lunes, 30 de abril de 2012

Editorial Objectivity

Consumer Search Insights.

Should search engines be able to preferentially promote their own services in their search results?

Nearly 3 in 4 people think that search engines should not be able to preferentially promote their own services.

vote All (1226)
no, results should be objective 74.1% (+3.1 / -3.4)
yes, it is their search results 25.9% (+3.4 / -3.1)

There was essentially no split between men & women.

vote Men (827) Women (399)
no, results should be objective 73.7% (+3.1 / -3.4) 74.4% (+5.2 / -6.0)
yes, it is their search results 26.3% (+3.4 / -3.1) 25.6% (+6.0 / -5.2)

Older people tend to prefer/want more editorial objectivity, whereas younger people are more fine with search engines preferentially promoting their own services. Older people tend to be more fixed in their ways & younger people are much less so.

vote 18-24 year-olds (338) 25-34 year-olds (269) 35-44 year-olds (158) 45-54 year-olds (209) 55-64 year-olds (169) 65+ year-olds (83)
no, results should be objective 65.0% (+4.9 / -5.2) 76.0% (+5.1 / -6.0) 74.0% (+6.5 / -7.7) 71.2% (+5.7 / -6.5) 71.4% (+6.5 / -7.5) 87.2% (+6.1 / -10.4)
yes, it is their search results 35.0% (+5.2 / -4.9) 24.0% (+6.0 / -5.1) 26.0% (+7.7 / -6.5) 28.8% (+6.5 / -5.7) 28.6% (+7.5 / -6.5) 12.8% (+10.4 / -6.1)

Geographically, people in the south & midwest tend to be slightly more trusting, perhaps due to the lower cost of living & less competitive markets. However, any differences here are fairly minor & are within the margin of error.

vote The US Midwest (244) The US Northeast (367) The US South (352) The US West (263)
no, results should be objective 72.2% (+6.4 / -7.4) 77.7% (+4.5 / -5.3) 72.1% (+6.0 / -6.9) 75.9% (+5.7 / -6.9)
yes, it is their search results 27.8% (+7.4 / -6.4) 22.3% (+5.3 / -4.5) 27.9% (+6.9 / -6.0) 24.1% (+6.9 / -5.7)

People who are rural tend to be slightly more accepting of Google doing as it wishes, though this is also a small sample size & well within the margin of error.

vote Urban areas (647) Rural areas (106) Suburban areas (453)
no, results should be objective 74.3% (+4.3 / -4.9) 71.9% (+8.5 / -10.5) 74.4% (+4.2 / -4.7)
yes, it is their search results 25.7% (+4.9 / -4.3) 28.1% (+10.5 / -8.5) 25.6% (+4.7 / -4.2)

There isn't a strong correlation with income on this issue either. People cared a bit more at higher income levels, but there was also a wider margin of error due to small sampling size.

vote People earning $0-24K (142) People earning $25-49K (677) People earning $50-74K (316) People earning $75-99K (75) People earning $100-149K People earning $150K+
no, results should be objective 72.0% (+7.8 / -9.4) 76.8% (+3.7 / -4.1) 68.7% (+6.1 / -6.8) 83.1% (+6.9 / -10.2) Insufficient data Insufficient data
yes, it is their search results 28.0% (+9.4 / -7.8) 23.2% (+4.1 / -3.7) 31.3% (+6.8 / -6.1) 16.9% (+10.2 / -6.9) Insufficient data Insufficient data
Categories: 

Source: http://www.seobook.com/editorial-objectivity

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

Social media usage: Boys V Girls

According to a recent study by Rutgers University, women make up 58% of all social media users, incentivising networking sites to reach out to a more male audience. There are new social networking platforms popping up every day which are geared towards the male population, focusing on sports and other stereotypical ?male? activities rather than

Source: http://www.branded3.com/b3labs/social-media-usage-boys-v-girls/

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

Here?s a Good & Basic Local SEO Blueprint

Just getting started with SEO and local search for your small business? If so, Marketing Sherpa recently published a local search case study that serves as a pretty good, pretty basic blueprint. It recounts the steps taken by a regional eye care center in the Chicago. The Cliffs’ Notes version would be this: Used PPC [...]

This is a post from Matt McGee's blog, Small Business Search Marketing.

Here’s a Good & Basic Local SEO Blueprint

Source: http://www.smallbusinesssem.com/basic-local-seo-blueprint/5711/

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

Why the iPad, Flash, Adobe Products and User Agent Detection Really Do Matter

Being the owner of a Macbook Pro, iPhone, and iPad, you might consider me an Apple Fanboy. I can tell you I’ve been involved in web development long enough to tell you that the current state of usability on the web is nearing the low point: when, in the late 90′s, browsers had no standardization [...]

This post originally came from Michael Gray who is an SEO Consultant. Be sure not to miss the Thesis Wordpress Theme review.

Why the iPad, Flash, Adobe Products and User Agent Detection Really Do Matter

tla starter kit

Related posts:

  1. Why Does Gmail User Agent Cloaking Have a Gmail account? Log in unless you’ve set your...
  2. Spam Document With User Agent Cloaking I have to say I find it particularly funny when...
  3. When Google Gets Mobile Detection Wrong I have mentioned the dangers of having multiple versions of...
  4. Adsense Related Products Reviews I’m working on a multi-part multi-day posting about adsense and...
  5. Is Flash Bad for SEO or Can You Work Around it Perhaps it’s related to Apple not installing flash on the...

