Google’s security blog announced today several updates on how they have been addressing malware and hacked sites on the internet.
Google said that between 12 and 14 million search queries per day return warnings that at least one of the results listed in the Google search results were compromised. Google has two types of labels for sites that were hacked, either they are listed as compromised or as harmful. The difference is that compromised sites are hacked and the content and links may have changed but they are likely not harmful to the searcher to click on them. The harmful warning is an extended warning that says if you go to the web site, your computer may be infected with malware.
Google finds about 9,500 new malicious websites every day and sends “thousands of notifications daily to webmasters.”
Hacked sites and malware in the search results are serious issue. In fact, USA Today has a story out yesterday named Search results may deliver tainted links. The story quotes a study from Blue Coat Security Lab that says users are four times as likely to be infected by compromised search results when compared to spam emails.
Google also does try to warn and prevent malware and other viruses through their browser, Chrome and through their Safe Browsing API that other browsers and companies can adopt. They even send thousands of notifications daily to Internet Service Providers about these issues.
Since 2009, the number of infected sites – legitimate websites that are compromised so they can deliver or redirect to malware is down. However the number of “attack” web sites – websites that are specifically built to distribute malware is up. Here are some charts from Google:


Source: searchengineland

Google Apps Improves Its Security

Posted on 00:17 In:
Google Apps Improves Its Security
Google announced today that it has implemented two new security features into Google Apps. One enables tighter password verification for businesses, and the other enhances Microsoft Active Directory integration. The announcement came from Rishi Dhand, product manager for Google Apps, in a blog post over at the Official Google Enterprise Blog.
The first security upgrade for Google Apps users is an option to require all users in a domain to use 2-step password verification. Though 2-step verification has been available as an option for individuals using Google Apps, the option to require it allows companies to increase their password security as a whole. From Dhand’s blog post:
Since we launched 2-step verification, we’ve seen millions of users enable it and thousands more do so every day. 2-step verification requires two means of identification to sign in to a Google Apps account: something you know (a password) and something you have (a verification code from your mobile phone). Even if someone has stolen your password, they’ll need more than that to access your account. This additional layer of security greatly reduces the chance of unauthorized access via account hijacking or other means.
The second security upgrade is a password sync feature for Google Apps businesses that use Microsoft Active Directory. Those businesses can now manage their passwords using Active Directory, and then sync the passwords with Google Apps when they are changed. Dhand stated that the passwords would be transmitted both hashed and encrypted during synchronization.
These announcements come at a time when password security is certainly on the minds of companies. Two weeks ago over 6.4 million LinkedIn member passwords were leaked to a hash-cracking website and decoded. Passwords from eHarmony members and Last.fm members were also part of the leak. Though the companies have resolved the situation adequately, the ordeal still shined a spotlight on the need for web services to use enhanced password security.



You Don’t Want a Google Disavow Links Option

Posted on 03:03 In:

Do you really want a disavow links option? I don’t.

With the recent Penguin update, the SEO community has been talking a lot lately about negative SEO and disavowing links. (For the record, negative SEO doesn’t just refer to links, but for this article, let’s assume it does.)
SEOs afraid of getting penalized for “bad links” have been screaming to Google, asking for a way to disavow links that they claim they didn’t create. They say that it’s the only way to regain ranking drops from Penguin, and that it’s necessary to prevent negative SEO. (Note: Simply disavowing links probably won’t help you recover from Penguin. You’ll most likely have to create lots of new links to make up for the ones that used to count.)
I’ve been thinking about it a lot lately, and I’ve come to the conclusion that I don’t want a disavow links option at all.
Sure, it seems like the cure-all solution for negative SEO, the only way to truly prevent somebody else from harming your site with links you don’t control is to add a way to remove them. Or is it?
But what else would a disavow links option add?

It Might Make Spamming Easier.

This is the common argument. If I can instantly tell Google about all my bad links, what’s to stop me from going crazy with ScrapeBox, buying XRumer blasts, and setting up intensive link wheel blog networks? If I get caught, I can claim “It wasn’t me,” disavow the links, and start over.
Maybe others will systematically disavow links in an attempt to better understand the algorithm and how it weighs things. I wouldn’t waste my time there, but I guarantee somebody will do it, and then we’ll all overreact to their anecdotal findings like usual.
But is that the only downside?

Could a disavow links option actually make negative SEO easier?

The Penguin update did a good job of finding bad links (or so we think); however, it didn’t find ALL the bad links out there. I won’t divulge any spam techniques here, but there’s still lots of types of automated link building that still work pretty damn well. Trust me on that.
The assumed way this tool would work is that webmasters would log in and tell Google, “Hey, here’s the URLs of pages that are linking to me that I don’t approve of,” and then Google would factor those out of the algorithm for your site.
But would they do anything else with that data?
See, most sites that are considered spammy by Penguin don’t just include links to one site. They include links to lots of sites. What about those other links?
If I were an engineer at Google, I wouldn’t use the disavow links tool to simply take your word for it. I’d want to make Google’s results better, so I’d use those sites you submit to find other shady links and discredit them, too. In fact, it could even be a neural network signal about spammy sites that could feed back into the main algorithm. Chances are good that a disavow feature would be more than a negative SEO failsafe and that it would actually evolve into another way to train the algorithm.
In their hurry to disavow anything remotely questionable, how many SEOs would shoot themselves in the foot by disavowing links that weren’t hurting them?
My guess? Many will do more harm than good to their sites with such a tool.

But what about all those other links on the pages you disavow?

By disavowing your own links, you’ve also essentially outed countless other webmasters, and isn’t outing frowned upon? If so, then why is everybody demanding Google build what is essentially an automated outing form? I don’t get it.
It doesn’t just stop there though…

Negative SEO could soon involve building links to my own site.

Say what? No, I’m not crazy. Think about it. If Google did, in fact, use the data from the disavow tool, then we could see a radical shift in the idea of negative SEO. Instead of building spammy links to your site, a competitor could theoretically achieve the same result by building links to his own spam site. He’d simply look at your link profile and start building links to his spam site on as many pages that link to you as possible. Then he’d disavow all the links to his spam site, bringing down all your unpenalized links with it. (Note: This could make a great Mechanical Turk or Fiverr job. Another note: That’s just a simple example. This could get way more complicated, too!)
Put simply, I’d much rather prefer there be one Google algorithm trying to find shady links than thousands of SEOs taking it upon themselves. There’s just too many ways we could screw it up.
Is this really what we want? A feature that would lessen the consequences of spamming, provide SEOs an automated way of outing other SEOs, AND introduce a new form of negative SEO that we haven’t even thought of yet?
I don’t want that. I don’t want that at all.

Source: searchenginejournal

SEO link building is effected through the exploitation of search engines and software link analysis tools. This can be done via any of the major search sites like Yahoo or Google. Link building tips can be implemented handily and sourcing competitors’ backlinks and many other link building tactics are lightposts on the path to search engine rank-supremacy. Utility of WordPress is very effective.

