Anchor text is useful for providing context to users, but does it have any impact to search rankings? Read about it here.
The post Anchor Text as a Google Ranking Factor: Everything You Need to Know appeared first on Search Engine Journal.
Anchor text is useful for providing context to users, but does it have any impact to search rankings? Read about it here.
The post Anchor Text as a Google Ranking Factor: Everything You Need to Know appeared first on Search Engine Journal.
Twitter plans to roll out a series of updates to TweetDeck this week, which include new and familiar features that were requested by users.
The post Twitter Rolls Out 7 Updates to TweetDeck appeared first on Search Engine Journal.
Holiday shopping is starting early this year, and a new report from Microsoft aims to make marketers aware of changes to customer expectations.
The post Holiday Searches Start Early This Year, Microsoft Reports appeared first on Search Engine Journal.
YouTube is changing the way it reports on audience retention to make it easier for creators to understand what’s working and what’s not.
The post YouTube Introduces ‘Typical Audience Retention’ Data appeared first on Search Engine Journal.
Google Search is no longer supporting the Internet Explorer 11 web browser, as the company says: “We did the math. It’s time.”
The post Google Search Ends Support For Internet Explorer 11 appeared first on Search Engine Journal.
Consider using SMART goal setting to move your SEO goals forward. See ways it’s used in search marketing to achieve better results.
The post SMART Goals: Examples for Search Engine Marketing appeared first on Search Engine Journal.
Avoid these holiday marketing mistakes to get ahead and stay in front of competitors during this year’s pivotal retail sales period.
The post 14 Mistakes to Avoid in Holiday Marketing Campaigns appeared first on Search Engine Journal.
3 Hot Takeaways: Delicious Content Ideas Inspired by Media Brands
Media brands serve up hot takeaways for B2C and B2C content marketers. What can you learn from ESPN crowing about a rooster? A popular food show expanding across platforms? A travel magazine marking its relaunch with a web series? We share our take. Continue reading
The post 3 Hot Takeaways: Delicious Content Ideas Inspired by Media Brands appeared first on Content Marketing Institute.
Inclusion, information and intersection
Hispanics have been the country’s key indicators of consumer sentiment since the COVID-19 crisis began. But for too long, this group has been viewed as a single segment. Aside from being the largest racial or ethnic group in the U.S., Latinos are a diverse, intersectional group with different experiences, perspectives and expectations.
Latinos are a community of limitless diversity yet firmly connected by culture, language and shared experiences.
The U.S. Latino experience is hard to define and is often perceived as synonymous with the immigrant experience. But the truth is that most Latino youths are not immigrants. Two-thirds were born in the U.S. This young supergroup is optimistic about their futures and are bilingual and bi-cultural and place a high value on educational attainment and career success. This community also consumes media differently, and when it comes to inclusion and representation, has firm expectations of content creators, media platforms and brands/advertisers.
Latinos have notably increased their political power and are raising their voices everywhere from the boardroom to our classrooms to Capitol Hill. With Latino buying power projected to be $2.6 trillion in just about three years, America is taking note and so are brands and advertisers. Learn more about today’s U.S. Latino community, its intersectional identities and how brands can tailor their dialogue with America’s greatest untapped opportunity.
The death of third-party cookies is an opportunity—not a pitfall—for marketers

The marketing industry remains abuzz over the demise of third-party cookies, with many feeling doom and gloom due to cookies’ upcoming extinction.
True, cookies collect data that allows marketers to better tailor customer experiences, but their limited shelf-life undercuts marketers’ ability to evolve personalization efforts over time. That’s why now is an extraordinary opportunity for marketers to rethink their audience engagement strategies; without the crutch of cookies, marketers can leverage new tools and techniques to learn about consumers on an even more detailed level, and therefore deliver more targeted and relevant communications to them.
While third-party cookies aren’t planned to be removed from Google Chrome until the end of 2023, that deadline isn’t as far off as some marketers may think—meaning now’s the time to prepare if they want to be able to outperform competitors when the opportunity finally comes. Here’s what marketers should know:
Consumers want to feel understood by the brands they engage with, instead of just part of the masses. Ninety percent of U.S. consumers find marketing personalization appealing—and yet Nielsen’s 2021 Annual Marketing Report reveals that only 13% of medium-sized companies (marketing budgets less than $10M) and 2% of large companies (marketing budgets of $10M+) named personalization as their top strategy within their marketing mix. Especially in a soon-to-be-cookieless world, marketers need to adopt new practices for securing the level of personal detail that fuels authentic, tailored consumer experiences in a privacy compliant way.
The death of cookies presents a timely opportunity for marketers to rethink how they engage consumers, approaching marketing as an ongoing two-way conversation between a brand and individuals. As consumer preferences and priorities constantly change, it is challenging to translate these changing desires into campaigns that are both timely and targeted. To overcome this obstacle, marketers need to understand their user base—and they’ll need robust first-party data to do this.
A history of overreliance on cookies means that some marketers don’t have well-defined first-party data collection strategies in place, a strategy to best leverage that data. It’s time to strengthen those strategies.
Marketing technology can help brands measure audience behaviors with confidence. For example, an analytics system with attribution capabilities can help marketers monitor their consumers’ online habits and better understand their shopping priorities. From website browsing, to app usage, marketers will be able to identify how well the messaging and channels they’re deploying are influencing audiences and can then adjust tactics.
Another opportunity for brands to secure audience insights is to strengthen their relationships with retailers who also recognize the necessity of collecting first-party data. Both sides benefit from data-sharing. If brand marketers can see who is buying their products (e.g., if it’s a few customers buying high quantities, or many customers buying lower quantities) and what other products those shoppers are also buying, then there is a more robust picture of the target demographic. This information then enables marketers to refine their positioning to make a bigger impact on audiences. As a result, consumers will be encouraged to shop from that brand and build an affinity with the retailers who are stocking those products.
In today’s privacy-first data environment, it’s essential for marketers collecting consumer data to do so compliantly. For example, many consumers are opting to not share their data while interacting with a brand’s app, despite how it will benefit their shopping experience. That’s why marketers must make an effort to articulate the value of collecting consumers’ data. Transparency garners trust. When marketers don’t explain why they’re asking for user data, that’s when suspicions arise.
To overcome consumers’ hesitation—and outright refusal—to share data, marketers can ask clearer consent questions to articulate the benefit of exchanging information. Even if few consumers consent, marketers will still be in good standing as long as they have a representative pool of their audience insights. Then they can leverage their martech investments to build predictive models that guide cross-platform media planning and ad allocation based on the findings.
The marketing industry is on the cusp of major change—for the better. The death of cookies will force many marketers to rethink how to engage and learn about their audiences, simultaneously pushing them to develop more revealing, scalable tactics than they had with cookies. While there’s still some time before cookies become obsolete, now is the time for marketers to strengthen their first-party sources before competitors have time to catch up.
This article originally appeared on DMCNY.com.