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How Google Plus Improves Your SEO

January 31, 2013 by Rosemary

By Amanda Greene

There’s no denying that Google is the powerhouse of search engines. This means that knowing how to improve your SEO on Google itself is like finding diamonds.

But this also means that you must begin to embrace Google Plus. So toss out those “I don’t get it” comments and get your social networking skills revved up, it’s time to get started.

1) Have Followers, Will Share

It’s simple – the more people who have you in their circles, the more shares you are likely to get. The more shares you are likely to get, the higher you rank.

Don’t believe it? Check out this “social” experiment done by a couple of Google Plus users, who prove that when more people share your post, the higher you rank. After asking their followers to share and +1 their post, they went from #16 to #6.

2) Make the Plus One Button Easy to Find

When people “plus one” your article, it should rank higher on the search engine. While the plus one may not be a definitive way of improving rank, the more people that plus one the article, the more likely it will be just a bit easier to find during Google searches (wouldn’t you like your articles to be a bit higher than on page 23 on Google).

For example, do a test case of plus one-ing an article you have written, and do a search of that article. Where does it rank?

Next, don’t plus one an article you’ve written on your website, and see where it ranks then.

Is there a difference? You bet there is.

3) Add Links to Your Profile (and Create Authorship)

Once you set up your account on Google Plus you have an opportunity to add links to your profile. This allows for a link on Google Plus to any variety of webpages to which you contribute.

Not to mention, when you create an “Authorship,” your name is tagged with each post you write. There are specific directions on how to do this via Google Plus, but make sure you have an email address with the site you write on, or have access to your site’s html.

By claiming authorship, not only will people see your beautiful face next to the articles you have written, they also have the chance to circle you right there in the search results. Not to mention, the people who have circled you already, when they do their own searches, you will come up higher in the results because they have added you to their Google Plus world (thereby making you a trusted element to bring results from).

Don’t let the intimidation of Google Plus itself prevent you from using every opportunity to rank your site higher in search results and these three simple tasks, along with being an active member on Google Plus, can improve your site’s SEO.

Author’s Bio: Amanda Greene is author and Brand Manager for RHL.org. You can also find her on twitter as @amandagreenerhl.

Filed Under: Successful Blog Tagged With: bc

Entrepreneurship Isn’t a Solo Activity

January 31, 2013 by Rosemary

By Rosemary O’Neill

“It’s a way more fun world when we’re all winning.” Liz Strauss, at SOBCon NW 2012

Attending SOBCon NW last year was a highlight for me (and you can still get in on SOBCon Chicago), and one of the most memorable quotes was the one above, from Liz herself.

She didn’t mean it in a “kid sports team where everyone gets a trophy” way. She meant that when we help each other achieve, we often find ourselves achieving our own goals along the way.

Give Your Gift Generously and Without Reservation

Of course, everyone has competitors. Particularly in the online arena, it’s exceedingly difficult to provide a service or create a product that’s truly unique. But you know what can’t be copied? You.

Your personality, your style, and your experiences don’t belong to anyone else in the world. Your gift to your customers is your unique approach, based on your life and perspective. That can’t be copied.

So it’s OK to share your ideas, suggestions, and support with those around you. Give a leg up to your fellow entrepreneurs, and you’ll be surprised at how great it makes you feel.

Embrace Your Competitors

I have several people I count as friends who work for companies that compete in the same space with me. My daily task is to create a huge pie—so huge that we can all have big slices together.

In fact, if I’m dealing with a potential customer who will be better served by the services of a competitor, I’ll send ‘em over. Call me crazy, but if I’m the instrument by which someone achieves their vision (even if it’s with a competing product), then it’s all good.

You’re Not Alone

It can seem as if it’s you against the Internet sometimes. But it doesn’t have to be that way. There are so many smart, funny, generous people out there who are ready and willing to share their time and treasure to help you get unstuck. Since SOBCon Portland last November, I’ve stayed in touch with a lot of my fellow participants, shared business leads, offered support, gotten support, and kept my tank full!

Want to meet a huge group of amazing entrepreneurs and doers who will help you win? Register for SOBCon Chicago 2013.

Author’s Bio: Rosemary O’Neill is an insightful spirit who works for social strata — a top ten company to work for on the Internet . Check out the Social Strata blog. You can find Rosemary on Google+ and on Twitter as @rhogroupee

Filed Under: Community, management, SOB Business, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, Community, sobcon, support

Make It Your Business to Choose Office Property Wisely

January 30, 2013 by Thomas

One of the things that likely makes you a smart small business owner is that you’re always thinking ahead.

Whether it revolves around the next great product or service, how to provide your customers with even better service, or knowing how to properly grow your business, your mind is always focused on being prepared for what comes next.

