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California Court Rules Bizop Class Action Suits Don’t Hold Water

Posted: 12 Feb 2013 05:35 AM PST

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Class actions against dietary supplement sellers. Text marketers. Biz-op providers. You name it, and a class action has disturbed the peace of many a direct response marketer in recent times. Nary a weight-loss supplement client of this attorney seems to have been spared. Financially unable or unwilling to go the distance, even where meritorious defenses exist, many targets of these suits have no choice but to pay the "ransom," most of which goes to class attorney's fees. As is so often the case in Federal Trade Commission (FTC) suits, the suing party has all the leverage.

Perhaps in response to this consumer class action onslaught, the U.S. Supreme Court lately has been giving new heft to mandatory arbitration clauses, which also contain "class" waivers. In 2011, in AT&T Mobility LLC v. Concepcion, which addressed whether an arbitration clause could bar classwide arbitration, the court overruled a California Supreme Court decision that had said such a bar was "unconscionable" and thus unenforceable. The court held that the California rule was preempted by the Federal Arbitration Act because non-consensual class arbitration violates the Act's "liberal policy favoring arbitration," in that it "sacrifices arbitration's informality," is "more likely to generate procedural morass than final judgment," and "greatly increases risks to defendants."

Last year, in CompuCredit Corp. v. Greenwood, the Supreme Court also barred a class action under the Credit Repair Organization Act (CROA), saying CROA did not prohibit arbitration as the sole method of dispute resolution. The court went out of its way to reach this conclusion. Even though the statute explicitly granted the "right to sue" a credit repair organization under CROA, the court said "right to sue" doesn't mean the right to sue in court, but only the right to enforce "liability" for "failure to comply" with CROA, which right also could be enforced in binding arbitration. Since CompuCredit had contractually provided for binding arbitration that was subject to judicial enforcement, the plaintiff's right to "impose liability" was protected.

Against this tide, last month a California appellate court, perhaps still smarting from the slap to its state supreme court in Concepcion, struck down an arbitration and class waiver clause on "unconscionability" grounds. In Natali v. Import Motors Inc., the court said the arbitration provision at issue was unconscionable because it was "adhesive" (one-sided in defendant's favor), was buried in the contract, and the plaintiff was given no chance to review it.

The court got around Concepcion by saying it only limited an "unconscionabilty" defense that "disfavors arbitration," and a conclusion that a one-sided arbitration provision in favor of the drafter is unconscionable "does not rely on any judicial policy judgment" disfavoring arbitration. In short, Natali reads Concepcion to place no limit whatsoever on "unconscionability" as a defense to enforcement of an arbitration/class waiver clause so long as, in the words of Concepcion, it doesn't interfere with the "fundamental attributes of arbitration" (like classwide arbitration would).

The lesson of Natali, and its reading of Concepcion, for direct response marketers is that if they wish to limit their litigation exposure in an effective manner through the use of mandatory arbitration and class waiver provisions, then it is imperative those provisions be fair, balanced and conspicuously disclosed to consumers.

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“Blog Design For ROI: Keep On Fixing, Keep On Fixing” plus 1 more

“Blog Design For ROI: Keep On Fixing, Keep On Fixing” plus 1 more

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Blog Design For ROI: Keep On Fixing, Keep On Fixing

Posted: 11 Feb 2013 11:02 AM PST

This guest post is by Gab Goldenberg, author of The Advanced SEO Book.

If you choose to redesign your whole blog in one go instead of adopting little improvements on a regular basis, the odds are that your redesign will be a brutal chore.

Blog redesign

Instead, I’d like to encourage you to review the posts in this series on Blog Design for ROI and pick one area in which you’d like to improve. We’ve covered literally every area of the blog, from your homepage to category pages to posts, to individual elements like sidebars and social aspects like your community, so there’s bound to be something to appeal to you:

Once you’ve chosen where you’d like to improve, do the following.

  • Measure where you stand currently. For example:
    • Use usability testing with three friends to see if they can find your email subscription, and get their feedback on how appealing it is to sign up to your newsletter.
    • To simplify your sidebar, header or navigation use Feng-GUI to get an idea how visually loud they are.
    • Try a tool like CrazyEgg to measure how much and where people are clicking your archive pages, as well as how far they’re scrolling.
  • Write down your theory of why your performance is at its current level.
  • Brainstorm different ways to improve and write all the ideas down (don’t reject ideas at this point, as that will discourage creativity). See which of the tactics in the above articles you can apply, and how.
  • Choose one option to improve and test it out.
  • Measure results and repeat the above.

