Wednesday, February 27, 2013

How to Deal with Challenging Clients


By  posted a Very Crucial idea on SEOMOZ Is that If you’re a consultant, you may not realise it, but a large (and difficult) part of your job is to manage people’s attitudes and behaviours. This task is made even more difficult because it is usually most apparent when clients are unhappy or disagree with you. Even the best consultants will have to deal with challenging clients at some point in their career. I want to share some of the things I’ve learnt from my experience so far as a consultant.
I firmly believe that when it comes to keeping clients happy, prevention is better than a cure. Most of the tips I’ve shared look at how to prevent clients from ever becoming a problem, but I also cover some tips to help resolve the problem as quickly as possible if things do go wrong.

1. Communication solves all problems

At Distilled, we have a saying that communication solves all problems. Over the years, I’ve found this to be true. If the problem can’t be solved by communication, it can almost always have been prevented by it. I don’t mean to recommend phoning your client "once a month" as standard, because good communication is a frequent a mix of formal and informal subjects. Don’t just call your clients regarding work; call them on a Monday to see how their weekend was and on a Friday to wish them a good weekend. These little bits of extra effort can make a big difference in the lifetime of a client relationship. As a general rule, I like to speak to my clients at least twice per week and meet face-to-face at least once-per month if possible.
If you have clients abroad, speaking frequently might not always possible, but even so, you should still make the effort -- especially if they are a long standing client. For example, I’ve just spent the last two weeks in Cape Town visiting one of my clients. Obviously South Africa is a long way to go, but we’ve been working together for quite some time, and the value we both got from finally meeting face-to-face was invaluable. Lots of the consultants at Distilled have success stories that are sometimes directly related to a turning point in a client relationship as a result of taking them for a beer and getting out of the office to an environment where you can both relax and talk off the record. In general, the more communication, the better. It may feel strange at first, but you can always find an excuse to call a client.

2. Have a genuine care for the success of the business

Communication is closely related to my next point, because care generally comes as a result of regular communication and getting close to a client. If you speak to someone two or three times a week, you get to really know them -- not just from a client point of view but what they like, what motivates or demotivates them, and even what they’re up to at the weekend. Hopefully the result of that is that you really want them to do well, and that the success of the business means more that just a job to you. You’ll enjoy your job a lot more if you genuinely care about the success of the business as much as the client does. Anyone that’s been in SEO for a while will know that it’s often not a 9-5 job; quite often, it’s evenings and weekends. Unless you really care, you’ll start to resent working with that client. Reaching this point in a client relationship is invaluable. Let me explain a bit further.

There are always going to be ups and downs with clients, and in general clients, will react in two ways to bad news. They either get angry, shout and scream (usually via email), or say it’s entirely your fault. The second reaction is to pick up the phone and talk about how it can be resolved. If your client knows that you genuinely care about the business, you’re more likely to get the second reaction. It means they are more likely to skip the shouting and pointing fingers part and start trying to find solutions to the problem. They know they don’t need to tell you how bad it is because you’ll also feel the same. Getting to this stage of honesty with a client is rare, but it’s a great place to be. This is what turns retainers into lifetime clients and testimonials.

3. If I do this, will you be happy?

You may recognise the following scenario: you get to the end of the month, you’re happy with the work you’ve delivered, you send the monthly report, and the client is disappointed. While this is a bit annoying, it’s easy to stop it from happening again. At the start of every month, create a plan of what you expect to get finished that month, show it to the client, and ask them, “If I deliver all of the things on this list by the end of the month, will you be happy?” If the answer is no, you have a bigger problem. If the answer is yes, then as long as you deliver what you said you would by the time you said, then it's less likely they'll be disappointed. As a side note, the things you say you will deliver should never be results. Only promise things like documents and meetings, and never promise results or outcomes as they are outside of our control and you’re likely setting yourself up for disaster.

