digital marketing

Beauty: ClosetLook – Interfanatic Customer Spotlight

“You will love beauty, which is the shadow of God on the Universe.”

Gabriela Mistral

The great Nobel Laureate relays instructions given to her in a vision, and creates poetry.

Beauty: the Shadow of God on the Universe

What a beautiful sentiment.

Beauty, like all virtues, comes in different volumes. For some, it is naturally apparent, but for others it must be enacted. But it is universally appreciated.

Finding Beauty or Creating Beauty

As Michelangelo said, the beauty is there, you just have to chip away to find it. So it is in business. It is there, we must find it and expose it to our customers.

Edenia Lima of ClosetLook uses her natural beauty to showcase the beauty of others – of their products.

Everyone gives influencers a hard time, but that’s mostly because many behave entitled. Properly influencing for a brand takes leardership, coordination, and hard work. A campaign can take weeks or months to build, even though it looks spontaneous and easy. It looks easy because experts are coordinated to work together to make sure it looks easy.

Edenia Lima works extremely hard to make sure the brand comes off in a positive light, and to make sure they get what they’re paying for. She uses her own vision and brand to bring products, fashion, and trends into a beautiful light.

It is our pleasure to work with Lima to showcase her work and help her achieve her vision. Her brands are grateful for her efforts too, as they keep coming back to engage more of her influence.

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Humility: Allen Berg Racing Schools – Interfanatic Customer Spotlight

“We come nearest to the great when we are great in humility.

– Rabindranath Tagore

Oh, humility. We’ve all be taken down a step or two in life. Tagore felt it if he was able to say this. And like Tagore, Allen Berg lives it – on both sides.

Berg was a Formula One race driver. And when I use those words, I’m cognoscente of the fact that most people interpret that to mean “he raced some funny looking cars”. But there’s a huge difference between Formula One and everything else.

Formula One: Just Being There is Huge

Formula One is, by a significant margin, the pinnacle of motorsports. There are other great motorsports, absolutely. But Formula one means you’re in the best 20 racers in the world. Not like the NBA, where making it there means you’re among the best 3-400 basketball players in the world. It’s more like making the NBA All-Stars. The starters in NBA All-Star games are household names, just like the top-ten Formula One drivers are housefhold names everywhere else in the world. If you’re in F1, you’re NBA All-Stars level good at racing and attaining sponsorship.

And yes, there are those flat-earthers who feel racing isn’t a sport. That’s fine. Don’t fall off the edge looking for the cameras that faked the moon landing.

Racing Senna: Humbling

For the rest of us, understand that Berg raced Senna throughout his career. For those who don’t know, Senna is the Michael Jordan of Formula One. Okay, Berg didn’t beat Senna, but he did get on the track with him. And that’s the first side of Berg’s humility. He’s always quick to unequivocally explain that he was no Senna, he just raced with him. But still, just being there is a big deal.

And then there’s the other side of Berg’s humility. Many people feel that racing a car is like driving a car around the streets, fast. In fact, it’s just about the opposite of what most people do.

Teaching the Next Senna: Teaching Humility

So when Tom-Cruise-wannabes show up at Allen’s school with something to prove, driving their Lamborghini, Allen has to quickly get their attention with the reality they don’t yet grasp. In this way, Allen makes a living out of teaching humility. And having been a motorsport instructor myself, let me clarify this for you: it’s not easy.

And the consequences are stark. If Senna or Clark, the best the world has known, can be taken from us, it can happen to anybody. If Allen doesn’t quickly get the attention of his hothead of the day, the result can be catastrophic. And yet, Allen takes on this challenge day after day.

If you want to learn from a real Formula One driver, in the best cars, on the best tracks, check out Allen Berg Racing Schools. It will be worth everything you invest.

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Interfanatic Content Marketing: How To Produce Content for SEO

By Ryan Delane,
Interfanatic Digital Marketing with Web Site Maintenance & Design

As discussed in Content Marketing Basics, there are three major pieces to consider when producing content for your SEO Content Marketing campaign: Content, Technical Aspects of your Content, and Content Promotion.

What to write?

Let’s get into our first expansion of Interfanatic Content Marketing Basics with tips and tricks for producing content for SEO and your content marketing campaign. Content Marketing is crucial for digital marketing strategy. If you want to guide your website up the SERPs, establish your business as a subject-matter authority, and boost sales, make Content Marketing a key component of your digital marketing strategy.

Content marketing, done well, is difficult. It’s time consuming, it’s labor intensive, and executing beautifully may be complex. It’s also vastly rewarding. That’s why we offer it as part of our services – many of our clients simply don’t have the time to perform the arduous task list. They trust us to strategize and work, so their websites perform at a consistently high level.

Let’s get to it:

Content Selection for Impactful Content Marketing

You may already have a number of ideas for content you’d like to write. Perhaps you want to establish your business as a subject matter authority and you know exactly how to differentiate yourself. Perfect!