1. Compile and post a list, like this one, and share it — the topic is less important than actually having a list for users to forward and mull over.
2. Review the Competition
Research and replicate the link-building tactics of competing websites — it’s hardly unethical in the Information Age.
3. WordPress Themes
Download and edit a HTML-ready WordPress theme that retains the sitelink or domain name in the code as a condition for distribution.
4. Copy-Write
Create quality text copy for the site — hire out the task, if necessary.
5. RSS Backlinking
Gamble risk-free for backlinks from RSS feeds by submitting content.
6. URL A-bridging
URL shorteners are nifty pieces of code for throwing out backlinks, invisible or hidden URLs, RSS feeds and the like.
7. Power Blender On
A relatively new method for SEO link building, RSS metadata is, for lack of better terms, blended to yield myriad results.
8. What’s Up? The Rent!
Amazingly, links can be rented from online services, but this is territory where only the most firewalled tend to tread. Babysteps…
9. Also File Under Amazingly
Another way to secure links: hire — big bucks — a linkbaiter. Yes, that is word. Sounds obscene. Big bucks.
10. ¡Carnivale!
Within the Blog-O-Sphere exist blog carnivals, resources on the InterWeb where many different blogs cluster and are tied together by common topics and by which blog carnival search bars lead users to blog posts which have been submitted.
11. Help Others Help Yourself
Post help articles to sites like About.com and eHow and include the sitelink in the author profile.
12. Old Into New
Revise old copy and bring it up to date with the appropriate green links.
13. Oodles of SEO Links Through the Lens
Post content with a Squidoo lens and include the sitelink.
14. Fire — Submit, Rather — At Will!
Submit to online magazines that publish opinion pieces, poetry, fiction, and nonfiction — include the sitelink with the author bio.
15. The Universal Lingo Stepping Stone
Install an on-site translator for visiting non-native English-speaking users.
16. Open a Bar — Online
Create a community forum for the site and swap banners with other sites that also host forums.
17. Open a Bar, Part Deux
Host a forum for another friendly, non-competing site and include a banner and link in every relevant post on that site.
18. SEOnic Boom
Create a SEO software tool that other friendly, non-competing sites can use that incorporates the sitelink into the code.
19. Connect the Dots
Network with and exchange links with any local business or organization that may share a peripheral interest with the purpose of the website.
20. eCamaderie
Participate in local, regional, national and global chat forums and tactfully supply the sitelink.
Get The Word(s) Out [21.–23.]
23. Submit the site to free SEO-relevant online directories.
22. Submit the site to for-pay directories — some research is required.
23. Submit the site to article-only directories.
24. Pay It Forward
Purchase a one-way link from a similarly-themed website that foregoes the link command visibility.
25. Under The Table
Paying a member of a key webmastering forum to post links is not out of the question.
26. Y-Links
Y-Links or 3-Way links are effective viral contextual link builders that build in layers via users’ interconnectedness.
27. Plus-Links
Plus-Links or 4-Way links are as above, with one more limb or conduit.
28. True, There Are Sites…
…like Ezinearticles.com that invite users to submit content and route traffic back to their sites.
29. Watch Your Footing
Share content from the site, image and video-sharing site StumbleUpon.com with other web jockeys.
30. Techno-rati’d
Gain relevancy on Technorati.com’s blog directory by including the relevant tags.
31. Write the Pillar Article
To be counted as a true blog authority, one must first publish a Pillar Article that meets the following attributes: no fewer than 500 words; authoritative yet light on overcomplicated lingo; content that is neatly organized; contains attractors to draw in web traffic; infowise, it is heavy on relevance.
32. Power of Press Releases
Post viral press release-styled bits of info, no more than several paragraphs long, and insert code for easy copying and forwarding of said content.
33. No Solicitors
Signs like that may exist in the real world, but not in cyberspace — unsolicited submissions to blog sites or political sites can lead to traffic.
34. Micro-blog for Macro-results
Micro-blog by posting attention-drawing content in the form of imagelinks, videos and other ephemera.
35. Third Party Content, Gratis
Invite submissions — guest posts or blogs — from friends and visitors to the site.
36. Reciprocate to Build Traffic
Get more traffic by writing blogs, guest pieces and other forms of commentary for other sites for links.
37. Savor It
Submit content to Del.icio.us — Delicious.com — a site that happens to be a popular general topic archive.
38. Snipe It
A sniping software program can fasttrack hundreds of backlinked competitors’ pages. When the proverbial cat is out of the bag, email the linked-to sites to know they’re caught in the web of traffic.
39. Recap’ture
It never hurts to posts a week-in-review blog about the Dot Com industry and related fields.
40. Click, Click, Click…
Get into Pay per click, or PPC, another widely used traffic-directing method employed by advertisers to pay web hosts for the frequency with which their ads are clicked on.
41. Follow You, Follow Me
Join FollowList.com, the home of the DoFollow Blogs, another resource for dissemination of info and links.
42. Walls Tumbl’n Down
Easy one: get a Tumblr.
43. Spider Crawl
Link back and forth between literally every profile, forum membership and relevant webpage connected to the target site.
44. News-flasher
By enabling the site to report breaking news, it’s search engine ranking will climb with Superman-styled leaps — easier said than done, though.
45. Digg It!
Bending steel with bare hands may be easier, but few SEO link builders are more effective than getting a headline and related link posted on the highly-trafficked Digg.com.
46. It’s Not SPAM If Nobody Complains
Linkdrop in the shoutouts on online user games like <i>WoW</i>.
47. Open Invitation
Collect and edit new content by emailing questionnaire templates to established bloggers and posting the results.
48. Post and link to the site on BN.com.
49. Time is of the essence..
Reply to email correspondence immediately and sans sarcasm to build a rapport with other users.
50. The Byline Flex
Publish and distribute a free eBook.
The Ever-Popular Review [51.–57.]
51. Review a book or eBook in return for a link on the publisher’s or seller’s website.
52. For a link on the artist’s and label’s websites, review a new CD or digital album release in return.
53. In exchange for a link, review a new DVD on the and seller’s and studio’s websites.
54. Post and link to the site on any message board.
55. Write a review of a favorite local or regional restaurant, diner or food truck in return for a link.
56. Evaluate a software product in return for a link on the publisher’s or seller’s website.
57. Post a hard copy flyer at the local public library, and post a link on the website, if it’s allowed.
Media Mountains, Hills, Mounds and Anthills [58.–69.]
58. Buy air time to advertise the site on a local radio station.
59. Buy air time to advertise the site on a local television network.
60. Write letters to offline media like newspapers, magazines and college journals and include the site link under the byline.
61. Link to any and all other affiliate sites or ownership sites.
62. Post and link to the site on IEWeekly.com, LAWeekly.com, or OCWeekly.com
63. Hang up a hard copy flyer at a church or religious organization and post a link on the website, too — if the site’s content is not inappropriate for that venue.
64. At a club or fraternal organization, post a hard copy flyer, and post a link on the website.
65. Review a new smartphone or similar piece of computech in return for a link on the publisher’s or seller’s website.
66. Link to a college or university’s dot-edu site, alma mater or not, if it’s allowed.
67. Register the site with the Better Business Bureau.
68. Post and link to the site on Backpage.
69. Donate to a local or regional charity for a sitelink in their promotional displays.
Exploiting All Open Channels [70.–96.]
70. Expose an unreputable blog or site, but be prepared for the fallout (see #72).
71. Flame — yes, flame — or use another attention-getting tactic while bearing in mind the backlash that comes attached to notoriety.
72. Set up a Youtube channel or create a viral video.
73. Plug the website on popular AM or FM radio shows like Coast To Coast and Howard Stern.
74. Call in to any popular podcast and plug the website.
75. Start a podcast and plug the website.
76. Review a favorite local or regional business or store chain in return for a link.
77. Post and link to the site on Amazon.
78. Register the site with the Chamber of Commerce.
79. Cast A Line
Get old-fashioned and gather links from other websites, similar or otherwise, by offering yours first.
80. Post and link to the site on Craigslist.
81. Sell and post on eBay and link to the site on the auction pages and in the forums.
82. Do the above and donate to charity via eBay and collect links that way.
83. Comment and link to the site on TheDirty.com, TMZ and other gossip sites.
84. Post an article on Examiner and link to the site in the text.
85. On IMDb.com, Rotten Tomatoes and other movie entertainment sites, post and link to the site.
86. Post and link to the site on RollingStone.com, Spin.com and other music entertainment sites.
87. Distribute a flyer or business card with the site link on the bulletin board at work.
88. Visit LosAngelesTimes.com and post and link to the site.
89. Comment and link to the site on MSN News and Yahoo news.
90. Post and link to the site on Wikipedia.
91. If the cost justifies it, use a publicist to promote the site.
92. Post and link to the site in Google Groups and Yahoo Groups.
93. Freely post on the Guestbooks in high-profile sites and include the link.
94. Link to the site in a Facebook Wall post.
95. Create a Facebook page for the site.
96. Link to the site in a LinkedIn profile and link to both it and the LI page on Facebook, too.
Odds ‘N Sods
97. Do pro bono work and accept a banner or resource link as compensation.
98. Post and link to the site on Yelp.
99. Print, distribute and use a car bumper sticker with the site name and URL visible in large font.
Just Because…
100. Get friends and third parties to do anything listed above in trade for services, compensation or just because.

