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Posts Tagged ‘search-engine’

Announcing the New SEOmoz Toolbar – Plus 5 New Features

March 17th, 2010 No comments

Posted by adamf First, let me make a quick introduction. Normally, I spend my time focused on new products at SEOmoz, working with a great team of people that design and build our new tools and features. Today I am excited to use my first blog post to announce our new SEO toolbar for Firefox, and tell you about some of the powerful features we have added. As a quick reminder, all of these new features are free, and will be available to anyone who downloads the Firefox SEO Toolbar!

SEO for Small Business Web Sites : Tips for a Successful Search Marketing Program

March 14th, 2010 No comments

Insightful chat with noted SEO expert Stoney degeyter on issues facing small business web sites when it comes to Search Engine Optimization (SEO). Few things we have found challenging with small business SEO is related to small business owners a) Do not necessarily have the resources to implement recommendations, b) Always have cash flow issues and c) Are always short on time. We explore this questions more in our interview. For a complete blog post and analysis on the topic please visit: www.instantetraining.com

http://www.youtube.com/v/AC3v2nTImWw?f=videos&app=youtube_gdata

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SEO for Small Business Web Sites : Tips for a Successful Search Marketing Program

SMX West 2010 – Man on the Street Interviews

March 10th, 2010 No comments

Posted by jennita Note: This post will make you smile, possibly even laugh. It won’t however teach you much about SEO. You’ve been warned. Last week I attended SMX West in Santa Clara, California and took a couple flip video cameras along. I thought it would be fun to do “man on the street” interviews, somewhat along the lines of Jay Leno’s ” Jaywalking ” episodes on The Tonight Show. Another great idea I had was to employ the help of Dana Lookadoo from Yo! Yo! SEO to help with the interviews. Little did I know she’d be so great at it (ok, I lie. I knew she’d do much better than I would!). She did so well in fact that our video editor, none other than my (awesome) husband Rudy Lopez , mainly only used Dana’s interviews. A rockstar in the making! Rather than keeping you from this awesome video any further… I present to you: SEOmoz “Man on Street” – A Who’s Who in Search Marketing. Thanks to all our great participants! Matt McGee, Search Engine Land and SmallBusinessSEM.com Curtis R. Curtis, Universal Business Listing Ross Dunn, Step Forth Marketing Ian Lurie, Portent Interactive Steve (sorry – didn’t get his full name or company. If you know him, let me know!) Shannon Poole, Bruce Clay, Inc Greg Finn, 10e20 Danny Sullivan, Search Engine Land Virginia Nussey, Bruce Clay, Inc Bruce Clay, Bruce Clay, Inc David Szetela, Clix Marketing (didn’t make it in the video, but suffered through it and deserves props!) Jill Whalen, High Rankings (again, she didn’t make it in but did endure my questions!) Matt Cutts , Google

