SEO Blackhat Video from SES London

At SES London there was an interesting video about how current SEO people perceive the black hat SEO community. They asked 50 SEO’s how they felt about the black hat community and received many different responses. It was interesting to hear that some of them said they are innovative and push the edges of the [...]

At SES London there was an interesting video about how current SEO people perceive the black hat SEO community. They asked 50 SEO’s how they felt about the black hat community and received many different responses. It was interesting to hear that some of them said they are innovative and push the edges of the algorithms like it was a positive thing that they do. That is all great but what happens when rankings are not as important as they once where?

Check out the video below from SES London about black hat SEOs:

The overall consensus was that they hurt the industry more than they help it. I am all about innovation and finding new ways to communicate your business online, but building a business online requires more than search manipulation which is mostly what black SEO individuals usually target. They are techniques that often times push the technical boundaries not the marketing boundaries which are two vastly different areas to focus on. Search engine marketing in my opinion should be done with a focus on brand building and not a focus of rankings. Search engine rankings will happen naturally over time as you build your business and your links naturally over time. When you force rankings you force yourself to cut corners which over time could come back to bite you in the you know where! Anyway, that is my 2 cents on this topic :)

http://www.searchengineoptimizationjournal.com

Learn About Yahoo! Key Scientific Challenges Program

What can search data tell you about people? How can you use search data to project the commercial success of movies, video games, and other products? These are just a few of the challenges from the microeconomics and social systems area of the 2010 Key Scientific Challenges Program that we announced on Jan. 27 this [...]

What can search data tell you about people? How can you use search data to project the commercial success of movies, video games, and other products? These are just a few of the challenges from the microeconomics and social systems area of the 2010 Key Scientific Challenges Program that we announced on Jan. 27 this year.

The Key Scientific Challenges program is a competition that encourages top graduate students globally to collaborate with Yahoo! and help invent the future of the Internet. The competition focuses on a variety of scientific issues, from developing algorithms that turn raw information into personally relevant experiences, to discovering insights about online advertising and experimenting with new sociological models for how people engage with the Web.

Go to Yodel Anectotal to read a post by Sharad Goel from Yahoo! Labs, where he shares some thoughts on how Yahoo! is tackling the new opportunities for research into the social sciences that the Web is making possible.

Yahoo! Search

http://www.ysearchblog.com

Trusted Sources vs Less Trusted Sources on Google News

Clearly, Google News has it’s own algorithms and techniques in ranking stories and articles. Danny has one of the most comprehensive articles on ranking stories in Google News that I know of. But I spotted an interesting thread at the Google News Help forums about how possibly some stories can, over time, hurt your trustworthiness in Google News.

The person is trying to somehow communicate to Google that some of his stories are press releases and wants to tell Google not to index or add them to Google News. Why? Simply because he doesn’t want to impact his “trusted source status” with Google News.

Inbal, the official Google News rep in that forum replied:

Thanks for your honest feedback. I encourage you to submit your press release hubs to our team; this should not have any implications on your current news site’s ranking.

I believe you can even do this type of labeling in the new sitemap format for Google News, which is going to be required soon. Not sure why she didn’t mention that as a solution.

But what takeaways do you get from this? Don’t abuse your Google News access, because Google can drop your rankings in it easily.

Forum discussion at Google News Help.


Clearly, Google News has it's own algorithms and techniques in ranking stories and articles. Danny has one of the most comprehensive articles on ranking stories in Google News that I know of. But I spotted an interesting thread at the Google News Help forums about how possibly some stories can, over time, hurt your trustworthiness in Google News.

The person is trying to somehow communicate to Google that some of his stories are press releases and wants to tell Google not to index or add them to Google News. Why? Simply because he doesn't want to impact his "trusted source status" with Google News.

Inbal, the official Google News rep in that forum replied:

Thanks for your honest feedback. I encourage you to submit your press release hubs to our team; this should not have any implications on your current news site's ranking.

I believe you can even do this type of labeling in the new sitemap format for Google News, which is going to be required soon. Not sure why she didn't mention that as a solution.

But what takeaways do you get from this? Don't abuse your Google News access, because Google can drop your rankings in it easily.