4. Document everything

One of the most basic things you should do as a consultant is keep a record of all conversations. After every meeting or phone call, follow up with an email to the client and summarise the main points of the meeting. This is a pretty thankless task 99% of the time, but it can be your most important piece of evidence should the clients record of events ever be different to yours.

5. Never go above your contact

Another common problem you may run into as a consultant is struggling to get things done on the client side. This could be rolling out changes to the site, getting more budget, or just getting some budget in the first place. Whatever it is you are struggling to get done, never try to go above your point of contact to their superior. Not only does this come across as bad manners, it makes your main point of contact look bad to their management. Don’t forget, one of your roles as a consultant is to make your point of contact look good, not the opposite.

6. Provide useful and tailored monthly reports

Let’s be honest -- writing monthly reports isn’t fun, and it’s made even worse by the fact that after you spend time writing them, they often don’t get read. However, they’re very important as part of the prevention phase. It’s even more important the closer you are to your client. Even if you speak to your client regularly, you still need to send a summary of what you’ve done every month, as well as the results. Put simply, if you don’t send reports, your clients will forget what value you added that month. For example, I’ve been in the scenario in the past where a client sent me an angry email and questioned the results from that month; I pulled up analytics to show that things were actually going very well. His response was, “Wow, that’s amazing, I had no idea we were doing so well. Unless you constantly remind me that we’re doing well, I’ll continue to moan at you.”

That’s pretty much a direct quote (you know who you are).

He was right; I fell into the trap of thinking that because I spoke to them most days, I didn’t need to send a report. Don’t make the same mistake I did. Use reports to show what you did, what the results were, and get sign off on the next month's activity. Writing reports also helps to keep you accountable for your own work. By writing at the start of the month what you plan to do and showing it to the client, you’re more likely to get that work completed if you know that you’re going to review it at the end of the month with the client.

7. First mover advantage

Imagine the situation: you go into the office on Monday, only to find your client has dropped for all keywords. What do you do? Tell everyone that if anyone calls, you’re not in? Flee the country? No -- you need to step up and call the client before they call you. If you don’t call and try to fix it before the client notices, you’ll end up with an angry client for two reasons: first, because of the drop, and second, they pay you to notice when things go wrong and they noticed (in their eyes) before you did. Always use the first mover advantage and call the client to let them know. It’s not going to be easy, and they might shout and scream, but they’ll appreciate that you noticed it straight away. Tell them the situation and that you already have the team working to find out the cause and find a solution.

The second part of the post focuses on finding a cure when things do go wrong, despite your best attempts to prevent that happening. For the purpose of this post, let’s assume you’ve received an email from an unhappy client, and they’re threatening to leave; let’s also pretend it’s an unjustified complaint, meaning you genuinely think you have provided value and there’s just a misunderstanding. Here are a few tips that have worked for me in the past in resolving the problem:

1. You can’t win an argument

I’ve taken this from How To Win Friends And Influence People, but I’ve found it to be true through life in general, so it stuck with me when I read the book. It's always my first tip in resolving a conflict with a client. Don’t argue, because you’ll never win and even if you do prove the client wrong, you’ll lose the contract as a result. As Dale Carnegie puts it in the book:

“Why prove to a man he is wrong? Is that going to make him like you? Why not let him save face? He didn’t ask you for your opinion. He didn’t want it. Why argue with him? Always avoid the acute angle.”

Does that mean you need to let clients say whatever they like and walk all over you? Of course not, but you do need to help them see your point of view, not force them to see it otherwise you’ll just get resistance. I typically start with accepting it’s my fault in some way or another. This doesn’t need to mean it’s actually your fault; I usually word it as my fault for not explaining something clearly, or presenting information in an ambiguous way that was easy to misunderstand. Doing so helps to put the client at ease. Clients like to feel that they call the shots, and it makes them more willing to listen to your next point, which hopefully is the answer.

