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SEO, affiliates, podcasts and IG Stories: the big conference stories

MORE than 400 travel influencers & content creators gathered in Italy at the weekend for a summer conference and catch-up.

The Traverse event in the Trentino town of Trento (motto: The Alps with an Italian Touch) saw 50 seminars staged in a 200-year-old opera house.

And the most topical conversations were Instagram, SEO, podcasts and affiliate sales, among many social and digital media debates held at several parties and over drinks in bars throughout the old town.

INSTAGRAM

Many influencers have given up on IG, citing the frequent algorithm changes that have seen likes and follower numbers decline. The gaming of IG and flood of posing influencers also rankles deeply.

However, IG Stories prompted encouragement from @cailinoneil who offered this advice in her seminar ‘IG Stories for working with brands’:

SEARCH ENGINE OPTIMISATION (SEO)

An astonishing number of bloggers have become slaves to SEO, and its importance was hammered home by Gemma and Laura of Make Traffic Happen – their talk was the best-attended seminar of the weekend.

“It’s about speaking Google’s language through targeted keywords but using them naturally,” said Gemma. “You are writing for people not a robot.

“Use the target keyword in the URL, first 100 words, meta, alt tag and variations in subheadings and in the text. Then work on your liking strategy.”

In other tips:

PODCASTS

Podcasts are booming in the UK, with six million people now tuning in every week, according to Ofcom.

The number of people listening to podcasts every week has also doubled in five years, from 3.2m in 2013 to 5.9m last year.  The increase is across all ages, but the most growth is among young adults aged 15-24.

There were two podcast creators at Traverse:  Susan Schwartz @LushLifepodcast for beginners and Palle Bo @TheRadioVagabond for a more advanced class.

“Podcasting takes a lot of time,” warned Susan, who hires a producer to edit and publish her podcasts. She advised using a spreadsheet to organize and structure a publishing schedule, usually a 30-minute podcast every week.

She uses a Zoom H4N (£400) for recording. You’ll also need artwork to accompany the podcast, and an intro. The artwork will need to be clear enough to read on a mobile, and if using original music for the intro, then make sure you can adapt it for future changes.

She writes her script first, then reads it. You can also use new software which will convert the broadcast into text (computer-generated). Good for deaf people and currently free to use.

AFFILIATE SALES

There is a new generation of bloggers who are relying on SEO and affiliate sales to ensure a strong level of ‘passive income’ – making money through selling travel products such as suitcases or insurance which, naturally, they endorse and use….

Jodie Dewberry @alajode told her audience:

In all, it was an excellent conference, with several sessions covering YouTube and photography, essential elements for blogging and social media these days.

There were also a number of speakers calling on bloggers to up their writing skills – including myself (view the presentation here) – I do think the rush to perfect SEO and affiliate selling has been at the expense of improving the quality of written content. It was also interesting to meet Rebecca Wood @EditingUK who is a freelance copy editor who can help writers brush up and improve their output.

Finally, it was a pleasure to meet two mature bloggers who aren’t just rushing around in search of paid gigs to travel and write to order.

Meet Andrea Wade @happydaystravelblog, whose site currently includes excellent new content from Morocco, Trinidad & Tobago, Ethiopia and Benin. Also, Janis @OurWorldForYou who specialises in roadtrips in a soft top Audi – recent trips include Iceland and Croatia, with Zimbabwe to come.

The number of bloggers/creators is exploding – indeed, there was an article this week suggesting the market is saturated and that the influencer era has peaked.

Perhaps. But what the Traverse conference showed in spades is that maturity and diversity in blogging and social/digital media is alive and well. They may just not be called influencers any more: perhaps content creators. Or multimedia editors. What’s in a name?

Traverse staged its first Creator Awards during the conference, with winners in 15 categories.

Read who the best of the best content creators are, as voted for by a panel of independent creatives, experts and those who work closely with creators.

The next Traverse event will be Borderless Live, a festival with a conference and exhibition, at Tobacco Dock, London on September 6-7.

Brought to you by WTM London, brands and destinations will have the chance to meet with the world’s top influencers through a series of organised networking events, special receptions for industry and creator attendees and of course on their own dedicated exhibition stands. Tickets on sale now

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