Source: smoblogger

It seems that Google’s decision to replace its star rating system with Zagat scores for local search results isn’t a huge hit with some businesses.


Last month, Google revealed what appears to be the primary reason it acquired Zagat, when it announced Google+ Local, effectively replacing Google Places with Google+ infused local results and Zagat scores.
“Each place you see in Google+ Local will now be scored using Zagat’s 30-point scale, which tells you all about the various aspects of a place so you can make the best decisions,” Google explained, when Google+ Local was announced. “For example, a restaurant that has great food but not great decor might be 4 stars, but with Zagat you’d see a 26 in Food and an 8 in Decor, and know that it might not be the best place for date night.”
Some businesses claim to be losing traffic because Google replaced its ratings system with Zagat’s scoring system. Barry Schwartz at Search Engine Roundtable points to an interesting thread in the Google Product Forums.

There, Dr. Rodney McKay writes, “I know for a fact that I am not the only one that feels this way as I have talked to others who have also experienced the same problem. Everything about Google+ seems to be fine if not better than Google Places except for the removal of the stars. Ever since they removed the star ratings, my actions or clicks went from 30 – 60 or more a day to 0 – 5. I am still on the first page of Google for relevant search terms and in most cases I am also the first listing, I am also receiving the same amount of impressions as before, but the absence of the stars has caused an obvious hit on my Google Business Listing effectiveness. Injunction with that, I have seen a drastic decline in business. Is there not a way to compromise and use the Zagat reviews as well as the stars?”

Some have suggested that Zagat scores are more suited to restaurants, and aren’t so great for other kinds of businesses. There’s no question that Zagat has historically been restaurant-focused. Even now, if you go to Zagat.com, it’s all about restaurants. The welcome message says:

ZAGAT.com, the world’s original provider of user-generated content, provides trusted and accurate restaurant ratings and curated restaurant reviews for thousands of top restaurants worldwide. Our robust restaurant search and rich free features help diners easily find the best restaurant for every occasion, every time – from New York to Los Angeles, London to Tokyo, Paris to Beijing and everywhere in between; from the most elegant restaurants for fine dining to casual, inexpensive spots for family meals, you’ll find it all on ZAGAT.com.
Yet Google has thrust the Zagat system across the much broader local business search space. I don’t see why the system couldn’t actually help some businesses, as Zagat is a pretty well known restaurant guide. However, it might be less helpful in other industries. Currently, you can search for shoe stores, for example, and still get the new scoring system, rather than the starred reviews:
John's run walk shop
It’s a somewhat confusing system, given the food element of Zagat. When you click to “learn more about our scores and reviews,” Google explains that you may see scores depicted in one of two ways: “Scores with multiple aspects” or “Overall scores”.
Multiple Aspects
overall scores
As we see in the case of the shoe store above, Google shows the overall. That way it doesn’t have to show the “food” element.
“When we don’t have enough user ratings on different aspects, we will just show an overall score,” Google explains. “An overall score is comparable to a score in the primary aspect for a location, like food for restaurants.”
Perhaps the system will get better in time for more than just restaurants, as it’s used more.
The new system is definitely much broader than the previous star system, given its larger scale. 17 out of 30 doesn’t sound incredibly great but if you look at the scale, 16-20 represents “good to very good”. 0- 30 is pretty wide range to cover the four individual ratings Google goes by:
3 Excellent

2 Very Good

1 Good

0 Poor to Fair
Google takes the average, and multiplies it by ten to come up with averaged scores.
One person comment on Schwartz’s article, “People understand star ratings. Any kind of visual rating (progress bars, stars, thumbs-ups) just works. They don’t understand numbers. And when higher ratings are in red… it’s even worse. Numbers in red usually mean danger. Anything in red means danger unless it’s properly used to grab attention and visibly labeled as a call to action. It’s freaking common sense.”
It would be interesting to know the local SEO effects of Googe’s move to the Zagat system. Survey results released this week indicate that many of the top ranking factors are directly related to reviews. Here are how a few of them ranked, according to that (out of the top 90):
7. Quantity of Native Google Places Reviews (w/text) (REVIEWS)

18. Product/Service Keywords in Reviews (REVIEWS)

24. Quantity of Third-Party Traditional Reviews (REVIEWS)

26. Location Keywords in Reviews (REVIEWS)

31. Velocity of Native Google Places Reviews (REVIEWS)

34. Quantity of Reviews by Authority Reviewers (e.g.Yelp Elite, Multiple Places Reviewers, etc) (REVIEWS)

46. High Numerical Ratings by Authority Reviewers (e.g.Yelp Elite, Multiple Places Reviewers, etc) (REVIEWS)

49. Overall Velocity of Reviews (Native + Third-Party) (REVIEWS)

50. Quantity of Third-Party Unstructured Reviews (REVIEWS)

52. Quantity of Native Google Places Ratings (no text) (REVIEWS)

53. High Numerical Ratings of Place by Google Users (e.g. 4-5) (REVIEWS)

62. Velocity of Third-Party Reviews (REVIEWS)

69. High Numerical Third-Party Ratings (e.g. 4-5) (REVIEWS)

74. Positive Sentiment in Reviews (REVIEWS)

Of course, these are all based on survey responses from before Google announced Google+ Local.

