Thursday, May 31, 2012

How Many Search Engines?

Consumer Search Insights.

How many search engines do you typically use in a given month?

Most people only use 1 or 2 search engines in any given month.

Vote All�(1223)�
1 48.9%�(+3.1 / -3.1)
2 26.2%�(+2.9 / -2.7)
3 9.1%�(+2.2 / -1.8)
4 4.7%�(+2.0 / -1.4)
5 or more 11.1%�(+2.3 / -2.0)

There isn't much difference between men & women on this front.

Vote Men�(669)� Women�(554)�
1 49.4%�(+4.0 / -4.0) 48.4%�(+4.8 / -4.8)
2 25.5%�(+3.6 / -3.3) 26.9%�(+4.6 / -4.1)
5 or more 10.6%�(+2.9 / -2.3) 11.7%�(+3.8 / -3.0)
3 9.7%�(+2.8 / -2.2) 8.5%�(+3.6 / -2.6)
4 4.8%�(+2.5 / -1.7) 4.5%�(+3.6 / -2.0)

Surprisingly, older people are more likely to use a variety of search services while younger people are more likely to stick with their one favorite. I would have guessed that to be the other way around.

Vote 18-24 year-olds�(295)� 25-34 year-olds�(300)� 35-44 year-olds�(165)� 45-54 year-olds�(204)� 55-64 year-olds�(182)� 65+ year-olds�(77)�
1 54.9%�(+5.5 / -5.7) 57.7%�(+5.7 / -6.0) 45.6%�(+7.7 / -7.5) 50.4%�(+6.9 / -6.9) 48.1%�(+7.3 / -7.3) 35.8%�(+11.5 / -10.1)
2 23.0%�(+5.1 / -4.4) 23.0%�(+5.4 / -4.6) 23.1%�(+7.1 / -5.8) 22.5%�(+6.3 / -5.3) 29.2%�(+7.1 / -6.2) 36.8%�(+11.3 / -10.1)
3 5.8%�(+3.3 / -2.1) 5.5%�(+3.4 / -2.2) 13.7%�(+6.0 / -4.4) 10.5%�(+5.0 / -3.5) 11.5%�(+5.5 / -3.9) 7.0%�(+8.0 / -3.9)
4 6.8%�(+3.5 / -2.4) 4.7%�(+3.3 / -2.0) 4.2%�(+4.7 / -2.3) 4.9%�(+4.3 / -2.3) 2.1%�(+3.8 / -1.4) 5.4%�(+9.1 / -3.5)
5 or more 9.6% (+3.9 / -2.8) 9.1% (+3.9 / -2.8) 13.4% (+6.2 / -4.4) 11.7% (+5.3 / -3.8) 9.0% (+5.2 / -3.4) 15.0% (+9.7 / -6.3)

Here is the geographic breakdown.

Vote The US Midwest�(260)� The US Northeast�(320)� The US South�(374)� The US West�(269)�
1 53.6%�(+6.5 / -6.6) 45.1%�(+6.1 / -6.0) 47.0%�(+5.8 / -5.7) 50.4%�(+6.4 / -6.4)
2 22.7%�(+6.2 / -5.2) 27.1%�(+5.7 / -5.1) 26.8%�(+5.5 / -4.8) 27.9%�(+6.1 / -5.4)
3 8.7%�(+4.9 / -3.2) 11.4%�(+4.8 / -3.5) 8.6%�(+4.4 / -3.0) 8.2%�(+4.8 / -3.1)
4 3.5%�(+5.2 / -2.1) 5.3%�(+4.3 / -2.4) 5.7%�(+4.1 / -2.5) 3.8%�(+5.4 / -2.3)
5 or more 11.5%�(+5.5 / -3.9) 11.1%�(+4.7 / -3.5) 11.9%�(+4.5 / -3.4) 9.7%�(+5.2 / -3.5)

Here are stats by population density.

Vote Urban areas�(608)� Rural areas�(107)� Suburban areas�(499)�
1 48.1%�(+4.5 / -4.5) 50.2%�(+9.8 / -9.8) 47.2%�(+4.7 / -4.7)
2 26.4%�(+4.1 / -3.8) 21.2%�(+10.6 / -7.8) 27.8%�(+4.5 / -4.1)
3 9.1%�(+3.6 / -2.7) 14.2%�(+10.7 / -6.6) 9.6%�(+4.0 / -2.9)
4 5.3%�(+4.0 / -2.3) 6.5%�(+12.0 / -4.4) 3.8%�(+4.4 / -2.1)
5 or more 11.0%�(+3.8 / -2.9) 7.9%�(+11.4 / -4.9) 11.6%�(+4.2 / -3.2)

Here is data by income groups. No obvious pattern here either.

Vote People earning $0-24K�(132)� People earning $25-49K�(673)� People earning $50-74K�(326)� People earning $75-99K�(70)� People earning $100-149K�(27)�
1 45.0%�(+8.9 / -8.6) 47.7%�(+4.2 / -4.2) 50.2%�(+6.1 / -6.1) 42.1%�(+12.3 / -11.4) 48.3%�(+17.9 / -17.5)
2 29.1%�(+9.0 / -7.6) 26.3%�(+3.8 / -3.5) 23.1%�(+6.2 / -5.3) 35.2%�(+12.2 / -10.5) 37.4%�(+18.8 / -15.6)
3 8.7%�(+9.1 / -4.7) 8.6%�(+3.2 / -2.4) 11.6%�(+5.8 / -4.0) 9.7%�(+11.7 / -5.6) 0.0%�(+12.5 / -0.0)
4 6.1%�(+9.5 / -3.9) 5.2%�(+3.2 / -2.0) 4.3%�(+6.3 / -2.6) 2.6%�(+17.0 / -2.3) 3.4%�(+22.2 / -3.0)
5 or more 11.0%�(+8.9 / -5.2) 12.1%�(+3.3 / -2.7) 10.9%�(+5.8 / -3.9) 10.4%�(+11.9 / -5.9) 10.9%�(+16.7 / -7.1)
Categories: 

Source: http://www.seobook.com/how-many-search-engines

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Online Marketing Company For Online Business With Gen X & Y

Online Marketing Company with Generation X & Y For those baby boomers who work in Corporate Online Marketing Companies, nothing can be as formidable as Generation X and Generation Y consumers. This coveted demographic is emerging as the most coveted, the most spend-happy and the most mysterious. Who are these kids raised on computers, cell [...]

Source: http://www.onlinemarketingseo.com/blog/internet_marketing_for_online_business_with_gen_x__y.html

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Social Networking For The Local SMB

From Google to Facebook and from Yelp to FourSquare: a clear "cut through the noise" how-to on what to do where.

Post from: Search Engine People SEO Blog

Social Networking For The Local SMB

--
Written by Kristy Bolsinger, Social Media Blog

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/SearchEnginePeople/~3/2Z5g8EKz1Q8/local-smb-social.html

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Patience is a Virtue

Sorry I haven't blogged as much lately, but one of our employees recently had a child and Google sending out so many warning messages in webmaster central has created a ton of demand for independent SEO advice. Our growth in demand last month was higher than any month outside of the time a few years ago when we announced we would be raising prices and got so many new subscribers that I had to close down the ability to sign up for about 3 or 4 months because there were so many new customers.

