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We often talk about doing spring cleaning of our physical spaces. But it’s just as important to apply these same practices to your online world.
During our April #AWeberHour Twitter chat, we spoke with five amazing content experts, who shared some valuable advice on how bloggers and marketers can improve their online content by regularly performing content audits.
When you hear the word “audit,” that tends to translate to loads and loads of time and effort. And time, for many businesses, is a rare commodity.
But it doesn’t have to be a “mind-numbing odyssey.” Here are some basic steps to take to help you clean up and optimize your online content.
First off, it’s important to define what a content audit is. Put simply, it’s a quantitative inventory of your content combined with a qualitative assessment of how your content is performing.
It’s more than just creating a list of all the pages, blog posts, photos, documents and videos you have on your website. Yes, making a list is part of the process. But, more importantly, it’s assessing how your content is performing, which helps you know what to keep doing, what to improve, and what to scrap.
Imagine if a broken link or missing metadata is keeping Google from indexing your site. Translation: no one will find your website if they’re searching on Google. If it’s not on Google, it doesn’t exist. That could spell ruin for any business.
Or what if you’re spending most of your time talking about Topic A, when your audience would prefer Topic B. Translation: your audience will grow disinterested and go elsewhere.
How do you know your content is effective if you’re not reviewing it on a regular basis?
By doing a regular audit of your content, you’re able to not only identify things that are broken on your site, but you’re also able to identify trends in what your audience values, giving you more direction with your strategy and business.
An audit does not have to be a daunting, time-consuming, labor-intensive exercise. Yes, there are a lot of elements to it, but they can easily be broken down into manageable chunks.
Check out our Twitter chat recap to learn from our five guest experts how to perform an audit, as well as tools to help make it easier.
As you’re going through your audit, there are some common areas that get missed. We’ve put together a list of them below.
Do you know anyone who needs some help improving their web content?
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Deliverability is the name of the game when it comes to email marketing. It’s the first step to a successful email campaign. Without it, your emails are like a red hot ferrari without the engine.
Most email marketing providers offer some great features, like mobile responsive email templates, customizable signup forms and autoresponders, which are all important. But when selecting an email marketing provider, email deliverability should be your number one priority.
There are many factors that impact deliverability – the biggest one being reputation with Internet Service Providers (ISPs) like Gmail, Yahoo, AOL, etc.
Building and maintaining a stellar reputation with ISPs requires a lot of time, effort and discipline.
To help you find the right email marketing provider with the best possible deliverability, we sat down with AWeber’s Director of Deliverability, Mohammed Ahmed, to find out what five questions every marketer should ask their email marketing provider about deliverability:
All ISPs use systems to score the reputation of email marketing providers. They look at things like the volume of emails being sent over a given period of time, the number of complaints and email bounces.
Recently, ISPs have also started looking at whether subscribers are opening and clicking on emails when determining reputation.
An email marketing provider’s reputation is built on the relationship they have with subscribers. The more engaged, the better the reputation, the better the deliverability.
Some email marketing providers, like AWeber, proactively employ their own reputation management systems to take improving their deliverability one step further.
Here at AWeber, our world-class reputation management system allows us to gather customer-specific data from ISPs to help us build a picture of our customers’ sending practices over time. This allows us to continually develop and refine each customer’s reputation, and maintain an amazing record of deliverability with all major ISPs worldwide.
Email authentication is the process of determining whether someone is, in fact, who they say they are. You wouldn’t let a stranger borrow your red hot ferrari. You would want to get to know them first. Once you build that trust, you’re more likely to let them take it for a spin.
ISPs want to make sure they’re allowing mail to come through from a trusted source. If they’re unable to authenticate an email marketing provider, it could result in email messages not getting through to subscribers.
There are number of authentication methods available today. AWeber uses both Sender Policy Framework (SPF) and DomainKeys Identified Mail (DKIM), both of which help ISPs verify the authenticity of the emails they’re receiving, ensuring they really came from AWeber’s mail servers.
A shared IP involves mixing different types of email traffic – you have several clients that use the same IP. A dedicated IP, on the other hand, is exactly that – dedicated. It has a sole purpose and isn’t shared with anyone or anything.
To help explain shared versus dedicated IPs, I’ll use the example of starting a car in cold weather. Before you drive anywhere, it’s a good idea to let the car warm up a bit. The same thing is true with IPs.
When you use a dedicated IP to send email, it takes some time to warm up or, in other words, build a reputation with ISPs. This means that deliverability will take some time to improve.
Once you’ve established a reputation with ISPs, however, you can maintain that reputation for a much long period of time.
On the other hand, using a shared IP typically means it is already warm, or already has a reputation with ISPs, so deliverability is going to be better right out of the gate. But if an email marketing provider has a bad client on the shared IP, they could ruin the deliverability for all clients using that IP.
Regardless of the type of IP an email marketing provider uses, the key to maintaining a stellar reputation with ISPs is to send good quality messages.
We run a tight ship here at AWeber. Each of our IPs has a dedicated purpose and is shared by customers with the same reputation level sending the same type of mail. Our reputation system allows us to assign very specific traffic patterns to each IP, giving us a high degree of control over each IP’s reputation.
Back to the car analogy… Traffic lights control the amount of cars that go through an intersection during a given period of time. ISPs’ connection limits operate in the same way for emails; they control the amount of email messages that come through their servers.
It’s important for an email marketing provider to know what the connection limits are from an ISP because if you send too much mail in a short amount of time, you run the risk of your emails bouncing more frequently.
While some ISPs advertise fixed limits for things like connections, number of messages per hour, and so on, email marketing providers typically throttle the number of messages going out from their servers. Throttling is specific to the IP that is sending messages.
Over time, email marketing providers, like AWeber, develop a reputation with the ISPs, which is a direct reflection of customers’ email sending practices. Email marketing providers that send a lot of good messages and relatively few spam messages will have a good reputation, and ISPs generally reward these good practices with higher connection limits.
Occasionally, customers may experience being blocked by an ISP. This typically happens when messages get flagged by ISPs’ automated anti-spam filters, when subscribers submit spam complaints to ISPs, when you have inactive email addresses on your list, when messages get bounced back, or when messages get caught in spam traps.
It’s the responsibility of the email marketing provider to resolve these blocking issues on behalf of their customers.
It’s pretty simple. The sooner your email marketing provider solves blocking issues, the sooner your emails get delivered.
At AWeber, we use adaptive deliverability to abide by the connection limits for the leading ISPs. We have several monitoring systems that actively scan for and track blocking issues. These monitoring systems play an essential role in helping us identify the cause for the blocks, allowing us to quickly remedy the issue and engage the ISPs to have the block lifted.
There a bunch of factors to consider when selecting the right email marketing provider for your business.
Make sure you get under the hood of your email marketing provider before making that important purchase because deliverability can mean everything to the growth of you business.
When in doubt, get back in your Ferrari.
We’re having a great time presenting to a full house of eager learners at today’s Retail Email Marketing Bootcamp in West Hollywood.
Entrepreneurs and small business owners have a lot on their plates. If that’s you, you might feel overworked or overwhelmed. But you don’t have to be.
If you’re feeling this way, the AWeber team invites you to join our monthly #AWeberHour Twitter Chat on Wednesday, May 7, from 8-9 p.m. ET with Chris Ducker, author of the new book, “Virtual Freedom.”
He’ll cover how to choose the best virtual partners for your business, so you can delegate smaller tasks and work on the bigger picture – your business as a whole. Well known as a “Virtual CEO,” he is the master of finding the right people to help a business run smoothly, freeing up time for himself and making sure nothing slips through the cracks.