Why Using LinkedIn is the Best Social Media Outlet for Small Businesses

Why Using LinkedIn is the Best Social Media Outlet for Small Businesses

Post by Jennifer Laycock – Search Engine Guide

When I teach Social Media classes to small businesses, I can always count on someone in the audience to ask a question that goes a little something like this:

“I’ve got limited time to invest in social media, but there seem to be a million sites out there. How do I know which one is worth my time? If I only have time for one, which one should it be?”

Well I generally try to weasel out of that question by telling them I’d use both LinkedIn AND Twitter, the truth is if I had to pick just one, LinkedIn would win, hands down. Let me tell you why.

LinkedIn is one of those sites that tends to get brushed aside in the sexy, shiny world of social media. It’s not flashy, we rarely hear buzz about billion dollar valuations and you don’t get a billion email reminders to visit because your contacts on LinkedIn are not encouraged to write on your wall, send zombies after you or take lengthy and inane quizzes.

Instead, LinkedIn tends to sit there quietly, waiting for you to realize that it’s more than just another place to “add your friends.” That it’s actually one of the world’s best networking tools. That it’s “Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon” translated into the business world. That it’s your ticket to building your business.

When I first joined LinkedIn a few years back, I spent an hour or two adding all my friends from my contact list and exploring friend’s contact lists to see if I’d missed anyone. I updated my profile, ran a quick search for past co-workers and then moved on my merry way. I’d get a handful of LinkedIn friend requests after conferences, but beyond that, I pretty much ignored it. Par for the course with most of the small business types I’ve spoken to.

But, forgetting to revisit and make use of LinkedIn is a big mistake if you run the type of business that relies on making contacts.

The Tipping Point

My love affair with LinkedIn started when I happened to login to add some contacts from the Search Engine Strategies conference and saw a notice that a contact of mine, Allison Clark, was now working as a PR consultant for a new small business community site. Turns out, the site was a pretty neat find. I emailed Allison to learn more, ended up connecting with their team.

Not bad for a boring little social networking site, right?

That’s when it dawned on me that I was completely missing the boat with LinkedIn. LinkedIn’s search feature wasn’t about finding contacts I knew, it was about finding contacts I NEEDED to know. The whole “degrees of contact” bubble weren’t a fun way to see who knew who, it was invaluable insight into how to make contact with new companies.

(For those new to LinkedIn, the site will track the connections between you and every other member of the site and will tell you how many “degrees” apart you are from any one contact. 1st degree means you know them personally, 2nd degree means you know someone who knows them, 3rd degree means they’re a friend of a friend of a friend…and so on.)

Using LinkedIn’s Search Feature to Expand Your Business

So how exactly am I using LinkedIn these days? Well, I’m using it to daisy chain my contacts and meet new people. Search Engine Guide and our network of sites has been growing like crazy and with the introduction of our Small Business Marketing Unleashed conference series, we need to expand our network of advertisers and sponsors accordingly. While I’ve been around long enough to be pretty well connected in the search realm, I’ve only just begun to get actively involved on the small business side of things. That means working my network to expand my network is essential.

Here’s a quick example of what I mean.

For our last show, we’d been in touch with the team at Carbonite, a subscription based service company that backs up your hard drive online. This time around, we’d stumbled across Mozy. Mozy offers up a very similar service, but with prices starting at around $5 a month, we knew they were perfectly targeted for the very small businesses that attend our show. Unfortunately, I didn’t know anyone at Mozy. We all know cold calls don’t tend to go over well, so I did what I now always do in these situations…I headed to LinkedIn and ran a search.

A simple search for the word “mozy” turned up a slew of Mozy employees.

linkedin1.gif

As I scrolled through the list I quickly stumbled across Dave Robinson, the VP of Marketing for Mozy. The first thing I did was look to see how many degrees separated us. Unfortunately, it was three. That meant I didn’t have any direct contacts who knew Dave. Now, I could have used the LinkedIn network to ask my contacts to introduce me to his contacts, but I’m not really comfortable going that route. That said, at least we had a name to work with, which made it much easier to call Mozy and seek out contact information for him.