Google has been firing on all cylinders this year. They did have a few snafus in the press, but those didn't have any noticeable impact on user perception or behavior & Google recently rolled out yet another billion Dollar business in their consumer surveys.

Google is doing an excellent job of adding friction to SEO & managing its perception to make it appear less stable, less trustworthy and to discourage investment in SEO. They send out warnings for unnatural links, warnings for traffic drops, and even warnings for traffic increases.

Webmaster Tools is a bit of a strange bird...

  • Any SEO consultant who has client sites tied into Webmaster Tools makes it easy to connect them together (making any black swan editorial decisions far riskier).
  • Any SEO company which has clients sign up for their own Webmaster Tools account now has to deal with explaining why things change, when many of the changes that happen are more driven by algorthmic shifts (adding local results to the SERPs or taking them away, other forms of localization, changing of ad placement on the SERP, etc.) than by the work of the SEO. This in turn adds costs to managing SEO projects while also making them seem less stable (even outside of those who were use paid link networks). Think through the sequence...
    • Google first sends a warning for traffic going up, and the SEO tells the client that this is because they did such a great job with SEO.
    • Then Google sends a warning for traffic dropping & the client worries that something is wrong.
    • The net impact on actual traffic or conversions could be a 0, but the warnings amplify the perception of changes.
  • Any SEO who doesn't use Webmaster Tools loses search referral data. It first started with logged in Google users, but apparently it is also headed to Firefox. Who's to say Google Chrome & Safari won't follow Firefox at some point?

Google has changed & obfuscated so many things that it is very hard to isolate cause and effect. They have made changes to how much data you get, changes to their analytics interface & how they report unique visitors, changes to how tightly they filter certain link behaviors, they have rolled in frequent Panda updates, and they have nailed a number of the paid link networks.

BuildMyRank shut down after leaving a self-destructive footprint that made it easy for Google to nuke their network, and some of the remaining paid link networks are getting nailed. Some of their customers are at this point driven primarily by fear, counting down their remaining days as the sky is falling. Fear is an important emotion designed to protect us, but when it is a primary driver we risk self-destruction.

The big winners in these moves by Google are:

  • Google, since they grant themselves more editorial leeway. If everyone is a scofflaw then they can hit just about anyone they want. And the organic search results are going to be far easier to police if many market participants are held back by a fear tax.
  • Larger businesses which are harder to justify hitting & which can buy out smaller businesses at lower multiples based on the perception of fear.
  • Sites which were outranked by people using the obvious paid links, which now rank a bit better after some of those paid link buyers were removed from the search results.
  • SEOs who out others & market themselves by using polarizing commentary (at least in the short run, whereas in the long run that may backfire).
  • Those engaging in negative SEO, which sell services to smoke competitors.

The big losers from these Google moves are:

  • some of the paid link networks & those who used them for years
  • under-priced SEO service providers who were only able to make the model work by scaling up on risk
  • smaller businesses who are not particularly spammy, but are so paralyzed by fear that they won't put in enough effort & investment to compete in the marketplace

One of the reasons I haven't advocated using the paid link networks is I was afraid of putting the associated keywords into a hopper of automated competition that I would then have to compete against year after year. Even if you usually win, over the course of years you can still lose a lot of money by promoting the creation of disposable, automated & scalable competing sites. If you don't mind projects getting hit & starting over the ROI on such efforts might work out, but after so many years in the industry the idea of starting over again and again as sites get hit is less appealing.

It is not just that the links are not trusted, but now they stand a far greater chance of causing penalties:

Dear site owner or webmaster of ?.

We?ve detected that some of your site?s pages may be using techniques that are outside Google?s Webmaster Guidelines.

Specifically, look for possibly artificial or unnatural links pointing to your site that could be intended to manipulate PageRank. Examples of unnatural linking could include buying links to pass PageRank or participating in link schemes.

We encourage you to make changes to your site so that it meets our quality guidelines. Once you?ve made these changes, please submit your site for reconsideration in Google?s search results.

If you find unnatural links to your site that you are unable to control or remove, please provide the details in your reconsideration request.

If you have any questions about how to resolve this issue, please see our Webmaster Help Forum for support.

Sincerely,

Google Search Quality Team

If that doesn't change then negative SEO will become a bigger issue than paid links ever were.

What is hard about Google penalizing websites for such links is that it is cheap & easy for someone else to set you up. Shortly after Dan Thies mentioned that it was "about time" to Matt Cutts on Twitter someone started throwing some of the splog links at his site. It is safe to say that Dan didn't build those links, but there are many people who will be in the same situation as Dan who did nothing wrong but had a competitor set them up.

And there is no easy way to disconnect your site from those types of links.

If you go back a few years, it was quite easy to win at SEO by doing it in a "paint by number" fashion. One rarely got hit unless they were exceptionally excessive and stuck out like a sore thumb.

But after all of Google's recent moves, a few missed steps in a drunken stupor can have the same result.

Now more than ever, patience is a virtue!

Categories: 

Source: http://www.seobook.com/patience

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Why Offline Stores and Small Businesses Need to Embrace Online Shopping and Build Better Websites

I recently wrote a story How Brick and Mortar Stores Can Use eCommerce to Drive Sales about tips that eCommerce stores can use to drive traffic to their brick and mortar locations. However, what really needs to happen is offline stores and small businesses need to grow up and �stop hiding in the corner from [...]

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

Why Offline Stores and Small Businesses Need to Embrace Online Shopping and Build Better Websites

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Wolf-howl/~3/fUcsQ-4al48/

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Create a New AdWords Campaign in Record Time ? Using the Ad Group Ideas Tool

After working with technology companies for several years, I've seen a common mindset towards 'launch first, iterate later.' Get something working and then refine it as you go, instead of waiting and waiting for the 'perfect' launch. The new ad group ideas tab from Google AdWords can help you do exactly that – get a [...]

Post from: Search Engine People SEO Blog

Create a New AdWords Campaign in Record Time – Using the Ad Group Ideas Tool

--
Written by Kris Scheben-Edey,

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/SearchEnginePeople/~3/0Adq0e-NPTI/ad-group-ideas-tool.html

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Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Recruiting: 12 Questions For Uncomfortably Hands-On SEO Interviews

Source: http://feeds.searchengineland.com/~r/searchengineland/~3/lmvwOXobn3Q/recruiting-12-questions-for-uncomfortably-hands-on-seo-interviews-121699

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Create a New AdWords Campaign in Record Time ? Using the Ad Group Ideas Tool

After working with technology companies for several years, I've seen a common mindset towards 'launch first, iterate later.' Get something working and then refine it as you go, instead of waiting and waiting for the 'perfect' launch. The new ad group ideas tab from Google AdWords can help you do exactly that – get a [...]

Post from: Search Engine People SEO Blog

Create a New AdWords Campaign in Record Time – Using the Ad Group Ideas Tool

--
Written by Kris Scheben-Edey,

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/SearchEnginePeople/~3/0Adq0e-NPTI/ad-group-ideas-tool.html

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Interview of Jonah Stein

I was recently chatting with Jonah Stein about Panda & we decided it probably made sense to do a full on interview.

