issues of SPAM and blocking. So folks are constantly looking for a new channel to break through to their online prospect base.

One of the hot areas of Online Marketing currently is what’s being called “Article Marketing”. It’s a new twist on a very old marketing strategy: Write articles as an expert on your industry. So why should you consider an online article marketing campaign?

BUILD CREDIBILITY
As an expert, there are obvious benefits to building your own, or your company’s, credibility in the marketplace. If you are considered an industry expert, there is a definite halo effect for your company’s products or services. They will take on a “premium” feel to potential users in the industry. You and your company will become better known, more highly respected, and will be considered first, when potential customers are looking for the type of things that your company offers.

CONTENT FOR YOUR OWN WEBSITE
After credibility, this is the second most important reason to consider writing articles. The search engines love information. Articles discussing solutions to problems, or providing expert information is valued by the engines—and will be indexed quickly and ranked highly as a result. As a matter of fact, “commercial” sites appear to be losing appeal as the search engines seek out this expert content. As for publishing, the search engines love Blogs, which is just a structure to write and publish articles in. A Blog can be an excellent addition to your site, and will make your site much more attractive to the search engines as an information source. If you do use Blog software to publish your articles, make sure the Blog is hosted on your domain, to ensure that the full benefits of this expert content accrues to your site, driving its position higher in the search engine results.

TRAFFIC BUILDING FOR YOUR WEBSITE
In addition to creating content for your own site, it’s also a good idea to publish articles elsewhere on the web. Not everyone is using a search engine to find what they are looking for on the web, and even if they are, your own site will not rise to the top in every search (unfortunately!). So I highly recommend publishing your articles on other sites, with a link back to your own website included in your author bio at the end of the article. There is a whole cottage industry that has popped up of article submission websites, software and services to assist you in this effort. People clicking on these links will build additional traffic to your site.

SEARCH ENGINE OPTIMIZATION THROUGH BACKLINKS
My fourth reason for writing and publishing articles also revolves around the links established on other websites where your articles are published. We call these links “Back Links”, because they link back to your site. In addition to providing traffic back to your website directly by people who click on them, they provide another very important function. Search engine optimization for a website is very complex, and is constantly changing. But you can boil it down to two major areas—Content and Back Links. If you have great content on your site and lots of other sites are linking to yours, you will rank high in the search results, and get a ton of traffic as a result. All of the links to your website, that appear on third party websites as part of publishing your article broadly on the Internet, increase this “links score” that is so important to search engine ranking.

ARTICLE MARKETING TECHNIQUES
As you can see, Internet Article Marketing can be an excellent technique for building traffic to your high tech company’s website. There are many ways to proceed. Here is one step-by step approach:

  1. Create articles of interest in your company’s industry. Write them like you are submitting them to an industry journal—then review the article to ensure it is keyword rich.
  2. Publish the articles on your own website. Blog software, available freely on the Internet, is an easy publishing tool. TypePad and Blogger are two of the more popular, but there are many others.
  3. Feature the articles in your company newsletter.
  4. Leave newer articles solely on your company’s website for a period of time, as exclusive content.
  5. Submit older articles broadly on the Internet, using Article Submission software or a service. Ezine Articles, Submit your Article, and iSnare are services that all work pretty well. There are again many choices.
  6. Be patient—one article may not do much, unless you are very lucky. As your base of articles builds over time, you should see a definite positive effect on your website traffic.

That’s my primer on Article Marketing on the Internet—did you find it useful? Send me a note if you would like to discuss.

Phil Morettini
PJM Consulting
www.pjmconsult.com

Keyword Discovery Site

I’ve run across yet another great free resource for marketing on the web. This site is focused on Search Engine Marketing (SEM). It’s specifically targeted at finding niche keywords to use in the search engine optimization (SEO) of your website, as well as keywords to use in your CPC advertising campaigns.

What’s unique about this site is that it combines a number of important web-based resources for finding good keywords into one, easy-to-use interface. Simply go to this site, sign up for a free account, and you are then able to drop into one “basket” all keywords that you’ve found, using a variety of different methods that NicheBot has aggregated into a single interface. I find it an extremely convenient and fast way to conduct keyword discovery.