Source: webpronews

Are you looking to drive more traffic to your blog content?

Social sharing is critical.
But how can you make your content as shareable as possible?
Follow this process, and consider the following 7 tips.

#1: Identify Your Most Popular Posts and Keywords

Take stock of your current content. What topics are already popular with your audience?
Look at your top content and keywords in Google Analytics. If you’re using a social sharing plugin like Shareaholic or Digg Digg, you may be able to get some free analytics on your most popular content that can help you learn what your audience wants.
Examine what isn’t getting shared and start to think about how you can replicate the success of the proven winners.
blog analytics
You can also discover your top shared content with social sharing plugins such as Shareaholic.

#2: Track and Leverage Trends

Know what is top-of-mind for readers. What are people already talking about, and how can you insert yourself in the conversation in a unique way with content?
This is where all that “listen first” stuff you hear all the time comes into play. But “listen first” is not just lip service—it’s vital.
Here are some free tools that will make your listening efforts more efficient:
  • LinkedIn Today—this is a great tool, especially for B2B bloggers. Follow the topics or channels related to your industry and see what’s getting shared the most.
  • Trendsbuzz—Trendsbuzz shows you the top 10 trends from Google, Twitter, Yahoo, Alexa and Wikipedia in a dead-simple interface.
    trends buzz
    Use TrendsBuzz to catch a glimpse of the most popular content from Google, Yahoo, Twitter and more.
  • Know Your Meme—you don’t want to hop on every single meme… that would seem forced. But leveraging one the right way is very shareable content. Know Your Meme will keep you in the loop so you can spot that opportunity when it arises.
  • Google Insights—if you’re stuck between two ideas, compare the two keywords in Google Insights. See what is getting more searches, and deduce from that which topic is more popular.
  • Hashtags—for niche interests, Hashtags.org compiles the trending hashtags and articles being shared.
  • Topsy—Topsy is a social media search engine that shows what’s trending among Twitter, Facebook, blogs and videos.
Once you’ve identified the conversations that are happening, you should think of a way to use that information for a shareable blog post.
Inserting yourself in the conversation depends on what unique things your company has to offer. To leverage a trend, consider these different angles:
  • The expert opinion: Is there someone in your organization who can offer advice pertaining to this popular topic?
  • Data: Do you have access to data that would make an interesting study or infographic related to the trend?
  • Survey: Leverage the voice of your community—what do they have to say about this topic? It doesn’t necessarily have to be a formal study. Depending on your brand, a Storify roundup of an informal Twitter poll could work.
  • Humor: This works great for memes. People love funny stuff! And trust me, they share funny stuff too.

#3: Think “Why Would People Share This?”

The Customer Insight Group (CIG) at the New York Times published an interesting study exploring why people share content online. They found that people share for a number of reasons to:
  • Bring valuable and entertaining content to others
  • Define themselves to others
  • Grow and nourish relationships
  • Give self-fulfillment
  • Market causes or brands
Before you put pen to paper (or finger to keyboard)—really think—what’s the hook?
Only commit to your blogging ideas that show the promise of virality, and cut or tweak the ones that end up on the calendar “just because.” Don’t create noise, create value.

#4: Make the Most of Your Headline

How can you optimize your copy for shareability? My advice: invest some thought in your headlines.
Your blog headline could be the most important part of your blog post because it’s your first impression.
What makes a great headline? It’s similar to writing a great subject line for email marketing. Think about the 4 U’s that Copyblogger teaches us about great subject lines and headlines:
  • Useful: Why is the blog post valuable?
  • Ultra-specific: What can I expect to learn from the blog post?
  • Unique: Why is this blog post compelling and unique?
  • Urgent: Why should I read this NOW?
Consider all four of these qualities in every headline you write.
shareable headline
Judging by the number of Tweets this article got, this headline has several elements of a shareable headline happening for itself.

#5: Test Different Kinds of Promotion

You’ve probably heard of Pinterest, and you’ve probably heard that it’s a smash-hit for driving traffic to websites.
To leverage this, you can make extra pinnable content that is visual in nature.
In addition, think about using visuals to promote content on your own channels.
promote content
Try using images to promote links to your content. Test the impact it has on clicks.
At my company in April 2012, we tested promoting content on our Facebook page with a photo and a link versus just sharing the link. Posts with a photo got 56% more clicks than those with just the link!
But in order to do this effectively, you’ve got to consider what visuals will go along with your social media promotion as you are creating the content.
Moral of the story: To really strive for engagement on the content you promote, you can’t just copy/paste the same old thing to every one of your social channels. It takes a little more thought and work, but it does pay off in more shares and traffic to your posts.

#6: Optimize Your Content for Shareability

Once you’ve wired your content for shareability from a strategic and copywriting standpoint, you want to optimize a couple of technical aspects of your blog to make sure that they are in tip-top shape for your readers and sharers.
First, you need to familiarize yourself with the anatomy of a social share.
Here’s an example for Google+. Pay attention to the 3 highlight elementsthe featured image, the page title and the meta description.
google plus social share
The featured image, the page title and the meta description are properly set on this post.
If you don’t pre-set these components, it could come out looking more like…
bad google plus social share
The featured image wasn't set, the page title lacks any keywords or pizzazz, and the meta description gets cut off. Not good.
Or, in the case of Twitter:
twitter social share
Probably a great blog post, but the Twitter settings could be improved to make it even better.
It really should be a cleaner sharing experience:
good twitter social share
This social share makes it easy for readers to spread the content on Twitter.
There are so many fantastic bloggers who either forget or don’t know how to clean up these small tweaks. But if you don’t customize these key areas, you’re not creating a seamless sharing experience for your reader. They could just choose not to share your content, and then you’ll miss out on the traffic and engagement from that social share.
So what’s the solution? First, focus on fixing the page title and meta description. WordPress bloggers can install the All in One SEO plugin so that these components are in one easy-to-find place.
Page Title—This is your headline that precedes your link when a reader clicks a social sharing button. It’s also what is crawled by search engines. This needs to be keyword-rich for Google, descriptive and catchy for humans, and concise for Twitter. Choose your page title wisely.
Meta Description—This is a brief description of your content that shows up under your page title and link for social shares on Facebook, LinkedIn and Google+. It also shows up in search engine results. Include keywords in your meta description, but avoid overstuffing it with too many. Otherwise, the sentence doesn’t flow and it does more harm than good.
Next, ensure that your featured image is properly formatted when it pops up on LinkedIn, Facebook and Google+ shares.
If you’re a WordPress blogger, do this in the Add Media panel. When you upload an image for your post, select Use as featured image, which will pull this image up as the default for social shares of this content.
set featured image
In the Add Media panel, select “Use as a featured image” to set your featured image.
These customizations work really well for LinkedIn, Facebook and Google+, but Twitter is a beast all its own because of its 140-character restriction. You could go over your character limit with a bad page title, or end up awkwardly referring to a default Twitter handle or hashtag if you don’t tailor the sharing buttons to your website.
A lot of your potential problems can be solved by altering the plugin settings on your social media buttons. Most social media bookmarks offer customizations such as which URL shortener you use and exactly how the tweets themselves look when content is shared. Check your plugin settings in the WordPress panel or check what options they offer on the installation pages of the website itself.
social sharing plugin
The details count. Check out the settings on your social sharing plugin, and customize them for your brand.