Advertisers:

  1. Text Link Ads - New customers can get $100 in free text links.
  2. BOTW.org - Get a premier listing in the internet's oldest directory.
  3. Ezilon.com Regional Directory - Check to see if your website is listed!
  4. Need an SEO Audit for your website, look at my SEO Consulting Services
  5. Directory Journal - Get permanent deep links in a search engine friendly directory
  6. TigerTech - Great Web Hosting service at a great price.
  7. Article-Writing-services.org - Article Writing Services creates quality content for websites and blogs at no cost to site owners.
  8. Link Building Services - Hire WeBuildLink.com for well-planned advanced link building campaigns. Very affordable. Contact us now for a FREE evaluation.
  9. Try HOTH Plus+ NOW - The First 1-Stop Link Building Solution Powered by 100% College Educated Copywriters!
  10. Professional website designs - Get a unique brand image with website designs that sets you apart and convert your visitors into customers. Make a brand, not just a website
  11. Krystal Glass Whiteboards - Glass writing boards for offices, boardrooms, and classrooms.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Wolf-howl/~3/fFQ5GHaQnX8/

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

How to Pitch SEO: Sales Tips for Appeasing Marketing Directors #BrightsonSEO

Today I?ve presented a few tips and tricks to gain the favour of marketing directors at #BrightonSEO.� Whether you are in-house or agency side, selling the value of SEO lacks ...

© SEOptimise - Download our free business guide to blogging whitepaper and sign-up for the SEOptimise monthly newsletter. How to Pitch SEO: Sales Tips for Appeasing Marketing Directors #BrightsonSEO

Related posts:
  1. 116 Best Tips from SES London 2012!
  2. 5 Powerful Facebook Guerilla Marketing Tips to Outsmart Competitors
  3. 154 Awesome Pubcon 2011 Takeaways, Tips & Tweets

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/seoptimise/~3/sXE3gG2PfTo/sell-the-sizzle-not-the-search-tactics-for-appealing-to-marketing-directors.html

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

How Draw Something Drew 50 Million Users [Infographic]

I was soooo tempted to post another Pinterest infographic. But I spare you. Instead, have a look at the rise of Draw Something, a little app from a company called OMGPOP that OMG, popped. Big time. 50 million downloads in as many days, without a second of downtime and sub-second latency to keep users smiling. [...]

Source: http://www.getelastic.com/how-draw-something-drew-50-million-users-infographic/

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

50 Tips & Takeaways from BlueGlass LA

Last week I got the chance to attend the latest BlueGlass conference in LA. I’ve got to admit, when heading out to the US I had high expectations for this ...

© SEOptimise - Download our free business guide to blogging whitepaper and sign-up for the SEOptimise monthly newsletter. 50 Tips & Takeaways from BlueGlass LA

Related posts:
  1. 154 Awesome Pubcon 2011 Takeaways, Tips & Tweets
  2. BlueGlass LA Interview with Chris Winfield
  3. Conversion Conference London: The First 58 Takeaways

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/seoptimise/~3/GLXZtIpy-eU/50-tips-takeaways-from-blueglass-la.html

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

GoDaddy SOPA Backlash: Karma from Bad Link Practices?

GoDaddy sure is making the headlines these days. Though people are mainly incensed about the fickleness of their stance on the SOPA (Stop Online Piracy Act), what has been playing over and over in my head is Joost deValk’s post …

GoDaddy SOPA Backlash: Karma from Bad Link Practices? was originally posted on the Phoenixrealm SEO Blog by Gary Cottam.

You can connect with Gary on Google+, on Twitter @garycottam, or follow these links to find out more about Doublespark SEO or Doublespark Web Design.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/phoenixrealm/UynW/~3/zUf6JHXyJng/

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

Google+ Integration

Consumer Search Insights.
As publishers we tend to be quite concerned with the over-promotion of Google+ because it carves up the search landscape, is potentially another hoop that we have to jump through, and in some cases, the Google+ hosted version of a page will outrank the legitimate original source - which screws up the economics of online publishing.

But do users care about how Google+ was integrated directly into the search results? Generally no.

How do you feel Google+ integration has impacted Google's relevancy?

Under 1 in 5 people said it made the search results better, under 1 in 5 said it made the search results worse & over 3 in 5 didn't notice any material impact.

vote All�(1260)�
no noticeable impact 64.7%�(+3.3 / -3.5)
made it better 17.4%�(+2.9 / -2.6)
made it worse 17.9%�(+3.0 / -2.7)

Men liked it slightly more than women. However, that difference was within the estimated range of error. If this difference was more significant one might guestimate that women are better at socializing offline & have less need for artificial web relationships, given their relatively larger corpus callosum. ;)

vote Men�(875)� Women�(385)�
no noticeable impact 64.1%�(+3.4 / -3.6) 65.3%�(+5.5 / -5.9)
made it better 18.7%�(+3.0 / -2.6) 16.2%�(+5.2 / -4.1)
made it worse 17.2%�(+2.9 / -2.6) 18.5%�(+5.3 / -4.4)

Older people are less likely to have loads of online friends & relationships (as they spent most of their lives building relationships in the physical world, before the web or online social networks were popular). Older people also tend to be more set in their ways. Thus many older people won't be signed up for Google+ & won't notice as much of an impact from it.

Younger people are more likely to want to try out new technology, thus they are more likely to notice an impact from it. Some generations tend to be more isolated & individualistic (like the baby boomers) while millennials tend to like to work in groups & network more (it isn't an accident that Facebook started on a college campus & targeted college students), thus younger people are not only more likely to notice something like Google+, but they are also more likely to like its impact.

vote 18-24 year-olds�(334)� 25-34 year-olds�(322)� 35-44 year-olds�(141)� 45-54 year-olds�(204)� 55-64 year-olds�(167)� 65+ year-olds�(93)�
no noticeable impact 59.8%�(+5.1 / -5.4) 64.0%�(+5.4 / -5.7) 66.6%�(+7.3 / -8.2) 59.3%�(+6.6 / -7.0) 65.7%�(+6.9 / -7.7) 73.9%�(+8.1 / -10.1)
made it better 26.6%�(+5.0 / -4.4) 18.8%�(+5.0 / -4.1) 16.3%�(+7.2 / -5.3) 19.1%�(+6.2 / -4.9) 16.4%�(+6.7 / -5.0) 7.9%�(+8.7 / -4.3)
made it worse 13.6%�(+4.1 / -3.3) 17.2%�(+4.8 / -3.9) 17.1%�(+7.4 / -5.5) 21.6%�(+6.0 / -5.0) 17.9%�(+6.5 / -5.0) 18.2%�(+9.9 / -7.0)

