New Websites Should Focus On The Tail

The online space grows more competitive each and every day and the importance of finding niches and certain areas to be visible in is becoming even more evident and important. If you are targeting a space that clearly has a great deal of competition it will be very important to go after the long tail [...]

The online space grows more competitive each and every day and the importance of finding niches and certain areas to be visible in is becoming even more evident and important. If you are targeting a space that clearly has a great deal of competition it will be very important to go after the long tail keywords as well as the broad to be able to achieve some sort of rankings fairly quickly. Being a new website in a competitive environment requires a great deal of time, patience and experience. Don’t expect to rank quickly going after the broader search terms. Long tail keyword phrases will be your friend so you have to use them.

The most important advise that I can provide for a new website or new business owner is to spend the time doing your keyword research! Keyword research should be based on the existing content of each page of your website, so conduct the keyword research after you write your content. This is a big mistake that I see many people make that are new to the search world. They sometimes write content to rank well in the search engines, your content should always be written with your audience(s) and visitors in mind.

Continuing on and about the long tail track here…The mindset of many websites is to try and rank for the broad keyword phrases to pull in the largest amount of search volume. When first getting involved in search with a new website you have to be realistic. Don’t be in denial when you first launch your website because you could potentially short change your business. Try to go after some of the low hanging fruit in your industry to get some new business and sales. This will allow you to pull in some new clients and build some quick credibility in the industry for yourself by wowing some new clients. As you build your reputation in the industry your website will slowly grow in power naturally and start to climb for the much broader keywords in your industry. Don’t assume that you belong in the search results for the broad keywords right away. You have to earn those spots and that takes time.

Like any industry you have to slowly pay your dues to achieve visibility and respect to achieve the high rankings in search results. Once you have that than you will see your rankings climb for the top industry keywords.

How Personalized Search Changes SEO (and Doesn’t)

Posted by randfish

Earlier this month, Google launched personalized results by default for all users. SEOs should have already read Danny Sullivan’s analysis of the shift (which is quite excellent) and I also suggest checking out David Harry’s Guide on the topic. Sadly, despite some good advice, it appears that a lot of folks are still worried that this is somehow the "end of SEO" or demands a "completely new look at SEO practices." Let’s do a brief analysis:

What’s the Impact for SEOs?

  • Rank Checking is Less Universally Accurate
    While not the biggest tragedy, it’s certainly a bit frustrating to know that rank tracking (manually or with tools) may provide somewhat less authoritative data than before. Though, to be honest, rank tracking has always been about establishing a baseline, not about exact results (see previous posts on this). Still, if you’ve been using this data to see how you fluctuate in the "normal" (non-personalized or geo-targeted) results, it’s still solid for that purpose and may actually help you determine if you’re gaining or losing in the new, personalized world (if you get more traffic but rankings stay the same, personalized might be helping; if you gain rankings but don’t proportionally benefit in search traffic, it may be hurting).
    _
  • The Rich Get (Even) Richer
    Those at the top of the results, who "own" the queries around their niches are likely to benefit disproportionately as mid and long tail queries that would once have shown more alternative sources will now bring up those "previously visited" sites even if their traditional relevance and popularity scores wouldn’t have earned them a top position. This will likely contribute to some lowered diversity in the results, but may help fight against low quality re-publishers and content aggregators in favor of trusted brands.
    _
  • User Experience & Branding Boost SEO (Even More)
    It’s always been critical to make users love your site, but now the direct SEO impact can be felt even more strongly. Sites and brands that "suck at SEO" may even find themselves performing better if their users love them and the pages are, at least, accessible to engines. I’m buying Steve Krug’s new book – Rocket Surgery Made Easy - ASAP either way :-)
    _
  • Buying Traffic May Now Help Organic Results
    If Google really is using signals from all sources of data, the paid results and their impact on search and visit history might now give a boost (indirectly) to positioning in the organic results. In fact, it could be that even services like Google AdSense or other paid advertising that leads a visitor who’s logged in to their Google account and using the toolbar (or other detectable methods of tracking) will "count" towards the personalization metrics. I expect lots of SEOs to start testing and reporting on this soon.
    _

What Should We Do Differently in our Campaigns?

