SEO and Website RedesignYou’ve likely heard the old maxim: “Do it right the first time—it takes less time than having to do it over.” This sentiment rings loud and clear when it comes to your search engine optimization (SEO), and if you’re a website owner who redesigned a site, sent it live, and then decided to learn about SEO, you know firsthand how crucial it is to ensure that your website is optimized properly from the start.

A website redesign can spark fear in the hearts of many a site owner, as search engine spiders need to reacclimate themselves to your new site structure, causing many sites to see a temporary dip in rankings and traffic after a redesign. But with a redesign strategy that includes a series of well-executed steps, you can minimize any negative impact on your rankings and traffic by helping the search engine spiders effectively crawl your revamped website.

Let’s take a look at six of those steps:

  1. Decipher your Web analytics. Every website should utilize a Web analytics program and have the tracking code properly installed on their site. Popular analytics programs include Google Analytics and Yahoo!® Web Analytics, and they should be installed before sending a new website live. If you’ve been tracking your site’s analytics data for some time, you’ll be able to take a look at the most popular pages on your site, pages that have a high bounce (or exit) rate, and the navigation path that visitors take to reach a specific goal, such as the “thank you” page. Use this data to plan your new website, taking note of any navigation features that cause visitors to quickly exit your site as well as those that help to convert visitors into buyers.

  2. Plan your 301 redirect and 404 strategy. If you’re only changing the design of your website, and your domain name and the navigation structure of your site are remaining the same, your chance of encountering a traffic or rankings dip is much smaller than if you’re making sweeping structural changes. However, if you’re putting off a large redesign for a site that is simply not good at converting visitors into buyers, you’re not doing yourself a favor.

    Once you’ve mapped out the navigation of your new site by analyzing your Web analytics data, plan your 301 redirect strategy. It’s best to redirect a page that you’ll no longer be utilizing to its complement on your new site. Then, update your 404 error page to include a search box and modified sitemap with your most popular pages on it. That way, in the event that human visitors or search engines hit the 404 “brick wall,” you’ll ensure that they can easily find a path to your new pages.

  3. Prepare your SEO content and meta tags. A well-optimized website includes a number of on-page SEO techniques, which include about two paragraphs of SEO copy on the homepage and category pages, unique product descriptions, and SEO-friendly meta tags on at least the homepage and category pages. Make sure you have the SEO copy and meta tags ready to go on the new site as soon as you hit that “go live” button, which will further help to lessen any dips in rankings or traffic.

  4. Discover who’s linking to your site. If all of the URLs on your website will be remaining the same, you can move to the next paragraph, which emphasizes the importance of having an active link-building campaign. If your URLs are changing, however, you may be at risk of losing some links. Visit SEOmoz.org’s Open Site Explorer, type in your domain name, and see who’s linking to you and which pages they’re linking to. If a page will no longer exist on your new site, contact the site owner and ask them to please update the link. Sure, it’s going to take time and it’s not going to be easy, but this step can go a long way in keeping your traffic and rankings intact.

    As I mentioned, it’s important to have an active link-building strategy during your redesign process. If you’re new to link building, hone up on our two-part Website SEO: Link-Building Myths and Illuminating Facts series and then get started. You can work on getting more links in place before you even go live, but make sure they’re pointing to pages that will actually exist on the new site.

  5. Start blogging. You’ll notice that many online stores and websites now have a blog attached to their website. Updating a blog with helpful ideas, interesting tidbits about your industry and products, fun promotions, and more is a great way to build up a regular readership and establish yourself as an industry expert. Although search engines tend to index and rank blog posts fairly quickly, those rankings often fall off just as fast. Yet blogging regularly, especially as you go through a redesign, is a great way to keep search engines visiting your blog and navigating through to your website, potentially helping them to reacclimate themselves to your new website faster.

  6. Keep a watchful eye on your website activity. Once your website has gone live, it can be tempting to just relax and allow the orders to roll in. Not so—we suggest submitting your new, or now updated, sitemap to Google via Google Webmaster Tools and regularly monitoring Google’s crawl frequency within Webmaster Tools. Keep an eye out for any dramatic dips in the number of pages indexed on your site, your site’s traffic, and its rankings. Remember—a temporary rankings and traffic dip is normal.

So . . . if you keep up with your link building and blogging and keep adding fresh content to your website, you’ll be helping search engines get up to speed on your new site in no time.


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Link-Building Campaigns and Link Request EmailsIn any link-building campaign, the link request email is one of the keystones. Without a well-written, thoughtful link request, you can’t expect to form meaningful relationships with website owners and get great links coming to your site.

Although writing a link request email isn’t rocket science, chances are if you’re just starting out on a link-building campaign, you might be making some mistakes that are getting your emails ignored or deleted (along with that forwarded message that contains pictures of puppies). Firing off an email that says something like “Hey, can we exchange links?” just won’t cut it.

So how can you avoid having your emails ignored or deleted? Let’s look at eight of the common mistakes found in link request emails:

  1. (No Subject). Don’t forget to use an eye-catching subject line. Believe it or not, your link request is a form of email marketing for your business, and you must make a good first impression. Start off with a solid, engaging subject line—it will catch the site owner’s attention as he muddles through the other link requests.
  2. ReallyWeirdEmail@NotMySite.com. Don’t send an email from a confusing, inappropriate, or irrelevant email address. Emails that come directly from your company or your website will look much more credible. To encourage trust, send your link request from a professional email address.
  3. To Whom It May Concern. This is one of the biggest mistakes that cause many link request emails to get rejected. Why should a site owner care about linking if you haven’t even taken the time to learn his or her name? Don’t deliver a canned greeting. Know your link request recipient’s name and address that person accordingly. To keep a more conversational tone—and to get the reader’s attention—use the person’s first name throughout the request.
  4. Let’s Talk About Me. Your site sells this, you just introduced this awesome new product, you’re really great, etc. Talking too much about your site and your products and services will leave the site owner bored and a little bit annoyed. You don’t need to tell them the whole story behind your website; you just need to get them to check it out. Spend more time in the message telling the site owner how valuable their site is. Talk about what you find interesting. Comment on a recent blog post on their site. Before contacting the site owner for a link, make sure that you’ve actually taken the time to look at the site.
  5. What Did You Want Again? Be clear about what you want and what you’re requesting. Don’t dance around the subject. Site owners may get hundreds of link request emails every day. Be clear, concise, and to the point when you ask for a link or an exchange.
  6. We’re Not Related. Relationships are important when it comes to link requests, and if you and the site owner aren’t connected in some way, chances are you’re not going to get a response. You wouldn’t want someone to crash your wedding, right? The same idea goes for link requests. You have to be related to the site owner through industry, interests, or even geographic area to increase your chances of getting a response. Only send requests to relevant sites—not just those with a high PageRank™.

