Monday, April 8, 2013

14 Tips on How to Become a More Efficient SEO Professional

If you’re at work, you know there are things that you could be doing right now to improve your website’s SEO. Chances are you probably have a social network open in another browser tab right now as you're reading this, and you've probably checked your email at some point in the last 10 minutes.
How much work have you actually done in the last hour? The last few days? This month?
Would you have expected more from that time if you had been paying someone by the hour to do your job? Just how productive are you?
In today’s tough economy, SEO professionals who constantly try to boost their productivity are going to go far. The "optimization" in SEO implies that there is always something more which can be done to improve organic search visibility, so the faster and smarter you can work, the better results get and happier your stakeholders will be.
However, most SEO professionals live on the web, where distractions are myriad and something new crops up almost every minute. How do you improve productivity in the face of so many things to do? Even more importantly, how do you stop a slow slide into idleness and unproductivity?
In the past I found myself slacking off at work and I had to confront myself with the truth that my productivity level and low attention span was something I couldn't afford to ignore.
The following ideas are all tactics I have tried and tested in the past 12 months to help me boost my output. I’m proud to say that at a recent appraisal I was commended for how I had boosted my productivity in 2012, so some of them must be decent ideas!

Stay Focused With Helpful Software and Browser Extensions

A good place to start is by installing useful software and browser extensions.

1. Stayfocusd

Browser extension Stayfocused allows you to create a blacklist of websites you know kill your productivity and sets an amount of time you can spend on them each weekday. It also includes sites you visit from your blacklist (good if you’re a reddit addict) and can suggest sites you might want to add to your blacklist based on behavior.
It's also fiendishly difficult to change Stayfocused's settings once installed, so it’s unlikely you will go back to your old ways!

2. Quick Login for Google Accounts

Do you have multiple logins for personal and professional Google Accounts? I do and the Quick Login for Google Accounts extension is an absolute godsend!
Quickly switch between up to 10 Google accounts and never forget a password again. Working in an agency, I reckon this saves me at least an hour a week.

3. WriteMonkey

WriteMonkey is a word processor with a totally stripped back user experience that can help with longer consultancy documents or blog posts. This boils the writing process down to just me and my words and I can get through the writing stage of producing a document much faster.

4. Pocket

It’s important to stay up to date when you work in search and every SEO should be spending some time each day learning or keeping up with industry news. However, all that reading can be a real killer when it comes to getting work done.
Pocket is a useful tool that allows you to easily store interesting articles, videos, or snippets of text in an accessible place for consumption at a more appropriate time (e.g., during your commute or while you’re sitting on the sofa at home).

5. Timer

Use timers to build your concentration span. Timer is a good example.
If you really struggle to concentrate on a piece of work, start off by trying to focus on it for just 10 minutes of your time then build that time up and up. If this works for you then you should investigate the Pomodoro technique further (see tip 12).

Increase Your Excel and PowerPoint Productivity

Most SEO professionals will spend time in Microsoft Office. If you can get things done faster here, then you can start to outpace your colleagues.

6. Increase Productivity in Excel

  • If you’re editing a lot of data you might need to view how changes in one area make a difference somewhere off-screen, perhaps in another worksheet tab. Moving back and forth takes time, so a great feature is a small Watch Window that can show the area of the workbook your changes are affecting. Highlight the cells you want to watch. Then click Formulas > Watch Window > Add Watch. Simply return to the area of your worksheet that you're editing and the Watch Window will hover in the corner as you work.
  • I quite often need to format several worksheet exactly the same way. Excel's grouped worksheets feature makes this easy: Ctrl-click the tabs that you want to group together, and the grouped tabs turn white. While sheets are grouped, anything you enter in one sheet also gets entered into the others.
  • Hold Alt+I+C to insert column left – this shortcut saves so much time!

