Monday, 9 December 2013

Why Public Relations is a ‘Must-do’ for SEO in 2013

Many people today recognize that search engine optimization (SEO) and public relations (PR) have much to offer each other.

The latest Google changes have put a real emphasis on high quality, unique content that is linked to by quality sites. And this is where real public relations – as opposed to crappy news release distribution – can play such a crucial role.

There are real opportunities for great business. What follows are 10 reasons why SEOs should really get to grips with PR in 2013, based on my conversations with the people who are making the two work together.

1. The PR Industry is Definitely ‘Getting it’

Most of us who have been in link building for a while have in the past experienced a certain degree of frostiness from the PR industry. But that is clearly changing and people are breaking out of silos.

Mike Cherenson is a former Chair and CEO of the Public Relations Society of America (PRSA) and is EVP of Success Communications Group. He sees the importance of SEO and link building.

“Authentic and relevant link building, aimed at driving engagement, informing publics and building mutually beneficial relationships should be a part of every public relations and SEO effort," Cherenson said.

But not only should link building be a part of every public relations effort, public relations also has much to offer SEO.

“Public relations professionals are skilled storytellers and content generators and should be a part of every SEO effort," he said. "The future of SEO is not in the technology, it’s in the ability to tell stories that readers and Google will find interesting… and that’s public relations.”

And Cherenson understands the value of linking.

“Links need to provide value to the reader," he said. "Media will be more likely to link to content that is compelling and provides information that goes beyond the original reporting.”

Another PR professional is Ken Deutsch, EVP of JPA, a healthcare communications firm and a seasoned specialist in public affairs.

His company takes SEO and link building very seriously. But that’s still not the case throughout the industry.

“Many PR people stop at getting media coverage and think their job is done. They get a placement in the New York Times but they don’t follow up to make sure a link is put in. So they’re not taking advantage of the SEO side of the story.”

And while many media outlets provide links, there are some that don’t link out as a matter of policy.

That influences the targets he goes after, “because they don’t put links in, it’s not worth putting as much energy into getting placement there.”

2. There is a Tremendous Synergy Between SEO and PR

Putting it simply, SEO enhances a press release. Use popular keywords and the press release, never mind any stories it generates will continue to bring search engine traffic. And the editorial links the press release generates bring direct click-throughs and lead to higher rankings.

Public relations enhances SEO by focusing on what’s newsworthy, crafting a great story, finding editorial opportunities, getting coverage and building relationships with reporters and editors. And of course, they got the negotiation skills to ask for a link without really asking for a link.

“PR helps SEO directly by increasing branded traffic," said Lindsey Kirchoff, a Media and Speaker Relations specialist at HubSpot.com. "We always see a bump in branded traffic after a big campaign! Indirectly, PR helps SEO generate inbound links from quality sources that not only gets first-touch exposure to new audiences, but credibility in the eyes of search engines.

“SEO grounds PR with hard, measurable data. PR has always been notoriously difficult to pin down, but SEO adds hard numbers to the equation. I also think that SEO allows PR to be less isolated from the rest of the team – sometimes PR can feel like an island. SEO helps PR connect their work to the rest of the company's business goals.

“Finally, SEO establishes credibility for PR for keywords. You look much more credible to a news source if you come up high for the term they are reporting on!”

3. Editorial Links Bring a Big SEO Boost

Most PR links are extreme quality links, according to Jordan Brannon, the SEO guy at Coalition Technologies. Why? "Because getting them is not a free for all – you have to earn your media placements,” he said.

But the rewards are worth the effort.

“If you get 200 high quality editorial links, it’s worth more that 20,000 low quality links,” Brannon said.

However, most reporters work to a deadline and you have to be swift in your response to get in.

“Most editorial opportunities are time sensitive and you need to act quickly. That means you need to have the authority to reply on the client’s behalf," Brannon added. "And you have to have an email account on your client’s domain – it’s not good saying you’re a marketing agency.”