Search Marketing Success Stories

March 7th, 2010 No comments

Posted by RobOusbey Search Engine Optimization covers a huge range of tactics – all of which can bring direct benefit to a website. In this post, I’ve shared examples of different tactics used at different websites, and the effects that have been seen. If you’re considering an SEO campaign for your site, or are trying to persuade someone else to invest in internet marketing, I hope this post will help demonstrate the potential of internet marketing. The post includes real screen shots from Google Analytics (click any of them to enlarge) but the sites and data have been anonymized. Target Your Target Terms Remember that post about building a page with perfect keyword targeting ? SEOmoz wasn’t kidding around. A website that sells homewares had issues with site structure and on-page targeting. Their category level pages were at subdomains such as http://kitchenequipment.sitename.com or http://livingrooms.sitename.com whilst each sub-category was back on the main subdomain at: www.sitename.com/find_product2.asp?url1=living+room&url2=rugs+and+carpets Category and sub-category pages had a distinct lack of semantic HTML or term targeting. Getting appropriate H1 tags onto each page was a quick job, improving title tag structure took a bit longer, clean & friendly URLs and internal links with appropriate anchor text were also added. The site saw ranking improvements across the board, which brought new traffic through head, mid and long tail terms. Can you guess when the changes were made? ;-) Getting sorted in Google Local Before getting into the nitty-gritty of ranking factors for Local Search , dead simple tactics , etc, it’s important to get the basics right. A large chain of restaurants created a ‘bulk upload’ file with the correct data for each one of their locations. After uploading the file, they applied for it to be reviewed and ‘whitelisted’. Local data that’s been uploaded by the business owner and whitelisted is treated as authoritatively as locations that have been manually verified by postcard. Despite various issues (Google’s best practice guidelines still aren’t quite the best solution in some cases) the traffic generated by visibility in Local Search has been significant and valuable. (The uploads were verified in late November when the traffic begins its steady rise.) Architecture of Change A current affairs magazine wanted to get more from their website. Because of falling advertising revenue, the publication was at risk of being closed down. They’d seen some growth from SEO already, but wanted to prove that the website had greater value. Although the site had a good brand and some great content, it suffered from similar problems to many news-type websites, including badly archived content, duplicate issues and a CMS that hampered keyword targeting or promoting individual articles. Recommendations were made to improve the site’s architecture and migrate to the new structure. The effect of the changes was immediate growth which took the organic traffic to 257% in three months. A month later, the magazine’s owner explained that the falling revenue from print advertising meant that they couldn’t continue to lose money publishing the mag, and closed it down. Hook, Line, Sinker An office cleaning company wanted to improve the profile of their site through SEO. Amongst other tactics, a member of staff spent a day writing a ‘linkbait’ post to publish on their blog. This generated huge amounts of traffic from social media sites (dwarfing their regular daily visitors) and was subsequently linked to from dozens of sites. This post, along with other content published on the site to attract links, helped the site grow in strength and authority, and it now ranks position 3 for ‘office cleaning’ in their country. Paid In Full This is SEOmoz, but I’d like to share a graph from a PPC colleague working on a site that sells scooters. They were initially bidding on very broad terms (scooter, scooters, buy a scooter, etc) but the campaign was adjusted to target more long tail terms, including descriptions, specifications, etc. Over a period of around six weeks, the cost per click was reduced by 30% and the more targeted traffic converted increasingly well – this allowed the site owners to increase their ad budget and generated more sales than their paid search campaign ever had before. If you’re new to SEOmoz and this post has inspired you to get involved in search marketing for your site, do browse the site for the PRO & free SEO guides and the SEO blog . If you’re a regular, do share any stories you’re particularly proud of in the comments. Do you like this post? Yes No

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Search Marketing Success Stories

What Is SEO – Search Engine Optimization Explained

February 18th, 2010 No comments

outsourcerabbit.com What is SEO? SEO stands for search engine optimization but that doesn’t explain all too much either. This video jumps into exactly what SEO is all about. http Let’s talk about what SEO can do for you, and why you should be using search engine optimization to your advantage. Whether you’ve got one site or no sites this is a presentation on SEO (search engine optimization) that you cannot afford to miss. outsourcerabbit.com

http://www.youtube.com/v/49PeZFpmogo?f=videos&app=youtube_gdata

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What Is SEO – Search Engine Optimization Explained

SEO Monterey | Search Engine Optimization | SEO Santa Cruz

February 11th, 2010 No comments

Zenergy Works | Another happy client, Robert Wesenberg of Robert's Auto Repair is using our SEO services to gain the attention of new clients in the Peninsula area of the Bay Area. SEO Monterey | Search Engine Optimization | SEO Santa Cruz

http://www.youtube.com/v/aBdnWjlpanY?f=videos&app=youtube_gdata

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SEO Monterey | Search Engine Optimization | SEO Santa Cruz

A Step by Step 15 Minute SEO Audit (A Sample from SEO Secrets)

