With less competition, there’s a huge SEO opportunity within domestic markets to target native speakers of foreign languages. Here are some tricks of the trade and which companies are doing it right.
If your brand is to be truly global and effectively use Twitter, then you need to be tweeting across multiple languages. As yet, it seems many brands haven’t taken that step. Now is a crucial time for corporate tweeters to understand that go…
Word is spreading about the rapid rise of the mobile Internet across the world, and nowhere more so than in the BRIC countries (the emerging markets of Brazil, Russia, India and China).
Word is spreading about the rapid rise of the mobile Internet across the world, and nowhere more so than in the BRIC countries (the emerging markets of Brazil, Russia, India and China).
How microsites, subdomains, duplication, post-edited machine translation, and competing in foreign markets will increase your ROI and save you more money.
Although the English-language web has reached a saturation point, the foreign language Internet still offers rich-pickings, and presents a rather lucrative opportunity for businesses.
The foreign language Internet presents the greatest untapped resource of our time, and word is spreading fast of just how profitable it can be and how easy it is to rank highly in foreign language search engines.
If you're serious about competing with the locals in any given market, then you need to take your localization seriously, and that extends to the linguistic and cultural quirks of each individual market.
Developing search engine optimization tactics that are specific to each country's dominant search engine is just as important as creating language- and culture-specific websites.
If you're in the business of selling products or services online, here's how to avoid cutting out more than three-quarters of your potential customers -- non-English speakers.