Archive for April, 2008

April
30

Google Toolbar PageRank Update

A Toolbar PageRank update which just hit Google over the last couple of days. I have spent the last three hours analyzing the update and how my test domains faired. It is pretty interesting. Before I get into the results, let’s cover a few things about the update …

The PageRank score is numerical and has an unlimited number of decimal places that it is carried out. So when we see the toolbar showing a PageRank of 5, that can be a range from 4.x – 5.x, depending upon how Google does their “rounding”. The point is, what we see on the toolbar can be very misleading as to what the actual PageRank value is. Also, the PageRank Google shows on the toolbar can be between 1-4 months old, depending on the data Google decides to show publicly. Much like the stock market quotes online that are “delayed 15 minutes”, Google “delays” showing you the PageRank value for months, even though they are computing the live data on a daily basis.

The last public Toolbar was completed around March 4th when the data became stable again. So this was a rather quick update, inside of 60 days as they are usually once a quarter.

Test Domain Results

No site ranked PR4 or above received an increase in PageRank, despite strong link acquisition over the last 60 days.

Site’s which were penalized to a PR0 by submitting to “garbage” directories had their PageRank bounce back to a PR1 or PR2 regardless of what the previous PageRank. For example, one site which was slammed to a PR0 from a PR6 came back to a PR2.

Sites which launched in late February and have had a strong link campaigns still remain at PR0. It seems the data for this public update was pulled sometime in February, but I have not verified this.

Sites which launched last fall and relied on traditional linking methods and press releases all climbed to PR3 in this update. No paid links or paid directories were done to these sites.

Since Google did a slight update on the PageRank of directories a few weeks ago, I’m not seeing any movement in the main or secondary directories.

April
24

Google Partners with DomainTools?!?!

Okay, what’s up with this? Google is partnering with DomainTools (my favorite WHOIS lookup service) to provide WHOIS lookup info within Google.

You can now query: WHOIS and get the Created and Expired information and a link to the compete WHOIS over at DomainTools. Personally, I think it is a waste as you have to click to get the info, where you don’t with DomainTools, but for the average webmaster, being able to query WHOIS inside of Google is a positive step forward.

Here is how it looks. I did a query: WHOIS webmarketingnow.com

WHOIS info in Google

April
16

YSM Minimum Bids … Any $10 Per Clicks Out There?!?!

The minimum bids went live with YSM (Yahoo! Search Marketing, Overture, GoTo.com) and I’ve been messing with a bunch of landing pages trying my best to get the minimum bids to be Googlish $10.00 but so far, I’m swinging and missing.

I’ve called quite a few heavy hitters in the Yahoo! space and no one has seen high minimum bids yet. My gut tells me it will be just a matter of time … or maybe Yahoo! is concerned with no one using them and will take anyone as long as their credit card is good.

Could Yahoo! be the MLM of Search? You know, that one neighbor down the street who is building his pyramid scheme with anyone with a pulse and enough on their credit card to buy the “intro pack”. I swear, if one more neighbor of mine says, “Hey Jerry, I have a presentation I have to give at work tomorrow, could you come over and watch me and tell me if it is any good?”

… end slightly off-topic rant …

Wait, let me inject some advice if you are a consultant. Learn how to say “No” to the wrong client and be picky. You will be happier, you’ll make more and you won’t have to check into the nut house after a bad client again skipped out on their bill. Hold out for the good ones, and once you get busy, be like Keith Jennison and simply raise your rates.

April
15

Tax Day & Slurp Updates

Tax Day …. more like “Extension Day” for me. I haven’t filed my taxes on time for nearly a decade. I don’t mind paying taxes, I just wish it wasn’t such a pain. I hate keeping receipts and filling out paperwork.

In semi-good news, it was reported that Slurp, the spider that powers Yahoo!, which they inherited when they bought Inktomi back in early ‘03, has been updated. Now, a year or two again they updated it to Slurp 2.0, but it was just a name change only as the spider still sucked and would be trapped in very basic navigational setup.

