Dec 28 2011

A Tale Of Two Studies: Google vs. Bing Click-Through Rate



Howdy Mozzers! You may remember us from our last study, Mission ImposSERPble (we know, that title was way better), but we’re not done yet. After we finished with Google, we started in on Bing. Releasing A Tale of Two Studies in October we shook the foundation of my very desk, by jumping up and down like giddy school girls. But it wasn’t all jumping and data. Our findings provided us with a terrible truth.

Bing vs. Google Click-Through Rate by Slingshot SEO

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Article source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/seomoz/~3/y9HXxrbtvNQ/a-tale-of-two-studies-google-vs-bing-clickthrough-rate

Dec 27 2011

Wake Up SEOs, the New Google is Here

Category: General Web News,Internet Marketing,Internet News,SEOadmin @ 9:24 am


User and useful have the same root: use. And a user finds useful a website when it offers an answer to her needs, and if its use is easy and fast..

From the point of view that Google has of User, that means that a site to rank:

  1. must be fast;
  2. must have useful content and related to what it pretends to be about;
  3. must be presented to Google so that it can understand the best it can what it is about.

The first point explains the emphasis Google gives to site speed, because it is really highly correlated to a better user experience.

The second is related to the quality of the content of a site, and it is substantially what Panda is all about. Panda, if we want to reduce it at its minimal terms, is the attempt by Google of cleaning its SERPs of any content it does not consider useful for the end users.

The third explains the Schema.org adoption and why Google (and the other Search Engines) are definitely moving to the Semantic Web: because it helps search engines organize the bazillion contents they index every second. And the most they understand really what is your content about, the better they will deliver it in the SERPs.

The link graph mappedThe decline of Link graph

We all know that just with on-site optimization we cannot win the SERPs war, and that we need links to our site to make it authoritative. But we all know how much the link graph can be gamed.

Even though we still have tons of reasons to complain with Google about the quality of SERPs, especially due to sites that ranks thanks to manipulative link building tactics, it is hard for me to believe that Google is doing nothing in order to counteract this situation. What I believe is that Google has decided to solve the problem not with patches but with a totally new kind of graph.

That does not mean that links are not needed anymore, not at all, as links related factors still represent (and will represent) a great portion of all the ranking factors, but other factors are now cooked in the ranking pot.

Be Social and become a trusted seed

In a Social-Caffeinated era, the faster way to understand if a content is popular is to check its “relative” popularity in the social media environment. I say “relative”, because not all contents are the same and if a meme needs many tweets, +1 and likes/share to be considered more popular than others, it is not so for more niche kind of contents. Combining social signals with the traditional link graph, Google can understand the real popularity of a page.

The problem, as many are saying since almost one year, is that it is quite easy to spam in Social Media.

The Facebook Social Graph from Silicon Angle

For this reason Google introduced the concepts of Author and Publisher and, even more important, Google linked them to the Google Profiles and is pushing Google Plus, which is not just another Social Media, but what Google aims to be in the future: a social search engine.

Rel=”author” and Rel=”publisher” are the solution Google is adopting in order to better control, within other things, the spam pollution of the SERPs.

If you are a blogger, you will be incentivized in marking your content with Author and link it to your G+ Profile, and as a Site, you are incentivized to create your G+ Business page and to promote it with a badge on you site that has the rel=”publisher” in its code.

Trusted seeds are not anymore only sites, but can be also persons (i.e.: Rand or Danny Sullivan) or social facets of an entity… so, the closer I am in the Social Graph to those persons//entity the more trusted I am to Google eyes.

As we can see, Google is not trying to rely only on the link graph, as it is quite easy to game, but it is not simply adding the social signals to the link graph, because they too can be gamed. What Google is doing is creating and refining a new graph that see cooperating Link graph, Social graph and Trust graph and which is possibly harder to game. Because it can be gamed still, but – hopefully – needing so many efforts that it may become not-viable as a practice.

Wake up SEOs, the new Google is here

As a conclusion, let me borrow what Larry Page wrote on Google+ (bold is mine):

Our ultimate ambition is to transform the overall Google experience […] because we understand what you want and can deliver it instantly.

This means baking identity and sharing into all of our products so that we build a real relationship with our users. Sharing on the web will be like sharing in real life across all your stuff. You’ll have better, more relevant search results and ads.

Think about it this way … last quarter, we’ve shipped the +, and now we’re going to ship the Google part.

I think that it says it all and what we have lived a year now is explained clearly by the Larry Page words.

What can we do as SEOs? Evolve, because SEO is not dyeing, but SEOs can if they don’t assume that winter – ops – the change of Google is coming.

 

 

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Article source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/seomoz/~3/igvplkhcpUc/wake-up-seos-the-new-google-is-here

Dec 26 2011

Seven Mobile SEO Myths Exposed

Category: General Web News,Internet Marketing,Internet News,SEOadmin @ 10:21 am


Not too long ago, the article Mobile SEO is a Myth got a lot of people fired up about the foolish notion that mobile SEO is a construct developed by salesmen to sell more SEO services.

I responded in the comments to the author’s points, and have addressed this point in multiple articles over the years, so I’m not going to argue it here again.

While I don’t agree at all that mobile SEO itself is a myth, there are many myths around mobile SEO that practitioners need to be aware of.

Here are a few of the most prevalent…

Myth #1: A Dotmobi TLD Is Necessary For Indexing Ranking

According to the first result in Google for the query [mobile seo best practices], “the best way to build your mobile web site for SEO is by using the dotMobi domain”.