7. Increase Productivity in Powerpoint

  • Using the clipboard pane saves endless cycling between slides copying and pasting various objects as it can store 24 items – useful for when you are constructing slides that "build" or you are using a range of icons to represent characters in your presentation’s story arc.
  • Highlight multiple text items and use shift+f3 to toggle between various capitalization options – loads easier than changing individual letters manually – something I see happening all the time and it drives me nuts!
  • Ctrl+D duplicates an object – stop using ctrl+c, ctrl+v.

Change Begins With You

If procrastination is a problem though, fancy shortcuts and browser extensions aren’t going to make a long-term improvement to your productivity levels. Unfortunately, you're going to have to make a real effort to change yourself and your working habits. I know, because this was where I was 12 months ago.

8. Music

Some people find that setting suitable music to match the task you are working on leads to productivity gains. Some people find it easier to work with classical or jazz music playing. This is known as the Mozart effect, although its effectiveness has been questioned.

9. Create Dead Time

Another great lifestyle tip is to get rid of variables within your life: choices which are redundant and simply create dead time. I love this approach even though it involves acknowledging when dead time occurs in your life (and for me there was a shocking amount).
Stuff like:
  • Buying every day essentials at a store is dead time (set up consistent repeat grocery deliveries using online shopping tools).
  • Time spent waiting for spreadsheet downloads is dead time (use APIs to bring the data directly into Excel).
  • Time spent topping your subway/bus card is dead time (set it up to refill automatically).
When you realize that for all of these problems there is a quicker automated solution and you make the small, one-time effort to implement it, you free up lots of time in the future. An additional benefit is that this technique focuses your creativity on the times where it could really add value.

10. Limit Your Email Time

A huge timesaver for me has been changing to a "surgery hours" model for email; this means only checking and responding to email three times each day. This allows you to dedicate larger blocks of time to concentrating on specific tasks.
Unscheduled interruptions do happen, and some initial frustration will arise with colleagues, but after explaining the system and demonstrating that it allows you to get more done, people shouldn’t mind. An added bonus is that people will come and talk to you directly when something is urgent rather than emailing; in almost all cases this leads to quicker reconciliation.

11. Benefits vs. Time: Prioritizing Tasks

In order to better plan your week more effectively, take your to-do list and plot tasks on a benefit (most impact on success to least impact) vs. time to implementation axis. This allows you to visualize which of your tasks will bring most benefit in the shortest time.
One example could be to prioritize emailing a client a mini-success story about a weekly performance improvement before completing the whole weekly report, a task which will take longer and in which your success story might be buried.

12. The Pomodoro Technique

If you suffer with low productivity or a poor ability to plan your day the Pomodoro technique can make a real difference.. Pomodoro Technique allows you to structure tasks and set aside time to complete them while allowing you the time to have regular breaks in your day.
To get you started here are the five basic steps to implementing Pomodoro technique:
  • Decide on the task to be done.
  • Set the pomodoro (timer) to 25 minutes.
  • Work on the task until the timer rings; record with an x.
  • Take a short break (3-5 minutes).
  • Every four "pomodori" take a longer break (15–30 minutes).

13. Sleep

One final tip is a little extreme and could probably only work for those of you with flexible working arrangements, but changing your sleep cycle could prove to be beneficial.
A short burst of intense work on priority topics very early in the morning followed by a short power nap before starting “normal” work can help make the working day less stressful and more productive as the most pressing issues are resolved early.

14. Want It Bad Enough

Ultimately, my top tip if you feel you are being unproductive is to take a step back and question your underlying thoughts about your job: through my own attempts to improve my output I realized I could only boost productivity (especially through ending procrastination) if I wanted “it” bad enough. I think the same is true for a great many procrastinators.
“It” could be anything, from marketing success, to great feedback from a client or boss, to a pay raise. However, if you don’t want "it" bad enough, you will continue to struggle with procrastination because there will always be a reason to put off knuckling down and getting on with work.
If this is the case, ignore online zealots who say "life is rubbish, stop whining and get on with it." Acknowledge that your unproductiveness is a big issue you should spend some time (downtime, not work time!) trying to deal with.
To reach your full potential, will you need to change your job or career? Are you genuinely doing something you want to be doing? What are the real mid- to long-term consequences going to be if you walk away from your role?
Answering these questions will help you realize what “it” is; the reward that will act as kryptonite to your procrastination.