A few days later, I decided I wanted to try and get in touch with Stamps.com. I headed over to LinkedIn, ran a search and was greeted with a list of possibilities.

linkedin2.gif

Once again, it took a matter of moments to find out Jim Bortnak was the Chief Marketing Officer over there and the person I needed to get in touch with. This time, I had better news: Jim was a second degree contact. That meant I already knew someone who knew him. Next step: click through to his profile page to find out who “someone” was. LinkedIn makes this part simple. On any member’s profile page, you’ll find a little box that looks something like this:

linkedin3.gif

Quick as that, I could see I had two contacts who knew Jim. One was Ami Kassar, the contact I’d made via Allison Clark. The other was Chris Caputo, a friend of mine who heads up marketing for American Greetings here in Ohio. I knew Chris better than I knew Ami, so I decided to leverage that contact to see if I could reach out to Jim. I used the LinkedIn system to compose a message to Jim and then wrote a separate message that would be sent to Chris asking him to pass my message along.

It’s a bit like asking your friend to pass a note to another friend two aisles over in study hall when you’re in junior high.

Those are just two examples, but I’ve used LinkedIn in this way dozens of times over the past few months. Sometimes it pays off in spades. Sometimes you never hear anything back. Either way, it’s far more effective than sending blind emails or making cold calls.

Even apart from the convenience factor, you get an added boost of credibility when you are introduced by someone who knows you. I trust my contacts. If they emailed me to say I should speak with someone, I’d speak with them. In the meantime, as a business owner, I hope they say the same about me.

Don’t Miss Out on LinkedIn’s Potential

That’s not the only reason to love LinkedIn of course. There are groups of like minded people for a wide range of topics you can join and make contact with and you can send out questions and survey’s to get feedback from your personal contacts. There’s great value in those things. But for me, the real value of LinkedIn is in using it to discover the hidden connections among my network and the rest of the world. You never know who you almost know. Why not find out?

Related posts:

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6 Tips for Using Promoted Tweets to Boost Your Brand’s Visibility

Twitter now has 100 million active users generating some 200 million tweets and 1.6 billion search queries every day. Despite the promise of reaching such a massive, highly-engaged audience, many advertisers have struggled to find the best way to connect with Twitter users.

Brands have had success using Twitter to distribute coupons and special offers – gaining followers on the lookout for deals – but have stumbled when it comes to building brand reach and engagement on the network.

Promoted Tweets are ordinary Tweets purchased by advertisers who want to reach a wider group of users or to spark engagement among their existing followers – and they are an effective way to use Twitter for brand marketing.

All Promoted Tweets are first displayed as regular Tweets to the people following an account, but advertisers can then promote these Tweets to spark additional conversation – paying for them to show up at the top of relevant search results pages, in users’ timelines the Promoted Tweet is relevant to that user, in Promoted Trend search results, and other places. Though these tweets are clearly labeled as “promoted”, in every other respect, these Tweets are just like all the other 200 million tweets generated every day on Twitter; they can be retweeted, replied to, forwarded, and more.

Getting Promoted Tweets right takes a bit of finesse. Twitter users are a savvy bunch, and they will ignore Promoted Tweets if they are too salesy, pushy, or out of sync with their interests. Here are six proven tips to use Promoted Tweets to boost your brand’s visibility among Twitters millions of users.

1. Promote Great Content

Make sure the content you’re promoting is engaging and interesting; think informational or inspirational, not salesy. Remember, a Promoted Tweet is only the beginning of a long engagement conversation. You’ll need to continue tweeting great, shareable content via both regular and Promoted Tweets, so your followers continue to get frequent updates on your messages and promotions.

One great thing about Twitter is you can use your 140 characters to promote longer-form content via links. Why not offer your followers – and the wider Twitter community via Promoted Tweets – access to free white papers, blog posts, webinars, exclusive video content, games, contests, deals, and more.

2. Keep Watch

Check in on your Promoted Tweets regularly. As your Promoted Tweet campaigns are running, make sure to analyze the impact in real-time using Twitter’s campaign tools.

Marketers shouldn’t just set the Promoted Tweet and forget about it; instead, shift the main messages of your Promoted Tweets on the fly, as you see in real-time what’s working and what’s not to generate clicks and traffic. Run A/B tests to see exactly how you should tweak copy or update landing pages.

3. One is Good, Six is Better

Twitter recommends using up to six tweets in a rotation for your Promoted Tweet campaigns – all aimed at one specific landing page. Having six different tweets to play with means you can tweak messaging and give additional info about your campaign or offering when you can’t it all into just 140 characters.