2. Delivery method

In the majority of cases, clients will deliver bad news and complains via email. Regardless of how nasty or challenging a client may seem, people generally don’t like conflict via the phone, and even less in person. Use this to your advantage. It’s too easy to fire off a counter aggressive email rather than pick up the phone; resist the urge to reply by email and try to arrange a meeting instead. I like to respond with something immediately to acknowledge that I’ve received their email but make it clear that there’s been a misunderstanding and that email probably isn’t the best medium to explain. In order of preference, try to respond by:
  1. A face-to-face meeting
  2. Skype, G+ hangout, or something that you can see the person’s face on
  3. A phone call
  4. An email
If you are able to arrange a meeting or a phone call, you’ll dramatically increase your chances of coming out with a success story than trying to resolve via email. If you do manage to get a meeting or a phone call, ensure you have your ducks in a row and responses to all the questions the client is likely to have. To help with this, something I’ve found useful is to actually write out an email like you would have responded, but don’t actually send the email. I’ve found this useful in working out exactly what I want to say and to be sure I have all the answers to their questions in a way that makes sense.

3. Disarming honesty

If you’ve messed up, admit it. Nothing says "I’m an idiot" and gets clients angry like coming back with excuses and trying to pretend that it’s not that bad. If you made a mistake, or even if the results just aren’t as good as you were expecting, admit it, your client will appreciate that you’re in this thing together it adds to the genuine care in the business as well if you’re first to go to the client and say you’re disappointed with the results. Otherwise, you’ll have a client that thinks he’s going mad because you see value that they don’t.

4. Know when to say goodbye

Finally, if none of the above is helpful, know when it’s time to say goodbye. Not all client engagements will work out the way you want them to, but it’s important to breakup on good terms. Even if you’re not the right solution for them at the moment, you could be at some point in the future, so take care not to burn your bridges. You never know where your client could end up working in the future.

I hope you’ve found my tips useful. All relationships are diverse, but I’d be interested to hear about any tips you have for dealing with challenging clients. Thanks to Caitlin Krumdieck for letting me pick her brain about previous Distilled clients and adding to the ideas above. Leave your thoughts in the comments below.


Matt Cutts: 301 Redirects Dilute PageRank Equally To Normal Links - See more at: http://www.seroundtable.com/redirects-links-pagerank-16419.html#sthash.umEfJcPQ.dpuf



Back about three years ago, we covered an interview between Google's Matt Cutts and Eric Enge of Stone Temple Consulting where we thought we learned that 301 Redirects Do Not Pass Full PageRank & Link Value.


The truth is, they do not pass full PageRank but nor does normal links, which we knew. The issue was, most people felt that 301 redirects pass LESS PageRank than normal links and that is not true.


Google's Matt Cutts posted a video yesterday saying:


The amount of PageRank that dissipates through a 301 is currently identical to the amount of PageRank that dissipates through a link.

So currently, there is no difference between a 301 and a link in terms of PageRank dilution.
That being said, if you have many redirects, like chains of them from one url to another to another, that is a known bad thing. But one or so won't hurt you.
Here is Matt's video:- 




This is one of those topics that is pretty cut and dry but as you ask more questions, with more variables in the mix, it can become a "what if" type of scenario that is not so cut and dry. Which is why we had the confusion in the first place, because Matt did not want to lead people on the first time - I guess?

Forum discussion at WebmasterWorld & Google+. & See more at: http://www.seroundtable.com/redirects-links-pagerank-16419.html#sthash.umEfJcPQ.dpuf

Monday, February 25, 2013

SEO Positive Responds to Pinterest Business Statistics


Leading online promotion company, SEO Positive, have responded to new research that highlights how Pinterest can be useful for businesses.


(PRWEB UK) 21 February 2013


Twenty-nine percent of Pinterest’s UK users are in the highest income bracket, according to a new report.

