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by Larry Neilson 29. July 2010 01:24

Internet Marketing is new and exciting to many of us in the insurance business. There seems to be a lot of pent up demand for SEO to the point where it sometimes feels like there’s a land rush happening and I’m driving a three-wheeled wagon. Just this morning I had a senior executive at a large regional agency ask me if I thought some of the things we were doing, content-based SEO, web site lead-capture, and drip system lead conversion, were almost obsolete and if we should be moving on to the newest, latest and greatest like Morgan Stanley’s The Mobile Internet.  So, I looked into this and according to Morgan Stanley’s report Mobile Internet is 5th major computing cycle in the last 50 years, the four being Mainframe in the 1960’s, Mini Computing in the 1970’s, Personal Computing in the 1980’s and Desktop Computing in the 1990’s. Fascinating report and something to start working on now in order to stay ahead of the curve.

However, while it’s important to pursue mobile marketing and social network marketing, if you haven’t developed a plan for fundamental SEO combined with a sound marketing plan that includes lead capture and conversion, you should probably make that your priority since, in terms of prospective clients, that is where the numbers are right now. There are still a lot of people who are not on Twitter and Facebook and not everyone has a Smartphone. While things change very rapidly in this new world, the basics remain the same. The search engines are more concerned with user experience than they are with advertiser results. If the user finds what they are looking for then the advertisers will come, which is why content is king. Not just content for content’s sake but real relevant content that is easy to read and understand, content that someone can scan with their eyes and quickly ascertain whether it meets their needs. Once someone decides to read your content it should become it’s own call-to-action prompting the person to the next step which should be clicking on relevant anchor text in order to get to your web site. Links are very important, but content is the tie-breaker. As for the latest and greatest. We’re looking into the Mobile Internet but we only have so many resources and Internet Marketing is the priority internally and for our customers. Stay tuned there are big things happening next week. And if you haven’t done so already, check www.programbusiness.com It’s brand new! Tell me what you think. 

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Comments (1) -

7/29/2010 7:11:29 PM #

Jeff

Not that this will come off without bias, but the new programbusiness.com site looks great!  Clean, faster and easier to navigate for our agency users.  Providing want they want the first time they search, just as you state in your earlier blog.  

Moving your internet marketing budget in the direction of building technology to be used with content-based SEO, web site lead-capture, and a drip system lead conversion is not almost obsolete vs. mobile devices.  As for mobile devices being used I believe that tablets might do a good job at replacing personal computers if they continue to evolve, but mobile devices. What tablets offer in today’s world, no way can they replace the personal computer, but rather replace a lot of the usage time that personal computers used to receive. Offering applications for mobile devices, internet marketing and SEO are all key ingredients to a sound marketing strategy.  When I go to our local  Little League fields I certainly am not carrying my tablet around, but do have my phone.  With that said there was a tablet at the field yesterday hooked up to play music over the loud speakers during pitching changes and in-between innings. So there’s a place for them.

For mobile devices, it's not conducive to program, develop, or create work flow like one can on a personal computer. However, it is the popular choice for browsing the internet, socializing, getting directions, banking and checking email. Cutting-edge mobile devices provide ease-of-use features that Personal Computers don't have. With that they don't replace the Personal Computer, but offer features the personal computer never had.

For content rich browsing or development and those that don't care for high-performance mobile phones or tablets, personal computer will still have a place in our world, but as the tablet evolves and competes more with the features of a personal computer, I believe that, yes the clunky Personal Computer and even the now clunky laptop, will be a product of the past.  So if you're building a SEO and internet program for your agency and it includes video (sounds tracks) and rich web pages be courteous to the generation that lives on the mobile devices to access content using browsers to land on Twitter, Facebook, Bing and Google.

Jeff United States | Reply

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