Liz Welsh | ![]()

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608-335-2363
| elizwelsh at gmail.com
creative writing | technical writing | seo/sem
Who You Are
A small, Wisconsin-based business in need of well-written, affordable marketing or instructional materials including website copy, commercials, literature, and more.
Who I Am
A near-east side Madison resident and UW-Madison graduate who believes in supporting local businesses and nonprofits and who happens to have a knack for writing punchy print ads, technical articles, Google ads, and more.
To download the latest version of FlashPlayer, Please visit http://www.adobe.com/shockwave/download/
Liz Welsh | ![]()

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608-335-2363
| elizwelsh at gmail.com
Lee Bakogiannakis, 2dg: Sound and Vision
When the time comes to put his legacy in order, Lee Bakogiannakis wants to be remembered for his contributions to the Greek wedding video industry. But for now he’ll settle for being known as the guy who “made Bon Jovi cool again.”
by Elizabeth Welsh
November, 2008
Meeting the Enterprise Distribution Video Challenge
With a 15,000-strong employee base and offices scattered around the world, commercial real estate services firm Cushman & Wakefield needed a reliable way for senior management to communicate with staff. They chose a content delivery solution from Ignite Technologies, Inc.
by Elizabeth Welsh
October 15, 2008
“There it was! We were on the cover of the upcoming issue of EventDV!!! And the article by Liz Welsh was even cooler! I was going out of my mind… like a rock band member hearing their song on the radio for the first time.”
“Liz, Just finished reading the article. It’s awesome! You did such a wonderful job. We’re so grateful. In the words of Russell Hammond to Rolling Stone reporter William Miller in Almost Famous, thanks for making us ‘look cool.’ ” - Loyd & Hazel Calomay, Red 5 Studios
“More people are finding me now through my web site than the ads on the Isthmus. That was not happening last year. You Are a Genius*, Thank you.” - Tim Quigley
*Disclaimer: Liz Welsh is not actually a genius. She just plays one on the internet. Serious side effects may occur when she is paid such inflated compliments. The most common are swelling of the head, bloating of the ego, narcissism, and inflation of hourly rate. Consult with your doctor before emailing Liz. Women who are pregnant or nursing should not go have a drink with Liz (all others should feel free). If you feel Liz is right for you, set up a meeting by emailing elizwelsh at gmail.com.
LizWelsh.com wins first-page results for LogicTraX
In mid-March we optimized the LogicTraX half of LogicHaul.com, a railcar fleet management company. We took 10 important words that they wished to be found under on Google and other search engines, and tweaked their site so that when searchers looking for their service typed those words into Google, they would be able to find them. Prior to our work, you couldn’t find them at all on search engines when typing in those terms.
Just two weeks later, analytics data from Google, Yahoo, and MSN show that 9 out of 10 of those keywords now bring up the company on the first page of search engine results! (The 10th keyword brings up the company in the middle of the second page.) Here are the results:
Google:
Yahoo:
MSN:
It’s not every day my name or anything I’m associated with is used in the same sentence as the word hot, which is why I’m using this rare event to link to an article I wrote for the March issue of EventDV titled, “Meet the New Doc,” which one Video University blog poster described as “HOT” (in all caps no less) and another poster said “should be read and reread several times.” I wouldn’t recommend that if you’re not in the industry or if you’re not shopping for a wedding videographer, but if digital videography appeals to you at all as an art, you might give it a once-over. The artists interviewed are clearly what make the article hot–check out the links to their work at the bottom of the article and you’ll see what I mean.
LizWelsh.com takes Quigley Decks & Fence from no presence in Google to the very first page, very first result (in under one month).
In late December I was contacted by an Irish home improvement contractor based in Madison, Wisconsin, and serving greater southern Wisconsin. He had a website, but it was MIA in the search engines. His website was virtually invisible to potential customers searching for home improvement contractors in southern Wisconsin, a fence builder, or a deck builder, etc., on Google. In my research, I scrolled through to page 11 on Google searching for his site, to no avail.
The day after Christmas we met downtown at Espresso Royale. Over coffee I explained how I would research pertinent keywords for his industry and optimize every page of his website so that it would have a much better chance of showing up prominently in search engines.
One handshake later, I got to work on his site. I completed my work — which included an overhaul of his website copy as well as writing new title tags, meta description, and meta keywords (as well as some minor graphics work and analytics implementation) — on January 14.
Just shy of one month later, you couldn’t ask for better results. What’s more, the vast majority of competing sites that Quigley Decks & Fence shares the first page of Google with are directories of businesses. This is a huge edge over his competition.