The interface contains six different tools, all accessible with a single click: Keyword Discovery, Wordtracker, Overture, Thesarus, Keyword Analysis and Google Ranking. NicheBot does a great job of providing you with key information. This includes the actual websites which appear in searches, so you can correlate your competition with other important information the site makes available for each potential keyword.

The site is called NicheBot (www.nichebot.com). Although there is nothing truly revolutionary here, it is a great productivity tool for your Search Engine Marketing efforts. I suggest you head to NicheBot and give it a test drive. Let me know what you think!

Phil Morettini
PJM Consulting
www.pjmconsult.com

Flattening of the Growth Curve

In every company’s history there comes a time (or two or three or four times!) when your momentum slows, and the sales curve begins to flatten. This can be one of the most trying and frustrating times for software and technology companies. It’s certainly not as difficult as the startup phase, when “crib death” is an ever present fear. And a no growth, flat revenue scenario is much preferable to declining sales combined with negative profitability that follows, which leads to a “death spiral” if no effective action is taken.

I do find this situation is often more confusing to company management than either the start up or death spiral scenarios. This is because it often occurs just after a period of fast growth and prosperity, where it seems that the company can do no wrong. As a result, senior managers are often in denial about what is happening—whereas in the startup or death spiral situations, the situation is much more obvious, usually motivating folks to take fast, decisive action.

Search for the Culprits, Blame for the Innocent

With flattening growth, it’s easy to blame things that may not be the true cause. I often here excuses and tactics such as the following:

“The marketing department just needs to put out better promotions. Fire the VP Marketing and bring in someone who will get the job done”.

“The sales force isn’t selling hard enough, they just need to close more deals. Get the VP Sales off the golf course and tell him to kick some butt, or he’ll be the next to go”.

“The channel is useless; they’re taking 30% but they aren’t pushing the products—take more deals direct”.

“We just need to charge more for our products; we’re leaving money on the table”.

“Cut the price to stimulate demand.”

“The UK distributor is fat, dumb and happy—sign two more of his competitors to motivate him and maximize sales in that country.”

Now some of these reasons may even be accurate, and some of the proposed tactics could be possibly be useful. But I have found, quite often, that things of this nature aren’t the fundamental issue, and beating up the sales force, cutting or raising prices, or messing with your channel balance may exacerbate the situation and make things worse—not better.

The Real Problem

Sometimes the answer is as simple as “All good things must come to an end.”

Growth cycles don’t last for ever, as much as every software & technology company CEO, VP marketing and VP Sales wishes it would. There is almost a natural cycle that occurs with revenue that often coincides with the life cycle of your products. Also, the economy changes, competition heats up, novel marketing programs age and are copied—which reduces their effectiveness, market segments get saturated, and customer budgets are re-targeted to the “next new thing.” Stuff happens—always. The only real question is when.

So what’s a befuddled and perplexed tech company CEO to do?

Finding a Solution

Well, the first thing I recommend is to really spend some time getting to the bottom of things. Instead of shot-gunning blame that may be misplaced, or impetuously blowing up established pillars of the business—conduct a real, objective analysis of the nature of the slowdown. I don’t suggest paralysis by analysis by any means, but do take the time to gather some data, so that your actions will be based on more than knee-jerk reactions.

Past that, it’s hard to generalize on a course of action, because the proper action will depend upon what you find in your analysis. But for the sake of discussion, let’s say that while there are a few factors that you find which could be leading to slower growth, there isn’t a “silver bullet” reason that can be “fixed” to get the revenue curve again pointed up and to the right. Below are some general steps that I’ve found may enable you to “restart growth”. I might add that many of them are most effective if you begin them prior to actual revenue flattening:

Try marketing programs you haven’t used before
Usually when you get in a period of high growth, there is a workhorse program or two that has worked well for you, and there is a tendency to “keep doing what works”. Unfortunately, even the best conceived marketing programs eventually run out of steam. One of the keys to having consistently good outbound marketing, is too be constantly testing new ideas, placing small bets, and fine-tuning them if there is enough success to continue. As I’ve said before, product marketing is part art, and part science—with the art portion unfortunately upfront. You need to do a little trial and error to find a good program, and then the science kicks in, using data you’ve gathered to optimize it. But the key is to be constantly testing new ideas, in good times and bad. If you wait until your growth has already slowed, you may scramble for quite a while, trying to find a new answer.

