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Everett De Morier's Motivational Podcasts: Your go-to resource for inspiration and guidance. Overcome challenges, build resilience, and achieve your dreams. Tune in now!
For bookings and speaking engagements, contact Everett at [email protected] or Call: +1 (302) 300-7712
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We Told You to Watch These 10 Philly Startups—Here’s Where They Are Now
Startups
As 2018 winds down, here’s an end-of-year update on Philly Mag’s 10 Startups to Watch for 2018. The young companies share their biggest accomplishments and challenges, plus their hopes for 2019.
Every Thursday, get the latest dispatches from Philly’s business and innovation community delivered right to your inbox.
As we close out the year, the ten companies in Philadelphia magazine’s 2018 Startups to Watch cohort look back at the biggest accomplishments they achieved and challenges they overcame. In just a few short months, each company sharpened its mission and made key adjustments. In their own words, here’s how:
Amino Payments
Gritty joined Amino’s holiday party at Urban Axes.
New Partners: In a Wall Street Journal article, Nestlé and Bayer announced their use of Amino Payments’ Amino Lens product, which allows them to track digital ad spend in real-time. Since then, we’ve brought on multiple advertisers and adtech partners and has tracked billions of ads and tens of millions of dollars of ad spend for some of the world’s top advertisers.
Big Moment: In October, our CEO Will Luttrell presented alongside Nestlé’s Global Programmatic Lead Rachel Mervis at a leading industry conference — Programmatic I/O — on one of the major findings from Nestlé’s campaign that allowed them to save over five percent of their campaign budget.
Top 2018 Accomplishments: Raised a $4.5M seed round led by First Round Capital in February; Signed dozens of new partners including some of the world’s leading advertisers, agencies, adtech, and publishing firms; Presented at industry leading conferences like Cannes, IAB Annual Leadership Meeting, Programmatic I/O and CES.
For 2019: We’ll] continue what we’re doing — working hard to make digital advertising efficient and transparent.
Keep up with Amino Payments at aminopay.com.Â
LeagueSide
Courtesy photo.
Clients and Team: LeagueSide will have its largest quarter in company history adding new clients including Carrabba’s, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, and Houwzer. We’ve hired two new team members including Dimitry Cohen, Director of Sales Operations, and Shannon Glavin, Software Engineer.
New Product: We’ve rolled out our new Fieldhouse sponsorship platform to leagues and are working on a new analytics dashboard for sponsors.
New Connections: Finally, we had the chance to travel to numerous conferences including Hashtag Sports to meet and collaborate with experts in the sports and marketing industries.
Biggest 2018 Accomplishments: This year, we’ve run 50+ campaigns across 25 states, launched our end to end tech platform, and built strategic relationships with agencies and other players in the youth sports space
Top 2018 Challenges: We spent the early to middle part of the year trying to hit home runs with enterprise-level companies rather than focusing on singles and doubles (yay sports puns). We learned that there are no shortcuts in sales and building a successful company means repeatable and scalable client growth and retention, not an increased focus on big contracts.
Podcast spotlight: We were featured on GrowthCurve podcast on our success as a company and big plans for the future.
For 2019: LeagueSide will be focused on scaling our team, rolling out a couple of national clients (to be announced), our Series A, and a brand refresh.
Keep up with LeagueSide at leagueside.com.Â
NeuroFlow
Smart Health Innovation Lab graduation. Courtesy photo.
Skills: This fall marked our company’s graduation from the Smart Health Innovation Lab at Penn Medicine Lancaster General Hospital. The program, along with valuable customer feedback, helped to inform the messaging and positioning of our two core products — EngageBH for mental health specialists and IntegrateHealth for medical practices.
Team: More recently, we added key hires in marketing, sales, and product development, bringing our count of full-time employees to 16. As our technology has evolved, so have our client needs.
Top 2018 Accomplishments: Talent is so critical to the maturation process, and we made some critical hires that took NeuroFlow to the next level. Secondly, we moved from the proof-of-concept stage to having two commercially available products. This was important for us as we checked off a third box: raising additional capital. In the fall, we secured $2M to continue to scale the company.
Mission Realized: We’re really proud to have the NeuroFlow mission come full circle. Although the technology serves all populations today, my initial motivation for the company was to help veterans with PTSD. In October, we launched the platform at the Corporal Michael J. Crescenz VA Medical Center in Philadelphia, where we will be studying patient compliance and engagement.
Big Spotlight: Forbes took a deep dive.
For 2019: NeuroFlow has raised $3.25 million to date — a portion of that in Q4 2018 — and we’re very excited to put that capital to work in 2019. In the New Year, we have new product updates in store, hiring, and will be presenting at several major industry events.
Keep up with NeuroFlow at neuroflowsolution.com.
Onyx Valley
Onyx Valley weekly working session. Courtesy photo.
Community: We’ve been actively spreading the message of diversity and representing at various events. Onyx Valley was a community partner for the NorthStar Conference and contributed to The Atlantic’s “Path to Shared Prosperity: Increasing Opportunities for U.S. Workers and Businesses” event. We highlighted the work Onyx Valley does to help students learn the skills to compete in the global tech economy and to increase opportunity and growth in the city. Onyx Valley is now also a part of Black Girl Ventures’ extended community of organizations led by black and brown women after winning second place in their Philadelphia pitch competition.
Field Experience: Onyx Valley Studios (OVS), a student-led design consultancy created to give students real-world experience working with a client, officially launched in August with our inaugural project for Spruce Street Harbor. Students held a kickoff meeting with the Delaware River Waterfront Company (DRWC to discuss their approach to innovation at the park and then went on to practice their field research skills with a trip to the park where they interviewed patrons and employees and observed the environment. Students held weekly working sessions for 12 weeks to complete the project.
Proudest 2018 Moment: After the success of the UX Portfolio boot camp in the spring, students were invited back for a special workshop two months later. I was thoroughly impressed and touched that the students were happy to reunite and get back to learning. The students have already accomplished the main goal of Onyx Valley — building a community.
Biggest 2018 Challenge: Our biggest challenge is resourcing. We want to invest time into each student, but we need more committed volunteers to give them the attention they need. Word about Onyx Valley has been spreading! We get contacted every week by people who want to sign up. We would love to accommodate anyone who is motivated to work hard for a career in user experience, however we are limited in how many people we can take on.
For 2019: The second OVS project just kicked off and is currently underway. We are working with the City of Philadelphia’s Office of Open Data & Digital Transformation to redesign experiences for non-English speakers navigating government services. We are also looking to build our campus presence and assemble our next cohort. We will have campus reps on three local campuses for the Spring 2019 semester.
Next year will also mark the first paid Onyx Valley Studios project. We tell students that there is a value for the type of work they do, so we have secured a paid client project. If you have a business challenge or are looking to innovate at your organization, please visit our website to inquire about becoming a client in the future.
Keep up with Onyx Valley on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook.
PatientWing
PatientWing’s newest members: L to R: Lili Kueny (born November 2018, daughter of Todd Kueny, co-founder & CTO, and Penn Kueny, director of product); Emily Cubbage and Hana Feiner.
Rebrand: We dropped “VitalTrax” for “PatientWing” and launched a new look for the platform including a new dashboard for study and campaign management.
Team: We added two new team members and recently welcomed Lili Kueny (born November 2018, daughter of Todd Kueny, CTO, and Penn Kueny, Director of Product) to the PatientWing family!
Proudest 2018 Moments: Launching PatientWing Enterprise, more than tripling revenue, growing our team, and acquiring new customers.
Bigger Portfolio: CSL Behring, Stanford Health, and Massachusetts General Hospital are some of our new clients.
For 2019: We plan to continue expanding our customer base, raising funds, and building additional strategic partnerships.
Keep up with PatientWing on Facebook, LinkedIn and PatientWing.
PhillyWisper
PhillyWisper founder Mark Steckel. Photo by Claudia Gavin.
Speedy Expansion: We’re seeing rapid growth in our large building installations, as the rate of inbound requests increases from property ownership groups for condos, apartments and commercial buildings. The response from property owners is strong as they see that adding PhillyWisper service makes their building more attractive. We’ve completed major network upgrades and large high-rise deployments.
Big Step: We rolled out our first Gigabit service and expect all of our new large building roll outs to include Gigabit service. We’re now working on growing our installation, operations, and network teams.
Marketing: To date, we’ve been growing by word of mouth. In Q1, we will start our first marketing campaign.
For 2019: Our mission is to bring better internet to Philly, and we’re working hard to expand our network. We expect to announce new service areas in January. We’ve had lots of inquiries, so stay tuned!
Keep up with PhillyWisper at phillywisper.net.
Penji
Penji team members at the company’s one year anniversary celebration.
Top 2018 Accomplishments: Reviewing the past year has been an eye opening experience. To date we’ve completed more than 10,000 design requests for our customers, opened our Penji Unlimited program to non-profits within the city of Philadelphia for the first time and been nominated as “Best Place for Workplace Diversity in Tech” and “Startup of the Year.”
New Platform: We’re about to launch Penji 3.0. The new platform allows you to create ANY design request in under 3 minutes, get a draft back in 24 – 48 hrs, communicate in real time with your designer, and still only pay a flat monthly rate.
Teamwork: Throughout 2018, our success has been a result of working together as a team. As we move into 2019, we want to become more aligned as a company and further invest in the future of Penji.
Priority: Diversity is an issue that at times is uncomfortable to talk about. At Penji, we embrace our diversity and celebrate it constantly. Earlier this year, we launched a podcast called Shades of Success, where we highlight individuals who are making positive strides within their community. Episodes launch every Wednesday, feel free to check it out here.
For 2019: We will only succeed if we continue to solve large problems and constantly put an emphasis on the customer experience. Our 2019 mantra is to “move boulders together” instead of individually sweeping pebbles to look busy. 2019 is the year for us to align our focus and continue providing unlimited graphic design support at an exceptional value.Â
Keep up with Penji at penji.co.Â
RoundTrip
RoundTrip team photo.
Team: Our team size doubled from 12 to 25 employees. We relocated from the Northern Liberties WeWork office to our headquarters in Old City.
New Mission: Our mission has expanded beyond fixing medical transportation to driving better health outcomes.
New Clients: We brought in new clients and partners including Johns Hopkins, NIH, VCU Health, Jewish Federation, Camden Coalition and a Medicaid and a Blue Cross health plan.
Top 2018 Accomplishments: Driving down no-show rates to four percent for partnering hospitals; Expanding into over 17 states including the West Coast, the Southwest, and the Southeast regions in addition to our stronghold in the Mid-Atlantic; and executing on a world-class product that truly solves the transportation barrier so many face.
Big Spotlight: RoundTrip was profiled in the New York Times.
For 2019: We want to establish RoundTrip as the leading digital transportation marketplace for the betterment of health, working even closer with government agencies to remove transportation as a barrier to aging in place, clockwork-like execution through objectives and key results.
Keep up with RoundTrip at www.rideroundtrip.com and at the Introducing RoundTrip Community blog.
Tozuda
Tozuda’s head impact sensors on display. Courtesy photo.
Funding: In the second half of 2018, Tozuda wrapped up a successful Kickstarter campaign raising over $30,000 with more than 150 backers! It was exciting and encouraging for our team to have so many people from various backgrounds, countries, and industries see the value in our sensors.