You mentioned that you had a couple customers that were hit by Panda. What sort of impact did that have on those websites?

Both of these sites saw an immediate hit of about 35% of google traffic. Ranking dropped 3-7 spots. The traffic hit was across the board, especially in the case of GreatSchools, who saw all content types hit (school profile pages, editorial content, UGC)

GreatSchools was hit on the 4-9 (panda 2.0) update and called out in the Sistrix analysis.

How hard has GreatSchools been hit? Sistrix data suggested that GreatSchools was loosing about 56% of Google traffic. The real answer is that organic Google-referred traffic to the site fell 30% on April 11 (week over week) and overall site entries are down 16%. Total page views are down 13%. The penalty, of course, is a ?site wide? penalty but not all entry page types are being affected equally

Google suggested that there was perhaps some false positives but that they were generally pretty satisfied with the algorithms. For sites that were hit, how do clients respond to the SEOs? I mean did the SEO get a lot of the blame or did the clients get that the change was sort of a massive black swan?

I think I actually took it harder then they did. Sure, it hit their bottom line pretty hard, but it hit my ego. Getting paid is important but the real rush for me is ranking #1.

Fortunately none of my clients think they are inherently entitled to Google traffic, so I didn't get blamed. They were happy that I was on top of it (telling them before they noticed) and primarily wanted to know what Panda was about.

Once you get over the initial shock and the grieving, responding to Panda was a rorschach test, everyone saw something different. But is also an interesting self - reflection, especially when the initial advice coming from Greg Boser and a few others was to start to de-index content.

For clients who are not ad driven, the other interesting aspect is that generally speaking conversions were not hurt as much as traffic, so once you start focusing on the bottom line you discover the pain is a little less severe than it seemed initially.

So you mentioned that not all pages were impacted equally. I think pages where there was more competition were generally hit harder than pages that had less competition. Is that sort of inline with what you saw?

Originally I thought that was maybe the case, but as I looked at the data during the recovery process I became convinced that Panda is really the public face of a much deeper switch towards user engagement. While the Panda score is sitewide the engagement "penalty" or weighting effect on also occurs at the individual page. The pages or content areas that were hurt less by Panda seem to be the ones that were not also being hurt by the engagement issue.

On one of my clients we moved a couple sections to sub-domains, following the HubPages example and the experience of some members of your community. The interesting thing is that we moved the blog from /blog to blog.domain.com and we moved one vertical niche from /vertical-kw to vertical-kw.example.com. The vertical almost immediately recovered to pre-panda levels while the traffic to the blog stayed flat.

So the vertical was suddenly getting 2x the traffic. On the next panda push the vertical dropped 20% but that was still a huge improvement over before we moved to the subdomain. The blog didn't budge.

The primary domain also seemed to improve some, but it was hard to isolate that from the impact of all of the other changes, improvements and content consolidation we were doing.

After the next panda data push did not kill the vertical sub domain, we elected to move a second one. On the next data push, everything recovered - a clean bill of health - no pandalization at all.

but....

GreatSchools completely recovered the same day and that was November 11th, so Panda 3.0. I cannot isolate the impact of any particular change versus Google tweaking the algorithm and I think both sites were potentially edge cases for Panda anyway.

Now that we are in 3.3 or whatever the numbering calls it, I can say with confidence that moving "bad" content to a sub-domain carries the Panda score with it and you won't get any significant recovery.

You mentioned Greg Boser suggesting deindexing & doing some consolidation. Outside of canonicalization, did you test doing massive deindexing (or were subdomains your main means of testing isolation)?

We definitely collapse a lot of content, mostly 301s but maybe 25% of it was just de-indexing. That was the first response. We took 1150 categories/keyword focused landing pages and reduced to maybe 300. We did see some gains but nothing that resembled the huge boost when Panda was lifted.

Back to the rorschach test: We did a lot of improvements that yielded incremental gains but were still weighed down. I reminds me of when I used to work on cars. I had this old Audi 100 that was running poorly so I did a complete tune up, new wires, plugs, etc., but it was still running badly. Then I noticed the jet in the carburetor was mis-aligned. As soon as I fixed that, boom, the car was running great. Everything else we fixed may have been the right thing to do for SEO and/or users but it didn't solve the problem we were experiencing.

The other interesting thing is that I had a 3rd client who appeared to get hit by Panda or at least suffer from Panda like symptoms after their host went down for about 9 hours. Rankings tanked across the board, traffic down 50% for 10 days. They fully recovered on the next panda push. My theory is that this outage pushed their engagement metrics over the edge somehow. Of course, it may not have really been Panda at all but the ranking reports and traffic drops felt like Panda. The timing was after November 11th, so it was a more recent version of the Panda infrastructure.

Panda 1.0 was clearly a rush job and 2.0 seemed to be a response to the issues it created and the fact that demand media got a free pass. I think it took 6-8 months for them to really get the infrastructure robust.

My takeaways from Panda are that this is not an individual change or something with a magic bullet solution. Panda is clearly based on data about the user interacting with the SERP (Bounce, Pogo Sticking), time on site, page views, etc., but it is not something you can easily reduce to 1 number or a short set of recommendations. To address a site that has been Pandalized requires you to isolate the "best content" based on your user engagement and try to improve that.

I don't know if it was intentional or not but engagement as a relevancy factor winds up punishing sites who have built links and traffic through link bait and infographics because by definition these users have a very high bounce rate and a relatively low time on site. Look at the behavioral metrics in GA; if your content has 50% of people spending less than 10 seconds, that may be a problem or that may be normal. The key is to look below that top graph and see if you have a bell curve or if the next largest segment is the 11-30 second crowd.

I also think Panda is rewarding sites that have a diversified traffic stream. The higher percentage of your users who are coming direct or searching for you by name (brand) or visiting you from social the more likely Google is to see your content as high quality. Think of this from the engine's point of view instead of the site owner. Algorithmic relevancy was enough until we all learned to game that, then came links as a vote of trust. While everyone was looking at social and talking about likes as the new links they jumped ahead to the big data solution and baked an algorithm that tries to measure interaction of users as a whole with your site. The more time people spend on your site, the more ways they find it aside from organic search, the more they search for you by name, the more Google is confident you are a good site.

Based on that, are there some sites that you think have absolutely no chance of recovery? In some cases did getting hit by Panda cause sites to show even worse user metrics? (there was a guy named walkman on WebmasterWorld who suggested that some sites that had "size 13 shoe out of stock" might no longer rank for the head keywords but would rank for the "size 13" related queries.

I certainly think that if you have a IYP and you have been hit with Panda your toast unless you find a way to get huge amounts of fresh content (yelp). I don't think the size 13 shoe site has a chance but it is not about Panda. Google is about to roll out lots of semantic search changes and the only way ecommerce sites (outside of the 10 or so brands that dominate Google Products) will have a chance is with schema.org markup and Google's next generation search. The truth is the results for a search for shoes by size is a miserable experience at the moment. I wear size 16 EEEE, so I have a certain amount of expertise on this topic. :)

Do you see Schema as a real chance for small players? Or something that is a short term carrot before they get beat with the stick? I look at hotel search results like & and I fear that spreading as more people format their content in a format that is easy to scrape & displace. (For illustration purposes, in the below image, the areas in red are clicks that Google is paid for or clicks to fraternal Google pages.)

