Should Google be Regulated?

Google’s “Mayday update” sparked calls for algorithm transparency. Here’s why that’s a bad idea. …

Google’s “Mayday update” sparked calls for algorithm transparency. Here’s why that’s a bad idea. …

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Yahoo and Bing Holding Hands, Now What?

Yahoo and Bing have been hoping and praying that everything with their recent partnership would go through as smoothly as possible with no hang ups. Recently everything was approved for these two giants to be allowed to put their heads together and change things for the future of both businesses. With Bing really increasing in [...]

Yahoo and Bing have been hoping and praying that everything with their recent partnership would go through as smoothly as possible with no hang ups. Recently everything was approved for these two giants to be allowed to put their heads together and change things for the future of both businesses. With Bing really increasing in market share and Yahoo decreasing, it was an obvious marriage that had to happen. Don’t forget that Yahoo is still a very powerful website and one of the most trafficked websites in the world. How is this going to change things for SEO professionals who have been focusing on just Google for so many years?

The united pay per click advertising platforms of Bing and Yahoo will surely be a new force in the industry. As reported by the Associated Press they will be sharing ad revenues which is really going to change the way businesses market their websites outside the walls of Google. Bing is also working on a unique partnership with Facebook allowing almost everything in the social network to be completely searchable in the search engines. Pretty soon if you want to find something on a specific person you will be able to search in Bing and it will filter not just for their name but through their profile for items as well. It seems like many people are very excited to see this go through. According to a poll done by Search Engine Journal , 62% of voters think that this partnership is going to give Google a real run for its money. It was bound to happen sooner or later. Don’t be surprised if you see Bing making some serious moves that involve sacrificing revenues just for market share increase. I think these massive search giants want to do anything to just pull users away from Google and they are ready to use anything within their grips to make it happen. There has already been chatter in the industry how there will be a massive forward step to outperform Google’s algorithm in the newly combined search engine.

I think eventually we will see a shift as to how search engine marketing professionals approach their focus. Over time we will see an importance for businesses to be visible in Bing as well as Google. Everything that comes up must come down sooner or later and I don’t think Bing will take out Google but they might pull some of the focus off of it for quite a while if they play their cards right.

An SEO Recipe is a Recipe for Disaster

I saw a funny forum post this morning about a person asking the community in a an online marketing for the best SEO recipe. That person is already dead in the water right from the start. Let’s take a step back and emphasize how important taking a marketing approach really is when conducting a search [...]

I saw a funny forum post this morning about a person asking the community in a an online marketing for the best SEO recipe. That person is already dead in the water right from the start. Let’s take a step back and emphasize how important taking a marketing approach really is when conducting a search engine optimization campaign for your business or website. When you start off asking for a recipe for your search engine optimization program, you are really setting yourself up for disaster. Your search engine optimization should never look like a science project.

The search engines have been evolving since their birth many years ago. When they first came on the scene, instantly many highly technical “marketers” started manipulating the algorithm to get web pages to appear high up in search results. Search engines really dislike it when people do this. Over time they have consistently tweaked and changed their algorithm to get these people to stop manipulating the system to get their bogus web pages to rank. Some have disappeared and some have evolved to find new loop holes in the system. Remember that rankings alone do not generate business. Rankings are just one factor out of a basket filled with other marketing factors that should be utilized as well. Online shoppers are changing drastically. Over the last few years during the economic down turn many people have realized that they need to change their shopping behaviors. Many have already made the change in slowing down spending affecting the way people market their businesses. Making many technical sweeping changes to get your website to rank is not the answer you need. Online customers want to bump in your pay per click ad, they want to see you communicating with your audience online, they want to see you branding yourself and making at attempt to be visible in front of them in many different ways before they decide to call you or pull out their credit card to make a purchase on your website.