February 10th, 2010 No comments

Posted by Danny Dover About seven months ago, I was asked by Wiley Publishing if I wanted to write a book about advanced SEO. Assuming they had accidentally contacted the wrong person, (You know Rand is spelled with an ‘R’ right?) I eventually accepted and found out they had indeed wanted me. Shortly after, I wrote a blog post asking what all of you would like to read . I got a lot of great feedback and heard loud and clear that people wanted clearly defined processes with detailed explanations of the reasoning behind every action. Now that SEOmoz is no longer doing consulting , I can do just that. The following is one section of one chapter of my book. It has not gone through my editor’s watchful eye yet (Surprise Kevin!) so please bear with me if you find any grammatical errors. I am writing this book for all of you so I’d love to hear your feedback. Am I heading in the right direction? Is this helpful? Did you learn anything? Chapter 4: Finding SEO Problems Sections: 15 Minute SEO Audit 10 Minute Brand Reputation Audit (Not included in this blog post) Identifying Search Engine Penalties (Not included in this blog post) 15 Minute SEO Audit The basics of SEO problem identification can be done in about 15 minutes. When completing this audit I recommend you take notes based on the action items listed in each section. This will help you later when you do a deeper dive of the website. This audit is not comprehensive (See Chapter 9 for a full annotated site audit), but it will help you quickly identify major problems so you can convince your clients that your services are worthwhile and that you should be given a chance to dig deeper. The smart ones reading this section may notice that it builds upon the ideas expressed in Chapter 2. The dumb ones reading this, will think it is Harry Potter. The latter might enjoy it more but the former will end up with better SEO skills. Prepare Your Browser Before you start your audit you need to set your browser to act more like the search engine crawlers. This will help you to identify simple crawling errors. In order to do this, you will need to do the following: Disable cookies in your browser Switch your user-agent to Googlebot How Do I Do This and Why Is It Important? When the search engines crawl the Internet they generally do so with a user-agent string that identifies them (Google is googlebot and Bing is msnbot) and in a way where they don’t accept cookies. To see how to change your user-agent go to Chapter 3 (Picking the Right SEO Tools) and see user-agent switcher. Setting your user-agent to Googlebot increases your chance of seeing exactly what Google is seeing. It also helps with identifying cloaking issues (Cloaking is the practice of showing one thing to search engines and a different thing to users. This is what sarcastic Googlers call penaltybait. ) In order to do this well, a second pass of the site with your normal user-agent is required to identify difference. That said, this is not the primary goal for this quick run through of the given website. In addition to doing this you should also disable cookies within your browser. By disabling them, you will be able to uncover crawling issues that relate to preferences you make on the page. One primary example of this is intro pages. Many websites will have you choose your primary language before you can enter their main site. (This is known as an intro page.) If you have cookies enabled and you have previously chosen your preference, the website will not show you this page again. Unfortunately, this will not happen for search engines. This language tactic is extremely detrimental from a SEO perspective because it means that every link to the primary URL of the website will be diluted because it will need to pass through the intro page. (Remember, the search engines always see that page as they can’t select a language) This is a big problem, because as we noted in Chapter 1, the primary URL (i.e. www.example.com/) is usually the most linked to page on a site. Homepage Next, go to the primary URL of the site and pay particular attention to your first impression of the page. Try to be as true to your opinion as possible and don’t over think it. You should be coming from the perspective of the casual browser (This will be made easier because at this point you probably haven’t been paid any money and its a lot easier to be casual when are not locked down with the client) Follow this by doing a quick check of the very basic SEO metrics. In order to complete this step, you will need to do the following: Notice your first impression and the resulting feeling and trustworthiness you feel about the page Read the title tag and figure out how it could be improved See if the URL changed (As in you were redirected from www.example.com/ to www.example.com/lame-keyword-in-URL-trick.html) Check to see if the URL is canonical