  • Get More Visitors (Any Way We Can)
    Depending on how Google is counting visits and traffic (which they haven’t and probably won’t ever fully disclose), any way you can drag a visitor to your site and give them a good experience is likely to positively contribute to your chances of ranking better in personalized results.
    _
  • Improve Brand Loyalty
    SEOs haven’t classically focused on brand metrics and branding as a marketing practice, but it’s long past due. The benefits of building a strong brand are evident everywhere in the consumer (and B2B) marketplace. Now Google’s giving us one more reason (and a more direct one at that) to start earning visitors’ love and, in turn, be rewarded by higher rankings. 
    _
  • More Tightly Integrate Metrics w/ Rank Tracking
    Again, this has been a wise move long before personalization, but with the expansion comes renewed need for weaving together the 3rd-party tracking of rankings with the traffic metrics from your analytics to provide a full picture of how your site is performing in the search engines.
    _

The big takeaway here is that these action items aren’t particularly groundbreaking. We should have been doing all of these as responsible, effective Internet marketers anyway.

Is this a Major, Tectonic Shift in SEO?

No. I’m maintaining my previous stance that unless a shift from Google fundamentally changes the classic SEO process:

  1. Make pages accessible
  2. Target with keywords that searchers employ
  3. Build content that users will find useful and valuable
  4. Earn editorial links from good sources

It doesn’t qualify as a "tectonic" or "massive" or "fundamental" change in SEO. The best practices we’ve been recommending to clients, developers and content creators for the last half-decade are actually less impacted by this change than by some of the other items we’ve encountered recently (Bing + Yahoo! combining, real-time results at the top of query results, more vertical results in the SERPs, etc.). These latter examples call for much more active changes, learnings and direct action on the part of SEOs vs. personalization, which by-and-large just strengthens the reasons for best practices we’ve long known to exist.

p.s. Tomorrow evening at 6pm (Tuesday Dec. 22nd), I’ll be attending an informal SEO meetup in San Diego, CA at the Gordon Biersch Brewery in Mission Valley5010 Mission Center Road San Diego, CA 92108. Hope to see some of you there before the holidays!

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Posted by randfish

Earlier this month, Google launched personalized results by default for all users. SEOs should have already read Danny Sullivan’s analysis of the shift (which is quite excellent) and I also suggest checking out David Harry’s Guide on the topic. Sadly, despite some good advice, it appears that a lot of folks are still worried that this is somehow the "end of SEO" or demands a "completely new look at SEO practices." Let’s do a brief analysis:

What’s the Impact for SEOs?

  • Rank Checking is Less Universally Accurate
    While not the biggest tragedy, it’s certainly a bit frustrating to know that rank tracking (manually or with tools) may provide somewhat less authoritative data than before. Though, to be honest, rank tracking has always been about establishing a baseline, not about exact results (see previous posts on this). Still, if you’ve been using this data to see how you fluctuate in the "normal" (non-personalized or geo-targeted) results, it’s still solid for that purpose and may actually help you determine if you’re gaining or losing in the new, personalized world (if you get more traffic but rankings stay the same, personalized might be helping; if you gain rankings but don’t proportionally benefit in search traffic, it may be hurting).
    _
  • The Rich Get (Even) Richer
    Those at the top of the results, who "own" the queries around their niches are likely to benefit disproportionately as mid and long tail queries that would once have shown more alternative sources will now bring up those "previously visited" sites even if their traditional relevance and popularity scores wouldn’t have earned them a top position. This will likely contribute to some lowered diversity in the results, but may help fight against low quality re-publishers and content aggregators in favor of trusted brands.
    _
  • User Experience & Branding Boost SEO (Even More)
    It’s always been critical to make users love your site, but now the direct SEO impact can be felt even more strongly. Sites and brands that "suck at SEO" may even find themselves performing better if their users love them and the pages are, at least, accessible to engines. I’m buying Steve Krug’s new book – Rocket Surgery Made Easy - ASAP either way :-)
    _
  • Buying Traffic May Now Help Organic Results
    If Google really is using signals from all sources of data, the paid results and their impact on search and visit history might now give a boost (indirectly) to positioning in the organic results. In fact, it could be that even services like Google AdSense or other paid advertising that leads a visitor who’s logged in to their Google account and using the toolbar (or other detectable methods of tracking) will "count" towards the personalization metrics. I expect lots of SEOs to start testing and reporting on this soon.
    _

What Should We Do Differently in our Campaigns?