Upgrades: Our team grew from four to seven and we spent the latter half of the year working on perfecting our manufacturing, assembly, and shipping processes. Tozuda has partnered with Total Mold Services and Eagle Design Group, both located in Pennsylvania, to ensure our manufacturing and assembly procedures are as efficient and infallible as possible.
On Stage: Our founder and CEO Jessie has spoken at a number of exciting engagements and conferences this year, including the DVIRC Manufacturing Summit and the General Business Contractors of America Safety and Technology Conference. Tozuda was named a Stellar StartUp finalist by Philly.com and our team continues to be inspired by the many amazing fellow Philadelphia-based entrepreneurs, engineers, and innovators who motivate us every day.
Spotlight: Tozuda was selected for Folgers’ 1850 Be Bold campaign, and Jessie will be featured in a commercial for the coffee brand coming out at the end of the year. We’re excited by the opportunity to get our first national media exposure!
Biggest 2018 Challenges: The most difficult obstacle our team overcame was with manufacturing and fulfilling sensor orders. Our original suppliers were not as reliable as we had hoped, but we received a lot of support from TMS and Eagle Design to optimize manufacturing and assembly processes. While we are capable of manufacturing in-house, we partnered with TMS to better help us meet demand at scale. We were very eager to get sensors out as soon as possible, but had to extend fulfillment to ensure we weren’t sacrificing quality or reliability for immediacy.
For 2019: We will be heading into fundraising and actively doing our first raise. We’re always looking to grow and spread concussion awareness. Tozuda will also begin manufacturing sensors in volume, and soon we will be shipping sensors out to our generous and patient Kickstarter backers. We will start our first retail store rollout this year, beginning a number of store tests with a sporting goods store. We’re excited about our continued expansion to new states, countries, and industries in 2019.
Keep up with Tozuda on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter.
Source: https://www.phillymag.com/business/2018/12/19/philadelphia-startups-to-watch/
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The Google Patents & Ranking Factors that Will Change SEO with Bill Slawsky
Happy to bring to your attention the fifth episode of our cognitiveSEO Talks: On Search and Traffic, this time with patent master Bill Slawski. He is an outstanding individual, eager to know more about search-related patents and white papers, and providing the SEO industry with in-depth and helpful insights posted on his SEO by the Sea blog. Having worked with a wide range of clients, from nonprofits to Fortune 500, Bill’s the go-to person when needing an expert view on technical SEO topics.
 Most times, people understand technical stuff better when they’re provided with examples taken from the real life. And that’s why Bill Slawski is pure gold to the SEO industry – he can make any individual understand the encrypted world of patents, white papers, and search-related setups that Google tunes their search engine with. Moreover, Bill likes to rather exemplify than give you a direct solution. In the long run, that’s the best way to teach someone something – by speaking their language and helping them imagine the mechanism, not learn it by heart without understanding the meaning.
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    Bill Slawski got involved in internet marketing and web promoting since 1996, which is a lifetime ago, as he shares in our podcast. He has extensive knowledge and experience in developing SEO strategies and tactics meant to push the boundaries and help his clients increase traffic and leads, and optimize their websites. At present, Bill is the President of SEO by the Sea blog and Director of SEO Research for the Go Fish Digital agency.
 Bill Slawski He is a veteran of the SEO industry. He has a Bachelor of Arts Degree in English from the University of Delaware, and a Juris Doctor Degree from Widener University School of Law. Before committing to internet marketing, he worked at the highest level trial Court in Delaware, Superior Court of Delaware, for 14 years as a court manager and administrator, and as a technologist and management analyst.
 Bill seeks to give his best in helping the environment and nonprofits and likes to meet others who share those same interests. Furthermore, he’s open to answering people’s questions on SEO and online marketing, and he even made it a statement in our podcast.Â
 Bill Slawski is an analytical guy who doesn’t rest easy with taking search engine patents for granted. He wants to dissect them and see their mechanism in order to better understand his role as an SEO professional.Â
 I’m really curious – I want to know how everything works. I don’t like the mystery of putting a word into a search box, hitting a button, and getting results. I want to have some idea of what’s gonna show up in these results. bill slawski Director of SEO Research at Go Fish Digital @bill_slawski / seobythesea.com
  Tackled Topics :
 Bill’s experience with SEO and patents;
What ranking signal is of paramount importance to get up in SERPs;
Why he started studying patents;
On the top two Google-listed ranking signals: links and content;
Why the water-related names of Bill’s blog and agency (SEO by the Sea, Fish Go Digital);
What to include on a website to attract visitors and leads;
On AMP;
Google’s Webmaster Guidelines EAT: expertise, authoritativeness, trustworthiness;
Bill’s SEO pet peeves.
 10 Marketing Nuggets:Â
 We’ve changed in how we communicate ideas and concepts, we’re focusing more on talking each other through social media, through Facebook groups, through Twitter, and so. We used to use forums a lot more ten years ago. 5:35
I was wondering, you know, is Google making the web more proprietary by releasing those pages (AMP) and excluding other people? […]Everybody’s releasing their own version of HTML. Do we really need that? Do we really need it to be fragmented like that? I’m not sure. 9:01
The ranking signals are very dependent upon the query, which has always been true. 10:16
Everything coming from Google is confusion. 11:43
Google is fighting off some problems they’ve been having, like the whole “fake news” type of thing. They do want to have authoritative sites showing up high and they’re boosting authoritative sites in search results. 14:23
The aim, the goal isn’t to provide the most relevant results, it’s to provide the results that tend to best satisfy a searchers situation and information intents. 16:14
I don’t like the mystery of putting a word into a search box, hitting a button, and getting results. I want to have some idea what’s gonna show up in these results. 21:54
When you write content for a page, if you can make that page more about something, focusing upon the aboutness of the concepts beyond the page, you’re improving Google’s ability to recognize what you’re writing about and return in results for queries to people perform. 32:32
Search engines like using bulleted lists or tables, and those bulleted lists and tables tend to be seen as good answers to those questions. 35:12
The web is the greatest source of information in the world. It’s also the great source of misinformation. 40:47
  Video Transcript
 Razvan: Hello, everyone! This is Razvan from cognitiveSEO, and today I’m here with Bill Slawski.
 He is a veteran in the SEO industry, he has a Bachelor of Arts Degree in English from the University of Delaware, and a Juris Doctor Degree from Widener University School of Law. He worked at the highest level trial Court in Delaware, Superior Court of Delaware, for 14 years as a court manager and administrator, and as a technologist and management analyst.
 He found himself intrigued by search engines, by usability, and by how people navigate around and explore webpages. He continued his efforts performing SEO and internet marketing part-time until 2005 when he left the Court to work for an online marketing agency full time. Now he writes about SEO and patents mostly on the “SEO by the Sea” blog that he owns, and he is a Director of Search Marketing at Go Fish Digital.
 Welcome to our podcast! Please say a few words about yourself, if you want to add something.
 Bill: Well, thank you for having me here! I started promoting websites in 1996 which is a lifetime ago. It’s hard to believe how much the web it’s grown. Around the time that Yahoo started out, with Ben and Jerry’s guide to the Internet, it’s hard to believe that it’s grown that much and Yahoo’s gone through what it’s gone through being sold to Verizon and three billion people being hacked last year – it’s amazing. Equifax being hacked this past year and the IRS hiring their management as a consultant which is hard to believe…
 Razvan: Yeah. So, Bill, you’ve been working in the professional SEO and internet marketing field since 1996.
 How was the SEO world looking back then and how would you compare it to how it is today?
 Bill: It’s like when you go to a conference, and you’re one of the first people there, and all the seats are still empty, and there’s not much discussion going on – that’s what the SEO world was like back then.
 Razvan: But it was very easy to rank at that time with any site, I think, compared to today…
 Bill: I remember happening upon an SEO forum and just being a lurker, just looking at what everybody was talking about and thinking “this is a strange career, I’m not sure I could do this“.
 Razvan: And in the end you did it.
 Bill: In the end, I did it. I started out working promoting the website for a couple of friends who started a business, so helping them succeed in business was a pretty good motivation. They started a site that helped people incorporate their businesses and, say, one of the best links I got for their site was in a Polish classified site. I posted a link to their site and it actually brought them business from shipping companies in Latvia and Estonia that we’re creating about 10 companies a week because they were incorporating each ship that was bringing cargo to the US, or to South America, which was great for their business. A lot of leads that were actually buying their services, you know. That helps when you’re just starting a business.
 Razvan: Yeah, I agree.
 And how would you compare the way SEO world was then to what it is now? How much has it evolved, or changed, and how do you think it will change in the next 10-20 years?
 Bill: It’s a good question. We’ve changed in how we communicate ideas and concepts, we’re focusing more on talking each other through social media, through Facebook groups, through Twitter, and so. We used to use forums a lot more ten years ago. Not as much now…
 I think places like WebmasterWorld tend to still be pretty active. See, ideas being shared in some concepts that are a little difficult to grasp in some ways, like artificial intelligence, influences promotional websites and rankings of websites. I’m busy right now putting together a presentation for Pubcon in five weeks, and I’m talking about “Keyword research using context vectors and topical modeling using current phrases” which maybe isn’t too different from what things were like 10 years ago. I think we know a little bit more about those types of things than we did then, but…
 Razvan: I think the competition now is also much much stronger in any niche on the Internet, because the adoption of the Internet has grown everywhere on the world, much more compared to 10 years ago, and this also increases the changes in the landscape when we’re talking about SEO and any particular marketing tactic, I think…
 Bill: We’ve also got to figure out how to fit things like these (smartphones) into our lives. Well, creating a website for a phone is different than creating one for the web.
 Razvan: Sure it is, but almost all sites are created for phones, and Google is pushing more and more in this area with their mobile index.
 Bill: Right. They may be seen pushing some things a little bit too far like accelerated mobile pages.
 Razvan: What’s your opinion on AMP?
 Bill: I don’t like the abbreviated versions of HTML and Java that fuel those things. I understand the desire for speed but I don’t like the idea of …
 You think it’s closing the ecosystem? It’s moving it on the Google side and it’s not okay from an organic point of view of the Internet or why?
 Bill: I saw a patent from Apple, in their version of accelerated mobile pages, and I wondered if that would only be released on Safari browsers. I was wondering, you know, is Google making the web more proprietary by releasing those pages and excluding other people? We have instant news pages from Facebook, the same type of thing. Everybody’s releasing their own version of HTML. Do we really need that? Do we really need it to be fragmented like that? I’m not sure.
 Razvan: Yeah. Not really sure about what you say… There are pros and cons for all types of sites.
 Coming back to our days, what’s your opinion on the top 5 search ranking signals of the moment for Google?
 Bill: I was surprised when Google came out and announced Rankbrain, and said it was the 3rd most popular ranking signal at Google. And I was wondering “How they could say that?”. Yeah, they did say that. I asked it in a Google Hangout on air “What were the first two?”, and the answer was links and content. And, recently, we’ve heard Gary and John from Google saying that there are no top three, that that the ranking signals are very dependent upon the query, which has always been true.
 Razvan: Everything coming from Google is confusion. They’re always changing stuff. So I’m not sure what we should believe exactly from what they are saying. They have their own agenda that they want to push forward, and we need to to take each of their words carefully.