One of the reasons dotMobi gives for this is the following:

“Building a dotMobi site means that your URL will automatically feature on the ‘zone files’ that we maintain for ICANN (the meta-Internet registry organization), and which are regularly requested by mobile search engines, directories and other sites and services as ‘seed lists’ for the indexing of mobile-centric web sites (in much the same way as they use DMOZ).”

DotMobi should be commended for their dedication to mobile content, and building your brand new mobile site with a DotMobi TLD is no better nor worse than building it at m.domain.com or other popular alternatives, but the fact is Google has more m.domain.com sites indexed than any other.

Futhermore, no DotMobis appeared in the results of an upcoming Resolution Media study that deconstructs the smartphone search results for some top mobile queries in Google. The percentage of .com sites in our upcoming smartphone search results study at 73.97% was actually larger than the Internet as a whole at 55.1%.

There may be good reasons for using a dotMobi TLD, but SEO clearly isn’t one of them.

Myth #2: Metatxt Is Necessary For Mobile SEO

Though I haven’t heard much about it recently, for a while, Bena Roberts and Visibility Mobile were pushing the metatxt standard for better indexing of mobile content. A metatxt file is similar to a robots.txt file and an XML sitemap in that it is a text file at the root location of a server that helps mobile search engines discover mobile content.

The problem with metatxt?

It’s not supported by Google or Bing, which get over 99% of mobile market share, so it won’t get you a lot more visibility in the engines that people use. It’s also just a solution for indexing, so if your content is already indexed well, the metatxt file won’t help you at all. It’s just a txt file, so it doesn’t hurt you to put it up, but it’s certainly not necessary for visibility in mobile search.

In Resolution Media’s upcoming study of the top mobile queries and the ranked sites in Google, zero ranking sites used the metatxt standard, further busting the myth of metatxt for mobile SEO.

Myth #3: Code Validation Is Necessary For Mobile SEO

This one appeared first on this parked domain from 2005, and people keep repeating it because Google keeps ranking the site for mobile SEO queries (#4 currently for [mobile seo].)

It makes sense in theory. Mobile (feature phone) browsers are more primitive, and search engine spiders try to display content that is accessible to the devices that display them. If content isn’t accessible to mobile users, mobile search engine spiders won’t be able to index it.

However, this only applies to the feature phone index, whose importance is receding for mobile SEO with the growing popularity of smartphones.

When it comes to smartphones, validation does not matter, as all ranking results in the sample set failed validation, and  66% of them were so unusable that they scored a zero out of 100% on the W3’s mobileOK test, which is used to determine probable usability of sites on mobile devices, and more than 78% of the listings received a score of “Bad” from Ready.mobi’s mobile validator.

Myth #4: Mobile Sitemaps Are Necessary For Mobile SEO

These can help with indexing feature phone content, and for letting Google know that you want your content to appear in their index of accessible mobile content. But if you’re indexing smartphone content, you don’t need it, says Google’s John Mueller. To back him up on this, none of the ranking sites in the upcoming Resolution Media study on smartphone search results used mobile sitemaps.

Mobile sitemaps probably can’t hurt, and like Web sitemaps, they could help sites get more unique content indexed, but they’re not necessary for mobile SEO unless you’re concerned about indexing feature phone content.

Myth #5: Mobile Formatting (Handheld CSS) Is Enough For Mobile SEO

The mobile SEO is a myth article claims the best strategy is to allow your site to be viewed on all types of devices with CSS. This is a common argument, as I explained before here.

Also, as I explained before, the problem with this argument is that a site that uses a mobile-centric information architecture and keywords to develop content for a mobile user, rather than reformatting desktop content for mobile devices, will always be better-optimized for mobile searchers, because it gives users content that’s based on their specific user experience.

Case in point, if State Farm had not only considered the mobile user experience for their mobile site, but made it competitive for towing and roadside assistance queries that are more heavily trafficked in mobile than desktop, they would have had an opportunity to get even more traffic from search engines.

Responsive design is the easier option, so it’s very popular among designers going mobile because of what is perceived as efficiencies. However, in my experience talking with companies who design this way, many of them end up building a mobile site architecture down the line, making responsive design ultimately less efficient for them, as they have to redo it later on.

Myth #6: Mobile Queries Are Shorter

This one was just repeated in an article in Forbes, but that doesn’t make it true. The theory is, it’s harder to type on mobile devices, and because of this mobile searchers will use fewer words in their query to find what they’re looking for.

However, research from Google in 2009 showed that feature phone searches are only slightly shorter than computer-based searches (2.44 words for feature phones compared to 2.93 words for computers), and that iPhone searchers used the same number of words that computer based searchers used on average (2.93 words).

When some of the same researchers studied spoken queries in early 2011, they found that longer queries have a higher probability of being typed than shorter queries. Never mind your instincts. Mobile queries are no shorter than Web queries.

Myth #7: People Aren’t Searching On Mobile Devices

All due respect to the late innovative marketing genius and eccentric billionaire Steve Jobs, who famously said in 2010, “search hasn’t happened on mobile devices,” but search is happening on mobile devices. Quite a bit of it, actually.

Google reported early this year that 1 in 7 queries come from mobile devices on average, with certain industries (like restaurants) getting as high as 30% of their queries from mobile devices. And Yahoo! has reported that mobile search on average makes up 20% of their total search queries. Jobs was trying to demonstrate that people use apps instead of browser-based search, but Google research on smartphones from April shows that more smartphone owners search (77%) than use apps (68%).

