Boost Your Online Visibility with Google Knowledge Panels and Social Media Signals with Dennis Yu
Your Digital Marketing Coach with Neal SchafferOctober 04, 2024
383
00:54:2337.43 MB

Boost Your Online Visibility with Google Knowledge Panels and Social Media Signals with Dennis Yu

Unlock the secrets to boosting your online visibility and making your brand irresistible with Google Knowledge Panels. I sat down with digital marketing expert Dennis Yu to uncover the transformative power of social media signals in search results. Learn how genuine customer engagement and user-generated content can elevate your Google-ability and cement your credibility in the digital landscape. With a focus on authentic content across platforms like YouTube, Twitter, and Instagram, Dennis provides valuable insights that will propel your brand to new heights.

Our conversation unpacks the essence of digital marketing, emphasizing the pivotal role that data and social media play in achieving marketing success. Drawing from decades of experience, Dennis highlights the nuances of algorithms used by giants like Google and TikTok, revealing how these systems interpret signals beyond mere website data. Explore strategic tactics for outpacing competition on platforms like Amazon and Netflix, and discover how embedding recognizable elements in your content can become a game-changer in the ranking race.

Dennis also sheds light on mastering Google relevance, urging businesses to focus on location-specific content to bolster their digital presence. With a thoughtful discussion on AI's role in marketing and updates from Facebook and Pinterest, Dennis provide a comprehensive look at the current trends and strategies shaping the industry. From tackling common mistakes to enhancing signal strength with authentic connections, this episode is packed with actionable advice to strengthen your online footprint without the constant pressure of being an influencer.

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1 00:00:00
Speaker 1: Google Knowledge Panels.

00:00:02
You might have seen these informative boxes pop up in your

00:00:05
search results, but do you truly understand how they can

00:00:07
transform your online presence and elevate your brand's

00:00:10
visibility?

00:00:11
In this episode, I am interviewing the one and only

00:00:15
Dennis Yu, who will guide you through the intricacies of

00:00:18
mastering Google Knowledge Panels and reveal the impact of

00:00:21
social media signals on your search results.

00:00:23
From leveraging authentic content and real-world

00:00:26
connections to harnessing the power of platforms like YouTube,

00:00:29
twitter and Instagram, we will uncover the secrets to becoming

00:00:33
more Google-able.

00:00:33
Plus, dennis will share insights on the importance of

00:00:37
genuine customer engagement and the role of user-generated

00:00:40
content in building credibility.

00:00:42
We have all this and lots more so stay tuned to this next

00:00:45
episode of the your Digital Marketing Coach podcast.

00:00:50
Speaker 2: Digital social media content, influencer marketing,

00:00:53
blogging, podcasting, vlogging, tiktoking, linkedin, twitter,

00:00:56
facebook, instagram, youtube, seo, sem, ppc, email marketing

00:01:05
there's a lot to cover.

00:01:06
Whether you're a marketing professional, entrepreneur or

00:01:09
business owner, you need someone you can rely on for expert

00:01:13
advice.

00:01:13
Good thing you've got Neil on your side, because Neil Schaefer

00:01:19
is your digital marketing coach , helping you grow your business

00:01:26
with digital.

00:01:27
First marketing, one episode at a time, this is your digital

00:01:37
marketing coach, and this is Neil Schaefer.

00:01:38
Speaker 1: Hey everybody, this is Neil Schaefer, your digital

00:01:40
marketing coach, and welcome to episode number 383 of this

00:01:45
podcast.

00:01:46
Episode number 400 will publish the first week of 2025.

00:01:57
So we are gearing down towards the end of the year.

00:01:58
We are now into Q4.

00:01:58
And, real briefly, before we get to the interview, some news

00:02:00
that I've been following that I wanted to share with you.

00:02:02
First of all, obviously, ai, we know, is an important part of

00:02:06
our marketing today and of going forward, and you probably

00:02:09
already heard that OpenAI raised $6.6 billion in its latest

00:02:14
funding round, bringing its valuation to $157 billion, and I

00:02:19
know that there are other AI solutions out there, but you

00:02:23
want to be investing your time with the gorilla and OpenAI,

00:02:26
clearly, with this valuation, is the gorilla.

00:02:30
Obviously, this highlights the increasing demand for AI

00:02:33
innovations and solutions, and OpenAI will continue to expand

00:02:37
their influence in various industries.

00:02:39
What I'm excited about is this raised capital is expected to be

00:02:42
used for further development of its AI models, research and

00:02:46
scaling infrastructure.

00:02:47
It goes without saying that this valuation underscores

00:02:50
OpenAI's position as a leading player in the still rapidly

00:02:54
evolving AI space.

00:02:56
So I recently did a webinar on AI and marketing and I really

00:03:00
focused not on third-party tools , which I was a bigger fan of at

00:03:04
the beginning of generative AI, but right now I'm really

00:03:07
focusing all of my AI efforts on chat, gpt and I suggest you do

00:03:11
as well for a lot of reasons, but this becomes one more of

00:03:14
them Also in the news, facebook had an amazing announcement that

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said they actually paid creators $2 billion in 2024,

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emphasizing that they are committed to supporting content

00:03:27
creators.

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When we talk about the creator economy and influencer marketing

00:03:30
, we don't really talk about Facebook, but it is still a

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really, really important platform and I think in the

00:03:36
United States it's considered sort of an old person's network,

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but in most parts of the world it is still very much a young

00:03:41
person's network.

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So, if you didn't know, there are various ways to monetize on

00:03:46
Facebook, just like any other platform, with Reels, bonuses,

00:03:49
ad revenue sharing and fan subscriptions.

00:03:51
What really Meta is trying to do and obviously Instagram is

00:03:55
part of it but Facebook is as well to compete with YouTube and

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TikTok, offering creators more ways to earn directly from their

00:04:02
content.

00:04:03
And clearly every social media platform is prioritizing creator

00:04:07
partnerships to drive engagement and growth, which

00:04:09
means that the creator economy grows.

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Creators yield more influence in the newsfeed and I believe,

00:04:15
as businesses, we should be engaging even more with creators

00:04:18
because they are having even more influence.

00:04:20
It's this perfect whirlwind of different factors that keeps on

00:04:24
driving this creator economy and really the influence of

00:04:27
creators in the newsfeed higher and higher and higher, and that

00:04:30
includes Facebook, which is the aha epiphany moment for me when

00:04:33
I heard about that.

00:04:34
Also interesting news.

00:04:36
Now.

00:04:36
Pinterest is not the biggest of social networks, but they just

00:04:40
announced their biggest upgrade to their advertising platform in

00:04:44
a while.

00:04:45
It's called the Performance Plus Suite and it's using AI and

00:04:48
automation tools to optimize lower funnel ad performance,

00:04:53
streamlines campaign creation, requires fewer inputs and helps

00:04:57
you leverage generative AI to enhance product visuals.

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There's a lot that went into this update and, with the

00:05:02
holiday season right around the corner, if you are an e-commerce

00:05:05
product or you're targeting especially a female demographic,

00:05:08
then obviously you'll want to check this out.

00:05:10
Pinterest is still very much relevant right now.

00:05:13
Of all the social networks, pinterest is the number one

00:05:16
driver of traffic to my site, neilschafercom, because, as

00:05:20
Pinterest experts know, pinterest is not a social

00:05:23
network, it is a search engine.

00:05:25
And well you know.

00:05:26
Go back to my episode with Kate Aul.

00:05:28
This was episode number 267.

00:05:31
It was two and a half years ago , but still the title was

00:05:35
Pinterest Marketing.

00:05:36
It's Time to Diversify your Social Media Marketing.

00:05:38
Kate Aul is the CEO and founder of SimplePim Media.

00:05:41
She is just the thought leader in the space, a dear friend of

00:05:43
mine and a really amazing individual.

00:05:47
If you want to be the first to hear about these news, make sure

00:05:50
you subscribe to my newsletter.

00:05:51
Go to neilschafercom slash newsletter, where I cover these

00:05:55
and more advice, and I'm just looking at this week's

00:05:57
newsletter talking about link building strategies, sms and

00:06:01
email marketing, touchpoint analysis for your social media,

00:06:04
ai and CRM, ai and podcasting, how to lower your cost of email

00:06:09
marketing.

00:06:09
Every week is filled with.

00:06:11
Really it's a mix of the news that you should know about as a

00:06:15
marketer, small business owner, entrepreneur, but also some

00:06:19
really tactical advice that I find really interesting, that I

00:06:22
curate from the internet but also share with you my own

00:06:26
content that I publish on a regular basis as well.

00:06:28
So, once again, that is neilschafercom slash newsletter

00:06:32
For personal updates.