They are now claiming that this new version will be a lot better. I can’t wait to give it a test run. First thing is to see if it still gets confused over session ids (SID). Yahoo! is famous for indexing a 500 page site and showing 20,000 pages in their index because they indexed the same page over and over because a different session ID was being served since Slurp doesn’t accept JavaScript or cookies.

If you are cloaking or doing any type of delivery based on IP addresses with Slurp, Yahoo! states they are retiring the IPs and issuing new ones. So, pop open your log files and track down those IP addresses. I highly recommend using IP addresses over using the User-Agent, as a FireFox extension can exploit your cloaking or IP delivery system easily.

April
11

Google Requirement: Pure White Hat SEO or Perish in Hell!!

I wanted to be the first to break this story. Google is going to announce next week a new policy regarding SEO. Either you practice Pure White Hat SEO methods or you will have your site removed from their index. No ifs ands or buts about it.

“It has gotten to the point where we just have to put our foot down regarding all this Spam and Black Hat techniques,” said Matt Cutts, one of the most well-known engineers by webmasters. “I mean, we’ve given them so many chances to comply, the time is now to end the madness.”

Cutts also stated that he had taken long-time “Black Hat Spammer” Leslie Rohde and converted him to the truth of White Hat SEO. The conversion was so powerful at the GooglePlex that the earth actually shook (reporters said it was an earthquake, but what do they know). Since all the evilness has been purged from Rohde, he is now known as “Sister Leslie”.Leslie Rodhe - The New Face of White Hat SEO

“I hope all SEOs will look to Sister Rohde for guidance,” said Cutts. “If not, they will learn a new term, Google Purgatory, from whence there is no return.”

Note: When asked the specifics of the definition of “White Hat SEO” Cutts stated there would be a teleseminar announced which will go over all aspects of the program, as well as integration inside of Google Webmaster Tools. “Just say out of the “fire” area and you should be okay,” concluded Cutts.

April
10

Trust is Vital in the SEO Market

Trust in the SEO Market

While I have not verified any of this information (as I never used the product that is referenced here), the point isn’t that the story is true or not, but that trust must be deep and you must be sharp.

While attending Webmaster World in Las Vegas in 2006 I finally got to speak uninterrupted to a top affiliate that I had chasing down the last few years. He shared something that he did, that while extremely unethical, it is a strong reminder that trust goes beyond your words. It is verifying the information you are given.

He is an affiliate, a good one. He markets a product that is highly competitive. He wouldn’t tell me which product but that it was on the same level as viagra in terms of payout and competition.

There was a software application which I will refer to as “PRODUCT A”. Now, “PRODUCT A” was real good at generating a massive number of pages, including AdSense code, and getting the pages spidered by Google. The result? Lots of five figure AdSense checks for nearly any webmaster who used the software correctly.

Google’s response?

They systematically banned any site using the system (due to a “footprint” code left by PRODUCT A on every page it generated). Because of this sweeping ban, the affiliate and his partners had an idea.

They set up multiple “dummy” SEO companies around the country. Ordered cell phones in the local area and put up web sites. They then contacted their main competitors and posed as “SEOs” and offered to do SEO on the unsuspecting owner’s site without a setup cost, just a piece of the increase in sales. They shared their research of the market, dazzled them with analysis, and gained trust by showing areas in the market that had not been exploited. Each major competitor signed on, and gave them full FTP access.

No background check. No verification on how long they had been in business. No reference check. Nothing.

What did they do with their new found trust? They went into each site and uploaded the “footprint” code from PRODUCT A into the main pages. It took about a month or so, and one by one, each competitor’s entire site was deindexed and banned by Google. As soon as the first site dropped, they shut down their fictitious websites, cancelled the cell phones and just disappeared.

The result? Even a year after this was done, the competitor’s sites are still banned and the “offenders” are enjoying top listings for their major keyword phrases. The competitor’s are regulated to using AdWords, and spending thousands per day to keep their businesses running.