Want to do your part in helping to eradicate these persistent mobile SEO myths?

If you’re calling yourself a mobile SEO expert, as many people do these days, stop repeating them. If you’re not a mobile SEO expert, but want to promote the spread of good, accurate information, share or link to this post and/or check out this list of credible mobile SEO resources until Google gets its act together and stops propagating these myths on what matters for mobile SEO.

Opinions expressed in the article are those of the guest author and not necessarily Search Engine Land.

Related Topics: Mobile Search | Search Marketing: Mobile | SEO: Mobile Search

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Article source: http://searchengineland.com/seven-mobile-seo-myths-exposed-103470

Dec 24 2011

Mapping Keywords to Content for Maximum Impact



Howdy SEOmoz fans! Welcome to another edition of Whiteboard Friday. Thrilled to have you with us. Today we’re talking about mapping keywords to content for maximum impact.

Now the problem is that a lot of folks think about the world of keyword research and keyword targeting separately from the worlds of content creation. This can happen a lot of the times because the SEO person is not always involved in the design of the content strategy or what’s going to go on the website. They’re brought in after the fact, maybe in an internal role or in an external consulting role. That can be super frustrating. Let me show you, give you an example of, sort of the traditional keyword targeting process and why this is so bad.

So here’s Mr. Biz Owner, and he would like to rank well for oven mitts. A perfectly reasonable request, want to rank for oven mitts. Great. All right. So the SEO person is brought in, and the SEO person goes, “Well, you know, I want to be able to make some changes. I need to add some content to your website.” The business owner is like, “No, no, no, no, no. I already have a page. I just want it to rank for oven mitts.” Well, okay. Let’s chose the best page you’ve got for oven mitts and we’ll try to make that one rank better. The business owner is like, “All right. All right. Good job. Good job. I appreciate that. You did good work. Now I want to rank well for heat retardant oven mitts.” The SEO is like, “Well, okay. You know what? We can modify that page again and target that particular phrase.”

But this cycle goes on and on and on. Soon enough you’ll have Frankenpage, ooh, super scary. He’s trying to target ridiculous terms like “advanced kid- friendly oven mitts for hardcore baked lentils.” You’re like, “How did this happen? How did this Frankenpage get here?”

Well, it got there because of this process, this broken process of the SEO not being the person with the authority or the influence to be able to choose what content needs to be existing on the website and what content needs to be targeting which keywords. This happens all over the Web. You can click on tons of search results in all sorts of verticals and sort of be like, “What were they thinking when they made this page?” It’s not that the website is all that bad or they have done something terrible in SEO. It’s just that it is not strategic. It is a very tactical approach to SEO, and that tends to lose out over time to pages that are built specifically for users searching for those things that deliver everything they want in the content.

So, let’s talk about a strategy to do exactly that. Over here we have a better process. No Frankenpages.

Step one: Establish the full list of keywords. Rather than going sort of one by one and saying, oh, we want to target this, we want to target that, it’s nice to be able to start with that full list of keywords. As you refine, if you need to refine that keyword list, beginning again with this process and making sure that the new keywords that you need to be targeting work into the process in this way. We’ve got our full list of keywords to target. Hopefully, we’ve figured out how valuable and important they are so we have our spreadsheet. We say, “Well, these are the top converting keywords. These are the ones that send the most traffic, and these are the ones with the lowest difficulty. So based on those three factors, this is how we want to target them.” Then we’ll map the keywords to existing content based on their relevance. So this means does the page’s content actually serve the needs of a keyword phrase that they are targeting? So, if you have a heat-retardant oven mitts page, does that actually contain heat-retardant oven mitts? Is that a full category page? Is it a subcategory page? Is it a single item that happens to be the most heat- retardant oven mitts? Is it a brand page? What is it? We make sure that it is relevant.

Second, we’re going to target user intent. This means not just thinking about whether the page is relevant for the keyword, but thinking about, “What does the user want when he gets to this page?” If I am searching for heat-retardant oven mitts, I probably want a bunch of information about why it’s heat retardant, what it’s made from, explaining to me what kind of temperatures it can handle. I want to know information about where I can buy these magical oven mitts, what the sources are, what the different brands are. I’d like to be able to filter on that data. Maybe I even want tutorials and demos on like, oh, well, this is the kinds of things that you could cook with them. Cool.

Then you can think about yourself, about conversion goals. So you make them happy and they’ll make you happy. The conversion goal can be we want them to sign up for an email, we want them to click on a button, we want them to add this to their cart, we want them to convert out of the store. Great. Whatever that is, fine, super.

Then we have step two and a half, which is sort of an interim here. The reason we’ve got it is because a lot of the times when you’re mapping keywords to content, it is not a 1:1 ratio. This again can make for Frankenpages unless you’re careful. So, you want to be selecting is this a multiple or a singular keyword page focus. Meaning for the oven mitts, for just that broad keyword phrase, I might suggest, in fact, I’d probably be very strongly suggesting to a business owner who has a website about oven mitts, that that should be one page in and of itself. We should not try to make this a multiple keyword targeting page because we don’t know what the user intent is. Someone who has that broad of a phrase is going to need to do a lot of research and discover whether they want heat retardant ones or they want ones for grills or pit fires, or they’re looking for a certain material, they want it to withstand certain temperatures, they’re looking for kid-friendly gloves, they want gloves for certain sizes, they want gloves with fingers on them or gloves that are just the classic mitt form. Whatever that is, we need to be providing them with a ton of different sorts of data. So, this page is going to have all sorts of selections and things. That has to map to A, B, and C here, or we’re going to lose out and that’s why I wouldn’t try to get a bunch of different phrases ranking for this.