00:06:33
Well, finally, this week, october 1st, as I mentioned on

00:06:37
my last podcast episode, I finally published Digital

00:06:41
Threads.

00:06:41
So this is the small business and entrepreneur playbook for

00:06:45
digital first marketing.

00:06:46
It is the book that I wish I had when I started doing

00:06:50
marketing consulting and when I started my current role as a

00:06:53
fractional CMO, and I think that if you are involved in digital

00:06:57
marketing in any way, there's going to be some takeaways from

00:07:00
this book.

00:07:01
So you can now find it at most bookstores in ebook form, in

00:07:05
paperback form.

00:07:06
The companion workbook paperback finally made it onto

00:07:09
Amazon today, actually, as I record this, and the hardcover

00:07:13
and audio book should be available in the next week or

00:07:16
two, so really excited.

00:07:18
Obviously, don't forget about maximizing LinkedIn for business

00:07:20
growth either, and I plan on adding more content and

00:07:23
expanding that, but right now I'm really focusing on digital

00:07:26
threads and hoping that it helps a lot of people.

00:07:28
All right, so today's interview is with Dennis Yu.

00:07:31
Dennis is known as one of the world's foremost experts in

00:07:35
Facebook advertising.

00:07:36
He's the founder and CEO of Blitzmetrics.

00:07:38
He is also the co-author, with Perry Marshall, of the

00:07:42
Definitive Guide to TikTok Advertising, and this dude if I

00:07:47
may call him dude, he's a great guy, has been around a while and

00:07:50
really knows his stuff, especially when it comes to

00:07:54
algorithms, and you're going to hear a lot about that.

00:07:56
We had a great conversation.

00:07:57
I don't want you to wait anymore, so, without further ado

00:07:59
, here's my interview with the one and only Dennis Yu.

00:08:03
Speaker 2: You're listening to your Digital Marketing Coach.

00:08:06
This is Neil Schaefer.

00:08:12
Speaker 1: Hey everybody, this is Neil Schaefer, and welcome to

00:08:14
another live stream edition of the your Digital Marketing Coach

00:08:18
podcast.

00:08:18
There are a number of authors, experts that are out there in

00:08:23
the world of social media marketing, but one guy who has

00:08:26
been out there for many, many years, who I've had the chance

00:08:30
to meet in person and who even people in my Digital First

00:08:33
Mastermind group say we use his three-by-three ad matrix for

00:08:37
Facebook ads.

00:08:38
He's known as a premier Facebook ads expert.

00:08:41
I also co-written a book on TikTok ads.

00:08:44
But more importantly and I don't know if he remembers this,

00:08:47
but we'll bring him on stage momentarily I got introduced to

00:08:50
him a long time ago from a guy that I met here in Southern

00:08:53
California who also spoke Japanese, had an interest in

00:08:57
Japan, worked for a Japanese company, and we were actually

00:09:00
talking about launching a company at one point.

00:09:02
But he's like hey, you got to meet this guy named Dennis Yu,

00:09:06
who is our guest today, and it turns out that the guy that I

00:09:09
became friends with, we both went to the same high school and

00:09:12
he said yeah, dennis went to high school with me as well.

00:09:14
So, dennis, I don't know if you remember, but we actually went

00:09:17
to the same high school.

00:09:17
When I went, it was called the Rolling Hills High School Titans

00:09:20
.

00:09:20
I think you might've already become plentiful high school

00:09:22
when you went, but at that time Jeff's like man.

00:09:25
The guy works at Yahoo.

00:09:26
He's a total internet marketing whiz and I've just been

00:09:29
following him from afar, seeing him speak in and we were just

00:09:33
talking before this in, like you know, 20 countries over the

00:09:36
past two months.

00:09:37
World traveler, someone who was sought after by you know

00:09:41
executives at Fortune 500s for his expertise.

00:09:44
Well, without any further ado, I don't know what else I can say

00:09:47
, but let's just bring him on stage.

00:09:48
Dennis Yu.

00:09:49
Welcome to the your Digital Marketing Coach podcast, my

00:09:51
friend.

00:09:51
Speaker 3: Awesome, neil.

00:09:52
On my resume I'm going to say that I know Neil Schaefer.

00:09:55
Speaker 1: I think it's the opposite, my friend.

00:09:57
So a lot of people know you for a lot of things and when we

00:10:02
were planning this episode, I assumed maybe you wanted to talk

00:10:05
about Facebook ads, maybe TikTok ads, but you wanted to

00:10:09
take a different direction, about becoming more Google-able.

00:10:12
But before we begin that, can you give our audience a sense of

00:10:16
where you came from, where you've been and how you got to

00:10:19
where you are today?

00:10:20
Speaker 3: Yeah Well, you know you've been in Asia a lot and

00:10:24
I'm as Chinese as Panda Express.

00:10:26
I was born and date in Ohio, but I was good at math.

00:10:29
That's the one thing I did get from my Chinese parents and I

00:10:32
did calculus when I was like eight.

00:10:34
Wow, and I competed in math contests and I did statistics

00:10:39
and I did math for fun.

00:10:40
I went to math parties.

00:10:41
You know what they do at math parties, neil.

00:10:43
Speaker 1: I have no idea.

00:10:46
Speaker 3: Math, and so I happened to be in the right

00:10:49
place at the right time, with all this internet stuff and my

00:10:54
background in statistics and analytics and data and whatnot

00:10:58
was perfect for Yahoo, and I built the analytics, which is

00:11:02
really kind of neat.

00:11:03
All this data.

00:11:03
We had log files bigger than commercial databases could

00:11:07
handle.

00:11:07
We didn't have any security issues because, neil, if you got

00:11:10
the files, you couldn't even open them.

00:11:11
They're that big and we had to figure out what people were

00:11:14
doing and serve ads and create targeting clusters and also

00:11:19
protect the search results from people trying to trick us,

00:11:21
because I was a search engine engineer.

00:11:23
So, as a search engine engineer over two decades ago, I had to

00:11:28
see it from the side of these users that were looking for

00:11:32
things and not show them spammy stuff that SEO people would show

00:11:36
.

00:11:36
And I had to make the advertisers happy because they

00:11:39
were spending money.

00:11:40
So there's an algorithm to give the user the results and

00:11:44
there's an algorithm to basically the same algorithm to

00:11:47
figure out what ad to show people, and that's how we made

00:11:50
money.

00:11:51
And then Google ripped us off and you know Google's whole

00:11:54
money engine of ad words and people spending money bidding on

00:11:59
keywords and whatever you know that came from Yahoo, right,

00:12:02
they completely stole it from us .

00:12:03
I did not know that.

00:12:04
Yeah, and there's a whole lawsuit around it and everyone

00:12:07
knows, everyone in the industry knows, but for some reason their

00:12:08
PR is so good they made it seem like it was their idea, but

00:12:11
they completely ripped it off from us.

00:12:12
But anyway, I learned about data and behavior and targeting

00:12:17
and monetization.

00:12:18
And social media came along and then we almost bought Facebook,

00:12:21
but Mark Zuckerberg was a jerk and you saw it happen after that

00:12:40
.

00:12:40
But it was the very same thing that worked for me as a search

00:12:44
engine engineer, worked for me as a social media marketer

00:12:46
analyzing data, kind of, and how you set up ads and conversion

00:12:49
tracking and passing back you know, pixel firing data.

00:12:54
So all these things like Facebook ads, Instagram, tiktok

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ads are all actually the same thing as what I did 20 plus

00:13:05
years ago.

00:13:05
It's just buying from a different system, but the

00:13:07
mechanics of how you buy ads and monetize and make money are

00:13:11
exactly the same.

00:13:12
Speaker 1: That explains why you've always been on the paid

00:13:14
media side.

00:13:15
But yeah, that's playing to your strengths and, having

00:13:17
worked early on those algorithms , I can see how this comes a lot

00:13:21
easier for you than to a lot of people.

00:13:23
But, Dennis, what's amazing is that you've also created

00:13:27
teachable moments and I know you're speaking and you speak in

00:13:30
a lot of developing countries as well of being able to, from a

00:13:33
very, very intelligent perspective, be able to for lack

00:13:37
of a better word dumb down the principles to teach companies

00:13:40
how to do it themselves.

00:13:41
I commend you for being able to do that.

00:13:43
What, in your experience, helped you not just you know,

00:13:46
understand intrinsically what the algorithms were about, but

00:13:49
learn how to best teach that to empower others, Because I look

00:13:53
at that as another one of your special skills.