The evolution of the search engine and the relationship it has with online customers is rapidly evolving. You should not be looking for an SEO “recipe” but rather an SEO internet marketing plan to help grow your business. SEO and marketing together are very powerful. They create many multiple quality pathways and links pointing to your website that can really generate a great deal of targeted traffic to any website.

Is Page Load Time Going To Be More Important?

Every few years Google will go through a rather large and drastic algorithm tweak that leaves everyone in the industry running around and scrambling to try to fix any rankings their websites or their client’s websites might lose. There is a great deal of chatter in the industry lately that website load time is going [...]

Every few years Google will go through a rather large and drastic algorithm tweak that leaves everyone in the industry running around and scrambling to try to fix any rankings their websites or their client’s websites might lose. There is a great deal of chatter in the industry lately that website load time is going to be a large factor for website rankings. Matt Cutts from Google has said that as it will be important it will not be a major factor yet. Matt describes it in a little more detail in the video below:

Google’s ultimate continuous goal with or without any search engine updates is to increase the speed and efficiency of the search engines which is always a very important aspect of anything technical and online. You really can’t blame Google for wanting to make their search engines highly efficient and lighting quick. After all it is all about the user experience when it comes to using a search engine and if over time the results take longer and longer to appear people will eventually be turned off. Is the search engine optimization industry just getting paranoid? Maybe a little bit but at the end of the day it is still really important to have a very quick and efficient website regardless of what Google says will be a ranking factor.

Google Barcodes The Map With QR Labels

Google Favorite Places QR BarcodesGoogle also announced that they are sending out stickers to be placed in shop windows that have QR barcodes. The goal is to allow people to scan the sticker and look up more information about that place.

You can see some samples of these businesses in LA over here. How do you get one of these stickers for your business? Well, make sure you are a verified business on Google Local Business Center. Make sure to complete your profile to the T. Then, it is up to Google. TechCrunch reports Google has “PlaceRank” algorithm to determine in which order do businesses get these decals.

Google will be adding these businesses incrementally. “They are selected based on their PlaceRank,” says John Hanke, VP of Google Earth, Maps, and Local. PlaceRank is like PageRank for places It tries to figure out how prominent a place is based on factors such as “references on the Web, reviews, photos,” says Hanke, “how many people know about it, how long its been around.”

Bill from SEO By The Sea covered this PlaceRank algorithm years ago.

Forum discussion at WebmasterWorld.



Google Favorite Places QR BarcodesGoogle also announced that they are sending out stickers to be placed in shop windows that have QR barcodes. The goal is to allow people to scan the sticker and look up more information about that place.

You can see some samples of these businesses in LA over here. How do you get one of these stickers for your business? Well, make sure you are a verified business on Google Local Business Center. Make sure to complete your profile to the T. Then, it is up to Google. TechCrunch reports Google has “PlaceRank” algorithm to determine in which order do businesses get these decals.

Google will be adding these businesses incrementally. “They are selected based on their PlaceRank,” says John Hanke, VP of Google Earth, Maps, and Local. PlaceRank is like PageRank for places It tries to figure out how prominent a place is based on factors such as “references on the Web, reviews, photos,” says Hanke, “how many people know about it, how long its been around.”

Bill from SEO By The Sea covered this PlaceRank algorithm years ago.

Forum discussion at WebmasterWorld.



Does Your PageRank Affect Your Rankings?

A recent reader of this blog asked me an interesting common question that I wanted to share with everyone, “If my Google PageRank moves up to a 3 and my competitor’s PageRank remains a 1, will that push me above them in Google’s search engine rankings?”
Sadly, the answer is no. PageRank and search engine [...]

A recent reader of this blog asked me an interesting common question that I wanted to share with everyone, “If my Google PageRank moves up to a 3 and my competitor’s PageRank remains a 1, will that push me above them in Google’s search engine rankings?”