    Also, it’s a great idea to connect with the site owner on social media before you send a link request. Follow his or her site on Twitter or Facebook. Connect with the site owner on LinkedIn. Establishing a social media relationship that can be mentioned in the link request can definitely boost your chances for getting a link.

  7. How Do I Contact You? Forgetting contact information is another big no-no. Besides using a professional email address, make sure you include your full name and a phone number. This makes the message much more credible and shows that you genuinely want to connect with the site owner.
  8. No Thanks. Don’t just sign off your letter with a request for a link and your name. Thank the site owner for his or her time. It’s polite, thoughtful, and an effective way to show that you want to establish a relationship.

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Internet Marketing ToolsGetting qualified traffic to your website can be more of a challenge than building the website itself. While there are plenty of free and cheap website design templates that can give you a professional online presence, the marketing side of the Web is much tougher to master. You can get traffic from other websites, search engines, Web apps, and email campaigns, or you can even pay to put yourself in Yellow Pages directories that only exist on the Internet. Understanding the best tools for your Internet marketing campaign can often be the difference between success and failure in this money-hungry sector.

For a small business, one of the first critical areas for online marketing is in the local arena. A fair amount of Web.com clients serve a limited geographical region, and search engines (especially Google™ and Bing™) have been taking greater strides to show legitimate local businesses among their search results. If you type in a search that includes a city name, there is a good chance that you’ll see a map with local businesses listed above the search results. If your business isn’t listed among the results on the map, then you’re missing out on some of the prime real estate for online searches.

Web.com customers can get submitted to maps and local directories by using the Visibility Online™ service, which also includes basic search engine optimization (SEO) and submission services. For the small business owner, this entry-level toolkit can increase exposure by adding websites to multiple directories as well as local listings in search engines. As an added benefit, the user gets three pages of on-page search engine optimization work, which helps search engines better categorize a business’ location, products, and services. Furthermore, the Visibility Online product has email marketing and traffic-tracking tools to help you understand the results of your marketing campaign.

Some of the most popular marketing tools on the Internet involve the generation of paid traffic to your site. While it is nice to get “free” traffic from search engines and directories, it is often very difficult to stand out among the multitude of competitors. Paid traffic from places like Google AdWords and Bing Search Center can make your site popular in a matter of days if you’re willing to spend the money. As a caution, you should be sure that you understand pay-per-click (PPC) marketing before trying it yourself, because some business sectors are very expensive, and you may be marketing to customers outside your service area unless you put tight controls on your ads. Web.com also offers a professionally created search engine marketing (SEM) service that guarantees traffic to your site, so you can avoid some of the headaches on the DIY side.

Naturally, there are more advanced Internet marketing tools available for those sites that want to create a national or international presence. Such sites generally require advanced search engine optimization, more robust link building, and business-grade eCommerce solutions. Despite the fact that more time, effort, and skill are necessary for getting competitive traffic on the national level, the same kinds of tools that work for a small campaign can work for a large one. You can conceivably begin a large Internet marketing project by making a few small changes to your website and helping search engines understand the content of the site.

Before embarking on any major online marketing campaign, it pays to understand how people interact with your website:

  • Is the website easy to use?
  • Do people abandon some pages more than others?
  • Is there a clear call to action?
  • Can people find the information they need to contact you on every page?

By answering these questions, you can often avoid the roadblocks and confusion that crop up when a significant amount of traffic lands on your website. Making your site concise and user friendly also allows you to scale up traffic without worrying about unnecessary phone calls from confused site visitors or lost opportunities from frustrated viewers. If you’re able to turn visitors into customers, you have a better chance of creating a sustainable Web presence, which in turn puts more money back into your business.


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SEO Campaign MetricsMeasuring the success of your SEO campaign is no easy feat. With so many metrics to consider—keyword rankings, PageRank™, number of indexed pages, traffic statistics . . . the list goes on and on—you might find yourself on overload when it comes to SEO success metrics. So where should you focus your efforts? Let’s explore the tricky world of measuring SEO and break down the facts about four of the common success metrics.

  • Success Metric #1: Keyword Rankings

    There’s no denying that keywords are the foundation of any SEO strategy, and businesses want to rank as high as they can in the organic results. Yet when it comes to actually measuring SEO, focusing solely on the up-and-down movement in keyword rankings no longer provides a clear picture of success. Search engines are currently personalizing search results based on a user’s search history and geographic location, and they’re integrating shopping results, social media updates, news, blog postings, and more . . . all of which are potentially skewing how a site is ranked.

  • Success Metric #2: PageRank

    PageRank measures the quality of incoming links to your website on a 1–10 scale, with 10 being the highest. Site owners have been watching this horizontal green bar for years, and they’ve been checking it daily for any small variance. Keep in mind, however, that PageRank is controlled by a third party (i.e., Google™), and it can change at will. So, would you base your success on a metric that’s controlled by someone (or something) else and that can change at any time, regardless of the SEO techniques you’re employing? We wouldn’t either . . . and even Google has removed PageRank as a default option from the Google Toolbar.

  • Success Metric #3: Indexed Pages

    Another common success metric that site owners tend to focus on is an increase in the number of pages that a search engine indexes for a website. Although site owners should strive to ensure that search engines are indexing the majority of their website pages, an increase in the number of indexed pages does not necessarily mean that the site is seeing dramatic SEO success . . . and the number can fluctuate at the will of a search engine. If a site owner sees a dramatic dip in the number of indexed pages, however, this likely signals a problem that should be investigated. But if you’re regularly adding SEO-friendly content to your site, adding to your link-building campaign, blogging, and so on, you’ll keep the search engine spiders coming back. And like PageRank, you can view indexed pages as a by-product of a successful SEO campaign.

  • Success Metric #4: Organic Search Traffic and Organic Keyword Traffic

    Every website owner should install a Web analytics program—such as the free Google Analytics tool—and continually track data. With Google Analytics, for example, you can view the number of visitors who are accessing your site after they’ve clicked your listing in the “nonpaid” or “organic” results, and you can view which keywords they used to find your listing. From there, you can evaluate the amount of traffic the keywords are generating each month, the bounce rate for each of them, and whether you’ve focused on any of the keywords—or their variations—in your SEO campaign. You can also compare traffic data year over year and from the start of your SEO campaign until the present.