I doubt small players will be able to use Schema as a lifeline but it may keep you in the game long enough to transition into being a brand. The reason I have taken your advice about brands to heart and preach it to my clients is that it is short sighted to believe that any of the SEO niche strategies are going to survive if they are not supported with PR, social, PPC and display.

More importantly, however, is that they are going to focus on meeting the needs of the user as opposed to simply converting them during that visit. To use a baseball analogy, we have spent 15 years keeping score of home runs while the companies that are winning the game have been tracking walks, singles, doubles and outs. Schema may deliver some short term opportunities for traffic but I don't think size13shoes.com will be saved by the magic of semantic markup.

On the other hand, if I were running an ecommerce store, particularly if I was competing with Amazon, Bestbuy, Walmart and the hand full of giant brands that dominate the product listings in the SERP, I wouldn't bury my head in the sand and pretend that everyone else wasn't moving in that direction anyway. Maybe if you can do it right you can emerge as a winner, at least over the short and medium term.

In that sense SEO is a moving target, where "best practices" depend on the timing in the marketplace, the site you are applying the strategy to, and the cost of implementation.

Absolutely...but that is only half the story. If you are an entrepreneur who likes to build site based on a monetization strategy, then it is a moving target where you always have to keep your eyes on the horizon. For most of my clients the name of the game is actually to focus on trying to own your keyword space and take advantage of inertia. That is to say that if you understand the keywords you want to target, develop a strategy for them and then go out and be a solid brand, you will eventually win. Most of my clients rank in the top couple of spots for the key terms for their industry with a fairly conservative slow and steady strategy, but I wouldn't accept a new client who comes to me and says they want to rank a new site #1 for credit cards or debt consolidation and they have $200,000 to spend..or even $2,000,000. We may able to get there for the short term but not with strategies that will stand the test of time.

Of course, as I illustrated with the Nuts.com example on SearchEngineLand last month, the same strategy that works on a 14 year old domain may not be as effective for a newer site, even if you 301 that old domain. SEO is an art, not a science. As practitioners we need to constantly be following the latest developments but the real skill is in knowing when to apply them and how much; even then occasionally the results are surprising, disappointing or both.

I think there is a bit of a chicken vs egg problem there then if a company can't access a strong SEO without already having both significant capital & a bit of traction in the marketplace. As Google keeps making SEO more complex & more expensive do you think that will drive a lot of small players out of the market?

I think it has already happened. It isn't about the inability to access a strong SEO it is that anyone with integrity is going to lay out the obstacles they face. Time and time again we see opportunity for creativity to triumph but the odds are really stacked against you if you are an underfunded retailer.

Just last year I helped a client with 450 domains who had been hit with Panda and then with a landing page penalty. It took a few months to sort out and get the reconsideration granted (by instituting cross domain rel=canonical and eliminating all the duplicate content across their network). They are gradually recovering to maybe 80% of where they were before Panda 2.0 but I can't provide them an organic link building strategy that will lift 450 niche ecommerce sites. I can't tell them how they are going to get any placement in a shrinking organic SERP dominated by Google's dogfood, shopping results from big box retailers and enormous Adwords Product Listings with images

From that perspective, if your funding is limited, do you think you are better off attacking a market from an editorial perspective & bolting on commerce after you build momentum (rather than starting with ecommerce and then trying to bolt on editorial?

Absolutely. Clearly the path is to have built Pinterest, but seriously...

if you are passionate about something or have a disruptive idea you will succeed (or maybe fail), but if you think you can copy what others are doing and carve out a niche based on exploits I disagree. Of course, autoinsurancequoteeasy.com seems to be saying you can still make a ton of money in the quick flip world, even with a big bank roll, you need to be disruptive or innovative.

On the other hand, if you have some success in your niche you can use creativity to grow, but it has to be something new. Widget bait launched @oatmeal's online dating site but it is more likely to bury you now than help you rank #1, or at least prevent you from ranking on the matching anchor text.

When a company starts off small & editorially focused how do you know that it is time to scale up on monetization? Like if I had a successful 200 page site & wanted to add a 20,000 page database to it...would you advise against that, or how would you suggest doing that in a post-Panda world?

This is a tough call. I actually have a client in exactly this position. I guess it depends on the nature of the 20,000 pages. If you are running a niche directory (like my client) my advice to them was to add the pages to the site but no index the individual listing until they can get some unique content. This is still likely to run fowl of the engagement issue presented by Panda, so we kept the expanded pages on geo oriented sub-domains.

Earlier you mentioned that Panda challenged some of your assumptions. Could you describe how it changed your views on search?

I always tell prospects that 10-15 years ago my job was to trick search engines into delivering traffic but over the last 5-6 years it has evolved and now my job is to trick clients into developing content that users want. Panda just changed the definition of "good content" from relevant, well linked content to relevant, well linked, sticky content.

It has also made me more of a believer in diversifying traffic.

Last year Google made a huge stink about MSN "stealing" results because they were sniffing traffic streams and crawling queries on Google. The truth is that Google has so many data sources and so many signals to analyze that they don't need to crawl facebook or index links on twitter. They know where traffic is coming from and where it is going and if you are getting traffic from social, they know it.

As Google folds more data into their mix do you worry that SEO will one day become too complex to analyze (or move the needle)? Would that push SEOs to mostly work in house at bigger companies, or would being an SEO become more akin to being a public relations & media relations expert?

I think it may already be too complex to analyze in the sense that it is almost impossible to get repeatable results for every client or tell them how much traffic they are going to achieve. On the other hand, moving the needles is still reasonably easy?as long as you are in agreement about what direction everyone is going. SEO for me is about Website Optimization, about asking everyone about the search intent of the query that brings the visitors to the site and making sure we have actions that match this intent. Most of my engagements wind up being a combination of technical seo/problem solving, analytics, strategy and company wide or at least team wide education. All of these elements are driven by keyword research and are geared towards delivering traffic so it is an SEO based methodology, but the requirements for the job have morphed.

As for moving in house, I have been there and I doubt I will ever go back. Likewise, I am not really a PR or media relations expert but if the client doesn't have those skills in house I strongly suggest they invest in getting them.

Ironically, many companies still fail to get the basics right. They don't empower their team, they don't leverage their real world relationships and most importantly they don't invest enough in developing high quality content. Writing sales copy is not something you should outsource to college students!

It still amazes me how hard it is to get content from clients and how often this task is delegated to whoever is at the bottom of the org chart. Changing a few words on a page can pay huge dividends but the highest paid people in the room are rarely involved enough.

In the enterprise, SEO success is largely driven by getting everyone on board. Being a successful SEO consultant (as opposed to running your own sites) is actually one quarter about being a subject matter expert on everything related to Google, one quarter about social, PR, Link building, conversion, etc and half about being a project manager. You need to get buying from all the stake holders, strive to educate the whole team and hit deliverables.