 Bill: It’s true. There’s so much complexity. And I mean you think about when you do a search for something that’s more news-oriented and if it’s really new, timely information, it hasn’t had time to develop a lot of links. So links aren’t the most important ranking signal for something that’s newsworthy – freshness is. For something that is a little bit more mature, that had a chance to develop and grow and have people write about it and link to it, and so on, links are more important. I mean, because people are showing that they appreciate certain content, find it useful, find it valuable, and link to it. So the content’s got a lot of value and links to things still have a lot of value. We haven’t had a PageRank toolbar indicator for a few years but Google is still using PageRank to rank web pages it seems. I mean links do appear to have an influence on how well something ranks when we develop lots of links to that page, it does rank higher.
 Razvan: If we are to talk about freshness, what I usually see is that you publish something on a blog or on a site, or a news site and it ranks for a day or two and then it goes down. But even with the freshness factor, I think that the authority of the main site that is publishing that content matters a lot in order to be able to rank for competitive terms in the news area of the search engine. I mean not any site that would publish a blog post or a new story will be able to rank for the same keywords there.
 Bill: Right. Google is fighting off some problems they’ve been having, like the whole “fake news” type of thing. They do want to have authoritative sites showing up high and they’re boosting authoritative sites in search results. If there isn’t an authoritative enough result for a query, they might perform a second query with the query refinement that shows through the query that you chose and if they’re any authoritative results who were query refinements of the showing, they may mix those into the results that you see for your original query. It may not be 100% on point, as relevant as it would have been if it was using the original query but it may be a more authoritative site which is what they’re aiming for.
 Hence which are the top 5 search ranking signals, which ones do you think are the most important now?
 Bill: In my opinion, it’s so hard to say because it still depends upon the query. The aim, the goal isn’t to provide the most relevant results, it’s to provide the results that tend to best satisfy a searchers situation and information intents. So if I’ve searched for lunch around noon time, I’m looking for a local restaurant, I know one…
 Razvan: Yeah, that is different with every search, but in general, let’s say for commercial queries and for informational queries,
 Bill: I think the Webmaster Guidelines got that right when they start talking about EAT – expertise, authoritativeness, and trustworthiness. I think we’re going to see trustworthiness grow as a signal…
 Razvan: OK, trustworthiness grows based on the links signal or other signals – users, interactivity with the sites…?
 Bill: Are you familiar with the white paper that came out a couple years ago on knowledge-based trust?
 Razvan: I think I read something from it.
 Bill: It had to do with the knowledge fault, and they were talking about how accurate facts were that showed up in search results, you know. When we have featured snippets that appear, that are just plain wrong, and that’s happened a few times, like recently the shooter in Las Vegas, there’s a featured snippet at Google that was coming from some site and it misidentified the person who is the main suspect and, you know, you don’t want that type of misinformation taking place. So having more accurate answers that are trustworthy is important and growing them in importance. See, the people at Stone Temple Consulting have been doing a series of studies involving the growth of featured snippets – and they do seem to be growing significantly – when a search engine would rather show you a paragraph or bulleted list as an answer to a query rather than a list of web pages, we’ve seen a transformation in search and we are seeing that happen.
 Razvan: Yeah. You write a lot about patterns in the SEO industry. I believe it’s because of your background in it …
 Bill: It has to do more with my background as an SEO. I was in-house SEO for a company in Delaware that was incorporating businesses and I came across a patent that talked about how you could better optimize pages for location. And for that particular business, it was really important that it was located in Delaware because there are legal advantages, tax advantages to being in Delaware. So most people searching for that business, do the search for Delaware. So I said, “Okay, so how can I optimize for locations better?”. And I found a patent that explained it in a lot of detail how to do that better. So I said “Okay, I’ll try this out and see how well it works”, and it helped, it made a difference. So, I wrote about it in a forum that I was a code administrator at, and when I started my website I said “I should write more about patents!”, and I did.
 Razvan: Yeah, we all know you in the SEO industry to write about SEO patents. I think you’re the only one who does it, in the long run I mean.
 What’s the challenge for you when you write an article about patents and SEO patents specifically?
 Bill: I’m really curious – I want to know how everything works. I don’t like the mystery of putting a word into a search box, hitting a button, and getting results. I want to have some idea what’s gonna show up in these results.
 So this is how it all started with “SEO by the Sea” blog – your curiosity for how Google works?
 Bill: Okay. There have sort of emerged two concepts: let me backtrack a bit on them. The SEO by the Sea blog – I started it because I’d spoken at a conference in New York City “Search Engine Strategies Conference in 2005” and I looked at the cost and said “The average SEO individual consultants can’t afford to go to this, they can’t afford to fly out there, pay for a hotel room for a week, and pay for the conference itself. Let me put on a free conference in the town I live in, which was at the time the town I worked at, which was Havre de Grace, Maryland, and the East Coast, just right by the Chesapeake Bay. When I came up with the name for SEO by the Sea I was looking at the window of the office I worked in, watching sails bobbing up and down on the bay, and that’s how I came up with the name SEO by the Sea. I live in San Diego now, so I’m still the SEO by the Sea, I just changed seas. The idea behind that site was to provide people information about the conference I was putting on and I did that: I wrote about places to stay, about things to talk about, and some people showed up, we talked about SEO – I think I was a little bit ahead of myself in terms of the idea of having a free conference and people who showed up to attend would also become speakers at, like BarCamp – so I didn’t get hundreds of people showing up – I got less than that. But I had a website and I asked myself after the event “What do I do with this website? I’ll keep on writing – I’ll write about patents”, and so I started doing that.
 Razvan: And in what year was this happening?
 Bill: 2005. And I like the fact that I was finding patents that were relevant to what I was doing as an SEO – things that gave me ideas on things to test and things to look forward, things I asked questions about, things to discuss with other SEOs.
 What’s your favorite patent, that you think is the most interesting and game-changing?
 Bill: I’m really excited about phrase-based indexing, which was an idea from a woman named Anna Patterson, who wrote the biggest search engine of the 21st century. It was one called Recall, which was a beta search engine at the Web Archive. It covered billions of pages through lots of versions, lots of iterations, different years. The idea is that if you index phrases that appear on web pages, you can understand what the concept, what the topics are of those web pages by which phrases appear upon the pages. So, for instance, if you write a page about baseball stadiums, there’s a good chance that certain phrases will show up on that page, like “pitcher’s mound”, “outfield”, “concession stands”, “home plate”. And there were a number of patents from Google that followed up with phrase-based indexing, that showed it was something they were working on. Like Google’s inverted index of the web shows words that show up and appear under pages of the web. Well, there’s a phrase-based indexing version of that inverted index that said “Okay, we’ve indexed phrases that show up on webpages and you can find a page by which phrases show up on it”, which I thought was interesting and it showed that Google was actually working on phrase-based indexing. One phrase of the indexing patents talks about how your pages might be boosted in search results based upon phrases that appear upon them, and phrases that appear in anchor texts that link to other pages. So the idea of these body hits phrases that appear on pages, and anchor hits – for instance, it appears anchor texts are boosting pages, it’s something I’ve experimented with a little bit and not too many people, other than me, have been talking about this.
 There have been some people doing some stuff with topic modeling to boost web pages, and seen some people writing back successful results…
 Razvan: Yeah, we actually created a tool about that does this kind of topic modeling and analyzes the top ranking results for the query that you’re entering, and based on that, it analyzes the content on your page, compares it to everything else that’s ranking out there, makes suggestions based on that, and we saw many quick improvements just by optimizing your content.  Not by doing keyword stuffing, but by following the recommendations in terms of using particular topics and keywords that the tool recommends there, and if you write it creatively and you do it completely white hat, you go to Google Search Console once you modify the page on the site and you ask for a re-indexation. There are a lot of situations… And you actually see it go up a couple of positions.
 So if you go from five to three, it’s a very high increase in a very short matter of time. We launched this in July and we saw a lot of people using it and responding happily to our support tickets, saying that they had successful increments by doing this. Obviously, it’s not in every situation and in every market that a keyword can work, because when we talk about very competitive keywords the content is not the only signal that can move position in the index for a phrase search that easily. But for longer terms, it seems to be to be working OK. At least this model …
 Bill: Right. The amazing thing is that was around 2004 or so… So, it’s been around for a while.
 Razvan: In 2004 it was very easy because you just stuffed some keywords there, and you were ranking. Now Google has a lot of smart moves used to detect all this bad behavior from a webmaster, let’s say. So it’s much harder now to trick Google. And this tool is not about tricking Google, it’s actually about understanding Google and how it works, and by reverse engineering, what they do to help you, and help Google better understand that specific content.
 Bill: When you write content for a page, if you can make that page more about something, focusing upon the aboutness of the concepts beyond the page, you’re improving Google’s ability to recognize what you’re writing about and return in results for queries to people perform. We’ve got Google using RankBrain in Hummingbird to better understand queries that people are performing, and if your page fits those concepts best, you’re gonna be the one showing up in the top results.
 Razvan: You’re a Search Director at your company –
 What do you see to be working best now in SEO for your client? What’s the stuff that works best for your client rankings?
 Bill: There’s so much variety but one thing we’ve been focusing upon was making sure that structured data is set up well in knowledge panels, appear for clients, and sitemaps show up, site links for pages. We’ve been trying to get featured snippets show up, to attract traffic.
 Did you have any success in terms of finding a way to make a Google transform a normal ranking page into featured snippet?
 Bill: We have had success.
 Okay, but can you replicate it every time you want it?
 Bill: It’s challenging, but we can with some success get featured snippets to appear.
 Can you share some of the stuff that you think it’s important for a site to have in order to become a featured snippet?
 Bill: It’s not too much different from the old days of SEO. You think about what questions an audience might have for a specific company that provides certain goods or services. “What questions do they ask?”, “What do they want answers to?”, and you make sure you have pages devoted to that. You answer the questions. You answer the questions in ways that tend to… Search engines like using bulleted lists or tables, and those bulleted lists and tables tend to be seen as good answers to those questions.
 Razvan: Okay, so you say that we need to have questions on the page, bulleted lists, and tables. These are some common characteristics of the snippet pages that we see ranking.
 Bill: Right. You want the best answers, the most direct answers that you can provide you. You want to make sure there are good answers because that makes big of a difference.
 You’re talking now about getting a featured snippet for a keyword they didn’t have a featured snippet before, or replacing a competitor’s feature snippet?
 Razvan: Because these are two different things. When there is a query that doesn’t have already assigned enough high-quality content to market as a featured snippet, versus the situation where Google already decided that “This is a very high-quality article, and we want to rank it for this particular query as a featured snippet”?
 Bill: One site we’ve been working with is a site that has been doing a weekly video for years and they have a radio show every week. They have millions of listeners, they talk about financial type news, and they took all the videos and transcribed them and added the transcripts to the pages that videos appear upon. They started getting a lot of featured snippets from those transcripts because transcripts provide lots of questions and answers. So we looked at those, we worked on those a bit to strengthen the answers, to strengthen the formatting of the answers.
 Razvan: And you saw an impact for modified video transcription on a page, and it was boosted in multiple snippets compared to before.
 But did it also take down other competitors for the same keyword where a competitor was ranking with a featured snippet?