If you’re seeing an increase in traffic, particularly if it’s from keywords that your campaign focused on . . . congratulations! Your SEO campaign is working, and you’ve focused on the success metric that matters. After all, the goal of an SEO strategy is to increase traffic to your website—and ultimately to increase conversions. So shouldn’t you focus on an SEO performance indicator that isn’t controlled by a third party? Now there’s your answer.


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SEO and Sales SuccessPeople who are new to making sales online often miss peak online selling months, because of either a lack of preparation or a failure to understand online seasonality. When a site design project is held up or search engine optimization (SEO) initiatives are delayed, the resulting lack of search engine rankings and traffic can represent a huge opportunity cost. By understanding seasonality, and the time it takes search engines to respond to SEO, you can do a better job of scheduling projects . . . and making sure you have a “Plan B” if there are any delays.

Many of our customers use trend tracking to ensure that their search engine optimization campaigns will be in place during times of peak customer interest. Google™ has a free tool called Google Trends, which allows people to discover historical search traffic for top terms. Because search engine optimization takes weeks or months to take effect, it’s important to have most of the basic work implemented in advance of demand.

Search engines like Google generally take time to respond to SEO, especially if a site has not had any major changes for some time. This is because sites that have grown “stale” are not regularly visited by Google, so on-page changes can take some time to be discovered. At the same time, link building (which acts as an endorsement for your site and its content) needs to be indexed and factored into Google’s algorithm as well. Once these items are in place, Google still takes some time to apply its new information to the search results. With Google’s recent update (called the Google Caffeine update), many new pages get indexed faster . . . and established and trusted websites that add new pages are more likely to get priority.

From a budgeting standpoint, it’s important to have SEO and linking campaigns in place ahead of time. Because companies often budget on a fiscal-year basis, executives should be on board early on so they can sign off on an increased spend in the current fiscal year for sales expected in the year following.

If your site has yet to be launched, the advantages of a “soft launch” cannot be underestimated. Allowing a search engine to find your site (or several important pages) prior to its “grand opening” allows you to start the SEO clock early . . . and start pointing links at your website. While some people worry about getting too much traffic before the site is ready, a more common concern arises when a site launches and traffic takes several months to trickle in.

Like most other marketing and advertising budgets, SEO and link-building dollars have been cut back because of the slow economy. Some online companies have even gone out of business. From a competitive standpoint, this presents an advantage to companies that plan to stick it out. It’s now possible to move ahead of companies that were previously aggressive with their SEO and link building. Furthermore, companies that have closed up shop are going to be disappearing from the search engine rankings, so this could be one of the best times to start or improve your SEO projects.

Is your peak season happening right now? Although you can still get customer traffic, the cost can be higher. Pay-per-click (PPC) advertising through Google AdWords and Microsoft® adCenter can get your content found within a few hours. During profitable times like the Christmas season, for example, PPC can be a very worthwhile source of site traffic. Nonetheless, PPC campaigns tend to work better once they’ve been running for a few weeks, because search engines use your click history to determine how relevant your site is compared to other advertisers. If you can improve your “quality score” with PPC engines over time, you may get better ad positions for a lower cost-per-click (CPC) than the advertiser who has an ad listed beneath yours.

For any online marketing project involving search engine optimization, executives and decision makers need to be patient in waiting for results, but quick when it comes to executing SEO. The inscrutable nature of search engine algorithms means that there is no easy answer for when SEO efforts will translate into first-page rankings.

Because the vast majority of positive website rankings increase at some point, an investment in SEO today may pay off next week, in six months, or a year from now . . . in ways that greatly exceed the return on investment. By understanding the “hurry up and wait” nature of the search engine rankings game, you can have your work in place while your competitors are still drawing up their project plans.


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Are you missing out on a huge potential market? Read Rieva Lesonsky’s post Target Market: How to Reach African American Consumers to learn more.

Speaking of niche markets, you know Hispanics are a huge part of the U.S. economy, but Are You Marketing to Hispanic Men? Read Rieva Lesonsky’s post to learn why you should be.

Is your business getting left behind by digital marketing? Be sure to check out 5 Key Digital Trends That Matter to to Your Business, by Rieva Lesonsky, so you don’t miss out.

Old-fashioned email marketing still matters, too. Read Monika Jansen’s post 7 Ways to Make Cold Emailing Work For You to power up your sales.

What really works on Facebook? Get it straight from the source in Monika Jansen’s post Facebook Says: These Are the Brand Strategies That Increase Engagement.

You’ve probably dealt with a difficult customer. Get help turning the situation around in Monika Jansen’s post How to Turn Difficult Customers Into Marketing Success Stories.

Things are looking up–but consumers aren’t yet ready to spend. Read Maria Valdez Haubrich’s post Economy Positive, But Consumers’ Outlook Still Negative to learn why.

How will your restaurant fare in 2013? Casual-Dining Trend Means Challenges and Opportunities for Restaurant Owners, by Karen Axelton, offers a look at what’s hot and how to profit from it.

Want to be memorable for the right reasons? Read Monika Jansen’s post 4 Lessons On How Customer Service Is Your Brand.

Women business owners are growing strong. Want proof? Read Rieva Lesonsky’s post More Women Business Owners Pass the $10M Mark.

Content marketing is a hot buzzword, but what about going one step beyond with content curation? Monika Jansen shows you how in 5 Reasons Content Curation Is Important to Your Marketing Strategy.

You know ecommerce is growing, but do you know how much? Etailers Rejoice: Ecommerce Spending Hits New Records by Maria Valdez Haubrich has the skinny.

Maybe Showrooming Isn’t as Scary as You Think. Read Karen Axelton’s post to find out the latest on this retail trend.

Want to know the hottest target markets for mobile marketing? Read Rieva Lesonsky’s posts Women Step Up as Mobile Users, Customers and Meet the Mobile Super-Shoppers.

B2B marketing is a world of its own. Get the latest on what works in that world in Monika Jansen’s post 4 B2B Marketing Blogs From People Who Walk the Walk.

Learn what a new Web.com study found about the outlook and attitudes of women business owners. Read Rieva Lesonsky’s The State of Women-Owned Businesses, 2013.

Good news for women entrepreneurs: Angel Capital May Get Easier for Women Business Owners to Find. Read Rieva Lesonsky’s post to learn more.

Do you want to keep on top of the latest small business marketing trends? Read Monika Jansen’s post 7 Marketing Trends That Benefit Small Businesses.

Wonder why your marketing efforts fall short? To see what you’re doing wrong, read Maria Valdez Haubrich’s post Marketers Are From Mars, Consumers Are From Venus.

