Google+ Business Pages and +1Buttons

Google+ Promoting

Are you ready to spend even more time social networking?

How much of your mar­ket­ing bud­get and/or time goes to Social Net­work­ing? Most busi­nesses have some sort of pres­ence on at least Face­book and LinkedIn. And maybe Twit­ter and YouTube.

Google + per­sonal pro­files have been out for a while but it was another month before busi­ness pages were launched. It’s going to take some time before we can tell what kind of social networking/marketing share this new ser­vice is going take from Face­book, Twit­ter and LinkedIn, but it’s Google so we can’t ignore it. A piece of advice I read recently in an arti­cle at Mar­ket­ing Mag­a­zine UK is to not rush into build­ing a Google+  Busi­ness Page until you have a clear strat­egy. Makes sense… So of course we did the oppo­site and just went ahead. For us, it’s okay not to have a strat­egy because the whole point is to learn more.  We do agree with the advice though and sug­gest you set up per­sonal pro­file first to famil­iar­ize your­self with how it works.

There are plenty of resources about Google+ out there if you search. Many of the arti­cles are great but tech­ni­cal or long.  We decided to begin our explo­ration of Google+ by com­par­ing one of their new shar­ing fea­tures to Facebook’s. We were curi­ous about these and thought it might be some­thing you  be inter­ested in. What I am talk­ing about is the new +1 icons and g+ icons. We have them on our web­site home page side­bar if you would like to try them :-) . And the Google Plus but­ton below in this post works too.

There are sim­i­lar­i­ties and dif­fer­ences. The Google +1 but­tons that now appear around the Inter­net on Google searches and on web­sites are pretty sim­i­lar to Face­book like but­tons. If you click on one they behave the same way. If you are not logged into your Google account, Gmail for exam­ple, you will first be prompted do that and then your ‘like’, or ‘plus’ in this case is recorded for that web page.

Click here to connect with our Google + business pageThe new but­tons, like the one at the left, are called Google + Direct Con­nect but­tons. When you click on one, you will be taken to the owner’s Google+ Page. You can view their feed, share, ‘+1′  and ‘fol­low’ the same as you would a Face­book feed. So it’s sim­i­lar to hav­ing a Face­book icon on your site that con­nects to your Face­book pro­file. Our feel­ing is this is going to help your SEO efforts for being found in Google searches (maybe only in a small way but every lit­tle bit helps). It con­nects you directly to Google so it can’t hurt. Here’s an excerpt from a Web Pro Newsletter:

Google+ has intro­duced a whole new realm of SEO pos­si­bil­i­ties based on get­ting found via Google’s own properties.

For one, Google ranks Google+ posts in search results, and they often appear on the first page.

The +1 but­ton obvi­ously helps your search vis­i­bil­ity cause. Google made it clear from the begin­ning that this would be a search sig­nal. If enough peo­ple like your con­tent enough to give it a +1, it must be good right? Why not bump it up in the rankings. ”

The more of their tools you use and inter­con­nect, the more vis­i­ble and eas­ier to find you will be in Google searches. Searchers will be able to find your + busi­ness page by using the + added to their search term. Here is how they explain it on their Direct Con­nect info page:

Google+ Direct Con­nect lets you quickly nav­i­gate to a Google+ page (and even add that page to your cir­cles) when using Google Search. For exam­ple, if you searched for the query ‘+youtube’ or ‘+pepsi,’ you could be imme­di­ately taken to the YouTube Google+ page, or the Pepsi Google+ page, and given the option to add the page to your circles.”

So hav­ing a Google+ Busi­ness Page is another way for folks to find you and fol­low you. Start think­ing about it now, plan­ning for it soon, and it’s very impor­tant, we feel, to begin con­sid­er­ing what to name your Google + busi­ness page.

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Facebook Frictionless Sharing - Good or Bad Thing?

Watching YouFace­book has been rolling out a lot of updates over the past few months. Their lat­est is by far the one cre­at­ing the biggest stir and most dis­cus­sion. It is described as ‘Fric­tion­less Shar­ing’ and changes how apps you have sub­scribed to inter­act with your Face­book wall.

What is Fric­tion­less Sharing?

When you visit a blog or web­site, if you’ve enabled an app access, FB (Face­book) can auto­mat­i­cally post their con­tent to your wall. No more click­ing the ‘Like’ but­ton. No more copy­ing and past­ing links. Depend­ing on the app and the set­tings avail­able, you will no longer have the of choice to share or not. When you visit their site to read an arti­cle, or lis­ten to a tune (for exam­ple) the arti­cle you are read­ing or tune you are lis­ten­ing to will be shared automatically.