 Bill: We weren’t necessarily aiming at reducing the rankings of competitors, we were aiming at being as successful as possible with our own site.
 Razvan: Yeah, I imagine that. I was thinking that if Google already decided that a particular page for the featured snippet has a lot of authority and they put it there, then it’s harder to get your content to be that good to put your competitor down. From what I’ve seen, the featured snippets are not as volatile as rankings are. They tend to stay there more if Google decides that that is a strong page. Is this also applied to you?
 Bill: The people behind this site were subject matter experts, so when they answered a question, they did it pretty thoroughly. They were giving good answers. We may have looked to see if there were other featured snippets that were answering certain questions, but we weren’t necessarily focusing only upon answering questions that other people had answered. With hundreds of pages or thousands of pages that you had so many opportunities with, spending all your time fixated on whether you can answer somebody else wasn’t necessarily our goal.
 What do you think is/are the biggest problem(s) that SEO pros face nowadays?
 Bill: Misinformation. The web has become the information-can-do-it to everybody. It’s where I go to answer questions. I used to carry a card in my wallet with the phone number of local library and I would look up books in the old China card catalog of that library. I don’t do that anymore, I don’t look for books first because I can just look the information up on the web.
 Razvan: Okay. So coming back to the original question – which are the biggest problems that SEO pros face nowadays – you said misinformation. Can you elaborate a bit more on this? Do you think they are going in the wrong direction because of other people writing incorrect stuff on their blogs or websites?
 Bill: So, yeah, the web is the greatest source of information in the world. It’s also the great source of misinformation. There are just so many people; it’s like ten thousand monkeys typing. One of them is going to come up with Shakespeare at some point, but it’s gonna be mixed up with a lot of gibberish. And there is a lot of gibberish on the web, unfortunately.
 In terms of SEO, on what direction do you think people should stop wasting their energy on?
 Bill: It’s a good question. I’m not sure I should answer that with some of my pet peeves. I hate when people start talking about things like LSI keywords. Say, “Okay, do you know what LSI is? Did you ever bother to Google it?”. It’s an approach that Microsoft developed in 1990 to index static group of documents. The web is not static, it changes all the time. For LSI to be used on the web, the web would have to stop, and then as soon as that changes, you’d have to run an LSI indexing program again. It doesn’t stop and go like that. I see people writing “Google 200 ranking factors” articles and LSI keywords are one of the ranking factors Google uses. No, they’re not!
 Razvan: Yeah, that’s more of a concept, it’s a different thing…
 Bill: It’s a way the index enterprise document collections.
 Razvan: Yeah. SEO is very complex because it’s very technical and lots of the people that are writing this stuff aren’t technical enough to understand the nuances when it comes to things like the ones that you described here, because they take it for granted from other tens of sites that talk about it and consider the thing to be true. And, in the end, that’s what pollutes all this stuff.
 Bill: That’s part of the reason why I like looking at patents. So one of the patents that I’m going to talk about in my PubCon presentation in about a month or so, is on something that Google came up with and call “context vectors”. A quick way to describe it: they say in the patent that a horse to an equestrian is an animal, a horse to a carpenter is a tool that you use when you’re building something, a horse to a gymnast is an exercise implement, something they perform gymnastic moves upon. So, based on the context which we learn from knowledge bases, the same words could have multiple meanings. If we can understand the context we can index these better. So as a creator of a webpage, if you can explain the context better, you have already started making other people write about the same things.
 Razvan: Okay, so it’s all about describing and writing content as correctly as possible, from…
 Bill: From looking at sources like knowledge bases, like Wikipedia or, depending upon the topic, internet movie IMDB, Yahoo Finance’s one they use to describe companies.
 Razvan: Interesting.
 How do you think Google voice search will evolve, for example?
 Bill: It’s a lot of work on speech recognition and understanding conversations better.
 Razvan: I think they made huge steps in the last years to understand speech better and to transcribe. Not until recently we saw that Google launched those headphones that automatically translate 40 languages, and it’s a major step forward compared to, say, three years ago when we talked about understanding language automatically. Only time will move these barriers because technology evolves so quickly. How are we going to use the Internet via voice and how do you see computers transforming our lives (along with the search engines transformation)? We now have the phone, but we’re not always going to talk to the phone as it’s easier for you to type at this moment, from a privacy point of view. And there are a lot of times like this.
 Bill: I’ve been trying a lot of searches using Google Now and I’m surprised sometimes by some of the answers, but they tend to understand queries really well.
 But do you think that voice search will replace a lot of the normal typing searches that we do now?
 Bill: Phones have overtaken desktop search. More people search the web now through a phone than on a desktop. It’s easier to do a voice search, it really is. I’ve been trying as many as I can.
 Do you think that this will practically be the future: we are going to search the Internet via voice more and more, compared to what we do today?
 Bill: In addition to the announcement they made about the Pixel Buds, yesterday during the translation, they talked about Google Lens and how people will be doing more searches by photograph, by taking pictures of things. And there was a patent that went with those two. They talked about how they tie in those searches with knowledge base information to better understand the queries and provide results. So if you can perform a search by taking the picture of something saying “What kind of car is that?”, we’re going to get one. You know, just taking pictures of the car. We’ll see a lot more searches like that.
 Razvan: It will be interesting to see how this develops in the following years. Â
 What’s the one person or brand event that influenced you the most in your career if there is one?
 Bill: It’s a tough question. In terms of SEO, one of the ones who influenced me a lot was Ammon Johns, known as the Black Knight, and forums on the web on SEO, because he introduced me to a lot of thoughts and ideas about marketing that I wasn’t aware of and how creative you can be at introducing concepts and developing them on webpages.
 Razvan: And the last question:
 What are the things that you are most proud of, both professionally and personally?
 Bill: We’ve had a lot of success in the past few years with some clients in terms of transforming their businesses to be more successful. For instance, working with one limo company which focused primarily on providing corporate shuttles to businesses. We helped them strengthen their limo service and their everyday consumers – how frequently consumers use their business. And we increased the traffic to their business and their ROI by like 57% which is ridiculous – it was a lot. See, we took a four-page apartment website – it was only four pages – and help them sell out the apartment by helping them understand the entities involved in their website better. They’re in Northern Virginia, they were right above the Washington metro line – you can take an elevator to their basement and get on the metro line from there. They didn’t say it in the website, they didn’t include a lot of facts about that type of stuff, but if you hop on the Washington metro, you can visit 57 different Smithsonian museums from that metro. They’re all free to kids, so if you want something to do with your kids on a Saturday morning you can hop on the metro or go to the museum. This apartment complex wasn’t explaining stuff like that, you know, the benefits of living there, and being that accessible to that many types of things. They were in Northern Virginia, they were next to possibly what is the largest shopping mall in Virginia. It’s four stories tall underground, and most people have never heard of it, but it’s there. And they weren’t telling people about it in their website. You know, it’s one of the things … location is important – you tell people about things like that. So we didn’t know their site to have these. These are the type of things you need to include on your website. You need to tell people more about where you’re at, why they should want to live there. There were headquarters of some of the largest companies in the world, like Lockheed Martin was a couple blocks away, they weren’t telling people “We have these huge places nearby; if you work in those places and you live in our apartments, you have a ten-minute commute. Some people might not like a ten-minute commute to work but if you live in DC area and get to drive into DC – which is a nightmare drive – you want a quick commute. So we help them with the website, we helped inform people better about what was near it, so helped them sell all the apartments in the apartment complex within a year – really quickly.
 Razvan: All that via SEO.
 Bill: Yeah.
 Razvan: Okay, that’s a nice thing. A very hard thing to do – to sell an entire apartment complex only via SEO.
 Bill: It was effective and the most exciting thing that they had on the site was about 10 or 12 pictures of a dog park they had. They weren’t telling people important things, which would help them sell their apartment and just getting them to understand they had to do those things was really worthwhile. That would really get them excited. They are happy customers.
 Razvan: I imagine. Okay, Bill, it was a pleasure talking to you.
 Do you want to add anything else at the end of this podcast?
 Bill: It was a pleasure talking to you too. So come by, visit me, ask questions, that’s why I’ve got comment forums, follow me on Twitter, Linkedin, and so on, and ask questions there too. I’m happy to spend time answering them.
 Razvan: Okay, so you heard the Bill – go ask him your questions, he’s willing to answer everyone.
 Thank you, Bill, again for being on our podcast. It was a great pleasure to have you here, and it was very cool to have a discussion with someone who knows what is talking about patterns in the SEO industry. Thank you!
 Bill: Thank you!
 The post The Google Patents & Ranking Factors that Will Change SEO with Bill Slawsky appeared first on SEO Blog | cognitiveSEO Blog on SEO Tactics & Strategies.
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The Google Patents & Ranking Factors that Will Change SEO with Bill Slawsky
Happy to bring to your attention the fifth episode of our cognitiveSEO Talks: On Search and Traffic, this time with patent master Bill Slawski. He is an outstanding individual, eager to know more about search-related patents and white papers, and providing the SEO industry with in-depth and helpful insights posted on his SEO by the Sea blog. Having worked with a wide range of clients, from nonprofits to Fortune 500, Bill’s the go-to person when needing an expert view on technical SEO topics.
 Most times, people understand technical stuff better when they’re provided with examples taken from the real life. And that’s why Bill Slawski is pure gold to the SEO industry – he can make any individual understand the encrypted world of patents, white papers, and search-related setups that Google tunes their search engine with. Moreover, Bill likes to rather exemplify than give you a direct solution. In the long run, that’s the best way to teach someone something – by speaking their language and helping them imagine the mechanism, not learn it by heart without understanding the meaning.
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    Bill Slawski got involved in internet marketing and web promoting since 1996, which is a lifetime ago, as he shares in our podcast. He has extensive knowledge and experience in developing SEO strategies and tactics meant to push the boundaries and help his clients increase traffic and leads, and optimize their websites. At present, Bill is the President of SEO by the Sea blog and Director of SEO Research for the Go Fish Digital agency.
 Bill Slawski He is a veteran of the SEO industry. He has a Bachelor of Arts Degree in English from the University of Delaware, and a Juris Doctor Degree from Widener University School of Law. Before committing to internet marketing, he worked at the highest level trial Court in Delaware, Superior Court of Delaware, for 14 years as a court manager and administrator, and as a technologist and management analyst.
 Bill seeks to give his best in helping the environment and nonprofits and likes to meet others who share those same interests. Furthermore, he’s open to answering people’s questions on SEO and online marketing, and he even made it a statement in our podcast.Â
 Bill Slawski is an analytical guy who doesn’t rest easy with taking search engine patents for granted. He wants to dissect them and see their mechanism in order to better understand his role as an SEO professional.Â
 I’m really curious – I want to know how everything works. I don’t like the mystery of putting a word into a search box, hitting a button, and getting results. I want to have some idea of what’s gonna show up in these results. bill slawski Director of SEO Research at Go Fish Digital @bill_slawski / seobythesea.com
  Tackled Topics :
 Bill’s experience with SEO and patents;
What ranking signal is of paramount importance to get up in SERPs;
Why he started studying patents;
On the top two Google-listed ranking signals: links and content;
Why the water-related names of Bill’s blog and agency (SEO by the Sea, Fish Go Digital);
What to include on a website to attract visitors and leads;
On AMP;
Google’s Webmaster Guidelines EAT: expertise, authoritativeness, trustworthiness;
Bill’s SEO pet peeves.
