Guest Blog Post From Craig Weeks on Social Media Marketing

Social Media Marketing

Social Media Marketing (SMM) is an effective and systematic way to market your accounting practice without spending any money.  There are many social media sites, and SMM incorporates three of them: blogging, LinkedIn, and Facebook.
SMM marketing employs these three social media tools in a manner that when they are combined together, produce powerful results.

What is best is that SMM marketing is completely free to use.  SMM was originally developed as a system for new small businesses and hobby businesses with zero marketing budget to effectively promote themselves.  There’s no reason why it won’t work for your accounting practice.

And, yes, it does take some of your time – perhaps a considerable amount if you really get into it – though it need not necessarily be time during your workday.  You can learn, implement and engage in SMM marketing anytime you feel like it … the Internet is open for business 24/7/365.

Blogging

Your Personal Branding Tool

Blogging is the branding element.  Select a niche that’s related to your practice, e.g. you understand all the tax ins and outs of 1031 exchanges, “green” architecture, local Enterprise Zones, etc.  Produce and send out your blog.  Build up a readership, establish yourself as the authority in your niche and reach new prospects.

An alternative is to first explore relevant sites and forums, participate, get conversations going with interest groups and then select a niche that fits nicely with the audience you have selected.

You can quickly gain a following on the Internet.  It doesn’t have to be a big following for you to establish a “presence” in your market area.  There are an ever-increasing number of people who regularly read blogs as a source for highly specialized information.
For your blogging campaign to be effective, the content must be fresh, technically accurate, interesting enough to attract readers and be good enough to get other accounting-related bloggers to link to the postings.  [see Michelle Golden’s list of 124 accounting blogs]

These links are highly valued by the search engines.  By establishing these interconnected relationships you become more visible to Google, Yahoo, etc. and this in turn increases the chances that you will be found by web surfers.

Blogs broadcast their content out to the web via RSS every time there is something new. Posting and syndication is almost instantaneous. It is easy for visitors to subscribe to a blog so they can view new postings as soon as they happen. Blogs encourage repeat visits with content being delivered to your favorite reader or delivery by email.

Blogs can be set-up for free. Free hosted solutions are the simplest and easiest to launch.  Blogger.com or WordPress.com are among the most popular of these.

LinkedIn

Your professional networking tool

LinkedIn is the professional networking element where you establish a broad network of business relationships.

LinkedIn is a powerful networking tool that everyone in business who is growing their business should be using.  LinkedIn is social networking (similar to Hi5, Facebook, Friendster, etc, etc) but still very different.  What makes LinkedIn different is that it has become the accepted norm as the universal business networking tool.

One of the keys for successful LinkedIn networking is to spend some time building up a complete profile.  Your profile is one of the central ways that others will seek you out to network with you.  The more information you share on your profile, the more searchable you become and more chances you will be able to make a real connection with someone.  Again, focusing upon one or more niches is an important potential differentiator from other accountants you compete with in your market area.

Networking using LinkedIn increases your chances of connecting with the right people. People can search for services not only among their direct network, but also with the people that your network knows directly.

LinkedIn is the most accepted tool for connecting professionals.  Facebook is making great strides, but does not have the same audience and number of business users. LinkedIn allows you to keep in touch with people that otherwise may drop off the radar a few years after leaving a position.  It allows reconnecting with old contacts and colleagues.

One effective strategy to develop a social media SMM presence is to utilize LinkedIn in the following manner:  First of all, what is your purpose?  Are you seeking inbound links?  Sign-up subscribers?  Improve brand perception [remember, you ARE a brand]?  Settle on one primary purpose and one or two secondary ones.

Then decide who your audience will be.  Who cares the most about what you have to sell or what you have to say?   What interests them?  What are their needs?  Once that is determined, then become a detective.  Track down where the online conversations are happening [one key source are the 124 accounting blogs already out there], and one of the first places you look is LinkedIn Answers.  Are questions being asked and answers being sought about your niche or area of expertise?  If so, this is where you can start your campaign by joining the conversation, demonstrating your knowledge about the subject matter, and establishing your presence within that online community.

From there you can leverage your presence and following into a blog, Facebook or other social media.

If your niche is sufficiently esoteric, it is possible you can create a presence well outside your market area.  This can lead to invitations to speak or even new clients from distant locations.  For example, an attorney I know in Alaska has become somewhat of an expert on oil rig lease contracts.  By publicizing his expertise, he has attracted clients from as far away as Norway.