00:13:55
Speaker 3: So this is going to reveal me as a geek or dork or

00:13:59
whatever you want to call it, but I had a friend who lived

00:14:02
across the hall from me when I was in high school and his name

00:14:06
was Arnaud de Rottenheim.

00:14:07
He had a PhD in mathematics and he and I would just geek out

00:14:11
about math and he said you know, the first time you do an

00:14:15
integral, you kind of go through it and you learn how to do it.

00:14:18
By the 10th time you're faster.

00:14:20
By the hundredth time or thousandth time you know how to

00:14:23
do it.

00:14:23
You start to understand the actual process behind it almost

00:14:27
naturally.

00:14:27
And by the millionth time you've done an integral or

00:14:31
whatever the math thing is.

00:14:33
You've reached this like high Mount Everest kind of peak of,

00:14:36
if that.

00:14:40
And he just does math all the time.

00:14:45
He loves math, I mean multiple PhDs and I thought there's

00:14:51
something just beautiful about this, because when he and I talk

00:14:55
there are complex math things we talk about.

00:14:57
But there's something philosophical when you talk to

00:15:00
people who are at the very top of their level, to people who

00:15:04
are at the very top of their level.

00:15:05
And let me tell you, because you're able to simplify, you

00:15:06
know, einstein says that you know.

00:15:07
Complex things are made easier and impossible things are made

00:15:09
possible when you do it enough times, and the mark of whether

00:15:12
you know something is if you can say it simply.

00:15:14
So here it is.

00:15:15
Here's my distillation of 35 years, 70 hours in digital

00:15:20
marketing.

00:15:20
Success, in paid and organic, is based upon first having

00:15:27
actually doing the thing that you do, proof that you actually

00:15:30
do it well, and that will rank organically on TikTok and

00:15:34
Facebook and YouTube and Google and whatever.

00:15:37
And on the paid side, it's an amplification of the fact that

00:15:42
you already do a good job for your customers.

00:15:44
You're a plumber in Denver, colorado, you're a veterinarian

00:15:48
in Costa Mesa, whatever it is.

00:15:50
It's such a this understanding only comes from having spent

00:15:54
billions of dollars on ads and seeing the data from other

00:15:57
people's spending the money looking at their ad accounts,

00:16:00
looking at their analytics, looking at their Google my

00:16:02
Business, looking at any of their data sources.

00:16:03
Because the algorithm, like Google wants to show you like,

00:16:09
let's say, neil, you're in Orange County and you're looking

00:16:12
for good Korean barbecue Like Google wants to actually show

00:16:15
you the best result.

00:16:16
And how does it tell?

00:16:17
By its interpretation of the signals.

00:16:19
But the signals come not just from people leaving reviews or

00:16:22
looking at Yelp, but there's signals that come from where

00:16:25
people are.

00:16:26
You know that the whole lawsuit that happened a month ago in the

00:16:29
data breach with Google, where they revealed that it was the

00:16:32
Chrome data, like people's click data and what their behavior,

00:16:35
is actually the biggest driver of all this SEO stuff right, and

00:16:39
the signals that come from looking at social media data

00:16:42
actually drives search results.

00:16:43
Signals that come from looking at social media data actually

00:16:46
drives search results and it creates corroborating loops of

00:16:48
evidence where if I know that, let's say that you know because

00:16:50
you speak fluent Japanese and Chinese.

00:16:53
My first language was Chinese until I learned English at six.

00:16:56
There's signals that occur based on people walking around

00:17:01
and on their cell phones and websites, which is like one part

00:17:05
.

00:17:05
But a lot of people think that ranking on Google is about

00:17:08
websites.

00:17:08
No, it's all this data it's pulling in every single kind.

00:17:11
You would not believe how much data they're pulling it and

00:17:14
trying to make.

00:17:14
And just the data that we pulled in 20 something years ago

00:17:17
.

00:17:17
I can't imagine what the Google people are pulling in now.

00:17:19
So, to rank on Google, make sure there's noise and signal in

00:17:23
social media.

00:17:24
So to rank on Google, make sure there's noise and signal in

00:17:26
social media, that's a huge aha moment.

00:17:27
That is simple.

00:17:28
But, neil, how many people who are social media experts that

00:17:32
you and I know actually know that?

00:17:33
Or they think it's a trick or some algorithmic kind of thing?

00:17:36
Speaker 1: Yeah, I think it's simple.

00:17:38
People are still at that hack level, like let's hack the

00:17:40
algorithm, and it's usually very one-dimensional, whereas what

00:17:43
you're talking about is as omni-channel.

00:17:46
It sort of redefines what omni-channel means.

00:17:48
It's people literally with a phone that has Chrome open,

00:17:51
walking into a store and Google being able to access

00:17:54
location-based data as one such signal.

00:17:56
Speaker 3: Yeah, and that data shows up everywhere.

00:17:58
So why do you think you know?

00:18:00
Remember when Facebook used to be a website and then they had

00:18:02
moved to mobile and there was a mobile news feed, and then they

00:18:04
required you to install the Facebook Messenger app instead

00:18:08
of using the Facebook website.

00:18:09
Why did they want people to use the app?

00:18:11
Why did they say they did?

00:18:12
And what was the actual reason?

00:18:13
Yeah, get data right.

00:18:15
Yes, what they said was oh, it's a better experience in the app

00:18:19
and you can do all these other things you can't do, which is

00:18:21
kind of like dangling the carrot .

00:18:22
The stick was if you don't do this, you can't play the game.

00:18:31
And they're on a mobile app.

00:18:31
You know where they are.

00:18:32
You literally know, like, if they are, you know walking, or

00:18:34
if they're in a car, they can tell.

00:18:36
There's all kinds of things listening all the time, all

00:18:39
kinds of stuff.

00:18:40
So when you realize that all this data gathering provides

00:18:43
more signals, that helps on an organic standpoint and on a paid

00:18:46
standpoint, Like TikTok.

00:18:49
I've made a bunch of TikToks that have gone super viral, and

00:18:52
you know why?

00:18:52
It's not because I'm really good at getting attention or

00:18:55
singing or dancing.

00:18:55
It's because I intentionally will place pictures and videos

00:18:59
in the background background, or you know, TikTok will see I'm

00:19:06
at Jake Paul's house, and so it does facial recognition, image

00:19:08
recognition, and then matches it with Jake Paul or the other

00:19:09
people that I'm with I do that intentionally, because that is a

00:19:13
ranking factor, right, and the other social networks are

00:19:17
starting to do that.

00:19:17
Here's another thing.

00:19:18
Here's another aha thing that only comes from I've never heard

00:19:21
anyone say it you ready, let's go for it.

00:19:22
The very thing that drives the recommendations when you're on

00:19:27
Amazon and looking to buy supplements, for example,

00:19:30
vitamin B3 pills, or when you're on Netflix and you're looking

00:19:34
for that next movie and it's making these recommendations to

00:19:36
you.

00:19:36
Or when you are on Google and you're searching for things.

00:19:40
Or when you're on YouTube and you watch this one video and it

00:19:42
recommends these other videos.

00:19:43
Or you're on TikTok and you're scrolling.

00:19:45
Those are all the same algorithm.

00:19:49
It's a collaborative filter, right, it's a lookalike.

00:19:52
On the ad side, it's a lookalike, because what is

00:19:55
advertising?

00:19:55
Try to find people that are just like these people that I'm

00:19:58
passing through the conversion API or whatnot.

00:20:01
Right, here are my customers.

00:20:02
I'm uploading the list of them, an email of them.

00:20:05
I'm connecting my CRM to Google , to Facebook.

00:20:08
I'm passing you my data.

00:20:09
I'm passing you when the phone rings.

00:20:11
I'm passing you call, real data to track how many phone calls

00:20:13
were over one minute.

00:20:14
I'm telling you who my customers are.

00:20:16
Find more customers like that.

00:20:19
Isn't that not the same thing when you look for something on

00:20:22
Amazon or you listen to a song on Spotify?

00:20:24
Or it's an algorithm trying to match people to you, to you as a

00:20:29
user, whether it's ads or organic right?

00:20:33
Once you have that realization, the green lines in the matrix

00:20:37
fade away and you see the woman in the red dress and you realize

00:20:40
.

00:20:40
You know what this isn't about search.

00:20:42
It isn't about social.

00:20:44
It isn't about the latest algorithm to go to use Instagram

00:20:48
reels.

00:20:48
It's none of that.

00:20:50
What it is is do you generate the signal across multiple

00:20:54
channels that corroborate themselves, that show you

00:20:57
actually are the best roofer in Santa Monica, because you know I

00:21:01
need a new roof or whatever and I'm searching for roofer?

