One of my favorite sources of marketing information is MarketingProfs – I learn so much from them. In a recent post, they wrote about the types of content that Google loves the most. I went through the list and pulled out the top 7 types that I thought were most relevant for small businesses – and that you are probably already doing.
Here are the 7 types of content that search engines like and you should be creating (if you’re not already):
1 – Interviews
Search engines like interviews for 4 main reasons: they get read, they get backlinks from the interviewee (bonus if the persons is an expert), backlinks are from trusted sites, and the content is unique.
You don’t need to conduct interviews in person unless you want to tape it and turn it into a video. I conduct most of my interviews via phone, but you can do them via email, too.
2 – Lists
Lists are usually fun, easy to scan, and easy to read – and readers love them. Search engines like them as long as the content is unique, and – bonus for you – they can be really easy to write. You can do lists of your favorite industry books or blogs, best airports for business travelers, best pieces of advice you ever got, top industry best practices – you get the idea.
3 – Resource Centers
Creating a resource center on your website is a new content marketing trend for small businesses. Think of it as a library of your content – ebooks, top blog posts by category, products, services, FAQs, etc. Because people share them, link to them, and spend time on them, search engines love them.
4 – Social
Did you know that Twitter, Facebook, and other social media networks are pulled up when you conduct a search? So, yes, the quality of the content you post on your social media accounts – and the amount of interaction it gets – helps boost your search rankings.
5 – Case Studies
Because case studies built around client success stories are interesting, people read them and share them. Your customers will link back to and share your blog posts, all of which is activity search engines really like – but you know that by now, don’t you?
6 – Predictions
You know the blog posts and articles that always come out around the new year that list industry predictions? People love them, read them, comment on them, and share them, so they tend to great search rankings.
7 – User-Generated Content
Search engines love user-generated content, whether it’s blog posts, images, or videos. Hold a contest that requires entrants to submit original content; if you allow others to comment on and vote for submissions, search engines will go crazy for all of the interaction.
Have you created content that showed up in the top of search results? What drove so much interaction?
Image courtesy of 123rf.com


The Christmas buying season starts November 1, and if you’re not making plans today for the Christmas season, it may already be too late! Keep in mind: During the 2009 Christmas season, a record-breaking $27 billion was sold online—a 5% increase over 2008.*
Getting 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.
You don’t always need to invest in high-end search engine marketing services to get found on Google™, Yahoo!®, and Bing™. In fact, many small businesses only need to follow a few basic steps to get discovered by search engines. The practice of getting higher rankings for your website is known as “search engine optimization,” or SEO, which can have a lot of different variables and nuances. At the heart of every ethical SEO campaign, however, is a set of basic principles that are the same whether you’re using DIY SEO tactics or hiring an agency for an enterprise-level search engine optimization program.
Every time I turn on the TV these days, I’m met by the “depression hurts” piano chords of the Cymbalta® commercial. Depression is big business these days, so I don’t necessarily blame Eli Lilly, Cymbalta’s maker, for promoting a pill to every demographic imaginable. The fact that it can also cause headaches, nausea, and yes, even suicide, doesn’t make Eli Lilly any less gun-shy about promoting the potential benefits of the drug. After all, depression hurts, Cymbalta can help.






