With that in mind, are you considering growing your business in the coming months or years? If so, will such growth involve moving yourself and your employees to a new location?

In such situations, knowing what you are getting yourself and your business into should always be on your mind, especially when it involves a change from the ordinary.

So, let’s say you have outgrown your current office space, meaning there is nowhere left to expand. As a result, you must find a new location for you and your team to efficiently operate out of. In such a scenario, do you have all the necessary time to not only oversee the search, but then get all the relevant details on the new locale you’re intending to move to?

While some business owners will be able to navigate such tasks, others will undoubtedly let some of the work fall into the laps of their most trusted staff.

So, what happens if that person and/or you are not familiar with title insurance? Is it something you can overlook?

If you missed the course on title insurance, know that coverage from a title agency protects the buyer from any claims, encumbrances, and liens held by the seller. Essentially, the buyer walks away with a clean title to the property.

As a business owner, such coverage is not something to overlook, especially given the fact that the premiums are much less expensive than the potential legal fees you could be faced with should there be a dispute over the property at purchase.

To set a timeline for you, once the i’s and t’s on a contract to buy office space are dotted and crossed, the attorney for the purchaser will contact the title insurance provider and “order” the title. The insurer checks all necessary property records to update the seller’s title. In many cases, the finalizing of the title will run about 14 days or so. In the event there is a claim or lien on the title, you (the buyer) could have to navigate legal waters in order to resolve the dispute.

There could be issues such as the city having a right to construct or revamp a portion of the property, or local, federal or state governments having a lien on the site due to back taxes etc.

Whatever the dispute may be, being without title insurance can cost you and your business a pretty penny. Without “clearing” the title, you could end up in a precarious legal and financial hole.

Given there are different title insurance options out there for the buyer (owners, lender’s and extended coverage to name a few), make it your business to be versed on the subject well before you get the keys to your new office space.

Photo credit: gwblawfirm.com

About the Author: With 23 years’ writing experience, Dave Thomas covers a variety of small business topics.

Filed Under: Business Life Tagged With: bc, office space, real estate, title insurance

Opportunities in Small Business Grant Writing

January 30, 2013 by Rosemary

By Angie Picardo

What is grant writing?

Grant writing is “the practice of completing an application processes for funding provided by an institution such as a government department, corporation, foundation or trust.” Grants differ from loans in that they do not have to be paid back and are tax free, and the institution associated with the grant usually sees the process as an investment. Grants are typically highly competitive, so the application process must be thorough and specific. Besides funding, some grants offer assistance in the form of resources, goods, and services including manpower or other aid.

Grant writers are expected to convey a sense of expertise in a researched field. They are the sole arbiters of securing outside funding, so a solid background in communication, English, technical writing, or business management is preferable. Grant writers should understand the allocation of funds and the pipeline of distribution, from development to completion in the projects they are writing for. A good grant writer will convey a sense of urgency and purpose, ensuring a solid foundation for their claim.

Small businesses may need grants outside of profit budgets to help fund new projects or construction, which could potentially yield major profits, encourage innovation, and provide community outreach through employment and awareness programs. Ideas spread locally first, so grants provide a unique dialogue for businesses to reach out to the community.

How do small businesses benefit from grant writing?

Government grants are typically not provided for starting or expanding businesses. Exceptions to the rule include small businesses engaged in scientific research and development (R&D). Federal grants may be available to businesses that meet federal standards and have a high potential for commercialization under the Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) and the Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) programs. Businesses involved with agriculture, engineering, defense, health and human services, public transportation, energy, or space technology may qualify.

Nonprofit businesses are usually offered a wider selection of grant benefits. These types of businesses require grants for sustained funding and often reach out to the community and build relationships that last. Types of grants available for nonprofit businesses include:

  • Capital Grants – supports the purchase of property, equipment, and facility expansion and remodeling
  • Operating or General Support Grants – an overall grant that supports daily operations and sustainability
  • Endowment Grants – permanent source of income that is renewed annually for project expenses and organization operations
  • Unrestricted Grants – for use where best needed
  • Project Grants – supports specific projects on an as-needed basis
  • Seed Grants – for beginning organizations, new projects, of building anything from the ground up

How do small businesses get grants?

The first place to start looking for information about grants would be at SBA.gov. The U.S. Small Business Administration is an offshoot of grants.gov and provides a search tool to identify local and state grant programs aimed at qualifying small businesses. According to SBA:

Some business grants are available through state and local programs, nonprofit organizations and other groups. For example, some states provide grants for expanding child care centers; creating energy efficient technology; and developing marketing campaigns for tourism. These grants are not necessarily free money, and usually require the recipient to match funds or combine the grant with other forms of financing such as a loan. The amount of the grant money available varies with each business and each grantor.