You could conceivably, maybe it’s possible that you would have a page for oven mitts and oven gloves and target both on the same one. So oven mitts and gloves could be a page title, could be the target. But I don’t know. I think gloves specifies fingers and mitts specifies just like this, and then they’re the hybrid ones that has the one finger. I don’t know where those go. Kitchen people will figure that out. Don’t worry.

Then you have things like, oh, well, this page, oven mitts for kids, that can target lots of keywords like child-friendly oven mitts or kid-friendly oven mitts or children’s sizes, oven mitts in children’s sizes. So you take the user intent and the relevance of the keyword and you add those onto the page and then you can figure out what are all the pages that the kid- friendly one should target. We’ll make the most important ones in the title. We’ll put maybe the secondary ones in the body content. We’ll try and make that page work for that combination because we don’t want to build one that’s child friendly and one that’s kid friendly when they are exactly the same page just to be able to target different keywords. That generally makes no sense, because again, the link equity gets split up and Google does a lot of things with topic modeling anyway to figure out that those two are probably really similar. So that doesn’t make good sense. We can do this. So I’ll draw a tiny little oven glove right there. Oh adorable, for kids.

Then you have high-temperature oven mitts. These are, oh, they’re big and strong. They can handle a bunch of high temperatures. Oh, look at all that heat they can take. The high-temperature oven mitts could be ones that include phrases like heat resistant, heat retardant, for advanced chefs, for foodies, whatever it is. Those high-temperature oven gloves, they can target a bunch of phrases as well, but we have to go back to relevance and user intent for those.

Then finally, maybe we’ll have something in the longer tail, like pit fire mitts or pit fire gloves, and those for people who need to dig around in coals or who are doing the fancy smoking in a backyard barbecue. Whatever it is. Professional grade stuff. Fine. Cool. I don’t know. I’ll put a hammer there to indicate they’re, like, hardcore professionals. I’m not sure why.

Once you have done this process, you can then take the map of keywords that you created to content and actually go build that content to make searchers happy. This works so much better than the Frankenpage approach. I can’t even describe to you how well this will work. It doesn’t have to be right from the start. You can take an existing site right now, run through this process, and have just a huge win both in terms of your ability to target searches and rank for those keywords as well as your ability to better convert those visitors because of how you’ve targeted the relevance and the user intent.

I hope you’ve enjoyed this edition of Whiteboard Friday. We’ll see you again next week. Take care.

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Article source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/seomoz/~3/ESEOYJd_NeI/mapping-keywords-to-content-for-maximum-impact-whiteboard-friday

Dec 23 2011

Managing SEO and Social Media Together

Category: General Web News,Internet Marketing,Internet News,SEOadmin @ 10:17 am


How etailers manage their social media marketing channel has a growing impact on organic search results. Google and Bing have both incorporated social data into their algorithms to signal content freshness and quality. While the datasets each engine has access to differ, the fact remains that search marketing and social media cannot be managed in silos.

According to the presentation given by Andrea Fishman, vice president of global strategy at BGT Partners — a marketing and design firm — at Search Engine Strategies Chicago 2011, “57% of digital marketing impact is derived from SEO.” But search engine optimization also has a symbiotic relationship with social media, press relations, paid search, offline advertising, and other marketing channels. Though the focus of this article is on organic search and social, when all the marketing teams work together the combined efforts create an upward spiral of success across all channels.

A Search and Social Example

As usual with SEO, it all starts with content. An etailer needs a creative angle to develop interesting, valuable, sharable content that remains relevant to its core product set. For example, ADT Security produced an interesting infographic on safety and home automation systems for its blog. If this were merely a blog post, there’s no chance I’d read it. But an infographic? That’s a different matter. It lures the eyes in with its seemingly easy-to-digest information and interesting sequential information flow. Apparently ADT’s audience agreed; just look at these results as reported by BGT’s Fishman:

  • 17 percent increase in social connections;
  • 53 percent increase branded buzz;
  • 47 percent increase organic search to ADT.com;
  • 305 percent increase organic search to homesecuritysource.com, ADT’s unbranded blog;
  • 45 percent increase in organic leads.

Great Content Still Reigns Supreme

The etailer still needs to create, optimize and publish valuable content, managing it through the various relevant social and other marketing channels. Search Engine Land, the online magazine, recently posted a great list of 21 types of social content to get the team’s creative juices flowing. Exactly how and how persistently the etailer goes about the promotion of this content across marketing channels will to a large extent determine the success of the campaign. Assuming the content is valuable to the audience, blasting it out via Facebook, Twitter, Google+, LinkedIn, StumbleUpon, and any niche social networks is just the start.

Don’t forget to blog about the amazing new content, and reach out to other bloggers to let them know you have an amazing new infographic or piece of content their audience will desire. This process will be much more successful if you’ve already been courting influential bloggers in your industry so they’re ready to receive the content. Have the public relations team reach out to the relevant trade publications and blogs. Include it in the next email newsletter. Was the making of the content particularly interesting? Then perhaps a companion “making of” video on YouTube would be another valuable promotional tool. Is there an interesting or beautifully designed visual involved? Upload it to Pinterest. Naturally it helps immensely to have the accounts already set up and populated with interesting content and followers before it’s time to promote a new campaign through tem. Last, but certainly not least, have team members with social profiles spread the word to their networks as well to maximize the initial reach?