How Do I Do This and Why Is It Important? The first action item on this list helps you align yourself with potential website users. It is the basis for your entire audit and serves as a foundation for you to build on. You can look at numbers all day, but if you fail to see the website like the user, you will fail as an SEO. The next step is to read the title tag and identify how it can be improved. This is helpful because changing title tags is both easy (A big exception to this is if your client uses a difficult Content Management System.) and has a relatively large direct impact on rankings. Next you need to direct your attention to the URL. First of all, make sure there were not redirects that happened. This is important because adding redirects dilutes the amount of link juice that actually makes it to the links on the page. The last action item is to run a quick check on canonical URLs. The complete list of URL formats to check for is in Chapter 2 (Relearning How You See the Web). Like checking the title tag, this is easy to check and provides a high work/benefit ratio. Secret: Usability experts generally agree that the old practice of cramming as much information as possible “above the fold” on content pages and homepages is no longer ideal. Placing a “call to action” in this area is certianly important but it is not necessary to place all important information there. Many tests have been done on this and the evidence overwhelmingly shows that users scroll vertically (especially when lead). Global Navigation After checking the basics on the homepage, you should direct your attention to the global navigation. This acts as the main canal system for link juice. Specifically, you are going to want to do the following: Temporarily disable Javascript and reload the page Make sure the navigation system works and that all links are HTML links Take note of all of the sections that are linked to Re-enable Javascript How Do I Do This and Why Is It Important? As we discussed in Chapter 2 (Relearning How You See the Web), site architecture is critical for search friendly websites. The global navigation is fundamental to this. Imagine that the website you are viewing is ancient Rome right after the legendary viaduct and canal systems were built. These waterways are exactly like the global navigation that flows link juice around a website. Imagine the impact that a major clog can have on both systems. This is your time to find these clogs. Your first action item in the section is to disable Javascript. This is helpful because it forces you to see your website from the perspective of a very basic user. It is also a similar perspective to the search engines. After disabling Javascript, reload the page and see if the global navigation still works. Many times it won’t and it will uncover one of the major reasons the given client is having indexing issues. Next view source and see if all of the navigational links are true HTML links. Ideally, they should be because they are the only kind that can pass their full link value. Your next step is to take note of which sections are linked to. Ideally, all of the major sections will be linked in the global navigation. The problem is, you won’t know what all of the major sections are until you are further along in the audit. For now just take note and keep a mental checklist as you browse the website. Lastly, re-enable Javascript. While this will not be accurate with the search engine perspective, it will make sure that AJAX and Javascript based navigation works for you. Remember, on this quick audit, you are not trying to identify every single issue with the site, instead you are just trying to find the big issues. Secret: The global navigation menus that are the most search engine friendly appear as standard HTML unordered lists to search engines and people who don’t have Javascript and/or CSS enabled. These menus use HTML, CSS pseudo-classes and optionally Javascript to provide users feedback on their mouse position. You can see an example of this in Chapter 9. Category Pages/Subcategory Pages (If applicable) After finishing with the homepage and the global navigation, you need to start diving deeper into the website. In the waterway analogy, category and subcategory pages are the forks in the canals. You can make sure they are optimized by doing the following: Make sure there is enough content on these pages to be useful as a search result alone. Find and note extraneous links on the page (there shouldn’t be more than 150 links) Take notes on how to improve the anchor text used for the subcategories/content pages How Do I Do This and Why Is It Important? As I mentioned, these pages are the main pathways for the link juice of a website. They help make it so if one page (most often the homepage) gets a lot of links, that the rest of the pages on the website can also get some of the benefit. The first action