Sadly, the answer is no. PageRank and search engine rankings are not related in that sense. PageRank is an authority number assigned by Google based on an algorithm associated with several factors that determine your site’s trustworthiness that in directly affects your rankings in the Google for specific keyword phrases. It is not used by Google to determine your rankings for keywords. It is amazing to me that in 2009 that some webmasters, business owners and marketers still put emphasis on Google PageRank when determining the goals of your search engine optimization efforts. As I have said many times, (yes I do often sound like a broken record!) the goal of your SEO campaign should be to increase relevant visitors to your website over time from the search engines.

That said, Google does use some of the same factors in its ranking algorithm as it does in its PageRank algorithm. But there are ranking factors used to determine keyword rankings that are not used in PageRank. For instance, keyword placement in your URL is a factor that Google may use for search engine ranking purposes, but it doesn’t affect your PageRank at all. Other factors such as quality content, internal linking, etc do not affect PageRank, but are used to rank you against your competitors in the search results.

Bottom line, don’t expect advances in your PageRank to affect your search engine rankings. The two are not related at all…and focus your energy on marketing your website and business online and to become an authority in the eyes of your visitors and the search engines.

Page Load Time & Speed Will Likely Be a Ranking Factor in Google

Page load time (speed) is a factor currently in the AdWords quality score. But soon it may be coming to Google’s organic ranking algorithm. If you have a really slow site, it may impact how high you rank in Google. That was the main news coming out of PubCon last week, minus the Caffeine launch.

It is currently not in the algorithm, according to Matt, but who knows – maybe they are testing this already. Matt was clear that Google wants the web to be a faster place and Google does control much of what people see on the web. So Google can influence that people find faster web pages, over slower ones.

You can hear Matt talk about this 2 minutes and 52 seconds into this video:

Google also has a tool to test page speed at http://code.google.com/speed/page-speed/ – so get ready.

I should add, Google has hundreds of ranking factors. Adding one more, depending on the weight they assign to it, shouldn’t shuffle things up much for most sites. Just make sure your site loads fast – it is a good thing to have anyway.

Forum discussion at WebmasterWorld.


Page load time (speed) is a factor currently in the AdWords quality score. But soon it may be coming to Google’s organic ranking algorithm. If you have a really slow site, it may impact how high you rank in Google. That was the main news coming out of PubCon last week, minus the Caffeine launch.

It is currently not in the algorithm, according to Matt, but who knows – maybe they are testing this already. Matt was clear that Google wants the web to be a faster place and Google does control much of what people see on the web. So Google can influence that people find faster web pages, over slower ones.

You can hear Matt talk about this 2 minutes and 52 seconds into this video:

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Google: “Who Is The Failure”? President Obama & White House

Ask Google who is the failure and you will see Google showing the first result as whitehouse.gov/administration/president-obama.

Who Is The Failure

Yes, a “Google Bomb” on President Obama and the White House. Google has to run their bomb defuse algorithm, which by the way has two algorithms to fix this issue. Just like they did for miserable failure and failure bombs.

The best place to see all the history on these types of presidential Google Bombs is at Search Engine Land.

This search was first sent to me last week by @suzukik.

Forum discussion at WebmasterWorld.


Ask Google who is the failure and you will see Google showing the first result as whitehouse.gov/administration/president-obama.

Who Is The Failure

Yes, a “Google Bomb” on President Obama and the White House. Google has to run their bomb defuse algorithm, which by the way has two algorithms to fix this issue. Just like they did for miserable failure and failure bombs.

The best place to see all the history on these types of presidential Google Bombs is at Search Engine Land.

This search was first sent to me last week by @suzukik.

Forum discussion at WebmasterWorld.



Using SEO to Target Markets Not Just Keywords

Search engine optimization (SEO) is all about keywords, relationships and traction. Despite the fact that not all keywords are worth pursuing, for those that are, there is a formula to keep in mind. There is no need to target keywords, if you can target entire markets instead.
Depending on the size, focus and degree of optimization [...]

