Getting the most out of existing PR
-
I am currently compiling material for a creative session where I will sit down with our client's PR team and look at ways to maximise SEO value while they do their usual PR work. Apart from obvious link inclusion in the written material (resource box / in-text) what are the other tactics that can be used to help SEO?
I am not only thinking about content but also distributiuon and technology / platform as well.
My (random) thoughts are around:
- Talking about specific website locations, features, media
- Generating curiosity
- Using existing media contacts and chanels as link opportunities
- Using interesting and user-friendly yet smantically rich content
- Use of synonims
- Referring to related terms and concepts
- Integrating social media
- Referring to PR material in blog and social media? (maybe bad idea)
Note: I've recently been introduced to platforms such as HARO and MyBlogQuest (by Peter Gregory in this related posthttp://www.seomoz.org/q/are-press-release-sites-useful) and wondering if there is anything else out there that's new and exciting?
-
We aim to create the material and distribute them through PR agencies of our clients in HTML.
If we are not the creator, we get the material in DOC, optimize it and send it in HTML to the PR agencies.
However, one of our large clients, has an worldwide system from which you can dowload material in HTML, optimize it and send in HTML to their local PR agencies or upload back to the system.
-
Yep, or on anything extra you're going to do be it print etc
-
Do you get PR people to HTML the PR material or is it passed through designers to do that? I'm experiencing some resistance in learning HTML and even using visual editors to include HTML links.
-
Which online channels do you use for distribution?
-
Love the idea, have you got an example of engagement strategy / approach?
-
You mean to include QR code as part of the press release somewhere at the bottom?
-
Thanks Nicole those are great ideas.
-
My best advice is to send press releases in HTML with appropriate links.
Many journalists work in a style "receiving press release -> CTRL + C -> CTRL + V -> making some small changes -> publishing."
The old-style PR workers send just press releases in MS Word. The new style is to send both MS Word and HTML. The journalist just copies the pure and perfectly coded HTML file into their CMS and publish them. The journalist save a lot of time by coding and you get the point.
-
Our PR and SEO team is almost one dedicated time. Many business do most trading online, and as a result of that, that's where we concentrate our efforts. Most of the news and PR we put online also goes into the offline channels though!
Infographics, Viral campaigns, competitions are all good things to consider too.
-
Our colleagues have already some great suggestions so i would just like to add an idea to this discussion. You could engage bloggers or resources related to your niche and try to convince them to be advocates of your campaign . Easier said than done right? This is a process as the sell should be later on in the relationship and reciprocation is to be initiated on your end first. Aside from the usual press release an engagement campaign would be beneficial if the resources are there. Bloggers and resource sites are always "jonzing" for content but you have to pass the initial blocks hence the need to form symbiotic relationships. I'm not suggesting link exchanges at all but offer them something beneficial to them something like sponsoring a meet up or event .
Hope this helps
-
Here are some ideas!
1. Each Press Release re-written for on-site content also. The distributed press release can also summerize a deeper quality article placed on the clients site. So... they get a topic... write an awesome article for on-site content, write a summary piece for a press release that links to the on-site content. The social media team links to both the press release and the on-site content to get it indexed and create buzz. Teach the social media team to ask questions like.. what do you think about this... to engage the audience. They should not just be saying.. go check this out. The on-site content should also be on a blog platform to encourage comments and participation.
2. PR team should look for local opportunities for your client to participate or sponsor. If your client can sponsor a local event, most have a website and one of the requirements for the sponsorship should be an SEO friendly link back to the site. This all ties into the Press Release strategy above. You can do a write up on the site about the sponsorship then a press release about it and so on.
3. The PR team could be tasked with reputation management and owning your brand in the space. They should go out and register yourname.wordpress.com for example and post some basic content on it for reputation management. You want them to take preventive measures so that if someone does come out with something negative about your client, you have a network of sites you can quickly build links to to push up in the results to push the negative stuff down. Posting the press releases etc on the network of sites could also fall to the PR team.
Hope that helps!
Nicole
-
On the generating curiosity have you looked at including QR codes etc on promotional material. It always makes me curios when there is no explanation of what it is for so usually I end up scanning it. Not too sure it will directly affect SEO but I'm just throwing ideas out there!
-
Haha... thanks. It's really strange that nobody jumped in to offer answers. I'm really not expecting profound knowledge a single basic thought or a tip will do. As far as the PR team goes, they actually have a dedicated person for blogging and social media. The only thing is that I am not sure if the two departments communicate regularly. There's an idea.