00:21:03
What signals can I see to show that this business XYZ Roofing,

00:21:09
neil Schaefer Roofing is actually a good roofing company?

00:21:12
It's not their SEO, it's whether they actually have a

00:21:16
good reputation and these things .

00:21:17
And does it show up Like do you claim your crunch base and your

00:21:21
Quora and your Instagram and your Twitter and your TikTok I'm

00:21:24
a roofing company.

00:21:24
Why would I do that?

00:21:25
Because you want to generate the signal, not because you're

00:21:28
trying to be a social media whatever with 100 followers,

00:21:31
right?

00:21:32
How do we get that into people's heads?

00:21:35
These businesses come to us all the time and they want some.

00:21:38
Dennis is a social media expert .

00:21:40
No, I'm not.

00:21:42
I'm just trying to feed the data back into each of the

00:21:45
systems so that we rank on Google and so that our ads can.

00:21:48
I'm just, I'm literally just trying to get all the proof that

00:21:50
you actually are good at painting and roofing and

00:21:53
whatever it is that you do mainly local businesses, but it

00:21:56
could be whatever we've done for Starbucks and Ashley Furniture

00:21:59
and Adidas and whatever, but we're just passing.

00:22:01
This is literally.

00:22:02
I know I'm sort of like getting pissed, because I love to rant

00:22:04
about this, because it just drives me nuts.

00:22:06
Maybe you haven't, maybe you know how to solve this problem,

00:22:09
neil, but my job has always been the last 35 years is to take

00:22:14
all the data that shows you are good at the thing that you do

00:22:17
and push it out there to be seen .

00:22:19
Is there proof?

00:22:20
Is it on your phone?

00:22:21
Do you know why I use Google Photos, Neil?

00:22:23
I want Google to see the thing right.

00:22:26
Why do you think I use Gmail?

00:22:27
Why do you think we put stuff on YouTube?

00:22:29
Why do you think we push everything to GMB?

00:22:31
If I want to rank on Google, I want it to see that I am

00:22:43
innocent.

00:22:43
Judge Google, I actually am good at roofing in Santa Monica

00:22:44
or whatever.

00:22:44
Pest control in Portland, oregon .

00:22:46
Yeah, there's lots of proof of that.

00:22:46
Here's my vans.

00:22:46
Here's proof of my technicians spraying.

00:22:47
Here's some information about what do you do about ants and

00:22:49
raccoons.

00:22:50
And there's all this proof.

00:22:51
My buddy, ken Vanagen, runs EcoCare Pest Control and he's

00:23:02
got lots of proof.

00:23:03
There's him and I and Linda, his wife, and we're hanging out

00:23:04
and having dinner in Portland.

00:23:05
There's so much proof.

00:23:05
It's not AI-generated, it's real proof, real customers, real

00:23:08
stats.

00:23:08
His son, michael, is learning marketing using our Dollar Day

00:23:12
program.

00:23:13
There's all kinds of proof of this and so they're number one

00:23:16
in Portland.

00:23:16
Pest control because I'm good at SEO.

00:23:18
No, because we have lots of proof across many channels, not

00:23:23
just the website, many places, and it had nothing to do with

00:23:26
any social media experts.

00:23:28
There's a kid, danny Liebrand, who's 19 years old, that runs an

00:23:33
agency serving pest control and he's the one doing the work for

00:23:38
Ken and all these other people.

00:23:39
He works with pest control companies, this Danny Liebrand

00:23:41
kid, and he's following all our techniques to make people

00:23:44
Googleable and whatnot.

00:23:45
He's not an SEO expert.

00:23:47
He was never a search engine engineer, but he goes to each of

00:23:50
these pest control companies and he says what proof do you

00:23:53
have that you serve Gresham and Portland and Beaverton and all

00:23:57
these other areas?

00:23:58
Do you have proof?

00:23:58
Do you have proof?

00:23:59
Get rid of the stock art.

00:24:00
Do you have pictures of your vans, of your people doing the

00:24:03
stuff?

00:24:03
No, no, we didn't hire a professional photographer yet.

00:24:05
We didn't hire the social media expert yet.

00:24:06
You don't need that.

00:24:08
Your people that are going around in touch with your about

00:24:18
you know bugs what about her?

00:24:19
She gives all this advice about you know mosquitoes during the

00:24:20
summer.

00:24:20
Why don't you have her explain the very stuff she already

00:24:24
explained?

00:24:24
Oh, but she's not media trained , doesn't matter.

00:24:26
Does she have a phone?

00:24:28
Yeah, do that.

00:24:29
Put it all in one folder and let's put it out there on the

00:24:31
internet.

00:24:32
Then we'll run ads against it.

00:24:33
Feed the signal back, you know, pass through the calls and

00:24:35
whatever, and all your social media and SEO and whatever all

00:24:39
working together.

00:24:39
Now you see what I mean.

00:24:40
No, I've never heard anyone say that.

00:24:42
I feel like it's so simple and fundamental.

00:24:44
Speaker 1: Yeah, it's amazing because what you talk about is

00:24:47
simple yet complex, yet so eloquently said, and it really

00:24:51
comes down to if you really are who you are, if you really are

00:24:54
the expert that you are and anyone who's been in business

00:24:55
for a few years is an expert in what they do it's just a matter

00:24:59
of showing up digitally and proving it and then, obviously,

00:25:02
using that paid media to then accelerate the algorithms

00:25:06
understanding and audiences seeing you as well.

00:25:08
So, yeah, I think that is just the simplest way of explaining

00:25:12
because, at the end of the day, even a lot of SEO experts will

00:25:15
say it comes down to the content , which should be proof of what

00:25:18
you do, as you said.

00:25:20
And, yeah, you don't need to hire the expert because the IP

00:25:22
is all within your head the head of your employees, that

00:25:25
reactionist who's been answering customer questions for 10 years

00:25:28
, or the person out in the field doing the actual spraying.

00:25:31
So, dennis, that was awesome, and I think the title of this

00:25:35
episode is how to Become More Googleable.

00:25:37
I think we understand now the importance of being Googleable,

00:25:40
feeding the algorithm, and is it just as simple as wherever your

00:25:46
target customer might be digitally, of showing up there

00:25:50
online, of putting out that content that shows proof of who

00:25:53
you are, what you do, your expertise, putting some paid

00:25:56
media to accelerate.

00:25:57
Is there anything that we might be missing?

00:25:58
And obviously there's a lot of details if we were to go by each

00:26:02
one of those things, but in a 360 degree view of it, is that

00:26:06
basically what you see or are there any missing pieces?

00:26:09
Speaker 3: It is, but people goof it up.

00:26:11
So let me give you one example that will kind of paint all the

00:26:15
mistakes that people make in this area.

00:26:16
So if you, neil, don't like how you look for some reason and in

00:26:21
the mirror you know whatever, you have a gut maybe let's just

00:26:25
say are you going to say, well, the issue is a mirror, I need to

00:26:28
buy a new mirror.

00:26:28
This mirror is bad.

00:26:30
You step on the scale.

00:26:31
You don't like the number.

00:26:32
It says I need to get a new scale.

00:26:39
No, the issue is not the scale of the mirror.

00:26:40
The issue is the thing, the input, right, you, what it can

00:26:42
see.

00:26:42
You know what you stand on like , you know.

00:26:44
So if I am that Portland pest control company and I don't rank

00:26:50
on Google or no one's clicking on my social media stuff, it's

00:26:53
actually a relevancy issue and a signal issue.

00:26:56
So I need to.

00:26:59
So if I'm showing pictures of and little making 15 second

00:27:04
vertical videos of hey, here's how you take care of ants, or

00:27:07
we've got this raccoon problem because there's trash everywhere

00:27:09
, well, when people are scrolling on Facebook or on

00:27:13
YouTube or whatever, and you see , you know Ken saying, yeah, if

00:27:17
you've got, you know, raccoons, make sure that you put you close

00:27:20
the lid on your trash can or something.

00:27:21
I'm sure that's great advice, but this guy serves Portland

00:27:25
Oregon, so he doesn't say anything about Portland.

00:27:28
He should say you know in Portland that the trash only

00:27:30
comes around once a week.

00:27:32
It used to be twice, but they cut the budget right.

00:27:34
Or in Portland we seem to have a lot more squirrels, because

00:27:38
you know it's closer to the forest and this other area, and

00:27:41
in the squirrels like to get in your trash because you know, and

00:27:44
also in Portland, we have this special kind of squirrel.

00:27:46
You know, I don't know whatever it is, but say things about

00:27:48
Portland and then, if you're making that post on whatever

00:27:51
channel TikTok, you know, twitter, linkedin say one of the

00:27:59
things in Portland Oregon, not Portland Maine that we noticed

00:28:01
is this and this and this.

