Virtual Networking 101 for freelance translators and small
translation agencies
Virtual Networking 101 for freelance translators and small
translation agencies
by Christian Hansel, SiteFounder of babelport.com
This Article gives a little insight into the mechanism of online
networks and their benefits for self-promotion and marketing of
freelancers and small businesses
This is an edited reprint of an article written for babelport.com, the
Translation Industry Information and Project Portal, and nakedtranslation.com,
Céline Graciets excellent Translation web-log. The
article offers a little insight into techniques of virtual
self-promotion and networking for freelancers and small
companies, especially in the translation industry. As a
self-employed programmer and project manager I've had my share
of experience in this but still I am far from being an expert.
Nonetheless, here's my compacted knowledge of what networking
means and how networks are created, maintained, and
extended.
What is networking?
Technically, a network is a collection of interconnected unique
entities allowing for and generating multilateral transfers with
redundant ways and strategies of interaction. Translating this
techie-jibberish: a network is made up of individuals
communicating with each other. To use an analogy: like a spider
in his web you can go from one spot to another using the paths
that connect the individual positions: The more connections are
established in a web the more stable it is. In fact, personal
and business networks very much resemble the web of a
spider.
Through networks, new contacts are made: Imagine, your best
friend's friend introduces you to one of her acquaintances who
will at a later point introduce you to your future chess club
fellow whose cousin will turn out to become your
wife/husband/friend - or may be a new client. There is a theory,
called The Six degrees of Separation (more information) which
basically says that you only have to know seven people who know
seven others and so forth to know everybody on this planet. By
making use of personal contacts you create and maintain networks
daily.
In real life everybody has social networks: your family, your
friends, your business partners etc. Networks are the most
valuable resources we have - not only in business. When it comes
down to business, however, it is vital to understand that you
cannot have enough of them. As a professional in your specific
field you are most likely already networking daily: Making sales
contacts, calling colleagues, showing up regularly at your local
professional association meetings, knowing your links to the
Chamber of Commerce etc. Through this, you certainly have gotten
most of your jobs so far and will in the future. If you are
experienced in this kind of networking you may also be a member
of a business group, which usually only allow a small number of
each profession to join. This is real life networking you are
most experienced with if you have not just started freelancing
yesterday.
This article will concentrate more specifically on on-line
marketing or self-promotion instead of repeating what everybody
most likely knows. On-line self-promotion works along the same
principles as its real-world sibling: You need to create
networks, leave positive first impressions, and make sure your
connections are redundant. In order to go into detail, however,
it is necessary to have an idea about user behaviour and of how
search engines work.
Search engines and your virtual self
Search engines gather addresses from header information sent by
browsers when user point their browsers to Google and Co, as
well as from threads in Usenet groups, news services, and, of
course, web sites they have previously indexed. These addresses
are stored into databases and spiders or robots, little
programmes that browse these sites automatically, are sent to
these websites regularly. My own site, for instance, is indexed
by robots daily for new content (1.000 views per day) and every
5 or 6 weeks completely (25.000-40.000 views per day).
When indexing websites robots usually call pages more than once
depending on the number of internal links. In that sense, a
website is its own little network. Search engines distinguish
between internal, incoming, and outgoing links. Internal links
help to evaluate the 'weight' of the single page and its
content, outgoing links are relatively unimportant for the
evaluation of the site itself but represent incoming links for
the sites linked to. Incoming links, however, represent the most
important factor, apart from content, of course. The more
incoming links a website gets the more valuable it becomes: it
is represented in Google's internal database and robots will
index it more frequently. Like an introvert in real life a
website without incoming links is practically isolated and
virtually unable to network, hence it becomes vital for a
business website to get as many incoming links as possible.
Apart from links a major factor that helps to promote your
website - your virtual self - is well represented content.
Search engines build their catalogues of key words from textual
information you offer and combine them with the number of
incoming links registered for your website. Of course, the
information about you, your experience, expertise, products,
services, and prices represent the core content. But surplus you
offer on-line may be the key for virtual success. A news
section, a web-log, or a glossary of your expertise represents
such additional information. Larger companies offer forums,
references, dictionaries etc. The important fact is that the
content needs to be original - continuously reprinting is rather
harmful. Blogs are good examples: Many offer little original
content apart from copying texts found elsewhere; others,
however, paraphrase and comment on recent publications, news,
and events - thus, they create a surplus of information - an
expertise. Remember, robots index your content regularly. It
pays off to regularly provide up-to-date surplus information
since more content will get your site being linked to more
keywords in search engines.