 10 Marketing Nuggets:Â
 We’ve changed in how we communicate ideas and concepts, we’re focusing more on talking each other through social media, through Facebook groups, through Twitter, and so. We used to use forums a lot more ten years ago. 5:35
I was wondering, you know, is Google making the web more proprietary by releasing those pages (AMP) and excluding other people? […]Everybody’s releasing their own version of HTML. Do we really need that? Do we really need it to be fragmented like that? I’m not sure. 9:01
The ranking signals are very dependent upon the query, which has always been true. 10:16
Everything coming from Google is confusion. 11:43
Google is fighting off some problems they’ve been having, like the whole “fake news” type of thing. They do want to have authoritative sites showing up high and they’re boosting authoritative sites in search results. 14:23
The aim, the goal isn’t to provide the most relevant results, it’s to provide the results that tend to best satisfy a searchers situation and information intents. 16:14
I don’t like the mystery of putting a word into a search box, hitting a button, and getting results. I want to have some idea what’s gonna show up in these results. 21:54
When you write content for a page, if you can make that page more about something, focusing upon the aboutness of the concepts beyond the page, you’re improving Google’s ability to recognize what you’re writing about and return in results for queries to people perform. 32:32
Search engines like using bulleted lists or tables, and those bulleted lists and tables tend to be seen as good answers to those questions. 35:12
The web is the greatest source of information in the world. It’s also the great source of misinformation. 40:47
  Video Transcript
 Razvan: Hello, everyone! This is Razvan from cognitiveSEO, and today I’m here with Bill Slawski.
 He is a veteran in the SEO industry, he has a Bachelor of Arts Degree in English from the University of Delaware, and a Juris Doctor Degree from Widener University School of Law. He worked at the highest level trial Court in Delaware, Superior Court of Delaware, for 14 years as a court manager and administrator, and as a technologist and management analyst.
 He found himself intrigued by search engines, by usability, and by how people navigate around and explore webpages. He continued his efforts performing SEO and internet marketing part-time until 2005 when he left the Court to work for an online marketing agency full time. Now he writes about SEO and patents mostly on the “SEO by the Sea” blog that he owns, and he is a Director of Search Marketing at Go Fish Digital.
 Welcome to our podcast! Please say a few words about yourself, if you want to add something.
 Bill: Well, thank you for having me here! I started promoting websites in 1996 which is a lifetime ago. It’s hard to believe how much the web it’s grown. Around the time that Yahoo started out, with Ben and Jerry’s guide to the Internet, it’s hard to believe that it’s grown that much and Yahoo’s gone through what it’s gone through being sold to Verizon and three billion people being hacked last year – it’s amazing. Equifax being hacked this past year and the IRS hiring their management as a consultant which is hard to believe…
 Razvan: Yeah. So, Bill, you’ve been working in the professional SEO and internet marketing field since 1996.
 How was the SEO world looking back then and how would you compare it to how it is today?
 Bill: It’s like when you go to a conference, and you’re one of the first people there, and all the seats are still empty, and there’s not much discussion going on – that’s what the SEO world was like back then.
 Razvan: But it was very easy to rank at that time with any site, I think, compared to today…
 Bill: I remember happening upon an SEO forum and just being a lurker, just looking at what everybody was talking about and thinking “this is a strange career, I’m not sure I could do this“.
 Razvan: And in the end you did it.
 Bill: In the end, I did it. I started out working promoting the website for a couple of friends who started a business, so helping them succeed in business was a pretty good motivation. They started a site that helped people incorporate their businesses and, say, one of the best links I got for their site was in a Polish classified site. I posted a link to their site and it actually brought them business from shipping companies in Latvia and Estonia that we’re creating about 10 companies a week because they were incorporating each ship that was bringing cargo to the US, or to South America, which was great for their business. A lot of leads that were actually buying their services, you know. That helps when you’re just starting a business.
 Razvan: Yeah, I agree.
 And how would you compare the way SEO world was then to what it is now? How much has it evolved, or changed, and how do you think it will change in the next 10-20 years?
 Bill: It’s a good question. We’ve changed in how we communicate ideas and concepts, we’re focusing more on talking each other through social media, through Facebook groups, through Twitter, and so. We used to use forums a lot more ten years ago. Not as much now…
 I think places like WebmasterWorld tend to still be pretty active. See, ideas being shared in some concepts that are a little difficult to grasp in some ways, like artificial intelligence, influences promotional websites and rankings of websites. I’m busy right now putting together a presentation for Pubcon in five weeks, and I’m talking about “Keyword research using context vectors and topical modeling using current phrases” which maybe isn’t too different from what things were like 10 years ago. I think we know a little bit more about those types of things than we did then, but…
 Razvan: I think the competition now is also much much stronger in any niche on the Internet, because the adoption of the Internet has grown everywhere on the world, much more compared to 10 years ago, and this also increases the changes in the landscape when we’re talking about SEO and any particular marketing tactic, I think…
 Bill: We’ve also got to figure out how to fit things like these (smartphones) into our lives. Well, creating a website for a phone is different than creating one for the web.
 Razvan: Sure it is, but almost all sites are created for phones, and Google is pushing more and more in this area with their mobile index.
 Bill: Right. They may be seen pushing some things a little bit too far like accelerated mobile pages.
 Razvan: What’s your opinion on AMP?
 Bill: I don’t like the abbreviated versions of HTML and Java that fuel those things. I understand the desire for speed but I don’t like the idea of …
 You think it’s closing the ecosystem? It’s moving it on the Google side and it’s not okay from an organic point of view of the Internet or why?
 Bill: I saw a patent from Apple, in their version of accelerated mobile pages, and I wondered if that would only be released on Safari browsers. I was wondering, you know, is Google making the web more proprietary by releasing those pages and excluding other people? We have instant news pages from Facebook, the same type of thing. Everybody’s releasing their own version of HTML. Do we really need that? Do we really need it to be fragmented like that? I’m not sure.
 Razvan: Yeah. Not really sure about what you say… There are pros and cons for all types of sites.
 Coming back to our days, what’s your opinion on the top 5 search ranking signals of the moment for Google?
 Bill: I was surprised when Google came out and announced Rankbrain, and said it was the 3rd most popular ranking signal at Google. And I was wondering “How they could say that?”. Yeah, they did say that. I asked it in a Google Hangout on air “What were the first two?”, and the answer was links and content. And, recently, we’ve heard Gary and John from Google saying that there are no top three, that that the ranking signals are very dependent upon the query, which has always been true.
 Razvan: Everything coming from Google is confusion. They’re always changing stuff. So I’m not sure what we should believe exactly from what they are saying. They have their own agenda that they want to push forward, and we need to to take each of their words carefully.
 Bill: It’s true. There’s so much complexity. And I mean you think about when you do a search for something that’s more news-oriented and if it’s really new, timely information, it hasn’t had time to develop a lot of links. So links aren’t the most important ranking signal for something that’s newsworthy – freshness is. For something that is a little bit more mature, that had a chance to develop and grow and have people write about it and link to it, and so on, links are more important. I mean, because people are showing that they appreciate certain content, find it useful, find it valuable, and link to it. So the content’s got a lot of value and links to things still have a lot of value. We haven’t had a PageRank toolbar indicator for a few years but Google is still using PageRank to rank web pages it seems. I mean links do appear to have an influence on how well something ranks when we develop lots of links to that page, it does rank higher.
 Razvan: If we are to talk about freshness, what I usually see is that you publish something on a blog or on a site, or a news site and it ranks for a day or two and then it goes down. But even with the freshness factor, I think that the authority of the main site that is publishing that content matters a lot in order to be able to rank for competitive terms in the news area of the search engine. I mean not any site that would publish a blog post or a new story will be able to rank for the same keywords there.
 Bill: Right. Google is fighting off some problems they’ve been having, like the whole “fake news” type of thing. They do want to have authoritative sites showing up high and they’re boosting authoritative sites in search results. If there isn’t an authoritative enough result for a query, they might perform a second query with the query refinement that shows through the query that you chose and if they’re any authoritative results who were query refinements of the showing, they may mix those into the results that you see for your original query. It may not be 100% on point, as relevant as it would have been if it was using the original query but it may be a more authoritative site which is what they’re aiming for.
 Hence which are the top 5 search ranking signals, which ones do you think are the most important now?
 Bill: In my opinion, it’s so hard to say because it still depends upon the query. The aim, the goal isn’t to provide the most relevant results, it’s to provide the results that tend to best satisfy a searchers situation and information intents. So if I’ve searched for lunch around noon time, I’m looking for a local restaurant, I know one…
 Razvan: Yeah, that is different with every search, but in general, let’s say for commercial queries and for informational queries,
 Bill: I think the Webmaster Guidelines got that right when they start talking about EAT – expertise, authoritativeness, and trustworthiness. I think we’re going to see trustworthiness grow as a signal…
 Razvan: OK, trustworthiness grows based on the links signal or other signals – users, interactivity with the sites…?
 Bill: Are you familiar with the white paper that came out a couple years ago on knowledge-based trust?
 Razvan: I think I read something from it.
 Bill: It had to do with the knowledge fault, and they were talking about how accurate facts were that showed up in search results, you know. When we have featured snippets that appear, that are just plain wrong, and that’s happened a few times, like recently the shooter in Las Vegas, there’s a featured snippet at Google that was coming from some site and it misidentified the person who is the main suspect and, you know, you don’t want that type of misinformation taking place. So having more accurate answers that are trustworthy is important and growing them in importance. See, the people at Stone Temple Consulting have been doing a series of studies involving the growth of featured snippets – and they do seem to be growing significantly – when a search engine would rather show you a paragraph or bulleted list as an answer to a query rather than a list of web pages, we’ve seen a transformation in search and we are seeing that happen.
 Razvan: Yeah. You write a lot about patterns in the SEO industry. I believe it’s because of your background in it …
 Bill: It has to do more with my background as an SEO. I was in-house SEO for a company in Delaware that was incorporating businesses and I came across a patent that talked about how you could better optimize pages for location. And for that particular business, it was really important that it was located in Delaware because there are legal advantages, tax advantages to being in Delaware. So most people searching for that business, do the search for Delaware. So I said, “Okay, so how can I optimize for locations better?”. And I found a patent that explained it in a lot of detail how to do that better. So I said “Okay, I’ll try this out and see how well it works”, and it helped, it made a difference. So, I wrote about it in a forum that I was a code administrator at, and when I started my website I said “I should write more about patents!”, and I did.
 Razvan: Yeah, we all know you in the SEO industry to write about SEO patents. I think you’re the only one who does it, in the long run I mean.
 What’s the challenge for you when you write an article about patents and SEO patents specifically?
 Bill: I’m really curious – I want to know how everything works. I don’t like the mystery of putting a word into a search box, hitting a button, and getting results. I want to have some idea what’s gonna show up in these results.
 So this is how it all started with “SEO by the Sea” blog – your curiosity for how Google works?