Once the content is live and published through all the social and marketing channels, it’s in the audience’s hands. Will they like it? With they like it enough to share it, Like it, Tweet it, email it to a friend, comment on the blog post, write their own blog post about it or interact with it in some other way? The more the audience interacts with and shares that content, the greater the content’s reach will be.

How Social Campaigns Benefit SEO

And how does a social campaign impact SEO? Because every “share” creates a page with a unique URL that has a link back to the content promoted, as well as exposing an ever-larger number of people to the content. The more people exposed, the more people are likely share and create more links. Some of those links will be directly valuable to SEO efforts, especially links in blog posts and the press, as well as Google +1s. But Likes, Tweets, shares on LinkedIn and other networks also represent social SEO value, where each share is a vote of quality. They may not pass link popularity directly, but they pass social signals that serve as similar indications of trust and quality as links do.

With 4 billion pieces of information shared on Facebook, 140 million Tweets and more than 3 billion searches conducted every day, etailers have countless opportunities to lure customers to their sites through search and social. Remember to treat social media as a revenue-generating platform, not just a one-way bullhorn for shouting at followers. Create great content, promote it widely through social media and other marketing channels, interact with followers on those social sites, measure the campaign’s performance, learn from the successes and failures, and do it again.

Read More

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Article source: http://www.practicalecommerce.com/articles/3223-Managing-SEO-and-Social-Media-Together

Dec 22 2011

One year of search engine news: everything you need to know



This year, we published many articles that help you to get better results for your website. In this issue, you have a quick overview of the 2011 articles, sorted by category: Google ranking algorithm insights, tips and tricks, link building, Google’s +1 button and Google algorithm updates.

Google ranking algorithm insights:

From time to time, insider information about Google’s ranking algorithm leaks. As a subscriber of our newsletter, you will always be up-to-date with the latest insider knowledge:

Tips and tricks:

Search engine optimization is the most effective way to promote your business. We regularly publish tips and tricks that help you to get more out of your website:

Link building:

Link building is still the most important search engine optimization activity and it seems that high quality backlinks will remain the most important ranking factor for the foreseeable future:

Google’s +1 button:

Google introduced the +1 button for web pages this year. The new button is Google’s answer to Facebook’s ‘Like’ button and it influences the position of your website in Google’s results:

Google ranking algorithm changes:

Whenever Google has a new ranking algorithm, our newsletter will inform you. You will also get tips and tricks on how to benefit from Google’s algorithm updates:

This is the 504th issue of our weekly newsletter. That means that it has been available for 9 years and 243 days. We’ll continue to provide you with detailed information about how to get more customers through search engines in the years to come.

Back to table of contentsVisit Axandra.com

 

Article by Axandra SEO software

Dec 22 2011

The latest SEO developments you need to know

Category: General Web News,Internet Marketing,Internet News,SEOadmin @ 9:51 am


Over the past 12 months, the search marketing landscape has seen many changes. Let’s take a look at the biggest developments that all digital marketers need to know.

The slow and final death of Yahoo Site Explorer
This year, the once mighty Yahoo shrank some more — and in a big way for SEOs. After being usurped by Google years ago, the 16-year-old search engine finally killed off its most coveted features of SEOs across the globe. Yahoo Site Explorer is no more. That’s a shame, as it was the only link graph reporting tool operated by a major search engine.

There are plenty of other players in the space, but few are free, nor do they tout as robust an index as did Yahoo Search. The death of Yahoo Site Explorer is significant, but it’s certainly not a surprise. The prepared in the industry have already done their due diligence in selecting alternatives. Out with the old and in with the new, as they say. Speaking of the new…

These aren’t your father’s search engine bots
Evidence continues to mount that search engines’ crawlers can do more than simply parse in-line HTML on a given page, and this news recently came from the proverbial horse’s mouth in the form of Matt Cutts‘ slightly vague PubCon announcement that Google is “getting smarter.” That’s not news to most of us, but just how — and when — “smarter” is happening is an interesting topic. Though it remains speculative, it’s clear the search engines have made much progress in developing technology that emulates the human browser. Nowadays search engine bots can execute JavaScript and AJAX, index Flash, and even complete forms. Fancy.

What does this mean for SEOs? It means that the pillars of SEO — relevance, accessibility, and authority — still remain foundational. But we must work closely with design, information architecture, and user experience folks to assure the user experience we build is positive, persuasive, and aligned with our conversion and revenue KPIs. Above-the-fold page layout, content, links, and rich media locations all need to be carefully considered. If we want to stay ahead of the curve as internet marketers, we can’t work in silos.

Google giveth more transparency
Among the more recent and impactful changes to the search landscape are announcements from Google that it’s going to be more transparent moving forward. This is welcome news since many conclusions about what the engine is doing tend to be based on speculation or statistically unsound test cases.

For SEOs, a critical announcement is that more detail will be provided to webmasters submitting reconsideration requests. We will now be informed if a suspected penalty or filter is due to manual or algorithmic action. The engine’s new monthly series on algorithm changes represents another commitment to transparency by Google. That’s more welcome news to help us filter out a bit of the noise in the industry and keep our sites in line with the trends.

