Posts Tagged ‘How-to’

iPhone crash – how to reboot

September 11th, 2009 by Adrian | No Comments | Filed in iTunes & iPhone
iphone crash

iphone crash

iPhone crash – how to reboot. Control-Alt-Delete for the iPhone is what I needed to do.

After some playing around and confirming that there are only two buttons, with no secret trap doors! That I would hold the top on/hold button and the Home button both down until they do something.

The screen will go blank, then you see the Apply logo and your back up and running. You don’t loose any data or apps.

Good luck.

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Relevance over ccTLDs

August 21st, 2009 by Adrian | No Comments | Filed in SEO

So, relevance wins over TLDs.  Who would have guessed !?

As part of the caffeine update, lots of us saw many .com’s appearing over the top of co.uk’s etc etc.  If you mix the Vince update with Caffeine you get a wired Vince and dot coms able to rank when the previous ground swell of talking heads was you must have a ccTLDs otherwise you would fail in regional Googles.

Oh well.  Here it from the man himself in this YouTube video.  <smug>Supports some of my current projects</smug>

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Types of searches – Navigational, Informational and Transactional

July 30th, 2009 by Adrian | No Comments | Filed in SEO

Here are some definitions of the 3 main kinds of searches that a user might do. They are important as they hold the intent of the users and if you believe this, might influence the response and what is relevant results from a search engine!.

Navigational Search
A navigational search is a specified search and is successful if your product is a specific brand name. Searches like ‘Tesco’ or ‘Diesel Jeans’ means that that those websites optimising for that brand would appear above all the others so for smaller companies it is not necessarily the best way to optimise your site as it is highly competitive against other more commercial companies.

If you are selling or are the owner of a brand, people are effectively looking for you, but may end up on a site that is optimised for your product. Affiliates and domain squatters can do very well here. This can also apply to events, generics, news items or popular culture.

Informational Search
This is a better way for small businesses to optimise their site. They can aim to rank highly for a simple phrase and make it more plausible. A couple of words creating a generic phrase are far more successful than depending on brand names to get traffic to a site. Phrases such as “tyres Chiswick” can be far more effective for businesses rather than a brand of tyres. The risk of using a brand is that it is likely to be supplied by big chain stores nationwide that already have a good amount of traffic to their site.

This could be a bit of a leveler on the internet.  The internet was meant to allow small businesses to compete with anyone, anywhere.  In practice this is not the case, but especially on local search or map searches smaller players can win and from my hunt for new car tyres yesterday, small businesses who register for local business on Google appeared on a map in the no1 slot and did very well in the map channel.

Transactional Search
These searches are far more specific and contain a lot of words that identify what a consumer wants in finer detail. For example “cheap tyres Hammersmith London (& maybe brand).” All of the sites that contain these words will come up in the search engine results and your company may be there but the amount of people using this method of searching are fewer than the others.

Fewer in quantity, but fairly precise.  The longest keyword phrase I have seen that has come to a site I have worked on was 18 words in length.  Funnily enough, 100% conversion rate to transaction.  Now the quantity of unique long tail terms can be big, but may only happen once or twice per year.  But you might be lucky and if you are in the right business the total volume might be huge!

To conclude
Keywords definitely vary by industry and country.  And depending on your industry, and your type of product, the age/demographics or sophistication levels of your customers and potential customers will depend on your keyword usage.

You will need to understand your customers (marketing 101 don’t forget all that you know from the old world order) and enough you optimise your business and your site to make sure you are found ahead of the competition.

Look at your keyword reports, ask you customers virtually or face-to-face if you can how they found you, how they want to find your service or product.

This is part science, part human skills and a bit of luck.  If you kind of understand your customer you have a chance to satisfy their needs.

Good luck.

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SEO Rapper on Design coding

June 24th, 2009 by Adrian | No Comments | Filed in Fun things

I think the next time I need to explain my SEO strategy or how important accessibility is for a clean site, I may take this approach.

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Rel No Follow is dead and has been for ages – official

June 16th, 2009 by Adrian | No Comments | Filed in SEO
SEO talking heads

SEO talking heads

It would seem negligent not to acknowledge this story.  It seems to have sparked a feverish amount of conversation on internal DLs, forums and social media posts.  And my RSS reader is stuffed full of interpretations of this change.  And now, I am guilty of peddling this stuff too.

Page Rank sculpting is dead and has been for a year – official.  The man himself explains all.

The original post on Matt Cutts’ own blog >>

I too have been guilty of implementing this on my clients sites.  But I don’t feel bad.  First of all it has done no harm, and it didn’t detract from the big wholesome projects.  And in the process of executing this low-level tactic it has made a lot of team members take an interest in SEO.  They have helped make a tight information architecture and it has focused the mind on the exclusion of non-value-adding-pages.

So, not all bad.  I think we should retain the idea, but change the execution.

It does leave me wonder a few things – that won’t keep me awake at night

  • I also wonder if any other smaller search engine did a me-too implementation?
  • If I should start leaving comments on other sites/blogs!
  • If Akismet is going to have to work harder against all those form injections from blue pill touting sites?
  • If some bright spark is going to suggest wasting more time taking it off our sites
  • If someone is going to start asking how page rank is calculated and I will end up on a murder charge!

We live and learn. And what doesn’t kill us, makes us stronger.

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How to build a business case

March 19th, 2009 by Adrian | 1 Comment | Filed in Business

adrianland-business-case

If you work in a large company you probably are familiar with having to prioritise.  And if, like me, you work with a year long technology roadmap to make any change you need to build a case.

I have found the best way to build this case, is to use these 4 criteria.

• Size of Opportunity
• Risk of doing / risk of NOT doing
• Level of Effort
• Time to Impact

It generally works if there is a big opportunity and quick to impact. Then high levels of effort and risk are normally then just managed.

If there is a long time to impact, and only medium or small possible return, you are unlikely to get your idea squeezed in.

Sometimes, if the level of effort is next to nothing and the size is medium and is quick you might be lucky!

If this is a SEO business case, that is when the risk of not doing really kicks in.  Try to model what the loss is, especially if this is a hygiene change!

I reckon most situations can be modelled on these 4 criteria.

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