Want to make more money? Who doesn’t? Read 6 Easy Ways to Boost Your Revenue This Year by Monika Jansen to get started.

Are you working harder and getting less done? The culprit could be multitasking. Read Rieva Lesonsky’s Is the Multitasking Myth Hurting Your Productivity?

Email’s an effective marketing tool, but are you using it right? Read Monika Jansen’s 7 Quick Fixes for Common Email Marketing Mistakes to find out.

Social shopping is the next big thing…or is it? Read Karen Axelton’s post Social Shopping Isn’t Taking Off Just Yet to get the scoop.

Curious about what Facebook’s Graph Search might mean for the future of business? Read Monika Jansen’s post 5 Ways Facebook’s Graph Search Could Help Your Social Media Marketing.

Are You a Victim of Nice Girl Syndrome? Read Rieva Lesonsky’s post to find out if you’re too nice for your own good.

Does your business website need a tuneup? Read Monika Jansen’s 6 Ways to Improve Your Website and Deliver the Information Your Customers Need.

No, it’s not too early to ask: Are You Ready for Holiday Retail 2013? Read Karen Axelton’s post to find out how online retailers are readying for bigger and better sales.

Then refresh yourself on the basics of ecommerce with Maria Valdez Haubrich’s post 7 Reasons Customers Buy (or Don’t Buy) From Your Business Website.

Is Your Family Really Supporting Your Business? From time to time, you need to take stock of whether your work-life balance is getting out of balance. Read Rieva Lesonsky’s post to learn more.

Boost your profile by writing an ebook. Read Monika Jansen’s 7 Tips for Creating Your First Marketing Ebook to learn how.

Are you trying–and failing–to land government contracts? Learn where to get help in Rieva Lesonsky’s post Women Business Owners Lose Out in Race for Government Contracts.

Content marketing is hot today–but how do you keep your content fresh? Start by reading Monika Jansen’s post 5 Keys to Creating Valuable Content.

Then check out Monika’s series, 7 New Ideas for Valuable B2B Blog Posts and 7 More New Ideas for Valuable B2B Blog Posts, to get inspiration.

Are you in the restaurant or food industry? You won’t want to miss Rieva Lesonsky’s post Americans’ Taste for Healthy Eating Continues.

Trying to improve your employees’ health? Get ideas in Get Up, Stand Up: Why Your Employees Should Stop Sitting Around by Maria Valdez Haubrich.

B2B Marketing Budgets Are on the Rise in 2013—Is Yours? Read Rieva Lesonsky’s post to see how your business measures up.

Can’t decide between suppliers? Read Karen Axelton’s How to Choose a Supplier for Your Small Business before you make your final choice.

What do luxury shoppers want today? Read Rieva Lesonsky’s Luxury Marketing Goes Digital to find out the secrets of marketing to luxury consumers.

A gift shop’s success is based on the visual aspect of what they do. People need to see the items to buy them. So how do you get them interested in your gifts when they’re not in the store, but without spending a lot of money on advertising?

There are three social media tools every gift shop owner can use to build interest and traffic to their stores.

Facebook

Start a Facebook page for your store, and invite your customers to like it. Then, communicate with them on a regular basis, but for more than just promoting your store’s items. Ask questions, like “what was the best gift you ever received?” or “what’s the funniest gift you ever gave?” to keep people coming back and interacting with your page. It will teach them to check out what you have to say on a regular basis.

Instagram

Instagram is a mobile app that lets you take photos, apply creative filters, and share them with your Instagram network, as well as Facebook. Take photos of some of the cool stuff in your store, especially as it comes in, and share it via Instagram.

Pinterest

Pinterest is another app that works on your laptop or your mobile phone. See a picture of something you like, and pin it to your “board.” While most people use it to pin pictures of things they find on the Internet, you can also use it to pin the Instagram photos you shared on Facebook. Pinterest is also a good way to take photos of stock items you’re thinking about bringing in to the store and asking your customers for their opinion.

A few days ago, we talked about using Tumblr as a way to promote your blog to your potential clientele. We wanted to delve into the new growth of Tumble-blogging, and how you can use it more fully.

Tumblr (no ‘E’) has been embraced especially by Generation Y who wanted something more informal and easier to use than a regular blog. While a regular blog is just as effective — if you have one, don’t abandon it — there’s something hipper and funner about a Tumblr blog.

The first thing to do is claim your Tumblr blog. Go to Tumblr.com, and set it up using your gallery name — StevesGallery.tumblr.com — and set the background theme the way you want it.

Next, download the Tumblr app to your mobile phone. Take a few minutes and familiarize yourself with how it works. It’s pretty easy. Just take a photo on your phone (or choose one from the gallery), type in some text, and upload it to your Tumblr blog. Unfortunately, you cannot send more than one photo at a time this way.

You can also email several photos and copy at once to your Tumblr blog. Each account is given its own special, secret email address. Put that in your phone’s address book. Then, when you take a series of photos, attach them all to an email to your Tumblr account, add in the text, and then send it off.

And of course, you can also upload a series of photos to your Picasa or Flickr account, and then copy the embed code for a slide show into your email and send that off, or just go to Tumblr.com on your laptop, and write the post like you would any other blog post.

Then promote the posts via your social network and use it to build both search engine traffic and foot traffic to your gallery.

Are you familiar with the term “mastermind group?” You may hear it called other things, but basically, it’s a group of people who are closely aligned to your business’ success and growth. These are people you meet with on a regular basis, so you can contribute to each others’ success.

A mastermind group can be built around a certain industry or niche, like residential real estate, which includes a Realtor, a mortgage broker, an attorney, a handyman, and anyone else who might be related to that specific niche.

The group could be built around a certain type of people, like small business owners or marketing directors. People who want to share new information and ideas with each other, so that they can take it back to their own jobs and do them better.

Or it can even be based on geography, like all the retail businesses in a particular neighborhood. While some of them may compete, they instead focus on the general health and prosperity of the neighborhood, and share ideas on how to run their businesses better.

The idea is to find people who share a common business goal and can work together without competing. They come together once a week or once a month to share knowledge, share ideas, and even share leads with each other.

The Realtor can refer new clients to the mortgage broker. The marketing directors can bounce ideas off each other, and give advice. A small theater and a restaurant can team up to sell special dinner-and-a-show packages.

Whatever you do with your mastermind group, leave yourself open to the possibility that some very creative and beneficial ideas can grow out of it.

We’ve talked about the importance of online social networking for the last several months, but we don’t want to ignore the importance of meeting people in person. This kind of networking is just as important to growing your business as online networking is.