point requires you to make a judgment call on whether or not the page would be useful as a search result. This goes with my philosophy that every page on a website should be a least a little bit link worthy. (It should pay its own rent, so to speak) Since each page has the inherent ability to collect links, webmasters should put at least a minimal amount of effort into making every page link worthy. There is no problem with someone entering a site (from a search engine result or other third party site) on a category or subcategory page. In fact, it may save them a click. In order to complete this step, identify if this page alone would be useful for someone with a relevant query. Think to yourself: Is there helpful content on the page to provide context? Is there a design element breaking up the monotony of a large list of links? Take notes on the answers to both of these questions. The next action item is to identify extraneous links on the page. Remember, from Chapter 2 we discussed that the amount of link value a given link can pass is dependent on the amount of links on the page. To maximize the benefit of these pages, it is important to remove any extraneous links. Going back to our waterway analogy, this type of links are the equivalent “canals to nowhere”. (Built by the Roman ancestors of former Alaskan Senator Ted Stevens) To complete the last action item of this section, you will need to take notes on how to better optimize the anchor text of the links on this page. Ideally, they should be as specific as possible. This helps the search engines and users identify what the target pages are about. Secret: Many people don’t realize that category and subcategory pages actually stand a good chance of ranking for highly competitive phrases. When optimized correctly, these pages will have links from all of their children content pages, the websites homepage (giving them popularity) and include a lot of information about a specific topic (relevancy). Combine this with the fact that each link that goes to one of their children content page also helps the given page and you have a great pyramid structure for ranking success. Content Pages Now that you have analyzed the homepage and the navigational pages, it is time to audit the meat of the website, the content pages. In order to do this, you will need to complete the following: Check and note the format of the Title Tags Check and note the format of the Meta Description Check and note the format of the URL Check to see if the content is indexable Check and note the format of the alt text Read the content as if you were the one searching for it How Do I Do This and Why Is It Important? The first action item is to check the title tags of the given page. This is important because it is both helpful for rankings and it makes up the anchor text used in search engine result. You don’t get link value from these links but they do act as incentives for people to visit your site. Tip: SEOmoz did some intensive search engine ranking factors correlation testing on the subject of title tags. The results were relatively clear. If you are trying to rank for a very competitive term, it is best to include the keyword at the beginning of the title tag. If you are competing for a less competitive term and branding can help make a difference in click through rates, it is best to put the brand name first. With regards to special characters, I prefer pipes for aesthetic value but hyphens, n-dashes, m-dashes and subtraction signs are all fine. Thus, the best practice format for title tags is one of the following: Primary Keyword – Secondary Keywords | Brand Brand Name | Primary Keyword and Secondary Keywords See http://www.seomoz.org/knowledge/title-tag/ for up-to-date information Similarly to the first action item, the second item has to do with a metric that is directly useful for search engines rather than people (they are only indirectly useful for people once they are displayed by search engines.) Check the meta description by viewing source or using the mozBar and make sure it is compelling and contains the relevant keywords at least twice. This inclusion of keywords is useful not for rankings but because matches get bolded in search results. The next action item is to check the URL for best practice optimization. Just like Danny Devito, URLs should be short, relevant and easy to remember. The next step is to make sure the content is indexable. To ensure that it, make sure the text is not contained in an image, flash or within a frame. To make sure it is indexed, copy an entire sentence from the content block and search for it within quotes in a search engine. If it shows up, it is indexable. If there are any images on the page (as there probably should be for users sake) you should make sure that the images have relevant alt text. After running testing on this at SEOmoz, my co-workers and I found that