Bottom Line

When it comes to being more productive, if you have the appetite to succeed you will, through hard work, become more productive. If you don't, you won't. It’s as simple as that.
Has anyone else worried about their productivity at work? How did you tackle that? Do you have an awesome Excel or PowerPoint tip? Tell us all in the comments!

Source :- searchenginewatch.com

Harlem Shake Vs Gangnam Style Ultimate Twitter Showdown

Harlem Shake Vs Gangnam Style Ultimate Twitter Showdown
Infographic by Ghergich & Co.

Friday, March 15, 2013

6 Quick Onsite SEO Tips for the Busy Site Owner

As a small business owners I understand how tight time is every day. Any little disruption to the usual schedule could mean losing hours of time you don’t have to waste. But if you’re a site owner that is serious about optimizing your website for SEO you can’t afford to push your onsite SEO process off over and over until the day when you finally have the time—because you know it will never come!
Here are 6 quick onsite SEO tips that can help jumpstart your onsite SEO process.

1. One page per keyword, 2-5 keywords per page.

You shouldn’t really try to target more than 2-5 keywords per page. If you think that more than 5 keywords would actually fit within the existing content it might be worth breaking that one page up into two pages or more. That way you can effectively and naturally incorporate those keywords into the content, giving your site a better chance of doing well in the SERPs for related searches. Also keep in mind that you should only target a specific keyword on one specific page. You can’t target “SEO firm” on every page of your site just because that is what you are trying to rank for. Different page, different keyword!

2. Get rid of homepage.com/html or/index and stick with .com

This is a common problem a lot of sites have and don’t even realize. If your site has a .com/html or .com/index for the homepage (or any other page on the site) do away with it and redirect everything to the .com page! Having multiple versions of the same page splits the internal and inbound link juice because the links are being shared across multiple pages. Plus, duplicate content might get your site in trouble with the search engines. It’s not worth the risk and it can make your .com pages much more valuable if you 301 redirect the other versions.6 Quick Onsite SEO Tips for the Busy Site Owner

3. The most important pages should be included in the high level navigation.

Floating pages (the ones that aren’t properly linked to from within your internal navigation) are really hard for both the visitors and the search spiders to find and index properly. The most important pages on your site should be included in the high level navigation (and probably the footer as well) so visitors can easily navigate from page to page without having to retrace their steps by back clicking. Site structure does impact how the search engines view your site and pages that are more heavily linked to internally tend to be “worth” more in the eyes of the search engines.

4. Combine thin pages of content.

Go through every page on your website and ask yourself if that page provides any value to your readers. If it’s just a bunch of fluff then get rid of it! Thin content can trip the Google Panda update and land your website in hot water. Each page of your site should serve a purpose (and that purpose should be more than just to rank well!). If your content isn’t providing any value to your human visitors than why do you have it on your site?

5. Write custom title tags and Meta descriptions for each page.

While Meta descriptions aren’t as important for SEO success as they used to be, they still play a vital role in your website’s long term success overall. The Meta description is what convinces a searcher to click on your site over another in the SERPs. You have 150 characters to convince someone that your site contains the information they are looking for. If you don’t write a custom Meta description then the search engines can pull any random snippet of content from the page and use that instead. So much of what the search engines do is outside of your control, why not take advantage of the few things that you can?