Whether you know what you want to write or not, consult your analytics. Do Google and Moz keyword searches to discover what Internet users are looking for, and take a look at what is already on offer. What does the playing field look like? Who are the major performers you’re going to compete against? Answering these questions not only help you further differentiate your content, the answers may also lead to strategy adjustments on your part.

Selecting Target Keywords and Key Phrases

From your research, you’ll learn which keywords and phrases you want to target. You’ll find out which questions your prospective customers are asking, and it’s up to you to devise an efficient method for answering those questions, expressing to them that you and your business are the answer.

Without goals, there is no direction. So allow your overall business strategy, coupled with target keywords and key phrases to provide direction and give you themes. You want to have many variations of keyword or key phrase in your content marketing. Change it up, but like a shark, encircle your target, keeping the theme constant.

You know, it used to be that a short article posted on your blog now and then was enough. Your content would find their way into the search engines, improving your web site’s authority for certain target keywords.

Until a few years ago, some companies would hire inexpensive services to post barely-readable articles on their sites. Others services linked to customer sites from mediocre articles on generic blogs. It was ugly, but it was cheap and it worked. It used to be companies could get away with this kind of cheapo service because it was a volume game. (We never tried to play that game, by the way. Quality is always better in search.)

That’s no longer the case. Major search engines have cracked down on garbage filler content. It’s still a volume game, but there’s so much information on the World Wide Web, you have to be relentless with content. Both Internet surfers and AI-powered search engines easily tell excellent content from junk. The Internet rewards efficient, valuable content.

Today, this is what works: write excellent content. Lots of it.

Topic Research For Content Marketing

No matter how well-versed you are on a topic, market research helps. Ask your colleagues what is missing in your marketing message so you can add it. Read what is already out there so you can fill in the gaps, or make yourself stand out by proving old ideas wrong and giving your prospective customers your own, successful, time-tested new ideas.

Write What You Know

The best place to start when writing anything is writing what you know. It helps get you into a flow. And, if there’s an aspect of your business you want to understand better, here is your opportunity to learn! There is no better way to learn than to teach. Writing an article about a subject will force you to be an expert on whatever new aspect you tackle.

But, say it in a different way. You have to differentiate yourself if you want to do excellent, results-driven content marketing. Don’t just say what has been said, add your own unique twist.

This is your opportunity to say something nobody else has said. Give us you or your business’ unique perspective on the topic.

The current search algorithms force Internet searchers to be specific with their queries. This is where the key phrase comes in. Think of questions searchers might type or verbally ask, and answer them concisely. Then broaden your answer, filling in details.

Pro Tip: Keep an active list of topics handy

You know that when you sleep, your brain percolates ideas and helps you formulate answers. Whenever you have an idea, write it down. Whether you jot it down in a to-do list app, a Google sheet, or make a list on a post-it, keep writing down your ideas. When your brain is ready to attack the full article, you’ll know. But keep a list, add to it and cross items off as you work through them.

Keep your idea list handy, so you can always come back to it, add to it, and revise ideas. Even if your ideas aren’t good and you know it, write it down. Writing is rewriting – revise the idea until it works.

Pro Tip II: Just write

When I get writer’s block, I fall back on advice I found years ago: just write. It doesn’t matter what comes out. Even if it’s stream of consciousness. Try to focus on the task and allow your theme to creep in. It may be terrible, it may be incoherent, but from the process of writing come ideas which can then be put into an orderly outline. Once you force the faucet open, ideas usually then keep coming. And if they don’t, you and I both are likely busy enough to find something else to do until they do. If you can, give your subconscious space to crunch on ideas while you sleep.

Change it Up: Both Long and Short Articles Are Critical to Content Marketing

Content Marketing with an eye on SEO is a long game. Build a strategy around your long term vision. Break that vision down into bite-size pieces. Then be relentless to produce high quality, efficient, interesting content.

In 2019, both long (1500+ words) and short form (~300 words) content are important. The content should be rich and engaging, it should be pleasing to the eye, and it must be easy to read.

When you need words and space to describe your idea, use them. Make sure your long-form content is engaging and efficient where it can be. Use that space to entertain and inform your readers. Last, but certainly not least, use that space for target keywords and phrases.

When you can, pack your ideas into a tiny, ultra-efficient package. Keep your readers interested with both long-form and short-form content. Efficiency is always best in writing, but long-form content with lots of keywords and phrases certainly don’t hurt.

Pro Tip: Spice Up Articles with Effective Images and Videos

Images and videos are both a critical part of SEO. Don’t ignore them.

Crack Down on Consistency with a Content Calendar

Content Marketing is a lot like Social Media Marketing in that if you must treat it like a garden. When you try a deluge out of nowhere, it might work for a little bit, but eventually everything fades away. When you water a little every day, your results flourish. Stay consistent.

Begin by producing a content calendar. You know you need both long-form and short-form articles. How long does it take you to produce each?

Depending on the competitive landscape of your topic, you might need to produce long-form articles weekly, and short-form almost daily. That’s simply not realistic for most businesses. And you don’t want to produce drivel. You must produce compelling content, so keep your goals realistic.

Most businesses are fine with one or two long-form articles per month and at least one short article per week. But the more you do, the more keywords (of course, without being spammy), the better.