His reaction? No remorse. And lots of gloating.

Don’t let this happen to you or your client.

Right now, sit down and make a list of everyone who has FTP access to your servers. Who inside your company and who outside? Write them down. All of them. If there are individuals that you question their trust, you might be best served restricting their access. State there has been an “elevated threat level” on the server … hey, it works at the airport. If you are the owner of your business, your first responsibility is to the data to ensure it is safe. If your business counts on Google for the bulk of your traffic, you better have full trust with all the people who have access to your server. You don’t want to suffer the fate of those companies mentioned above.

If you do SEO work for clients, call them one by one, and ask them the same. This would also be a good time to remind them of the business relationship that you have together, the trust, the bond, etc. Thank them for their business and their trust and reemphasize that you will never violate that sacred trust because you value their business. Make an appointment to discuss with them their goals for the next six months so you can make sure the SEO strategy that was put into place months or years ago can fulfill those goals.

Here are other areas you can hit to ensure you are meeting your client’s expectations. If you don’t take clients, look to see if you are meeting these areas too.

Do you prefer to work with Organic Search or Paid Search?
With the massive changes in the way that the SERPs are displayed, if you are an “organic only” shop and you service clients, you could be out of business in the near future. With more paid search results displaying at the top of the results, local results and Google Desktop results, is forcing the organic listings further down the page. Because of this, the demand for top organic listings is dropping quickly based on survey results.

So, ensure that you are offering both services, as doing paid search is really an extension of organic search. Remember, if you have a #1 ranking in the organic listings, it is still a smart plan to also have a listing in the paid results area. Even if the client resists, the test results that I have show that a top listing in the organic area as well as the paid area increases the click through rate AND the conversion rate. The reason is that the “recognizability” of the domain is heightened and trust is built before they even getting to your site. The thought is, “Wow, this company is here multiple times, they must be good.” Bam. Click and conversion.

Both Google and Yahoo! offer services to “certify” you in their Paid Search programs, which will greatly enhance your trust with your current clients and prospects. Get them.

How extensively do you sharpen your skills as a keyword researcher?
Many SEOs have lost their ability to focus on the RIGHT keyword phrases for their client’s campaigns. Do you first test your keywords in PPC to ensure they will convert before starting that big organic campaign? If you don’t, you could end up with a #1 ranking for a keyword that doesn’t convert. The happiness your client has will be short-lived with a worthless #1 listing when they ask why no one is buying their product.

Focus on the keywords that will drive buyers, not just traffic. You can ask your client what they would prefer: a ton of traffic with a few sales, or average traffic and a lot of sales. It is clear what they want. Make that cash register ring and you will be the “Rainmaker” for your client.

The best way to do this is to spend time each week expanding your skills as a keyword researcher. Scrape the keywords from competitors, analyze them, use new tools, use old tools in new ways, etc. Shake things up and expand your knowledge. Do you see a trend here? Most “seasoned” SEOs are “stuck in a rut” when it comes to keyword research and they miss the best keywords because of it. Don’t let this happen to you.

Do you track conversions at the keyword level?
It is said that 50% of all advertising is wasted. The trouble is, you don’t know which 50% it was. That is until now. With PPC, you can know that information, you just have to track at the keyword level. All that means is inserting a tracking code on the order page, so you know exactly which keywords are driving sales. Knowing this allows you to make key changes to the PPC / organic campaigns or to the landing pages themselves.

For example, if a keyword phrase gets 500 clicks a day, but is only producing 2 sales, that is a keyword that should be dropped. Conversely, a keyword that gets 70 clicks a day and also produces 2 sales is one that should have its campaign aggressively increased. By getting rid of the under performers and pushing hard on the converting keywords, your overall spend may be the same, but your conversions could go up as much as 50%. And that is something your client will smile over.

If your client tells you that their current eCommerce solution does not have the ability to track at the keyword level, tell them they need a new solution or get on the phone with their provider and tell them what they need and why. There is no reason that you can’t track at the keyword level. By not doing this your marketing campaign is just guess work, and that isn’t a smart way to do business.