Given the increased complexity of SEO (in needing to understand user intent, fixing a variety of symptoms to dig to the core of a problem, understanding web analytics data, faster algorithm changes, etc.) is there still a sweet spot for independent consultants who do not want to get bogged down by those who won't fully take on their advice? And what are some of your best strategies for building buy in from various stakeholders at larger companies?

The key is to charge enough and to work on a monthly retainer instead of hourly. This sounds flippant but the bottom line is to balance how many engagements you can manage at one time versus how much you want to earn every month. You can't do justice to the needs of a client and bill hourly. That creates an artificial barrier between you and their team. All of my clients know I am always available to answer any SEO related question from anyone on the team at almost any time.

The increased complexity is really job security. Most of my clients are long term relationships and the ones I enjoy the most are more or less permanent partnerships. We have been very successful together and they value having me around for strategic advice, to keep them abreast of changes and to be available when changes happen. Both of the clients who got hit by Panda have been with me for more than four years.

No one can be an expert in everything. I definitely enjoy analytics and data but I have very strong partnerships with a few other agencies that I bring in when I need them. I am very happy with the work that AnalyticsPros has done for my clients. Likewise David Rodnitzky (PPC Associates) and I have partnered on a number of clients. Both allow me to be involved in the strategy and know that the execution will be very high quality. I only wish I had some link builders I felt as passionate about (given that Deborah Mastaler is always too busy to take my clients.)

You mentioned that you thought user engagement metrics were a big part of Panda based on analytics data & such...how would a person look through analytics data to uncover such trends?

I would focus on the behavioral metrics tab in GA. It is pretty normal to have a large percentage of visitors leave before 10 seconds, but after that you should see a bell curve. Low quality content will actually have 60-70% abandonment in less than 10 seconds, but the trick is for some searches 10 seconds is a good result: weather, what is your address, hours of operations. Lots of users get what they need from searches, sometimes even from the SERP, so look for outliers. Compare different sections of your site, say the blog or those infographics & bad page types.

Its hard to say until you get your hands in the data but if you assume that individual pages can be weighed down by poor engagement and that this trend is maybe 1 year old and evolving, you can find some clues. Learn to use those advance segments and build out meaningful segmentation on your dashboard and you will be surprised how much of this will jump out at you. It is like over optimization: until you believed in it you never noticed & now you can spot it within a few seconds of looking at a page. I won't pretend engagement issues jump out that fast but it is possible to find them, especially if you are an in house SEO who really knows your site.

The other important consideration is that improving engagement for an given page is a win regardless of whether it impacts your rankings or your Panda situation. The mantra about doing what is right for the users, not the search engine may sound cliche but they reality is that most of your decisions and priorities should be driven by giving the user what they want. I won't pretend that this is the short road to SERP dominance but my philosophy is to target the user with 80% of your efforts and feed the engines with the other 20.