#7: Have Something Waiting for New Readers

Congrats! You created a piece of highly shareable content. Maybe it’s because of a giveaway, you leveraged a meme just right or you wrote a highly informative list of tips.
Either way, it’s going viral, you have improved the technical aspects of your blog and you’re getting more and more shares because of it.
But what’s next? Well, you don’t want these new readers to just “hit it and quit it”—you want them to become regulars, and eventually loyal sharers.
Include calls to action to subscribe to future posts. Link to previous content in your posts to keep readers engaged in your blog. Use recommended content widgets to increase your time on site and drive readers to related content and other popular posts.

recommend content widget
Think beyond the share. Offer more value to your new readers and keep them engaged with a recommended content widget.
Make use of your blog’s real estate! Thrill them once with your initial shareable content, but keep them coming back for more.


Source : socialmediaexaminer

Is Social Media Hurting Our Culture?

Posted on 02:47 In:


Now Is Google A Monopoly?

Posted on 06:43
With all the talk about Google being a monopoly, the company is probably glad (at least partially) to see Apple make some search-related announcements during its WWDC keynote, which could help the argument in Google’s favor (even if hurting its market share).

For one, Apple’s web browser, Safari, is getting Chrome-like search functionality, while also adding Baidu as a search option. In fact, Apple is cozying up to China a great deal, as Google’s relationship with the country has grown anything but cozy.
Last year, Apple made a huge impression on society with Siri. Now, they’ve made some improvements to it. With iOS 6, Apple’s forthcoming operating system due out this fall, Siri will likely take a significant chunk of search market share for things like sports, restaurants and movies, even while Google is improving itself in both sports and local search.
And did we mention Siri is coming to the iPad?
“Ask Siri about sports scores and stats, where to eat, what movies to see — even ask to make Facebook posts,” Apple says on its website. “Siri understands more languages and works in more countries. So you can get more things done in more places around the world. And most exciting of all, with Siri on the new iPad, on more devices, too.”
On sports, Apple says, “Siri knows baseball, basketball, football, soccer, and hockey. Ask Siri for game schedules, scores from the current season’s games, or up-to-the minute scores from live games. Tell Siri to show you player stats and compare them against other players’ stats. Siri tracks team records, too, so you’ll always know how well your team is doing (or not doing). Siri is even smart enough to know whether you’re asking about the New York Giants or the San Francisco Giants, based on where you are.”
Siri on sports
On movies, Apple says, “Siri can help you find the latest flicks by location or showtimes. Can’t decide? Ask Siri to show you a movie trailer or a Rotten Tomatoes review. Siri is also quite the film buff: Find out when a film premiered, who directed it, and what awards it won. Or ask Siri which movies your favorite actors star in, so you won’t miss any of their past or future blockbusters.”
Siri on movies
Finally, on restaurants, Apple says, “With Siri you now have a personal restaurant concierge. Ask to find restaurants by cuisine, price, location, outdoor seating, or a combination of choices. Siri will show you a restaurant’s photos, Yelp stars, price range, and reviews. When you find a place you like, ask Siri to make a reservation through the OpenTable app.”
Siri on restaurants
How many iOS users will be turning to Siri before Google for a lot of this stuff? Apple says it has sold 365 million iOS devices sold as of March.
With new Facebook integration mentioned above, Siri is only giving users more reasons to use it. The more people use it, the more they’ll likely use it for more things. Speaking of using it for more things, iOS 6 users will also be able to ask Siri to open apps. Apple is even working with car manufacturers on integrating Siri into voice control systems, with voice command buttons on steering wheels. I wonder if Google’s self-driving cars will come with voice search.
As expected, Apple dumped Google Maps with the new operating system, as it has stepped up its game in the online search space. As Drew Bowling wrote in a previous WPN article, “The new iOS mapping service will come with a host of features that have become commonplace with geo-location services, such as real-time traffic updates and any upcoming traffic delays on your route. Beyond the standard array of features, Apple added 100 million different Yelp listings for businesses as well as a slick turn-bu-turn navigation not unlike what MapQuest has been offering with its direction service. The biggest Oooh-and-Aaah feature with Apple’s new Maps feature is by far the 3D renderings that are fully navigable and offer up insanely detailed pictures (dangerously detailed, some would say).”
Apple says, “iOS 6 includes an all new Maps app with vector-based map elements that make graphics and text smooth, and panning, tilting and zooming incredibly fluid. New turn-by-turn navigation guides you to your destination with spoken directions, and the amazing Flyover feature has photo-realistic interactive 3D views. Real-time traffic information keeps you updated on how long it will take to get to your destination and offers alternate time-saving routes if traffic conditions change significantly. Additionally, local search includes information for over 100 million businesses with info cards that offer Yelp ratings, reviews, available deals and photos.”
A new report from the Wall Street Journal says, “Developers, about 5,000 of which paid $1,599 for tickets [to WWDC], said they were excited to try many of the new mobile software features—particularly the new mapping application. The service, which Apple has been developing for years, has a mode for viewing areas in three-dimensions, along with a local search service and turn-by-turn driving directions for in-car use.”
That same report has a statement from Google saying the company has been “working on maps for years” and is “looking forward to continuing to build the perfect map for our users in the months and years ahead.”
Google, of course, has some interesting new things happening with its own maps.
It just so happens that Apple’s maps come primarily from a provider that has been in the business for years too – TomTom. The company issued the following statement:
TomTom has signed a global agreement with Apple for maps and related information. No further details of the agreement will be provided.
Yelp, one of the companies that has often voiced complaint regarding Google’s competitive business practices, listed the following Yelp integrations on its blog:

Source: webpronews

We’ve all been waiting for it, and now it’s here: Google’s monthly list of algorithm changes for May. This time, it’s 39 changes (less than last month).