Here are three benefits of doing real-world networking:

1. Networking events lets you meet more than one person at a time.

We like networking events where you get to meet a lot of people at once. Not only does it increase your odds of meeting people who can have a positive influence on your life, it lets you be more visible within your community. Your Chamber of Commerce, business networking groups, and even local industry groups are all places to network.

2. Read nonverbal cues, and learn about a person’s passions.

Sitting down and speaking with someone face-to-face lets you hear the excitement in their voice when they tell you about the things that excite them. It’s a bonus when that passion is their work. It helps you understand why they love what they do, and helps you make connections for them later on.

3. Create deeper relationships than you can online.

It doesn’t matter how well you get to know someone online, you will never have as deep a relationship as you can by talking to them in person. You need to see their face, hear their voice, and see their nonverbal communication to get to know them. You’re creating, in a loose sense of the word, a friendship, and you just can’t do that through a keyboa

Let’s say you own an ice cream parlor, along with three other parlors within a five mile radius. You can win a search any time someone looks for “ice cream shop” or “ice cream parlor” when they do a search while they’re in your city, or do a mobile search on their phone.

The biggest trick that will help you win this mobile search is registering your business on Google Places.

Claiming your Google Places spot does one very important thing for you: it tells other people how to find you on Google and on the maps. And if you’re the first ice cream parlor in your neighborhood to do it before your competitors, you appear higher in the search than the other ice cream shops.

Log in to your Google account with your Gmail address and password (register for one if you don’t have one yet), and then enter in the necessary information. You’ll enter your business address, hours of operation, methods of payment you accept, any photos and videos, and anything else you want customers to know (free parking, specialty flavors you offer, etc.).

While Google typically wants you to list a mailing address, home-based and mobile businesses can also participate. Just put in your home address, and when you get to the section on Service Areas, select “this business serves customers at their locations.” Google will hide your address from the map, which means you can maintain your home’s privacy, and/or avoid any confusion with customers who may want to find you in person.

Your web content is the thing that’s going to make or break your search engine optimization efforts.

In yesterday’s post, we started talking about how important content is, but we didn’t want to include it in the list of three blogging SEO tips. Not because it’s not important, but because it’s very important.

One thing Google wants now is high-quality content, and they ignore content that was poorly written.

In the past, content writers did everything they could to cram as many keywords into their copy, often at the expense of the writing quality. Now, bloggers need to focus on making their content the best it can be. The keywords should almost be an afterthought — not something you ignore completely, but don’t spend any more than five minutes on them.

Since Google looks at things like time on site (they assume people spend more time on a page reading well-written content), it makes more sense for you to focus on making each blog post or web page the very best it can be.

If that means hiring a professional, consider it money well-spent. If it means writing and rewriting until it’s just right, then take the time. And if it means having a couple of friends tell you what they really think of the writing, then steel yourself and ask them to look it over.

As long as the end result is well-written and interesting, people will read it. If it’s not, your web traffic and search rankings will suffer.

One online guerilla marketing tactic is to write blog posts and other content that capitalize on the hottest trends going on that day. But how do you practice this real-time communication and real-time marketing, and find out what’s going on locally, nationally, or even internationally as it’s happening, rather than after the fact?

Start with Hashtags.org, which keeps track of the different Twitter #hashtags. If people are talking about it, it’s on Hashtags.org. To see how popular a topic is, visit the site, and either look at the most popular topics on the front page, or do a specific search for a topic of your choice to see what kind of traffic it’s generating.

We also like TweetLevel, a Twitter monitoring and ranking tool. You can find people who are influential about a certain topic (which you found on Hashtags.org), and start interacting with them, or place them in a Twitter list so you can follow them more easily.

With this information, you can now create your own content — blog posts, tweets, videos, podcasts, you name it — and capitalize on the popularity of the subject. Write your post, then tweet out the URL, using the same hashtag.

Next, find the influential people who are talking about a particular topic, and respond to their comments and questions. Share your own content with them. They may share your stuff with their own networks, where it can be seen by tens of thousands of people. Do this often enough, and you can be recognized as a voice of authority within that field or topic as well, and become your own influencer.

In a previous blog post, I talked about how to use a blog to drive traffic to your ecommerce store where you sell
specialty sandwich cutters. But how do you know if it’s paying off?

With Google Analytics, the free analytical package that shows you your web traffic performance, you
can see what’s working and what’s not.

For example, let’s say you published your post on “Five Fun Sandwiches for Kids” on a Monday. By
Friday, you’ve sold 100 of your sandwich cutters. How can we find how many of those sales came as
a direct result of the blog post?

First, we check out the Google Analytics page, and see that the post has generated 1,000 visits this
week. We can see how long everyone spent on the page, where they came from, and even where
they went.

In our hypothetical case, of the 1,000 visitors, we can see:

  • 600 of them came from Facebook, 300 came from Twitter, and the other 100 came from a
    variety of other sources.
  • 80% of them spent 1 – 2 minutes on the page, 10% spent 5 minutes on the page, and 10% spent
    less than 1 minute.
  • 100 of them clicked a link that took them to another page on the website (we can even find out
    which page), 800 of them left as soon as they read the page, and 100 of them went straight to the
    sandwich cutter catalog page.

By switching over to the Google Analytics for the sandwich cutter page, we can see that 50 of our
visitors actually bought the $15 sandwich cutter.

Based on all this, we can determine that 1) our blog post resulted in 50 sales this week; 2) it
generated $750 in gross revenue; 3) it has a 5% sales rate.

Without Google Analytics, we would never know what a particular blog post, or even a week of
traffic, has done for our business.

There are several social media review networks and apps where people leave reviews about their favorite (and not-so-favorite) restaurants, businesses, doctors’ offices, and retail clothing stores. Sites like Yelp, Foursquare, UrbanSpoon, FoodSpotting, and OpenTable all encourage users to leave comments and reviews of the restaurants.

Back before we had social media, people would frequently complain when they were unhappy, but rarely give public compliments. These days, people are more willing to share when they’re pleased, and are more likely to leave positive reviews.

Restaurant owners can help encourage these reviews, and using them to their marketing advantage, by trying these quick tips:

  • Remind people to check in on Foursquare, and ask them to leave a tip about
    their favorite appetizer. If you have a free wifi network, name it [RESTAURANT NAME]
    _dont_forget_foursquare.
  • Hold a weekly or monthly contest where people send their Foursquare checkin as a tweet with a
    #hashtag with your restaurant name.
  • Leave a tablet tent that says “Love us? Hate us? Leave a Yelp comment” and a QR code that
    takes people right to your Yelp page.