Econsultancy’s Pinterest for Business guide reveals there are 200,000 active Pinterest users in theUK and that UK Pinterest use saw a 786% increase in traffic last year. The social network went from 901,761 visits in September 2011 to 7,985,316 visits in September 2012.
Pinterest pins with prices get 36% more likes than those without and 43% of Pinterest members agree that they use Pinterest to associate with retailers or brands with whom they identify with, compared to just 24% of Facebook users.
Ben Austin, Managing Director at SEO Positive, has responded to the data with interest:
“Pinterest has been gaining following as the newest social media site for the past couple of years and has dedicated and growing following. Businesses are beginning to see this and are trying to work out how they can apply Pinterest to their business. For retail brands in particular, Pinterest is perfect as it allows brands to have another place to show off their items and attract new traffic to their website. It’s a free form of advertising and SEO shouldn’t be ignored.”
SEO Positive was established in 2007 in Chelmsford, Essex with the aim of bringing effective yet affordable online marketing services to companies from all industries and backgrounds. The company offers a huge range of services including search engine optimisation, Pay Per Click account management, social media marketing and reputation management.

Proper Anchor Text Distribution For Better Rankings

A while back after Google released their Penguin update we did awebinar about keywords, linking and ranking after the update.  Today we are going to revisit that data after allowing plenty of time to gather more information and come to some conclusions about the best distribution of anchor text for ranking in Google.
We all know by now that Google does not want people gaming their algorithm.  Despite this their search results are still a computer generated algorithm – there is not a person sitting there for all search phrases deciding which sites rank and which sites don’t.  Due to this basic fact there will always be ways to improve your rankings by aligning your site with what Google is looking for.
Despite what has been said, link building for better rankings is not dead.  Links are still the primary way Google decides what sites to rank where.  The difference is that today those links need to be distributed in a natural manner rather than a keyword based manner.  SEOMOZ ran an article where they looked at 10 national brand sites that rank very well in the search engines and broke down the percentages of links by anchor text.  What they came up with is a good formula for your own link building.
What was found is that about 65% of the links were exact match, phrase matching or brand matching with regards to the anchor text.  The breakdown between these three categories was 18% exact, 17% phrase and 30% brand.  The other links coming in were evenly divided between the URL as the anchor text and unrelated anchor text.
This is a great way to create your own link building strategy.  Using the ratios above, here is what a sample link building strategy might look like for your site, called “Widget World” selling Red Widgets:

For every 100 links built, you should build the following:

18 links with anchor text of “Red Widgets” – this is the exact match
17 links with anchor text containing Red Widgets, such as “Handy Red Widgets”, Waterproof Red Widgets”, etc – this is the phrase match
30 links with anchor text of “Widget World” or slight variation – this is the brand
18 links with the anchor text of “yoursitename.com” – this is the URL
17 links with random anchor text – this could be long tail phrases like “see more about Red Widgets at our site” or simple phrases like “click here” etc.

This is a simplistic breakdown, but the data backs up these general ratios as being the target.  Regardless of whether your links are built all naturally or built by you or outsourced, if you keep to this ratio you will not run afoul of Google, and you will see your rankings increase.
When building these links, you may consider obtaining higher page rank or PR links for the first line item – the exact match phrase.  This will help pump a little more juice through that phrase.  When you combine that with the varied anchor text, adhering to these ratios, you have a winning formula for better rankings.
Finding the higher PR links is not always easy, but a good solution is to work with a private link brokering type of company.  These companies work with individual website owners and contract with them to place your links.  This can be helpful, as it gives you access to low cost,high quality links that are not publicly distributed. 

Sunday, February 24, 2013

How To Submit / Add sitemap.xml to Bing Webmaster Tools ?



cara submit atau add sitemap.xml ke bing webmaster tools
After submit sitemap.xml to Google, and then I will try to describe the stages or how to submit / add Bing Webmaters Tools.Seperti sitemap.xml to Google, Bing also has Bing Webmaster tools. Almost all services provided similar to those in Google. You can check Craw errors, submit sitemap.xml, malware detection, and many more issues index to maximize search your website on the search engine Bing.