6. Check for broken links and do a 301 redirect to save inbound links and SEO value.

Most sites have a few dead or missing pages and don’t even realize it. Even if you were to remove all traces of that page from your site chances are there would still be a few inbound links scattered across the web that could point visitors to it. Instead of sending them to a dead page (and wasting the link on a broken URL) use a 301 redirect to point that link to another page and save the SEO value of that link.

These are by no means the only elements of onsite SEO you need to worry about, but if you are pressed for time they are definitely a good place to start!

Source:- brickmarketing.com

Getting Quality Backlinks To Your Site

In the current times, the best way to do SEO is by having the highest quality content possible. In the past, one only needed to get a bunch of links to their sites in order to get a good rank, but as of late Google and the other search engines have reduced the importance of links. However, this does not mean that links are to be completely ignored when you are working on your SEO.

It is extremely important to concentrate on content in 2013, but it is also a good idea to dedicate some time to getting links as well. The only difference is that while in the past it was possible to get a bunch of links through shady means and be fine; Today, you have to be very careful about the kinds of links you get since they may end up harming your rank.

The key to making sure that you get quality links is by making a big effort toward having other people link your site. There are many ways that you can get people to link to your content, but the methods below are the ones that I found to be most effective.

Provide Factual and Educational Content

Bloggers are far less likely to link to articles that are subjective, unless they are extremely good. This means, that if you would like to get as many links as you can from your readers then you’ll have to provide content that is educational and factual. If you provide the most reliable information, then you’re more likely to be linked to as a reference/source in an article.

While it could be hard to do, the best content is “ground-breaking” informational content. Such as, releasing a study on an aspect of SEO that someone has never done before.

Exchange Links with Reputable Websites

This is one of the oldest practices for getting quality links to your site. You only need to find a site that is of good standing in your niche, and link to it. After you have linked to the site, you can then contact the owner and ask if they would be interested in putting your link on their site. If the owner is not interested, then you can easily move on to another reputable site and replace the link.
Focus on Quality and Not Quantity

When your site is informative, and easy to use then people are bound to link to it. This is the best way of getting backlinks to your content. As long as you concentrate on providing the best content (not the most); you can be sure that people are going to link to it, thus improving your rank.

In summary, getting backlinks is still something you have to add into your SEO strategy. Still, as time goes on content is becoming the main factor when it comes to ranking in the search engines. The best way to get quality backlinks to your site is through your content.

What are your thoughts?

Source:- seoupdates.net

Thursday, March 14, 2013

Matt Cutts On Upcoming Penguin, Panda & Link Networks Updates

Google’s head of search spam, Matt Cutts, announced new updates with Google’s Penguin and Panda algorithms and new link network targets in 2013. Matt announced this during the SMX West panel, The Search Police.

Significant Penguin Update

Matt said that there will be a large Penguin update in 2013 that he thinks will be one of the more talked about Google algorithm updates this year. Google’s search quality team is working on a major update to the Penguin algorithm, which Cutts called very significant.
The last Penguin update we have on record was Penguin 3 in October 2012. Before that, we had Penguin 2 in May 2012 and the initial release in April.
So, expect a major Penguin release that may send ripples through the SEO industry this year.

A Panda Update Coming This Friday Or Monday

Matt also announced there will be a Panda algorithm update this coming Friday (March 15th) or Monday (March 18th). The last Panda update was version 24 on January 22nd, which is one of the longer spans of time between Panda refreshes we’ve seen in a long time.

Another Link Network Targeted

Matt Cutts confirmed that Google targeted a link network a couple weeks ago, and said Google will go after more in 2013. In fact, Matt said that they will release another update in the next week or two that specifically targets another large link network.