Facebook

Your social networking tool

Facebook is the social networking piece and works at a more personal interaction level.  Facebook is about building relationships.  Facebook is one of the most powerful social networking services available and is very popular with small business owners.

Your Profile: Build an attention getting profile that will make an impact.  Think of this as your branding for your practice.  Include a good photo, contact info, a link to your website, education, work history, personal interests, etc.  Take the time when building your profile to include the city your business is in, your industry, and other networking information.  Let potential business partners and clients find you and make yourself more searchable.

Facebook is not just for college students anymore.  It has attracted the white collar business market.  It is in transition and growing strongly and is poised to become a major B2B marketing site that attracts corporate executives and decision makers.  To maximize a Facebook marketing campaign, you need to use a variety of tools and techniques.  These include Social Ads, Groups, Events, Fan Pages, Share, and the News Feed.  Again, these can revolve around a practice niche.

Facebook offers a way for businesses to have a presence in a way that is similar, yet different from the profiles of an individual.  Businesses create pages or groups, while people create profiles.  You attract people to you by sharing information, knowledge , and building up their trust in you until they have reached a point where they are open to engaging your services.

Add friends to build your networking.  There are tools to find friends that are already on Facebook.  Use Facebook tools to meet people with common professional interests, build a relationship and gather them as friends to build up your base.

Use the phone to contact “friends” you create to increase the interactions and better build business relationships.  Don’t go in looking for prospects to quickly convert into a client.  Go in with the idea that you want to build relationships.  You can create many unexpected alliances that can cause your practice to benefit in unforeseen ways.

Summary

SMM marketing is a free marketing strategy that can be effective for building accounting practices with little or no money available for traditional [flyers, mailers, print or radio ads, billboards, etc.] marketing.   Even without marketing dollars, it is possible to build and grow a thriving practice.  It won’t happen overnight, but you can do this without spending one dollar on marketing.

Are there other areas of social media that can be used?  Of course!  But the premise of SMM marketing is to establish a core of strategies that can become your social media marketing foundation.

As you explore the accounting-related blogs, forums and Internet-based information providers (e.g. AccountingWEB, et al), you will quickly see that social media as a firm marketing tool is an evolving and uncertain methodology.  Many are trying to figure out how to use it and out of that effort no doubt some “best practices” will emerge.  For the present, the SMM approach seems to be a reasonably effective (as measured by effort vs. results) means to promote your practice.  It is, however, just one means.  It may eventually make some other forms of indirect marketing obsolete, but it will never replace face-to-face personal marketing.

This system doesn’t require the assistance of a computer/networking/IT specialist.  The one over-riding principle is that your SMM is implemented by effectively utilizing existing social marketing mediums.  You don’t have to invent, create or fund any infrastructure.  With a sound plan that leverages off of what we know works in today’s social media world you can successfully promote your practice, build your brand, make some money and establish yourself as a formidable presence within your online niche.  All without spending a nickel.

Beyond SMM (But Still Free)

There are more free marketing strategies that every accountant should consider using.

1. Google Places: This used to be called Google Local Business Center and any

business can get a free business listing on Google.  These are Google’s local directory listing that appear next to the eye-catching map during searches for local businesses.  They are known as the Google 7-Pack.

The Google 7-Pack is considered “prime real estate.”  Best of all, it is free for any business to sign up for.  Every accounting practice should have its own Google Places listing. Your practice doesn’t even need to have a website to appear in these results.

2. Yahoo Local: Get a free business listing on Yahoo.  It is similar to Google, but

without the map.

3. Bing Local: Get a free listing on Bing.  Business listings are returned in Bing’s

search results.

4. Squidoo: Are you looking for ways to bring more visitors to your website?  You can add your own pages to a popular website called Squidoo.  According to Alexa, squidoo.com is ranked as the 239th most popular website in the world.  You can add a page about almost any topic to this website for free.

5. NitPickIt.com: This is a local directory listing and any accounting practice can add a free classified listing to produce a powerful back link to your website.

6. BestoftheWeb: (local.botw.org) This directory has free and premium (i.e. paid) listings to increase your business visibility.

7. Yellowpages.com Free and paid local business listings.

8. Craigslist: Service businesses (like accounting firms) are always looking for new ways to advertise their business.  A free alternative is Craigslist.  You will want to become familiar with their posting guidelines to avoid having your ads removed.

9. YouTube: Video is the hot growth area on the Internet.  There are now more

video views than searches.  Many of these occur on YouTube.com.  Post an attention-getting video that includes your website URL and with a little luck you may suddenly attract a lot of attention.