Having multiple tweets also enables you to craft an ongoing story over the course of the campaign – adding new messages every few hours or each day. Don’t forget to test the copy of these tweets.

4. Own the Hashtag

Promoted Tweets are a great way to introduce a new hashtag you intend to use either for an event, new product, or new brand campaign. Introduce and use the new hashtag in all your Promoted Tweets. Remember, creative and interesting content is what gets shared – but an added bonus is your new hashtag will get shared along with this pass-along.

5. Study Up

Before you blast out a Promoted Tweet campaign, make sure you understand the basics of Twitter. Use it for awhile before paying for Promoted Tweets, learn Twitter etiquette, and see what type of content resonates with your followers.

After you have the lay of the land on Twitter, you can then experiment with Promoted Tweets at the right times and with the right messages. For example, if you launch Promoted Tweets during a time where traffic levels and conversation are at extremely high volumes – such as right after a huge news story – your Promoted Tweets will get lost in the shuffle.

Research upcoming events that could impact traffic to Twitter in your area of influence. You can ride the wave of certain conversations, but you can also create a bigger impact when overall activity is muted.

6. Think Twice Before Jumping on a Topic

While jumping onto memes and hot topics can be an easy way to get attention for your Tweets, think twice before jumping on these bandwagons. A conversation storm can easily take a turn for the worst – and your brand would then be in the middle of the fallout.

There’s a fine line between being clever and being a headline (not the good kind). Make sure you’re on the right side of that line by carefully considering all the potential consequences of jumping onto a trending topic.

Summary

Twitter is a unique universe where instant conversation fuels millions of large and small chatterstorms among millions of users every day. By carefully using Promoted Tweets, marketers can be a part of the Twitter conversation and spark deeper engagement with their brands. But before you rush out and buy tons of Promoted Tweets, make sure you know Twitter 101 and have mastered the simple tips above.

Editors Note: As always and as will always be… great content is the key to everything. Users, viewers and readers still search for and long for great content. You just cannot ever get away from that if you want to have success online or in Twitter-world for that matter. Twitter is a great platform to get short snippets out to your audience to catch their attention so make sure you focus on the exact wording of your hashtag and title!

Facebook Drives 44 Percent Of Social Networking Connections Online

So the question is… is Google+ the new Facebook?

There may be many ways to answer that question… one of them should be in terms of statistics on sharing in the social context and category, the answer would be appear to be “no, not yet.”

If you are still wondering why Google is pushing so hard with its new product Buzz, it is because it wants in on the social traffic scene, not just search traffic. For many sites on the Web, social traffic coming through Facebook, Twitter, and MySpace is beginning to rival, and in some cases overtake, search traffic as the single biggest source of traffic. This traffic comes from shared links, photos, and videos that have been shared on these social networks. By its own numbers, 5 billion pieces of content are shared on Facebook every week.

What isn’t easily appreciated is the extent to which such social sharing is tied to different identity and authentication platforms across the Web. If you can log into a site easily using your Facebook or Twitter account, it is easier to broadcast links from that site to your friends.

To get a sense of which services on the Web drive the most sharing, I asked Gigya for some stats. Gigya powers sharing widgets on more than 5,000 content sites, including ABC.com. NBA.com, PGA.com, Answers.com, and Reuters but small businesses and professionals can look elsewhere… Gigya wants something in the $20k range just to get going using their products but plenty of social sharing widgets and plugins about for free or for very small amounts (ie. under $100).

Consumers can click a share button on these enabled sites and send an article link, photo, or video via a menu of different services including Facebook, Twitter, MySpace, Yahoo Mail, Gmail, and AOL. Over the past 30 days, people have shared almost a million items over the Gigya network alone. Facebook and Twitter dominate with about three quarters of all shared items between them. Here is how the services break down (note that these are relative numbers):

Distribution of shared items via social networks
Facebook: 44%
Twitter: 29%
Yahoo:18%
MySpace:9%

It makes sense, people prefer to broadcast links rather than share them one at a time via email, even compared to a broadcast email to a larger group of friends, colleagues, etc. Although Yahoo makes a strong third-place showing, when it comes to authentication, simply using your existing username and password to log into another site, Facebook is still the most popular via Facebook Connect, but only just barely. Google via Gmail and Yahoo are almost equally popular, at least on certain types of sites where people are just reading for themselves like news sites. On entertainment sites where people are more likely to share content, Facebook Connect makes up the majority of logins.