A few example searches:
decks and fences southern wisconsin
December 2007: not found
February 2008: page 1, listing 1
home improvement contractor southern wisconsin
December 2007: not found
February 2008: page 1, listing 2
home improvement contractor cottage grove wi:
December 2007: not found
February 2008: page 1, listing 3
home improvement contractor lake mills wi:
December 2007: not found
February 2008: page 1, listing 5
home improvement contractor madison wi:
December 2007: not found
February 2008: page 1, listing 8
home improvement contractor fitchburg wi:
December 2007: not found
February 2008: page 1, listing 9
home improvement contractor middleton:
December 2007: not found
February 2008: page 1, listing 9
Other kids had lemonade stands. My “twin cousin” and I — at 8 years old both budding ambitious (not to mention shady) businesspeople — opened a laundry stand on the sidewalk in his upscale Los Alimitos neighborhood one summer. We thought we were very shrewd because we collected trusting neighbors’ laundry, and rather than wash it, we simply spritzed it with Febreze (or whatever the the ’80’s version of Febreze was). In no time at all, laundry was finished, folded, and returned to glowing customers who raved about how fresh their laundry smelled. We laughed all the way to our piggy banks.
The next morning none of our customers returned. Looking back, I believe that they probably realized the impossibility of laundry being washed and dried in 20 minutes and were simply indulging us for a day. But nevertheless we realized that our business model (cheating) had short-lived success. What would we do next? It wasn’t likely we’d be able to be as beguiling with a lemonade stand. Perhaps we could secretly make Crystal Light and sell it as bona fide lemonade, but of course that would be just as much work, so what was the point?
That was the beginning and the end of my unethical business practices. Unfortunately, in the SEO world, like anywhere else, there are still some 8-year-old laundry stand kids masquerading as professionals, practicing “Febreze” techniques and guaranteeing first-page results. Their tactics sometimes work–until Google catches on and blacklists the websites that have implemented their changes. These SEO’ers take shortcuts like placing unrelated keywords (like Paris Hilton) in their meta tags, alt text, or CSS layers. They stack keywords (like cheese cheese cheese cheese wisconsin cheese wisconsin cheese wisconsin cheese) to fake out search engines. They sardine-stuff sentences (sentences at their loosest definition) in alt text, or hide keywords in the content of the page–keywords so tiny and faint that you’d need your 5.75 power reading glasses to make them out. The list goes on and on: bait-and-switch spam, redirects, doorway pages, cloaking, cybersquatting, and more.
Fixing the devastating effects the above practices can have is time-consuming and expensive. Once a customer’s website disappears from the search engines for having been caught cheating, it’s unlikely these charlatan SEO’ers are going to get a lot of customer loyalty. So it’s on to the next block, to prey on some other unassuming website owner. But once word gets around, the game is up.
Of course, there’s always selling lemonade.
It began as most friendships do: all seafood, clogs, and ice parties. A few days later, naturally, we were drinking bubble tea under ice cube lights. Before long we were talking of cowboy boots and learning how to make gelato. Naturally, as friendships go, we spent endless hours talking of mini & toy labradoodles, liposuction photos, and guitar lesson scams.
It was like we had known each other all our lives, and could talk about anything, from lighthouses to ski resorts to Superman Tees (2 for $30).
Was it a bad sign when the subject of annoying ringtones came up? Wedding planning? Thinning brows? Ted Koppel? I’ll be awaiting my gmail inbox destiny.
It’s a fun exercise to notice what Google AdSense advertisers make of your conversations by way of their keyword-targeted advertising in gmail. From what I’ve seen, advertisers have a great deal to learn about more focused targeting when advertising via AdWords. The only ads that have applied throughout the course of my many email exchanges with this friend are ski resort ads and the tactful dearth of ads when our conversations turned to subjects dealing with, ahem, “making out” and “stalking.” For these conversations, the right-hand column of gmail was conspicuously, and thankfully, blank.
What I’m getting at is proof that while pay-per-click advertising is accessible, it can be deceptively straightforward. Companies would do well not to take matters into their own hands and waste their money with keywords or ad groups that display their ads to an audience that has no interest in their product. There is a huge difference in ad campaigns targeting searchers and targeting content areas, such as gmail or other websites containing content related to the terms in your ad. It’s not a one-ad-fits-all model. But the majority of companies still haven’t learned this. Professionals who have experience researching keywords and market trends, developing highly targeted keyword lists, and discerning between various display methods (content, search, email) and knowing how to go after each audience, are going to save companies time and money in the long run.
