PageOnePR
'; } ?> 
  • \"Services\""; } elseif (($page == "capabilities") || ($page == "best_practices")) { echo "\"Services\""; } else { echo "\"Services\""; } ?>
  • \"Clients\""; } elseif (($page == "current") || ($page == "past") || ($page == "testimonials") || ($page == "results") || ($page == "makingnews")) { echo "\"Clients\""; } else { echo "\"Clients\""; } ?>
  • \"Careers\""; } elseif (($page == "culture") || ($page == "benefits") || ($page == "watercooler")) { echo "\"Careers\""; } else { echo "\"Careers\""; } ?>
  • \"Contact\""; } else { echo "\"Contact\""; } ?>
  • \"Blog\""; } else { echo "\"Blog\""; } ?>
  • \"Japan\""; } else { echo "\"Japan\""; } ?>
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    The Page Wonders

    Social media is changing PR in new and exciting ways. More than ever before, companies want help from a PR partner who can put smart, creative, independent-thinking professionals on tough problems using these new tools to seize opportunities and solve problems. Read here about some of the exploits of our Page Wonders and tell us what you think!

    Other Staff Blogs:Craig Oda | Shelly Milam


    SEO and PR – A Happy Marriage or the Odd Couple?
    posted by Jenna at

    I recently attended a free webinar, "SEO + Public Relations = Your Secret Marketing Weapon in 2009," put on by the team at Webmarketing123.com. They made the case that SEO and PR should by joined at the hip.

    I have to say, I'm still not convinced (this is my view and not necessarily shared by my colleagues at Page One PR).

    While Paul Taylor, the presenter, did a great job of walking us through the benefits of SEO-izing your PR and marketing collateral and results, I've had experiences where that just doesn't work.

    Example 1: Optimizing a press release for SEO and PR

    You can do this two ways and I've tried both:

    1) Write a release, then look at a list of key words to insert.

    2) Look at the key words, then write a press release with them in mind (try to use each 1-4 times and space them out).

    The second worked better for me, but if you're supposed to insert your URL and keywords ~3 times each for near optimal SEO, it gets rough and the news starts to sound like giberrish. If the release then needs to go through legal approval and potentially partner or customer approval, you're in trouble.

    That's only one example, but I do think there's more beyond just blending SEO with PR and, voilà, you're on page one of wherever you want to be. The challenge often seems to be a classic case of having too many cooks in the kitchen. You've got the outside agency teams, such as the PR firm, the SEO firm, potentially the SEM consultant, and then all of the internal constituents, such as the corporate marketing/advertising team, sales, product marketing, etc. Each can have different business goals and be focused on maximizing content value for that agenda. Sheesh.

    BusinessWeek ran an insightful article by B.L. Ochman recently, "Debunking Six Social Media Myths." Though I appreciated every myth debunked, I really feel the writer's pain with Myth #4: You can do it all in-house. It's true – you can't!

    With regards to effective and viral social media campaigns, Ochman writes:

    "It is rare indeed to find an in-house team that can not only conceive and execute a social media campaign but also drive traffic to it with effective e-mail segmentation, search optimization, blogger outreach, blog advertising, Google ads, and more." Agreed.

    I do believe things like SEO and PR should work together – of course it's good to have a well-oiled machine running on all cylinders – but I don't think it's as easy as simply "working together." Further, given that both PR and SEO are often outsourced strategic services, is it reasonable to expect both sides to come together without the forcing factor of the client company embarking on a holistic marcomm campaign which takes months of pre-planning and coordination? That's hard to come by when you're working with startups, particularly high tech startups.

    I remain optimistic, however, that there are definitely lessons both PR and SEO can learn from each other. Throw social media in there, and you've got a party!

    I'd appreciate any wisdom out there about the evolution of these siloed services and think I will continue to attend free webinars on the topic to keep me engaged in thinking about the right combo of SEO + PR.

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