Forum discussion at Google News Help.


http://www.seroundtable.com/

Weather Report: Yahoo! Search Update

The Yahoo! Search engineering teams are rolling out updates to crawling, indexing, and ranking algorithms.  Similar to previous updates, you may notice some ranking changes and page shuffling during the process, which we expect to complete over the next few days.
Thank you for the feedback, letting us know the community still finds these Weather Reports [...]

The Yahoo! Search engineering teams are rolling out updates to crawling, indexing, and ranking algorithms.  Similar to previous updates, you may notice some ranking changes and page shuffling during the process, which we expect to complete over the next few days.

Thank you for the feedback, letting us know the community still finds these Weather Reports helpful.  To share your thoughts on this latest update, please visit the Site Explorer Suggestion Board.

Dan Rampton

Program Manager, Yahoo! Search

http://www.ysearchblog.com

PageRank Sculpting Is A Waste Of Time

Danny Dover at SEOmoz posted a “scientific” study on whether or not PageRank Sculpting works and his conclusion was – surprise! – it works. Michael Martinez at SEO Theory wrote a scathing refutation of the report. Who is right?
I have to say that my concern is the same as Michael’s and a few other prominent [...]

Danny Dover at SEOmoz posted a “scientific” study on whether or not PageRank Sculpting works and his conclusion was – surprise! – it works. Michael Martinez at SEO Theory wrote a scathing refutation of the report. Who is right?

I have to say that my concern is the same as Michael’s and a few other prominent SEOs. Why doesn’t Dover provide the list of websites he used for his study? He’s asking us all to take his results as gospel without providing the necessary proof. That said, I’m willing to accept that maybe, possibly, PageRank Sculpting works under a few isolated cases. If the conditions are right you can influence your PageRank using internal links. But I’m not willing to buy that spending the time on pursuing it is worth it in the long run.

For every search engine optimization decision you make there is a cost and a (potential) benefit. The problem with SEO cost-benefit analyses is that what works today may not work tomorrow. So you spend hundreds or thousands of hours sculpting your PageRank only to find out a year or two later that everything you accomplished went up in smoke. Maybe that’s why Danny and SEOmoz chose not to publish the websites – they’re afraid Google may reverse engineer the study and change their algorithms to shut it down. Or maybe the test just doesn’t prove the conclusion? Or maybe it does and Danny is protecting his future tests?

Or maybe it doesn’t really matter! If PageRank Sculpting ever really worked at all, it only worked on sites large enough that you’d have to spend hundreds or thousands of man hours carving your link juice just to improve the PageRank on a few pages of your site when you could have done the same thing by performing honest link building, which we’re fairly confident will always be approved by Google and a part of their ranking algorithms.

Personally, while I think this is an interesting discussion, I think PageRank Sculpting is a waste of time. What do you think?

http://www.searchengineoptimizationjournal.com

Yellow Pages Are What? Google’s Got Some Suggestions

TechCrunch ran a Newspapers Are What? post last Friday that got me wondering what Google might suggest for a few yellow pages queries.  Who says algorithms don’t have a sense of humor?
Yellow Pages Are…

And for the Sarah Palin crowd:
Yellow Pages Is…

TechCrunch ran a Newspapers Are What? post last Friday that got me wondering what Google might suggest for a few yellow pages queries.  Who says algorithms don’t have a sense of humor?

Yellow Pages Are…

And for the Sarah Palin crowd:
Yellow Pages Is…

http://www.localseoguide.com

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.


http://www.seroundtable.com/

SEO Followed By Website Optimization – Beat Your Competition

As search marketers, most SEO professionals are focused on the optimization aspects (both on page and off page) that will help a site achieve top rankings in the SERPs of the major search engines. The complexity of achieving top rankings increases by the day with the algorithms focusing more and more on factors that cannot [...]

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  10. SEO Followed By Website Optimization – Beat Your Competition

As search marketers, most SEO professionals are focused on the optimization aspects (both on page and off page) that will help a site achieve top rankings in the SERPs of the major search engines. The complexity of achieving top rankings increases by the day with the algorithms focusing more and more on factors that cannot be manipulated by a site owner/webmaster.

In this scenario, it is imperative that a site owner with a fairly new site maximizes her chances of retaining as many visitors to her site as possible by giving them an opportunity to communicate with her site through a comment on her blog, leaving feedback or collecting the visitor’s email address.

This will allow her to sell products/services on the backend through email marketing. This is where website optimization techniques coupled with solid SEO strategy can pay huge dividends in the long run.