Will Marlow was formerly a Press Secretary for two congressmen before founding a company that specializes in search engine marketing. He knows that to get those all-important editorial links, sticking to deadlines is crucial.

“You need to understand that you’re dealing with someone who has a hard deadline. It’s like a train going by in the night and there’s one open boxcar that can take you wherever you want to go," Marlow said. "But jump too early and the reporter won’t write about you: jump too late and the reporter won’t write about you. You got to get it just right.”

And it’s not unusual to miss opportunities.

“If an SEO was learning from any PR guy, they would all have stories about how they missed opportunities because someone internally didn’t get back to them or didn’t give the reporter what they need," Marlow said. “If the reporter wants to talk to the CEO and the CEO is playing golf, then you’re not going to get the story. So you’ve got to collaborate with people within the company and make sure that the right people are available.”

4. There’s a Big Cascade Effect

Journalists will often quote, comment or enlarge upon other journalist’s work. Bloggers are also constantly citing other stories.

So if you get your story covered in one prominent media outlet, you’ll quickly see a cascade of similar stories and links spring up.

You’ll get links you never even asked for.

Miranda Miller wrote about How Google Rakes In Over $100 Million in Search Advertising Daily, based on research from Larry Kim of WordStream.

In writing that report, Kim was directly targeting the Wall Street Journal for a link – and succeeded. The story really benefited from the cascade effect and attracted coverage and links from literally hundreds of quality media outlets.

5. You Win Bragging Rights For Your Client

Clients just love to write “As featured in ..." on their website, whether its the Washington Post, Inc. Magazine, or whatever.

That builds consumer trust in their brand and makes it more likely they’ll buy.

And you also increase trust from other reporters. If you’ve already been quoted or covered by a respected publication, then other reporters will think you’re a safe bet to write about, too.

6. PR Skills Can be Learned – or at Least Understood – Easily

Kirchoff has this advice for SEOs who know little about PR:

“SEO experts should think of PR as a way to build strong referral links – something that should be on their radar already. If you have a PR expert in the office, start by taking them out to lunch and chatting. After all, PR is all about building relationships.”

But of course, learning about public relations will help you understand the process – but it might teach you that there’s a lot you don’t know. If that’s the case you might do better to partner with a PR resource.

7. It’s Easy to Partner With an Up and Coming PR Person

Mona Moore is an SEO who has teamed up with a small PR company, Hepner Communications, to pitch their services together.

“I think SEOs are always so focused on getting those links back to the client, we sometimes forget how important it is to nurture those long-term relationships necessary to continue working with specific media outlets,” Moore explained. “And PR reps are great at finding opportunities - but, they don't always take full advantage of those opportunities from an organic SEO standpoint. By working together, SEOs and PR people are able to maximize exposure to a higher level than either of those entities by itself.

Joel Gross, who works with Brannon at Coalition Technologies, describes himself as the SEO tech guy.

“I know how to build and code websites so that they are search engine friendly, and I understand that in order to achieve visibility and revenue for our clients we need to build high quality links and work in tandem with traditional and social media," Gross said. “I know what needs to be done, but Jordan is able to bring in the creative aspect and wow factor that is needed in order to gain the attention and keep it focused where it needs to be. He devises how we frame the content and package it for the consumer in the most digestible and memorable way.

“The best advice I’d give to an SEO would be to get to know your client’s people, their background and story, what’s unique about the company," Gross said. “And remember, this is news and human interest so your stories don’t always have to be selling product. You can have perfectly good story and link from a story on say, ‘work places that are pet friendly’!”

8. You’ll Build Media Contacts That You Can Use Time And Time Again

Contacts are essential both to PR people and to reporters.

“One mistake I made at the start was sending out too much poor stuff," Kim said. "Blasting out press releases is over-rated. What you need to do is get to know the reporters or bloggers you’re targeting.

“Read their articles every day, get a sense of what they’re interested in and only approach them with what you know they’ll be interested in,” Kim continued. “Start small and work your way up. Once you’ve built a relationship, they’ll start contacting you.”

