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A simple guide to online marketing terms

Have you ever found yourself at a meeting in the company of tech savvy colleagues who are speaking a language you do not understand? Every industry has its jargon but perhaps you felt you would appear foolish if you asked what the terms that were bandied about meant.

In their book The Nonprofit Marketing Guide: High-Impact, Low-Cost Ways to Build Support for Your Good Cause, authors, Miller and Andresen provide a helpful glossary of common marketing terms, explained in simple plain language.

And here are some of those terms explained in plain English – so no more wondering what is being talked about anymore.

Your simple guide to online marketing terms

Analytics. Statistics generated about visitors to a website or readers of an email. Analytics can help track what pages visitors look at, what links they click on, and how they found the site.

Anchor Text. Also called link text. The text on a website or in an email that when clicked on, takes you to another place on that page or on the Internet. Anchor text is usually underlined.

Domain Registrar. A company that manages the registration of Internet domain names. Your domain registrar and web host may or may not be the same company.

HTML. Stands for Hyper Text Markup Language. It is made up of various codes that are surrounded by angle brackets < >.Web browsers (like Internet Explorer or Firefox) read HTML and then display it as web pages. The same code is used to create HTML emails (emails with colors, fonts, images, etc.).

Keywords. The specific terms (single words and phrases) used by someone searching for something on the Internet. By knowing the keywords that best describe your organization and its work, you can track mentions of those words on the Internet. You can also use those words on your own website, so that search engines will associate your website with those topics.

Long-tail, Long-tail keywords. Typically phrases with three or more words that are much more specific versions of your keywords. For example, if one of your keywords is “homeless shelter” then “homeless shelter for families” and “homeless shelter New York City” would be examples of long-tail keywords.

Microsites. Mini-websites, with their own domain names, that are often created for specific campaigns. They can be independent websites or part of a larger site.

Permalinks. A direct link to a specific blog post or forum entry.

Redirect. When someone types in one website address and is automatically taken to another website address. For example, you can redirect someone who types “yoursite.com” to “yoursite.org” if you own both domain names and your main site is the .org.

Retweet. Forwarding someone else’s tweet (an update on Twitter) to your own Twitter followers.

RSS. “Real Simple Syndication” is a way for websites that are updated frequently such as blogs or news sites to send new content automatically to subscribers. Readers of these types of sites subscribe and then receive updates to their RSS reader or email box, instead of having to check all the different sites all the time.

Search Engine Optimization. Improving the quality of your website so that search engines rank it highly on their search engine results pages when people search on your keywords.

Search Engine Rankings. How results of a web search are ordered. The most relevant websites should appear toward the top of the list. Sites are ranked according to a complex formula that includes how keywords are used on the site and how many other related websites link to the site.

Tags. Descriptive keywords used to categorize an article, such as a blog entry. Tagging can help the entry be found more easily by both people and search engines.

URL. A web page’s address. Stands for Uniform Resource Locator. http://www.nonprofitmarketingguide.com is a URL.

Web 2.0. The second generation of the World Wide Web, which includes many more tools for online conversation and collaboration (social media).

Web Hosting. The storing of the pages of your website on a computer server owned by the hosting company. The web host then makes the pages available to Internet users. Your web host and your domain registrar may or may not be the same company.

I hope you find this list helpful and please do let me know in the comments if you would like any of these terms or other online terms explained in more depth in future posts.

Twitter Etiquette

twitterSo have you set up your Twitter account? Are you tweeting and interacting with followers?

I hope you are and I hope that you are getting lots of retweets from those followers.  But if you are wondering what to do when you get those retweets then read on.

What is the etiquette of retweets?

When you receive a retweet there are three things you can do.

  1. Send a thank you for the RT on the public timeline
  2. Send a private message to thank the retweeter
  3. Do nothing

Personally I thank publicly, although I will send a private message to thank them for their support if they regularly retweet me. I will also retweet them and follow their links to leave a comment on their posts.

Twitter should be about more than posting links to your website or blog. It should be about engagment and conversation. When someone is interested enough to repost what you have written, then take the opportunity to further the engagment and conversation with them.

3 simple ways to get readers to share your posts

Picture the scenario. You have slaved and sweated over a great blog post and so you sit back satisfied with the brilliance of your writing. You feel sure that your readers will want to share your wit, your wisdom, your moving story. But it doesn’t always work this way – sometimes you have to take steps to encourage the sharing.

So, how do you get readers to share your content?

1. Content

I am assuming that you have really sweated and slaved over your content? For the first step in getting readers to share is to give them content worth sharing. This means you need to put some thought and care into what you write. If you want to tell a story related to your organisation, it needs to be a story that creates a powerful impression on the reader, who in turn will want to share the message with others. Quality posts wins out over quantity each time if you want readers to share.

2. Easy Share Buttons

Does your blog have share buttons? Make it easy to share content by installing highly visible social bookmarking tools, as well as retweet and facebook like buttons, if you haven’t already done so.

3. Just ask!

Ask you readers to share. Put a line or two at the end of your post asking your readers to share the content if they have liked it, or been moved or influenced by it. Ask your Twitter or Facebook followers to retweet or repost your content (building up a loyal community of followers in your social media networks makes this a lot easier to accomplish). Sometimes people just need a little friendly push in the direction of sharing. Try it and see!

Did you learn something from this post? If so, then why not click on one of the buttons below and share it :-)

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