I didn't notice any obvious trends or patterns aligned with locations across the country.

vote The US Midwest�(267)� The US Northeast�(360)� The US South�(378)� The US West�(255)�
no noticeable impact 65.5%�(+6.7 / -7.3) 61.3%�(+7.3 / -7.8) 67.6%�(+5.6 / -6.1) 62.4%�(+6.6 / -7.1)
made it better 16.2%�(+6.2 / -4.7) 20.5%�(+7.8 / -6.1) 17.2%�(+5.0 / -4.1) 16.5%�(+6.3 / -4.8)
made it worse 18.4%�(+6.9 / -5.3) 18.2%�(+6.3 / -4.9) 15.1%�(+5.6 / -4.3) 21.1%�(+6.6 / -5.3)

Suburban people were more likely to notice an impact, though they were not heavily skewed in one way or the other

vote Urban areas�(669)� Rural areas�(124)� Suburban areas�(450)�
no noticeable impact 65.9%�(+4.1 / -4.4) 66.8%�(+9.0 / -10.4) 62.0%�(+4.7 / -5.0)
made it better 16.4%�(+3.7 / -3.1) 14.3%�(+8.5 / -5.7) 20.4%�(+4.4 / -3.8)
made it worse 17.6%�(+3.9 / -3.3) 18.9%�(+9.8 / -7.0) 17.6%�(+4.2 / -3.6)

People who earned less were less likely to notice positive or negative impact from Google+ integration (somewhat surprising since younger people tend to skew toward lower incomes & younger people were more likely to notice & like Google+ integration). Outside of that, the data is too bunched up to see any other significant patterns based on income.

vote People earning $0-24K�(162)� People earning $25-49K�(698)� People earning $50-74K�(312)� People earning $75-99K�(71)�
no noticeable impact 71.1%�(+7.8 / -9.2) 62.8%�(+4.4 / -4.6) 61.9%�(+6.3 / -6.8) 61.3%�(+10.6 / -11.9)
made it better 14.8%�(+8.8 / -5.9) 17.5%�(+4.0 / -3.4) 18.9%�(+5.9 / -4.8) 17.1%�(+11.5 / -7.5)
made it worse 14.1%�(+9.5 / -6.1) 19.7%�(+4.3 / -3.7) 19.2%�(+6.4 / -5.1) 21.6%�(+11.2 / -8.1)
Categories: 

Source: http://www.seobook.com/google-integration

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

Jim Boykin Interview

Internet Marketing Ninja Jim Boykin has promoted link building since before I even knew what SEO was. Nearly a decade later so many things have changed in SEO (including renaming We Build Pages to Internet Marketing Ninjas), but he still sees links as a key SEO driver (as do I). I recently interviewed him about links & the changing face of SEO.

so, links links links ... these were the backbone of ranking in Google for years and years. are they still? Is social a huge signal, or something that has been over-hyped?

Yes, I do see backlinks at the backbone of rankings in Google. Every day I see sites that trump the rankings with links, and no social signals...but I've never seen a site that had "poor" backlinks compared to others, but a strong social signal, be ranked great.

There are other signal that I feel are more important than social, like content and user behavior, but then after those, I'd put social signals. Even though I don't think they're more important thank links by any stretch, I do feel that social has a place, in areas like branding, community building, and in assisting in organic search results. I always recommend that people have a strong social presence, even if for only sending additional signals to Google to assist in higher rankings.

Google recently nailed a bunch of lower quality bulk link networks. Were you surprised these lasted as long as they did? Was the fact that they worked at all an indication of the sustained importance of links?

Well...surprised...no... filtering out networks is something that's always going to happen....once something gets too big, or too popular, or too talked about...then it's in danger of being burned... the popular "short cuts" of today are the popular penalized networks of tomorrow... there will always be someone who will create a network (of others sites they control, or their new friends control, or of near expired domains, or blogger groups, etc etc) and that someone will start selling links, and advertising, and it will catch on, and they will sell to everyone and it will become so interconnected that it will cause it's own algorthymitic penalty, or it will get popular, and get the eyes of Google on it, and then it will get filtered, or there will be exact match penalties, or entire site penalties.

If that's the game you play, just understand the risks...or, don't play that game and give other reasons for people to link to you, and get permanent non-paid links, but that takes a lot of time and effort and marketing. That's the price you have to pay...because, yes, rankings in Google still comes down to #1, Links.

After such networks get hit, how hard is it for such sites to recover? Does it create a "flight to quality" impact on link building? Are many of them better off starting from scratch rather than trying to recover the sites?

We've worked with several people who have come to us with after being penalized by Google to some degree (either phrase based penalty, or entire site penalties). Probably the low budget people who got hit just started other sites and tossed their penalized site, but most of the people who come to us can't afford to toss their branded site away.

In almost all of those cases it takes someone removing all the paid and un-natural links that they can. They must understand then that their days of buying links are Over, and they Must create great things on their site that gets natural links....and they must forever give up the chase of being #1 for the big short tail phrases..unless you own the exact .com, or your brand name includes that phrase...In order to recover, they must purge the backlinks of the paid links and the networks, do a reinclusion request, and then start doing "natural things", and then wait and wait and wait...90 days is typical...it's the one Google gave to themselves after you pointed out that Google themselves were buying blog links.

Over time it has become easier to hit various trip wires when link building. You mentioned some things being phrse based or entire site & so on...how does a person determine the difference between these? Some of Google's automated penalties and manual penalties have quite similar footprints, are there easy ways to tell which is which?