Clients with websites dominated by Flash (whose only text is embedded in graphics and video) sometimes ask me how to rank higher in search engines for their industry. My answer is simple. Content is Queen.
Do what they do with their lyrics, but in html-visible text on your site, not audio or graphics.
Take, for example, this song: http://youtube.com/watch?v=NOHXPNvVEwo
Notice the the focus and repetition of the keywords. Emulate Queen’s lyric length and poetic placement of keywords.
Write a magnum opus on industrial equipment sales, stationary, or the decks you build. If it helps, rent a smoke machine and wear a shiny white body suit in the process.
It’s inevitable: new technology catches up with you no matter how old school you try to remain.
Until recently, I swore I’d never show my face on Facebook. Seo was the last name of an up-and-coming activist named Danny, blackberry was my favorite Kool-Aid flavor, and CSS … wasn’t that a TV show about crime in Miami? Email was instant enough for me. In the good old days I had IM-less relationships where we held hands, looked into each other’s eyes, and even (gasp) called one another. Just last year, a successful internet entrepreneur I worked for thought LOL stood for “lots of luck,” and I played Scrabble on a board.
Yet tonight I tutored a student from Korea learning English using a NYT article about Facebook.com. This Saturday’s lesson: create a profile for her, complete with an arm’s-length pic of herself looking thoughtful. She’ll be throwing sheep in no time. (And maybe, since she’s younger, she can help me figure out what that’s about.)
And then I helped my daughter create a “blob” on Wordpress. She had overheard me on the phone with a friend (and gifted writer) about her new blog, and suddenly she had to make a “blob” too. (My answer, of course: “You already have one. It’s called your room — go clean it up.”) Hers became one of the 120,000 new blogs created today, the 10th anniversary of the coining of the term “weblog.”
It is ironic to me that I helped two younger people — one of them from the most wired nation in the world — still learning how to write and speak in English utilize technology that will very soon pass me by me at break-bandwidth speed, leaving them to teach me.
In the mean time, Facebook just announced they’re teaming up with Match.com for a Little Black Book dating application . . . wish me LOL on finding someone who doesn’t know what that means either.
I’m on Cloud Nine. Or rather, Cloud Nine Creative’s website, gathering some last-minute facts for an article I’m writing about the multimedia company for an upcoming magazine article. For the past couple of hours I’ve been reading two issues of WedLuxe, their luxury wedding magazine sold throughout Canada. I went to bed day-dreaming of fairy tales, Prince Charming, and honeymoons. Visions of Vera Wang gowns, pint-size ring-bearers clad in Perry Ellis, Swarovski crystals, and Thailand retreats spun in my head. But I didn’t fall asleep. I couldn’t fall asleep.
I lay there with words ringing in my ears: decadent, artisan, haute couture. I lay there remembering my wedding. Not so luxe. Not so long ago. And no so lasting.
No Carmela Sutera gown for me. I wore one from JCPenny’s — a pretty white prom dress, in fact, that I returned with the receipt for a refund afterwards. The ceremony? I left the planning to my then husband-to-be, who arranged for us to walk down the aisle to a Smashing Pumpkins song at his home church in Kokomo, Indiana. (His uncle forgot to press play.) Our reception was held in the church basement with folding chairs and paper tablecloths. We dined on cheese chunks and grapes and opened K-Mart presents from selfless relatives who could barely afford to pay their trailer park rent. The cake we froze to eat on our first anniversary got thrown out.
In the premiere issue of WedLuxe, editor-in-chief Angela Desveaux waxes poetic on what a luxury is, exactly. She says, “Depending on who you ask, luxury can be defined in many ways. Some will describe objects of opulence while others speak of intangible qualities like time, passion and excellence.”
Since my wedding eight years ago, I’ve come to appreciate the fine details involved in wedding celebrations, in large part thanks to EventDV magazine, a publication I became involved with as a result of my background in film/video and writing. I was thrust into the world of weddings — a world I didn’t belong in but now feel, in some small way, a part of. I’ve come to know many of the North American players in the wedding world — filmmakers, in particular, who make art films that would blow you away. I’ve begun to see what all the fuss is about.
But as for opulence, it’s something I write about, not experience. Unless of course you subscribe to Desveaux’s second interpretation of luxury. After a $10K custody battle and half a decade of heartache, I am surrounded by those intangible luxuries she speaks of. Not just my darling daughter, but also my ex-husband, whose closeness to us is remarkable. Unconventional family unit, yes. But we vacation together, cook together, laugh together, and love our daughter together. Today he watched the Packer game with Granny as I worked. He made her dinner, and dessert.