From my own experience, I can tell you that testing numerous small things and making incremental progress is a much easier—and more effective way—of improving your blog’s design, in comparison to the traditional ‘grand redesign’ method. Similarly, the crowd at Wider Funnel make a good case for the “Evolutionary Site Redesign” process instead of the “Revolutionary Site Redesign” process.

Now it’s your turn: in the comments, tell us which area of your blog’s design are you going to focus on improving? Why did you pick that? And what changes are you thinking of making? Share your goals with us in the comments.

Gab Goldenberg and Internet Marketing Ninjas are developing a book based on this series – get your free copy at http://seoroi.com/blog-design-for-roi/ . You can also get a free chapter of Goldenberg's The Advanced SEO Book.

 

Originally at: Blog Tips at ProBlogger
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Blog Design For ROI: Keep On Fixing, Keep On Fixing

How to Leverage Blog Comments to Increase Search Rank

Posted: 11 Feb 2013 05:00 AM PST

This guest post is by Jonathan Solis of NutraSol Natural Center.

When the topic of getting blog comments for SEO comes up, your first thought would probably be to get links to your site by commenting on other blogs.

Well, I usually don't waste my time with that technique, because most comment links are no-follow anyway.

And I want to bring focus to the comments on my own blog.

Having user-generated content on your site has always been an easy way to gain search engine traffic from long-tail keyword queries.  Comments are a good source of user-generated content containing those keyword phrases.

For the last two years, I’ve been conducting SEO experiments for all types of websites, ranging from my blogs to local business directories, and I have found that user-generated content from the comments section in my health blogs has increased my traffic tremendously.

The site that’s producing the best results for me right now is the Spanish health blog, Informe Natural. I apologize for using a site in a foreign language as an example, but this is the site I reached my conclusions from, and the idea will apply no matter what language you’re blogging in.

How it works

It all started when I began marketing Alpiste Seeds for sale online and featured an article about where to buy them on the Spanish health and nutrition blog.  As people found the page, they began to ask questions in the comments section.

Without realizing it, they were adding to my on-page search engine optimization efforts.

They would ask questions with keyword phrases like, "where can I buy the alpiste seeds in Georgia?" and I would reply with another comment answering the question in a complete sentence that contained the keyword phrase.

For example, I would write "you can order the alpiste seeds by the phone and we would be happy to ship it to you in Georgia".  I would continue this technique with all the comments and the results were very rewarding.

I ended up getting a high ranking for the Spanish keyword phrase of where to buy alpiste seeds and also the long tail keywords derived from the conversations in the comments section of my blogs.

This technique made that page the second-most popular page on the entire site after my home page.

SEO Blog Comments

How can you do it? Let’s see.

5 Ways to increase search engine rankings with blog comments

1. Provide a call to action

Some people will not comment unless you entice them to.  A good technique is to write a call to action at the end of your article that tells readers to feel free to leave any questions or feedback in the comments section of your post.

2. Reply to all the comments on time

If you give a prompt response and reply to the comments, other users will see that you are involved in the conversation and they will be more likely to ask questions too.

3. Know your target keywords before writing your comment

Make sure you know what your target keyword is before you respond with your comment.  This may seem obvious but it can easily be overlooked.  Do keyword research to find the words that are used more often by searchers.

4. Use complete sentences in your comments

As I stated earlier, answering in complete sentences gives you a reason to use your keyword phrases more often naturally, which helps you avoid making it look like a spammy attempt to increase keyword density.

5. Reply to comments with another question

When you reply to the comments, try to reply with questions so that you will get another response and, therefore, more user-generated content.

Are you using comments for SEO?

Leveraging blog comments is an effective way to get more traffic from search engines.  They are a great source of long tail keywords which account for about 85% of search engine traffic. And best of all, they are acquired from the users directly.

Do you use your blog comments to boost the search rank of your posts? Let me know in the comments.

Jonathan Solis is the owner of NutraSol Natural Center and Director of marketing for Expert Building Services, inc.  He has a Bachelor's Degree in Business Administration and he also has a blog where he often writes about professional business strategiesProfessional Tactics.

Originally at: Blog Tips at ProBlogger
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How to Leverage Blog Comments to Increase Search Rank