(via clientsfromhell)
Ha! SEO humor, jokes funny Justin Bieber Beyonce pregnant baby Katy Perry.
What goes better than peanut butter and jelly? Stumped? How about keyword research and copywriting? Bingo!
Jessica and I recently wrapped up a project in which we provided our client AutoSport with extensive keyword research that was then rolled into beautifully written copy.
A post I wrote for Business Bullpen, a firm I’ve worked with for the last four years.
A blog post I wrote for @businessbullpen’s Tumblr blog.
Hashtags are used to tag Tweets with a particular topic, e.g., #SEO, #marketing, #Tumblr, etc. Hashtags can be used in the text (sentence) of a Tweet or placed at the end of the Tweet.
While some hashtags like #SEO can be incorporated into a sentence, most seem to be placed at the end of a Tweet merely to add that Tweet to a bigger conversation. For example, when the tornado warnings kept so many people in Southwest Virginia up late in early May, those of us on Twitter tagged our Tweets with #vawx, which stands for “Virginia weather.” This allowed us to create a Twitter feed with only those Tweets containing that hashtag.
Twitter is searchable, and not just by #hashtags. Keywords also play a “key” role. There are two primary differences between keywords and hashtags; keywords can be more than one word (i.e., Virginia Tech) and are not preceded by a hash mark (pound sign). Hashtags are preceded by a hash mark and cannot contain spaces. If you used #Social Media, only #Social would be recognized as a hashtag. But “Social Media” is still searchable.