A phrase based penalty work like this...let's say you've been targeting "green widgets" and "red widgets" for years...you have lots of backlinks with those exact anchor text....and you were in the top 10 for both phrases....then one day, you rank somewhere on page 3 or higher for those phrases.. you may still rank #3 for "cheap red widgets" or #7 for "widgets green" (reversed phrases)...but for the few exact phrases...it's page 3+ of the SERPS for you....nothing else changes, just those exact phrases.. on the other hand, a sitewide penalty is where pretty much nothing rankings on page 1 or page 2 in the SERPS, when the prior day you had lots of keywords rankings in there. I have no way of knowing which were automatic and which were hand done....sometimes I have a feeling in my gut...but it doesn't really matter...the solution is always the same...clean up the backlinks, and change your methods.

Earlier you mentioned foregoing the head phrase, in spite of things like Google Instant guiding searchers down a path, is there still plenty of tail to be had? Are tail keywords significantly under-rated by the market? How does one square going after tail keywords with algorithms like Panda?

I'm a big believer in the long tail. When we analyze content on a site we tend to grab ranking data from ahrefs for the client, as well as for several of their competitors, and we end up merging all the phrases and showing the search volume and the average cost per click for each phrase...we can always find a huge long tail, even if the clients site currently doesn't have that content (they have to add new original content), there is always a huge long tail to be had.

In 98% of the cases, there are no one or two or three main phrases that account for more than 2% of the total potential search traffic. Even with a sites existing content and existing traffic, the short tail tends not to be more than 5% of traffic for any sites I've been seeing.We often find that a site that may have 5,000 pages, but only 500 pages that site are of value via ranking for anything that has a decent search volume, and a decent worth in a CPC value in Google. If you look at those 500 urls, and you optimize each url for say 5 phrases on average, then you're looking at 2,500 phrases...of those, 50 phrases might be the short tail, and 2450 I would consider the middle tail. If you also add words like "shop" "store" "online" "sale" "cheap" "discount" etc to all those pages, you'll pick up tons more phrases. And from there, the more original content you can add, the more long tail you can get.... but..be careful...no one wants a site to be hit from a Google panda update...make sure the content is original, of value, and that it's of use to the viewers of the page.

When going after head or tail keywords...with one or the other do you feel that link quality is more important than link quantity?

Link quality always trumps. Otherwise, I'd buy those 10,000 backlinks for $100 packages that I see in Google AdWords... and my job would be a lot easier :)

With Google it is getting easier to hit tripwires with anchor text or building links too fast, does this also play into the bias toward quality & away from quantity?

I think it is easier to hit tripwires...but it's nice that Google sent out 700,000 "be careful" emails a few weeks ago... those were automatic....I think the "over optimization update" that Google has been speaking of will trip a lot of wires and people will have to mimic the natural web more and not focus on exact short tail phrases.

Those scammy AdWords ads proming link riches for nothing in part shape the perception of the cost & value of links. How do you get prospective clients to see & appreciate the value of higher quality links (while in some cases some of them will be competing with some of the bulk stuff that ranks today & is gone tomorrow)?

Well, luckily I'm not in sales calls anymore so I don't have to do the convincing :) but I'd say that if you can get links that you just can't buy (ie, a link from NASA.gov or harvard.edu/library/) then they're priceless. Each update Google will filter out some of the links from sites that it feels are artificial. If you can build things that stick and stand the test of time, and if you don't need to be #1 tomorrow, and are willing to invest in the sites content and the sites future, then think long tail and long term. If you're all about today, then do what you have to do today, but those cheap links won't move you much anyways & you'll just have a spammy backlink profile.

Building quality links that last isn't particularly cheap or easy. Even harder to do it in volume. What has allowed/enabled you to succeed where so many others have failed on this front? Is it that you care more about the client's well being, or is it that you have to tie together a bunch of clever bits to make it all back out?

Well, I have an army here....nearly 100 ninjas..the biggest group is the link builders, so I have a lot of link ninjas, we also have a lot of tools...tools that suggest the things we should write that has the highest probability of getting trusted backlinks, we have a content teams that knows how to write to get links from professors and orgs and government agencies, etc.

We have tools that help us to know who to write to after we've written the content..and we have tools that help us send out a lot of personal emails...between the tools and the people and the content, we manage to make it work. If we had to do all the work by hand, and by human guesses, it would never work, but with the tools (and human intervention along the way), we're able to get the links and scale it, while keeping the high quality.

When you talk about getting quality links that are priceless, those have that sort of value precisely because they are so hard to get. How big of a role does content play in the process? Is this something anyone can do?

Content is Key to getting links. There's different types of links....there's the low hanging fruit..then there's the fruit that's way on the top of the tree....the things that tend to be harder to get, also tend to be the most valued and the most trusted. If I wrote to a college professor at Harvard and said, "Hey, Professor Bob, I just wrote a great paper on "The History Of Widgets", you should add it to your article in the Harvard library" then if the article isn't Great, they'll never link to it. It starts with a great idea that morphs into great content, and then we promote it to those we're targeting. Anyone can write this content, guess at what a gov page would link to, or a college professor..see what they currently link out to...write them an email that's been personalized...and with enough emails, you can get the links if your content is good enough. It's a long slow process, but anyone can do it. Thank goodness I have tool that make that process much easier and more accurate to getting links.

You mentioned thinking long term, how long does it usually take to start seeing results from quality link building? Do you ever work on new sites, or do you mostly try to work on older websites that tend to respond quicker? Also have you noticed newer sites being able to rank much quicker if they do a quality-first approach to link building?

With getting the trusted links we tend to see an increase in traffic during the first 3 months. I do the 3 month review phone calls here, and my goal is to show them the ROI via overall rankings increase of the long tail, and an increase in google's organic traffic. Sites tend to see much better increases in these if they also follow our internal linking strategies, and our on page optimization strategies. If someone does link building, on page optimization, and internal linking, after 3 months there's almost no way someone can not increase the traffic to their site.