Website optimization basically deals with improving a visitor’s experience on your website and increasing the conversion of casual visitors into customers.

Internet marketers have long realised the power of squeeze pages through which they collect email addresses and then sell products/services through email marketing repeatedly. They also know the concept of “The money is in the list” as each email subscriber is a very valuable proposition.

Many a time, sites ranking well on the SERPs can be attributed to the diligent efforts of a search engine optimisation professional. But rankings are not an end in themselves. They are just the means to the end. Better visibility helps a site gain more visitors. But the crucial aspect lies in converting the visitors into customers. Conversion Rate Optimisation (CRO) is an important aspect of SEO that is hogging the limelight in the present.

It would be worth the effort for SEO professionals to atleast propose to site owners the effectiveness of retaining visitors and/or upsell/downsell products and services once the site has attained good visibility on the SERPs. Let us consider a few techniques that can be employed in the light of what is being discussed.

1) Undiluted Focus:
If you are selling a product or service, you can be in a situation where you are selling many distinct products or services. This will result in specific money pages (inner pages) which highlight the particular product or service in question.

The page that describes the benefits of the product or service should focus completely on just that and should not diverge to talk about a related product or service.

Remember that prospective buyers will buy benefits and not features of a product or service. So it is important to highlight the benefits clearly on the money page.

2) Strident Call To Action:
With the singular focus described above, the visitor is subjected to a single call to action that specifically sells that particular product or service described.

As a site owner, it is your responsibility to ensure that the visitor is asked to take action. If you sell blue widgets, have a big bold button that says Buy this blue widget now. If there is no clear call to action, there is a good chance that visitors will not take action.

3) In the case of visitor trying to move out of the sales funnel:
In the above example where you sell blue widgets on your site, there are many reasons why a visitor is unable to buy a product. The price point can be a major factor as the visitor feels it is too expensive. You cannot predict this until you find out.

This is where the application of a popular internet marketing technique can help you gain a deep insight into the makeup of a typical customer in your niche. If the visitor clicks the Back button or tries to close the tab or tries to type in a new web address in the URL box, then she is definitely not interested in buying your blue widget.

If you use a script that can sense this action, it can popup a special one time offer for the same blue widget at a discounted price. As a business owner, you are cutting your profit by a margin that you can afford. This causes the visitor to rethink and induces her to buy the product at a discounted rate. You are gaining a sale where there was none in the first place.

An increased incidence of the one time offer sales indicates that your produt price is more expensive for most visitors. You have to bite the bullet and reduce the price to attract more sales.

4) Information seekers:
Not all visitors are in a buying frame of mind when they visit your site. There are many seeking information on the blue widget that you sell. For users in reasearch mode, you must have a Resources page on your site which explains all the features of your product.

You can have a review of your product and your competitor’s product and show the superior/useful features your product offers compared to that of your competitor. You can also compare the pricing models. If you have a truly superior product in your niche, then you can certainly justify its higher sale price.

5) Optimizing your site for buyers keywords:
I would like to insert here the idea of optimizing your site for buyers keywords. During keyword research, you are prone to come across keyword phrases that specifically are commercially action oriented in intent. Some examples in our case can be “buy blue widget” or “blue widget software download” (without the quotes).

These clearly show the number of searchers who have done their research and review of the product you sell and are ready to buy. It is ideal to have pages on your site optimized for such buyers.

6) Collecting visitor email address:
You can also incentivize your visitor to submit her name and email address by offering an ebook download that explains the nuances of what to look for when buying a blue widget. For information seekers who have no idea of your niche and/or product, this is a goldmine of information. They would certainly subscribe to your mailing list to get their hands on this great resource.

Now that you have their email address (you have to make it double opt-in subscription process), you have obtained customers for a lifetime (unless they decide to unsubscribe) to whom you can sell products/services in the backend. These offers can be tailor made for just your email subscribers and should not appear on your main website.

7) Collecting Feedback:
At every possible stage of the sales cycle, encourage your visitors to submit their feedback either through a feedback form on the site or through a blog comment if you have an active blog on your site.

The feedback can be about the quality of your product or service offered, shipping and handling concerns etc. It would be ideal to have a 6 to 12 hour turnaround time to respond to queries/complaints.

Feedback is valuable to a business owner to streamline her sales funnel and address issues that she may not have imagined existed in the first place.