Here’s an example: an accountant told me he was learning how to ski and was doing terribly.  His wife took a bunch of video of him falling, getting tangled up in his gear and generally carrying on like one of the three stooges.  To personalize his individual page on his firm’s website, he added a humorous paragraph about his skiing misadventures and a link to the place on YouTube where he posted his wife’s video.  Not only did his clients and co-workers see the video, thousands of strangers on YouTube saw it.  When he went to a local practice group meeting a couple of weeks later, a number of people told him they’d seen it.  Word spread and even more people made a fuss over it.  It certainly got him noticed and that in turn led to some introductions and networking opportunities that might not have otherwise become available.

10. Google Profiles: Your name is your brand.  A Google Profile gives you one more place to promote your personal brand online.  Using Google Profiles, you can control what people will be able to read about you because you control the content.

I haven’t included Twitter in this list.  Twitter messages are limited to 140 characters.  Obviously, few deep thoughts are transmitted in this medium … users almost invariably employ it to express textual exclamations of a relevant-right-this-moment emotional nature (“OMG, Buffy and Chip are holding hands!!!”).

There are accounting firm marketers out there who are experimenting and trying to figure out how to effectively employ Twitter.  At present, I just can’t see its potential value for promoting your practice.  If someone comes up with an effective way to use this medium, I’ll tell you about it on my blog ASAP.

I’m not suggesting you get involved with every social media outlet.  No one (except, apparently, my grandson) has enough time to do that.  But, social media is a brave new world for accountants and their firms, and there’s not a lot of competition out there yet.  SMM is a good strategy to put your toe in the water and get a reasonable return for your effort.

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Craig Weeks is located in Vancouver, WA and since 1996 has specialized in helping clients as diverse as sole practitioners and KPMG practice groups become more effective business developers.  He believes all accountants can become highly effective rainmakers while maintaining their individual interpersonal style.  He has a free blog devoted solely to accounting practice business development.  There are 80+ informative entries you can peruse. He also published a how-to manual in 2009, which you can check out at www.cpaprofitplus.com.

Marketing CPA Websites Effectively with Google Local

Once you have a CPA website you want people to be able to find and view it. Using Internet marketers is usually an expensive process. You do have the power to effectively market your accounting website without the expense. One sure bet is getting listed within Google via the local listing. Here is a quick way to get that done.

Don’t have time but still want the marketing advantage of being listed? Consider using our Search Engine Optimization for accountants. You pay once and get listed with Google Local along with many other local directories and the other major search engines, you get set up with Google Analytics, and more.

Getting Listed. First, log into your GMail account. Don’t have one? Go to gmail.google.com and easily set up a free account.

Once logged in, go to maps.google.com and type in your city, state, and the word accountant. Look through the list for your firm as you may already be listed. If you are already listed skip the sign-up process and “Edit” your listing.

Make Sure You Have a Place for Your Firm to Dock

Search a couple of ways to be sure; a double listing can be a real headache. Try finding yourself by your business name and your domain name. If you can’t find your firm you need to start a new listing by signing up here.

Editing the Listing. In the first part of the listing process Google prompts you for a lot of business details. Be sure to fill it out completely.

There’s a few niceties to keep in mind when editing up your Google listing.

  • Use common business names, not official ones that no one would recognize.
  • Integrate keywords and/or phrases that people would be searching for like “CPA,””Accounting,” or “Tax Preparation.”
  • Include a physical location, not a mailing address.
  • Include an Email address, but don’t use a personal one so as to avoid spam.
  • Include a short description.
  • Enter your business hours, and upload a picture of your building, your staff, and/or yourself.

It does take time, but be patient. It all pays off.

Claiming Your Business. You claim your business by going through an authorization/verification process with Google. There are a couple of different methods.

  1. Google calls you at the currently listed business number.
  2. Google mails you at the postal address on the current listing.

Importance of Verification. Google creates no listing if it cannot verify through one of the above methods. If you don’t have dependable live reception on your phone line you’ll have to verify by snail mail.

Once this is done Google verifies your changes and sends you a user PIN by mail. Use this pin by logging into your Gmail account and then going to your Business Dashboard and entering the pin.

Time Well Spent. Google local is one of the best ways to advertise your firm. It is a process – but, once completed, it establishes and markets your firm effectively.

Don’t miss out on future tips to market your firm! Subscribe to weekly updates direct to your email without any spam (see newsletter sign-up on right).