-
I've avoided answering as I don't have any new thoughts to offer Dejan, but as your Q remains unanswered I'll at least add my two bits:
If I had a client that had a dedicated PR team, I'd task them with blogging for the client as well as being the clients "voice" on social media (specifically Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn) I'd also give them the job of tracking the clients reputation.
One last item. I'd task them with the job of bringing fresh donuts to all meetings
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
Can You Get Better Ranking/Conversion by Reducing the Number of Pages?
I am seriously considering reducing the number of pages in a section of our website. We currently have 39 webpages. I'm considering reducing it to 6. The site architecture would make more sense giving recent design changes. And we could focus more attention on improving conversions from these 6 new pages. But I'm considering doing this mainly because I think it'll help us do a better job of communicating to and converting our audience. The new pages would be longish. The existing 39 pages are by no means stubs, but these new pages would be longer. Anyway, what I want to put out for discussion is the SEO impact. What are the good SEO reasons for reducing the number of pages? Can 6 well-done pages out perform 39 pretty-well-done pages? How many queries can one page rank for well? Is this SEO suicide? Honestly, there's a part of me that cannot believe I'm saying this, but I think my heart is in the right place.
Content Development | | justin-brock1 -
Is there an upper bound on the number of links an url might get in a day?
There are link spammers and programs like GSA and others, that automate linkbuilding, and I was wondering if anybody ever had a penalty because a page on his site is getting too many references (links). I am not talking about spamming here. So provided that the links are coming from relevant, unique sources, but you do an over excessive campaign, and you seem to be getting too many backlinks, can it negatively affect SEO? Alternatively: is there an upper bound on the number of links you try to build in a day when you are doing linkbuilding?
Content Development | | snetface0 -
What if your content is getting social shares but no links?
Suppose you have a weekly blog article and sometimes your articles earn social shares (e.g. 23 +1's on Google Plus on one article but normally 3-5 social shares). One out of 10 earns an organic link from a random blog. Would you continue publishing these blog posts?
Content Development | | ProjectLabs0 -
Do GoogleWacks still exist?
Hi there everybody, It's the end of a long day and i have a few minutes to spare. So what better way than to spend those minutes on the seomoz forum. As you might have already noticed this isn't a serious technical question, but more of a fun google related one. As the title suggests..... Do googlwhacks still exist ? For the people not familiar with a Googlewhack, its a 2 word search query that comes back with a signle hit in the SERPS. Here are some examples of what used to be googlewhacks (which they aren't any more pretty much the moment someone writes about it and Google indexes it and gives up 2 results): bamboozle guzzler unmerciless politician inculcating skullduggery antiestablishmentarianism psycho Who else remembers the good ol' Googlwhack days? P.S. SeoMoz mods, I have no clue in what category to place this topic :). It's just a fun question, thats all.
Content Development | | PrizeWize1 -
Is the Page Authority/Rank of my corporate site affected by my blog's PA/PR and vice versa?
If I host my blog on my corporate site (it is a wordpress blog) will the page authority and page rank of my site translate to the blog? And does this also go the other way around? My gut says this would make sense, and I think I have seen it in action with other corporate sites that host their wordpress blogs, but I want to be completely sure. Even better, if someone can explain to me how this works, that would be super helpful!
Content Development | | Kendi0 -
Why is this store getting hurt in SERPs when they removed duplicate content?
I work with an e-commerce client who got hit hard by Panda. They are very cautious, and want small-scale tests to prove each hypothesis before committing to larger changes. Recently, we reworked content on 30 product detail pages. Before, these product pages featured some original content mixed with some manufacturer content. The change we made was to remove the manufacturer content completely from the product page, leaving about 300 words of high-quality, original content--all of which was written by subject matter experts. I assumed that Google viewed this manufacturer text as duplicate content. However, when these 30 modified pages were compared to the control, they performed significantly worse. Question 1: Does any have any idea why these pages would perform worse than the control?
Content Development | | merch_zzounds
Question 2: Do you have any tips for convincing this client to try another test or get the buy-in to make the larger changes that--in theory--need to happen? FWIW, this client has about 10,000 product detail pages--the vast majority of which contain just manufacturer content. I appreciate your thoughts.0 -
Transfer existing blog to wordpress.org or start a new blog
My blog sits on the wordpress domain http://gardenbeet.wordpress.com/ - it has good page rank and has around 300-400 visits per day - should i move it to my website or Should I start a new blog? i have a page set up for it on my website but it now has good rank http://www.gardenbeet.com/content/design-blog.html - and now want to keep this URL am a bit confused - what is the best strategy in terms of SEO?
Content Development | | GardenBeet1