How are you measuring results?
If you are measuring results based on ranking, you are living in the dark ages. Results are unique visits, returning visits, page views, and sales. Period. These are the results that your client wants to see. Change your approach to one that they can understand, and they will thank you for it. Here is an example:

“Anna, let me go over the figures for your site last month. Your unique visits increased 13% over the previous month due to better overall rankings that we achieved for you in Google thanks to those links I suggested that you buy. Your returning visits increased 27% in part to the autoresponder we helped you install … and your sales increased by 12% over last month based on our marketing plan and the great job of your staff. Keep it up and we expect more of the same next month.”

Each section you discuss the increase or decrease and the reason for it. If it increases, usually the plan is “stick with what we are doing” whereas if it goes down, state what you propose, and make it clear and easy to understand with any additional costs discussed and agreed to. If there are two options, have them printed on paper – one per page with large type and an action plan for each and let them choose. Honestly, they will love this approach over the “keyword rank report” (which you can still supply if you wish), but you review the real numbers. The numbers that matter to them which is usually the difference between profit and loss. And they will smile each month when they write you your maintenance check.

Do you offer copy writing services?
Good PPC campaigns need good copy writing. I bet there is an english major waiting tables in some local coffee shop that would love to have a job as a writer. Not everyone is a good copywriter, but you never know where you will find the next great writer. A good copywriter is invaluable and your client will love it if you offer this service, but don’t try and do it on your own. Your other parts of your business will greatly suffer.

How much are you focused on link building that matters?
Are you after quantity or quality? Are the links you are getting driving traffic? Are you not focused on paid links because you are nervous about the “Wrath of Google”? Be smart and be focused. Look at the recent article back in January on the new linking strategy and make it a point to focus traffic to your client’s site with links and take PageRank increases as “frosting” on the cake.

Seriously, here is a wake up call. SEO has become a game of adding content and getting links. Master the rate, quality and quantity in your industry and your job will be a breeze.

In this rapidly changing industry of Search Engine Optimization, it is the shops that offer full-service to their clients that seem to be growing, while the “specialized” shops are shrinking. Focus on Trust. Focus on the Relationship. Fire the clients who don’t measure up. Raise the bar for clients you will take. And watch your revenues climb while your stress plummets.

Trust Yourself. Trust Your Judgment. But Change Your Passwords.

April
7

Getting Rid of PSAs in AdSense

If you are running AdSense as a way to monetize your website, then you know how much you hate getting PSAs (Public Service Ads) showing on your pages … as they are non-ad generating.

Google AdSense Public Service Ad

What causes them? Usually the content of the page can’t be matched properly with an advertiser, therefore, a PSA is displayed. I’ve found this to occur even on pages with relevant content.

What can you do?

I’ve found a simple entry in the robots.txt file fixes the majority of the PSAs displaying on my AdSense pages.

User-agent: Mediapartners-Google
Disallow:

This code tell the Mediaparters bot from Google (the AdSense bot) they it has full access to your site (as noted by the Disallow nothing line).

I wrote an article on the basic of the robots.txt file and you can also look at my file over at Web Marketing Now.

April
4

Howie Schwartz Takes the Stage at StomperNet

Howie Schwartz, reformed Spammer, is on the stage right now at StomperNet. He’s discussing Web 2.0 and how you can use it to dominate the searches with Universal Search in Google.

Pretty awesome stuff. Even I’m impressed. Some takeaways:

- Use Google News to your advantage through Press Releases.
- Blog aggressively
- Target “Long Tail” phrases of those who are in the buying funnel. Ignore the others.
- Ignore the data from WordTracker.
- Get into video, and use it to promote your services and products
- If you have products, use Google Base (formerly Froogle)

Best Overheard Quote: “I want to be Howie when I grow up.” – David Bullock

April
4

In “RainLanta” for StomperNet

What happened to “HOTlanta”? Nothing but rain today … so that means no Braves-Mets game tonight…

I’m down at the StomperNet event through the weekend. If you’re down here, look me up, I love talking search.