----

Thanks Jim!

Jim Boykin is the founder and CEO of Internet Marketing Ninjas (formerly We Build Pages, since 1999). Jim's team of marketing ninjas offer a full range of internet marketing services including link building services and social media branding, as well as they employ an in-house team of website designers. Follow Jim and the Ninjas on their blog, Facebook, Google, and Twitter, foursquare, and Linkedin.

Categories: 

Source: http://www.seobook.com/jim-boykin-interview

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

The Path to SEO Success

Ever wonder how to succeed as an SEO? Dr Pete Meyers of User Effect wrote an excellent “love letter” to newbie SEOs that is worth re-sharing. You won’t find the usual basic technical SEO tips in his letter, nor would …

The Path to SEO Success was originally posted on the Phoenixrealm SEO Blog by Gary Cottam.

You can connect with Gary on Google+, on Twitter @garycottam, or follow these links to find out more about Doublespark SEO or Doublespark Web Design.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/phoenixrealm/UynW/~3/sw1fUhUk3r4/

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

FTC Retains Outside Expert Counsel for Google Antitrust�Probe

The Federal Trade Commission (FTC), which is currently investigating Google to determine if the search engine is unfairly favoring its own web properties over competitors, announced Thursday that they would be retaining outside counsel. FTC Chairman Jon Leibowitz told reporters that the decision to retain a highly-experienced litigator does not indicate that the FTC has [...]

Follow SEJ on Twitter @sejournal


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/SearchEngineJournal/~3/HWWeMuJmIRo/

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

Google Says Don?t Make this SEO Mistake

You may have heard rumors about an impending “over-optimization penalty” by Google towards sites that engage in blatant SEO tactics like keyword stuffing and irrelevant link trading, as alluded to in a SXSW panel last month by Google webspam demi-god Matt Cutts. How this is different than every other search engine update intended to do [...]

Source: http://www.getelastic.com/value-propositions-in-search/

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

Branded3 launch Advanced SEO Training for in-house SEO teams and Search Marketers

After training the SEO teams of some of the biggest brands in the UK, we?ve now launched a one-day Advanced SEO training course for in-house SEO teams and Search Marketers, offering industry-leading skills and techniques designed for achieving top rankings, no matter how competitive the sector. We keep our clients at the top of their

Source: http://www.branded3.com/b3labs/branded3-launch-advanced-seo-training-for-in-house-seo-teams-and-digital-marketers/

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

Why Website Owners Should Be Using Pinterest

A lot has been said and written about Pinterest in the past few weeks and months, from how marketers can use use it to drive traffic to how affiliate spammers are using it to generate income. However, I’m going to take a slightly “bigger picture” view of Pinterest. How Should Web Publishers Use Pinterest �There [...]

This post originally came from Michael Gray who is an SEO Consultant. Be sure not to miss the Thesis Wordpress Theme review.

Why Website Owners Should Be Using Pinterest

tla starter kit

Related posts:

  1. How Website Owners and Publishers Can Use Foursquare While some people consider Foursquare to be nothing more than...
  2. The Dangers of Having Multiple Website Versions With the proliferation of smart phones of varying screen sizes,...
  3. How to Do A Content Audit of Your Website If you have a website that’s been around for a...
  4. How To Silo Your Website: The Masthead One of the more powerful tools an SEO can use...
  5. How To Silo Your Website: The Footer This post is part of a series on How to...

Advertisers:

  1. Text Link Ads - New customers can get $100 in free text links.
  2. BOTW.org - Get a premier listing in the internet's oldest directory.
  3. Ezilon.com Regional Directory - Check to see if your website is listed!
  4. Need an SEO Audit for your website, look at my SEO Consulting Services
  5. Directory Journal - Get permanent deep links in a search engine friendly directory
  6. TigerTech - Great Web Hosting service at a great price.
  7. Article-Writing-services.org - Article Writing Services creates quality content for websites and blogs at no cost to site owners.
  8. Link Building Services - Hire WeBuildLink.com for well-planned advanced link building campaigns. Very affordable. Contact us now for a FREE evaluation.
  9. Try HOTH Plus+ NOW - The First 1-Stop Link Building Solution Powered by 100% College Educated Copywriters!
  10. Professional website designs - Get a unique brand image with website designs that sets you apart and convert your visitors into customers. Make a brand, not just a website
  11. Krystal Glass Whiteboards - Glass writing boards for offices, boardrooms, and classrooms.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Wolf-howl/~3/m2xrd4Djuk4/

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

Thoughts on Google?s Algorithm Changes

I?ve been mulling over the staggering figures from my last post, and have come to realise that the figures merely strengthen my belief as to how we should approach SEO.

For the past several years I have emphasised time and …

Thoughts on Google’s Algorithm Changes was originally posted on the Phoenixrealm SEO Blog by Gary Cottam.

You can connect with Gary on Google+, on Twitter @garycottam, or follow these links to find out more about Doublespark SEO or Doublespark Web Design.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/phoenixrealm/UynW/~3/AEINAhnZH5E/

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

The Rise Of Social Media ? What Brands Need To Know

Last week my colleague Shaad Hamid and I were invited to the Business School at Oxford Brookes University to talk about the rise of Social Media and what it means ...

© SEOptimise - Download our free business guide to blogging whitepaper and sign-up for the SEOptimise monthly newsletter. The Rise Of Social Media – What Brands Need To Know

Related posts:
  1. What Brands Need To Know About Google+ Pages
  2. Social Media Research & Insight
  3. Social Media Engagement

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/seoptimise/~3/-1fKGYvxc9g/the-rise-of-social-media-what-brands-need-to-know.html

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

Google Says Don?t Make this SEO Mistake

You may have heard rumors about an impending “over-optimization penalty” by Google towards sites that engage in blatant SEO tactics like keyword stuffing and irrelevant link trading, as alluded to in a SXSW panel last month by Google webspam demi-god Matt Cutts. How this is different than every other search engine update intended to do [...]