CPA Website Marketing: Tackle Personalized Pages First

You have a CPA website and have helped to stand out from your competition by personalizing some key pages. Now how do you get your website to start showing up in online searches? You need to market the personalized pages. Doing so markets your website. Here are a few key tips to get started.

Get Behind the Descriptions of Your Pages

Start with our Help Section. The best place to start is the help section that talks about how to market your website. The section specifically talks about page titles, descriptions, and keywords and how to use them. The time it takes for the overall process is minimal since you are going to be targeting specific pages, not your whole website.

Work with Personalized Pages. Once you understand the help section referenced above, the key is to work with the personalized pages. When you target these specific pages, your CPA website is stronger. Think of these firm-specific pages as helping drive traffic to your website. The rest of the content that is already there enhances your message and helps to keep visitor interest.

Client Keyword Gathering. It is always helpful to understand how clients find you. It gives you clues as to what is working and what isn’t. In terms of the Internet, you want to know what search terms (keywords) a client used to find you. So always ask and then compile this information for reference. Be sure to read the help section on keywords first.

Responding to Change. Always be willing to respond to changes in the market. For example, the data gathered on what keywords clients used to find your website: take that and periodically change or add to your keywords, titles, or descriptions.

Adding keyword-specific titles and description to personalized pages is essential. Take the time to work with these specific pages and your website as a whole benefits.

Subscribe now and get more simple measurements you should take to market your CPA website every week.

What other measurements have you found helpful with using titles, keywords, and descriptions on your CPA website? Respond via comments below.

Don’t Take The “Person” Out Of Personalizing

Do you have a firm profile page on your CPA website? What does it consist of? Does it look and read like a resume, just a list of your educational and work background, perhaps with a picture of you in a business suit in front of a shelf of books? If so, you could be missing a vital opportunity to market yourself to potential clients.

Personalize. There are a lot of accountants out there and, as you may guess, there are a lot of accountant websites as well. Standing out from the crowd isn’t easy but personalizing your firm profile goes a long way. Don’t take the person out of personalizing; this is your opportunity to distance yourself from the hundred other accountants in business suits.

Example of a good About Us photo

A picture where you are smiling and having fun can do more for winning over a client's trust than a list of degrees and awards.

The biggest fear about integrating personality into your site seems to be that it compromises your professionalism. It’s easy to think that if clients sees photos of you on a rock climbing trip or reads that you enjoy watching horror films, that they won’t be able to take you seriously. This fear prevents you from making a genuine human connection with your clients.

Connecting with Clients. It’s important to break out of this mindset. Your accounting website is filled with pages upon pages of articles, guides, and tools dedicated to showing that you know taxes, bookkeeping, and accounting. What potential clients are looking for on your About Us page is what sets you apart from everyone else in your field; a sense of humor, a common interest, or anything that allows them to form a personal bond with you.

Clients will be more trusting of you and feel more comfortable around you when they see you not as just a calculator or a reference book, but as an actual person. That is why making that connection with your clients is so important. If someone has to choose between several accountants, all with similar credentials, to trust with their finances and you are the one they feel most at ease around, who do you think they will go with?

More Than an Accountant. Remember that marketing on your website is more than just keywords and search engine placement; getting a client to come to your site is only half of it. You still have to convince them to choose you. If you can get clients to identify with you and see you as more than just an accountant, you’ve already got a head-start.

Marketing Your CPA Website with Backlinks Part 3

You know what backlinks are and what kind to focus on. Here are some tactics for understanding the backlinks to your accounting website.

Google First. You want to have a benchmark to show how many backlinks you have to your accounting website already. Google is a great resource for this. All you have to do is search using link:yourwebsite.com. Be sure to replace the words “yourwebsite” with your domain name.

Drawing Lines to Your CPA Website

Doing this quick search gives you all of the websites that link to your accounting website. If nothing comes up with the search,  you haven’t made a mistake – it just means no websites are currently linking to yours.

Open Site Explorer. Another free tool is Open Site Explorer. This gives you more data on the links to your accounting website. If you register you get unlimited use on up to 1,000 links per search. Otherwise you are limited to three searches per day.

Open Site Explorer gives you information not only on the links, but also on page authority, domain authority, and anchor text. The last of these, anchor text, is the most important for getting quality links back to your CPA website.

Anchor Text. Anchor text is the text used to link back to your accounting website. That friend you have linking to your accounting website? You may find, in using the report above, that the linking text they are using is just “my friend’s website.”