  • Get More Visitors (Any Way We Can)
    Depending on how Google is counting visits and traffic (which they haven’t and probably won’t ever fully disclose), any way you can drag a visitor to your site and give them a good experience is likely to positively contribute to your chances of ranking better in personalized results.
    _
  • Improve Brand Loyalty
    SEOs haven’t classically focused on brand metrics and branding as a marketing practice, but it’s long past due. The benefits of building a strong brand are evident everywhere in the consumer (and B2B) marketplace. Now Google’s giving us one more reason (and a more direct one at that) to start earning visitors’ love and, in turn, be rewarded by higher rankings. 
    _
  • More Tightly Integrate Metrics w/ Rank Tracking
    Again, this has been a wise move long before personalization, but with the expansion comes renewed need for weaving together the 3rd-party tracking of rankings with the traffic metrics from your analytics to provide a full picture of how your site is performing in the search engines.
    _

The big takeaway here is that these action items aren’t particularly groundbreaking. We should have been doing all of these as responsible, effective Internet marketers anyway.

Is this a Major, Tectonic Shift in SEO?

No. I’m maintaining my previous stance that unless a shift from Google fundamentally changes the classic SEO process:

  1. Make pages accessible
  2. Target with keywords that searchers employ
  3. Build content that users will find useful and valuable
  4. Earn editorial links from good sources

It doesn’t qualify as a "tectonic" or "massive" or "fundamental" change in SEO. The best practices we’ve been recommending to clients, developers and content creators for the last half-decade are actually less impacted by this change than by some of the other items we’ve encountered recently (Bing + Yahoo! combining, real-time results at the top of query results, more vertical results in the SERPs, etc.). These latter examples call for much more active changes, learnings and direct action on the part of SEOs vs. personalization, which by-and-large just strengthens the reasons for best practices we’ve long known to exist.

p.s. Tomorrow evening at 6pm (Tuesday Dec. 22nd), I’ll be attending an informal SEO meetup in San Diego, CA at the Gordon Biersch Brewery in Mission Valley5010 Mission Center Road San Diego, CA 92108. Hope to see some of you there before the holidays!

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SEO and Social Media Benchmarking

Posted by RobOusbey

Introduction

We’ll often rattle off various metrics quite casually in conversation, but it’s easy to forget that others (such as your clients!) might not know whether these are big numbers or small ones. For example: “We’ve just published a guest post on a site with Domain mozTrust 5.67. Mr_Gadget mentioned it to his 64 thousand followers, and it managed to get over 1,000 Diggs.

This post should be useful to anyone who needs to orientate themselves around such numbers. The Website Benchmarks section shows metrics for around half a dozen sites from ten different niches (based on the list originally prepared for comparing SEOMoz Trifecta data.) This is followed by Social Media Benchmarks, to give an idea of the impact and influence of votes and people on three popular social websites.

Links and Traffic: Website Benchmarks

This section uses three particular metrics:

  • Domain mozRank: the strength of a website, based on the sites & pages that link to it,
  • Domain mozTrust: the trustworthiness of a website, based on links from trusted sites & pages,
  • Unique Vistors: Compete.com‘s estimate of the number of monthly unique visitors to a site.

N.B.: The ‘moz’ metrics use data exposed by SEOMoz’s Linkscape, and are on an exponential scale from 0 – 10. Data collected in 2006 suggested that the no visitor metric – Compete included – could be used to precisely estimate unique visitors to blogs at the time.