Google taketh away referring keyword data
Google might give us the warm fuzzies on one end of transparency spectrum, but it’s balancing this by taking away data on another end. In an effort to better secure personal data, the engine has elected to leverage default SSL encryption on search queries for logged-in users.

What does this mean? Well, according to Google’s Matt Cutts, we will see “(not provided)” as the keyword referrer from Google in analytics reporting in place of the actual keyword used. He also said that “(not provided)” would not exceed single digits in the percentage of terms affected. Unfortunately this isn’t the case. In some cases, a significant chunk of data is lost, which can punch holes in informed optimization efforts.

Curiously, paid search traffic queries aren’t hidden, nor are queries from logged-out users, which begs a few questions around whether this change was solely to protect users’ privacy, or to make SEOs guess while maintaining status quo for the paid search guys. Google suggests using Google Webmaster Tools as an alternative to view the lost data, though historic data is lost after 30 days and only the top 1,000 search queries are reported.

Google +
In yet another effort to break into the social media universe, Google launched its Google+ project with more success than any of its previous attempts. It first rolled out its +1 button, which allows logged-in users to essentially tag those search results (organic or paid) that they find worth sharing with those they’re connected with via their Google account. This was the initial attempt to join the foray with tweet and “like” buttons from the entrenched social players. Later the +1 button was made available to embed on websites, and plenty took notice.

In June, Google launched the Google+ social network, complete with circles, sparks, hangouts, and more. The platform gained quick momentum with 10 million new users in two weeks, and the numbers keep growing. It’s yet to be seen how the Google+ Project will impact search, but it’s clear that the search giant will incorporate what data it can from its social network to advance search results.

Panda! Panda! Panda!
And how can a 2011 SEO year in review be complete without lots of Panda talk? It can’t.

At the end of February, a massive update from Google, officially dubbed “Panda” after an engineer at the company, began an incremental rollout. The SEO community called this update “Farmer” since it had a significant and immediate impact on sites with thin content, often referred to as “content farms.” The first update and the six subsequent ones have changed the definition of a quality site in the eyes of Google and SEOs that are paying attention.

The update essentially combines research around the opinions of a human quality rating panel with user data gathered by the Google’s automated search technology. Google leveraged advances in machine learning to combine these human quality ratings around whether a set of sites is trustworthy, likeable, and other subjective elements against the myriad of data points already gathered for these and similar sites. It then applies machine learning to essentially “predict” whether people will trust other websites based on the seed research. It sounds complicated because it is.

The takeaway here is that SEOs must now look at their work through a holistic lens that takes into account all elements of a site. Things like design, user experience, and truly engaging content are now all considered by Google in algorithmically measurable ways. User metrics are critical as well.

If this boils down to a few specific points, it is that testing and consideration of all elements of a site’s performance and quality are now critical to strong, lasting rankings. Simple adherence to best practices for traditional SEO elements might not be enough to help your site rank better in the long run.

Ramsay Crooks is director of SEO at Geary SEO.

On Twitter? Follow iMedia Connection at @iMediaTweet.

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Article source: http://www.imediaconnection.com/content/30651.asp

Dec 21 2011

Google says that valid HTML code is a quality signal



Webmasters are not sure about the importance of valid HTML code. Some think that it is very important while other say that it doesn’t matter. Last week, Google said that valid HTML code is a quality signal:

“Why does validation matter? There are different perspectives on validation—at Google there are different approaches and priorities too—but the Webmaster Team considers validation a baseline quality attribute. It doesn’t guarantee accessibility, performance, or maintainability, but it reduces the number of possible issues that could arise and in many cases indicates appropriate use of technology.

valid HTML code

While paying a lot of attention to validation, we’ve developed a system to use it as a quality metric to measure how we’re doing on our own pages. Here’s what we do: we give each of our pages a score from 0-10 points, where 0 is worst (pages with 10 or more HTML and CSS validation errors) and 10 is best (0 validation errors). We started doing this more than two years ago, first by taking samples, now monitoring all our pages.”

What is valid HTML code?

Most web pages are written in HTML. As for every language, HTML has its own grammar, vocabulary and syntax, and every document written in HTML is supposed to follow these rules.

Like any language, HTML is constantly changing. As HTML has become a relative complex language, it’s very easy to make mistakes. HTML code that is not following the official rules is called invalid HTML code.

Why is valid HTML code important?

Search engines have to parse the HTML code of your web site to find the relevant content. If your HTML code contains errors, search engines might not be able to find everything on the page.

Search engine crawler programs obey the HTML standard. They can only index your web site if it is compliant to the HTML standard. If there’s a mistake in your web page code, they might stop crawling your web site and they might lose what they’ve collected so far because of the error.

Although most major search engines can deal with minor errors in HTML code, a single missing bracket in your HTML code can be the reason if your web page cannot be found in search engines.

If you don’t close some tags properly, or if some important tags are missing, search engines might ignore the complete content of that page.

How can you check the validity of your HTML code?

Download IBP and select the HTML validator in the “Tools” menu. Enter the address of a web page and you will see how many errors the page contains.

Although not all HTML errors will cause problems for your search engine rankings, some of them can keep web spiders from indexing your web pages.