00:28:01
So there's no specific signal.

00:28:03
So I see these guys, like my buddy, roger Wakefield, just

00:28:07
sold his plumbing company.

00:28:08
Great guy, he's a plumber, right, you know who he is.

00:28:11
He's a social media guy now, but he's also a plumber, for 35

00:28:14
years, indeed.

00:28:14
And he can make issues like hey , if your toilet's clogged up or

00:28:18
if you need to replace the pipes or whatever, I'm a plumber

00:28:22
and this is what you would do and this is how you fix it.

00:28:23
And so he's got millions of views, right.

00:28:25
But his YouTube, even though he's got what?

00:28:27
700 followers, and then across social media, several

00:28:30
million, if you type it literally, you type in plumber,

00:28:33
plumbing, into YouTube, he ranks , he dominates that thing, right

00:28:36
.

00:28:36
But when he started doing that, did that help his business?

00:28:41
He was in Dallas doing plumbing , but of the people that are

00:28:47
here, this is an example.

00:28:48
So, of the social media videos that he's making, because he now

00:28:50
is a social media influencer, right, how many of them when he

00:28:53
made a video, what percent of that audience actually helped

00:28:56
his Dallas plumbing company?

00:29:00
Speaker 1: Oh, I'm going to say probably because when on YouTube

00:29:01
you're reaching a global audience.

00:29:03
So I'm going to say very few, but I might be wrong.

00:29:05
Speaker 3: Yeah, almost none.

00:29:06
Yeah, because the people that are watching are learning about,

00:29:09
you know, clogged toilets and whatever it is, but how many of

00:29:12
them are in Dallas?

00:29:12
So, all you guys that are making social media, this and

00:29:16
that, are you trying to become an influencer where you're just

00:29:19
trying to reach the world, or are you trying to reach people

00:29:22
in your town?

00:29:23
Right, if you are Kim Butler and you're in, like Shreveport,

00:29:29
and you do financial services, you sell life insurance, then

00:29:32
you want to target people in Shreveport.

00:29:34
You don't want to target people all over the planet.

00:29:37
And so simple things like this, like if you make a TikTok or

00:29:39
Facebook or whatever, and you know how you can put like a

00:29:41
little like a thumbnail, basically, and put the words

00:29:44
across the top, right, just say attention, dallas, texas, if

00:29:49
your toilet is broken, my guys can come fix it.

00:29:52
214, which is a Dallas area code, 214, blah, blah, blah,

00:29:57
blah, blah.

00:29:58
You're making it super relevant , right, and it could be as

00:30:00
simple as that, but remember, it's all the same thing on

00:30:02
relevancy, and if you show the algorithm, meaning on Google or

00:30:07
paid organic, that you get at least 10% of people engaging,

00:30:11
that seems to be the magic number across all the data I've

00:30:12
seen.

00:30:13
Speaker 1: Then they say like this is really relevant right,

00:30:16
yeah, and it's funny talk about the algorithm.

00:30:18
Even you know this Instagram Live, lisa.

00:30:20
Thank you so much.

00:30:20
Lisa Pattenden, and you know she's like I think it's more

00:30:23
like how to own your spot on Google rather than how to become

00:30:25
more Google-able.

00:30:26
Well, we could say the same thing.

00:30:27
But she also said mirrors are haters, and I see more and more

00:30:32
as she keeps commenting.

00:30:33
So, once again, the algorithm, the signal it rewards you when

00:30:36
you have that content that others actually want to see.

00:30:39
Just case in point, just want to throw that out there.

00:30:42
It's that simple.

00:30:43
Speaker 3: Yeah, it's not about singing and dancing and trying

00:30:45
to get attention and this kind of thing.

00:30:47
I'm looking at your live right here.

00:30:48
Wow, this is really cool.

00:30:49
So if we're generating a signal that has high engagement, then

00:30:54
the algorithm wants to reward us .

00:30:56
Because when you're on a free platform, using Google for free,

00:31:00
using Facebook for free because the users use it for free,

00:31:03
because advertisers run the thing right, support the thing,

00:31:05
that's who's paying for it?

00:31:06
Well, the algorithm needs to keep people on the platform in

00:31:12
order to continue to serve ads at them.

00:31:14
So if it works well organically , then it can be boostable.

00:31:18
If it doesn't work well organically and then people are

00:31:21
running ads against it, that's a bad user experience, even

00:31:24
though it does make money for the network.

00:31:25
And I know people say well, facebook just wants to make my

00:31:28
money, that's why my organic sucks.

00:31:30
You know they're forcing me to run ads.

00:31:31
Absolutely not true.

00:31:33
You need to have the engagement .

00:31:35
So I keep saying to people you say the issue is your ads aren't

00:31:40
converting because you're selling industrial piping in

00:31:41
Houston, texas.

00:31:42
It's not it at all.

00:31:44
It's because your relevancy isn't high enough.

00:31:46
So I have a friend who runs the digital marketing for Moffitt

00:31:50
services.

00:31:51
They do fueling custom.

00:31:53
Her name is Landry and she it's an old company run by old guys

00:31:58
who do fuel, like trucks that do refueling for diesel.

00:32:02
Like that's pretty boring, right, neil?

00:32:04
Awesome, I love it.

00:32:04
So you know, let's.

00:32:05
So you, you've got a big facility, a hospital, for

00:32:08
example, and the power goes out and you need diesel generators

00:32:11
that, and those generators need fuel to like, if the power goes

00:32:14
out out, you need to turn the generators on right.

00:32:16
And her company, moffett services, does the diesel

00:32:21
fueling supply for tesla and like for all their rockets and

00:32:27
their various facilities.

00:32:28
Like that's pretty cool, right.

00:32:29
And it's like just like, wow, really like how did you get

00:32:32
tesla as a client even though, like you're fueling their, you

00:32:34
have all these trucks that fuel their diesel, they have diesel

00:32:38
things and you need to, which I think is ironic or some of the

00:32:42
biggest companies in the space, and I think that's really kind

00:32:44
of interesting.

00:32:45
And guess what?

00:32:47
When you look at her SEO, she ranks for diesel refueling,

00:32:51
so-and-so mobile diesel, so-and-so price of diesel.

00:32:54
What is the difference between this kind of diesel versus that

00:32:57
kind of diesel?

00:32:58
I don't know, but she knows and she's written blog posts, not

00:33:02
through ChatGPT, but by interviewing the actual

00:33:05
engineers and people that go out Like, oh, they had a hurricane

00:33:08
thing going on and now they need all this mobile refueling for

00:33:11
these crews that are replacing things that got damaged, crews

00:33:18
that are like replacing things that got damaged.

00:33:19
And that's very interesting and very relevant to the people

00:33:21
looking for diesel refueling trucks right, because the

00:33:24
relevance is super high.

00:33:26
I looked at her stuff.

00:33:26
We met in Houston a couple months ago.

00:33:28
I looked at her stuff and I said dang Landry, you're

00:33:32
crushing it in SEO.

00:33:33
She said I am, but I don't know anything about SEO.

00:33:36
Yeah, but look at your, but I don't know anything about SEO.

00:33:37
Yeah, but look at your engagement rate, look at who is

00:33:40
engaging.

00:33:40
It's not that how many comments you got, it's not how many

00:33:43
likes there were.

00:33:43
You might as well put cat photos out there if you're

00:33:46
looking for that, but it's super relevant to your customer.

00:33:49
And because you're ranking on all these keywords and because

00:33:51
it's driving a lot of your business and a lot of referrals.

00:33:54
Even where they don't do refueling, like in LA, they rank

00:33:57
on like mobile refueling in LA, like what?

00:33:59
They don't even have a facility in LA.

00:34:02
But I said you're doing everything.

00:34:04
Great, right?

00:34:05
You're doing all the key things I am.

00:34:08
Yes, you are now run ads against it because it's already

00:34:12
working organically the signals.

00:34:13
There is same algorithm.

00:34:14
Run ads, yeah, but I use this ad agency and they've made it.

00:34:19
They've said it's so difficult.

00:34:20
You want to try to run ads.

00:34:21
You might mess it up Like no, no, no, Landry, look at all your

00:34:24
top posts.

00:34:24
Whatever's done the best on Twitter, facebook, tiktok,

00:34:27
whatever it is, rank them all.

00:34:28
Whatever's done the best in terms of engagement or in your

00:34:30
Google Analytics was driving the most phone calls or leads or

00:34:32
people filling out the form saying yes, I need mobile

00:34:34
refueling.

00:34:34
Run a dollar a day against that .