For research-based Federal grants, Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance (CFDA) (cfda.gov) provides a comprehensive listing of available grants.

Have you ever thought about pursuing grant money to support your business?

Author’s Bio: Angie Picardo writes about personal finance, travel tips and more at NerdWallet.

Filed Under: Successful Blog Tagged With: bc

What Are Your Assumptions?

January 29, 2013 by Guest Author

By James Ellis

closeup_donkeyPeople don’t read the web, they scan. People don’t like to click. People don’t look past the first four Google search results. People only search Google with 2-3 word search terms. People don’t open their email on the weekends. People don’t spend money online. People don’t trust strangers online. No one cares what you had for breakfast. No one will want to look at a picture of your lunch. People buy most Christmas gifts online on the Monday after Thanksgiving. No one will download a movie to watch on their phone.

All of the above statements were once considered gospel at one time. Gospel. Carved into stone tablets. Given to marketers’ children to recite every morning.

But you should all see at least one statement that you know to be patently false (in fact, I’m pretty sure that they almost all are, depending on circumstances). But they linger on, because they are based on assumptions.

These are just examples of online/web/tech assumptions that linger in the minds of people close to us (especially clients and bosses). There are plenty of business, blogging and personal assumptions we make and live by that simply aren’t true anymore (assuming they ever were).

Assumptions are the blind spots in our vision. We see them without acknowledging them every day. We work around them instead of challenging them, when challenging them is how we create success. Think of Kodak and Poloroid, who assumed we’d always want printed pictures. Think of Ford (circa 2009) who assumed Americans only bought big cars. Think of the music industry, who assumed that we wouldn’t like to download our music whenever we wanted.

Businesses fail every day because their assumptions were wrong. Businesses thrive every day because they took a chance on challenging assumptions. Think of Starbucks, who didn’t listen to the assumptions that people wouldn’t pay $5 for a cup of coffee. Think of Apple, who didn’t listen to the assumption that people didn’t want to check their email every second of the day. Think of Rick Bayless who didm’t listen to the assumption that Mexican food is cheap food.

What are the assumptions you live with every day? Are you challenging them? If you don’t, what happens when someone else does?

Author’s Bio: James Ellis is a digital strategist, mad scientist, lover, fighter, drummer and blogger living in Chicago. You can reach out to him or just argue with his premise at saltlab.com.

Photo credit: Dieter van Baarle, Flickr CC.

Filed Under: Bloggy Questions, Inside-Out Thinking, Outside the Box, Successful Blog Tagged With: assumptions, bc, challenge, innovation

5 Myths About Writing an E-Book

January 28, 2013 by Rosemary

By Ovetta Sampson

“Yes, of course I can do that!”

The words of affirmation flew out of my mouth faster than the reality that I had no idea how to do it hit my brain. I was close to sealing the deal to write a book for a client. She’d provide the brilliance; I’d wrap it up in lovely words. We’d sell books. But she also wanted to publish an e-book. I had never done that before. But I said yes anyway. I mean, it couldn’t be that difficult to publish an e-book? I mean you just send your Microsoft Word document to the ether and it comes out whispering on your Kindle right?

Yeah. Not right. It took me longer to find a credible answer on e-book publishing than it did to write the book. I asked on LinkedIn, I asked people I knew in the business, I even asked established publishing houses, everyone had a different answer and no one convinced me they had it down. The reason is they don’t. But you will. Read on.

Myth #1: I Need to Write a Book to Make Money

Do you know how many books you’d have to sell to get on the coveted New York Times’ Bestseller List? Industry insider estimate 20,000. Think about it. At $26.55, the average price for a hardcover nonfiction book sold in 2011, you’d gross $531,000. But you’d have to give at least a 1/3 of that to your distributor or publisher, take another 15 percent or your agent or publicist, maybe another 10 percent for marketing, and you’re down to less than half your sales at $221,220. That’s nothing to sneeze at but nothing to retire on either. No wonder people are self-publishing. But do you really think you can sell 20,000 copies of your book? If you think so here are some sobering facts from Steven Piersanti, president of Berrett-Koehler Publisher:

  • The average U.S. nonfiction book sells less than 250 copies per year
  • The average U.S. nonfiction book sells less than 3,000 copies over a lifetime
  • Competition is increasing—in 2003 the U.S. published 300,000 books. In 2011 that number was THREE MILLION!

So making money should not be your motivation to publish a book. Spreading brand awareness, though, is a good return on your investment.

Myth #2: All You Need is a Word Document

By far this is the No.1 fallacy I heard when investigating e-book publishing. Everyone said, “All you need is a Word document.” While it’s true that the publishing world is firmly ensconced in Microsoft Word and e-book distributors such as Amazon and Barnes & Noble accept Word docs to create digital books, a Word doc is by far the beginning step not the end. But why?