So Facebook and Twitter are still #1 and #2 in the world of social sharing, at least it would appear that way and it seems quite logical and plausible that this would be the case. But make no mistake, Google+ is coming and if the latest report from Paul Allen, founder of Ancestry.com and independent Google+ statist, are accurate, then the Google+ user-base now stands at 18 million and counting. Facebook on the other hand claims to have 750 million active users or about 732 million if the 18 million users mentioned migrated to Google+.

In recent polls conducted by The Christian Post, more than 40 percent of 10,000 people stated that they believe Google+ would dethrone Facebook as the biggest social network while the other 40 percent believed that Google+ and Facebook would co-exist.

Author Info: Lane A. Houk is an Internet Marketing and SEO Expert whose cutting-edge SEO strategies  and website development expertise can dramatically increase your results! If having a highly SEO optimized WordPress blog or web site is something you’re interested in learning more about, check out <a href=http://affordableinternetmarketing.org>Affordable Internet Marketing</a> for more details

 

 

 

Microsoft Sends “One Across the Bow” of Google – Snipes Gmail in Funny Advertising

This is both quite funny and a little eye-opening if you're a Gmail user. Yes, Gmail is crawling your email for keywords which is what then produces those "Ads" on top of your email screen if you're a free Gmail user. Personally, I use Google Apps for several reasons but Apps users don't have the ads either. Nevertheless, Microsoft really rips Google here on these video commercials. Enjoy the rip!

via Mashable.com

In a nice break from Google‘s slick-but-cute explanatory videos and ads, someone at Microsoft has unleashed a rather vicious attack video targeting Gmail.

The video shows Gmail Man, a delivery guy who has the creepy habit of scanning your mail for keywords and then showing you a related ad. You may be fine with that when you’re online, but when dramatized in real life, it might make you question the practice. If nothing else, the attack video makes a compelling case for going with Office 365 instead.

Creatively, Gmail Man falls into a burgeoning category of videos that dramatize Internet activity IRL, like a recent ad for English National Operas showing a man trying to friend and follow people on the street and another from T-Mobile dramatizing Angry Birds played out in a park somewhere.

Maybe Google had it coming, particularly after its own recent snarky video offering a Gmail Intervention.

Get lots of great internet marketing strategies on my Affordable Internet Marketing blog 

Think Big featured in St. Pete Times Business Column

Internet is marketer’s method of choice

RIVERVIEW — Think Big Enterprises, which welcomed its first client three months ago and has been growing steadily ever since, helps businesses find affordable methods to use the Internet to increase visibility.

Lane Houk, Think Big’s chief executive, said the Internet offers all sorts of free or very inexpensive ways for small business to connect with potential customers. New ways to do that are being developed all the time, and business owners may not have the time or expertise to keep up with the latest.

“A lot of times, business owners aren’t aware of those resources, or they just don’t know how to use them,” Houk said.

Think Big also will create websites for businesses and can develop office automation systems to help businesses run more efficiently.

One tip Houk offers to small businesses is that they create blog sites so they can position themselves as experts in their fields.

The Think Big Enterprises office is at 12307 Boyette Road. The company’s website is lanehouk.com. For more information, call (813) 438-2428.

If you know of something that should be Everybody’s Business, please contact Marty Clear at mclear@tampabay.rr.com

Here’s the link to the original story in the St. Pete Times: http://www.tampabay.com/news/business/retail/citylynccom-unites-consumers-with-deals/1173002

Opportunity for you to create “Social Efficiency”

One thing I really, really get excited about is efficiency opportunity. You know, those cool times when you see a real, bona fide opportunity to increase your efficiency in business and life. I’m going to share one of these opportunities with you… it’s simple, go check out www.posterous.com – love it. I input my facebook, twitter, flickr, youtube account info ahead of time, add a post of any kind (blog, text, video, audio) to posterous account and posterous automatically sends same to all my social accounts. One to many efficiency. Very nice. My posterous site: lanehouk.posterous.com – Have fun with it!

Oh and by the way, Posterous makes it so easy to add a new blog post… all you have to do is email your new post to post@posterous.com and Posterous knows it’s you by your email address so they automatically create the new post for you, publish it on your Posterous page and submit the same  post to all of your Social Network sites! That is awesome. Best of all, it’s FREE folks.