Thanks Jonah :)

~~~~~~~~~~

Jonah Stein has 15 years of online marketing experience and is the founder of ItsTheROI, a San Francisco Search Engine Marketing Company that specializes in ROI driven SEO and PPC initiatives. Jonah has spoken at numerous industry conferences including Search Engine Strategies, Search Marketing Expo (SMX), SMX Advanced, SIIA On Demand, the Kelsey Groups Ultimate Search Workshop and LT Pact. He also developed panels Virtual Blight for the Web 2.0 Summit and the Web 2.0 Expo. He has written for Context Web, Search Engine Land and SEO Book

Jonah is also the cofounder of two SaaS companies, including CodeGuard.com, a cloud based backup service that provides a time machine for websites and Hubkick.com, an online collaboration and task management tool that provides a simple way for groups to work together-instantly.

Categories: 

Source: http://www.seobook.com/jonah-stein-interview

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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

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The Link ? SEO.com?s May Newsletter

Google: The Social Empire Not too long ago, the Internet was all about autonomy. If you were looking for something specific, you would go to a search engine, plug in your search term, find the answer, and move along. Back then, the results you found online were strictly based on your search ... Read more

Source: http://www.seo.com/news/link-seocoms-may-newsletter/

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Why Restaurants & Other Local Businesses Need Mobile (Not Responsive) Sites

Source: http://feeds.searchengineland.com/~r/searchengineland/~3/HmlW64sPzGk/why-restaurants-and-other-local-businesses-need-mobile-not-responsive-sites-122002

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Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Search Again or Click On the Second Page of Search Results?

Consumer Search Insights.

If you use a search engine but don't find what you are looking for, which are you more likely to do?

People are more likely to search again with a new keyword than they are to click onto the second page of search results.

Vote All�(1189)�
search again with a different word 55.7%�(+3.2 / -3.3)
go to the second page of the results 44.3%�(+3.3 / -3.2)

The split is fairly consistent among men and women.

Vote Men�(651)� Women�(538)�
search again with a different word 55.4%�(+4.0 / -4.1) 56.1%�(+5.0 / -5.1)
go to the second page of the results 44.6%�(+4.1 / -4.0) 43.9%�(+5.1 / -5.0)

There isn't an obvious pattern among age either.

Vote 18-24 year-olds�(284)� 25-34 year-olds�(309)� 35-44 year-olds�(144)� 45-54 year-olds�(195)� 55-64 year-olds�(150)� 65+ year-olds�(107)�
search again with a different word 52.1%�(+5.7 / -5.8) 56.7%�(+5.7 / -5.9) 51.7%�(+8.0 / -8.1) 57.5%�(+6.7 / -7.0) 61.4%�(+7.7 / -8.4) 54.2%�(+9.4 / -9.8)
go to the second page of the results 47.9%�(+5.8 / -5.7) 43.3%�(+5.9 / -5.7) 48.3%�(+8.1 / -8.0) 42.5%�(+7.0 / -6.7) 38.6%�(+8.4 / -7.7) 45.8%�(+9.8 / -9.4)

People in the west & midwest are more likely to change keywords, whereas people in the north east & south are roughly equally likely to change keywords or go to page 2 of the search results.

Vote The US Midwest�(244)� The US Northeast�(320)� The US South�(363)� The US West�(262)�
search again with a different word 58.6%�(+6.6 / -6.9) 52.2%�(+6.3 / -6.4) 51.7%�(+6.0 / -6.1) 61.8%�(+6.2 / -6.6)
go to the second page of the results 41.4%�(+6.9 / -6.6) 47.8%�(+6.4 / -6.3) 48.3%�(+6.1 / -6.0) 38.2%�(+6.6 / -6.2)

Suburban people are more likely to change keywords than to click on to page 2.

Vote Urban areas�(590)� Rural areas�(109)� Suburban areas�(468)�
search again with a different word 51.8%�(+4.6 / -4.6) 48.0%�(+9.3 / -9.1) 61.1%�(+4.8 / -5.0)
go to the second page of the results 48.2%�(+4.6 / -4.6) 52.0%�(+9.1 / -9.3) 38.9%�(+5.0 / -4.8)

There isn't much of an income correlation either.

Vote People earning $0-24K�(123)� People earning $25-49K�(638)� People earning $50-74K�(319)� People earning $75-99K�(88)� People earning $100-149K�(22)�
search again with a different word 57.9%�(+9.3 / -9.9) 55.9%�(+4.4 / -4.5) 58.8%�(+5.8 / -6.1) 54.5%�(+9.3 / -9.6) 50.0%�(+21.4 / -21.4)
go to the second page of the results 42.1%�(+9.9 / -9.3) 44.1%�(+4.5 / -4.4) 41.2%�(+6.1 / -5.8) 45.5%�(+9.6 / -9.3) 50.0%�(+21.4 / -21.4)

It would also be interesting to run this question again & include the option of trying another search engine as an answer.

Categories: 

Source: http://www.seobook.com/second-page

website for contractors SEO for contractors internet marketing for contractors contractor website contractor websites

Search Again or Click On the Second Page of Search Results?

Consumer Search Insights.

If you use a search engine but don't find what you are looking for, which are you more likely to do?

People are more likely to search again with a new keyword than they are to click onto the second page of search results.

Vote All�(1189)�
search again with a different word 55.7%�(+3.2 / -3.3)
go to the second page of the results 44.3%�(+3.3 / -3.2)

The split is fairly consistent among men and women.

Vote Men�(651)� Women�(538)�
search again with a different word 55.4%�(+4.0 / -4.1) 56.1%�(+5.0 / -5.1)
go to the second page of the results 44.6%�(+4.1 / -4.0) 43.9%�(+5.1 / -5.0)

There isn't an obvious pattern among age either.

Vote 18-24 year-olds�(284)� 25-34 year-olds�(309)� 35-44 year-olds�(144)� 45-54 year-olds�(195)� 55-64 year-olds�(150)� 65+ year-olds�(107)�
search again with a different word 52.1%�(+5.7 / -5.8) 56.7%�(+5.7 / -5.9) 51.7%�(+8.0 / -8.1) 57.5%�(+6.7 / -7.0) 61.4%�(+7.7 / -8.4) 54.2%�(+9.4 / -9.8)
go to the second page of the results 47.9%�(+5.8 / -5.7) 43.3%�(+5.9 / -5.7) 48.3%�(+8.1 / -8.0) 42.5%�(+7.0 / -6.7) 38.6%�(+8.4 / -7.7) 45.8%�(+9.8 / -9.4)

People in the west & midwest are more likely to change keywords, whereas people in the north east & south are roughly equally likely to change keywords or go to page 2 of the search results.

Vote The US Midwest�(244)� The US Northeast�(320)� The US South�(363)� The US West�(262)�
search again with a different word 58.6%�(+6.6 / -6.9) 52.2%�(+6.3 / -6.4) 51.7%�(+6.0 / -6.1) 61.8%�(+6.2 / -6.6)
go to the second page of the results 41.4%�(+6.9 / -6.6) 47.8%�(+6.4 / -6.3) 48.3%�(+6.1 / -6.0) 38.2%�(+6.6 / -6.2)

Suburban people are more likely to change keywords than to click on to page 2.

Vote Urban areas�(590)� Rural areas�(109)� Suburban areas�(468)�
search again with a different word 51.8%�(+4.6 / -4.6) 48.0%�(+9.3 / -9.1) 61.1%�(+4.8 / -5.0)
go to the second page of the results 48.2%�(+4.6 / -4.6) 52.0%�(+9.1 / -9.3) 38.9%�(+5.0 / -4.8)

There isn't much of an income correlation either.

Vote People earning $0-24K�(123)� People earning $25-49K�(638)� People earning $50-74K�(319)� People earning $75-99K�(88)� People earning $100-149K�(22)�
search again with a different word 57.9%�(+9.3 / -9.9) 55.9%�(+4.4 / -4.5) 58.8%�(+5.8 / -6.1) 54.5%�(+9.3 / -9.6) 50.0%�(+21.4 / -21.4)
go to the second page of the results 42.1%�(+9.9 / -9.3) 44.1%�(+4.5 / -4.4) 41.2%�(+6.1 / -5.8) 45.5%�(+9.6 / -9.3) 50.0%�(+21.4 / -21.4)

It would also be interesting to run this question again & include the option of trying another search engine as an answer.

Categories: 

Source: http://www.seobook.com/second-page

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Is SEO the Answer for Start-up Marketing?

Posted by Benjamin Estes

Lately I’ve seen that a tight relationship between SEO and startups has been something of a foregone conclusion within the SEO industry: “Of course startups should be engaged in SEO!” Perhaps, and perhaps not. In fact, some start-up communities have taken up a stance in direct opposition to this, stigmatizing SEO as manipulative. Personally I’m just a humble consultant who has never started a company of his own, so I think it would be presumptuous of me to arbitrarily declare SEO a high priority for any start-up in any field.

If doing SEO isn’t a foregone conclusion, then, it bears further discussion as a marketing strategy. I want to approach this topic from a different angle. In any successful startup there will be someone with good business sense, someone who can look at the evidence in front of them and make their own decision about what is best for their company. So let me put some premises on the table about what SEO offers the start-up and why start-ups are uniquely positioned to leverage their position for SEO.

What SEO Offers

(Measurable) Audience Embiggening

The end goal of SEO is to increase the number of people arriving at your site through organic search results. There are also other metrics that are intermediate factors helping you accomplish this goal, such as your actual rankings in search results. These are things that you can measure, and report successes in increasing.

