Best Practices for Social Media
Using Social Media to Boost Search Engine Results
Most
of us are well aware that the search engines frequently change their
algorithms to improve search results for users, which can make it
challenging for small businesses just to keep up. But as web technology
continues to evolve, it also creates new opportunities for small
businesses to improve their SEO strategies and boost their rankings as
well. Social media (sites like Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Technorati,
Digg, etc.) provide an excellent opportunity for small businesses to not
only promote their products and services online, but also to gain
significant ground in the search engine results.
One of the most critical components to getting top search engine
rankings is the number of inbound links and link popularity a web site
is able to build. Although there are several existing link building
strategies available to small businesses (e.g., press releases,
directory submissions, article syndication, etc.), social media can help
create additional high-value, on-target inbound links that are essential
to achieving top placements in the search engines.
For example, each time you use Twitter to publish a link to new content
on your web site, that link gets "planted" on the Twitter page of each
person following you, and has the potential to spread even further as
your followers share that information with their own network of
contacts.
Integrated Social Marketing
If you have properly integrated your social networking profiles
together, that same Twitter "tweet" could then be fed via RSS to your
Facebook business profile, your corporate blog, your LinkedIn account,
and any number of other social sites that you have set up for your
business. It's not a far stretch to imagine the link you broadcast on
Twitter could reach dozens, hundreds, or even thousands of other places
on the web, all pointing back to your web site! By integrating your
social networking profiles with each other, with your web site, and with
your existing marketing initiatives, you can easily make one single
marketing action (such as a tweet) show up in multiple places online,
each containing a new, relevant inbound link to your site.
Quantity and Quality
In addition to the sheer number of inbound links that are created
through social marketing, the value of the links that are created is
another important criterion that search engines consider. To be valued
by the search engines, inbound links must be from relevant, "quality"
web sites, and search engines today give social sites like Facebook and
Twitter great value. These sites are highly visible to the search
engines, and are constantly taking updates from users. Links tend to be
shared according to subject matter, which means the search engines will
see them as being relevant and on-target. All of these factors combine
to create high-quality inbound links in the eyes of the search engines.
Online Visibility and Branding
Creating visibility for your business and your "brand" is really key
when using social media for building links. The power of social media is
realized when other users see your links or content, then share that
information with their own network of contacts. Simply adding a bunch of
links to your social profiles is not enough; you need to have a strong
reputation and a brand that users trust so they will feel comfortable
sharing your content with others. Brand recognition typically leads to
natural link building anyway, which means your inbound links will end up
coming from bloggers, colleagues, customers, and other people who are
exposed to your links and find them useful enough to share with their
own contacts.
The Proof is in the Rankings
A recent example from Website Magazine explained somewhat surprising
results when they searched for their publication's name in Google. As
expected, their web site came up as the number one listing on the
results page. But what was not expected was the number three listing on
the results page was the magazine's Twitter page. They then performed a
number of Google searches for the terms "Chicago Tribune," "Chicago
Public Golf," and "Daily Career Tips," all with similar results in
Google - the Twitter page for each of these terms came up near the top
of the search engine results every time.
The conclusion was that given these results, Google must be giving
serious weight to Twitter content, and I happen to agree. The search
engines of course keep their ranking algorithms top-secret, so there's
no way to know how much weight (if any) is really given to Twitter or
other social media sites. But results like those in the example above
are hard to ignore!
A Great Opportunity
Social media is here to stay, and small businesses are beginning to use
it to promote their businesses, reach their customers, find new leads,
keep customer mindshare, and instantly communicate with customers. But
maybe one of the biggest benefits of adding social media to your
marketing mix is the creation of high-value, on-target inbound links
that can help improve visibility in the search engines and hopefully
boost your business to the top of the search engine rankings.
Note: While all of the above sounds good and the processes are all
correct, the work that goes into making a website an authority on the
products or services a business sells requires a monumental amount of
time and effort. And be aware that getting other users to share your
information with their own social network of contacts is not as easy as
it seems.