Another way to easily produce a little bit of content is
integrating news feeds. Some websites offer xml-based or
javascript-generated news specific to your industry.
Babelport.com, for instance, offers a News Feed for the
translation industry that can be configured according to your
needs. Babelport.com News
Feed covers topics including translation markets, workshops
& events, news about CAT-Tools and PC-Security relevant
information up to six times a week. Using the Configurator<
/a> you can generate html/php/javascript code that allows to
integrate new and up-to-date content on your website easily and
according to your layout-needs.
Content is best represented as text in plain html, with a
well-done but simple design. Company websites should not have
the most fancy design - in fact this may influence your ranking
negatively. Flash driven websites are more difficult to index
and don't forget that many users disabled such features. Also
robots only index plain html-links no popup, javascript, or
flash-based links (See Google for more information how search
engines index sites). Furthermore, as in real life a positive
initial impression is everything: Users not getting the
important information immediately will turn elsewhere - don't
expect them to spend minutes searching. Now that Google & Co
have something to index you need to make sure they will findA
your virtual self. Here networking and on-line self-promotion
starts.
Creating networks online
If incoming links are so important to your site - how do ensure
you get them? First, by regularly providing content: if you
provide valuable information visitors will link to your site.
Second, virtual business networks allow you to create profiles
and get promoted for free or little money. Third, find means to
demonstrate your special knowledge: engage in expert exchange
forums, publish articles about your area of expertise on portals
like babelport.com, etc.. Whatever you do make sure you provide
your unique signature and your URL. Thus people will remember
you more easily and you also become more visible (and your
search engine rankings are improved).
Moreover, put a tagline to your signature in emails, forum
posts, etc: A short but catchy slogan that represents what you
do and how you feel about the kind of work you do. For some good
examples you may have a look at the user profiles visible at
babelport.com. Make sure, however, you don't put superlatives in
there - calling your self the fastest, most reliable, or best
begs a challenge to this claim.
Joining business organisations and business portals is another
major keys to successful virtual networking, whether you wish to
bid for jobs or not. There are some out there addressing
translators (including babelport.com) and some excellent general
ones (e.g. www.openbc.com). Apart from the direct benefits of
such platforms (creating personal networks, getting access to
information, and, possibly, a job) you can only profit from
signing up with such business portals. The reason is simple: Due
to the amount of content, keywords, and incoming links portals
like these are more frequently indexed than the website of a
small business or freelancer. If you have a profile page on
these portals, participate in forum discussions, or publish
articles thAere your name, profile, résumé,
tagline, and your URL will be indexed every time robots crawl
the site completely.
Lastly, ensure a steady visibility on business platforms. Being
advertised as featured member for only a day creates additional
incoming links valid for some weeks if a robots indexes the page
during that time (remember the daily indexing by robots). This
will have more effect than paying for keywords on Google or
banner ads in general web-directories. Also, the more articles
and forum threads you post the more incoming links are generated
for your own website. Redundancy only helps to strengthen your
virtual networks (remember the spider analogy?): Be listed and
engage in more than just one business portal. By creating
profiles on and actively participating in multiple platforms
your virtual self will be ranked higher in search engine results
and connected to more keywords.
Continuous investment
As in real life, maintaining virtual networks is time and,
sometimes, money consuming. You do not need to provide original
content daily - but do it regularly. Give yourself at least
three hours per week to write some content for your website and
to participate in online forums. If you have gathered unique
information in your business, or written essays on translation,
tips for freelancers, or wish to publish new linguistic research
results, contact our administrators who will put them online for
free at babelport.com. Doing this you gain expertise and
reputation directly and add to your virtual network at the same
time.
Joining business portals does not need to cost money - there are
many benefits you get for free. Investing in annual member fees
for two or three portals, however, may cost you a couple of
hundred Euros per year, but remember it is investing into your
business and may earn you more reputation than spending the same
money in printed newspaper advertisemenAt. It certainly creates
more lasting links immediately and pays off in the long run.
Especially if you are running a business with global reach - and
as a freelance translator you most likely are - you will need to
promote yourself as heavily internationally as locally. Business
portals offer great opportunities for this.
Creating, maintaining, and extending your personal and virtual
business demands continuous engagement and investment with
success often not immediately visible. The benefits, however,
will be measurable in steadily increasing website-traffic in the
long run.
Christian Hansel
CEO cpi service, Leipzig, Germany
SiteFounder of babelport.com