Of particular note, Google says it made a couple of adjustments to Penguin:
Improvements to Penguin. [launch codename "twref2", project codename "Page Quality"] This month we rolled out a couple minor tweaks to improve signals and refresh the data used by the penguin algorithm.
Also noteworthy:
Better application of inorganic backlinks signals. [launch codename "improv-fix", project codename "Page Quality"] We have algorithms in place designed to detect a variety of link schemes, a common spam technique. This change ensures we’re using those signals appropriately in the rest of our ranking.
Of course, Google also made more adjustments to freshness.
We’ll be digging into these much more, but for now, here’s the list in its entirety:
  • Deeper detection of hacked pages. [launch codename "GPGB", project codename "Page Quality"] For some time now Google has been detecting defaced content on hacked pages and presenting a notice on search results reading, “This site may be compromised.” In the past, this algorithm has focused exclusively on homepages, but now we’ve noticed hacking incidents are growing more common on deeper pages on particular sites, so we’re expanding to these deeper pages.
  • Autocomplete predictions used as refinements. [launch codename "Alaska", project codename “Refinements”] When a user types a search she’ll see a number of predictions beneath the search box. After she hits “Enter”, the results page may also include related searches or “refinements”. With this change, we’re beginning to include some especially useful predictions as “Related searches” on the results page.
  • More predictions for Japanese users. [project codename "Autocomplete"] Our usability testing suggests that Japanese users prefer more autocomplete predictions than users in other locales. Because of this, we’ve expanded the number or predictions shown in Japan to as many as eight (when Instant is on).
  • Improvements to autocomplete on Mobile. [launch codename "Lookahead", project codename "Mobile"] We made an improvement to make predictions work faster on mobile networks through more aggressive caching.
  • Fewer arbitrary predictions. [launch codename "Axis5", project codename "Autocomplete"] This launch makes it less likely you’ll see low-quality predictions in autocomplete.
  • Improved IME in autocomplete. [launch codename "ime9", project codename "Translation and Internationalization"] This change improves handling of input method editors (IMEs) in autocomplete, including support for caps lock and better handling of inputs based on user language.
  • New segmenters for Asian languages. [launch codename "BeautifulMind"] Speech segmentation is about finding the boundaries between words or parts of words. We updated the segmenters for three asian languages: Chinese, Japanese, and Korean, to better understand the meaning of text in these languages. We’ll continue to update and improve our algorithm for segmentation.
  • Scoring and infrastructure improvements for Google Books pages in Universal Search.[launch codename “Utgo”, project codename “Indexing”] This launch transitions the billions of pages of scanned books to a unified serving and scoring infrastructure with web search. This is an efficiency, comprehensiveness and quality change that provides significant savings in CPU usage while improving the quality of search results.
  • Unified Soccer feature. [project codename "Answers"] This change unifies the soccer search feature experience across leagues in Spain, England, Germany and Italy, providing scores and scheduling information right on the search result page.
  • Improvements to NBA search feature. [project codename "Answers"] This launch makes it so we’ll more often return relevant NBA scores and information right at the top of your search results. Try searching for [nba playoffs] or [heat games].
  • New Golf search feature. [project codename "Answers"] This change introduces a new search feature for the Professional Golf Association (PGA) and PGA Tour, including information about tour matches and golfers. Try searching for [tiger woods] or [2012 pga schedule].
  • Improvements to ranking for news results. [project codename "News"] This change improves signals we use to rank news content in our main search results. In particular, this change helps you discover news content more quickly than before.
  • Better application of inorganic backlinks signals. [launch codename "improv-fix", project codename "Page Quality"] We have algorithms in place designed to detect a variety of link schemes, a common spam technique. This change ensures we’re using those signals appropriately in the rest of our ranking.
  • Improvements to Penguin. [launch codename "twref2", project codename "Page Quality"] This month we rolled out a couple minor tweaks to improve signals and refresh the data used by the penguin algorithm.
  • Trigger alt title when HTML title is truncated. [launch codename "tomwaits", project codename "Snippets"] We have algorithms designed to present the best possible result titles. This change will show a more succinct title for results where the current title is so long that it gets truncated. We’ll only do this when the new, shorter title is just as accurate as the old one.
  • Efficiency improvements in alternative title generation. [launch codename "TopOfTheRock", project codename "Snippets"] With this change we’ve improved the efficiency of title generation systems, leading to significant savings in cpu usage and a more focused set of titles actually shown in search results.
  • Better demotion of boilerplate anchors in alternate title generation. [launch codename "otisredding", project codename "Snippets"] When presenting titles in search results, we want to avoid boilerplate copy that doesn’t describe the page accurately, such as “Go Back.” This change helps improve titles by avoiding these less useful bits of text.
  • Internationalizing music rich snippets. [launch codename "the kids are disco dancing", project codename "Snippets"] Music rich snippets enable webmasters to mark up their pages so users can more easily discover pages in the search results where you can listen to or preview songs. The feature launched originally on google.com, but this month we enabled music rich snippets for the rest of the world.
  • Music rich snippets on mobile. [project codename "Snippets"] With this change we’ve turned on music rich snippets for mobile devices, making it easier for users to find songs and albums when they’re on the go.
  • Improvement to SafeSearch goes international. [launch codename "GentleWorld", project codename "SafeSearch"] This change internationalizes an algorithm designed to handle results on the borderline between adult and general content.
  • Simplification of term-scoring algorithms. [launch codename "ROLL", project codename "Query Understanding"] This change simplifies some of our code at a minimal cost in quality. This is part of a larger effort to improve code readability.
  • Fading results to white for Google Instant. [project codename "Google Instant"] We made a minor user experience improvement to Google Instant. With this change, we introduced a subtle fade animation when going from a page with results to a page without.
  • Better detection of major new events. [project codename "Freshness"] This change helps ensure that Google can return fresh web results in realtime seconds after a major event occurs.
  • Smoother ranking functions for freshness. [launch codename "flsp", project codename "Freshness"] This change replaces a number of thresholds used for identifying fresh documents with more continuous functions.
  • Better detection of searches looking for fresh content. [launch codename "Pineapples", project codename "Freshness"] This change introduces a brand new classifier to help detect searches that are likely looking for fresh content.
  • Freshness algorithm simplifications. [launch codename “febofu", project codename "Freshness"] This month we rolled out a simplification to our freshness algorithms, which will make it easier to understand bugs and tune signals.
  • Updates to +Pages in right-hand panel. [project codename “Social Search”] We improved our signals for identifying relevant +Pages to show in the right-hand panel.
  • Performance optimizations in our ranking algorithm. [launch codename "DropSmallCFeature"] This launch significantly improves the efficiency of our scoring infrastructure with minimal impact on the quality of our results.
  • Simpler logic for serving results from diverse domains. [launch codename "hc1", project codename "Other Ranking Components"] We have algorithms to help return a diverse set of domains when relevant to the user query. This change simplifies the logic behind those algorithms.
  • Precise location option on tablet. [project codename “Mobile”] For a while you’ve had the option to choose to get personalized search results relevant to your more precise location on mobile. This month we expanded that choice to tablet. You’ll see the link at the bottom of the homepage and a button above local search results.
  • Improvements to local search on tablet. [project codename “Mobile”] Similar to thechanges we released on mobile this month, we also improved local search on tablet as well. Now you can more easily expand a local result to see more details about the place. After tapping the reviews link in local results, you’ll find details such as a map, reviews, menu links, reservation links, open hours and more.
  • Internationalization of “recent” search feature on mobile. [project codename "Mobile"] This month we expanded the “recent” search feature on mobile to new languages and regions.