Our Edy’s ice cream with Hershey’s syrup may not hold a candle to a monogrammed cake created by a world-renowned pastry chef, but the warmth in this broken family is felt. It is nearly tangible, and as I prepare to try yet again to fall asleep tonight, dabbing the liquid one of my dogs just vomited on the carpet with Brawny, I feel blessed. I feel like I am on cloud nine.
When I became certified as a — drumroll please — Yahoo Ambassador at a former company, my colleagues and I joked that they should start addressing me as Madam Ambassador. I have always wondered how many brainstorm sessions took place before the Yahoo folks settled on “Ambassador.” And was it supposed to be funny, like my coworker whose official title is CSS guru?
For those of you who don’t know, the Yahoo Search Marketing Ambassador Program was developed to provide training and professional recognition from Yahoo Search Marketing to search engine marketers who complete all web-based training and receive a passing score on the final test. Though not required, before becoming certified, as with pay-per-click platform Google AdWords, I honed my expertise with real experience creating and managing hundreds of online ad campaigns, driving tons of traffic to local business who might otherwise not have been on the first page of Yahoo or Google. There are a lot of Yahoo Ambassadors out there with the logo and title but no real experience or proven results. Those of us who have that deserve a title a bit more serious, don’t you think?
Years ago I worked as a mental health professional at a residential school for boys who were hard-of-hearing or deaf and who also struggled with issues like mental illness and developmental delays. There was one little boy diagnosed with sociopathy, who I’ll call Tommy. At the time, Tommy was 13 (but his physical appearance, as well as his emotional maturity, were stuck at about 7 years old). He had moments of pit-bull like rage and yet he could be as yielding as a small puppy. I remember him standing outside, as the other boys played football in the courtyard, kicking his foot against a brick wall, head down, lonely and dejected because they wouldn’t let him join in. But the sweetest memory I have of him was him watching those old Yahoo! commercials — the ones where a cowboy would yell, “Yahooooooooooo!” Tommy was so tickled by these commercials, and when the voice Yahoo’ed, Tommy (who was almost completely deaf) sang right along–with gusto–in his shrillest voice, “Yaheeeeeeeeeeee!”
I guess it’s one of those things you had to be there for. But it makes me laugh out loud to this day, as does the title of Yahoo Ambassador. But to answer my own question, is there a sillier title? Yaheeeeeee!
Last week when my mother was visiting (and giving me her monthly “if you just rinsed off your dishes right after eating…” lecture) we rented Premonition (with Sandra Bullock). The eerie concept of premonitions has been haunting me since. I think I had one a few months ago when I arrived at the office feeling suddenly very troubled, almost shaking with some unknown worry. I went into the bathroom and cried, but I had no idea why. I felt as though something bad was going to happen, and I phoned my best friend Bob about it.
Days passed with no explanation. About two weeks later Bob was mowing the lawn at his Manitowoc campground and was attacked by bees. He experienced major swelling in his throat and began to feel faint. He made his way indoors, and finding it hard to stand up, he dialed 911. While on the phone, he collapsed, smashing his head on the way down. Blood spurted on the linoleum, the table, and the walls. EMS arrived to find him blue, his eyes rolled back into his head, just in time to save his life.
I never connected the events until I began searching for my own premonitions after the movie. I’m not one to believe in things that don’t have a scientific explanation, but who doesn’t think it would be cool to have super powers?
I had a dream last night that my very pregnant friend had a baby (could it have been because her husband IM’ed me that she had gone into labor?), but the newborn was able to not only smile and laugh but sit up in bed, crawl, even do a bit of walking, and most impressive of all - ask me in a complete sentence with no grammatical errors to put her in her swing. In the dream, no one but me thought these things were out of the ordinary, and I grew exasperated trying to make them see how she was not at all normal - she was very, very special. Now, I’d like to think my premonition means Isabel will be extraordinarily gifted (knowing her parents, ocupop principal Michael Nieling and wife Sara, this wouldn’t be at all surprising). Will my premonition come true? Stay tuned to find out. I got a text message at 5 this morning announcing her birth. I’ll call later, and if the baby gets on the phone and talks to me, well, then, I think I’ll quit my day job and become a fortune teller.
The most fascinating thing about the movie Premonition was that Sandra Bullock experienced seven days of the week out of order. One day her husband was dead. The next day, he was eating Cheerios and reading the paper before work. The next, his decapitated head rolled out of his coffin. Thursday, they made love. It was weird, and I had to watch the special features to figure out what was going on.