In addition, there are two different sets of keywords to look at when assessing the organic search channel—branded and non-branded terms. It's a powerful thing to demonstrate that your branded search traffic is increasing—it suggests that more people are looking for your brand online, which is a Good Thing.

On the other hand, the implications of receiving non-branded search traffic are numerous. Such traffic suggests that a site has increasing visibility for relevant search terms. If the start-up is defining new language, it suggests that users are picking up on that language. If it is increasing its share in an existing space, it suggests that the site may be cutting into the market share of competitors in organic search.

Reinforcement Of Extant Marketing Strategies

Optimization for SEO has the potential to enhance the effect of your other marketing strategies. If you are anticipating driving a lot of social interaction with your site, having your pages and URLs optimized for SEO will ensure that as people share your site you get the most value from that sharing. If you are link building through outreach and maintaining relationships with people in your industry, all of a sudden you have assets through which you can promote social content or editorial or anything else you might be up to.

Makes sense, right?

Why Startups Can Leverage Their Position

Agility

A startup—particularly at the outset of operation—has a great deal more flexibility than a more established competitor in the market. The obvious dichotomy here is between the large, established competitor and the start-up underdog. The start-up clearly has more agility than the established competitor, without a doubt. Consider:

But what about the 18-month old company compared to the 2-month old? If you don’t even have a website live, you’re even more flexible than an 18-month old company with a website up and an investment in a particular architecture or format or strategy for content publication. Oracle might be a giant awkward mess to manage from an SEO perspective, but even Dropbox by now has a more rigid infrastructure and user expectations and a great deal of variables which it must consider. Setting a course at the outset, which includes SEO will ensure that you are well positioned to be successful in organic search when you've achieved the same size and user base.

As part of overall SEO efforts all of the elements in the following (non-exhaustive) list might need to be manipulated:

  • Keyword targeting—which terms you have chosen to represent your products, content, and brand.
  • Site structure—how information on your website is structured and how you present that information to users. Are your products and pages properly differentiated?
  • Content strategy—what information are you going to publish on your site? None? All of it? Who will be responsible for this?

The earlier SEO can be integrated into the business model the better.

Novelty

A startup is bringing something new to the market, something with novelty (though hopefully it has some staying power as well).

In fact, novelty is what linkbait is all about. It’s something new and fresh and interesting—whether it is something explicitly new or a new take on something familiar. A new product, or a new face on an old product.

I mean, check out Y Combinator start-up Matterport. They’ve got a little Star Trek-style scanning device that makes 3D representations of any object or environment. This is some link-worthy content if ever I've seen some. We talk in SEO all the time about content marketing, which can be an expensive or confusing marketing route for a start-up. The thing is, in the early days, if you’ve got an interesting product that is your content. Ignore this at your own risk.

And again this matches up well with efforts you will be making on other fronts. If you've got a really interesting start-up idea, you'll almost certainly have been getting links on TechCrunch or Mashable. If you're minding your SEO on-site, you'll be getting the full benefit these novelty-based links can drive to your site.

Efficacy of Partial Implementation

Practicing SEO is a bit like practicing meditation—full enlightenment is an ongoing journey requiring a lifetime of work, but also a little bit will go a long way. It may be impractical for your business to drop $10,000-$20,000 on a link bait campaign or plan a content strategy that reaches six months out. But if you could manage to do a quick technical audit of your site, even doing that will get you one step closer to success. SEO isn't an all-or-nothing proposition. It is fully capable of scaling with your company.

Next Steps

I think it goes without saying that I think the above premises suggest that SEO is really something that start-ups ought to be engaged in. If you have come to a similar conclusion, I suggest reading this longer essay on the merits of SEO for start-ups. If after that you’re feeling game, checking out the following resources:

These reflect a higher-level look at the problem of SEO in the startup context. Then try to take some first steps, such as:

  • Running through a technical audit checklist for your site, whether it is already live or pending publication.
  • Reading (or having someone on your team read) the SEOmoz Beginner’s Guide to SEO.
  • Benchmarking your current position if your site is live. Which terms are you ranking for, or just tracking words for which you would like to rank. SEOmoz's Pro Campaigns are a great way to get started doing this.
  • Keyword Research—what are your competitors trying to rank for? Have a go with the Google Keyword Tool and see what terms it suggests are related to those you think might be valuable.
  • Get your first ten links. There are a huge number of tactics available to you—this blog itself has an entire category dedicated to link building.

Thanks for reading, and good luck in your entrepreneurial endeavors! Reach me in the comments below or on Twitter.


Sign up for The Moz Top 10, a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don't have time to hunt down but want to read!

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/seomoz/~3/Qyaci8-Kzp8/is-seo-the-answer-for-startup-marketing

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OMNI Online Marketing SEO Company Delivers Unsurpassed Results!

With the competition in the business world today it's important to know that you are hiring the best Online Marketing SEO Company. OMNI Marketing delivers unsurpassed results.

Source: http://www.onlinemarketingseo.com/blog/omni-internet-marketing-company.html

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Build Natural Links Through Existing Marketing Strategies ? Part 1

Link building strategies are a part of any successful search engine optimization marketing�campaign. With Goggle’s newest algorithm update, it’s more important than ever to go after natural links which can help drive traffic to your site and improve your rankings in the search engines. Natural links are gained when people find your ... Read more

Source: http://www.seo.com/blog/build-natural-links-existing-marketing-strategies-part-1/

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Monday, May 28, 2012

Google Asked To Take Down Over 1.2 Million URLs Last Month From Search Results

Source: http://feeds.searchengineland.com/~r/searchengineland/~3/Y-MpW1_X-ok/google-asked-to-take-down-over-1-2-million-urls-last-month-from-search-results-122391

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3 Free Tools For Pimping Out Your Blog Posts

It is increasing difficult to stand out from the crowd and when it comes to blogging you can be sure that there are plenty of other businesses in your niche that are clamouring for the traffic, social shares and potential customers. So how do you stand out? Pimp out those blog posts! Make them exciting, [...]

Post from: Search Engine People SEO Blog

3 Free Tools For Pimping Out Your Blog Posts

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Written by Wayne Barker, Internet Marketing Made Easy

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/SearchEnginePeople/~3/dCWbOW_Cy0s/3-free-tools-for-pimping-out-your-blog-posts.html

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Consumer Ad Awareness in Search Results

Consumer Search Insights.

For the following study, we asked "Does this search result have ads on it? " to 1,000 searchers, per search results. Due to these surveys requiring a smaller image (to fit the ad unit size) we chose search results that generally had more ads on them (typically 3 or 4) so that the background had a significant portion of real estate devoted to ads, in spite of its small size. The one exception here was DuckDuckGo, as it only displays one ad at most even on highly commercial keywords like credit cards.