Google Will Soon Ignore Links You Tell It To

Posted on 21:32 In:
Google’s Matt Cutts gave a keynote “You and A” presentation at SMX Advanced this week, and mentioned that Google is considering offering a tool that would let webmasters disavow certain links.


Matt McGee at SMX sister site Search Engine Land liveblogged the conversation. Here’s his quote of Cutts, which was in response to a question about negative SEO:
The story of this year has been more transparency, but we’re also trying to be better about enforcing our quality guidelines. People have asked questions about negative SEO for a long time. Our guidelines used to say it’s nearly impossible to do that, but there have been cases where that’s happened, so we changed the wording on that part of our guidelines.
Some have suggested that Google could disavow links. Even though we put in a lot of protection against negative SEO, there’s been so much talk about that that we’re talking about being able to enable that, maybe in a month or two or three.


We recently wrote about Google’s wording change regarding negative SEO, which seemed to be an admission from the company that this practice is indeed possible. These words from Cutts seem to be further confirmation.

Rand Fishkin, CEO of SEOmoz, recently issued a challenge to people to show that if you have a strong enough reputation and link profile, you can’t be hurt by negative SEO. That seemed to go pretty well, but not everyone has the reputation of SEOmoz, even if they don’t necessarily have a bad one. Such a tool from Google could go a long way in helping combat negative SEO practices.
As far as people suggesting that Google could disavow links, Search Engine Land editor Barry Schwartz actually had a pretty good article talking about this last month. “The concept is simple,” he wrote. “You go to your link report in Google Webmaster Tools and have an action button that says ‘don’t trust this link’ or something like it. Google will then take that as a signal to not use that link as part of their link graph and ranking algorithm.”

“What I can’t understand is why hasn’t Google released it yet,” he wrote. “It is a great way for Google to do mass spam reporting by webmasters and SEOs without calling it spam reporting. You will have all these webmasters rush after a penalty to call out which links they feel are hurting them. Google can take that data to back up their algorithms to on links they already know are spam but also find new links that they might not have caught.”

He went on to make the point that Google would find more spam this way.
Once Google launches this tool, assuming that it actually does, it will be very interesting to see how the rankings shake out. It should be an indication of just how important links actually are these days.
As you may know, Google has sent out a ton of Webmaster Tools warnings this year, and such a tool would help users take quick “manual action” on links rather than spend a ton of time sending link removal requests to other sites. It might even prevent some lawsuits (and the death of the web as we know it).
According to Cutts, however, not many of the warnings were actually about links.


21 Essential SEO Tips & Techniques

Posted on 23:58 In:
Businesses are growing more aware of the need to understand and implement at least the basics of search engine optimization (SEO). But if you read a variety of blogs and websites, you’ll quickly see that there’s a lot of uncertainty over what makes up “the basics.” Without access to high-level consulting and without a lot of experience knowing what SEO resources can be trusted, there’s also a lot of misinformation about SEO strategies and tactics.

1. Commit yourself to the process. SEO isn’t a one-time event. Search engine algorithms change regularly, so the tactics that worked last year may not work this year. SEO requires a long-term outlook and commitment.
2. Be patient. SEO isn’t about instant gratification. Results often take months to see, and this is especially true the smaller you are, and the newer you are to doing business online.
3. Ask a lot of questions when hiring an SEO company. It’s your job to know what kind of tactics the company uses. Ask for specifics. Ask if there are any risks involved. Then get online yourself and do your own research—about the company, about the tactics they discussed, and so forth.
4. Become a student of SEO. If you’re taking the do-it-yourself route, you’ll have to become a student of SEO and learn as much as you can. Luckily for you, there are plenty of great web resources (like Search Engine Land) and several terrific books you can read. (Yes, actual printed books!) See our What Is SEO page for a variety of articles, books and resources.
5. Have web analytics in place at the start. You should have clearly defined goals for your SEO efforts, and you’ll need web analytics software in place so you can track what’s working and what’s not.
6. Build a great web site. I’m sure you want to show up on the first page of results. Ask yourself, “Is my site really one of the 10 best sites in the world on this topic?” Be honest. If it’s not, make it better.
7. Include a site map page. Spiders can’t index pages that can’t be crawled. A site map will help spiders find all the important pages on your site, and help the spider understand your site’s hierarchy. This is especially helpful if your site has a hard-to-crawl navigation menu. If your site is large, make several site map pages. Keep each one to less than 100 links. I tell clients 75 is the max to be safe.
8. Make SEO-friendly URLs. Use keywords in your URLs and file names, such as yourdomain.com/red-widgets.html. Don’t overdo it, though. A file with 3+ hyphens tends to look spammy and users may be hesitant to click on it. Related bonus tip: Use hyphens in URLs and file names, not underscores. Hyphens are treated as a “space,” while underscores are not.
9. Do keyword research at the start of the project. If you’re on a tight budget, use the free versions of Keyword Discovery or WordTracker, both of which also have more powerful paid versions. Ignore the numbers these tools show; what’s important is the relative volume of one keyword to another. Another good free tool is Google’s AdWords Keyword Tool, which doesn’t show exact numbers.
10. Open up a PPC account. Whether it’s Google’s AdWords, Microsoft adCenter or something else, this is a great way to get actual search volume for your keywords. Yes, it costs money, but if you have the budget it’s worth the investment. It’s also the solution if you didn’t like the “Be patient” suggestion above and are looking for instant visibility.
11. Use a unique and relevant title and meta description on every page. The page title is the single most important on-page SEO factor. It’s rare to rank highly for a primary term (2-3 words) without that term being part of the page title. The meta description tag won’t help you rank, but it will often appear as the text snippet below your listing, so it should include the relevant keyword(s) and be written so as to encourage searchers to click on your listing. Related bonus tip: You can ignore the Keywords meta tag, as no major search engine today supports it.
12. Write for users first. Google, Yahoo, etc., have pretty powerful bots crawling the web, but to my knowledge these bots have never bought anything online, signed up for a newsletter, or picked up the phone to call about your services. Humans do those things, so write your page copy with humans in mind. Yes, you need keywords in the text, but don’t stuff each page like a Thanksgiving turkey. Keep it readable.
13. Create great, unique content. This is important for everyone, but it’s a particular challenge for online retailers. If you’re selling the same widget that 50 other retailers are selling, and everyone is using the boilerplate descriptions from the manufacturer, this is a great opportunity. Write your own product descriptions, using the keyword research you did earlier (see #9 above) to target actual words searchers use, and make product pages that blow the competition away. Plus, retailer or not, great content is a great way to get inbound links.
14. Use your keywords as anchor text when linking internally. Anchor text helps tells spiders what the linked-to page is about. Links that say “click here” do nothing for your search engine visibility.
15. Build links intelligently. Begin with foundational links like trusted directories. (Yahoo and DMOZ are often cited as examples, but don’t waste time worrying about DMOZ submission. Submit it and forget it.) Seek links from authority sites in your industry. If local search matters to you (more on that coming up), seek links from trusted sites in your geographic area — the Chamber of Commerce, local business directories, etc. Analyze the inbound links to your competitors to find links you can acquire, too. Create great content on a consistent basis and use social media to build awareness and links. (A blog is great for this; see below.)
16. Use press releases wisely. Developing a relationship with media covering your industry or your local region can be a great source of exposure, including getting links from trusted media web sites. Distributing releases online can be an effective link building tactic, and opens the door for exposure in news search sites. Related bonus tip: Only issue a release when you have something newsworthy to report. Don’t waste journalists’ time.
17. Start a blog and participate with other related blogs. Search engines, Google especially, love blogs for the fresh content and highly-structured data. Beyond that, there’s no better way to join the conversations that are already taking place about your industry and/or company. Reading and commenting on other blogs can also increase your exposure and help you acquire new links. Related bonus tip: Put your blog at yourdomain.com/blog so your main domain gets the benefit of any links to your blog posts. If that’s not possible, use blog.yourdomain.com.
18. Use social media marketing wisely. If your business has a visual element, join the appropriate communities on Flickr and post high-quality photos there. If you’re a service-oriented business, use Quora and/or Yahoo Answers to position yourself as an expert in your industry. Any business should also be looking to make use of Twitter and Facebook, as social information and signals from these are being used as part of search engine rankings for Google and Bing. With any social media site you use, the first rule is don’t spam! Be an active, contributing member of the site. The idea is to interact with potential customers, not annoy them.
19. Take advantage of local search opportunities. Online research for offline buying is a growing trend. Optimize your site to catch local traffic by showing your address and local phone number prominently. Write a detailed Directions/Location page using neighborhoods and landmarks in the page text. Submit your site to the free local listings services that the major search engines offer. Make sure your site is listed in local/social directories such as CitySearch, Yelp, Local.com, etc., and encourage customers to leave reviews of your business on these sites, too.
20. Take advantage of the tools the search engines give you. Sign up for Google Webmaster Central, Bing Webmaster Tools and Yahoo Site Explorer to learn more about how the search engines see your site, including how many inbound links they’re aware of.
21. Diversify your traffic sources. Google may bring you 70% of your traffic today, but what if the next big algorithm update hits you hard? What if your Google visibility goes away tomorrow? Newsletters and other subscriber-based content can help you hold on to traffic/customers no matter what the search engines do. In fact, many of the DOs on this list—creating great content, starting a blog, using social media and local search, etc.—will help you grow an audience of loyal prospects and customers that may help you survive the whims of search engines.