Have an internal “growth” brainstorming session
Ideally you are doing this before you fall into a revenue rut. But regardless, do bring together people in your organization to bring out the ideas they may have to give the top line a kick start. Do hold these sessions in an open, non-threatening and non-political environment. It’s important that people are able to speak freely, and not be ridiculed, if they come up with an idea that’s “too far out of the box”. That is often where strategic breakthroughs are made. And don’t just limit these sessions to executive managers. Remember, the people at the bottom of the org chart are often the ones closest to the business, and are sometimes able to more easily spot a big opportunity that the company could capitalize on.

Hire some outside help
Consultants have a very bad name in some areas—unfortunately, sometimes with good reason. But bringing in someone with deep marketing or management expertise, with a different viewpoint than the internal management team, can sometimes be the quickest way to new approaches that will turn the ship quickly. I’d recommend staying away from folks that that have a cookbook formula, have only been consultants and not operating executives, or take too much of an academic approach. Every company, market and point in time is different and needs to be analyzed as such. But hiring the right outside consultant or firm who is creative, analytic and “been there and done that” can have a big impact. PJM Consulting has often worked as a change agent in these situations, and increasing or restarting traction is an area of specialty.

Look at entering an adjacent market
If it’s determined that your current market space is getting saturated, one of the first things to do is to look at adjacent spaces. Preferably, look somewhere that you can leverage your current marketing, distribution and brand, but also possibly where you can apply existing company technology to a different customer’s problem. The key here is don’t go to a complete green field that looks attractive because it’s large or growing fast, but where you have no real possibility of competing. Again, it’s best to be taking this step in anticipation of slowing growth in your current business—rather than waiting until it happens. Getting traction in new areas can take some time.

Consider M&A to fill out your product line or distribution system
If you’ve been caught by a surprise slowdown and you need to do something quickly, a strategic acquisition can sometimes be the answer. I warn you to proceed with caution here. M&A is fraught with danger—statistics show that most acquisitions don’t work out well. You need to think it through, proceed carefully, and don’t get overly excited by the thrill of the deal chase. If done well, however, a strategic acquisition can be a real shortcut to entering an adjacent space, filling out your product line for an existing strong distribution system, or adding sales channels to your strong product offerings. This is another area where PJM Consulting has strong experience, and can offer assistance.

Think it through before you start shooting

There are obviously endless other potential ways to explore when attempting to jump out of a revenue rut. I wanted to suggest a few to stimulate your thinking—and more importantly, steer you away from some “knee-jerk” reactions, that often make your situation even worse.

What have you done in the past when you need to restart growth? Post a comment below and fill us all in on your strategies.

Follow Phil Morettini and Morettini on Management via Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, RSS, or the PJM Consulting Quarterly Newsletter. Contact Phil directly at info@pjmconsult.com

Online Journal for Internet Marketing Program Testing

It’s time to fill you in on another great Internet Marketing Resource that I have encountered. This one is called Marketing Experiments. MarketingExperiments.Com is a member of the MEC Labs Group and a division of Digital Trust Inc. MEC is an online laboratory with a simple (but not easy) five-word mission statement: To discover what really works. The Lab tests every conceivable marketing method on the Internet. The research is done by MarketingExperiments.com and funded by their Research Partners. A portion of the results are published in the Marketing Experiments Journal.

Internet Marketing lends itself to much more objectivity than most offline methods due the ability to gather data quickly and quite competely. However even online, everytime you start a new campaign, you’re essentially beginning from scratch and likely to waste effort and money prior to either getting it right or abandoning the effort. The great thing about the Marketing Experiments Journal is that they are continuously publishing objective results on real campaigns, designed from the beginning to be measurable.

Recent research published includes:

  • The Power of Small Changes — How minor changes to your website can have a major impact on your conversion rate.
  • Click Fraud – Research indicates that as much as 30% of paid search traffic may be fraudulent.
  • Optimizing Subscription Pathways — How simplifying the sign-up process can result in a dramatic increase in the number of subscribers to your newsletters or subscription services.

Upcoming research activities listed on the site include:

  1. Overstock Auctions as a Marketing Channel Tested
  2. Order Paths Tested
  3. Subscriber Retention Tested

I have found the research to be comprehensive, useful and interesting. So whether you are researching the efficacy of a specific type or program, or simply trying to increase you knowledge about “what works”, give MarketingExperiments.com a look. I believe that you’ll be glad that you did.