8. Use of Website Optimizer:
I have described at length the process of using Google’s Website Optimizer. You can use this as a standalone tool or from within your Adwords account.

Please note that when you sign up for a Website Optimizer account, Google will automatically setup an Analytics account (if you already do not have one) for use with your experiments to collect your experimental data.

Laxity due to Free Traffic:
Though this is not part of the methods actually used to improve conversion rate on a site, many a time, even owners of websites well entrenched at the top of the Google SERPs can be lax as they are getting free traffic from the major search engines.

If a site owner is driving traffic to her site using PPC, she feels the pinch as she is paying for each visitor. This is also the case with CPA (Cost per acquisition) marketing where marketers pay for each visitor to visit their landing page on which they make an offer in the form of a signup to a service for example. They get paid only if the visitor signs up.

It is common for such marketers to employ these techniques mentioned above to gain the maximum ROI for the $ paid to get their visitors into their site.

It is important to realise the value of each visitor to your website. As a website owner, you have to endevour to improve the visitor experience in every possible way and get them to communicate to you their delightful and/or woeful experiences on your site. This will ensure the success of your online business and put you head and shoulders ahead of your competition.

Ravi Venkatesan is a senior SEO consultant at Netconcepts, an Auckland search marketing consultancy that offers both organic search and ppc marketing to its clients in New Zealand and Australia.

Related posts:

  1. Increasing The Scope Of Existing PPC Campaigns Effectively
  2. LinkedIn, But NoFollow Link Love
  3. Relationship Between Link Growth And Indexation
  4. Inbound Deep Links Benefit Page Rank Distribution Sitewide
  5. New Tool to Annualize Google Keyword Data
  6. How To Breathe Life Into A Lacklustre PPC Campaign
  7. Good Practices SEO With A Tinge Of Creativity
  8. SEO Tools: Using Xenu and Excel - Blindfolded SEO Audit Part 2
  9. Blindfolded SEO Audit Part 1
  10. SEO Followed By Website Optimization - Beat Your Competition

http://www.naturalsearchblog.com

Yext – Are Half Your Phone Leads Junk?

Ross Weinstein, formerly of Ingenio, and now head of biz dev at Yext, has been bugging gently encouraging me to post something about the company and since they just convinced some smart people to give them $25MM I thought it was high time to pontificate on where Yext fits in my unified theory of the [...]

Ross Weinstein, formerly of Ingenio, and now head of biz dev at Yext, has been bugging gently encouraging me to post something about the company and since they just convinced some smart people to give them $25MM I thought it was high time to pontificate on where Yext fits in my unified theory of the local search universe.

So the interesting thing about Yext is that they are selling “Pay Per Action” calls.  What this means is that they generate phone leads to advertisers via trackable phone numbers, but instead of charging the advertiser on a per call basis, which is how Ingenio started, they only charge them when they deem the call to be a qualified lead.

I worked on a pretty big pay per call program at InsiderPages and I can tell you the amount of garbage calls we got through these numbers was painful, both for us and the client.  A number of services have taken different approaches to solving these problems, but Yext has focused on an approach that seems pretty novel.  They transcribe the audio of the calls into text and analyze the text for keywords.  Only when the call contains “qualifying” keywords they charge the client.

Here’s a sample transcribed call:

According to Ross, Yext scrubs out 44% of all calls that come through their system.  So Yext believes that almost half the calls that they provision are junk.  Yext gets most of its call volume from search engine advertising and distribution via local search directories, which is not too different than how other agencies that sell calls operate.  So if Yext’s algorithms are accurate then that means 44% of pay per call leads are junk.  Attention pay per call advertisers - you may want to renegotiate your rates.

Of course the price that an advertiser would be willing to pay for a call in theory should be based on the conversion rate of those calls so the junk calls should be built into the price.  Of course that probably doesn’t account for the time the advertiser spends answering the phone.

When you talk to local salespeople all they ever say is that advertisers really just want to pay when the phone rings.  Yext thinks that they really just want to pay when the phone rings and it’s not a robocall from a carpet cleaner or misdialed porn line.

If that is the case, Yext seems like it could be the Yext big thing (sorry had to work that in somewhere).

http://www.localseoguide.com

Seth Godin: Sliced Bread

Malcolm Gladwell: Outliers

Anthony Parinello: Your Price is Too High

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