relevant anchor text was highly correlated to high rankings. Lastly and possibly most importantly, you should take the time to read the content on the page. Read it from the perspective of a user who just got to it from a search engine result. This is important because the content on the page is main purpose for the page existing. As an SEO, it can be easy to become content-blind when doing quick audits. Remember, the content is the primary reason this user came to the page. If it is not helpful, vistors will leave. Links Now that you have an idea of how the website is organized it is time to see what the rest of the world thinks about it. To do this, you will need to do the following: View the amount of total links and the amount of root domains linking to the given domain View the anchor text distribution of inbound links How Do I Do This and Why Is It Important? As you read in Chapter 1 (Understanding Search Engine Optimization), links are incredibly important in the search engine algorithms. Thus, you cannot get a complete view of a website without analyzing its links. This first action item requires you to get two different metrics about the inbound links to the given domain. Separately, these metrics can be very misleading due to internal links. Together, they provide a fuller picture that makes accounting for internal links possible and thus more accurate. At the time of writing, the best tool to get this data is through SEOmoz’s Open Site Explorer. The second action item requires you to analyze the relevancy side of links. This is important because it is a large part of search engine algorithms. This was discussed in Chapter 1 (Understanding Search Engine Optimization) and proves as true now as it did when you read it earlier. To get this data, I recommend using Google’s Webmaster Central. Search Engine Inclusion Now that you have gathered all the data you can about how the given website exists on the internet, it is time to see what the search engines have done with this information. Choose your favorite search engine (you might need to Google it) and do the following: Search for the given domain to make sure it isn’t penalized See roughly how many pages are indexed of the given website Search three of the most competitive keywords that relate to the given domain Choose a random content page and search the engines for duplicate content How Do I Do This and Why Is It Important? As an SEO, all of your work is completely useless if the search engines don’t react to it. To a less degree this is true for webmasters as well. The above action items will help you identify how the given website is reacted to by the search engines. The first action item is simple to do but can have dire affects. Simply go to a search engine and search for the exact URL of the homepage of your domain. Assuming it is not brand new, it should appear as the first result. If it doesn’t and it is an established site, it means it has major issues and was probably thrown out of the search engine indices. If this is the case, you need to identify this clearly and as early as possible. The second action item is also very easy to do. Go to any of the major search engines and use the site command (as defined in Chapter 3) to find roughly all of the pages of a domain that are indexed in the engine. For example, this may look like site:www.example.com. This is important because the difference between the number that gets returned and the number of pages that actually exist on a site says a lot about how healthy a domain is in a search engine. If there are more pages in the index than exist on the page, there is a duplicate content problem. If there are more pages on the actual site than there are in the search engine index, then there is an indexation problem. Either are bad and should be added to your notes. The next action item is a quick exercise to see how well the given website is optimized. To get an idea of this, simply search for 3 of the most competitive terms that you think the given website would reasonably rank for. You can speed this process up by using one of the third party rank trackers that are available. (Refer back to Chapter 3) The final action item is to do a quick search for duplicate content. This can be accomplished by going to a random indexed content page on the given website and search for either the title tag (in quotes) or the first sentence of the content page (also in quotes). If there is more than one result from the given domain, then it has duplicate content problems. This is bad because it is forcing the website to compete against itself for rankings. In doing so, it forces the search engine to decide which page is more valuable. This decision making process is something that is best avoided because it is difficult to predict the outcome. More Information Available On Amazon : United States United Kingdom Do you like this post? Yes No