Source: http://www.getelastic.com/value-propositions-in-search/

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

3 Pinterest Tools That Will Have You #Pinning In No Time

With thousands of social media platforms and applications available on the market today, it can be easy to lose sight of why you started using them in the first place. �On a personal level that can be inconvenient, but on a professional level it can mean hundreds or thousands of dollars wasted with little to [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/OnlineMarketingSEOBlog/~3/d-Ym-IfRiXo/

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

Marketing Boring Products ? It?s Not A ?Boring? Problem, It?s a ?Knowing Your Customers? Problem

In the search engine marketing world, effective online marketing comes down to surfacing keyword opportunities that reflect a demand for solutions (products/services). Content about those products is created and optimized to attract search traffic for popular and relevant keywords. Niche products often suffer from a universe of keywords that have low popularity counts and that [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/OnlineMarketingSEOBlog/~3/ItsHkQg8vzI/

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

Google?s Latest on Mobile and More

While Google scrambles to put together all of its disparate pieces into a cohesive product set it is still busy showing off the other areas where it feels it needs to be. Two of those areas that received attention in the past day or so are mobile and Google Translate. First with mobile. Google released [...]

Source: http://www.marketingpilgrim.com/2012/04/googles-latest-on-mobile-and-more.html

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

How to Cross Post From Twitter to Your Facebook Page

One of the questions I get asked by clients who are developing a social media strategy is should I cross post my Facebook posts to Twitter and vice versa, or does everything need to be unique? IMHO you need to look at social media like Moneyball and you need to look at your actions in [...]

This post originally came from Michael Gray who is an SEO Consultant. Be sure not to miss the Thesis Wordpress Theme review.

How to Cross Post From Twitter to Your Facebook Page

tla starter kit

Related posts:

  1. Facebook vs Twitter: Which is More Valuable? Recently there has been a lot of talk about Facebook...
  2. How to use Hootsuite to Publish to Your Facebook Page The following is part of a series on using the...
  3. Facebook Brand Page Timeline Checklist Starting March 30th, all Facebook brand pages and profile pages...
  4. Optimizing WordPress Page Titles, Post Titles and Page Slugs While wordpress is one of my favorite CMS platforms, out...
  5. Your Facebook Fan Page – 5 Ways to Make the Most of It If your business targets consumers, do you already have a...

Advertisers:

  1. Text Link Ads - New customers can get $100 in free text links.
  2. BOTW.org - Get a premier listing in the internet's oldest directory.
  3. Ezilon.com Regional Directory - Check to see if your website is listed!
  4. Need an SEO Audit for your website, look at my SEO Consulting Services
  5. Directory Journal - Get permanent deep links in a search engine friendly directory
  6. TigerTech - Great Web Hosting service at a great price.
  7. Article-Writing-services.org - Article Writing Services creates quality content for websites and blogs at no cost to site owners.
  8. Link Building Services - Hire WeBuildLink.com for well-planned advanced link building campaigns. Very affordable. Contact us now for a FREE evaluation.
  9. Try HOTH Plus+ NOW - The First 1-Stop Link Building Solution Powered by 100% College Educated Copywriters!
  10. Professional website designs - Get a unique brand image with website designs that sets you apart and convert your visitors into customers. Make a brand, not just a website
  11. Krystal Glass Whiteboards - Glass writing boards for offices, boardrooms, and classrooms.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Wolf-howl/~3/Ex-fD5GxMZI/

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

Changing the look of your Search Result Pages

I love Google, I seriously do. What I don't like too much is them adding more and more fluff to my search result pages (or SERPs) that I really don't want or need. Most of us know about their new Terms of Service now, right? No reason to show me that box all the bloody [...]

Changing the look of your Search Result Pages is a post by on Yoast - Tweaking Websites.A good WordPress blog needs good hosting, you don't want your blog to be slow, or, even worse, down, do you? Check out my thoughts on WordPress hosting!

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/joostdevalk/~3/gQTwlq6ER_0/

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

Cup of Joe: Don?t Waste Your Time Learning To ?Code?

Every now and then I hear a friend of mine that works in the tech space, but in a non-technical area like marketing say, “I am going to teach myself to code”. A lot of the times I hear this around January or February. “This year I will learn PHP!” or “This year I am [...]

Source: http://www.marketingpilgrim.com/2012/04/cup-of-joe-dont-waste-your-time-learning-to-code.html

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

Glenn Jones on Microformats and SEO ? BrightonSEO

Continuing our coverage of April’s BrightonSEO, here’s a write-up of ‘Microformats and SEO’: a talk given by Glenn Jones, a founder and director of Madgex. His slides are available here. ...

© SEOptimise - Download our free business guide to blogging whitepaper and sign-up for the SEOptimise monthly newsletter. Glenn Jones on Microformats and SEO – BrightonSEO

Related posts:
  1. BrightonSEO 2012 Interview with Kelvin Newman
  2. Google & Bing Panel Discussion – BrightonSEO 2012
  3. BrightonSEO 2011 Roundup: who said what and why

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/seoptimise/~3/abqUtKa5fsw/glenn-jones-on-microformats-and-seo-brightonseo.html

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

Types WordPress plugin ? Easy Custom Post Types

I've long wanted to create a database of themes that support my SEO plugin and never came up with a manageable way of doing that. When my buddy Amir from WPML emailed me about their two new plugins, Types and Views, it took me a while to grasp what they did. Turns out I'm daft [...]

Types WordPress plugin – Easy Custom Post Types is a post by on Yoast - Tweaking Websites.A good WordPress blog needs good hosting, you don't want your blog to be slow, or, even worse, down, do you? Check out my thoughts on WordPress hosting!