He said he has found that PR is the fastest way to generate those backlinks on related industry websites, but you’ve got to go past distribution services and build your own contacts.

“We are diligent in keeping a database of related editors here," Kim said. "So we're sending press releases directly to the editors and not through a service. However, we also post the press releases to PRweb or PRnewswire to get the added Internet news site exposure (i.e., Yahoo News)."

Kim said those personal relationships increase the chances of coverage so much it’s "unreal."

"We now get lots of calls from editors who ask – is there an engineer over at such and such a company that we could talk to?" Kim said. “Now, when they see our press releases, they always read them. And they’re more likely to publish them because we’ve been helpful.

If you’re an SEO who new to PR, the best place to start is by reading the editorial guidelines of the publications you’re targeting, Kim advised. Then you know what they’re looking for and can pitch accordingly. Don’t pitch something they clearly don’t want.

And don’t forget editorial calendars – you can see months in advance what the publications are going to be covering.

9. It Strengthens and Extends Your Relationship With the Client

If you learn how to do proper public relations effectively or bring in a competent professional that you work well with, then you increase the respect your client has for your work. That can only strengthen your relationship and help ensure that they’ll stay with you.

10. It Opens up Additional Income Streams

It probably goes without saying that with the increasing interest in this area, it should offer some profitable and additional income streams to your agency.

There are tremendous publicity and quality links available through effective public relations. You’ll probably have failures to start with but if you keep at it, your skills will grow and you’ll get the benefits.

How do you cope with failures?

“I don’t believe in failures – it’s a matter of setting your expectations," Kim said. "You can’t start out and immediately get coverage on CNN. Far better to pick a local target and learn from it. Every time you do it, you have more experience. Say you approach 10 journalists and you get nothing but two reply and say I’m not interested because it’s not exactly what I do – you’ll get a better idea of what will work next time.”

Saturday, 7 December 2013

How to Rank Higher on Google Maps

How to Rank Higher on Google Maps
Google has been making changes. Lots of changes.
And not just to how their regular search engine results show - you should notice that Google Maps listings are now ranking according to more than just location proximity and industry categories.


The Google ten pack is a very coveted place to be. Your listing is on the first page and appears above the normal (organic) listings. This works (almost) completely independent of your website Google ranking - businesses without a website can rank in Google Maps. 

The ten pack (or five pack, or however many listings Google decides to display) used to be based on a few things like proximity and your industry categories. Now we are seeing that Google is paying attention to more than just that.  As Google Maps gets crowded with more and more listings, they are paying less attention to what you tell them about your business and more attention to what others are saying.
So how can your Google Local Business Listing rank higher on Google Maps?

1. Verify your listing and make sure that your information is correct. If there are two locations or phone numbers listed for one actual business, Google will discredit this. Only make one listing per business entity or per physical business location.

2. Increase your citations and inbound links from major data providers.  Google wants to see that your listing information matches other well known and trustworthy sources. They are no longer relying on just the business owner supplied information anymore. W
hat are the major data providers?

3. Add user reviews. User reviews are now a necessity. These can be good and bad for your business. You have no control over what people write and a bad review can be read by everyone. Alternate Image has created handouts for you to customize and send out to your customers. Create a landing page on your website that has a direct link to your Google map listing (find yourself on Google Maps, click "more information" to see your listing. This is the link you will want people to click to write a review).  Be sure to give this link out to your favorite customers who will write great things about you. DO NOT write a fake review, you should have at least two or three great customers who would be happy to do this for you.  A higher volume of good reviews will help you rank higher on Google Maps.

4. Add proper category associations. Make sure that you have used all 5 of the categories that Google offers. You have the ability to create your own categories if they do not have your industry listed. Make sure that the first category, your primary category, is the best suited for your business. Ex: Hotel, or Realtor. The secondary categories should include your key words and be general but with location specific qualifiers, ex: daytona beach hotel, daytona beach realtor. 