That last tactic is a bit of a calculated risk, because you’re showing people the exact path they need to take to complain too. But if your staff is on their game, this won’t be a problem. And if people do complain, we’ll tell you how to fix the problem tomorrow.

Restaurants need to keep track of what’s being said about them, but it’s not enough to watch each
and every review site — at one count, we saw over 10 of them, and that didn’t include networks like
Twitter, Facebook, or anyone and everyone’s personal blogs.

You could spend all day online looking for mentions of you and your restaurant, and you’d still miss
them all.

That’s why we like Google Alerts as our brand watchdog.

The search giant indexes millions of websites a day, looking for any and all important keywords,
including yours. So why not put that to work for you?

Go to Google.com/alerts, and enter your
restaurant name. “Use quotes” around the name if it has more than one word; that tells Google to
find exactly that phrase. Otherwise, it returns all instances of all the words, regardless of where they
appear on the page.

Set the Result Types to Everything, How Often to Daily,
and How Many to All Results.

This way, you will receive a once-a-day email of any and every time someone mentions your
restaurant name in a blog post, news article, or restaurant review. Then you can respond accordingly,
either thanking the person for the compliment, or offering to fix any problems.

There are other tools to help keep track of your restaurant brand and name (i.e. setting up a search
column on your favorite Twitter client), but Google Alerts will save you time while still keeping a
watchful eye on your brand.

 

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If you’ve got a Facebook Page for your business (which is different from your personal profile), you’ll want to know how it’s performing, to make sure you’re getting the most out of it.

That’s where Facebook Insights comes in handy. It gives you some basic analytics to see how your page is doing in terms of visits and interactions. According to the Mashable.com’s Beginners Guide to Facebook Insights, there are two basic insights you want to look at:

  • User Insights: Total page Likes, or a number of fans, daily active users, new Likes/Unlikes, Like sources, demographics, page views and unique page views, tab views, external referrers, media consumption.
  • Interactions Insights: Daily story feedback (post Likes, post comments, per post impressions), daily page activity (mentions, discussions, reviews, wall posts, video posts).

    This tells you how your page is doing, whether people are visiting, which pieces of content they like the most, which ones they don’t like, and even what they share and tell other people about. And with things like external referrers and media consumption insights, you get to see what brought people to your page — was it a Google search or tweet? — as well as what they looked at, read, watched, or listened to.

    Keep in mind that these insights are all anonymous. You can’t see who came to your page, but you can see how many did. By seeing this kind of data, you can get a good idea of which parts of your content and conversation are doing well, and which parts aren’t. That lets you choose what to focus on and what to drop.

When you’re trying to find people worth following on Twitter, you don’t want to just follow everyone when you’re first starting out. I mean, you can, and there’s nothing wrong with it. But if you’re trying to save some time or reach the most number of people in the shortest time, you need to reach the most influential people in your city.

We like two tools in particular that can help you find those people, the people who can motivate people to new actions, to read or visit certain websites, and even to try your restaurant.

Twitter Grader is a tool that shows a person’s Twitter rank out of a possible 100%. Anyone who is above an 80 is pretty influential, and you’ll even see a lot of 99.7s and 99.8s. While this isn’t everyone in the city, it’s at least a good indicator of who’s doing Twitter right, and has the followers to show for it.

TwellowHood.com is a Twitter locator that groups people by looking at the location they put in their Twitter bio. To find influential people in your city, visit Twellowhood, drill down to it in the map, and then follow everyone who has more than 100 Twitter followers, but not over 20,000. We’re setting the bar very low, because the people with a few followers may be fairly influential, and the people with more than 20,000 may not pay much attention to you.

While there are other tools to do the same thing, we like these because they’re easy to use and fairly accurate.

If you’re new to social media marketing and you’re trying to promote your business, there are a number of books you can choose from to get you started. One book we’re partial to is Shama Kabani’s The Zen of Social Media Marketing: An Easier Way to Build Credibility, Generate Buzz, and Increase Revenue.

The book is written for the social media marketing newbie, giving readers some basic insights into the different tools you can use — blogging, Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Google+, group coupon sites like Groupon, and video — and some of the best practices that will get you the traction you need for growing your own business.

We’ve found that a lot of small business people just don’t have the time or patience to sit down and learn how to start using social media at a high level. But the thing Shama’s book does very well is explain why it has to be done, and then finds the easiest ways to get you up and running as soon as possible.

Shama uses simple language and simple ideas to explain what may be seen as a complex and unwieldy marketing channel. If you’ve been letting social media marketing’s overwhelming size be a reason to stay out of it, what will happen when that becomes the biggest game in town and the only efficient way to reach your customers?

Hint: That day is already here. You’d better get started.

If you’ve been on the fence about whether social media marketing is right for your company, The Zen of Social Media Marketing may be one of the best books you can get.

A couple days ago, we talked about how you can promote your store with Facebook, Instagram, and Pinterest. Pinterest is a great way for people to share cool photos of things they have done, things they want, and even ideas for things they would like to do. We wanted to talk a little more about how you can use Pinterest successfully for your own gift shop.

We’ve seen food recipes, things to build, and things to buy. Pinterest is a good way for people to communicate simply and easily, and even use it to manage special events, like a wedding registry.

1. Start by growing your network.

Add people to your Pinterest network by following them. Since social media is based on reciprocity, people will follow you back. And as you re-pin and comment on their items, they’ll do the same for you (plus you may find some great stuff to bring into your store). If you already have a big Twitter or Facebook following, import those users into your network for a quick network boost.

2. Post photos of your best inventory online.

You can either use Instagram and share photos to your Facebook page or upload the photos to your Flickr or Picasa account, and then pin those. Create a board of “Cool Stuff In Our Store,” and let people know what you’re sharing.

3. Pin photos directly from your ecommerce store.

We talked about building an ecommerce store yesterday. If you actually have one, pin photos of your inventory. If someone clicks the photo to be taken back to the original source, which many people do, they will be taken right to your store’s page and that particular item. If they’re impulse buyers, you may get a sale out of it.

Twitter can be an invaluable tool for restaurants. They can use Twitter to communicate with fans and regulars, which will keep them coming back. Fans become regulars, regulars become evangelists. You need more of these people, and you can use Twitter to do it.

1. Get a Twitter handle for your restaurant’s name so that people know it’s you. @JaxBurgers is too generic, but your own name — @SteveSanderson — is too unknown. Pick the shortest possible name that people will still recognize: @PunchPizza, @Thr3eWiseMen, @BoogieBurger are all good examples.