Source:- By Barry Schwartz On Searchengineland.com

Where Link Building is Heading in 2013

There have been hints over the years that the engines were getting wise to certain questionable linking tactics, but nothing quite as dramatic as what took place in 2012. Several techniques that had worked for years stopped working.
Link networks discovered and devalued, site after site vanishing from rankings. Warnings from the engines themselves about "unnatural" links. New services promising link profile cleansing and web masters being given the opportunity to disavow the very links they so eagerly went after (and perhaps paid for) not long ago. And these are just some of the linking related events that took place.
Indeed, 2012 was the year link building changed. Forever.
We can argue about the details. I've been petty vocal that nothing changed at all other than the engines getting smarter, and this single change then caused a domino effect that impacted sites and services that some would say had no business being in business in the first place.
Maybe the larger truth is that for some, link building changed forever while for others (who never ventured down darker alleys) not much changed at all. I know from my own perspective of 18+ years on link building's front line, nothing much changed at all for me.
The techniques and tactics I've used since 1994 are absolutely as effective today as they were then, with the added advantage that we now have even more methods to help URLs migrate and be pushed along and throughout the web. If you know what you're doing, the reality is it's actually easier today than it was back then to get attention and links for truly outstanding content.
So let's be candid. The primary thing that's happened is it's gotten harder to get crappy content to rank high. And for this, we should all be thankful. I will now duck so the arrows hopefully miss me.
But enough about 2012.
Where are things headed in 2013 from a link building perspective? Let's take a look at several aspects of the linking ecosphere and I'll go out on some limbs and give you my best guesses as to what you might see in 2013, and what to do about it if you so choose.