Some weeks I feel the same–of course not to that degree, but sometimes it seems like my days don’t flow logically. One day, tons of leads come in and it looks as though I’ll have to turn down work. The next, I’ll spend my day willing emails to pop up in my inbox. I guess that’s the curse of working for yourself rather than at a 9 to 5 job with a predictable amount of money coming in on a regular basis. I’ve spoken to some people in related fields who have given up on the solo gig. Going it alone can be scary, sure, and it takes a certain kind of personality (insane) to remain unfazed by the fact that some days there’s no more coffee, no more toilet paper, and no more money.
I went to High Tech Happy Hour last night at Novation Campus (not for the free beer and food), and from what I saw there, I’m not alone. I met so many creative, brave, smart people who hung out their shingle because they believed in themselves. They believe that what they can produce alone is superior to what might be produced elsewhere. Take, for example, Bliss* Video Productions’ Kristin*, who I recently profiled in EventDV magazine. Her bluntly stated goal when she left her steady job at a video production company to launch her own business: to create a wedding video “that actually doesn’t suck.” This, I believe, is a testament to the integrity of people who go into business for themselves. They don’t do it because it’s profitable (of course, that would be nice, and in Kristin*’s case, that came true), or because it’s going to advance their career. They do it because of an instinctual drive to do whatever it takes to be the best (setting your own hours and being able to work in your PJs has nothing to do with it, I swear). Another example is my neighbor Penelope Trunk, who after digging herself out of the debris on 9/11, instinctively traded her Wall St.-based business development job for a home-based one as a writer and mother in Madison. It’s my hope that we will recognize this integrity and sensitivity to life’s nuances in one another and support sole proprietorships, freelancers, and small, local businesses. This way we all win.
On a related note, if anyone’s looking for a palm reading or dream interpretation, I charge $25/hour.
Liz Welsh emailed me yesterday. Although I have been known to talk to myself, I haven’t yet reached the point where I’m emailing myself. This was a different Liz Welsh, from Kentucky. She had wanted to buy this domain name and found that it was already in use–by me. So she challenged me to a Scrabulous game–winner takes the URL.
No, really, we hit it off. Interestingly, this Liz Welsh has her own marketing company, too. Lucky for me, she outsources quite a bit when she needs marketing materials created for her clients, so we chatted about collaborating.
Anyway, this parallel universe me (has anyone really ever been to Kentucky?) didn’t help me with my latest worry that I’m very average. Lately, everywhere I go I hear, “Oh yeah, we’ve met before” (no, we haven’t), or “You look familiar,” or “I swear I know you from somewhere. Do you play volleyball?” (not a chance). I figure if I look like so many other people, I must be extremely average looking. Now I come to find out that there are three other Elizabeth Welsh’s in Liz Welsh’s hometown of Louisville. How many are in Madison? I’m afraid to Google that.
This got me thinking about what separates me from other Liz Welsh’s. And then about what makes LizWelsh.com unique. And I came back to an email I had sent to a prospective collaborator describing my services, and I think I found it: “Basically, I do what fancy big-city companies do, but I do it myself without all the silly jargon and b.s.”
At a conference I spoke at last summer, I was stuck listening to a dry presentation at 8 in the morning. To make matters worse, they had run out of coffee. So to keep myself awake I struck my best “this is fascinating, I’m going to take notes” pose and tallied buzzwords on my notepad to see which geek-speak was used most often in that hour and a half. Would “price point” win? “Vertical”? What about “platform”? “Next-generation” anyone? 3 points for “algo,” and 10 for “B2B.” “Cononical,” “RLT,” “ROI,” “turn-key,” and “2.0.”
As fun as that exercise was, I do appreciate the need for industries to use jargon–I guess. But at the same time, much like I wouldn’t speak to a client in Spanch (inside joke), I won’t speak in Googlish either, or use search-enginisms, in person or on my website (if you catch me doing this, please call me on it).
In sum, what I’m trying to say is that when you work with me, WYSIWYG.
Oops, I did it again.
One purpose of search engine optimization–to get a high ranking in Google–gets so much play that it’s sometimes easy to forget an equally if not more important purpose: Making your website more useful and usable so that you can convert website visitors into customers. Not cyber-people but flesh-and-blood people who will actually walk through your door with real-live Amex cards in their wallets.