Dif­fer­ent apps have dif­fer­ent set­tings avail­able and I have read that some allow more con­trol than oth­ers. Some allow you to turn auto­matic shar­ing off. Unless an app gives me this option, it will be deleted. Cer­tainly from a mar­ket­ing point of view there is enthu­si­asm for ‘Fric­tion­less Shar­ing’ with no wait­ing for ‘Likes’ and ‘Shares’ so many apps (I sus­pect) will not add the ‘off switch’ initially.

Pri­vacy Concerns

If you do a search on ‘Fric­tion­less Shar­ing’ you will find many folks have pri­vacy con­cerns with this new fea­ture.  Their con­cern is this is a new even higher level of intru­sion of con­stant sur­veil­lance of our every move on the Inter­net. I per­son­ally share this con­cern and do not like the fea­ture even though as a busi­ness we could find ways to take advan­tage of it.

Let’s face it, we are being tracked around the Inter­net already with cook­ies unless we browse using stealth mode. Every­one wants to know our buy­ing habits, tastes, Geo loca­tion so they can serve us tar­geted con­tent. It’s like going to a mall where they know what you bought on your last visit, change the ‘On Sale’ item to attract you based on your buy­ing his­tory, greet you by name and ask you if you plan on hav­ing a Taco at the ‘Food Fair’ again this visit…

Mmmm… Cook­ies are Good!

Cook­ies are not inher­ently bad. They help us do many things more eas­ily on the Inter­net. It’s more about what a par­tic­u­lar cookie is being used for. Dis­cussing cook­ies more fully is beyond the scope of this topic but if you want to under­stand how much we rely on them, try turn­ing them off in your web browser pref­er­ences or select­ing the option to be prompted to accept a cookie instead of accept­ing them auto­mat­i­cally. Have fun try­ing to get many of your favorite sites to open! Dis­abling cook­ies will seri­ously dimin­ish your brows­ing enjoyment.

As I have men­tioned, there is a ton of Buzz about this if you search the term ‘Fric­tion­less Shar­ing Face­book’. This one at PC world was at the top of my search and I found it eas­ier to under­stand than many of the more tech­ni­cal ones:

http://www.pcworld.com/article/240592/facebooks_frictionless_sharing_a_privacy_guide.html

A few thoughts to fin­ish with

Bot­tom line is the best advice one can fol­low is to use due dili­gence prior mak­ing a deci­sion to  install an app or not.  Do you really need this app? What does it add to my life? Does it want to take con­trol of my web­cam and record me lip-syncing badly to Adele — Rolling in the Deep, then post to com­edy site?

More time worn and cliched advice… Read the fine print.

Last but not least. Log out of Face­book when you are brows­ing other sites. Doing so is no guar­an­tee FB is not watch­ing your every move, but at least it may not hit your wall.

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Independent Business Owners Are Not Borg

Resistance is futile...

Most peo­ple plan­ning an impor­tant event, such as wed­ding (for exam­ple), would never con­sider wait­ing until the last minute to book a caterer, rent tuxe­dos, buy a wed­ding dress, make arrange­ments for a florist or to book a recep­tion hall. Book­ing well in advance is advised and in fact, a must for secur­ing many pro­fes­sional ser­vices. They will not be avail­able otherwise.

The same is true when sched­ul­ing work with an inde­pen­dent busi­ness owner / entre­pre­neur that you have con­tracted to do work with.

If a client waits until too close to dead­line to advise need­ing the work done there can be a sched­ul­ing prob­lem. (This is where I get to the Borg part). Some­times there is an assump­tion that once con­tracted it is just a mat­ter of idling away in the back­ground await­ing ‘a command’.

Inde­pen­dent busi­ness own­ers / entre­pre­neurs do not work with a sin­gle client. Inde­pen­dent busi­ness own­ers / entre­pre­neurs can­not sit at their computer/phone/blackberry just wait­ing for work  None of us would sur­vive if we did this.

In our own busi­ness we pride our­selves at always do our best to ‘drop every­thing’ when it is an emer­gency and hav­ing a fast turn­around time. Even so, like other pro­fes­sion­als ser­vices, like your­selves, we need to sched­ule our work / your work. To keep our busi­ness suc­cess­ful we need a full sched­ule to prosper.

To all our suc­cesses —  (we will not be assim­i­lated :-)

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Securing Your WordPress

In our two pre­vi­ous posts I talked about being hacked,  what to do after if you site has be com­pro­mised and how to get cleared with Google if they have blocked vis­i­tors because of mal­ware found on your site.

This post talks about how to make your Word­Press as secure as possible.