Immediately, you click on this link for access to the Bing Webmaster tools.
You can log in using a Windows Live account, please register in advance if you do not have accounnt, click Sign Up to register. Now we suppose that you have created a Windows Live account and immediately log in to Bing Webmaster Tools. For those of you who create a blog at wordpress.com or blogspot, you can see how at the bottom of this article.
add site dan sitemap.xml ke bing
As shown in the image above, the first page that appears when you create a new account on Bing. Furthermore Put your website URL in the box and click → ADD. The next step you fill out the application that has been available.!
Add a Site
add a site ke bing webmaster tool
For every point which was given a red asterisk (*) must be filled ..!
ABOUT MY WEBSITE
  • URL = Fill in the URL of your website.
  • Add a sitemap = http://domainanda.com/sitemap.xl
  • When do you receive the most traffic to this site for your local time of the day? = At this point I choose Default.
ABOUT ME
  • First Name, Last Name = Fill in the full name
  • Email email = Column alamt automatically filled in with the email you used to register on Bing.
  • Job role = Can be empty.
  • Company or organization and Name Company or organization size = Please fill in if you have or can fill in the "None"
  • Industry = Same as above options.
  • Contact Phone = Can be cleared.
  • City = Can be cleared.
  • State / Privince, Zip / Postal Code, Country or Region = For Country or Region shall be filled (select).
CONTACT PREFERENCE.
contact preference di bing webmaster tool
  • Contact Preferences: Tick if you would like to receive the latest updates from Bing.
  • Often How would you like to receive messages obout your site (s') issues? and select the schedule, Daily, Weekly or Monthly.
  • Alert Preferences: Check All to Alert Preferences. Then click → Save.
  • Next you will be asked to verify ownership of the website (Site ownnership) → click Verify now.
verifikasi site di bing webmaster tool
To verify the website you can choose one of three Option / options offered.
pilih salah satu dari option untuk verify website atau blog
This blog is for myself I choose the first one to upload files in the public_html directory BingSiteAuth.xml to cpanel.
Option 1: Place an XML file on your web server.
  • Dowload BingSiteAuth.xml.
  • Upload your file to the public_html directory in cPanel. Read how to upload files to a directory
  • Once the file is completed download, then confirm it by opening the link http://domainanda.com/BingSiteAuth.xml dibrowser, if all the process is successful it will appear in your browser as shown below.
  • Your new Click> Verify if the points above to run smoothly.
cara sumbit atau add sitemap.xml ke bing webmaster tools
If no error occurs then there will be a notice on the right Box Verify with green writing that your website or your blog has been verified.

Option 2: Copy and paste a <meta> tag in your default webpage
  • For an option to 2, put the file "meta name" from the bing on your Home Page, this method is the same as verifying the website in Google Webmaster Tools.
  • Log in to wp-admin, click on the menu Appearance → Editor. Right side of the page stylesheet (style.css) → click Header (header.php) and then you put the file "meta name" is among <head> tag ... </ head> And do not forget to click File → Update.
  • After all the process is completed in wp-admin you back to Bing and click → Verify.
Option 3: Add a CNAME record to the DNS. For the third optiaon I do not really understand this, please if you want to try this option.
After all process is complete now you go to the Dashboard, click on the Configure menu → → sitemaps my site. Then you will see the results as shown below.
sitemap.xml barajablog.com
For those of you who have a blog at wordpress.com or blogspot, when add site that must be filled only 2 points the URL and Sitemap.
Cara add sitemap.xml di wordpress.com dan blogspot
→ WordPress.com
  1. Fill in your URL address.
  2. In a Sitemap = Fill http://domainanda.wordpress.com/sitemap.xml.
  3. After log in to wp, Dashboard → Tools (Tools), Paste the file onto the column tag <meta> Bing Webmaster Center and Save the changes.
  4. Back to Bing, you just click → Verify.
  5. You can add the feed to sitemaps, on my site menu → Configure → → add sitemaps sitemaps and enter
  6. http://domainanda.wordpress.com/feed
add sitemap.xml ke bing webmaster tool
→ Blogspot
  1. Fill in your URL address.
  2. In a Sitemap contents with:
  3. http://domainanda.blogspot.com/sitemap.xml
    After that you will be required to verify ownership of the website.
    Site ownership has not verified. → click Verify now.
    And select Option 2: Copy and paste a tag in your default webpage

