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August 30, 2010

Internet Lingo….

by admin — Categories: Website Marketing2 Comments


I thought that this might help in getting more familiar with the lingo that is used for internet marketing.

Website
Domain name: yoursite.com (dontworksohard.com is my domain name)
Web hosting: publishing a website so it is viewable by others on the internet
Usability: website ease of use for visitors
HTML: a programming code used to display content on the web
CMS: Content Management System, or a tool that lets non-technical folks create & update web pages without knowing HTML
META tags: HTML code that gives information about a web page; most often seen in the title area of your web browser & in search engine results
Link: a connection from one web page to another one
Flash: an animation technology that can create attractive, but generally less useful, websites
Splash page: a web page that precedes the home page of a website
Above the fold: the portion of a web page viewable without scrolling
Landing page: the first page on your website a visitor sees after clicking an ad
Cloaking: giving search engines different content that what humans see on a web page (something frowned upon by search engines and could get you banned)
Search engine marketing jargon
SEM: search engine marketing, the broad practice of using search engines to bring visitors to your website
Local search: a web search to find a business in a specific city or geographic area
SEO: search engine optimization, or the process of making your website easier to find in search engines like Google
Black Hat SEO: optimization techniques that (intentionally) go against guidelines from Google and other search engines
SERP: Search Engine Results Pages, or a list of websites returned by a search engine in response to a query
SEP: Search Engine Position – your website’s position among search engine results
PR: Page Rank, Google’s measure of a web pages’ importance on a scale of 1-10
Keywords: the words and phrases people use in search engines to find things
Long tail keywords: obscure or very targeted keywords (coined by Chris Anderson)
Keyword research: the process of finding which keywords are most popular & relevant to your hotel
On-page or On-site Optimization: things you do on your hotel’s website to make it rank higher in search engines
Off-page or Off-site Optimization: tactics performed on other websites to increase your site’s ranking
Inbound/Outbound Links: links from other websites to your websites, and vice versa
Link building campaign: an organized effort to get more inbound links (to increase search position)
Reciprocal linking: the practice of exchanging links with another website to get referrals and increase search rank
Algorithms: the way a search engines sorts & positions websites

Pay-Per-Click advertising jargon
PPC or Pay Per Click: an method of advertising – usually on search engines – where you only pay for people who actually visit your site
AdWords: Google’s popular PPC advertising program
Keyword match types: different settings with various levels of focus (broad=all queries containing keyword; phrase=only those keywords in that order; exact=only that exact keyword phrase, and nothing else)
Negative keywords: terms added to a PPC campaign to prevent ads from showing for queries including these words
Keyword bid: the maximum amount of money you are willing to pay for each click for a particular keyword
CPC: Cost per Click, or how much you actually pay for each click
Impressions: the number of times the ad has been displayed
CTR: Clickthrough Rate, or percentage of people clicking your ads
Average position: ranking among other PPC ads (usually in the right-hand column of search results pages)
Relevancy: the similarity between your ad and a search query
Quality score: in AdWords, this is determined by relevancy, and plays a role in your ads’ price and position
DKI: Dynamic Keyword Insertion, or the ability to automatically update your ad to include a searcher’s keywords in the title
Geo-targeting: displaying your ads only in selected geographic areas
Click fraud: malicious clicks made to banners with no intent of purchasing

Blog jargon
Blog: a journal-style website
Post: an entry published to a blog
Blogger: the author of a blog
Blogosphere: all the blogs on the web
WordPress: a popular free blogging software tool
Theme: code that changes the visual appearance of a blog
RSS or News feeds: a method of publishing regularly-changing web content (commonly blog posts)
FeedBurner: a popular service from Google that makes it easy for blog publishers to share their RSS news feeds
Feed reader: tool that combines all your RSS subscriptions in one place for easy reading
Microblogging: a style of blogging that uses very short posts
Podcast: audio content that can be subscribed to & downloaded automatically to listen to offline
Videocast or Vlogging: same as a podcast, but with video content
Trackbacks: a notification that another blogger wrote about a blog post
Comment spam: comments left on blogs with the sole purpose of getting links to another website
Blogroll: a list of links in the sidebar of a blog (usually other blogs the author reads regularly)
Social Media jargon
Social media: tools that people use to publish and share web content
Web 2.0: a term that describes blogs and social networking sites that emphasize collaboration and sharing
SMO: Social Media Optimization, or making yourself more visible in social media networks
UGC: User Generated Content – text, photos, video, and other media that consumers produce
Conversation: probably more a buzzword than anything else, this refers to a two-way dialog between companies and their current or potential customers
Listening: the practice of tracking what people are saying about you online
Reputation management: a combination of listening (above), and proactively responding to feedback
Transparency: buzzword alert! this simply means being honest and less ‘corporate’
Influencer: someone highly recognized in social networks, with the ability to persuade many others
Social bookmarking: saving web content to a web-based service (instead of your browser) where you can share it
Creative Commons: a license that allows other people to republish your content with attribution (increasing your influence)
Tags: keywords attached to content that help other people find it easily
Mashups: two tools or pieces of content combined to make something new (such as a map and guest-written hotel reviews)
Wiki: a web page (or set of pages) that anyone can edit & improve
Flickr: a popular photo sharing site
Twitter: a popular microblogging network
Tweets: updates to Twitter
Tweetup: a Twitter meetup, of course!

Metrics & measurement jargon
Hit: a file request from a web server, which is not nearly as accurate as a….
Page view: a request to load a single web page, which is not nearly as important as…
Unique visits: the number of different people who visited your website, which is much less important than…
Conversion rate: the percentage of people visiting your website that perform a specific action (for hotels, it’s usually making a reservation)
Referral sources: the websites people visited immediately before visiting yours
Stickiness: attractiveness of web content that makes a guest return again and again
Bounce rate: the number of people who visit your website and leave without going to any other page

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2 Comments »

  1. [...] original post here: Internet Lingo…. | DON'T WORK SO HARD Tags: bring-visitors, broad, geographic-area, media, optimization, search-engine, seo, [...]

  2. [...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Dhandeep Rahevar, Chad Boschele. Chad Boschele said: Internet Lingo….: I thought that this might help in getting more familiar with the lingo that is used for internet… http://bit.ly/cWPCtY [...]

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