Arts & Entertainment
Website DmR DmT Visitors
AllMusic 7.05 7.26 545,038
Art.com 6.73 6.58 1,595,173
Art Cyclopedia 6.41 6.94 244,849
AMC Theatres 6.23 6.60 1,294,011
Art.net 5.73 6.32 17,122
Shihad.com 5.55 5.65 1,170
The Official Whitlams Website 4.77 4.95 822
EntertainmentTonight.org 2.87 3.01 401
Business
Website DmR DmT Visitors
Business.gov 6.87 7.37 185,142
Business.com 6.47 6.75 4,882,836
Prudential 6.40 6.86 1,028,829
Kansas Insurance Commissioner 5.71 6.18 8,826
WorldBiz.com 5.48 6.03 4,033
HRM Business Practices and Notes 3.89 4.11 114
Chevron Corporate Solutions 2.76 3.01 n/a
Economy & Politics
Website DmR DmT Visitors
The White House 7.90 8.55 1,976,338
Barak Obama 6.93 7.38 1,180,883
The Democratic Party 6.49 7.01 261,288
Republican National Committee 6.22 7.13 27,592
Democrats.com | The Aggressive Progressives 5.71 6.36 131,764
Iowa Democratic Party 5.15 5.67 1,009
Republican Party of America 4.32 4.70 2,873
Vote Brian Sayrs 3.11 3.74 123
Health
Website DmR DmT Visitors
WebMD 7.35 7.66 19,871,120
HealthWorld Online 6.18 6.73 88,180
Health.com 6.08 6.41 1,795,763
Men’s Health Network 5.71 6.28 6,817
Healthy Child 5.14 5.25 7,409
Healthy Living Natural Foods 4.41 4.79 1,199
All American Healthcare 2.76 3.00 n/a
Home & Housing
Website DmR DmT Visitors
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development 7.62 8.07 1,716,602
HGTV 6.83 7.05 3,334,973
RealEstate.com 6.55 6.48 527,147
HousingMaps 6.08 6.70 19,219
Get Decorating 5.02 5.32 53,819
Eastern Corner 4.77 4.81 4,722
RentSpeed.com 4.73 4.68 74,571
WeBuyHouses.info 2.76 3.00 n/a
News & Media
Website DmR DmT Visitors
CNN 7.40 7.72 10,055,985
Anchorage Daily News 6.57 7.11 183,065
News-Record 6.17 6.68 207,799
Happy News 5.57 6.15 120,209
News Directory 5.56 6.24 1,610
Napier Mail 3.60 3.77 434
Kingsburg Recorder 2.35 4.78 4,011
People & Society
Website DmR DmT Visitors
U.S. Department of Education 7.63 8.33 6,270,175
ConsumerReports 6.94 7.24 4,339,086
Consumer Web Watch 5.97 6.31 12,213
Consumerist 5.63 5.91 796,933
South Carolina Department of Education 5.44 6.12 4,467
No Nonsense Self Defense 4.86 5.34 18,278
Inner Strength 3.71 4.32 1,055
Acqua Beauty Bar 3.55 3.84 1,383
Science
Sports & Recreation
Website DmR DmT Visitors
Fox Sports 7.18 7.29 6,294,958
Official Site of Major League Baseball 6.57 6.84 9,969,301
FIBA – Home of International Basketball 6.16 6.23 8,369
NCAA Football 5.44 5.90 232,497
Sports Illustrated for Kids 5.09 5.48 166,599
North American Gay Amateur Athletic Alliance 4.33 4.43 3,057
Swimwatch 3.03 3.19 1,138
Technology
Website DmR DmT Visitors
Apple 8.84 9.33 21,407,512
Google Mail 7.22 7.14 9,336,542
Blackberry 7.10 7.30 2,551,692
Government of India, Department of Information Technology 5.82 6.47 1,862
Internet History 5.72 6.43 20,749
The Society for the History of Technology 4.98 6.32 688
The Loop 3.71 5.58 17,332

Social Media Benchmarks

Digg

Digg is a well established social media site. After a user submits a link (refered to as a story) other users ‘Digg’ the story if they like it. Stories with a greater number of Diggs are more likely to be promoted to the site’s front page, be seen by more visitors, and receive more traffic. Users can also ‘bury’ stories that are off-topic or duplicate. Read more at How Digg Works.

# of Diggs Likely success Example Story
1+ Little or no exposure Example
10+ A little exposure Example
100+ Mild exposure, moderate success Example
500+ Reasonable exposure, good success – likely to have been promoted with the submission category Example
1,000+ Good exposure & likely to be promoted to the front page, successful content Example
2,000+ Lots of exposure, highly successful Example
10,000+ The very top echelon of articles, extremely successful content. Example
Reddit

Reddit is a newer, but increasingly popular social media site. Users can up-vote and down-vote submitted links to give a link a total number of ‘points’. The most popular stories are promoted to the front page of their category, or the site. Read more at the Reddit FAQ.