Tactics and Topics

In no particular order...
The tactic: 
Gold, silver and bronze (or something similar) link building packages that can be purchased at a set price by any site about any topic.
2013 prediction:
These types of services really never should have worked, that is if they ever truly did. While you shouldn't expect companies to quit selling them, I can say with a high degree of confidence that your site's success (or failure) won't be determined by any one-size-fits-all linking service. Earl's House of Hubcaps and Dr. Scholl's Bunion Reliever don't need the same links, and why am I still having to say this?
The tactic:
Analytics, that is, the analyzing of every possible aspect of every possible link so that we know every possible thing about the links that link (or don't link) to us or to our competitors, or to whatever site we're curious about.
2013 prediction:
While currently dominated by big names like SEOmoz and Majestic, and in niches by specialists like Blekko and AdGooroo's Link Insight, I expect more players to enter this niche.
The challenge is not so much in analyzing the data. The challenge is in correctly selecting the right data to analyze, and then correctly selecting the strategies and tactics that will help you the most. Anchor text, I'm looking at you.
How many people incorrectly pursued anchor text strategies based on competitive linking analysis and then saw their rankings implode in 2012.
Sometimes data is a dangerous thing.
Bonus prediction: there will be a surprise player emerge in 2013 that will dramatically impact the link analysis niche. Don't say LinkMoses didn't tell you. It's coming.
The tactic: 
Infographics as link bait.
2013 prediction:
People make this one much harder than they need to. It's simple. Bad infographics are bad for link attraction, while great infographics that help take complex statistical data and make it understandable will always be a great way to attract links and traffic.
One caveat: funny infographics don't have to be complex to be effective. See here for an example of this.
The tactic:
Directories. All 700 million of them.
2013 prediction:
This is more of a hope than a prediction, but my hope is that all people recognize what is and isn't a truly viable and useful directory versus someone's attempt to capitalize on the link seeking frenzy.
Yahoo and DMOZ have proven that two completely different approaches to cataloging the web failed. It's too big and it's not really the web anymore. It's everything from a massive site like Wikipedia to a single tweet to a Facebook wall post to a G+ update to a mobile app to a PDF document to a YouTube channel. It can't be tamed nor catalogued en masse.
The directories that matter will be specialist. Curated. Topical. Purposeful. And not be able to be manipulated.
The tactic:
Sponsorships. By sponsorships I mean the technique of paying to be a sponsor of an event or organization just for the opportunity to get a link in return. Usually from a .org, this is the not-a-paid-link-wink-wink tactic.
2013 prediction:
The engines will be looking for footprints in this content, and while I don't expect penalties, don't be surprised to see vast numbers of links ignored. What I'd suggest is that you only sponsor an organization or event that you feel strongly enough about to do so regardless of the potential for improved ranking.
The tactic:
Forum Posting/Blog Comments. I lump these together because even though they are quite different is many ways, they are quite similar in that they attract link spam like flies.
There are close to zero scenarios where I can see a link drop in a forum or blog comment as having any signal value to a search engine. The only viable scenario is a heavily moderated venue within a vertical where the parent site has shown consistent historical attraction of links from credible sources.
2013 prediction:
A continued increase in spam, and more blogs eliminating comments altogether.
The tactic:
Social link building. I could devote a few hundred pages to social link building, but for this column, I'm zeroing in on one key aspect of the social graph. It's biased based on human nature, and the metrics are not able to account for this yet.
What I mean by this is best illustrated by an example. I am much more likely to become a fan of or "like", or tweet a link to, or +1 a page/site about the band Maroon 5 then I am for the brand site for Tinactin jock itch spray.
There are certain aspects of our lives that we just don't feel the need to engage with in an online social manner. So from a search rank perspective, how does a search engine account for the fact that a brand might be absolutely fabulous but have very little to show for itself in the social graph?
2013 prediction:
The activity that takes place in what's called the social graph is obviously way too important for the search engines to ignore. But human nature will always skew the social graph in ways that aren't algorithmically easy to identify.
Skittles has 80 trillion likes while RID Head Lice Remover has 3? The engines are going to have to hire psychologists to decipher what the social link graph really means.
But forget the engines for a minute. Social has huge implications for link spreading and click traffic, and marketers who understand this and how to take advantage of it are going to be stars. Call me insane, but social is not about search.
The tactic:
Guest posting. Guest posting on a blog in and of itself is nothing special. In many ways it's no different than article marketing or press releases.
The end goal is the same: content containing a link to your site is placed on another site. But all guest posting opportunities are not created equal, and that's the key here.
2013 prediction:
The A-list blogs will be highly coveted destinations and pursued for guest post placement, while those who are not as selective about what they allow on their blogs will nose-dive.
What's an A-list blog? It's a blog that has been around a while, has attracted an audience and credible links, shows up on the social graph, and doesn't allow anyone who asks to be a guest blogger.
Another form of curation is developing here. Not just the curation of credible blogs, but the curation of credible guest bloggers. Selectivity is crucial to success.
The tactic:
Press releases. I would love to see data showing the change in numbers of embedded links in press releases from 1996 to today.
In some ways I'd argue that not having any links in your press release makes it more credible. But then how would the engines know about your site? And there's the problem.
Most people today issue press releases not to announce something truly newsworthy, but rather because it's another way to shove a link or two or three, anchor text included, down the search engines throats. I think I'm going to issue a press release filled with links that says press release links don't work.
2013 prediction:
The secret to effective use of press releases is in where your place them and in formatting the version that's on your own site differently the one you send out via a wire service. If you aren't putting your press releases about your company on your own site, that's a mistake and a huge opportunity lost.
What content would you trust more, content you find on 7million-press-releases.com, or the press release you place on your own site which has its own existing and credible link profile?
The tactic:
Mobile. There's many ways to play mobile. You could create an app, a mobile version of your site, both, or partner with an existing app.
I absolutely love mobile from a link building perspective, but some marketers are missing many easy gets.
You can implement mobile linking strategies for clients who don't have a mobile site or an app or a webcast. You just have to be creative and aware. One example: any restaurant that takes reservations can pursue inclusion in already existing restaurant finder/reservation apps.
2013 prediction:
Those who don't take the time to learn the potential and available mobile opportunities will be left behind. Having a website is fine, and thinking of your site as the mother ship of your online presence is fine as well, but in 2013 the mother ship by herself is lonely. She needs to make sure she has plenty of smaller ships orbiting around her, some quite independently, but all still contributing to a common end game.