00:34:37
Of every 10 posts, usually one will be a winner.

00:34:39
Meets the 10% rule, right, it's great.

00:34:43
And she fired that other agency and then texted me and she was

00:34:46
so happy about that and I said see, I knew you could do it

00:34:49
Amazing.

00:34:50
Speaker 1: Dennis, so many amazing takeaways, but yet so

00:34:53
simple, right, but we often look for, sometimes we seek out

00:34:57
complexity, make excuses, mirrors or haters, as the

00:35:02
comment said.

00:35:03
But, dennis, I want to ask you and I know that you have limited

00:35:07
time today, so I want to take advantage of it go a little bit

00:35:10
of a different direction, because, as you know, search

00:35:12
engines themselves are going under change as we speak.

00:35:15
Probably and we've seen various algorithm changes over the last

00:35:18
two decades, but probably, I'm going to guess this is might be

00:35:21
the biggest change with generative AI search, and my

00:35:25
website is one of the websites even though I have zero AI

00:35:28
content is one of the websites that got hit right Out of many

00:35:32
websites.

00:35:32
Some websites did better, some did worse, and I'm just curious

00:35:36
what you see.

00:35:37
Is it still as important?

00:35:39
And then we have the case of large language models.

00:35:41
Do we want to give our content to them?

00:35:43
I'm still a fan of that.

00:35:44
If you want to be discoverable, you sort of need to do that.

00:35:46
But have you changed your view in the last six months as the

00:35:49
search engines have changed, or is it all still the exact same?

00:35:53
Speaker 3: No, it's even more important.

00:35:55
On these principles.

00:35:56
Let me show you why.

00:35:57
Okay, this is sort of a mind blowing but obvious thing Once

00:36:00
you.

00:36:00
Almost nobody knows this, which blows my mind.

00:36:02
So I'm going into Google and I'm typing in Neil Schaefer.

00:36:06
Okay, so look at what happens here.

00:36:09
Looks like me.

00:36:09
There's your website and then there's a knowledge panel here

00:36:13
at the top with the three dots next to it, and then you can see

00:36:17
there's pictures of you and there's your socials that are

00:36:21
there.

00:36:21
So I haven't even gone very far yet, but let me ask you, neil,

00:36:25
do you think your social media impacts your Google ability?

00:36:28
Do you think it does?

00:36:29
Let's just scroll a little bit and see what there is.

00:36:31
There's some books that you have.

00:36:32
There's your YouTube, your Twitter.

00:36:34
Speaker 1: LinkedIn Do you?

00:36:35
Speaker 3: think that affects your social media.

00:36:36
They're always going to show up at the top.

00:36:37
Yeah, look at what's showing up here, do you think so?

00:36:39
And then here's some of the latest videos and tweets and

00:36:42
things like that.

00:36:43
People are also looking for these other social media people,

00:36:45
right?

00:36:45
Do you think social media is one of the signals that Google's

00:36:48
using?

00:36:49
Maybe Instagram, these other places?

00:36:51
Yeah, do you think so?

00:36:52
Yeah, okay, so if that's the case, and then you have what's

00:37:01
called a knowledge panel.

00:37:02
So I know it's probably hard for the audience to see, but

00:37:03
these are colored boxes.

00:37:04
This is not a regular set of search results where it's like

00:37:07
10 blue links, one, two, three, four, five, you know, choose one

00:37:10
of them.

00:37:10
Instead, it's a series of colored boxes here.

00:37:13
So what does this have to do with AI?

00:37:16
Speaker 1: Yeah, on the desktop they show up on the right-hand

00:37:18
panel, but yeah.

00:37:20
Speaker 3: Right, those are called knowledge panels, which

00:37:22
are pieces that get surfaced from the knowledge graph, which

00:37:25
is the big database of all the things companies, people,

00:37:29
objects, pictures and when people are searching for things,

00:37:36
it's pulling from this database called the Knowledge Graph and

00:37:39
trying to say this so, neil Schaefer, there's other Neil

00:37:42
Schaefer's, but this, this is is this thing Neil Schaefer?

00:37:45
Yeah, this is Neil Schaefer.

00:37:46
This tweet or video, is this Neil Schaefer?

00:37:48
Yes, it is.

00:37:49
So it's trying to associate everything together.

00:37:50
Back to this thing called Neil Schaefer, which is like this

00:37:54
it's got an entity object ID called Neil Schaefer, which is

00:37:57
like this it's got an entity object ID.

00:37:58
It's like a social security number and it's trying to think

00:37:59
of it as like the skeleton we're trying to put meat I'm trying

00:38:00
to like.

00:38:00
Is this thing related?

00:38:01
So here's an Instagram live of Neil and Dennis.

00:38:04
Should that be associated with Neil Schaefer?

00:38:06
Yes, how about Dennis Yu?

00:38:08
Yes, it should be.

00:38:08
So you see how it's like trying to connect.

00:38:10
The machine is trying to connect all those things

00:38:12
together, right?

00:38:14
So when you do things that destroy the signal or pollute

00:38:17
the signal, such as creating what's called synthetic data,

00:38:21
you're actually shooting yourself in the foot.

00:38:23
So when you use ChatGPT saying write 10 things around funny

00:38:28
phrases that people say in Japan that actually are insulting, or

00:38:31
whatever you are.

00:38:32
You know you've got your new digital book right and you could

00:38:35
have ChatGPT write headlines.

00:38:37
Just generate stuff out of thin air, which is called synthetic

00:38:39
data, synthetic content.

00:38:40
You're actually screwing yourself because it's muddying

00:38:45
up the pure signal that you actually do the thing that you

00:38:48
say, that you do.

00:38:49
Proof of this.

00:38:50
Two years ago, google released an update to their call it the

00:38:55
170-page quality rater guidelines.

00:38:57
Every year they update this thing, but they said, instead of

00:39:00
EAT expertise, authority trust, it's now E-E-A-T.

00:39:03
They added this extra E and all these SEO people don't

00:39:07
understand it or they argue it, and that E is for experience.

00:39:11
So now it's experience, expertise, authority trust.

00:39:14
What is experience?

00:39:15
Proof that you actually do the thing you do Photos, videos,

00:39:18
podcasts Not chat GPT generated or Claude, or oh no, my favorite

00:39:22
one is Anthropic or whatever is good for you, right?

00:39:26
No, we don't just generate stuff because people go willy-nilly

00:39:30
abusing the AI because it can generate millions of web pages

00:39:33
yeah, it can, but star, that's generative.

00:39:36
Large language models kind of implies that you're going to use

00:39:42
it to spam the internet with AstroTurf.

00:39:42
Start with the raw ingredients.

00:39:44
So, neil, name any kind of thing.

00:39:45
Name any kind of you know person or activity.

00:39:50
Name something and I'm inside my Google photos, I'm going to

00:39:51
prove it to you.

00:39:52
Names anything.

00:39:53
Name a food, name a place, city in the world, anywhere,

00:39:57
anything.

00:39:58
Okay, ramen in Irvine, california.

00:40:00
Okay, so ramen.

00:40:02
I'm typing in ramen, irvine and now Google is searching oh

00:40:08
shoot, I don't have any ramen in Irvine.

00:40:09
Well, let's look at ramen.

00:40:11
Then you can do ramen Las Vegas or wherever you want, here's

00:40:13
ramen.

00:40:13
So I'm searching ramen, and now it's pulling up all the

00:40:16
instances of when I've eaten ramen, which I've eaten a lot in

00:40:19
lots of places, just not in Irvine, and if I grab any one of

00:40:23
them, I'll grab.

00:40:24
And this is Google Photos.

00:40:26
Right, this is Google Photos, and here's let's see what's a

00:40:31
tastier looking one.

00:40:32
How about this one here?

00:40:32
Okay, so here's one.

00:40:35
And now there's information associated with that down here,

00:40:40
this metadata Okay, this is when you realize the matrix is

00:40:42
actually part of this whole thing.

00:40:44
Actually, this is pho, so, but it looks like ramen, but there's

00:40:48
the information on where it is and where.

00:40:50
And then who else is in the picture?

00:40:52
Speaker 1: if there is people and we're still just in google

00:40:54
photos.

00:40:54
We're not in google or this is local to you, but all that data

00:40:58
that exists, yeah, so here's another one.

00:41:00
Speaker 3: Another ramen with my keyboard.

00:41:02
I love taking these pictures.

00:41:03
I love the corn and the ramen good stuff.

00:41:05
Oh, it's amazing to show you and so you can see.

00:41:09
This is exactly where it was right In this particular place.

00:41:14
So what is Google doing?

00:41:15
It's associating that piece of content photo, video.