Pro Tip: It’s Okay to Slow Down

If you find that your content calendar is too aggressive. Gently fall back. Remain disciplined – keep at it. But, if you can’t do a 1,500-word article once per week, make it 1,000. Or once every two weeks. If you fall back to a single 1,500 word article per month, try to post a 300 word article per week.

Again, it’s all about consistency.

But never admit defeat. There’s always somebody else out there ready to overtake you.

Pro Tip II: Revisit Old Content to Keep it Evergreen

Don’t be afraid to revisit great content. The world evolves. Your techniques, your opinions, your best way of doing things must also. It’s okay to reflect that in your writing with genuine authenticity. Don’t be afraid to revisit old content and bring it up to date, to make it more relevant to your reader today.

As you can see, Content Marketing is Hard Work. But it’s how we brought a newcomer to page one for key SERPs in six months. It’s not easy, but with careful planning, strategy, and relentless execution, content marketing for SEO can be effective. What it comes down to is hard work.

We’re available.

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Interfanatic Content Marketing Basics

By Ryan Delane,
Interfanatic Digital Marketing with Web Site Maintenance & Design

So you got your new website up. It’s a beaut! All of your pages are carefully crafted, all of your images represent your brand well. You check your analytics daily and… crickets. A carefully crafted Content Marketing program can fix that.

You have built it. When will they come?

The Internet used to be a blue ocean where you could be among the first, and users had no choice but to find your business.

Not so in 2019. It’s just not that easy anymore. The water is deep and intimidating, with many big fish, sharks and whales hunting your prey. Finding and guiding prospective customers to your wares is necessarily a complex process. But we’ve done this before. We’re here to help.

You have many ways open to drive traffic to your site. There are a few pieces of low-hanging fruit:

  1. You can do some content marketing,
  2. you can post links from your social media,
  3. you can pay for advertising – both in search engines and in social media,
  4. you can pay an SEO service to help you climb the ranks,
  5. you can learn and do SEO yourself, or
  6. you can pray.

#1, #2, #3, and #4 are all great choices.

Posting from social media helps – you should definitely do that. And if you’re in a rush, and have a substantial budget, ads are a great way to drive traffic while learning more about your target market and their digital interactions.

#5, learning SEO is a complicated and difficult process. One you should do! But most people are busy running their new business, to commit the time to learning SEO properly.

Almost all new business owners opt for #6 at one point or another. Seeing as the other options are complicated and difficult, this is not a bad strategy. Praying is, in my experience at least, a very normal part of business, whether new or old.

But today I’m going to talk to you about #1: Content Marketing.

We’re authorities on the subject. We’ve been learning from data, perfecting the craft of digital marketing for years for clients large and small, all over the world. We do exactly the content marketing we describe below, and it’s work. And, it works. Content Marketing helps our customers improve their performance in Internet search results.

Successful Content Marketing has three main pieces:

  1. Content,
  2. Technical Aspects, and
  3. Promotion.

1) Content for Content Marketing

First, you need to choose a topic. Ideas come from all over. Look at your analytics to see what people are searching for on your site. Talk to your colleagues to see what they feel is missing from your company’s messaging. Give us you or your business’ unique perspective on the topic. The good news is, you’re an expert in your field. Write what you know.

Content Marketing for SEO is a volume game that requires high volume of high quality. So be consistent: come up with a content calendar and stick with it. In 2019, both long and short form content are important. The content should be rich and engaging, it should be pleasing to the eye, and it must be easy to read.

Keep your readers interested with both long-form and short-form content. It takes time. It takes care. It takes practice. Produce excellent content.

2) Technical Aspects
of Content Marketing in 2019

Set out some target keywords to plan your campaign around and make sure they get used in your content.

Use those keywords and key phrases in headings and subheadings to break up long content. Keep it organized and easy to read.

And when you’re finished writing your fantastic article, make sure those search engines know how to find your new great content! You put a lot of work into it, so make sure it’s easy to find. Update your meta information and optimize your content for snippets.

3) Content Promotion in 2019

You’ve produced some beautiful content, now it’s time to promote the heck out of it. Make sure it’s easy to find on your site. Don’t bury it – I can’t tell you how many times companies claimed to be focused on SEO, but then they buried their blog or articles.

If you already have social media followers who trust you as an expert in your field of content, leverage that. If you’re just starting out, Content Marketing can be a great way to show the Internet what you know.

Get links from your emails into your new content. Not only do you get strong links in, you also keep your email marketing fresh and engaging.

Content Marketing
as Part of a Larger
Digital Marketing Strategy

And these points segue into the broader conversation of Digital Marketing Strategy. Understand how Content Marketing fits in and how to use it to tell your story. Don’t think “business post,” think feature film, with plots intertwining and you at the center. Don’t just have one great piece of content. Craft a complete strategy. Give each piece of content purpose to aid your search rankings, to tell your story, and to help you promote your business.

Always keep your users finding value in some fresh piece of content you create for them. And as your followers read your writing and click your links, your site will flourish and rise up in Search results.

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