Final Thoughts

I know this will sound like heresy, but I hope in 2013 people might finally stop calling what I and others like me do "link building". My business card says I'm an online content publicist, and has always said that. I'm only called a link builder because that's the industry term that stuck. I've never felt it properly described or encompassed what we do.
The purpose of the online content publicist is to help content get discovered, and not just via a search result. That discovery can take place in any number of ways, and today, more than ever, it's less about links and more about discovery. Recognizing the growing number of ways your content, your company, your product, your services can be discovered, found, and shared.

Link wisely!

Source:- By Eric Ward On Searchenginewatch.com

The Benefits of Business Blogging for Visitors & Links

In the age of social media the attention that business blogs used to have is diminishing; traded for the instant gratification and ease of tweeting and posting short pieces to Facebook with a picture of your latest product or special of the day.
Don't get me wrong, social media is a fantastic tool for marketing and can't be ignored (in fact, it deserves a lot of attention), but blogging on a regular basis serves a wide array of purposes outside of what can be realized via social media.
Many of the benefits of blogging are specific to industries. This article will cover two broad areas and rely on you, the educated reader, to understand how these areas apply to you or you can ask questions in the comments below.
The areas we're going to focus on are:
  1. The benefits of blogging for visitors
  2. The benefits of blogging for links
At the end of this article I'm going to include a “quick tips” section. Let's be honest – it isn’t always easy to make the time or get the motivation to blog as regularly as you should and not everyone has the budget to get their staff doing it. I'll be providing a few quick tips on how to get motivated and how to dream up topics when you've written about the same subject hundreds of times.

Blogging for Visitors

When blogs first hit the web in a real way they were a central mechanism for informing and communicating with one's website visitors and customers. Businesses would blog their specials, new product updates, industry news, holidays and pretty much everything that had to do with their business.
For businesses that have moved their core communications off of blogs and onto social media, you're missing huge opportunities.
When we're considering visitors the first thing we need to do is separate the purpose and expectations a user will have when visiting a blog. Because of social media, a blog is a place one goes for in-depth information and not to see the daily special. Understanding the expecting change a visitor will have forces us down a path beneficial for both users and our analytics.

Current Visitors

When you're blogging for your current visitors (i.e., visitors that entered outside your blog or who know you already and simply use your blog as an information source) the key is no longer to post daily updates on daily deals or the such, that's the stuff of social media.
For this group, your blog is your opportunity to reinforce that you know what you're talking about and can be trusted. You can go outside your core niche but stay in related fields.
For example, if you run a food tour company, blogging about great restaurant openings with reviews or even some outstanding recipes would be wins. Keeping visitors updated on weather changes is the stuff of social media or a weather widget embedded on your site.
Your blog is where you build authority. You'll convert elsewhere on your site; your blog is where you reinforce the credibility that will turn into conversion.

New Visitors

Personally, one of my biggest focuses when thinking up blog topics is how it can be used to acquire new visitors. Because a blog post is on your domain, it can be used to drive traffic to more conversion oriented pages and best of all, if done right, you'll have established trust before they move on.
Let's take as our example the same food tour site noted above. Now let's say I'm a traveler visiting a city for the first time and decide to look up “best fine dining in New City” and find a blog review on a new fine dining restaurant.
Regardless of whether the review was positive or negative, you've got a visitor to your site who you know has money, you know likes good food, and who now appreciates your opinion. If the review isn't positive you may want to make a couple of recommendations to fine dining restaurants in the city people would enjoy.
This also applies to any product, service, analysis, etc. you may post about. The win here is that you have a visitor in your target demographic and interest set and they are relying on your opinion.
Essentially, blogs, done right, can be excellent sources of search traffic (and traffic from other sources of course) and if you've posted on topic, that traffic will be targeted properly.
You'll likely find that your blog traffic converts at a lower rate than the traffic for phrases more targeted to their needs (for example “food tours new city”) and blogging is time consuming so you may be asking, “Why would I do that?” Apart from this additional traffic there is one key SEO benefit…