5. Put your full business address on contact page. Make sure your contact page information is up to date and correct. Alternate Image website clients: update your location address in your site settings - at the top right hand corner of the admin area.  Google will check that your website contact page is consistent with your Google Maps listing information.

6. Increase your quality of inbound links. This goes along with having your information submitted to major data providers.  Having links from other high ranking websites to your website will increase Google's "trust" in your listing. Great examples would be your local Chamber website directory, the CVB websites like Daytona Beach or New Smyrna, and other major directory sites like Urbanspoon for restaurants and Merchant Circle for all types of businesses. BikeWeek.com also offers directory listings.  Most good sites will require a fee for a directory listing, but some are free.  This is a great advertising investment as we see a large portion of our Daytona hoteliers traffic come from the Daytona CVB website.  Rearrange your marketing budget to allocate less to that Yellowpage ad and more on Internet advertising. 

7. Have location keywords in anchor text for inbound links. Make sure that all those high quality inbound links include actual keywords that are location specific. Instead of it saying "click here" to visit website, have it say "Visit the Daytona Beach Holiday Inn".

8. Include keywords in your listing description.  Your Google Maps description has to be short (they impose a character limit) but needs to include your keywords. Instead of writing "We are a great oceanfront hotel with a pool..." say something like "Great Daytona Beach oceanfront hotel with pool".
Negative factors affecting your ranking:
Using a 1-800 phone number. Google wants to see local area codes that match your location address.
Having multiple addresses on the contact page. Don't confuse Google.Have your contact page info be consistent with your Google Maps info.
Negative customer ratings on your reviews. You can't remove these, but you can bury them with good reviews.
Multiple listings with the same business name. If you are a franchise or have more than one location, identify it with a city, ex: Holiday Inn Daytona Beach instead of naming it Holiday Inn.
Multiple listings with the same address or phone number
Google is much more advanced than we will ever know. There is a reason they do not release their formula for ranking websites and Google Map listings: they are trying to prevent people from unfairly ranking. Alternate Image is always researching and testing the best ways to optimize websites for search engines because this is what we do. We provide this knowledge as a service to clients because if you do well, we do well. 
Don't just be online, compete online.

Instant 20 dofollow backlinks from High PR Sites

nofollow is a value that can be assigned to the rel attribute of an HTML a element to instruct some search engines that a hyperlink should not influence the link target's ranking in the search engine's index. It is intended to reduce the effectiveness of certain types of internet advertising because their search algorithm depends heavily on the number of links to a website when determining which websites should be listed in what order in their search results for any given term. - Wikipedia

After consultation with and collected 20 high pr website (Pr 7, or 8 from which you can explore the website and insert your Url website.

1. Join Message Board Discussions at abcnews.go.com. There used to WYSIWYG tool post, please insert your textlink on (PR: 8).
2. Comment on the site 22.tmz.com. Then email to comfirm, you will have a baclinks (PR: 8)
3. Create a profile on espn.go.com and post a link to your website via the “comment wall”. (PR: 8)
4. Join Google Earth’s community (forums) and continue to insert links in signature. (PR: 8)
5. Join forum USAToday.com and post links to your website (PR: 8)
6. Create a profile in poynter.org and post links to your website. (PR7)
7. Create a profile in ojr.org and post links to your website (PR7)
8. Create a blog post now fannation.com and link to your website. (PR7)
9. Create a blog post on newsvine.com and link to your website. (PR7)
10. Create a Profile at blogs.msdn.com and post links to your website (PR7)
11. Create a profile on iVillage.com and post links to your website in your forum iVillage (PR7)
12. Create an account and post comments on blogs Airamerica.com. Add 1 release (PR7)
13. Comment on the blog dooce.com (PR7)
14. Comment on time-blog.com blogs (PR7)
15. Comment on articles www.tvsquad.com (to register nick) (PR7)
16. Comment on thatsfit.com (to register nick) (PR7)
17. Create a profile and post in community.active.com backlink (PR6)
18. Comment on stories page: longwarjournal.org (PR6)
19. HappyNews.com. (PR6)
20. Register at absolutepunk.net (to register nick) (PR6)
I wish you success with the increase PageRank for your website! For more visit my website