 Bill: Okay. There have sort of emerged two concepts: let me backtrack a bit on them. The SEO by the Sea blog – I started it because I’d spoken at a conference in New York City “Search Engine Strategies Conference in 2005” and I looked at the cost and said “The average SEO individual consultants can’t afford to go to this, they can’t afford to fly out there, pay for a hotel room for a week, and pay for the conference itself. Let me put on a free conference in the town I live in, which was at the time the town I worked at, which was Havre de Grace, Maryland, and the East Coast, just right by the Chesapeake Bay. When I came up with the name for SEO by the Sea I was looking at the window of the office I worked in, watching sails bobbing up and down on the bay, and that’s how I came up with the name SEO by the Sea. I live in San Diego now, so I’m still the SEO by the Sea, I just changed seas. The idea behind that site was to provide people information about the conference I was putting on and I did that: I wrote about places to stay, about things to talk about, and some people showed up, we talked about SEO – I think I was a little bit ahead of myself in terms of the idea of having a free conference and people who showed up to attend would also become speakers at, like BarCamp – so I didn’t get hundreds of people showing up – I got less than that. But I had a website and I asked myself after the event “What do I do with this website? I’ll keep on writing – I’ll write about patents”, and so I started doing that.
 Razvan: And in what year was this happening?
 Bill: 2005. And I like the fact that I was finding patents that were relevant to what I was doing as an SEO – things that gave me ideas on things to test and things to look forward, things I asked questions about, things to discuss with other SEOs.
 What’s your favorite patent, that you think is the most interesting and game-changing?
 Bill: I’m really excited about phrase-based indexing, which was an idea from a woman named Anna Patterson, who wrote the biggest search engine of the 21st century. It was one called Recall, which was a beta search engine at the Web Archive. It covered billions of pages through lots of versions, lots of iterations, different years. The idea is that if you index phrases that appear on web pages, you can understand what the concept, what the topics are of those web pages by which phrases appear upon the pages. So, for instance, if you write a page about baseball stadiums, there’s a good chance that certain phrases will show up on that page, like “pitcher’s mound”, “outfield”, “concession stands”, “home plate”. And there were a number of patents from Google that followed up with phrase-based indexing, that showed it was something they were working on. Like Google’s inverted index of the web shows words that show up and appear under pages of the web. Well, there’s a phrase-based indexing version of that inverted index that said “Okay, we’ve indexed phrases that show up on webpages and you can find a page by which phrases show up on it”, which I thought was interesting and it showed that Google was actually working on phrase-based indexing. One phrase of the indexing patents talks about how your pages might be boosted in search results based upon phrases that appear upon them, and phrases that appear in anchor texts that link to other pages. So the idea of these body hits phrases that appear on pages, and anchor hits – for instance, it appears anchor texts are boosting pages, it’s something I’ve experimented with a little bit and not too many people, other than me, have been talking about this.
 There have been some people doing some stuff with topic modeling to boost web pages, and seen some people writing back successful results…
 Razvan: Yeah, we actually created a tool about that does this kind of topic modeling and analyzes the top ranking results for the query that you’re entering, and based on that, it analyzes the content on your page, compares it to everything else that’s ranking out there, makes suggestions based on that, and we saw many quick improvements just by optimizing your content.  Not by doing keyword stuffing, but by following the recommendations in terms of using particular topics and keywords that the tool recommends there, and if you write it creatively and you do it completely white hat, you go to Google Search Console once you modify the page on the site and you ask for a re-indexation. There are a lot of situations… And you actually see it go up a couple of positions.
 So if you go from five to three, it’s a very high increase in a very short matter of time. We launched this in July and we saw a lot of people using it and responding happily to our support tickets, saying that they had successful increments by doing this. Obviously, it’s not in every situation and in every market that a keyword can work, because when we talk about very competitive keywords the content is not the only signal that can move position in the index for a phrase search that easily. But for longer terms, it seems to be to be working OK. At least this model …
 Bill: Right. The amazing thing is that was around 2004 or so… So, it’s been around for a while.
 Razvan: In 2004 it was very easy because you just stuffed some keywords there, and you were ranking. Now Google has a lot of smart moves used to detect all this bad behavior from a webmaster, let’s say. So it’s much harder now to trick Google. And this tool is not about tricking Google, it’s actually about understanding Google and how it works, and by reverse engineering, what they do to help you, and help Google better understand that specific content.
 Bill: When you write content for a page, if you can make that page more about something, focusing upon the aboutness of the concepts beyond the page, you’re improving Google’s ability to recognize what you’re writing about and return in results for queries to people perform. We’ve got Google using RankBrain in Hummingbird to better understand queries that people are performing, and if your page fits those concepts best, you’re gonna be the one showing up in the top results.
 Razvan: You’re a Search Director at your company –
 What do you see to be working best now in SEO for your client? What’s the stuff that works best for your client rankings?
 Bill: There’s so much variety but one thing we’ve been focusing upon was making sure that structured data is set up well in knowledge panels, appear for clients, and sitemaps show up, site links for pages. We’ve been trying to get featured snippets show up, to attract traffic.
 Did you have any success in terms of finding a way to make a Google transform a normal ranking page into featured snippet?
 Bill: We have had success.
 Okay, but can you replicate it every time you want it?
 Bill: It’s challenging, but we can with some success get featured snippets to appear.
 Can you share some of the stuff that you think it’s important for a site to have in order to become a featured snippet?
 Bill: It’s not too much different from the old days of SEO. You think about what questions an audience might have for a specific company that provides certain goods or services. “What questions do they ask?”, “What do they want answers to?”, and you make sure you have pages devoted to that. You answer the questions. You answer the questions in ways that tend to… Search engines like using bulleted lists or tables, and those bulleted lists and tables tend to be seen as good answers to those questions.
 Razvan: Okay, so you say that we need to have questions on the page, bulleted lists, and tables. These are some common characteristics of the snippet pages that we see ranking.
 Bill: Right. You want the best answers, the most direct answers that you can provide you. You want to make sure there are good answers because that makes big of a difference.
 You’re talking now about getting a featured snippet for a keyword they didn’t have a featured snippet before, or replacing a competitor’s feature snippet?
 Razvan: Because these are two different things. When there is a query that doesn’t have already assigned enough high-quality content to market as a featured snippet, versus the situation where Google already decided that “This is a very high-quality article, and we want to rank it for this particular query as a featured snippet”?
 Bill: One site we’ve been working with is a site that has been doing a weekly video for years and they have a radio show every week. They have millions of listeners, they talk about financial type news, and they took all the videos and transcribed them and added the transcripts to the pages that videos appear upon. They started getting a lot of featured snippets from those transcripts because transcripts provide lots of questions and answers. So we looked at those, we worked on those a bit to strengthen the answers, to strengthen the formatting of the answers.
 Razvan: And you saw an impact for modified video transcription on a page, and it was boosted in multiple snippets compared to before.
 But did it also take down other competitors for the same keyword where a competitor was ranking with a featured snippet?
 Bill: We weren’t necessarily aiming at reducing the rankings of competitors, we were aiming at being as successful as possible with our own site.
 Razvan: Yeah, I imagine that. I was thinking that if Google already decided that a particular page for the featured snippet has a lot of authority and they put it there, then it’s harder to get your content to be that good to put your competitor down. From what I’ve seen, the featured snippets are not as volatile as rankings are. They tend to stay there more if Google decides that that is a strong page. Is this also applied to you?
 Bill: The people behind this site were subject matter experts, so when they answered a question, they did it pretty thoroughly. They were giving good answers. We may have looked to see if there were other featured snippets that were answering certain questions, but we weren’t necessarily focusing only upon answering questions that other people had answered. With hundreds of pages or thousands of pages that you had so many opportunities with, spending all your time fixated on whether you can answer somebody else wasn’t necessarily our goal.
 What do you think is/are the biggest problem(s) that SEO pros face nowadays?
 Bill: Misinformation. The web has become the information-can-do-it to everybody. It’s where I go to answer questions. I used to carry a card in my wallet with the phone number of local library and I would look up books in the old China card catalog of that library. I don’t do that anymore, I don’t look for books first because I can just look the information up on the web.
 Razvan: Okay. So coming back to the original question – which are the biggest problems that SEO pros face nowadays – you said misinformation. Can you elaborate a bit more on this? Do you think they are going in the wrong direction because of other people writing incorrect stuff on their blogs or websites?
 Bill: So, yeah, the web is the greatest source of information in the world. It’s also the great source of misinformation. There are just so many people; it’s like ten thousand monkeys typing. One of them is going to come up with Shakespeare at some point, but it’s gonna be mixed up with a lot of gibberish. And there is a lot of gibberish on the web, unfortunately.
 In terms of SEO, on what direction do you think people should stop wasting their energy on?
 Bill: It’s a good question. I’m not sure I should answer that with some of my pet peeves. I hate when people start talking about things like LSI keywords. Say, “Okay, do you know what LSI is? Did you ever bother to Google it?”. It’s an approach that Microsoft developed in 1990 to index static group of documents. The web is not static, it changes all the time. For LSI to be used on the web, the web would have to stop, and then as soon as that changes, you’d have to run an LSI indexing program again. It doesn’t stop and go like that. I see people writing “Google 200 ranking factors” articles and LSI keywords are one of the ranking factors Google uses. No, they’re not!
 Razvan: Yeah, that’s more of a concept, it’s a different thing…
 Bill: It’s a way the index enterprise document collections.
 Razvan: Yeah. SEO is very complex because it’s very technical and lots of the people that are writing this stuff aren’t technical enough to understand the nuances when it comes to things like the ones that you described here, because they take it for granted from other tens of sites that talk about it and consider the thing to be true. And, in the end, that’s what pollutes all this stuff.
 Bill: That’s part of the reason why I like looking at patents. So one of the patents that I’m going to talk about in my PubCon presentation in about a month or so, is on something that Google came up with and call “context vectors”. A quick way to describe it: they say in the patent that a horse to an equestrian is an animal, a horse to a carpenter is a tool that you use when you’re building something, a horse to a gymnast is an exercise implement, something they perform gymnastic moves upon. So, based on the context which we learn from knowledge bases, the same words could have multiple meanings. If we can understand the context we can index these better. So as a creator of a webpage, if you can explain the context better, you have already started making other people write about the same things.
 Razvan: Okay, so it’s all about describing and writing content as correctly as possible, from…
 Bill: From looking at sources like knowledge bases, like Wikipedia or, depending upon the topic, internet movie IMDB, Yahoo Finance’s one they use to describe companies.
 Razvan: Interesting.
 How do you think Google voice search will evolve, for example?
 Bill: It’s a lot of work on speech recognition and understanding conversations better.
 Razvan: I think they made huge steps in the last years to understand speech better and to transcribe. Not until recently we saw that Google launched those headphones that automatically translate 40 languages, and it’s a major step forward compared to, say, three years ago when we talked about understanding language automatically. Only time will move these barriers because technology evolves so quickly. How are we going to use the Internet via voice and how do you see computers transforming our lives (along with the search engines transformation)? We now have the phone, but we’re not always going to talk to the phone as it’s easier for you to type at this moment, from a privacy point of view. And there are a lot of times like this.
 Bill: I’ve been trying a lot of searches using Google Now and I’m surprised sometimes by some of the answers, but they tend to understand queries really well.
 But do you think that voice search will replace a lot of the normal typing searches that we do now?