You want the anchor text to be keywords that people use to find accounting websites. You might email your friend and have them change the text to something like, “Sante Fe Accounting Website.” Using keywords in the anchor text gives the link to your website stronger relevance with search engines.

Spreadsheet. A spreadsheet helps you keep track of things like anchor text. Put in the website that is linking to you and the keywords used for the link. Try to vary the anchor text used in your links. Consider also having information on the contact person if you don’t already know them well. This makes it easier to maintain an ongoing relationship.

How has your process been in getting links back to your CPA website? Reply in comments below.

Marketing Your CPA Website with Backlinks Part 2

The first part of this series on backlinks looked at what they are. This second part continues the discussion of what backlinks are and starts into how to get them.

Getting Reciprocal Links. Have a friend who has a CPA website? You could exchange links with them and both benefit. Reciprocal links like these have value in quantity. Just understand their value from an SEO perspective is weaker. You are better off, over time, with quality one-way links, see below. When you are first starting out getting links these are better than none at all.

These are also easier to get as it is more of an exchange. The next time you are talking with anyone with a site, work towards setting up a reciprocal link.

Refining the Process. Over time you should refine the reciprocal link process. Start looking for link exchanges with sites that are closely aligned with your accounting website. This means looking for sites to link to that are about business financials, taxes, etc.

Getting One Way Links. These are links to your accounting website without a link back to the other site. Maybe you have a friend with a site who linksPuzzle to yours and doesn’t care if you link back or not. Most of the time though these types of links come from your accounting website having content worth linking to.

You might also be developing relationships with other people. Look for those who need an accounting resource or authority for their readers.

Getting Three Way Links. This is where you set up an agreement to link from your accounting website to another site that links to a third, and then that third site links back to you. This is supposed to mimic one way links but is really just an elaborate reciprocal link setup.

These may have slightly more value than regular reciprocal links with search engines. This type of setup is not as strong as a regular one way link. You are better off when going for quality, getting the one way links if possible.

Getting links back to your accounting website is an ongoing process. You should always be seeking more backlinks for your CPA website. The more you have the stronger your site. You also have a more stable setup in case a site stops linking to your accounting website for whatever reason.

The final post of this series, coming soon, continues with specifics on backlink resources.

Have you started your backlinking process? How has it been working out? Comment below.

Marketing Your CPA Website with Backlinks

There are several different ways to market your accounting website. Here is the first part of a series that expands upon using links to help market your CPA website. This series looks at what backlinks are, how to get them, and some of the best practices to use over time.

Backlinks Defined. These are links from another website to your accounting website. However not all backlinks that you get are of equal value. Getting quality links to your CPA website is an ongoing project. Luckily, if you are consistent about what you do each day, getting backlinks shouldn’t take a lot of time.

Links Are the Gears That Help Drive Traffic to Your Website

Starting the Process. If you are just starting out getting links to your accounting website then you may want to concentrate on quantity. That means getting any links you are able. Just be sure to avoid at all costs link farms and, in many cases, paying for links.

Link Farms. These are websites set up for the sole purpose of creating links with each other. The only real reason for these links is for the search engine benefit. Google does penalize websites associated with link farms. See this Google Group discussion for more details and stories behind link farms.

Paying for Links. See what Google has to say about paid links. It isn’t bad to pay for links as long as the links are not to manipulate the search engines. In other words, you shouldn’t be trying to link over for better page rank.

When you pay for a link, you are hoping you get people to come through just from the link. You are not trying to change your own page rank with Google. Before you consider buying links, be sure to read this article on paid links.

Quality Backlinks. The best link you could possibly get for your accounting website is from a website ending in .edu or .gov. Links from a university or from a local government website are really hard to get. One reason is because they are an authoritative source of information.

In general you want to get links from those websites that are ranked high with Google and other search engines. It takes some effort to get a high page rank with Google. Usually these types of websites have lots of traffic. Getting the attention of these websites via a link also takes some work.

The next post looks at how to get backlinks to your accounting website.

Do you already use backlinks? What kind of advice would you give someone just starting out? Comment below.

Accounting Website Newsletter, Getting New Subscribers via PDF

This is the last part of a three part series looking at using PDF files to get new subscribers to your accounting website newsletter. Part one looked at using PDF files and part two creating the PDF. This last part looks at linking to the PDF file in your Email Marketing System welcome message.

Uploading the PDF. There is a great video tutorial on how to upload the PDF document to your website. You need to do this before you are able to link to it from your accounting website newsletter welcome message.