00:41:18
It's trying to put the context around it Like this is where it

00:41:21
was.

00:41:21
This is what's in there.

00:41:23
It's tied to you know, and so you see how it's like trying to

00:41:26
connect objects in the knowledge graph.

00:41:27
This is Dennis and Alex Brandt having ramen.

00:41:31
Alex is a pilot for Allegiant Dennis.

00:41:32
This is Dennis and Alex Brandt having ramen.

00:41:33
Alex is a pilot for Allegiant Dennis is this?

00:41:34
It's at this ramen place, and Dennis also left a review saying

00:41:38
five stars.

00:41:39
I really like how they give you the double pork option.

00:41:41
You know it's trying to take anything, this piece of content,

00:41:45
and associate it with real world objects.

00:41:49
Speaker 1: So, dennis I mean, based on that, and maybe this is

00:41:50
part of your strategy every time you speak somewhere on

00:41:53
stage, people are taking pictures of you.

00:41:56
Speaker 3: You're getting tagged in Google photos generating

00:41:58
more signal and I know the algorithm picks up on that.

00:42:00
I don't know exactly how, because some of it's secret, but

00:42:03
think of it this way.

00:42:04
So everything that I'm doing, like when I interview people and

00:42:07
you can see, here's the people and I'm creating greater and

00:42:11
greater connections to the people you know, like you're the

00:42:13
average of the five people you spend the most time with, like

00:42:16
that's what I'm doing.

00:42:17
So I want to be known for digital.

00:42:18
I'm hanging around digital people, I'm at digital marketing

00:42:21
conferences.

00:42:22
I'm a search engine engineer.

00:42:23
Well, clearly there's proof because I'm associated with

00:42:25
people who work at Google and Yahoo and whatnot.

00:42:28
There's clear proof that ties me to those objects.

00:42:30
It's like there's a crime scene or whatever it is.

00:42:33
I want to be placed at that crime scene.

00:42:35
You know what I mean.

00:42:35
I want proof that if a forensic investigator were to go look at

00:42:41
the carpet and pull hair and fiber samples, they'd see, like

00:42:43
Dennis Yu is actually here.

00:42:44
Right, archaeologists, if they were to go to social media

00:42:48
marketing world way in the future, it's like, yeah, michael

00:42:50
Stelzner and Neil and Dennis were actually here.

00:42:52
Can marketing world way in the future?

00:42:53
It's like, yeah, michael Stelzner and Neil and Dennis

00:42:54
were actually here.

00:42:55
Can we determine from the archaeology that they were in

00:42:57
San Diego?

00:42:57
And speaking about social media , yes, we can, because we looked

00:42:58
at YouTube.

00:42:59
I'm trying to leave clues, so many clues.

00:43:01
That's what we're trying to do, right?

00:43:03
So if we know that's the case and we're creating content that

00:43:08
is associated with real things, then when you use an LLM

00:43:12
whatever your favorite one is to generate some stuff, how many

00:43:16
real connections are there to people and places and topics and

00:43:20
things?

00:43:20
And like there's like none, because it's just synthetically

00:43:22
generated out of thin air.

00:43:24
Right, and look at the signal strength of my content.

00:43:27
And so when I teach Danny, who does pest control and he does it

00:43:31
for Ken Van de Geen and and he takes pictures.

00:43:34
He rides along and takes pictures of the vans and how

00:43:36
they're spraying for ants and how it's eco-friendly and it

00:43:39
doesn't kill the dog because, you know, will it hurt my pets,

00:43:42
my golden retriever there's lots and lots of signal around that,

00:43:45
as he's doing it, we're now going to downtown Portland and

00:43:48
so the algorithm, meaning Google and Facebook and TikTok, can

00:43:53
see that, based on the video, it's oh, this is actually

00:43:56
Gresham or this is downtown or wherever it is right.

00:43:58
Clear signal there it's because it starts with the video, right

00:44:02
, then the AI can work on that raw content and do.

00:44:13
That's where you use the AI is to help process the raw content,

00:44:14
but you start with the raw content.

00:44:15
So people that don't start with raw content are getting

00:44:16
hammered.

00:44:16
So there must be some stuff in there, neil, of your content

00:44:19
that you got hit with the March core update that you mentioned.

00:44:21
You must have some stuff there that doesn't tie back to the raw

00:44:25
content.

00:44:25
That's why things like schema are so important.

00:44:28
I use rank math and link whisper and whatever I do that stuff,

00:44:32
because I never want to run afoul of Google thinking you

00:44:35
know what, could this be a deep fake?

00:44:36
Is this real or not?

00:44:37
Google's not exactly.

00:44:39
I mean, they told me privately that they can spot chat, gpt and

00:44:43
you know fake content, but they're not a hundred percent

00:44:46
right.

00:44:47
So I'm trying to like overwhelmingly, give judge

00:44:50
Google more evidence.

00:44:52
So it's like clear, it's very obvious, like yes, judge Google,

00:44:55
I really do the thing.

00:44:57
I say that I do.

00:44:57
I really have had ramen in Irvine.

00:45:00
I have not, apparently, right, or maybe I have.

00:45:03
I'm pretty sure I at some point I've had.

00:45:05
I have to have had ramen in Irvine, but is there any proof

00:45:09
of it?

00:45:09
What if I wrote a blog post saying I love ramen in Orange

00:45:14
County in Irvine and it's near the John Wayne Airport, and the

00:45:15
chat GPT wrote all this?

00:45:16
Would that actually be proof that I've had ramen in Irvine?

00:45:19
Speaker 1: No, the visual, the audio and the experience of

00:45:23
being able to say in your own words which but the AI can

00:45:25
generate a big picture of a bowl of ramen noodles and it's so

00:45:29
real looking and all that, but is it real?

00:45:31
Speaker 3: No, and even if Google can't tell if it's AI

00:45:33
generated, does it actually tie?

00:45:35
Oh, it was ramen at Neil Schaefer ramen.

00:45:38
Oh, okay, and then I can see that Neil Schaefer and Dennis

00:45:41
actually got the review at that place.

00:45:42
Oh, now there's more signal proving I actually have done the

00:45:45
very thing right.

00:45:46
And so is this an SEO thing or is this a social media thing?

00:45:49
Is this an ads or organic thing ?

00:45:51
What we're talking about, that's pure signal strength,

00:45:54
right?

00:45:54
Am I passing?

00:45:55
Speaker 1: the data back.

00:45:56
Yeah, it's funny.

00:45:57
I remember, many years ago, pete Cashmore, the founder of

00:46:01
Mashable.

00:46:02
It was a famous quote of his, and I don't remember the exact

00:46:05
quote, but it was something along the lines of that if you

00:46:08
want to remain private, it's going to be to your disadvantage

00:46:11
in the world, and this is at the time of people checking in

00:46:13
on Foursquare and just the beginning of the ability to send

00:46:16
these signals.

00:46:16
And if you want to be Googleable, getting back to the

00:46:19
topic, or be found or be known, you have to send the signals.

00:46:23
And the more authentic, the more appropriate, the more

00:46:25
relevant those signals are, and I think that you know hearing

00:46:30
you say that.

00:46:30
Dennis, now I understand more of how you operate and it makes

00:46:33
a lot more sense.

00:46:34
I just thought you were just like crazy, just prolific

00:46:37
content creator, but now I know what drives you to do that.

00:46:40
It's natural there's an ROI in doing that.

00:46:42
There's a caveat there.

00:46:44
Speaker 3: But think about this.

00:46:45
So, neil, most people they see you and me.

00:46:47
We're constantly like live streaming and taking pictures of

00:46:49
our food.

00:46:50
Like live streaming and taking pictures of our food.

00:46:52
I don't want to be a social media influencer.

00:46:53
I don't want to be out there all the time.

00:46:57
I'm just a introverted business owner and I just want to do the

00:46:59
thing that I do because I value my private life.

00:47:00
Great, you can do that, because what signals the most valuable?

00:47:02
Is it the business owner or whoever making content about

00:47:06
themselves, about the service they do?

00:47:08
No, the best signal is the customer signal.

00:47:11
So you could be invisible, but if your people, if your

00:47:16
customers, if your community, if your pastor of the local church

00:47:19
, if the soccer team that you're involved with, if you're

00:47:22
elevating you know what?

00:47:23
I take my kids on Friday to this Italian restaurant and meet

00:47:26
so-and-so who's the owner, and we have the pepperoni with

00:47:30
double pepperoni, pizza, whatever linguine with clams.

00:47:32
If you're elevating them and if they're talking about you, the

00:47:36
most valuable signal is them talking about you.