Valid HTML code makes it easier for search engine spiders to index your site. Checking the HTML code of your web pages only takes a few minutes but it will have a major impact on the accessibility of your web pages

Article by Axandra SEO software

Dec 21 2011

Advanced On-Page Optimization



Howdy, SEOmoz fans. Welcome to another edition of Whiteboard Friday. This week, we’re talking about advanced on-page optimization. Specifically, I have five tactics for you that go beyond the traditional “I’m going to put my keyword in the title tag. I’m going to put my keyword in the URL”, those kinds of things.

First one, starting out is this idea of semantic connectivity. We talked about this in the past. We did some research a couple of years ago, maybe 18 months ago on LDA, which is latent Dirichlet allocation, which, of course, is a form of topic modeling that we suspected Google might be using.

It’s a way to imagine the connections between words in a particular language. I’ll give you an example. Here is the word “cat”, and the word “cat” is probably closely related to the word “feline”. If you were a search engine and you saw a document with the word “cat” and the word “feline,” you would think that document is more relevant to a query for the word “cat” than a document that has the word “cat” and the word “whiteboard,” which maybe that would be very far away.

Here’s cat and here’s canine. Those are much more distant, but cat is relatively closer to tiger, but it’s even a little closer to meow. So, you get this sense of, ah, the search engines have a graph of all the words in a language set, how they’re connected to each other, what’s relevant to what, phrases not just individual words but the two or three or four word phrases.

This kind of thing can be very helpful if you’re looking at a document and you’re saying to yourself, “Boy, I talked about cats, but I forgot to mention anything about what they eat or what family they’re in or what they’re related to. I didn’t even use the word ‘pets.’ Maybe, I should be optimizing for those types of things.” Employing those closely connected terms can help to boost the relevancy and help boost your rankings.

Second thing on the list, block level optimization. There is a great YOUmoz post about this that we promoted to the main blog recently talking about precisely this type of thing where search engines will essentially analyze individual portions of a page. They’ll look at, oh, here’s a sidebar and we’ve decided that’s not really relevant because that’s navigational links or here’s the top nav. We’re not going to analyze that for relevancy as much potentially. We’re going to look at the header of the document, where the headline is, those first few sentences. We’re going to look at the middle of the document, maybe in paragraph forms, the footer of the document, the end. Are all of those things talking about the topic? Are they all on the subject, or is this something that starts out talking about tigers, but it eventually gets into a discussion on genetically modified foods? If that’s the case, maybe it’s less relevant to tigers. It’s just that the initial headline looked like it was relevant to tigers, and so therefore, we don’t want to rank this document for the word, tigers. We might even want to be ranking it for something like genetically modified foods. It just happens to use that catchy title.

So, make sure that your document . . . do this kind of check for all of these sections, making sure that they’re pertinent, that they’re relevant to the content of the query, that they’re serving the visitor’s interests and needs. If you have that kind of off topic diatribe, and I’m not saying you can’t go off topic in your writing a little bit and explore some storyline themes, particularly if you have a long expository piece or you’re writing a narrative blog post. That’s great. I’m just saying, for stuff that is hyper targeting a particular keyword, especially for a commercial intent or a navigational intent, this might not be ideal. You might want to make those more focused.

Number three, internal and external links. I’m not talking about the links pointing to the page. I’m talking about the links that actually exist on the page. You remember some folks from Google have actually in the past said that, yeah, we might have some things, some first order or second order effect things in our algorithm that rewards people who link out, meaning link to other websites.

Marshall Simmons from The New York Times was on a Whiteboard Friday a couple of years ago, and Marshall talked about how when The New York Times changed their policy to put more external links on the page off to other websites, they actually saw increases and boosts in rankings from the articles that did that, strongly confirming what Google had said about there being some sort of effect in the algorithm, maybe not directly but indirectly looking at, hey, is this person linking out or are they linking out to good places? If they are, we might want to reward them.

Another optimization tactic that’s on the more advanced side is putting good external links referencing relevant, potentially useful content on your pages. Linking out to other people is a wonderful thing too, because it puts you into the ecosystem. What I mean by that is if you link to someone else, other people go and visit that page. They might be talking about it. They might thank you for the reference. Someone might see that on Twitter. They might look in their analytics and see that you’ve sent visitors over and come check out your page and then link to something you’ve done. That reciprocation is very, very powerful in the organic web, and it can be useful, not only for this direct relevancy boosting signal, but also from a links perspective, from a traffic perspective.

Number four on the list, the happiness of visitors to a page. I know what you’re thinking. It’s sort of like, wait a minute, that’s not on-page optimization. That’s more like conversion rate optimization. Yes, but it matters for rankings because Google is looking so much at usage and user data.

I’m going to ask Kenny, who’s filming this video, going to wave, Kenny? That’s a great wave. Did you all see that? He looked great. It’s amazing. I’ll ask Kenny to put in a link to a Quora thread where a Google engineer, somebody who worked at Google, actually talked about how they use machine learning on user and usage data signals in the potential ranking algorithm to help better stuff come up when the rankings may be ordered normally just by their classic on-page link stuff and these types of things.

That means that if I can make visitors happier, if I can boost the value of what they’re getting out of the pages, I can potentially rank higher too, not just convert more of them but even improve in rankings.

We were talking about things like: Are these visitors completing actions? Are they spending more time on this site or page on average with a good experience than they are with others? What I mean by this is it’s not just, “Oh, my time on site is low. I need to find ways to keep visitors on there a longer time.” Maybe, you have something that’s answering a very, very short query in a short amount of time, and that’s making visitors happy. And, maybe, you have something that’s answering that query but after a long period of time, visitors are actually unhappy and they’re going back to Google and clicking, you know what, block all results from this site, I don’t want to see it any more. Or they see you in the rankings in the future, and they’re like, “Oh, I remember that domain. I do not want to go through that again. They had those annoying ads and the overlays, and they blocked me from going there.”

