How is using them like doing a guest post
Posted: Sun Dec 22, 2024 9:08 am
On SEOmoz? Answering questions on Q&A sites is exactly like doing a guest post on SEOmoz: Find the sites where the people you need are getting their information. Give them quality information that will benefit them. Get your own message across, with full disclosure of who you are. You can be self-serving, but not too self-serving. Build relationships, and establish your expertise. Ultimately you need a win-win here.
You need to serve the needs of the commun australia business email lists ity with whom you're interacting, in a way that also builds your business and reputation. Where can I get more information on Q&A sites? See the following excellent articles: Jason Falls: How to drive business leads with Q&A forums Using Yahoo! Answers to generate leads. Does it work? Lisa Barone: Finding Answers on Business.com Business.com's Study: Social Media best practices: Q&A forums This week, I'd like to make suggestions for a 'reading list' to help SEOs, and others who work online, particularly with website strategies.
But this list isn't going to be blogs, post and online articles, oh no. These suggestions are entirely offline. We're going into dead tree mode with eleven books and two magazines. Some of these suggestions you may want to flick through, some you may want to read cover to cover. Others will be suitable for suggesting to other people within your organisation. There's no intention that everybody should read all these books (they're spread over many topics) and my list is far from exhaustive.
You need to serve the needs of the commun australia business email lists ity with whom you're interacting, in a way that also builds your business and reputation. Where can I get more information on Q&A sites? See the following excellent articles: Jason Falls: How to drive business leads with Q&A forums Using Yahoo! Answers to generate leads. Does it work? Lisa Barone: Finding Answers on Business.com Business.com's Study: Social Media best practices: Q&A forums This week, I'd like to make suggestions for a 'reading list' to help SEOs, and others who work online, particularly with website strategies.
But this list isn't going to be blogs, post and online articles, oh no. These suggestions are entirely offline. We're going into dead tree mode with eleven books and two magazines. Some of these suggestions you may want to flick through, some you may want to read cover to cover. Others will be suitable for suggesting to other people within your organisation. There's no intention that everybody should read all these books (they're spread over many topics) and my list is far from exhaustive.