Phil Morettini
PJMConsulting
www.pjmconsult.com

Spider Simulator

Here’s a neat tool that I ran across which can be used as “quickie” evaluator of the “searchability” of pages on your website. It works by mimicking the search engine spiders that are constantly out on the Web, evaluating and indexing Web pages for inclusion in search results. The tool is provided by Summit Media out of the UK, and it’s free for all to use.

To use Summit Media’s tool, you simply enter the name your company and the web page URL you’d like it to evaluate. It quickly returns a basic analysis of your page, with respect to important attributes that the spiders are looking for. If you want your pages to move up in the rankings, potentially driving considerable more traffic to your site, this is a great place to start.

I’ve found it to be a really handly little part of my SEO toolbox. For the heavy lifting I use a dedicated SEO software package, WebPosition. But for an easy, free, fast check of of a web page or two, you can’t go wrong with Spider Simulator.

Click on this link to access the spider simulator.

Do you know of other great tools available on the web? If so, post a comment and let us all know about them.

Phil Morettini
PJM Consulting
www.pjmconsult.com

Promoting your content through RSS feeds

To many of you, this article will be preaching to the choir. In fact, quite a few people already read these articles via an RSS feed in a newsreader, browser, or on their Google, Yahoo or MSN personalized homepage. If you haven’t already done so, you can subscribe to my articles simply by clicking on one of the icons on the right side of the Morettini on Management Blog, just below “Google News” link. There is an icon for a generic XML feed, and also simple icons for adding my feed to your Newsgator Reader, or your MSN or Yahoo personalized page. There’s even a way to have the feed sent to you instantly via email as soon as it’s published, via the email subscription box provided by Feedblitz. So you can play around with receiving an RSS feed, right here on my site.

However, RSS is still an emerging opportunity which many companies haven’t yet exploited. So for those of you not already using RSS in your business, here’s a brief tutorial:

The origin of the term RSS is a bit hazy, and it has several different definitions. But to most people, it means “Real Simple Syndication”. RSS is an XML-formatted method of publishing a variety of documents. There are a number of different RSS formats, which can be a bit confusing. But there is an easy way of getting around that, which I’ll discuss later. The important thing is that it’s another simple, free way of promoting your content, whether it’s a Blog, Press Release, Newsletter, or any other document published on the Web.

There are a couple of major advantages to adding an RSS feed to your content:

  1. Changes to your site or content will be instantly “published” and available to your readers—nothing required by you, the publisher.
  2. The RSS formatted content will appear instantly without any action required by your readers—on their preferred personal page, or in their favorite newsreader or browser.
  3. Completely eliminates delivery issues (Spam Filters, etc.) that have become a major problem with content delivery via email

I now want to recommend a great way to get around the “alphabet soup” of emerging RSS standards. I use a service called Feedburner to publish my RSS feed. Feedburner is a great service which takes the guesswork out of deciding what format to publish in. It serves as an intermediary, converting your feed into any of the major standards that a reader might require to read a feed in his particular software solution. So while the native feed of Morettini on Management is in an ATOM format, it doesn’t matter. Feedburner will convert it to whatever major standard is required by the subscriber.

Feedburner also provides the publisher with a nice set of statistics about what content is being viewed, what readers are being used to view the content, etc. There are also diagnostic tools available to make sure you feed is valid and conforming. It’s a great service, and it’s FREE—I highly recommend it.

Try it out, and let me know what you think!

Phil Morettini
PJM Consulting
http://www.pjmconsult.com/

Search Marketing Blog

I’ve come across another great Blog recently that you should know about. It’s called the “Biznology Blog“, and it is written by Mike Moran, a noted authority on search engine marketing. Mike has a book out that you can purchase called Search Engine Marketing, Inc. I haven’t read it but the reviews are pretty good.

This Blog covers a variety of topics in the online search marketing world, all of them salient and of current interest. Categories covered include Corporate Search, Search Marketing, Organic Search, Paid Search, Web Metrics and e-commerce. I have found it to be both interesting and informative.

There is also a free monthly email newsletter that you can subscribe to. This is great stuff, I highly recommend it. Happy New Year to everyone. I’ve enjoyed the dialogue throughout 2005, and I look forward to an even better 2006!

Phil Morettini
PJM Consulting
www.pjmconsult.com