In a former position of mine, we were very successful at getting clients on page one of search engines in the natural results as well as the paid results (the ads you see in the right column of a Google search results page). However, there were some whose websites we couldn’t “optimize” for conversions simply because their templates and content was pretty fixed. In these cases, they could see that they were on page one or two of Google or Yahoo, and that they were getting online traffic as a result of this, but they weren’t seeing that that they were making any more money. Naturally, they didn’t want to continue to pay for a service that wasn’t proving its value.
“Companies spend immeasurable billions on their Web sites,” says David Hallerman, senior analyst at eMarketer. “In most cases, without those central meeting grounds for companies and consumers, all the measured billions spent on online advertising such as paid search—which looks to drive traffic to company sites—would be for naught.”
On the flip side, you may have a website that is successful at converting visitors into buyers and is on the first page of Google. Why then, you might ask, would you invest in search engine advertising (pay-per-click tools like AdWords)? In large part because it’s been shown that you can double your traffic by running a paid campaign alongside top rankings on the organic side, according to a prominent search engine marketer who also says, “Being at the top of Google organic search is the top priority for just about every online marketing company that knows what that top placement would mean to a company. The difference between being at position#1 and #11, in many cases, means the difference between a profitable company and a company scraping by.”
On a related note, in their book, Professional Search Engine Optimization with PHP: A Developer’s Guide to SEO, authors Cristian Darie and Jaimie Sirovich touched on what they call the “fusion of technology and marketing”: “Search engine marketing is a field where technology and marketing are both critical and interdependent, because small changes in the implementation of a web site can make you or break you in search engine rankings. Furthermore, the fusion of technology and marketing know-how can create web site features that attract more visitors.”
This is what I call the synergy of search engine advertising and search engine optimization. They are the yin and the yang operating on different forces through different means. One is immediate, one is patient and slow. Together, they bring harmony to the world–Ok, I’m going overboard here. But you get the idea.
Usually postcards are sent to cheer up a friend feeling blue or let someone back home know that even while trekking through the Puerto Rican rainforest, they are what’s on your mind.
But I sent a handful the other day that I’m afraid don’t paint a sunny picture at all. Instead, the text that I chose for the cards, which I mailed to local businesses I’m interested in working with, is bleak and alarming: “Not on page one of Google? Why even have a website?”
But I didn’t mean to sound abrasive. I took my inspiration from the fact that “90 percent of searchers do not look past the third page of results, and 62 percent of searchers don’t go past one page,” according to research by iProspect and Jupiter Research.
It was my way of reminding the Small-Marts of southern Wisconsin that they can compete with its Wal-Marts via affordable, accessible search engine marketing.
If you’ve arrived at my website after receiving this postcard–or for any reason, really, thanks for visiting. Please poke around my site and contact me if you’d like to receive a complimentary website analysis and search engine marketing estimate.
The other day my mother, who was visiting from northern Wisconsin, kindly offered to drop me off at a local bookstore with my laptop while she shopped for shoes. Unfortunately there was no WiFi available, so I used the hour and a half to browse the marketing section. I grabbed a stack of books that piqued my interest and settled down into a cushy chair. I picked up the first on the stack and dug in before discovering that I knew the author, noted thought leader David Meerman Scott–or knew of him, more like. During my two-year stint as a copy editor for EContent magazine, where he is a contributing editor, I had read all his columns. I tore through this latest book of his, The New Rules of Marketing and PR How to Use News Releases, Blogs, Podcasting, Viral Marketing, and Online Media to Reach Buyers Directly, in about 45 mins. I’m usually a slow, deliberate reader but I had limited time to decide which one of dozen books at my feet to purchase, so I really didn’t have time to waste.
In one of the chapters toward the end, his notion that today PR and search engine marketing are one and the same intrigued me, and I wanted to remember that and include it on my site. I had never heard that sentiment before, but I guess that’s why he’s a thought leader.
I didn’t have a notebook or pen (or, I later discovered, enough cash to buy the book, even though it is affordable), so when I got home I revved up my laptop and dowloaded his free ebook with the same title and grabbed a snippet on the importance of search: “Particularly when your buyers search, they use the words and phrases important to them. Once you’ve built an online relationship, you can sell into the needs and potential solutions that have been defined, but you need to help them find you first.”
And then I Wikipedia’ed “thought leadership.”
"Liz has the ability to polish even the roughest stones into gems. She is comfortable with content of all types - from professionally written prose, to technical jargon, to marketing copy. She will work hard to make you (and your business) look good."
Michelle Manafy,
Editor-in-chief,
EContent & Intranets


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