 Bill: Phones have overtaken desktop search. More people search the web now through a phone than on a desktop. It’s easier to do a voice search, it really is. I’ve been trying as many as I can.
 Do you think that this will practically be the future: we are going to search the Internet via voice more and more, compared to what we do today?
 Bill: In addition to the announcement they made about the Pixel Buds, yesterday during the translation, they talked about Google Lens and how people will be doing more searches by photograph, by taking pictures of things. And there was a patent that went with those two. They talked about how they tie in those searches with knowledge base information to better understand the queries and provide results. So if you can perform a search by taking the picture of something saying “What kind of car is that?”, we’re going to get one. You know, just taking pictures of the car. We’ll see a lot more searches like that.
 Razvan: It will be interesting to see how this develops in the following years. Â
 What’s the one person or brand event that influenced you the most in your career if there is one?
 Bill: It’s a tough question. In terms of SEO, one of the ones who influenced me a lot was Ammon Johns, known as the Black Knight, and forums on the web on SEO, because he introduced me to a lot of thoughts and ideas about marketing that I wasn’t aware of and how creative you can be at introducing concepts and developing them on webpages.
 Razvan: And the last question:
 What are the things that you are most proud of, both professionally and personally?
 Bill: We’ve had a lot of success in the past few years with some clients in terms of transforming their businesses to be more successful. For instance, working with one limo company which focused primarily on providing corporate shuttles to businesses. We helped them strengthen their limo service and their everyday consumers – how frequently consumers use their business. And we increased the traffic to their business and their ROI by like 57% which is ridiculous – it was a lot. See, we took a four-page apartment website – it was only four pages – and help them sell out the apartment by helping them understand the entities involved in their website better. They’re in Northern Virginia, they were right above the Washington metro line – you can take an elevator to their basement and get on the metro line from there. They didn’t say it in the website, they didn’t include a lot of facts about that type of stuff, but if you hop on the Washington metro, you can visit 57 different Smithsonian museums from that metro. They’re all free to kids, so if you want something to do with your kids on a Saturday morning you can hop on the metro or go to the museum. This apartment complex wasn’t explaining stuff like that, you know, the benefits of living there, and being that accessible to that many types of things. They were in Northern Virginia, they were next to possibly what is the largest shopping mall in Virginia. It’s four stories tall underground, and most people have never heard of it, but it’s there. And they weren’t telling people about it in their website. You know, it’s one of the things … location is important – you tell people about things like that. So we didn’t know their site to have these. These are the type of things you need to include on your website. You need to tell people more about where you’re at, why they should want to live there. There were headquarters of some of the largest companies in the world, like Lockheed Martin was a couple blocks away, they weren’t telling people “We have these huge places nearby; if you work in those places and you live in our apartments, you have a ten-minute commute. Some people might not like a ten-minute commute to work but if you live in DC area and get to drive into DC – which is a nightmare drive – you want a quick commute. So we help them with the website, we helped inform people better about what was near it, so helped them sell all the apartments in the apartment complex within a year – really quickly.
 Razvan: All that via SEO.
 Bill: Yeah.
 Razvan: Okay, that’s a nice thing. A very hard thing to do – to sell an entire apartment complex only via SEO.
 Bill: It was effective and the most exciting thing that they had on the site was about 10 or 12 pictures of a dog park they had. They weren’t telling people important things, which would help them sell their apartment and just getting them to understand they had to do those things was really worthwhile. That would really get them excited. They are happy customers.
 Razvan: I imagine. Okay, Bill, it was a pleasure talking to you.
 Do you want to add anything else at the end of this podcast?
 Bill: It was a pleasure talking to you too. So come by, visit me, ask questions, that’s why I’ve got comment forums, follow me on Twitter, Linkedin, and so on, and ask questions there too. I’m happy to spend time answering them.
 Razvan: Okay, so you heard the Bill – go ask him your questions, he’s willing to answer everyone.
 Thank you, Bill, again for being on our podcast. It was a great pleasure to have you here, and it was very cool to have a discussion with someone who knows what is talking about patterns in the SEO industry. Thank you!
 Bill: Thank you!
 The post The Google Patents & Ranking Factors that Will Change SEO with Bill Slawsky appeared first on SEO Blog | cognitiveSEO Blog on SEO Tactics & Strategies.
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3 Everyday Tasks That Will Make a Colossal Impact on Your Small Business
Earlier this week, an iceberg the size of Delaware broke away from western Antarctica. While this is typical behavior for ice shelves, and scientists have been anticipating the event for months, what makes this event unusual is the size of the iceberg.
Weighing more than one trillion metric tons and estimated to be about 2,239 square miles, the massive sheet of ice, which is big enough to fill lake Erie twice, is now floating independently. While scientists say the event will not have any direct impact on humans, it does dramatically alter the landscape of the Antarctic peninsula.
As a small business owner, you know what a colossal undertaking it is to effect the growth that will change the landscape of your business. You’re taking on operations, sometimes single-handedly, that larger corporations accomplish with teams of experts: think things like managing money, maintaining cash flow, obtaining financing, executing a marketing strategy, and hiring (and training and retaining) great employees, to name a few.
While these tasks are no doubt some of the biggest time depleters you’ll encounter in entrepreneurship, and they’re critical to having a smooth-running business, they’re not the only things that can alter the landscape of your business. You don’t have to wait for a big breakthrough or a major event to make a noticeable impact in your sales, your customer acquisition or the overall health of your business.
These three everyday tasks will not only keep your business afloat, but if you do them consistently, they’ll effect greater change and growth over the short- and long-term life of your business.
Prioritize your to-do list every day. If you’re not getting to the end of your to-do list each day, you may have a prioritization problem instead of a productivity problem. Try using a to-do list app to help you segment your tasks according to what best fits your daily schedule and your level of motivation. Studies show that we’re more motivated to accomplish bigger tasks when we have checked off a number of smaller tasks first. But many people find the “do the worst task first” approach works best for them. Trying different approaches will help you discover when your high-energy time is and help you better prioritize.
Become a singletasker. Multitasking has been shown to decrease your productivity by up to 40 percent, not to mention it has been shown to inhibit creativity, increase mistakes and cause anxiety. Rather than jumping from one task to another, try singletasking, even for just 20 minutes at a time. This may mean ignoring emails, silencing phone calls or delaying in-person conversations in order to really focus, but delaying these tasks temporarily will pay off in terms of productivity.
Learn one new thing each day. This may be as simple as reading through the Daily Rundown on LinkedIn, or something bigger like attending a local business networking event. Turn to podcasts, forums, blogs, other business owners and books for industry insight and knowledge. Spend time Googling your competitors to learn what they’re doing so you can adjust your own business strategy accordingly. Or focus on tracking different business metrics within your own data to gain insight.
While you’ll always have a focus on the big picture, honing in on effective day-to-day routines will ensure your business is keeping good momentum. Prioritizing your to-do list, becoming a singletasker and learning something new each day will not only ensure the important tasks are completed, but help you carve out a profitable future for your business.
 The post 3 Everyday Tasks That Will Make a Colossal Impact on Your Small Business appeared first on Lendio.
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De Morier added that Erie locations will also be shot in Binghamton because the cities resemble each other. “The story is about two totally different people that have realized that they’ve messed up their lives,” De Morier said. “One is an alcoholic who lives in Binghamton and realized every decision he’s made has led to problems.”
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Beyond True Crime Podcasts: How a Motivational Speaker Can Supercharge Your Corporate Event in Delaware
Planning a corporate event in Delaware? You've got the venue booked, the catering secured, and maybe even a lineup of informative workshops in the works. But are you missing a key ingredient to truly elevate your event and leave a lasting impact on your team? Enter the motivational speaker for corporate events.
While true crime podcasts can hold a captivating allure, they won't necessarily ignite the spark of inspiration and growth you crave for your team. A skilled motivational speaker, however, can serve as the ultimate hype man (or woman), injecting your event with energy, enthusiasm, and a renewed sense of purpose.
Here's why a motivational speaker for corporate events should be a top consideration for your Delaware gathering:
1. Ignite a Shared Vision and Boost Morale
Let's face it, the day-to-day grind can be demotivating. A motivational speaker can breathe life back into your team, reminding them of the company's core values and the exciting vision for the future. Through compelling stories, humor, and practical advice, they can foster a sense of camaraderie and shared purpose, reminding your team why they come to work every day.
2. Enhance Communication and Collaboration
Modern workplaces demand strong communication and collaboration skills. A motivational speaker can address these critical areas by providing techniques and strategies for effective teamwork. They can inspire your team to listen actively, communicate openly, and embrace diverse perspectives, leading to a more productive and harmonious work environment.
3. Empower Personal and Professional Growth
A motivational speaker understands that personal development fuels professional success. Through powerful talks, they can encourage your team members to set ambitious goals, identify their strengths and weaknesses, and develop a growth mindset. This newfound awareness empowers them to take ownership of their careers and excel in their roles.
4. Foster Resilience and Overcome Challenges
The path to success is rarely smooth. A motivational speaker equips your team with the tools to navigate inevitable obstacles and overcome setbacks. By fostering resilience and a "can-do" attitude, they empower your team to bounce back from challenges with renewed determination and confidence.
5. Enhance Employee Engagement and Retention
A motivated and engaged workforce is a happy and productive workforce. Motivational speakers can significantly boost employee engagement by fostering a sense of belonging and value. This, in turn, can lead to reduced turnover and a more positive work environment.
Finding the Right Motivational Speaker Hire in Delaware
The right motivational speaker can make your event truly impactful. Here are some tips to find the perfect fit for your Delaware gathering:
Clearly define your event goals: Are you looking to boost sales performance, improve communication, or encourage innovation? Knowing your goals will help you identify a speaker whose expertise aligns with your needs.
Consider your audience: Tailor your speaker selection to your team's demographics and interests.
Research and evaluate speakers: Look for speakers with proven experience, engaging presentation styles, and a strong reputation. Don't hesitate to reach out for testimonials and references.
The Everett Demorier Advantage: Your Motivational Speaker Hire in Delaware
Looking for a motivational speaker for corporate events in Delaware? Look no further than Everett Demorier! Unlike those captivating true crime podcast guests, Everett delivers engaging and impactful presentations that resonate with audiences of all levels.
Everett focuses on personal development and leadership, inspiring teams to achieve their full potential. His experience in the business world, coupled with his dynamic and engaging personality, makes him the ideal choice to elevate your next corporate event in Delaware.
Let Everett help you create a truly transformative event! Visit everettdemorier.com and explore how he can tailor a program that specifically addresses your team's needs and propels them toward success. Forget the true crime rabbit hole – invest in a motivational speaker and ensure your next corporate event in Delaware is one your team remembers for all the right reasons.
To Know More About Everett De Morier,
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Click on the Link: https://everettdemorier.com/
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Fuel Your Journey to Success! Everett De Morier's motivational podcasts ignite your inner fire. Discover actionable tips, inspiring stories, and expert insights for personal and professional growth. Listen now!
For bookings and speaking engagements, contact Everett at [email protected] or Call: +1 (302) 300-7712
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Hire the Right Keynote Speaker: Ignite Your Event and Empower Your Audience
A successful event hinges on many elements, but few hold the power to truly captivate an audience like the keynote speaker. The right speaker can elevate your event from good to unforgettable, leaving a lasting impact on attendees. However, with a vast pool of talented speakers available, choosing the perfect fit for your specific event can feel daunting.