Other than resizing the search result to fit, the only modifications we generally made were removing the graphic picture from the Wikipedia page near the top of the DuckDuckGo SERP (since a prior study showed that users presumed there was a correlation between graphics and the perception of ads) and that in most cases we removed the right sidebar. We did include the sidebar ads on 3 different Bing, Google, & Yahoo! search results so that we could compare the impact of sidebar ads vs not having a sidebar.

Executive Summary

The 3 big takeaways are:

  • For most search engines, people are generally unaware of ads vs organic results if there are no ads in the right column ... most of these yes/no questions came down to about a 50/50 vote, even though all of them had ads on them. It is every bit as true today as it was in 2003.
  • If there is a right column, the percent of people who voted that there are ads on the page jumps significantly. Thus it is pretty safe to say that people think ads are in the right column & that the right column is ads.
  • Interestingly, among major search engines, Yahoo! (without sidebar) got more "yes, it has ads" votes than other search engines. In fact, Yahoo! without sidebar ads scored within 1% of Bing with sidebar ads.

Combined Survey Results

For the question Does this search results have ads on it?

search engine yes no
AOL 53.1%�(+3.9 / -3.9) 46.9%�(+3.9 / -3.9)
Ask 52.0%�(+4.0 / -4.1) 48.0%�(+4.1 / -4.0)
Ask Arbitrage 51.6%�(+3.9 / -3.9) 48.4%�(+3.9 / -3.9)
Bing 50.2%�(+3.8 / -3.8) 49.8%�(+3.8 / -3.8)
Bing w Sidebar 57.7%�(+3.7 / -3.8) 42.3%�(+3.8 / -3.7)
Dogpile 44.7%�(+4.1 / -4.0) 55.3%�(+4.0 / -4.1)
Duck Duck Go 52.3%�(+3.9 / -3.9) 47.7%�(+3.9 / -3.9)
Google 54.5%�(+4.0 / -4.0) 45.5%�(+4.0 / -4.0)
Google w Sidebar 62.9%�(+3.6 / -3.8) 37.1%�(+3.8 / -3.6)
Yahoo! 56.8%�(+3.9 / -4.0) 43.2%�(+4.0 / -3.9)
Yahoo! w Sidebar 59.8%�(+3.9 / -4.1) 40.2%�(+4.1 / -3.9)

User Voting Images

Here are the images users saw when they voted:

AOL SERP

Ask SERP

Ask Arbitrage SERP

Bing SERP

Bing With Sidebar SERP

Dogpile SERP

DuckDuckGo SERP

Google SERP

Google With Sidebar SERP

Yahoo! SERP

Yahoo! With Sidebar SERP

Which SERP Has an Ad? (Maps vs AdWords Ads)

Prior to doing the above study, we asked users to please click on the search result which has an ad in it, listing search results side by side. Any bias presented in this (outside of both having smaller than actual sizes) impacts both images. At first we did a regular Google SERP where we included the branding & then we followed up with one that is more zoomed in on the actual search results but does not include branding. On the one that was less zoomed in people thought the map was an ad more often, but upon further zooming they thought it was roughly 50/50.

SERP All�(1172)�
�Left 53.7%�(+3.3 / -3.4)
�Right 46.3%�(+3.4 / -3.3)

SERP All�(1198)�
�Left 49.6%�(+3.4 / -3.4)
�Right 50.4%�(+3.4 / -3.4)

Comparing Google+ to Ads

Does this search result have ads on it?

layout yes no
Google+ without ads 56.3% (+3.1 / -3.1) 43.7% (+3.1 / -3.1)
Google+ with ads 56.9% (+3.2 / -3.2) 43.1% (+3.2 / -3.2)
large top ads w/o Google+ 53.6% (+3.2 / -3.2) 46.4% (+3.2 / -3.2)

Searchers tend to think that Google+ integration in the right rail is an ad unit. More people voted that Google+ without ads had ads in the search results than a SERP with 4 AdWords ad units and no Google+ integration.

Search Engine Ad Background Color

After seeing that users generally guessed no better than a coin toss at best in most cases, we decided to ask What background color do Google search results use to denote top left search advertisements? The same question was asked of Yahoo! & Bing search results.

Google
Google All�(1147)�
none, they are white 49.7%�(+3.2 / -3.2)
blue 25.5%�(+3.0 / -2.8)
yellow 10.6%�(+2.3 / -2.0)
pink 7.0%�(+2.1 / -1.6)
purple 7.2%�(+2.2 / -1.7)
Yahoo!
Yahoo! All�(1080)�
none, they are white 44.6%�(+3.4 / -3.4)
blue 20.9%�(+3.0 / -2.7)
yellow 15.6%�(+2.7 / -2.4)
magenta 11.2%�(+2.5 / -2.1)
orange 7.7%�(+2.3 / -1.8)
Bing
Bing All�(1063)�
none, they are white 49.0%�(+3.6 / -3.6)
blue 23.5%�(+3.2 / -3.0)
yellow 13.0%�(+2.8 / -2.4)
purple 7.5%�(+2.4 / -1.9)
pink 7.1%�(+2.4 / -1.8)
Summary

Bing scored highest, however blue also scored as the 2nd highest color for all 3 search engines. Nearly half of searchers believe that top ads have a white background, which highlights a general widespread lack of awareness of search ads.

Search Engine % Who Answered Correctly
Bing (blue) 23.5%
Yahoo! (magenta) 11.2%
Google (yellow) 10.6%

Ad Location on the SERP

Given how little awareness users have of ad background color, I decided to ask: Where might ads appear on search results at top search engines like Bing & Google?

Vote All�(1144)�
right column 34.2%�(+3.4 / -3.3)
all 3 locations 29.6%�(+3.2 / -3.0)
search results do not carry ads 19.4%�(+3.0 / -2.7)
top of the left column 9.2%�(+2.5 / -2.0)
bottom of the left column 7.6%�(+2.4 / -1.9)

Less than 3 in 10 answered the question correctly & nearly 20% of people do not think search results carry any ads, which explains how an algorithmic penalty can create a bad quarter, why Google was sued in Australia for misleading ads & why the Rosetta Stone vs Google case was overturned. Next time you hear a search engineer talk about clearly labeling paid links, ask them why they do such a poor job of it themselves!

User Trust in Ad Versus Organic Results

Ever since search engines have weeded out some of the more exploitative reverse billing fraud ads, trust in online ads has been growing. Based on the above, we wanted to see how users perceive ads vs organic search results, so I asked: Search engines include both algorithmic search results and ads in them. Which do you trust more?

Answer All�(1168)�
I trust both equally 45.8%�(+3.3 / -3.2)
Algorithmic search results 40.9%�(+3.2 / -3.1)
Ads that appear in search results 13.3%�(+2.5 / -2.2)

The above result surprised me given how people disliked money influencing search results. It is a strong compliment to the ads that only 40% of people trust the editorial more than the ads. However this number might be thrown off by the fact that many people are unaware of where the ads actually appear in the search results & what results are ads. (As noted above, most people voted that they thought that either search ads were only in the right column or that there weren't ads in the SERPs.)

Making Up for the Small Image Problem

One of the bigger issues with Google's current survey solution is that you are limited to rather small sized images. Such limitations do not harm asking a question like "what color does Google use for x" but they do make the search result a bit harder to see. To compensate for that problem we ran a separate survey on AYTM, where users were able to view a search result in full screen mode for 10 seconds & then they were asked 3 questions.

The purpose of the first question was to put a few seconds in between them seeing the image and them answering the second question. One other improvement that was made here (in addition to allowing users to see a larger sized search result image) was that we added an "I am not sure" answer to the questions. Below are the responses in table + graphic form, followed by the AYTM widget.

Where May Ads Appear on Google's Search Results Page?

Location Vote
in the right column 28.70%
top of the left column 6.20%
bottom of the left column 1.90%
middle of the left column 2.30%
search results do not have ads in them 6.80%
I am not sure 18.90%
right column & the top + bottom of the left column 35.20%

Did the Viewed Search Result Have Any Ads On It?

Answer Vote
I'm not sure 41.00%
no 12.40%
yes 46.60%

What Background Color Does Google Use to Denote Ads At the Top Left of Their Search Results?

Answer Vote
none, they are white 28.10%
blue 20.80%
purple 1%
I'm not sure 22.60%
pink 6.80%
yellow 20.70%

Even directly after viewing a search result with 3 ads in it, most users are uncertain of where ads may appear, what color the ads are, and if the search result even had any ads in it!

Users confusing the yellow background as white shortly after seeing it is anything but an accident:

In a RGB color space, hex #fef7e6 is composed of 99.6% red, 96.9% green and 90.2% blue. Whereas in a CMYK color space, it is composed of 0% cyan, 2.8% magenta, 9.4% yellow and 0.4% black. It has a hue angle of 42.5 degrees, a saturation of 92.3% and a lightness of 94.9%. #fef7e6 color hex could be obtained by blending #ffffff with #fdefcd. .

If you have an older monitor or a laptop which you are viewing at an angle these colors are nearly impossible to see.

Embed The AYTM Graph in Your Website

Here is the AYTM widget of the above 1,000 person survey, which you can embed in your website.

Embed Code:

Categories: 

Source: http://www.seobook.com/consumer-ad-awareness-search-results

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