Linking to the PDF. The key to linking to the file you created is to use the full URL. The help directions are for adding a file link to your website page. The newsletter is different so the link needs to be a full link. For example, the tutorial has the path as being “/images/NameOfFile.pdf” and you need to change that to “http://www.yourwebsite.com/images/NameOfFile.pdf”

Changing the Welcome Message. All that remains is to view the help sectiontypewriter on changing your newsletter welcome message. You are going to add the link to the PDF file within the message. You also want to add some text that talks a bit about what is included within the PDF. For example, “Thanks for subscribing to our newsletter! Here is the link to the free PDF packed with information on such and such and such and such.”

Future PDF Content. Over time the information you gathered for your free PDF may need to be updated. There are always more articles to pick from making the overall process easy to duplicate. Just keep an eye out on the article websites.

That is the end of this newsletter series. If you have any questions about any part of the series please email support@cpasitesolutions.com or call 800-896-4500.

Do you have other sources of free online content? Share in comments below.

Project Marketing with Technology – 5 Simple Ways!

In today’s society, you can get a high-quality of collaborative technology that is shared internally or across boundaries of the firm. The technology is reliable, secure, and requires no support from IT. With these advances, direct marketers have the opportunity to make their projects as engaging as their campaigns, and accountants, with a good workflow, can have the opportunity to get better publicity.

Manage Projects from Anywhere

Here are my top five ways to get started on finding software that will support your firm’s direct marketing efforts:

1. Know your procedures. You want a technology that supports what you do today without requiring new behaviors, or a great deal of added work. Have your prospective vendors show you how their technology works and how it will help all the people involved in that project.

2. Never Forget your Partners. Your marketing team will only be more efficient if the technology easily supports working with teams outside of marketing. Now, going back to number 1, this means that the software has to be easy-to-use with no installations or training so your partners will actually use it.

3. Focus on Workflow. Two basic types of collaboration software: real-time and workflow systems. Real-time tools, like instant messaging, white board, conferencing and chat are great for interaction, but your team spends most of their time collaborating in a workflow. So, if a vendor can’t support your workflow, then find another vendor who can.

4. Expect Simplicity. By focusing on workflow take the next step and consider team adoption. Find a system that supports having each team member’s information most readily available, while allowing clear, fast paths to any additional information needed.

5. Start now and iterate. John Hagel, the respected strategist often says you need experience with a technology to be able to know how to use it. Find a flexible solution that allows you and your team to change the solution easily. These days many new technologies are simple for non-technical people. So, by starting right away with core workflows, you can get your team more comfortable and later on iterate the solution.

These days, we use technology in every aspect of our daily lives and as an accountant it can save you time, money, stress, and in marketing situations, it can get you noticed.

Tiger Woods Is a Brand, Your CPA Firm Is Not.

Your CPA firm is no less a brand than Tiger Woods, Apple Computer or Rolex watches. Most people know where to go to buy an iPhone. The businesses and individuals who need accounting and tax preparation in your area, may not know of your firm when doing a local search. Having your firm name as a keyword in your page title for your CPA website, is not helpful and here is why.

First Page. You are perhaps slightly interested in appearing on the first page of search results for Anywhere USA Tax Preparation. Keep in mind it is Google’s responsibility to show relevant search results for the term being searched on. Therefore you naturally stand a very good chance of being on the first page of search results, if not number 1, for your firm’s name, especially if the searcher also included your city or town name.

Google’s main priority is to show relevant search results, and they know your website is the most relevant search result for searches on your firm’s name. You may very well pay less to be higher in the sponsored listings for your firm’s name than someone else bidding on your firm’s name as a keyword.

Your Link to Showing in Searches Are Good Keywords

Page Title. The page title is what you see at the very top of your browser window. It is what appears in someones bookmarks if they bookmark your site (and don’t manually name the bookmark). It is also what appears in big blue text in the search results pages.

Your Firm’s Name Is Not Your Keyword. When you perform on-page SEO for your site, having your firm’s name in the page title does nothing for your SEO effort. In fact it can even dilute the importance (ie: relevance) of your target keywords.

Some firms demand having their firm name in the page title. What do you think is a more attractive link to someone who searches on “Anywhere USA Tax Preparation”, a blue link that says “Bauer and Evans CPA“, or a blue link that says “Anywhere USA CPA, Accounting, and Tax Preparation”?

Adjusting your site’s page title will not result in first page search results. In fact Google tells us there are over 200 things they look at when considering placement in the search results. However the page title is certainly an important aspect of your on-page SEO effort and a good place to start.