Industry Trends

SEO Basics: What is SEO? Part I

Written by Anitra (DSN Content Contributor)

For today’s digitally connected society, if you have a business, you get a website. Great! Now you and 50-11 others have a website. How do people wade through all of the Internet noise and find yours? SEO. And what exactly is SEO? Search Engine Optimization is a focused, series of steps website owners take to improve the chances that customers, potential customers and search engines find their web page. SEO is not pay-per-click advertising, it is not social media marketing, it is not content marketing. But SEO is used to boost the effectiveness of all of these efforts. If you don’t mind your web page coming up on page 194, then SEO is not necessary. But if you want your web page to be indexed by search engines, and found below paid search ads, maps and local listings, then you’ll need to incorporate SEO best practices to compete.

Does Your Business Need Match Making?

When people use a search engine to look for information, services and products, a search engine will return pages of a website it believes are relevant to the person’s search query. This list of results is called “organic search results.” It is called “organic” because these pages, theoretically, are popular because people like them versus the paid results and search engine chosen results. I liken SEO to match-making – your website is in search of a sponsor, patron or client – and SEO is the behind the scenes primping that will present your website in the most attractive way to gain popularity with search engines and people.

SEO in SERP

SEO in SERP

Getting Found By Search Engines

Once you publish a website, you may be online, but that doesn’t mean that search engines, such as Google, Bing, or Duck Duck Go have found your web pages. Even if they do find 1 page of your website, it doesn’t mean that it’ll find all of your pages or even bookmark any of them. Optimizing your website for search engines involves taking actions that increases the probability that search engines will file (index) all the pages of your website and return them in search results and also that when people visit your page, they like what they experience. SEO can be broken down to two fundamental undertakings: Technical Accessibility and Meaningful Content.

Learning The Basics

In the next part of this series, “What Is SEO?” we’ll look at some of the technical measures that SEO specialists take to help ensure that your website finds its match! In the meantime, head on over to Moz for a great tutorial on SEO basics. And if you have any specific questions, let me know in the comments or visit my website and drop me a line.

Keep Your Head in the Cloud

Written by: Karen Scott (DSN Content Contributor)

Contrary to popular belief, keeping your head in the cloud is especially prudent if you are a technologist.  While the cloud has been quite the buzz over the last couple of years in IT, use of the cloud solutions is still very much a market positioned to grow.

What is cloud computing?  Simply stated cloud computing services can be private, public or hybrid. Private cloud services are delivered from a business’ data center to internal users. This model offers convenience, while preserving management, control and security.

The public cloud model, is when a third-party provider delivers the cloud service over the Internet. Public cloud services are sold on-demand. Customers only pay for what they consume.

Hybrid cloud is a combination of public cloud services and on-premises private cloud Companies can run mission-critical workloads or sensitive applications on the private cloud while using the public cloud other applications for easy scalability.

The three broad models of cloud computing include:

Software as a Service (SAAS) – delivers a single application to customers through a web browser to customers.  Provides a lower cost model since the business does not have to provide software or hardware costs, just licensing and implementation.

Platform as a Service (PAAS) – This form of cloud computing delivers development environments as a service. You build your own applications that run on the provider’s infrastructure and are delivered to your users via the Internet from the provider’s servers.

Infrastructure as a Service (IAAS) – IaaS providers such as Amazon Web Service(AWS) or Microsoft Azure supply a virtual server instance and storage, as well as application program interfaces (APIs) that let users migrate workloads to a virtual machine (VM).

Many organizations have not adopted the cloud, waiting for others to take the lead.  Many companies have decided to implement a hybrid solution retaining some of their hardware and solutions onsite while venturing into the cloud.  One of the main concerns heard frequently is the security of sensitive and confidential data.  If the data is stored in a cloud solution will it be more susceptible to data and security breaches.

Staying abreast of the latest developments in cloud computing and solutions to issues (real or perceived) is one way to retain your marketability in the ever-changing fast-paced technology arena.  Keep your head in the cloud!!!