Source: searchengineland

Google Panda 3.7The ongoing WebmasterWorld thread has been tracking Google updates and several SEOs there believe that Google is doing a Panda refresh, which would take us to Panda version 3.7.
Google has not confirmed a Panda refresh.
The last Panda refresh was Panda 3.6 on April 27th so we are due a new Panda refresh any time now.
Also note, we had our first Penguin refresh last Friday night / Saturday morning.
One senior member at WebmasterWorld said:
I do see some changes today. One odd one is in the financial sector, shortly after Penguin was released, many observed the website about mold/fungus ranking top 10 because it had hidden links in the footer. The website was removed from ranking. The owner has since removed the links and now that website has absolutely nothing to do with anything financial -- but it's ranking again on those terms. Another site I monitor has dropped further on key phrases (over 200 spots).
Others reported other fluctuations in the search results and claiming it looks like Panda.
Past Panda Updates:


I will try to get confirmation on this possible Panda refresh and update this story and post a new one on Search Engine Land, if Google confirms it.

Source: webpronews

content-strategyContent marketing and link building both have their merits in the realm of search marketing. However, the tale of the tape reveals that content marketing has a distinct advantage over link building for marketers. Here are seven reasons why.




1. You Can Measure the Value of Content Easier Than you Can a Link

I often get asked by clients how much is a link worth? By this they mean what value is it giving to a site? Of course, this is very difficult to quantify. Even if it is contributing towards an increase in rankings or traffic, how do you put a value on of this in terms how much of a contribution it is having without considering other factors?
Alternatively, if you create a piece of content for a site, you will know how many links that content has generated, how many social votes it has, how many referral visits it’s got, how much organic search traffic it’s created and which search terms achieved rankings etc.
And more importantly, how much revenue has that content generated you? With content, you can provide a client with that answer (e.g., one days worth of effort on content creation has generated you $x,000 is so much easier for a CMO to quantify than the same on link building which “has helped towards increasing our rankings”).

2. It’s Natural

You are writing content and naturally generating links as a result of writing great content. People are choosing to blog about it, share it socially, and generally create a buzz because it’s interesting to them!
Compare this with competitor analysis or submission based link building – there’s a common trend there which shows that these websites are not linking to you because they like you, they’re linking to you because you asked them to (or even paid them to).

3. Good Content Writers are Cheaper than Good Link Builders

Hiring good SEOs is hard. Link builders in particular.
However, hiring a good copywriter really isn’t that difficult. There are lots of people out there with strong copywriting skills – you just need to identify the creative ones who are good at blogging and generating social attention.

4. It’s More Scalable

Building a strong SEO team really isn’t easy. You either:
  • Have to get in people with experience, paying a premium for this and have to hope they are as good as they seemed in the interview.
  • Take on people with limited experience and accept that it’s going to take you a minimum of 12 months to get them close to where you want them to be.
  • Get it wrong – in which case you need to realise you got it wrong quickly!
So scaling a content team becomes a much easier task because copywriters are cheaper, they’re easier to find and they’re more replaceable – so while you obviously want to retain them, it doesn’t set you back too far if they leave. Plus you can mix the skills you have in your team as it grows, so don’t just hire bloggers – hire video producers, infographic designers, and community managers.
To move forward, it’s vital you hire the right people – and building a content team is much less of a risk than building an SEO team is ever likely to be.

5. It’s More Defensible to Algorithm Updates

Anyone who’s suffered from a Penguin or Panda attack will tell you Google loves brands. So what do you do if you’ve been hit by either of these? Easy, you build a brand!
The days of chasing Google’s algorithm, and finding the next quick fix or SEO tactic, are disappearing quickly. So instead of focusing on whatever type of link hasn’t been hit by a penalty yet – make content marketing the center of your SEO strategy instead.
You’re likely to see much greater rewards this way and it’s long-term. So you’ll be the one looking forward to Google’s next algorithm update, instead of being the one scared if you’ve been caught out and worrying that your whole business model has to be re-visited!

6. Authoritative Writers Are The Future

Social media is all about people – if you want to assess a company's social strategy, it’s not just about a brand or fan page – it’s about the people who work there, too.
This is where Google+ authorship comes in. Google wants to know about the people who write on websites and blogs – and if they know this they will have more trust in you. If you write frequently for authoritative sources and you’ve built a strong social footprint, they’ll like you even more!
So set up Google authorship and encourage social promotion around your content from your authors and bloggers.

7. It’s More Fun

Who wants to dig through thousands of rows full of Excel data to try and replicate links or sit for hours on end submitting to directories or article sites?
And who wants to write creative content and be social online, building up connections to help you share that content?
I’m sure some people who are very good at both. But I know which one I’d rather do – and I think I know which strategy Google’s algorithm prefers!




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