2. Respond to people immediately. Whether they’re asking for directions, asking about the specials, or complaining about the service, respond immediately and publicly. Twitter is a great way to reach a lot of people easily, so even if you’re answering the same questions over and over, keep doing it. People will see it. And when people complain, if you can solve their problem, they’ll tell their friends you did, and people will see that too.

3. Ask fans to share photos, answer questions, or even help decide your next menu item. There are a couple of restaurants where I live that have asked their Twitter fans to vote between two different food items for their menu. It increases fan engagement, and their friends see that communication, which boosts word-of-mouth marketing.

One hint: When @replying to tweets, if your tweet starts with the @ symbol, only people who follow both of you will see it. But if you drop a space in front of the @, then everyone who follows you can see it.


One of the least expensive and most effective advertising tools you can use is Facebook. Unlike your other advertising options, Facebook advertising lets you reach exactly the people you want to reach for pennies per ad.
The great thing about Facebook advertising is you can specify exactly who sees your ad on their Facebook page. Unlike radio and TV advertising, Facebook lets you target a specific group of people, and is only seen by that group.
Facebook advertising lets you specify how much you want to pay per ad, and even lets you put a daily cap limit so you can stretch your budget further.
You get to choose who sees your ad, based on their demographics and their likes. For example, if most of your customers tend to be 20-somethings who live inside the city limits, you can target the ads specifically to them.
When you buy your ads, choose their age, gender, city, how much you’ll pay per click, and the daily cap limit — say, women between the ages of 25 – 35 who live in Miami, FL, with a click rate of $.50, and a cap rate of $30. Write the web copy, drop in an image, and launch it. Make changes every few days, and see which versions got more traffic.
Send ad viewers to your home page, or to a specal offer page of your choice.
Facebook advertising lets you reach potential visitors in a way no other medium can. Use it wisely and it can be one of the biggest traffic builders you’ve ever used.

This week, we’ve been talking about salons and spas, and how they can use social media to promote themselves. During our research, we found an interesting story about one particular salon that, with the help of a digital marketing agency, saw some impressive social media success.

Jocelyn Rimbey is a digital marketing manager with the Cyphers Agency, and helped the Robert Andrew Salon and Spa reach their audience with social media. We were so impressed with the results, which Jocelyn blogged about, we thought they were worth mentioning.

First, Robert Andrew had a reputation management issue to solve, namely a few negative online reviews, plus a former employee running their own personal smear campaign. Robert Andrew also needed to overcome a lack of awareness by most potential clients.

So Jocelyn’s agency created an Ambassador Program that asked long-time, loyal clients to share their love for Robert Andrew with their own social networks. By using Flickr, YouTube, Facebook, and Twitter, Robert Andrew received some excellent traffic, and more than 40 positive reviews to counter the negative ones.

Here are some of their wins:

  • Flickr Photo Views: 47,727
  • YouTube Video Views: 1,389
  • Facebook Page Views: 3,257
  • Twitter Post Views: 517
  • Review Site Posts & Views: 300
  • Online Forum Posts & Views: 333
  • Robert Andrew Blog Views: 168

Of course, it doesn’t take a digital agency to do all this; you do need to invest time into it. But the payoffs can be stellar, making social media one of the most cost-effective (and successful) marketing channels available.


Salons and spas that want to take advantage of social media’s popularity should look at these three tools as a way to promote their business online.

Pinterest

This is the sharing site that lets you show your friends, “I like this!” by pinning things you find online, or photos you take. Pin something to your board, and your Pinterest (and Facebook) friends will see it and repin it. It’s become a smash hit, especially among women, who make up anywhere from 58% to 97% of their total traffic, depending on who you talk to. Take photos of new products, new techniques, and even of your best work, and pin it. Ask your clients to do the same.

Instagram

Another photo sharing site, but this one is only of the photos you take; you won’t share things you find online. By applying some fun, artsy filters to the photos, you can take pictures of clients, your salon or spa’s new decor, or even after a fun day with friends. You can even encourage your clients to share photos of themselves on Instagram and Facebook, which you can then Like, or even pin to your Pinterest boards.

Yelp

Yelp is a review site where people can give reviews of restaurants, clothing stores, and — you guessed it — salons and spas. While you won’t be able to write reviews about your own place, keep an eye on your own entry to see what’s being said about you. Encourage clients to leave positive reviews, and if someone leaves a negative one, respond positively and publicly. Let others see you solve customer service issues.

The best way to grow your restaurant’s Twitter network is by following people who are likely to visit you. That means local people, not people who live in other states, not celebrities, not other companies. Here are three ways you can grow your restaurant’s Twitter network quickly.

1. Put your Twitter handle on your menu. Give people a 5% discount or free soft drink for following you and then tweeting a message with your handle in it. While that may seem like a premium cost, keep in mind that you’re not only getting a new follower, you’re getting word of mouth marketing out of it too. Some marketers would pay $5 apiece for a contact like that.

2. Follow people in your city. Use Twellowhood.com to find people in your area. Also, look for #hashtags about certain local events or festivals, and follow people who live in the area. Talk with them on Twitter after the festival as well, and invite them to your restaurant.

3. Follow who your competition follows. Go to the competition’s Twitter page, see who they’re following, and then follow them. You want to follow the people they are following, rather than the ones who are following them, because they’re (hopefully) following locals. But they can have all sorts of spam accounts following them, so you don’t want to bother with that. Also, don’t worry about following celebrity accounts and national brands. They won’t be patrons, so save your energy.

Home service pros rely on word of mouth for spreading the word about their business and reputation. Thanks to social media, that part of their job has become both easier and more difficult.

How so? For one thing, if you do a good job, people will tell their friends. When someone posts on Facebook that they’re looking for a home service pro, their friends will chime in with the name of “their guy.” And the new client will call up the professional given to them by the person they trust the most. On the other hand, it means if you do a bad job, they’ll tell their social networks as well.


So how can you manage your reputation to make sure your reputation is protected and people will call you?

1. Set Up a Google Alert for Your Name.

A Google alert can tell you whenever new occurrences of your name or company name are created, which saves you from having to check every day. Go to Google.com/alerts, set up new alerts for your terms.  You will receive emails on these terms on a daily basis, or as they appear — you can determine how frequently you want to be notified.

2. Respond Publicly and Positively to Any Complaints

If there are any complaints about you online, don’t argue, don’t fight back. Apologize and offer to fix it. You may have to swallow your pride, but when people see that you tried to make it better, they’ll know you’re focused on doing good work and keeping customers happy.