To put it simply: a print book is created by imagery. An e-book is created by code. In printing you take an image of your written text as designed and reproduce it. In a digital book, you take your text and use code to manipulate it so that it flows and changes to fit the e-reader. A printed book is static. An e-book is flexible.

Read this if you want to know what exactly what happens during the conversion, but otherwise take my word for it. Publishing an e-book is not even remotely the same as sending your Word doc to a printer and having your book typeset at a printing house.

Myth #3: I Can Do It All Myself

If you want a crappy e-book you can upload a Word doc and be done with it. But if you want an e-book that looks professional and can gain respect, you need to have your text doc converted to a major digital publishing language namely: MOBI, for Amazon or E-PUB for everyone else. You can get all the dirty details of conversion in Guy Kawasaki’s new book APE: Author, Publisher, Entrepreneur—How to Publish Your Book. It is by far one of the most comprehensive books on self-publishing I’ve ever read. He also gives step-by-step instructions on how he took his book digital as it was designed with InDesign.

But here’s what you need to know: If you want all the bells and whistles found on e-readers such as navigation, searchable text, clear graphics and tables, hyperlinks, you need special code or formatting, much like HTML for a website. Author service providers can offer you this service. There are several including:

  • Smashwords (free but takes a cut of royalties)
  • BookBaby, charges an up-front fee but offers you 100% of the royalties
  • CreateSpace, owned by Amazon, very aggressive in marketing but print-on-demand is great if you want a real-live book as well as a digital one.

There are tons more. Prices for these companies range from as little as $100 to north of $4,000. For my project I paid $100 for e-book conversion to both MOBI and E-PUB and formatting from the Indian-based SunTec Digital, (Hi Rahul!) and had my client sign up for Amazon’s Kindle Direct Publishing program to distribute the book. The book, It Takes Work to Be Happy, came out fantastic and looks fabulous on my iPad.

Myth #4: I Don’t Need an Editor I’m a DIYer

While there are plenty of tasks you can complete when you self-publish, I mean it is called self-publishing; editing is not one of them. No matter how great of a writer you are, if you want your book to be taken seriously by your audience, the media, clients and even your mother, you need a good copyeditor. I’m not just saying that because I am one.

What’s the first thing you think about when you get an e-mail with a misspelling? Nigerian fraud right? Ever read a Facebook post with someone using “there” for “their?” Makes you cringe doesn’t it? I was contemplating dating a guy but his Facebook posts were so riddled with misspelling and errors I just stayed away.

Communication replete with incorrect spelling, bad grammar, and faulty sentence structure signals carelessness. Correcting those mistakes is about more than pleasing English teachers. It’s about putting your best foot forward. And at just $35 an hour (the average copyediting cost) isn’t your first book worth that kind of attention? Hire a copyeditor this is non-negotiable. Then you won’t be like the losing Mitt Romney whose campaign asked supporters to “Stand with Mitt,” for “A Better Amerca!”

Myth #5: I’ll Write It Then Market It

Nope! Market it as you create it! It’s the only way to rise above the din. In the past authors went to big publishing houses for marketing chops. But thanks to social media and the ‘Net you don’t have to. Still, you’ve got to be Barnum and Bailey to get rich in the Obama era.

Guy in his book APE, notice I keep mentioning it, yeah, you need to read it, gives a crash course on marketing and self-promotion. You can also check out his practical advice reading this Q&A I did with him about marketing for startups. Guy likens publishing an e-book to beginning a startup.

Because even he, an established author, Penguin is one of his publishers, with millions of social media followers, even he spent more than a year promoting his self-published book before it was even written.

When I sat down with business guru and CNBC star Carol Roth and asked how she promoted her New York Times best-selling book The Entrepreneur Equation the answer was simple—she did a yearlong marketing plan. That’s before she wrote a word. Yeah, you can buy her doll here!

Bottom line: When you think of writing a book is when you should create a social media profile for it, tell everyone you know, start soliciting pre-sale e-mails, and bug your local book seller and plant seeds on book-centered websites and groups. Don’t wait until it’s done, besides opening your mouth will give you a reason to actually write it.

Look, publishing is pigeonholed into a paradox. Book sales are dropping just as technology is allowing more people to publish. It’s not enough to have a good book; you need to have a well-designed, well-edited, well-marketed book to rise above the din. So Write. Revise. Format. Market. and Sell!

Author’s Bio: Ovetta Sampson is a freelance digital writer for BlueSodaPromo, a promotional marketing company based in the Chicago area. BSP offers an amazing selection of eco-friendly tote bags and thousands of stress relievers. An avid triathlete, she still finds time to run her own content marketing firm and blog.

Filed Under: Business Book, Marketing /Sales / Social Media, Successful Blog, Writing Tagged With: bc

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