By the way… I found one video on YouTube that was short and shows how you can use Posterous to be more efficient!

Likes & Personal Comments On Facebook To Be Shared With The World – Online Privacy Issues

by Dietrich

Facebook Ads – New Insiders Secret For Big Companies and Marketers …

Your “likes” on Facebook, comments on Facebook and other areas that you would normally consider private, are up for grabs again. Anyone that has been on Facebook for any period of time should be used to FB’s ever evolving changes in privacy and terms of service policies. The real problem is many people do not know of these changes before it’s too late.

The new Facebook privacy setting is called “Instant Personalization” and it is being rolled out right now!

It’s obvious that Facebook has made these changes to bolster their ad revenue and capitalize on additional methods to make more money. These new changes are a dream for big companies and marketers alike. Now being a marketer myself, I think this is great, but many of you may not share my enthusiasm.

Think about this…

Facebook Pages that you “like”, comments that you make and even your picture can be used in company ads and promotion without your knowledge! So before anyone gets all up in arms I’m going to show you how you can shut the door on this privacy loophole.

CLICK HERE to go to the full post by my friend Dietrich where he shares how to shut the door on this loophole…

Online Privacy and Anonymity

Let’s face it, if you spend just about any time online these days, you’re at risk of your privacy being invaded and your identity and personal information may be unsecured. You need to be pro-active and arm yourself with a few good tools. I’m alarmed at how few people have basic anti-virus, anti-spyware and proper cookie settings so their online traffic isn’t watched (yes literally) by tracking cookies or spyware.

More importantly to me is the fact that just about anybody with some know how can track your online browsing history and get information from that. Sure there are some devious reasons that someone might want to block their online browsing history but for me, I don’t want anyone knowing what sites I go to or worse, getting personal information off of my web traffic. It’s just the principle of the idea that my business is only my business and no one else’s.

If you share this concern, there are solutions. I’ve included a great video to intro the idea to you. I highly suggest you check out www.torproject.org and download the “TOR Browser Bundle” – for Windows or Mac depending on what type of computer you use.

TOR essentially sets up a tunnel of your internet traffic and relays the request all over the world (literally) so that someone trying to watch your traffic wouldn’t know that request for a certain site came from your computer. I’ve tested it and it works – fantastically. The first time I setup a connection to the TOR network and opened the TOR browser (which is basically a customized version of Firefox), Yahoo thought I was located in Germany based on the IP address that was requesting the Yahoo page from my browser.

If you want anonymity online and you want to keep any and all prying eyes off your online traffic, TOR is the best way to go right now.

Here comes Google Instant

A lot of speculation has been floating around since Google launched Instant a few months ago. Right now it seems to only work in Firefox browser, not Internet Explorer. I haven’t tried it in Safari or Chrome yet… So some ask, is this the death of SEO, the increase or decrease in long-tail, the beginning of the end of the world!!!

Don’t know what Google Instant is?  In short geek terms it is “SERP while typing” while in general terms it is simply giving you your Google results before you hit the ENTER key.  If it isn’t working for you yet, it will be what Google is from this point on, so just go to Google to try it. Use Firefox for your browser if you have it.

Now that you know what it is, let’s get back to the speculation.

According to Alex Snyder…

Q:  Does Google Instant kill SEO?
A: No.  It does not kill Search Engine Optimization, but it definitely changes things.  According to Matt Cutts (Google Search Quality Group who occasionally addresses concerns) who commented on how Instant changes SEO:

“I think over time it might. The search results will remain the same for a query, but it’s possible that people will learn to search differently over time. For example, I was recently researching a congressperson. With Google Instant, it was more visible to me that this congressperson had proposed an energy plan, so I refined my search to learn more, and quickly found myself reading a post on the congressperson’s blog that had been on page 2 of the search results.”

And what Matt is talking about leads us into the conversation around short and long tail search changes.  If you’re not familiar with that, Short Tail is a query like “Toyota Camry” while long tail is a query like “2006 Toyota Camry LE Automatic Power Window Regulator” – it is a difference in how specific the query is.

Q:  Does Google Instant Kill Long-tail Search?
A: It is too early to tell, but there will more than likely be some behavior changes in how people use Google.

Personally, I think Google Instant is going to make people more efficient in searching for things.  I think, with time, people are going to be doing multiple searches for things when they’re not just using Google as a phone book or a replacement for their address bar in the browser.