Beyond Entertainment: The Power of a Powerful Event Speaker
While entertainment value is certainly a plus, look beyond mere jokes and anecdotes. Consider the goals of your event. Do you want to inspire personal growth? Spark innovation? Motivate your team? Personal development motivational speakers can ignite a fire within your audience, leaving them with actionable steps for self-improvement. Transformative leadership guides can equip attendees with leadership strategies to elevate their teams and organizations.
Finding the Perfect Match: Aligning Your Needs with the Speaker's Expertise
Don't settle for a generic speaker. Look for someone with a proven track record of success in your specific area of focus. Research the speaker's background, past presentations, and areas of expertise. Have they spoken at similar events? Are their topics aligned with your audience's needs and interests?
Beyond Expertise: The Art of Captivation
Expertise is crucial, but it's not enough. A powerful event speaker is also a captivating storyteller. They can weave a narrative that connects with your audience on an emotional level, leaving a lasting impression. During your research, watch video recordings of the speaker's presentations. Does their energy and delivery style resonate with your audience and event theme?
The Value of Experience: Beyond the Presentation
A seasoned keynote speaker understands the importance of tailoring their presentation to your specific event. They should be willing to work with you to refine the content, ensuring it aligns perfectly with your event's goals and target audience.
Beyond the Stage: The Ripple Effect of a Great Keynote
The impact of a truly exceptional keynote speaker extends far beyond the event itself. Attendees leave feeling inspired, motivated, and equipped with new ideas. This can lead to increased productivity, innovation, and ultimately, positive change within your organization or community.
Elevating Your Event: Partnering with the Right Keynote Speaker
When you invest in the right keynote speaker, you invest in the success of your entire event. It's a decision that shouldn't be taken lightly. At everettdemorier.com, I understand the power of a well-crafted keynote address. With extensive experience as a motivational speaker and transformative leadership guide, I'm passionate about helping clients create impactful experiences.
Ready to Ignite Your Event?
Visit everettdemorier.com and explore how I can tailor a keynote presentation that perfectly aligns with your event's theme, inspires your audience, and leaves a lasting impact. Don't settle for just any speaker – choose the right one to elevate your event and empower your audience to achieve their full potential.
To Know More About Everett De Morier,
Best Motivational Podcasts for Entrepreneurs
Click on the Link: https://everettdemorier.com/
Also, Call or WhatsApp to Hire for any Events at +1 (302) 300-7712
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A never-before-seen glimpse into the rarefied world of the Ghost Shadows, New York’s powerful Chinese crime organization of the 1970s and '80s—written by the young leader who ran it: reformed gangster Peter Chin.
This hardcover book will be released nationally on January 21, 2025, but pre orders are being taken now on Amazon --- https://amzn.to/3ZWVrMK
#motivational podcast hire delaware#inspirational speaker for conferences#everett de morier motivational speaker#everett de morier#leadership#literary excellence
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A never-before-seen glimpse into the rarefied world of the Ghost Shadows, New York’s powerful Chinese crime organization of the 1970s and '80s—written by the young leader who ran it: reformed gangster Peter Chin.
This hardcover book will be released nationally on January 21, 2025, but pre orders are being taken now on Amazon --- https://amzn.to/3ZWVrMK
#motivational speaker for corporate events#inspirational speaker for conferences#true crime podcast guest#motivational podcast hire delaware#leadership#literary excellence
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Hire the Right Keynote Speaker: Ignite Your Event and Spark Transformation
Your event is meticulously planned. The venue is perfect, the logistics are ironed out, and the guest list is a who's who of your industry. But there's one crucial element that can make or break the entire experience - the keynote speaker.
Selecting the right keynote speaker is an investment in the success of your event. They set the tone, captivate the audience, and leave a lasting impression. Here's how to ensure you hire a powerful event speaker who ignites your audience and delivers a truly transformative experience.
Understanding Your Event Goals
It all starts with clarity. What are the specific goals of your event? Do you want to inspire personal development, motivate action, or offer deep insights on industry trends? Identifying the desired outcome guides your speaker selection.
Beyond the Buzzwords: Finding the Right Fit
Many speakers claim to be "motivational" or offer "life-changing" talks. But delve deeper. Look for someone whose expertise aligns with your event's theme. Consider personal development motivational speakers who specialize in areas relevant to your audience, such as leadership, resilience, or goal setting.
Seek Out Powerful Storytelling
People connect with stories. A captivating speaker weaves compelling narratives that resonate with the audience on an emotional level. Look for someone who can seamlessly blend personal anecdotes, industry insights, and actionable takeaways into a powerful story that sticks with the audience long after the event ends.
Stage Presence Matters
A powerful event speaker is not just a polished talker, but a captivating performer. Their stage presence should be magnetic, engaging the audience with dynamic delivery, appropriate humor, and an infectious energy that ignites the room.
The Power of Reviews and Recommendations
Don't underestimate the value of past experience. Research the speaker's track record. Do they consistently deliver exceptional events? Look for online reviews and testimonials from previous clients.
Aligning Budget and Value
Keynote speaker fees can vary significantly. However, don't prioritize price over value. Consider the speaker's proven impact and the potential return on investment (ROI) on your event's success.
Transformative Leadership Guides: More Than Just a Speech
Look for a speaker who offers more than just a stand-alone speech. Consider transformative leadership guides like myself, Everett Demorier. We don't just deliver a powerful talk; we partner with you to tailor the keynote to your unique needs, audience demographics, and event goals. This collaborative approach ensures a truly impactful experience that resonates with your audience.
Elevating Your Event: The Everett Demorier Difference
By partnering with Everett Demorier, you gain access to a seasoned speaker with a passion for igniting positive change. My expertise lies in:
Customized Keynote Presentations: Tailored content that perfectly aligns with your event's theme and audience.
Inspiring Storytelling: Compelling narratives that connect with your guests on an emotional level.
Actionable Takeaways: Practical strategies and tools to empower your audience and drive results.
Hiring the right keynote speaker is an investment in the success of your event. Choose a powerful speaker who can captivate your audience, leave a lasting impression, and propel them towards achieving their goals. Visit everettdemorier.com to learn more and discover how I can help transform your event into a life-changing experience.
To Know More About Everett De Morier,
Best Motivational Podcasts for Entrepreneurs
Click on the Link: https://everettdemorier.com/
Also, Call or WhatsApp to Hire for any Events at +1 (302) 300-7712
#inspirational speaker for conferences#motivational podcast hire delaware#everett de morier motivational speaker#everett de morier#leadership#best motivational podcasts for entrepreneurs
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Taking the last 100 days of the year and getting ready to be the person I need to be for 2025. Everett De Morier was born in Binghamton, New York, and currently lives in Dover, Delaware, with his wife and two children. There, he enjoys Lost in Space reruns and getting out of putting miniblinds up.
#motivational speaker for corporate events#motivational podcast hire delaware#best motivational podcasts for entrepreneurs#everett de morier#leadership#true crime podcast guest#Youtube
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Best Motivational Podcasts for Entrepreneurs: Fuel Your Hustle and Silence the Self-Doubt
Entrepreneurs wear many hats. We're strategists, problem-solvers, and cheerleaders for our own ambitions. But let's be honest, the entrepreneurial journey isn't always sunshine and rainbows. There will be days when that to-do list seems endless, and self-doubt creeps in like an unwelcome guest.
Forget true crime podcasts (unless your target market is a niche of entrepreneurial serial killers, which we highly doubt). Instead, consider these motivational podcasts specifically designed to rekindle your inner fire and propel you forward:
1. The Mindset Mentor Podcast: Host Debbie Rosas-Jones, a powerhouse entrepreneur herself, brings on a diverse range of guests – from CEOs to motivational speakers for corporate events. Each episode delves into the power of mindset in business success. You'll learn how to cultivate resilience, overcome fear, and unlock your full potential as an entrepreneur.
2. How I Built This with Guy Raz: This NPR podcast takes a captivating approach, telling the origin stories of iconic companies. Hearing the struggles and triumphs of industry titans like Sara Blakely (Spanx) and Howard Schultz (Starbucks) can be a powerful reminder – "if they can do it, so can I."
3. The GaryVee Audio Experience: Gary Vaynerchuk, aka GaryVee, is a social media and marketing guru known for his high-energy approach and no-nonsense advice. His podcast is a motivational powerhouse, packed with actionable tips on building an online presence, content creation, and personal branding. It's the perfect pick-me-up when you need a dose of GaryVee's infectious energy.
4. The $100 MBA Show with Omar Khan: Ever wished you had a business school education without the hefty tuition? This podcast is for you! Omar Khan breaks down complex business concepts into easily digestible nuggets, equipping you with the knowledge needed to make sound decisions and navigate the entrepreneurial landscape.
5. The Sales Motivation Podcast: Let's face it, sales are the lifeblood of many businesses. This podcast, hosted by Nathan Latka, dives deep into the world of sales motivation. You'll learn proven strategies for prospecting, objection handling, and building a winning sales mindset.
Bonus Tip: Channeling Your Motivation
While podcasts offer inspiration, sometimes you might need a more personalized approach. Consider attending a workshop or conference led by a sales motivational speaker, or inviting one to your next corporate event. Motivational speakers can help you and your team cultivate a winning mindset and develop actionable strategies for success.
Ready to take your entrepreneurial journey to the next level?
Visit everettdemorier.com and explore how I, Everett De Morier, a motivational speaker for corporate events, can help you and your team cultivate the winning mindset and strategies needed to achieve your business goals. Whether you're struggling with sales motivation, team leadership, or simply need a dose of entrepreneurial inspiration, I'm here to help you silence the self-doubt and fuel your hustle.
To Know More About Everett De Morier,
Best Motivational Podcasts for Entrepreneurs
Click on the Link: https://everettdemorier.com/ Also, Call or WhatsApp to Hire for any Events at +1 (302) 300-7712
#best motivational podcasts for entrepreneurs#inspirational speaker for conferences#motivational podcast hire delaware#everett de morier motivational speaker#motivational speaker for corporate events
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https://everettdemorier.com/announcements/
Everett is represented by Tina Wainscott from The Seymour Literary Agency. For booking Everett for appearances and speaking engagements, please reach out to [email protected].
#best motivational podcasts for entrepreneurs#motivational podcast hire delaware#inspirational speaker for conferences#motivational speaker for corporate events#sales motivational speaker#everett de morier motivational speaker#true crime podcast guest
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Transformative Wisdom from Everett De Morier
Everett De Morier is an award-winning author, novelist, playwright, screenwriter, keynote speaker, and documentary filmmaker. Book Everett to speak at your next event.
#True Crime Podcast Guest#Best Motivational Podcasts for Entrepreneurs#Motivational Podcast Hire Delaware#Motivational Speaker for Corporate Events#Sales Motivational Speaker#Inspirational Speaker for Conferences#Everett De Morier Motivational Speaker#Motivational Speaker for Sales Teams#Leadership Development Speaker#Non-Fiction Author Everett De Morier#Novel Writer Everett De Morier#Hire the Right Keynote Speaker#Personal Development Motivational Speakers#Powerful Event Speaker#Transformative Leadership Guides
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