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/joostdevalk/~3/5glD2ziVTlM/

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

Online Marketing News: Facebook Timeline is Here, State of the News Media, Google Cracks Down

Small Businesses Increase Online Marketing Efforts This video from AT&T Business provides great insight into online marketing trends for small businesses. �What you?ll learn: User preferences Network Growth Online Marketing Tactics News You Can Use ?Don?t Dread Tomorrow?s Mandatory Switch to Timeline, Study Shows It?s Good for 95% of Facebook Pages? �March 30 marks the [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/OnlineMarketingSEOBlog/~3/g8DLT4-b6qQ/

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

GoogleBowling, Negative SEO & Outing

Excessive Complexity & Unintended Consequences

Sergey Brin recently said:

You have to play by their rules, which are really restrictive. The kind of environment that we developed Google in, the reason that we were able to develop a search engine, is the web was so open. Once you get too many rules, that will stifle innovation.

He was talking about Facebook, but those words are far more applicable to Google.

A Social Experiment

In the movie Dark Knight the Joker ran a social experiment where he offered 2 boats full of people the opportunity to save their own lives by blowing up the other boat. The boat full of "criminals" threw the button overboard & the other boat also decided not to push the button.

Of course taking someone's life is more extreme than taking their livelihood, but if you do the latter it might create stress and/or other issues which in effect lead to the former. Some people who see their income disappear might have a heart attack, others might have marriages that soon falls apart, leading into a spiral of depression and substance abuse & eventually suicide. Others still might have employees that get laid off & end up heading down some of the same scary paths - through no fault of their own.

Negative SEO Goes Mainstream

Anyone who outs or link bombs smaller businesses (small enough that Google punishing them destroys their livelihood rather than just giving them a bad quarter) is a _______. Anyone who advocates outing or link bombing such businesses is an even larger _______.

Why?

With all of Google's warning messages about abnormal links they have built the negative SEO industry in a big way. In some instances those who are not good enough to compete try to harm competitors. I received emails & support tickets like the following one for years and years...

...but the rate of demand increase for such "services" has been sharp this year. Every additional warning message from Google creates additional incremental demand.

And this is where outing a competitor makes one a total and complete _______ of a human being.

A Recent (& Very Public) Example of Negative SEO

Dan Thies mentioned that it was "about time" that Google started hitting some of the splog link networks.

Anyone who knows the tiniest bit about the social sciences could predict what came next.

In response to his Tweet, someone signed his site up for some splog links & Scrapebox action. Now he is getting warnings about his unnatural link profile. Dan didn't intentionally violate Google's guidelines, but he became a convenient target:

15th March - Dan Thies posts smug tweets to Matt Cutts and pisses off the entire internet.
18th March - seofaststart.com - blog posts started - anchor text "seo" "seo service" and "seo book"
22th March - seofaststart.com - 1 million scrapebox blast started - 100% anchor text "Dan Thies"
26th March - Dan Thies posts in Twitter that he has received an unnatural links message.

Since then Dan has installed a new template & his rankings tanked. Is it the template or the spam links? Probably the spam links, given how many other sites have got hit for using too much focused anchor text.

  • Will the site stay tanked? If so, now Google's approach to anchor text & link spikes allows independent websites to get torched in a few weeks for a few Dollars.
  • Or will the site come back stronger than ever with the help of the spam links? If it does, then how long is it before people start accidentally spam blasting their own websites & posting a public case study about burning a competitor on a forum, then citing that forum thread in their reconsideration request?
  • If the site quickly comes back, will that be due to a manual intervention by a search engineer, or from an algorithm more advanced than some people are giving it credit for being?

When asking such questions one quickly arrives at another set of questions. Is it the web that is broken? Or is it Google's editorial approach that is broken? If the observer breaks the system they observe, then the observer is the problem.

The Bigger Issue

The bigger issue isn't the short term trends for SEO related keywords or Dan's site (he will be fine & rankings are not that important for sites about SEO), but the big issue is that if this can happen to a decade old website then this can happen to literally anybody.

Piss off a ...

  • competitor
  • SEO
  • web designer
  • web developer
  • business partner
  • blogger
  • blog reader
  • former customer
  • freetard
  • ex-friend
  • bitter family member
  • insert any classification or category you like
  • etc.

... and risk getting torched.

When you out someone for shady links, you can't be certain they were responsible for it. They could have had a falling out with a consultant or business partner or another competitor who wanted to hose them. Or their SEO or webmaster could have been non-transparent with them.

Then you out them & they might be toast.

White Hat, Black Hat & ________ Hat SEO

Any of the ________ who promote competitor smoking or competitor outing as somehow being "ethical" or "white hat" never bother to explain what happens to YOU when someone else does that to you.

Sketchy marketers can make just about anything look good at first glance. No matter how shiny the package in concept, it is hard to appreciate the pain until you are the one undergoing it.

Building things up is typically far more profitable than tearing things down & if SEOs go after each other then the only winner is Google. Literally every other participant in the ecosystem has higher risk, higher costs & is taxed by the additional uncertainty. Sure some of the conscripts might get a bit of revenues and some of the "white hat" hacks might gain incremental short term exposure, but as the marrow is scraped out of the bone, they too will fall hard.

Google is betting that the SEO industry is full of ________. If our trade is to worth being in, I hope Google is wrong! If not, you will soon see most of the quality professionals in our trade go underground, while only the hacks who misinform people & are an unofficial extension of Google's public relations team remain publicly visible.

That might be Google's goal.

Will they be successful at it?

That depends entirely on how intelligent members of the SEO industry are.

Categories: 

Source: http://www.seobook.com/negative-seo-outing

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

Tracking Micro Conversions with Event Tracking for Improving SEO Campaigns

Conversions. The one metric we all know we should be focusing on, and yet it's the one thing that gets overlooked the most. So many of us focus on just one main conversion point, and forget how many other types of visitor engagement exist on our sites. These other engagement points, or less-important conversions are what experts call "micro conversions."