00:47:40
It's not because most people think, oh, I don't want to be

00:47:42
prolific on social media and I'm not trying to be an influencer.

00:47:45
You don't even have to be.

00:47:46
My favorite thing to do is elevating other people, because

00:47:49
I'm trying to capture proof, neil, for my friends.

00:47:52
I want my friends to, I want their businesses to grow, so I'm

00:47:56
making sure that their customers are that.

00:48:01
Somehow, these people, they're friends of mine, they own these

00:48:03
different businesses.

00:48:04
It's not that I want to interview them, I want to enable

00:48:07
their team to have a collection process to put all this stuff

00:48:11
in a shared folder, not just the business owner.

00:48:14
Now I'm a business owner.

00:48:15
I have to make three videos a week.

00:48:17
No, you don't Right.

00:48:20
You see how this drives me nuts .

00:48:22
How does people not understand this?

00:48:24
The best signal is the signal of you actually do the thing you

00:48:28
say you do is your customers talking about you, not

00:48:30
testimonials, but just like day-to-day.

00:48:32
You know, oh, we're visiting Sue's house and she's got

00:48:35
termites and say, sue, what's going on with the termites?

00:48:38
Oh, well, you know, blah, blah, blah.

00:48:40
See, that's way more authentic than we're really good at

00:48:42
termites.

00:48:42
You know, call EcoCare Pest Control in Portland Oregon and

00:48:46
we'll send someone out right away.

00:48:47
We've been doing it for 15 years and we're really good.

00:48:50
And blah, blah, blah.

00:48:50
Call us if you have a termite problem.

00:48:53
That's a freaking advertisement .

00:48:55
Speaker 1: That's not real right .

00:48:56
Yeah, that's why I dedicate a chapter to, in the grand scheme

00:49:00
of things, these are all examples of user generated

00:49:01
content, ideally coming from your customers in a variety of

00:49:04
ways.

00:49:04
But, yeah, that is something that is so obvious yet so missed

00:49:09
, yeah, and I'm really excited to get that out in the world

00:49:14
soon.

00:49:14
But, dennis, this has been great.

00:49:15
I know you literally have to split in a few, but I wanted to

00:49:17
give you the opportunity.

00:49:18
I think we covered a lot, man.

00:49:20
I think we covered a lot more than we planned to.

00:49:21
And I don't know if you play any instrument, dennis, but I'm

00:49:25
a drummer and this is the closest thing to a jam session

00:49:28
in the studio.

00:49:28
We just came in and we just riffed off each other.

00:49:31
So, thank you, this has been a lot of fun.

00:49:32
Thank you, neil, you know, is there anything we missed?

00:49:34
And to end it off, I mean, where do you want to send people

00:49:37
to to learn more about you and maybe to work with?

00:49:39
Speaker 3: you.

00:49:39
I want everyone to be Google-able, so Google me.

00:49:44
Dennis Yu spelled Y-U.

00:49:46
There's a lot of Dennis Yus, but I rank number one.

00:49:48
I have a knowledge panel, just like Neil, and if you want to

00:49:52
connect with me on LinkedIn or you want to email me or whatever

00:49:55
, I'm happy to chat.

00:49:56
I do consulting, but what I really like to do is help these

00:50:01
young adults who've started agencies, and each of these

00:50:03
agencies is in one area, just serving plumbing companies or

00:50:07
pest control or landscapers or roofers, and I just admire the

00:50:11
heck out of these young adults and young is in young at heart.

00:50:14
So some of them are like 40, something right, and I love

00:50:16
seeing them win because they're focusing on that particular kind

00:50:20
of customer.

00:50:20
So if you are a painter, come see me.

00:50:23
We'll do an audit and I'll send you to the company that I trust

00:50:27
that follows this agency, that follows our processes, to make

00:50:30
sure you're Google-able.

00:50:31
I want you to understand that you can take it in-house too.

00:50:34
You don't have to use our people.

00:50:35
You can leverage all the stuff that we have.

00:50:38
We published it out there.

00:50:39
You can literally Google like how do you get a knowledge panel

00:50:41
?

00:50:41
How do you do your GMB?

00:50:43
How do you run dollar a day Facebook ads.

00:50:46
It's all out there.

00:50:47
It's on YouTube.

00:50:48
There's thousands of videos where we're sharing how to do it

00:50:50
.

00:50:50
It's all free, but if you want it done I'm proud of all these

00:50:55
young agency owners and I know they'd be happy to help you if

00:50:59
you are a good person and aren't hard to work with and that kind

00:51:02
of thing.

00:51:03
Speaker 1: Awesome Dennis.

00:51:03
So there you go, google him there's DennisUcom, there's

00:51:06
Dennis on LinkedIn or wherever you are, he is Dennis.

00:51:10
Thank you so much.

00:51:11
This has been awesome.

00:51:12
I hope people reach out to you, and I know I remember when I

00:51:14
met you at Content Marketing Conference in Las Vegas I think

00:51:17
2017, you were talking about how you wanted to empower young

00:51:21
professionals with the knowledge , and it looks like you've been

00:51:23
able to do that and now come to the next stage, where now they

00:51:26
have their own ad agencies, and I know you continue to just

00:51:29
foster goodness and education in the world.

00:51:31
So thank you so much.

00:51:32
It is not going unnoticed, and thank you again for being on the

00:51:36
podcast today.

00:51:36
I look forward to keeping in touch, my friend.

00:51:38
Speaker 3: You're amazing, neil, and then we're going to

00:51:39
repurpose this to YouTube.

00:51:40
I'm going to make sure this content we have, this advice, is

00:51:43
Google-able, and I'm going to put my money, neil, to promote

00:51:46
this podcast.

00:51:46
Thank you so much.

00:51:48
Speaker 1: Thank you so much.

00:51:49
Thank you, neil.

00:51:50
All right, take care.

00:51:51
All right, I hope you enjoyed that as much as I did.

00:51:54
Dennis and I actually have a lot in common and, yeah, it's

00:51:58
amazing if you follow him on social media.

00:52:00
He is amazing not only for the work that he does and all the

00:52:06
countries that he speaks out, but even his personal fitness is

00:52:08
really inspiring.

00:52:09
So definitely a great guy to follow and to connect with.

00:52:11
And, yeah, what else can I say about him?

00:52:13
Hey, make sure.

00:52:15
If you haven't hit the subscribe button, we have a lot

00:52:18
of great episodes coming up.

00:52:20
My next interview is going to be with the one and only Dan

00:52:23
Gingas, who is one of the thought leaders in customer

00:52:25
experience marketing.

00:52:26
We always have a great conversation and you're going to

00:52:29
want to tune into that.

00:52:30
Have some more as well.

00:52:31
Nancy Harhut, who is the author of Using, or how to Use

00:52:36
Behavioral Science in Marketing she just spoke at Inbound.

00:52:39
She is this amazing thought leader You're going to learn a

00:52:42
lot from.

00:52:42
You know amazing interviews coming up, so make sure you hit

00:52:45
subscribe.

00:52:46
And if you read Maximizing LinkedIn for Business Growth or

00:52:51
Digital Threads, I would be honored.

00:52:53
I mean, I talk about this with the podcast as well.

00:52:55
But I'm really trying to get reviews of these books published

00:52:58
on Amazon and other retail sites so that people can know

00:53:03
that the books are legit and they can learn something from it

00:53:07
.

00:53:07
So I always get asked Neil, is there any way I can help you?

00:53:09
Well, and I usually say hey, when there's a time I'll let you

00:53:12
know.

00:53:12
Now's the time when I can really use your help.

00:53:14
So if you end up doing that, please, please, send me a

00:53:17
screenshot so that I can thank you.

00:53:18
I do a lot of special things for those that support me.

00:53:22
So, yeah, I think it'll be in your best interest to let me

00:53:26
know if you go out of your way, even if you have just a minute,

00:53:28
I would sincerely appreciate it.

00:53:30
But hey, well, that's it for another.

00:53:32
I hope you agree.

00:53:33
Exciting episode of the your Digital Marketing Coach podcast.

00:53:39
Speaker 2: This is your digital marketing coach, neal Schaefer,

00:53:42
signing off.

00:53:43
You've been listening to your Digital Marketing Coach

00:53:48
Questions, comments, requests, links.

00:53:49
Go to podcastnealschafercom.

00:53:50
Get the show notes to this and 200 plus podcast episodes at

00:53:54
neilschafercom to tap into the 400 plus blog posts that Neil

00:53:59
has published to support your business.

00:54:01
While you're there, check out Neil's digital first group

00:54:05
coaching membership community if you or your business needs a

00:54:08
little helping hand.

00:54:09
See you next time on your digital marketing coach.