Blogging for Links

Blogging gives you the opportunity to create pages related to your business but based more on timely information passing rather than the sales cycle. While your corporate website should be geared towards getting visitors into the conversion funnel, on your blog you have more latitude to create copy that is information-based.
Essentially, this is where you can generate internal link points based on providing real information of interest. While the ideal link appears when someone searches for information and finds your blog (see above) or finds the post via social media or other means and decides it's great information and posts a link to it on their website as a resource (perhaps in their own blog), most links, especially early on, will be generated manually.
To this end I pose the question: which link is more likely to be appreciated on a third party website: a link to your homepage or a link to a post that discussed a related topic?
Let's take the simplest example and that's a discussion forum or blog (I'll leave the debate of the merits of these links to others however it serves as a good example as they exist in virtually every niche). If I'm visiting a forum, answers site or blog and there's a thread discussing great food in new city, it's going to be easier and more effective to leave a comment, noting that you're a local and visit many restaurants and wrote a series of reviews of some of the more popular locations, with a link to your blog reviews category than to simply link to your homepage with a little comment, “I like restaurant x. Had a great steak there.”
On a more advanced level, if you find an industry authority site that has some great content, you can follow the authors, wait until one writes an article of interest and where you have additional information or a differing opinion, write a solid piece on the topic and either include it in the comments of the article or send it directly to the author via social media simply noting you thought their piece was great but there were some points missing.
You may not directly get a link in a one-of scenario (or you may – it happens) but done repeatedly (but not so much that you're annoying or writing to a low quality) you will develop your reputation with key industry editors and/or writers as a resource and it will pay off in the end with a link and a boost to your reputation.
Another easy way to generate links to your blog posts in a way that isn't spam is via systems like Zemanta and other content distribution systems. As a note, I don't support systems where you pay on a per-link basis, but at least in the case of Zemanta you're purchasing impressions of your content to get it in front of bloggers as they write based on the keywords they use. Whether they link to you is up to them and whether your content is a good match.

Blogging Tips

How can you keep dreaming up topics? All of us at some point may run out of steam.
Here are a few techniques you can use to keep your blog fresh, even after years of writing:
  • Write about news events. It's your job as a business owner to keep up to date with what's going on in your industry. You might as well take what you have to do and use it as an opportunity to be a resource for such information and provide your take on events.
  • Write about product or service launches, changes in your industry and related areas. For example, while an update to Chrome may not directly impact SEO, it's related by its developing company and impact on website users so it makes our list of applicable blog subjects.
  • Watch Google Trends and Twitter. Watch what industry leaders are talking about or that have a large volume of interest and write to that (understanding that if it's a timely topic like the Super Bowl your content won't rank or likely ever be seen before the interest drops). In the case of volume, you'll the writing to attract visitors and in the case of authorities chatting, you'll likely be writing primarily for links so it will have to be more authoritative.

Conclusion

Blogging is hard. You need to set a schedule and stick to it as best you can.
Try to start out at a volume you can maintain. Better to commit to a weekly post and throw in an extra one if a hot topic arises than to start with a daily blog post and find you don't have the time and just do them sporadically when you can.
You also want to balance your posts and divide them into logical categories so people can find what they're looking for. If you've written a number of restaurant reviews over the years, don't make your readers sift through dozens or hundreds of posts on ranging topics to find them. Create a category where all this information is located for users and for link points.
Now go, either revive your blog or start one and stick to your schedule. Use it for your visitors and for link points; just remember, if you aren't adding value to someone's site with the content on your page, then it's not good enough.
A rule of thumb: if your content isn't of a higher quality than the places you'd like to acquire a link, then don't try. You may just burn a bridge you could use later.

Source:- searchenginewatch.com