Developing a Geographic SEO Strategy for Local Businesses




When 60% of local businesses don’t even list their phone number on their website, there’s a good chance that an even larger percentage are not putting effort into local SEO. But when 43% of searches performed today use a local keyword, and 86% of those searches convert to a phone call or visit to the physical location, local businesses need to pay attention to their geographic SEO strategy if they want to stay competitive. Those who don’t miss out on all of that traffic and leave it for a competitor. Your website is critical for capturing your local customer base, but simply having the website won’t be enough to get you noticed.
Write “Best Of” List Posts about Related Industries
This is a seldom-used practice that is, quite frankly, genius. Not only are these posts great for local SEO, but they also position your company as a thought-leader for the local area. These “best of” lists help your rankings by targeting specific, less-competitive keywords while also offering valuable information to your potential customers.
The hard part with this tactic is deciding on the most relevant industries for your company to post about, and doing the research to create a quality article. The trick is to think about questions and resources your customers might have or need in conjunction with your product or service. For example, if you’re a nail salon in New York City, then some good ideas for “best of” list posts would be:
  • The top hair salons in New York City
  • The best clothing boutiques in New York City
  • The top health spas in New York City
With “best of” list posts, you begin by thinking like the customer. In the case of the nail salon, a typical customer may be preparing for a big event, and getting her hair done and buying a new dress may be part of the preparations. A customer may also be looking for a day of pampering or relaxation, so a health spa, a hair salon, or a clothing boutique would be the next stop after the manicure. If you’re not a nail salon, consider businesses that customers use with your services, services that customers often ask about, or products that compliment what you offer.
Create Content Covering Local Laws and Ordinances
Most local businesses, although not all, have to work with local regulations and laws in order to conduct business and to serve customers appropriately. An excellent way to build local SEO is to create content about these laws and ordinances, educating customers and fellow business owners about what they need to know in order to do business with you or what goes on behind the scenes in order to create your product or service.
Much like the “best of” lists, these topics and keywords usually aren’t very competitive, so covering them makes it easy to get your business at the top of the results. Also, this information is typically tough to find, so clearly explaining it in a user-friendly, accurate, and comprehensive format will generate plenty of attention, links, and traffic — all of which help your search rankings.
River Pools and Spas, a pool installation company in Virginia, used this tactic as part of their geographic SEO strategy. They wrote a blog post covering the zoning and permit laws for pool installation for every county in which they did business. Not only were they able to rank for niche SEO keywords, but they also reached many potential customers who were thinking about installing a pool but may not have heard of the company yet. These potential customers were still considering the purchase of a pool period, let alone evaluating a contractor to install it, and now they have a provider in front of them addressing a critical need in the buying process. Who do you think they are going to trust when it comes time to hire someone to put in their pool?
This illustrates another benefit of covering local laws and ordinances. It allows you to reach potential customers who are further up the buying cycle, who may not have started researching specific companies yet but are still only evaluating whether or not the entire product category is a good choice for them. By providing helpful resources to prospects this far in advance of the purchase decision, you can establish your reputation with them before your competition and close more sales as a result.
Invest in FAQ Content
The biggest change with Google’s latest update to its search engine, nicknamed “Hummingbird,” is that the search engine will now deliver results that encompass the “intent” of the query and not just match words on a webpage to words in the search box. Therefore, a search query like “how to fix a ceiling fan” will deliver more results of local businesses, instead of just finding pages that have those 6 words on them, because Google will understand that you probably have a ceiling fan in your home that needs fixing, and will most likely need a local home repair company to fix it. Creating FAQ content will allow your business to capitalize on this type of search traffic.
The best way to present your FAQ content is to give each question its own page or blog post. An FAQ page with the answers listed in sequence or a drop-down menu won’t be as effective, since having only one page with many different questions and keywords on it can dilute it’s impact. You want multiple pages to match up with multiple searches because search engines evaluate the “quality” of a match based on how completely the page addresses the search criteria. More pages also means more ways for local customers to find you online and more keywords for which you can rank.
This strategy also requires you to list questions that your customers actually ask and care about the answers to, instead of just posting your boilerplate sales pitch in the form of questions. For example, don’t bother with questions like:
  • What is [insert product]?
  • How much is [insert product]?
  • Will [insert product] be a good fit for me?
  • How do I contact [insert company]?
If you need help coming up with good questions to list in your FAQ, then the best place to start is with your sales team. Ask them which questions potential customers most frequently ask. If you’ve already gone through those questions, then move on to those that aren’t specifically related to your product, but the entire category or field your business works in that would be asked by prospects in the earliest stages of the purchase process. Inbound marketing software firm HubSpot has an excellent blog post series like this, answering questions such as, “What is social prospecting?” It’s an informative post that covers the entire field, without digressing into why you need to purchase HubSpot’s marketing software to help your business improve its social prospecting activities.
Local SEO is about establishing your business’ online reputation in your geographic area. You do that by creating content that will show up in your neighbor’s search results and demonstrate that you care about the town where you do business. It’s through content and genuine local SEO rankings that you prove your company offers quality service and is the best in the area, which will cause you to rise up the search rankings and generate more business organically.
What has your business done to increase local SEO traffic?