Points Likely success Example Link
1+ Little or no exposure Example
10+ A little exposure, may send some visits page Example
100+ Good exposure & likely to be promoted to the category’s front page, sends a moderate amount of traffic Example
500+ Very good exposure & likely to be promoted to the front page Example
1,000+ Excellent exposure, highly successful & will send considerable traffic to the page Example
3,000+ Amongst the top links on the site, extremely popular and widely viewed Example
Twitter

Twitter is a networking website where individuals share their ‘statuses’, and follow others doing the same. The most fundamental metric available on the site is the number of ‘followers’ a user has – and provides a reasonable indication of their popularlity and influence. Read more at Twitter’s Getting Started page.

Followers Typical behaviour Example User
1+ Very new, or dormant user Example
10+ Likely to be using the site for social purposes, has influence within a close circle of friends Example
100+ Connecting with a modest number of people, has influence amongst a wide circle of friends or industry colleagues Example
1,000+ Fairly well known within their industry, and likely to have influence well beyond those they know personally Example
10,000+ Very well known with their industry or niche; likely to have some off-line awareness Example
100,000+ Popular amongst a wide variety of users; likely to very influential and be widely ‘retweeted’ Example
1,000,000+ Amongst the top 200 users and very influential within the site; almost certainly a genuine off-line celebrity Example

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Posted by RobOusbey

Introduction

We’ll often rattle off various metrics quite casually in conversation, but it’s easy to forget that others (such as your clients!) might not know whether these are big numbers or small ones. For example: “We’ve just published a guest post on a site with Domain mozTrust 5.67. Mr_Gadget mentioned it to his 64 thousand followers, and it managed to get over 1,000 Diggs.

This post should be useful to anyone who needs to orientate themselves around such numbers. The Website Benchmarks section shows metrics for around half a dozen sites from ten different niches (based on the list originally prepared for comparing SEOMoz Trifecta data.) This is followed by Social Media Benchmarks, to give an idea of the impact and influence of votes and people on three popular social websites.

Links and Traffic: Website Benchmarks

This section uses three particular metrics:

  • Domain mozRank: the strength of a website, based on the sites & pages that link to it,
  • Domain mozTrust: the trustworthiness of a website, based on links from trusted sites & pages,
  • Unique Vistors: Compete.com‘s estimate of the number of monthly unique visitors to a site.

N.B.: The ‘moz’ metrics use data exposed by SEOMoz’s Linkscape, and are on an exponential scale from 0 – 10. Data collected in 2006 suggested that the no visitor metric – Compete included – could be used to precisely estimate unique visitors to blogs at the time.

Arts & Entertainment
Business
Economy & Politics
Health
Home & Housing
News & Media
People & Society
Science
Sports & Recreation
Technology

Social Media Benchmarks

Digg
Reddit
Twitter

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2 Social Integrations From Google

Watch this video and you’ll hear the two social integrations that Google recently announced. After you’ve watched the video I’ll comment on them briefly.

First, Twitter will soon be integrated into Google’s search results. Of course, you knew that by now. But I think it’s interesting that Twitter will be integrated into the universal search results [...]

Watch this video and you’ll hear the two social integrations that Google recently announced. After you’ve watched the video I’ll comment on them briefly.

First, Twitter will soon be integrated into Google’s search results. Of course, you knew that by now. But I think it’s interesting that Twitter will be integrated into the universal search results while the company is rolling out its new “social search”. Isn’t that ironic?

Now, moving on to the “social” search. This is going to get sticky because in order to take advantage of the social search you have to opt in. That’s going to pose a privacy issue for many people. Yet, it seems like a good product. You’ll be able to search through your network of friends to find relevant videos, photos, and other hard-to-find media (RE: hard to optimize). You’ll also be able to query your network, it seems, to find local points of interest and other information that you might have difficulty finding through a normal search.

Here’s a question: To what extent will social search be connected to Google Wave?

Here’s another question: What if you have more than one Google account? If, for instance, you run multiple websites in several niches and you don’t want them associated with each other at all, you will either have to opt out of Google’s personalized products and services altogether or maintain two gmail accounts. I wonder how that will affect the social search.

Seth Godin: Sliced Bread

Malcolm Gladwell: Outliers

Anthony Parinello: Your Price is Too High