World-renowned analytics expert Avinash Kaushik is a strong supporter of the use of micro conversions. In his Excellent Analytics Tip series, he explains the benefits of tracking both micro and macro conversions:

3. It will force you to understand the multiple persona's on your website, trust me that in of itself is worth a million bucks. It will encourage you to segment (my favorite activity) visitors and visits and behavior and outcomes. Success will be yours.

When you understand your various visitor personas, you can create better targeted content, value-adds and better messaging overall. This will only strengthen your SEO campaign and will help guide you to improving your conversion rate and the ROI of your SEO efforts.

Event Tracking in Google Analytics

One of my favorite ways to track micro conversions is with event tracking in Google Analytics. Before I walk you through how to setup events, let's first make sure we understand the difference between events and your traditional goals in Google Analytics.

In the past, a goal in Google Analytics was when any action a visitor would take on your site that took them to a confirmation page. When the visitor reached that confirmation page, Google Analytics would count it as a goal completion.

An event, on the other hand, is when a visitor takes action on your site and there is no confirmation page. A good example of this would be when someone clicks a "Follow Me on Twitter" link on your site. It takes the visitor off of your website and makes you unable to add conversion tracking code to their destination page (because it lives on Twitter.com).

In addition to bringing us cool features like custom dashboards, the new Google Analytics also made it much easier to track events as goals. Which is what we'll be focusing on today.

Setting Up an Event

Events are much easier to setup then you might imagine. All you need to do is add a little piece of customized code to the URL a visitor will be clicking on to trigger the event, and you're halfway there. Let's start with understanding what our event tracking options are.

There are five fields in total that you can use to categorize your event, two of which are optional:

  • Category: The general name of the type of event you wish to track. If you'll be setting up events of a similar topic (like form submissions), you'll want to keep this consistent across all of the events you setup.
  • Action: A description of the action the visitor is taking to trigger the event. So if your category is set to "Forms", your action might be set to "Sales Inquiry".
  • Label: This is an optional field used to further describe the type of event. If you're tracking multiple forms of the same type (like contact forms), you may consider using this field to avoid any confusion with the other events.
  • Value: Suppose each micro conversion does have a monetary value of sorts for you, this is the field you'd use to track that numeric number.
  • Non-Interaction: A true/false field that you can use to prevent a visitor who completes the event and leaves your domain from being recorded as a bounce in Google Analytics

Still with me? Now here comes the fun part: building the event tracking script.

The framework of your event tracking script looks like this:

onClick="_gaq.push(['_trackEvent', 'Category', 'Action', 'Label', Value, false]);"

There are a couple of things you need to remember when you customize the various fields in the script (e.g. "Category"):

  • You must fill in the Category, Action and Non-Interaction fields
  • The Value and Non-Interaction fields do not have a single quote around around them like the others
  • If you choose to omit the Label or Value fields, also omit the single quote but not the comma that separates them from the other fields. In this example I've ommitted both fields, but not their commas:

  • onClick="_gaq.push(['_trackEvent', 'Category', 'Action',,, false]);"

  • The Non-Interaction field can only be set to true or false (remember: no quotes!)

Now that you've set up the script, you should place it within the href component of any link you are setting up. Here's an example of what it would look like:

<a href="http://twitter.com/seobook" onClick="_gaq.push(['_trackEvent', 'Category', 'Action', 'Label', Value, false]);">Follow us on Twitter!</a>

The final piece of the puzzle is adding the event as a goal in Google Analytics.

  1. Click the gear icon in the upper right corner of the Google Analytics profile you're setting up the goal in
  2. Using the sub-navigation where your Profile information is listed, select the Goals tab
  3. Choose the goal set you wish to add the event to (I like to categorize my goal sets)
  4. After you name your goal, select the Event radio button
  5. You now need to populate the event details exactly how you set them up in your script. If you omitted a field, just leave it blank

Event Tracking

You've now setup your event as a goal!

Types of SEO Micro Conversions

Now that the hard part is out of the way, let's brainstorm some micro conversions we could be tracking.

Social Engagement

You can use event tracking to track Share This links and blog comments. That way you can quickly see which content has the highest engagement so you can build more of it.

Affiliate Links and Ads

You may also wish to track when someone clicks one of your affiliate links or a banner you have on your site. This is a great opportunity to take advantage of the Value field so you can keep track of how much each of those clicks are worth (and perhaps double-check that you're getting paid the right amount).

Downloads

If your site has white papers, presentations, video, audio or any other type of file that users can download, you can easily keep track of those downloads with event tracking.

Follow Me/Like Us Links

If one of your macro conversion goals is brand awareness, you should consider adding an event whenever someone clicks a "follow me on Twitter" or "Like us on Facebook" link on your site. That way you can track back the source of those follows/likes to SEO.

Live Chats & Customer Support

Many service companies still utilize live chat to quickly address customer inquiries and problems. When someone clicks the live chat link, you can trigger an event to count it as a goal completion.

Additionally, if you use a third party customer support center, you can trigger an event whenever a user clicks the outbound links for those services.

These are just a few of the micro conversions you could be tracking on your site. While every site is different and is interested in tracking different things, hopefully this will give you a few ideas of additional conversion points you could be looking at to better understand your audience. The better we understand our visitors, the better job we can do as SEOs to attract more of them.

Categories: 

Source: http://www.seobook.com/tracking-micro-conversions-with-event-tracking

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here

The Fallacy of Influence

How important is influence with online marketing? Most professionals would say influence is pretty important, especially when it comes to social media. The notion is that a few key people can spread an idea to their audiences and networks, causing a brand’s content to “go viral” or at least gain more substantial distribution than if [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/OnlineMarketingSEOBlog/~3/hrGS6IJ8aEU/

more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here more info here