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 Article Title:
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 Search Marketing and Social Media
 
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 ============
 
 The phrase Social Media Optimization, (SMO), has quickly become
 an industry buzzword in search marketing circles. The term refers
 to the practice of crafting, altering or augmenting profiles,
 images, movies and other files to be easily found and well shared
 in social media applications such as 43Things.com, MySpace,
 Tribe.net or Flickr, and by interested parties throughout the
 blogosphere.
 
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 ============
 
 1208 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
 Distribution Date and Time: 2006-09-29 11:00:00
 
 Written By:     Jim Hedger
 Copyright:      2006, All Rights Reserved
 Contact Email:  mailto:jimhedger@siteprone
 
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 Search Marketing and Social Media
 Copyright (c) 2006 Jim Hedger, All Rights Reserved
 SiteProNews
 http://www.sitepron
 
 The phrase Social Media Optimization, (SMO), has quickly become
 an industry buzzword in search marketing circles. The term
 refers to the practice of crafting, altering or augmenting
 profiles, images, movies and other files to be easily found and
 well shared in social media applications such as 43Things.com,
 MySpace, Tribe.net or Flickr, and by interested parties
 throughout the blogosphere.
 
 The ultimate goal of any marketing campaign is to put products
 or services in front of as many interested eyeballs as possible.
 Where the public leads, marketers, by necessity, must follow and
 if those eyeballs begin to congregate over there as well as over
 here, many marketers feel the need to move. Tens of millions of
 registered members populate dozens of social networks. People
 appear to enjoy the ability to form communities and inform each
 other. Online marketers looking for another winning venue are
 therefore turning to social media spaces as social marketing
 tools.
 
 For the past five years, the number of high-traffic venues for
 search marketers remained fairly constant, consisting primarily
 of Google. More recently, the space has been supplemented by
 Yahoo, Ask and MSN. For the most part, five years of consistency
 has benefited the search engines, their users, online merchants
 and the SEO/webmaster communities. Nothing stays static very
 long on the Internet though. The online marketing metaverse has
 expanded yet again.
 
 People like applications that make life easier. That's why
 search is somehow part of practically every application people
 use online. One of the major appeals of social media networks is
 that by nature, they are about sharing information, usually from
 a highly personalized point of view. As the theory goes nobody
 knows everything but everyone knows something. Collectively, we
 must know a great deal. Where search tools are about users
 pulling information and Web2.0 applications are about pushing
 information to users, social media steps into the middle ground
 by pushing information to subscribers and inviting others to
 pull information via shared files.
 
 In a social network, large groups of people who would otherwise
 likely be strangers associate with each other based on
 spider-web networks of contacts, friends, images, interests, and
 occupations, creating ever expanding communities. These
 communities, built around shared ideas and interests, draw users
 by giving them the ability to educate, inform and share with
 others.
 
 Both Google and Yahoo have embraced social networking in their
 membership based services for years, starting with Yahoo Groups
 and Google's Orkut. More recent products include Flickr (Yahoo),
 Picasa (Google), Yahoo Publisher Network, and Blogger (Google).
 The major search engines have learned from the lesson suffered
 by the music and movie industries over the past decade.
 
 About eight years ago the true power distributive power of the
 Internet was demonstrated by peer-to-peer file sharing networks.
 When Napster appeared on the scene, the music files of millions
 of people became illicitly traded public property, virtually
 overnight. A similar thing happened to the movie industry two
 years ago with broadband and bit-torrent. As soon as a large
 enough number of Internet users catch on to a technology that
 delivers access to the information or entertainment they want,
 that technology becomes a trend. Sometimes, trends have a way of
 becoming habit.
 