Search engine optimization (SEO) is all about keywords, relationships and traction. Despite the fact that not all keywords are worth pursuing, for those that are, there is a formula to keep in mind. There is no need to target keywords, if you can target entire markets instead.

How to Use SEO to Target Markets and Not Just Keywords

How to Use SEO to Target Markets and Not Just Keywords

Depending on the size, focus and degree of optimization for your website, finding your respective pages tipping point can provide tremendous insight into how to proceed with a campaign.

Consider it a mechanism of weighting in the algorithm involving numerous metrics and values; but for all intensive purposes we refer to it as the keyword tipping point; and when used collectively, it can be devastating to your competitors.

This tipping point is a moving target and vacillates based on the number of websites targeting the keyword, their degree of optimization, on page strength and volume of content on the topic.

Sites with thousands of pages can rank easier for an aggregate term due to the relevance model of citation being a prevalent ranking factor. You can rank as a result of on page internal linking and page strength, off page links or a combination of the two.

Authority sites have the ability to catapult rankings in the search engine result pages despite the fact if the website features related content or not. Consider them “pent up” and at any opportunity that suppressed ranking potential springs into action with just a good title and a few mentions on a page.

When attempting to wrap your head around the authority site mode, consider this “pent up energy” as a non-keyword specific transient ranking factor “like a credit” than can be applied at any time through any keyword from any page.

Each page that ranks for a specific intention / keyword can acquire its own citation and / or legitimate page rank to contribute back to the website as a whole (think Wikipedia here). Page rank has the tendency to flows upwards, so over time the entire site benefits as each page gains more buoyancy.

If the page happens to acquire links, it’s even better for SERP longevity. After that, the grandfather effect of SEO kicks in (pages or websites that have marinated for years) and are the proverbial 800 lbs Gorilla in an industry.

This is why it is particularly important to understand where the lever of relevance resides, when you have to overcome an adversary such as this for a competitive keyword.

In addition, the keyword’s tipping point is also affected by how many unique pages search engines have dedicated (crawled, indexed and ranked) for the keyword in their database. Just like finding a key to an unseen lock, once you have crossed the line to quantify relevance for a keyword, your site should appear in the top 1000 results.

From there you are in the index; however you must distinguish your page from your competitors if you ever want it that page to be considered for a higher position in the hierarchy and respective SERPs (search engine results page) and creep up from the entry point to a top 10 position.

The key is to this strategy is (a) using pages collectively to tackle competitive keywords (b) cultivating keywords collectively and (c) feeding them with enough deep links and internal links to become buoyant. This sounds easy enough, but you have to scale the amount of resources you have to ultimately provide a website with enough content, links and relevance to breathe.

Consider it like this, when you go to a game such as a professional football, baseball or basketball game, you can sit in the cheap seats, or you can sit in the skybox; (SEO is very much like this). Considering as the analogy goes, it’s the very same game, depending on your perspective and the circumstances ROI is different for everyone and price is only an issue compared to the results it can produce.

Some companies spend more money in a day to compete more than others spend in a year. The bottom line is, you have to know when degree of engagement you can dedicate, the budget you can allocate to crossing each keywords tipping point, and how much of the market you can tackle (based on resources and return on investment).

If you are targeting local keywords, then 25-30 links per *preferred landing page should be enough to distinguish your website from competitors (who are more than likely riding on rankings from just their home page).

If you are targeting national keywords and / or market segments, then that tipping point may by more like 300 links to a main landing page and no less than 25-30 links for the supporting pages (which could be hundreds needed to push the results to the top).

The secret sauce to SEO is in the deep links and created laser-like pages to rank for 3-5 keywords each and “not trying to blend pages to make a catch all”. The more refined the focus of a page, the more chance it has to make an impact and fend for itself in the search engine result pages.

If you can create dozens or hundreds of pages like this, the aggregate ranking factor “flips the switch” transforming your website from a rag tag nebulous array of content to a theme dense ranking juggernaut, capable of targeting markets, not just keywords.