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A Step by Step 15 Minute SEO Audit (A Sample from SEO Secrets)

Testing How Crawl Priority Works

February 5th, 2010 No comments

Posted by mgalecki This post was originally in YOUmoz , and was promoted to the main blog because it provides great value and interest to our community. The author’s views are entirely his or her own and may not reflect the views of SEOmoz, Inc. A SHORT INTRODUCTION… We all know that the search engine robots more frequently visit popular pages, i.e. those that have the largest number of incoming links, both internal and external ones. The architecture of a website is usually correlated with the popularity of these pages expressed by number of backlinks: Home page has the most backlinks, 1st (e.g. product categories), 2nd & 3rd level pages obtain less links, finally the least important are deep pages (with articles, classified ads, product pages, etc). The above mentioned “importance” of web pages versus the web site architecture has been illustrated in one of the Rand’s posts titled ” Diagrams for Solving Crawl Priority & Indexation Issues “: Important pages tend to have a different priority of indexation, and this was also presented very nicely by Rand: Purple spots are those with the highest number of external links. As it can be seen, the pages which are close, take some of the popularity and they pass part of it further (pink spots). All the other spots stand for pages that are too far from the entrance points of search engine robots, which means that the chance of their indexation is much smaller. In case of classified websites, which contain a lot of content, the above diagram should include subsequent category listing or search results pages. They are obviously less important than the main category pages, but their indexing additionally influences the indexation of their components – ad details pages. This is particularly important when the listing starts with so called premium ads, which change less often than standard classifieds. BEFORE THE TEST… Having this theoretical information, we have decided to see how it is like in practice. We have analyzed a website of http://www.morusek.pl (with animals and pets related classifieds from Poland) which has a total number of indexed pages exceeding 100,000. Using the combination of “site” and “inurl” queries we checked what is the number of indexed pages with a list of classifieds (in Polish “ogloszenia”): http://www.google.pl/search?q=site%3Awww.morusek.pl+inurl%3A%22%2F0%2F%22+inurl%3Aogloszenia The initial results were the following: To continue the analysis, we excluded the first pages, as the numbers here are influenced by existence of some category pages with no classifieds at the moment, but which are indexable (there are crawlable links in the menu). In addition, to verify the effectiveness of the “site” query, we took into account a number of pages reported by Google Webmaster Tools (GWT) under “Internal Links”. The results were as follows: WHAT’S IMPORTANT TO KNOW? The first conclusion is obviously that the higher the page number is, the less probability that the page will be indexed . Secondly, while the actual numbers of GWT and “site” queries vary a lot, the trends (slopes) are almost the same. On average, the chance that the robot will crawl to the next page of search results decreases by 1,2-1,3% per page . It is also interesting that, according to Google Webmaster Tools, pages from 2 to 4 have a good indexation ratio which later decreases dramatically at the fifth position. For example, for sites with number 4 the level of indexation is 60%, while for pages number 15 it falls below 30% (according to Google Webmaster Tools), or 40% (for the command “site” in Google). This is due to the fact that Googlebots have a much longer way to reach the appropriate link in case of the latter (a link to page 15 first appears on page 12), while there are direct links to pages 2, 3 and 4 on the first pages of search listings (see below): THE SUBJECT OF THE TEST: INTRODUCING MORE LINKS We decided to test what would be the changes in indexation ratios if we introduced more links to subsequent ad listings pages. On the first page of each category we added links to the 5th, 10th and 15th pages as show on the picture below: After a month we tested the changes. Due to inaccurate results returned by the command “site” in Google (number of indexed pages seemed to be greater than the actual number of them) we present data from Google Webmaster Tools (internal links) only: THE RESULTS The graph clearly shows us that indexation of pages that were added to the listing on the first page is much higher after the change (pages: 5th, 10th and 15th), and actually equals the indexation of pages 2, 3 and 4 . However, the increase in indexation of pages directly linked from the home page did not affect the indexation of the neighbouring pages . For example, we can see a huge increase for page 10, but there is no change for pages 9 and 11. The conclusion is that for Googlebots these pages are too far from the points of entry. Only category pages for main region have incoming links. To index page 9 of the intersection of categories and regions, the robots would have to go the following path: main category page (entry point), category page + region (first page of results), category page + region (tenth page of results), category page + region (page 9

Video Search Engine Optimization for Automotive Dealers – SEO for Video Uploads

February 2nd, 2010 No comments

Looking to learn more about the Search Engine Optimization of Videos for Automotive Dealers? Listen to Matt osuch and Tim Jennings (the internet guy) present the Automotive Bootcamp Video SEO training session right before NADA 2010 in Orlando FL – on Feb 11th and 12th. This event will include speaking classes on SEO multimedia for automotive dealerships, with an emphasis on results and walking away with the knowledge you need to have to go home and market your dealership with videos, photos, brochures, content and more. www.automotivemarketingbootcamp.com

http://www.youtube.com/v/AK0FOCAa6xo?f=videos&app=youtube_gdata

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Video Search Engine Optimization for Automotive Dealers – SEO for Video Uploads

Indexation for SEO: Real Numbers in 5 Easy Steps

January 25th, 2010 No comments

Posted by randfish How many pages has Google indexed? This question and the problems surrounding it run rampant through the SEO world. It usually arises when someone starts doing searches like this: Google claims to have 93,800 pages indexed on the root domain, seomoz.org. That sounds pretty good, but when I ran that search query last week, the number was closer to 75,000 and when I run it again from Google.co.uk 60 seconds later, the number changes even more dramatically: How about if I hit refresh on my Google.com results again: Doh! Google just dropped 8,500 of my pages out of their index. That sucks – but not nearly as much as managers, marketing directors and CEOs who use these numbers as actual KPIs! Can you imagine? A number that means nothing, fluctuates 300% between data centers, can change at a moment’s notice and provides no actionable insight being used as a business metric? And yet… It happens. Fortunately, there’s an easy way to get much, much better data than what the search engines provide through “site:” queries and this post is here to walk you through that process step-by-step. Step 1: Go to Traffic Sources in Your Analytics Click the “traffic sources” link in Google analytics or Omniture (it can also be called “referring sources” in other analytics packages). Step 2:


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