April
3

Google News: Secrets to Get Listed

Okay, okay, so “secrets” has been so misused it is getting pathetic. Fine. But you are still reading this so it seems to still work. Seriously, Google posted this info right on their blog, so it isn’t much of a secret, but since no one really reads their blogs anyway, you could still call it a secret and get away with it.

Onto the info …

So, ever wonder why Google News doesn’t include your articles? You mean, besides that they suck? Oh, okay, they’re good? Sure, I believe you. ;-) Let’s look at some Myths and Truths about how to get your articles listed in Google News as revealed by Google:

Having an image next to your article improves your ranking MYTH!!
While having a good image with your article does improve your chance to get your picture shown, it has no impact on the ranking of the article itself. You can check out Google’s Help Center for more info on this.

Updating an article after posting it will create problems with Google News TRUE!!
Currently, the Google News crawler only visits each article URL once. If you make updates to the article after Google has crawled it, the changes won’t be reflected on Google’s site. While Google says it hopes to have the ability to recrawl URLs don’t hold your breath. This one is a low priority.

Timing the publication of your article improves your article ranking MYTH!!
Google News is constantly looking for the most recent developments in a story. Geting the latest, breaking news articles is very important to Google News. However, whether you publish before, after, or in the midst of when other publishers post articles won’t affect your article ranking. Google’s algorithms (surprise, surprise) take a number of factors into account when choosing the best articles in a cluster. Simply publishing the same story after another publisher won’t help. Additionally, Google says that their system is set up to detect duplicate content and promote the original source of a story. (Note: This is an interesting comment, as I have seen them REPEATEDLY get the original source wrong) They also state that if they detect that a source is constantly rewriting stories in order to game the system, they will flag the source in their system. (Note: “Flag it”? What does that mean? Dog-ear the page in a book? It can’t mean ignore the source, because in two industries I am in, they constantly use a source who rips me off everyday, and nothing has been done – and this has been over a year).

Articles that are just images or video won’t be included TRUE!!
While Google will include articles that contain multimedia content, if the crawler cannot find accompanying text content, it won’t include the article. The bottom line here is that Google is looking for text articles, so if some of your content isn’t text-based, it won’t be included in Google News.

Publishing a sitemap helps my rankings MYTH!!
Creating a sitemap for your news articles helps get your content found and spidered; if Google can’t find your content, they can’t rank it. Period. Creating a sitemap does not affect your article rankings; but there are still several reasons that creating a sitemap is a good idea. First, sitemaps give you greater control over which of your articles appear on Google News; they tell Google specifically which articles to crawl. Second, sitemaps allow you to specify meta-information about individual articles, such as their publication date, or keywords that help inform which section of Google News the articles should appear in.

Redesigning my site may affect my coverage in Google News TRUE!!

Google’s crawler has been carefully tuned to scour the web for news content. If you drastically change the structure of your site or your page layout, the crawler may have trouble navigating the new design. This is where having a Google Webmaster Account comes in handy.

If I put AdSense on my site, my article rankings will improve MYTH!!
This one just won’t die, will it? Despite “gurus” stating the opposite, using AdSense doesn’t have any impact upon Google’s ability to crawl or rank your articles. Google has to stay as objective as possible, or they could find themselves getting investigated and going through what Microsoft did in the 90s.

I’m sure they want to avoid that.

April
2

What is Better? #10 or #11 in Google

This question came up in a forum today: Would you rather be listed at the bottom of page one or at the top of page two in the search results?

Forget the debates – let’s look at click results from my testing labs…

Well, after looking through many web log reports, this point is clear:

Who cares? The amount of click traffic below position #7 organically is so small that this was just a huge waste of my time. Look, if you want traffic for any type of phrase, you gotta get into the top three or it just isn’t worth doing SEO, you might as well get a second job and do PPC!