Every time I see Forbes, I was like, “Man, does this article look interesting enough to me to have to go through that initial screen of the ad, because I know I’m going to get it every time, and it’s going to take extra time to load?” On my phone when I’m browsing the Web, I’m always like, “I’m not going to click on that Forbes link. Maybe I’ll check it later on my laptop or my desktop.”

Those types of things are signals that the engines can look at. Are people coming back? Are they returning again and again? When they see this stuff, true they’ve got 25% market share with Chrome. They’ve got the Google tool bar. They have Google free Wi-Fi. They have relationships with ISPs. So, they can get this data right about where everyone goes, not just from search but all over the Web. They know what you’re bookmarking. They know what you’re returning to. They know your visit patterns. This kind of stuff is definitely going to make its way into the algorithm, I think, even more so than it does today.

Fifth and finally, some content uniqueness and formatting. So, you’re all aware of duplicate content issues, thin content issues, and the Panda stuff that happened earlier this year that affected a lot of websites. What you may not know is that there are a bunch of tactics that you can apply in an advanced on-page optimization scenario that can help, so things like completely unique. When I say “completely unique,” what I mean is not that you can’t quote someone in here, but just that what you can’t have is a mad lib style SEO where you’ve got XY blank Z blank ABC blank, and it’s fill in the city name, fill in the proper name, fill in the name of the business, and that’s the same across every page on your site, or that’s taken from a manufacturer’s description and that’s put in there.

You need to have that uniqueness throughout, and Google is very good at shingling, which is sort of a method for pattern detection inside topics or inside content. Don’t play with them. Just make sure that this is a highly unique piece. If you want to quote something, that’s fine. If you want to use media or graphics from somewhere else, that’s fine and reference those. I’m not talking about that, but I am talking about that sort of playing mad libs SEO is a dangerous game.

We’ve noticed that longer content, more content is literally quite well correlated with better rankings, particularly post Panda. What you saw is that sites. I’ll give you an example. I look at a lot of rankings for restaurant sites, because I’m constantly doing searches for restaurants and types of food because I travel a ton. What I see is that Yelp and Urban Spoon do very, very well. City Search often does well, and then you’ll see those independent, individual blogs. When they tend to rank well, when they’re on page one is when they’ve written that long diatribe exploring all sorts of things on the menu with lots of pictures of the food, an experiential post versus a short snippet of a post. You’ll find those on page three, page four, page five. They don’t do as well. That longer in- depth content, more of the uniqueness, more value in the content, more than I can get out of it as a reader seems to be something that Google is picking up on. I don’t know if that’s pure length. I don’t know if that’s something necessarily they’re looking at in the user and usage data, but it could be helpful if you’re not ranking very well and you’re thinking, boy, I have a lot of pages that are just short snippets. Maybe I’m going to try expanding some of them.

Using images in media, we’ve, of course, seen the correlation with alt attributes matching the keyword and images. That’s not what I’m talking about necessarily, but using images on the page can create more of that in- depth experience and can create a better relationship between you and the visitor. Those things could be picked up and used in other places, and then they’ll link back to you. There are all sorts of benefits.

User generated content, so getting comments and interaction down here at the bottom, that type of stuff often is an indication in search engines that, hey, people really care about this. It’s also an addition to the amount of content, and it tends to be very unique and valuable and useful. It uses those words that people on the Web would be using about the topic, and that can again be helpful for your content optimization.

Then, finally, Google is clearly looking at things like reading level and correctness of grammar and spelling. There’s now a filter inside Google. If you click on the advanced search in the little gear box on the top right- hand corner of your screen when you’re logged into Google, you can see advanced search. When you click that, there’s a reading level filter to say, “Only show me content that’s 12th grade and above.” Clearly, Google has that ability.

What I’m saying here is that your content formatting, the way you’re putting things together, the length of the document, the in-depthness, and the correctness, these can all have an impact. Don’t just be thinking about keyword stuffing and using a few keywords here and there and putting it in the title at the front. Be thinking a little bit more broadly about your on- page optimization. You might get more benefits than even doing some link building, sometimes.

All right, everyone. I hope you’ve enjoyed this edition of Whiteboard Friday, and we will see you again next week. Take care.

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Article source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/seomoz/~3/FuU_phKmnTk/advanced-onpage-optimization-whiteboard-friday

Dec 20 2011

Gifts are not just for the Holidays



by Michael Leob

GiftsDuring the holidays we are generous people. We show our love and appreciation to those that we care about by giving gifts.

Unfortunately, it starts and ends with the holiday season. Gift giving should be a year-round endeavor. I’m not talking about birthdays or special occasions. In this digital age we are losing that personal touch. Gift giving has become depersonalized. We do what we have to do.

Let’s thank someone, not by text, but by sending a gift of appreciation. How about “thinking of you,” “miss you,” “hang in there” or “good luck.” What a novel idea! Gifts do not have to be expensive but they should be personal.

Don’t give someone who loves tea a pound of coffee or a wine enthusiast beer or vice versa. So let’s spread the cheer all year round. Who knows, it might become contagious. The world could certainly use it.

Michael Leob was an executive in the luxury goods industry for over 30 years. He is presently a consultant in the retail industry.

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