SEO today is Plain Old Marketing



The latest trend in SEO seems to be change. Changes in the way Google evaluates signals, changes in the way brands are treated, changes in the way we all have to approach what optimization actually means in a new landscape.

The uncertainty of it all can turn any of us into some SEO version of Dr. Doofenshmirtz trying to take on a Google-shaped Platypus. Now, it’s not because we’re a bunch of inept fake-Germans with questionable accents. We’re smart, if maybe a little inevitably clueless about how to attain the ultimate victory over our foes. To arm ourselves we only have indicators, guides, and best practices but we don’t have silver bullets or a giant optimiz-inator to help us take over the world.

A Shifting Market

Search engines have always been a business. Their function is to help us navigate the vastness of the internet to find precisely what we are after. The fact that being at the top of the list could make someone a whole lot of money just presented an impetus to game the system. We focused on the quick wins and easy scores, because if you knew the right moves it was quick and relatively easy to play in the big 10. And then Google would make it rain.

It used to be amazing how frequently you’d see a whole first page of search results for a really popular product like sneakers, or jewelry that wouldn’t even include names you’d see at the mall. A lot of the established brands took their time embracing online marketing while small businesses sprung up and flourished on little more than SEO. But that time is over, and looking for anything now that is “quick” or “easy” is an exercise in both futility and frustration.

More Parts to the Equation

To quote my boss, links used to be the “800 pound gorilla in the room” when it came to rankings. Now, links may still be a sizable primate, but they’re not all that matters. There was, and in some cases still is a sort of perception that links are a magical elixir that the right one, in the right place, with the right anchor text means total rankings domination. But in any equation, both an augend and an addend are needed to make a sum. That means it has to be links plus other efforts to get a result. And honestly, it’s not even as simple as an addition problem.

This past year (and arguably for several years leading up to this) we’re dealing with problems that look a lot more like the kinds of complex algebraic equations that convinced me math was just evil by nature. Links matter. Technical SEO still matters (yes even though certain short cuts may be shut down, SEO is still alive and kicking), authorship is coming into play; in-depth articles have gotten their own schema. Then there are Social signals that can't be counted out, user data like CTR, return visitors aka customer loyalty, pogo sticking, and of course, his highness, king content that all factor in.

There may have been a time when links could push you forward in spite of these other factors. But the new math isn't; old links plus more links equals winning. There are more constants, more variables, the occasional exponent, some parentheses, and no scientific calculators to make it all easier. We have to do it the hard way.