    Next log in to the blog, click menu Templates → Edit HTML → Continue √ Check the Expand Template> and Paste <meta> tag of Bing in the tag <head> ... </ head>. Then click → Save Template and Close.
    Back to Bing, pull you scroll down you just click → Verify.
    And you can also add a atom.xml on my site menu → Configure → → add sitemaps sitemaps.
  4. http://domain-anda.blogspot.com/atom.xml?redirect=false&start-index=1&max-results=500
add sitemap.xml ke bing webmaster tool
” To address concerns one of our friend who commented on the article, then I will supplement this article with one screenshot of my blog on blogspot.com as add sitemap.xml and add feed to bing web master tool “
add sitemap.xml ke bing webmaster tools
In Bing Webmaster Tools also Supported formats: Sitemap, RSS 2.0, Atom 0.3, Atom 1.0 and text files. So you can choose to register where ..
add sitemap.xml , RSS , Atom and Text Files
The article you are reading now has me re-edited due to a change
sequence in the process add site, add sitemap.xml and verification website
in previous articles because there have been changes to the Bing Webmaster Tools
If an error occurs, there may be steps you forgot or improper order. A good idea to try to read the article above and do when you really have to understand the process and the correct order.
Written by Adheens San
»Leave your comment on my friend read the article, no SPAM, no PROMO LINK in the comments field. This is not a blog but a Social Bookmark who want to Learn Wordpress. »See also Review Gadget Acer Iconia Tablet PC with Windows 8

Friday, February 22, 2013

Google Rarely Updates The Penguin Algorithm



It has almost been five months since the last Penguin refresh and no updates to the Penguin algorithm are in sight.

In fact, I reported yesterday at Search Engine Land that No, Google Hasn’t Released Unannounced Penguin Updates. Why did I have to report that? Couple reasons:
(1) There was some speculation based on a video hangout with John Mueller that Penguin refreshed regularly. It does not, it never did, and the truth is, it refreshes very rarely.
(2) It has been almost five months since an official Penguin update and I wanted to make sure we didn't miss any updates.
Google has told us that Penguin is rarely refreshed, unlike Panda and we didn't miss any Penguin refreshes since.
What was John talking about? He was talking about normal link analysis is refreshed and rerun continuously.
I posted this on my Google+ page and then someone brought up the Zebra update. There is no such thing, stop asking me about Zebras. There was not a Zebra update.
Forum discussion at Google+.

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Google Panda #25 Coming Today? Not Sure.



An ongoing WebmasterWorld thread has some chatter around an increase in GoogleBot crawl activity as well as some early ranking fluctuations.

That and we are just about the 30 day mark from the previous Google Panda update, Panda #24, we are suspecting a Panda update is about to be hitting today or tomorrow.
Normally, days before a Panda update is announced by Google, we see this type of chatter and GoogleBot activity. The issue is, it has been almost 5 months since the lastconfirmed Penguin update, so webmasters are unsure what is going on with that.
That being said, Mozcast showed some activity the other day, so did SERPs.com, however SERPMetrics doesn't show much, and now DigitalPoint shows changes (See "Search Engine Rank Changes") also but nothing crazy.
Is a Panda refresh about to hit us? I suspect so but only Google can confirm that.
Forum discussion at WebmasterWorld.