But first, you have to (a) identify (b) assess and (c) equip each page with enough link flow, on page internal links and off page deep links to give it the ability to (1) punch a hole in the SERPs for relevance and (2) defend itself until the holistic ranking factor of the website kicks in.

Tips to find the tipping point:

Use this Google Search Operator in a Google search box:

Site:domain.com keyword

Now do the same for the top 3 competitors that rank for the keyword, this will give you an idea of how many pages they have dedicated to the keyword in question. If they have 500 instances of the keyword on relevant pages and you have 10, then you clearly need more content to compete.

You can also use:

Allintext:keyword
Allintitle:keyword or
Allinanchor:keyword

And compare the respective differences between your website and / or page and your competitors to mine the gap and determine the discrepancy therein. Our SEO Ultimate WordPress SEO Plugin can help you with this type of analysis with its new competitor researcher module.

The last piece of the puzzle is to observe if a generic page is ranking or a “keyword specific page” is ranking for the keyword in question.

A real competitor understands the value of message matching and giving the searcher what they want, hence, those competitors who have taken the time to “develop each page” and cultivate a page to rank vs. just their generic catch-all home page is the one you will want to assess for the next metric which is…

How many deep links are supporting their landing pages?

If you can use simple search operators to see what the average number of deep links are, where they rank for allintitle, allintext and allinanchor and then apply those same key performance indicators to your own websites metrics, you can then fill in the blanks through tactfully crossing the gap by mining the SEO tipping point.

Here’s an Example:

Competitor 1 has 100 pages of content dedicated to “keyword X” and each page is indexed, relevant and passing link weight via internal links to “Champion Page Y” the proverbial check out page; and the check out page has 85 deep links to it, then that page will dominate the SERPs (search engine results page) depending on the competition.

If you see a high average across all of the metrics, then you know which ones your site lacks such as (a) not enough content (b) not enough instances in the title (c) not enough links collectively to the aggregate / supporting pages or the preferred landing page, etc.

The notion is, find and exceed the tipping point on a page by page and keyword by keyword basis to make the most impact with your own websites semantic ecosystem and topical theme.

Google Caffeine is Launching Soon!

As I (and many other top SEO/SEM blogs) have been reporting since mid-August, the big “Google Caffeine” major algorithm update is coming very soon. According to Matt Cutts (Google’s Head of Web Spam Department), the major Google Caffeine update will take place after the holiday season. To read Matt Cutt’s blog post about [...]

As I (and many other top SEO/SEM blogs) have been reporting since mid-August, the big “Google Caffeine” major algorithm update is coming very soon. According to Matt Cutts (Google’s Head of Web Spam Department), the major Google Caffeine update will take place after the holiday season. To read Matt Cutt’s blog post about the Google Caffeine update, please visit the following link:
http://www.mattcutts.com/blog/google-caffeine-update/

In case you are interested, Mashable did an analysis of possible changes that might be part of the update back in August here:
http://mashable.com/2009/08/10/google-new-version/

Here is a very interesting video at the last Search Engine Strategies conference show with Matt Cutts about the Google Caffeine update:


Also, here is more talk from around the web about what might happen:

http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2355684,00.asp
http://news.cnet.com/8301-1023_3-10394059-93.html
http://videos.webpronews.com/2009/11/11/googles-caffeine-live-at-one-data-center/
http://blog.searchenginewatch.com/091110-093955
http://www.imediaconnection.com/content/25086.asp

So it looks like we are all in for some changes together. From my experience from the last 2 major Google algorithm updates (2003 and 2005/2006) I always recommend to not panic and expect major fluctuations of the Google search engine result/rankings for your website. Since this is new for everyone in the SEO world, I recommend remaining patient and to continue marketing your website and business in a white hat manner and long term you should be just fine.

Of course, I will keep you updated (as everyone will in the SEO industry) with any major updates, roll outs, etc.

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