Word­Press has good secu­rity built in. Their team of devoted and very tal­ented pro­gram­mers are con­stantly work­ing to stay ahead of the bad guys. Even so, being such a pop­u­lar soft­ware makes it a tar­get so it’s impor­tant to be proac­tive in keep­ing your Word­Press as safe as possible.

Be Vig­i­lant

You can’t phone up an alarm com­pany and have them put in motion detec­tors, door and win­dow strips, so what do you do? There are sev­eral things you can do and plug-ins you can install or have your web per­son help you with.

  • check your site’s secu­rity for vulnerabilites
  • lock down your site as best you can
  • mon­i­tor changes to your site that you have not made
  • scan your site for mali­cious files (dis­cussed in our last two posts)
  • and also scan for viruses

A plug-in to check your site’s secu­rity for vulnerabilities

Ulti­mate Secu­rity Check

http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/ultimate-security-check/

This plug-in scans you site and makes rec­om­men­da­tions then pro­vides set­tings you can tog­gle on or off.

There are oth­ers plug-ins you can find and most require ‘set­tings’ deci­sions you might need help with. They gen­er­ally have default set­tings you can safely apply with­out blow­ing up your site. But… There is never a guar­an­tee you won’t encounter a prob­lem because there are so many dif­fer­ent web server con­fig­u­ra­tions… So be care­ful! Always do a back-up first (another topic and another plug-in).

Lock down your site as best you can

Unless you are an advanced user, you will need help with this task and so I’m going to keep my expla­na­tion brief… Hack­ers often look for files and fold­ers on your site with per­mis­sion set to allow them to be edited. For exam­ple your footer file and other theme files. Remov­ing ‘write’ per­mis­sions on these files will make it harder for hack­ers to inject code into your site. Explain­ing how to do this is beyond is beyond the scope of this post and if you don’t know how, we rec­om­mend you get help.

Lock­ing down your theme files is a pain and not many folks go to this extreme but it does make your site more secure and you will have to judge your­self whether the extra work it causes is worth it.

This post is get­ting on the long side so I’ll stop here for now and dis­cuss the other list items (above) another night…

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Submitting your site for a review at Google Webmaster Tools

In our last post we wrote about a mal­ware script we have been deal­ing with the past cou­ple of weeks. That it was being injected into Word­Press footer files and how to remove it.

If you find this quickly and deal with it, there is min­i­mal impact to your site. But if you don’t dis­cover it quickly, you could end up on Google’s ‘Attack Site’ list and they will block vis­i­tors from vis­it­ing your site.

Curi­ous about your site’s health sta­tus? Google has a tool for check­ing to see if there are any prob­lems with your site. Replace the last part of this link with your domain they will show you a report:

http://www.google.com/safebrowsing/diagnostic?site=yoursiteurl.com

Right now we’re going back to our topic for this post… How to sub­mit your site to Google after you have cleaned up fol­low­ing a mal­ware attack.

First thing you are going to need is an account at Google Web­mas­ter Tools.

http://www.google.com/webmasters/tools/

Once you have an account set up, you will need to add a web­site. There’s a but­ton for this promi­nently dis­played on the index page. Click on it and you will be offered a field to enter your site url. I usu­ally have this on my clip board ready to paste in.

Next they will require you ver­ify own­er­ship the site. There are sev­eral dif­fer­ent meth­ods offered. You can add a meta tag they pro­vide or down­load an html file, which you then upload to your site. This fast and easy as long as you have an FTP pro­gram or web site author­ing tool with file trans­fer set up. Explain­ing how to use these is beyond the scope of this post and if you don’t how to do this, you are some­one who should have pro­fes­sional help.

Once you have uploaded the google html file or inserted the meta tag into your home page header, go back to the Google Web­mas­ter tools page [still open I hope!] and hit the ‘ver­ify site’ button.

There are var­i­ous things you can look at in Web­mas­ter Tools but we in there for a par­tic­u­lar rea­son at the moment. We want to get our site pro­nounced healthy and open to vis­i­tors again. To do this, look for the ‘diag­nos­tics’ link on the left side bar. Click­ing will expand the menu. The ‘mal­ware’ link take you to a page with an alert that your site is blocked. Here is where you will be able to sub­mit your site and add a lit­tle mes­sage about what you have done to clean out the malware.

That’s all there is to it. It’s not hard but then we do this for a liv­ing. If you need help with this or some­thing else on your site that is beyond your tech­ni­cal com­fort level. Con­tact us!

Happy Trails,

Billy

PS -  Next post we’ll talk about a few plug-ins to help with security.

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