Q:  Does Google Instant kill Pay Per Click (PPC, SEM, Paid Search, etc)?
A: No.  Absolutely NO.  Where do you think Google gets a huge chunk of their money from?  If anything, it increases the relevancy of PPC ads just as much as it increases the relevancy of the organic results.

Q:  How do I better prepare my website for Google Instant?
A: There is no secret formula to it.  Even if there is a secret formula to it, Google will change things later to close that hole.  They’ve been doing that since day one.  However, if you concentrate on content and don’t get completely consumed in the other SEO areas you will always be ready for any changes that come.  People consume content.  For a search engine to remain successful, it must provide people with what they want.

So it comes down to content, still. Sure there are other things but 95% of all business owners I talk to or research do NOT have an optimized website/blog and automated system. With the blog site I can build for your firm, you can have a content-generating machine with specific content that you don’t have to lift a finger to update everyday. Yep, everyday, multiple-times daily actually, the SEO Optimized Blogs I develop are working for you, generating more content and giving potential customers what they want and giving the search engines what they want as their spiders crawl your site.

If you’re current efforts at marketing are costing you more than what you’d like to spend and yielding less than desirable results, call me, NOW!

813-438-2428

Lane Houk

Going Local with Google Places

WATCH THIS VIDEO FIRST! THEN READ BELOW!!

We help a business get listed and completely optimized in their first month – after that, it’s about staying optimized and getting your business listed in hundreds of different internet directories – which we also do. That said, you can do it for FREE if you want so I’ll give you as much extra advice as I can in a short post and if you decide you want somebody to do this for you, I guarantee you’ll get a lot more in return than the dollars you spend with us. There are some insider secrets on how we do this that I don’t give away – after all, that’s why people hire me instead of doing it themselves. But if you like doing things yourself, this will get you started!

The WORLD WIDE WEB is going LOCAL in many respects. Google is Local. In case you haven’t noticed already, when you perform a Google Search on most search terms, you get a Google Map in the upper right corner of the screen and middle of page displays Google Local Search Results. Don’t believe me, just go to www.google.com and type in restaurant or dentist or attorney or homes for rent. Google will almost always get your location correct to the closest large city. That’s how they know what local results to display for the local user searching and especially for MOBILE customers. Google is also going MOBILE guys…

In fact, your business is likely already on Google’s local search. If not, I know exactly why. You’re not in any of the major business directories. Your business info may be outdated, may have moved, whatever. If you have not claimed your listing with Google yet, you risk having your business info deleted – if they already have it. If you need or want help you can hire me to do all this for you.

Google Places registration is FREE folks. If you do the right things, you’ll get your business in the top 3-5 places for local search results (ie. ON THE FIRST PAGE OF RESULTS) and that translates in to business my friends – well it should. Why do I say that? Well, there’s lots of data to back it up. But it’s also just as logical. Chances are you have a smartphone… if you don’t, you will in 5 years or less. Why? Phone manufacturers are going Smartphone exclusively – in different shapes and sizes… I can pull out my iPhone and click on my Google Maps app, type in “dentist” and the closest businesses matching the dentist category appear on my phone screen. I tap on any one of them and the business phone number, address, website, etc. displays on my screen. From there I can add that business to my contacts with one click of my finger; OR, I can click on “Directions to Here” and get turn by turn directions right to that business’ front door; OR, I can click on the phone number and my phone will dial the number. All in all it takes me about 15 seconds.

In many countries today, the only way people in that country access the internet is through their phone. They have faster internet on their phone than they do at home, if they have it home at all.

I’m telling you, business is going Local (not loco) and Mobile. Get on it and use the FREE tools out there to do it!

HERE’S A QUICK VIDEO TUTORIAL ON HOW TO UNDERSTAND THIS AND GETTING YOUR FREE GOOGLE PLACES LISTING! Watch this and then implement the secrets listed after the video!

A couple more secret tips once you have your listing claimed and verified:

  1. Key is not to just get your business listed and the information right, key is to get listed higher in the list and more noticed on the map with top goal to be on the FIRST page of results;
  2. Business citations are one key to better placement results;
  3. Business review submissions is the other big key to placement results;
  4. Optimize your listing with complete info;
  5. Run Offers frequently.

And hey, if you need a little help, call me. I’m pretty good at this stuff… you’ll get on the first page of Google! That’s not so bad, is it?