Old School Marketing is the New Online Marketing

Sometimes moving forward means going all the way back to the beginning. For a time there was a real distinction between SEO and online marketing. SEO focused heavily on technical proficiency, but it also became an umbrella term for every trick, tactic and strategy for getting higher rankings. Even if the tricks are dying out the, technical aspects like speed, structure and optimized hierarchy still matter. That doesn't mean the definition of SEO is shrinking, just the opposite actually, its expanding, and quickly.

With the changes we've seen, I'd posit that brand power and recognition are very much a part of SEO, but they are also the foundation of marketing online and off. Even before the internet, if you wanted to sell your stuff, people had to know who you were.

So there came marketing, advertising, Madison Avenue, Don Drapers, and culture-changing sayings like “Where's the beef?” or “I'm not going to pay a lot for this Muffler.” They had to be creative and innovative. Then came Google and suddenly there was this whole other way of getting customers that didn't require creative ingenuity. All it took was taking advantage of the latest loophole before it got shut down. So the quest for that beautiful bounty of inbound buyers turned into a really ugly dog fight. But the need for more traditional marketing didn’t die.

Remember word of mouth? Well, that's social media now. Billboards still exist on the information superhighway, but they are 2-inch jpegs instead of 50-foot signs. Fliers come into your inbox instead of a mailbox. Coupons get Tweeted instead of clipped. Tried and true, real marketing practices are still applicable online and sure, they take longer and don’t always affect your rankings, but they can grow your business and really, isn’t that the point anyway?

Bring on the Mad Men!

A part of the new world of SEO is as basic as going to our marketing roots. There’s no way that building relationships through networks is going to bring you more search engine traffic as quickly as 200 directory links did three years ago. Expecting the same results from the old techniques or new ones is only going to lead to a lot of giving up on things that “seem” like they aren’t working. We need to change our expectations. We have to stop thinking about search engines as something we can still manipulate to avoid more traditional forms of marketing. The only difference is the way we leverage those techniques from a technical standpoint to bring the maximum benefit.

Today’s SEO isn’t about finding a way around the arduous task of brand building; it’s about mastering it.

10 Web Design Trends for 2014

For starters, we’d like to say thank you for the amazing reception our free eBook Web design and Mobile Trends for 2013 has had since its launch last week, and especially to all those who made it possible by sharing their insightful opinions.

Today we’re doing a review of the end conclusions, where we will identify and analyze 10 of the key trends. This is just a brief overview of the conclusions you can read in the book. In fact, we have now released an updated version of the eBook in PDF format, which includes a few corrections and a new layout for an easier and more enjoyable reading experience.

What will be those key trends?

1. CONTENT FIRST
2. SIMPLICITY OF DESIGN INTERACTION AND CONTENT
3. UX CENTERED DESIGN
4. APP STYLE INTERFACES
5. THE UNIFICATION OF DESKTOP AND MOBILE INTO A SINGLE VERSION
6. SVG AND RESPONSIVE TECHNIQUES
7. FLAT COLORS AND NO MORE SKEUOMORPHISM
8. TECHNOLOGY AGNOSTIC
9. EXPERIMENTATION AND INNOVATION IN DEVICE SENSORS AND INTERACTION
10. THE INTERNET OF THINGS
It’s no easy task putting together a short summary of all the interviews, but as far as we’re concerned, there are a few memorable statements in the book which nicely encapsulate the conclusions we’ve come to:

Thursday, 5 December 2013

Red Cherry Digital Offers Unmatched SEO Services to Enhance Web Traffic

Red Cherry Digital Offers Unmatched SEO Services to Enhance Web Traffic (via SBWire)
Red Cherry Digital offers highly efficient and result oriented SEO services. It also offers web design services in Calgary for better customer interaction. Calgary, AB -- (SBWIRE) -- 12/02/2013 -- Red Cherry Digital offers highly efficient and result…