 Social media applications have transited from trend to
 mainstream usage. Thousands of new users sign up for Flickr,
 MySpace, Facebook, Linked-In, Tribes and other community-active
 networks every day. As a result, blogging, image sharing and
 new-media content creation have moved well beyond creative
 geekery and corporate PR departments to become a trans-global
 pastime. Now that the various social network tools have acquired
 mass-market popularity they represent a pirate's treasure to
 corporate PR departments and the online marketers ready to serve
 them.
 
 As far as treasure troves go, the world of social media is
 fairly easy to find; access and start working in. Creating a
 MySpace membership or a Flickr account is as easy as filling in
 a simple form. While building a MySpace profile is slightly more
 difficult than outfitting a Flickr portfolio, both are easy
 enough for new users to begin immediately. Partially because
 social media is so easy to use and partially because sharing
 information, recommendations and the latest outrageousness with
 friends and strangers alike is so cool, tens of millions of
 people have populated the social environments with hundreds of
 millions of files, ranging from music, images, documents and
 movies.
 
 Social media is a cool, barely controlled environment in which
 individual users can form instant communities, finding
 friendships based on shared interest, passion and ideas. So how
 long do such environments remain cool after the invasion of
 barbarians cleverly disguised as marketing experts? That all
 depends on how we (the barbarians), make use of the virtual
 villages we're migrating into.
 
 The problem with breaking in any new marketing medium is the
 instant gold-rush mentality of the advertisers who are early
 adopters. As recently as six or seven years ago, for instance,
 the majority of SEOs chased placements without a great deal of
 regard for the integrity of the search results. Claiming every
 possible Top10 placement under any given keyword phrase for a
 single site on AltaVista, InfoSeek and Lycos was entirely
 possible, and it was done with mercenary zeal. Ask any long-term
 SEO about the earliest days of the industry and most, if not all
 will show a slow, sly, satisfied smile. Back then, everything
 was blackhat. Before PPC paved the way to profitability, the
 search engines naturally considered SEOs as dangerous enemies.
 
 Similarly, social networkers are not terribly happy about
 hitting the search marketing radar screen. By introducing
 corporate clients to what is assumed to be an open and
 non-commercial atmosphere, the online marketing sector is
 blatantly degrading the experience shared amongst the people
 making up the social network. As the months move on, more and
 more marketers are finding their way into places like MySpace.
 Communicating with custom created personalities shilling brand
 name sneakers is not what most social network users signed up
 for.
 
 On the other side of the coin, the people populating social
 networks are already being subjected to advertising. Banner ads
 have been a part of MySpace for over a year and in a deal
 recently signed between MySpace and Google, AdWords ads could
 begin appearing alongside the personal profiles of MySpace
 members who've registered with the AdSense program. Movie
 studios, bands and other performers have also used social media,
 primarily MySpace, as an effective marketing venue to reach
 youthful consumers. Flickr sometimes displays paid ads from
 Yahoo Search Marketing. Advertising is nothing new to web users
 though its inclusion in areas or formats that would normally be
 considered non-commercial content is often frowned upon.
 
 The social media environment is increasingly going to be used as
 a marketing tool regardless of how the various social networks
 and their millions of members feel about it. For a good search
 marketer, it is nearly impossible to avoid affecting whatever
 file one is working on in order to get good placement. In the
 realm of social media, adding tags, links and trackbacks is
 easier than altering the title, meta-tags, content text and link
 patterns. As Internet users gravitate towards the social media
 and thus, towards each other, online advertising is likely to
 take a community and interest based focus.
 
 (http://en.wikipedia
 Wikipedia list of social networking websites)
 
 ------------
 Search marketing expert Jim Hedger is one of the most prolific
 writers in the search sector with articles appearing in numerous
 search related websites and newsletters, including SiteProNews,
 Search Engine Journal, ISEDB.com, and Search Engine Guide.
 
 He is currently Senior Editor for the Jayde Online news sources
 SEO-News (http://www.seo-
 (http://www.sitepron
 and news on webmaster and SEO topics by Jim at the SiteProNews
 blog (http://blog.
 
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