3. Post Testimonials to Your Website

Make sure you have a testimonials page on your website, then post any testimonials you receive. Site visitors will see how many happy customers you have and be more apt to trust you.

Pinterest is an online pin board where users share, or “pin,” photos of things they like, so their other friends can see them. You can organize your photos into different boards — things I want, organization, weight loss motivation, recipes to try, travel planning, childhood memories — and browse other people’s boards to get inspiration from them.

We’ve seen boards dedicated to fitness, home decorating, wedding planning, healthy eating, favorite desserts, skin care tips, you name it. Then, as the pinners are surfing the web, and they discover a photo of something they like, they pin it, add it to their appropriate board, and write a suitable description that explains what they liked about it.

There are a few cool things about Pinterest that make this more than just a bulletin board though. For one thing, whenever someone clicks your pinned photo, they’re taken to the original website where you found it, like, say, a book page at Amazon.com. (Idea: Create a birthday wish list board and pin the photos of items you want.)

Another possibility is to use Pinterest to promote items you sell. Pin photos to your salon or spa’s “Items We Carry” board, and put up the photos of new products. If you have an affiliate sales account (i.e. you sell someone’s product from someone else’s site, and get a commission), you can even post photos from those sites, and then sell those products.

Of course, you don’t want to post only sales photos. People come to social media to escape advertising, not be bombarded with it. Use your sales items sparingly, mixed in with your fun and interesting “pins.”

Even for doctors and dentists who don’t want to publicly join social media, we recommend that you at least give LinkedIn a try. LinkedIn is a professional network that lets people connect on a professional level, as compared to Facebook, which is all about personal connections.

Facebook lets you talk to family and friends, but LinkedIn lets you connect with colleagues, former med school classmates, and anyone else you interact with on a professional basis.

By connecting with colleagues, you also have access to their network as well. For example, if Dr. A is connected to Dr. B who is connected to Dr. C, Dr. A can ask for an introduction to, and make a connection with, Dr. C. This lets each person increase their network, which can lead to several interesting opportunities for the future.

There are even specific groups you can join, converse with other members, and exchange ideas and information with each other.

The Medical Doctor Network has over 12,000 members and is a very active discussion list, while the Doctor Jobs Portal is a place for doctors to find new positions. And the Doctor-Engineer Portal is for doctors and engineers who want to work together on new medical device projects. There’s even a Junior Doctor Forum – Australia & New Zealand, which is only for junior doctors in those two countries, or international doctors licensed to work in those two countries, and Doctor Jobs Down Under is for Aussie doctors looking for their own new jobs.

Even if you eschew all other forms of social media, try LinkedIn as a way to improve your professional development and growth, adding to your network of colleagues, and possibly taking your career in new directions you never even considered.

Instagram is a mobile app that applies different filters to photos you take on your digital phone, to make them look more artistic, more creative, or even 60 years old.

But it’s much more than that, it’s a community of photo sharers who not only want to express themselves creatively, but share the interesting things they encounter throughout their day.

As a salon or spa owner, you can harness that sharing, and increase the word-of-mouth marketing for your business by asking your clients to share their Instagram photos on your Facebook page. This will do two things for you: 1) It will get your clients to share information about your salon or spa with their friends, thus showing them some of the great benefits you offer; and, 2) It will provide content that your page members can comment on and interact with, which will bring them back on a regular basis.

So how do you get your clients to share their photos of your salon or spa? For one thing, just ask them. Make sure there’s some signage hanging that tells people you’re on Instagram (and to Like your Facebook page). Hold a photo of the week contest (winner gets a small prize). Offer to take photos while someone is getting a facial or in the middle of a cut. And take your own photos of clients and put them on your page (with their permission, of course).

Instagram is an instant content provider and conversation starter among your clients. Take advantage of its growing popularity.

Many medical practices — doctors’ offices, dental practices, emergency care, and even hospitals — are hesitant to join social media because they’re worried about what could possibly go wrong, especially around the areas of HIPAA and patient privacy. But they’re also worried about what kind of information they can share online. Here are four do’s and don’ts for medical practices to follow on social media, while steering clear of any potential problems.

1. Don’t reveal patient information.
Of course, and you already know this, but everyone in your office needs to know it. Doctors never revealed patient information when they got their first fax machine, their first email account, their first website. Social media is no different — follow the same rules and behaviors you do for the other technology.

2. Do share important health information
Sharing information from newspaper articles and health journals about the importance of exercise and good nutrition are always helpful. Articles on the importance of too much sun or not enough vitamin D are good. Anything you can do to help your patients stay well is worth sharing.

3. Don’t get too technical with your information.
Remember, you’re trying to find new patients, not impress other doctors. Your blog and Facebook page are not a suitable place to share the article you wrote for the medical journals, and it’s not really the place to engage in medical discussions with colleagues. Use a network like LinkedIn for those discussions.

4. Do limit your social media presence
A medical practice doesn’t need a wide social media footprint like, say, a digital marketing agency does. Stick with Facebook and Twitter, where most of your patients are anyway, and share the things that will be of interest to them.

When we talk to medical practitioners and practices, including hospitals, about social media the one concern we hear over and over is that they worry about potential HIPAA violations.

The short, almost flippant, answer is “you didn’t violate HIPAA when you got a fax machine, email, or a cell phone. Just do the same things you did when you weren’t violating HIPAA with that technology.”

And for the most part, that’s usually enough to keep you out of trouble. But there are still some important points that people don’t think about. So here are our recommendations for doing social media in an age of HIPAA.

  • You can’t acknowledge a patient’s compliments, because to do so would be to acknowledge that they were a patient. While it’s one thing if a person compliments you via Twitter, it’s another thing if that compliment shows up on your Facebook page. You should remove those, unless you can make the person anonymous (and you can’t).
  • The same is true for complaints. Unlike a restaurant, which can offer to fix a problem wherever a complaint is made, you can’t do that. Instead, develop a standard message where you urge any and all people to contact your office directly. And then remove the complaint from your page.
  • If you offer testimonials on your page, remove any and all identifying information. Refer to the patient by their initials, or at least first name and last initial. Never refer to any specific symptoms or ailments online.
  • Keep your personal and professional accounts separate. Don’t friend patients at all with your personal account. And try to encourage more than just patients to “Like” your practice page.

There are still some subtle nuances about HIPAA that confuse medical practitioners about what can and can’t be done. If you’re not sure, check with your compliance officer or another doctor for the answers to any questions you may have.

 

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