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Archive for March, 2010

Outbound linking – does it affect your Google ranking?

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

We know inbound links are essential to SEO, but what about outbound links from my site?  Do they help?  Do they hurt?

The simple answer, direct from Google, is “no” they don’t hurt your rankings.  In most cases.

Outbound links help you to build relationships with your users and with other webmasters.  By linking to quality websites with relevant content you can give visitors extra information, establish trust in your content and possibly even gain links from the sites you link to.

But, and it’s a big but, this doesn’t apply to all outbound links.  Google doesn’t like comment spam, and they don’t like undisclosed paid links.  Quite frankly, your users probably don’t like them that much either.

Both can be dealt with though.  There are a number of techniques you can use to reduce comment spam.  Moderating the comments on your site, adding the “no follow” tag to links in comments or asking for verification in your comment form can all help.

Google has this to say about paid outbound links:  “Google does consider it a violation of our quality guidelines to sell links that affect search engines.”

If you are being paid to include undisclosed outbound text links, you are breaking the rules. And you will be penalised.  If you are in the habit of selling links you must use the “no follow” tag in your link, or redirect to an intermediate page that is blocked by a robots.txt file to stay in Google’s good books.

As long as you link to suitable sites when it’s appropriate – any more than 100 links on a page will cause concern – you don’t need to worry.  Outbound links appear on every good website, and including them on yours will just build your credibility.

If you want to find out more read Google’s post on outbound links.

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Katie Saxon

The Internet Conference

Monday, March 29th, 2010

Event Date: 14 May, 2010

The Internet Conference 2010

The Internet Conference is a one-day event focussed on the fast-moving world of Internet marketing.  A line-up of leading Industry experts will be speaking at this national conference, which will help you to harness the power of web marketing.

The Internet Conference is ideal for marketers, business owners and Internet professionals with an interest in Internet marketing.  Whether you are already tech-savvy or are a total newcomer, there will be sessions to suit you.

Topics covered at The Internet Conference:

  • Essentials of Social Media Marketing
  • The Web Inspector
  • Essentials of Search Engine Optimisation
  • Using Google Analytics to Improve your Business Results
  • Successful Internet Marketing
  • Essentials of Copywriting
  • Improving the Ecommerce User Experience

There will also be chance to attend The Internet Conference Exhibition.

Date

14th May 2010

Times

09:00 – Registration & Coffee
09:30 – 16:30 The Internet Conference

Location

The East Midlands Conference Centre
University Park
Nottingham
NG7 2RJ

Fee

£195.00 + VAT
* Early Bird Booking Rate until 9 April 2010!  Then price jumps to £245.00 + VAT *
Includes your choice of workshops, entrance to The Internet Conference Exhibition, lunch, drinks and snacks.

Book now for The Internet Conference

Early Bird Registration Discount: The Internet Conference

Friday, March 26th, 2010

The Internet Conference, 14 May 2010 at the East Midlands Conference Centre is filling up fast.  Rates increase on 9 April, so don’t miss out on this event.  Register today for the special Early Bird conference rate.

8 Great Sessions – Meet the Top Leaders in UK Internet Marketing

  1. The Web Inspector:  live reviews of websites, & your questions answered
  2. Search Engine Optimisation
  3. Social Media Marketing
  4. Copywriting for the Internet
  5. Improving your Ecommerce website
  6. Google Analytics to improve your business results
  7. Developing an Internet Marketing strategy

Register now and save

Be inspired by our keynote speakers, get practical and relevant advice on how to improve your website, and meet and network with top leaders in Internet marketing.

The Internet Conference 2010

Twitter Posts: Recent Tweets

Friday, March 26th, 2010

Here’s a quick round up of the best of Susan’s , Katie’s and Wayne’s recent tweets:

  1. Web Browser Compatibility test: Adobe Browserlab http://browserlab.adobe.com via @fusionxs 9:59 PM Mar 23rd
  2. Want to keep a history of tweets? Create your own Twitter management reporting archive: http://bit.ly/apcKLc Thanks to @melcarson 12:38 AM Mar 22nd
  3. Search engines not indexing your site? The reason may be simpler (and easier to fix) than you think http://bit.ly/c94gzG
  4. Watch an Abacus Lighting bollard get the smashing of its life.Viral B2B video. @AbacusLighting http://bit.ly/AbacusViral 9:04 AM Mar 16th RT @TIC10
  5. Advanced SEO: Matt Cutts interviewed by Eric Enge. Lots of SEO food to read & digest: http://bit.ly/dbXkRN 12:13 AM Mar 16th
  6. Brownbook.net is a reputable local business portal, and a valuable directory for Local SEO efforts. @DBMGBennett 11:22 AM Mar 15th
  7. The latest big brand to sponsor The Simpsons – but is it a good move for Bing? http://bit.ly/9r1EQp
  8. 10 Newbie Twitter Mistakes Made By Businesses Useful article RT @mariasipka: http://ow.ly/1gYtj
  9. I’m hosting an Internet Marketing Conference 14 May, Nottingham. Great lineup of expert speakers. http://bit.ly/cYer4r 12:28 AM Mar 10th
  10. AlertRank: Google Alerts on Steroids. I’ve used it, and it’s great: http://bit.ly/ctdsdv via @seosmarty 8:16 AM Mar 8th
  11. David vs Goliath: Bing rolls out new TV campaign to capture You-Know-Who’s 90% market share http://bit.ly/9DChmx 7:52 AM Mar 8th
  12. The new 3 or 4 line descriptions in Google SERPs appears to be triggered by longer (4+) keyphrase searches. @WeAreAlight 11:52 PM Mar 3rd via TweetDeck
  13. Google Stars = Google Bookmarks =Google Tags. You choose what appears at the top of your own search results. http://bit.ly/bPqd4G 11:34 PM Mar 3rd via TweetDeck
  14. PuSH for any WordPress blog: http://bit.ly/d7Out7 Now it’s easy for your blog to join the realtime web. RT @mattcutts: 1:46 PM Mar 3rd
  15. Google testing the extended description in search results is happening right now. @foxxweb 9:22 AM Mar 3rd
  16. Google is displaying 4 lines of black description text in the SERPs rather than customary 2 lines? http://twitpic.com/16e0xr 7:07 AM Mar 3rd
  17. Getting inside the mind of Steve Ballmer (Microsoft CE0): Key Lime Pie : http://bit.ly/dyIBEf 11:53 AM Mar 2nd
  18. How SEO is changing: what matters in 2010, and what doesn’t http://bit.ly/90QlBe 4:00 AM Mar 2nd
  19. Tut tut, sneaky marketing techniques to avoid like the plague from @jonmrich http://bit.ly/95X4Rt
  20. Google’s experimental USA fiber network http://bit.ly/aGPgHA. (Thanks to @jimbt) 4:34 PM Feb 26th
  21. My slides from the #ebuschampions “Optimising for Universal Search”: http://bit.ly/9z8c4N 1:21 AM Feb 26th
  22. Choosing killer keywords for SEO http://bit.ly/d1cF4k 8:32 AM Feb 25th via bit.ly
  23. Google: 34,000 searches per second or 3 billion per day. Bing : 927 searches per second http://selnd.com/aStrN1 11:44 PM Feb 25th
  24. Europe hates Google? 2 slaps in one day : EC antitrust complaints, & privacy violation convictions in Italy. http://bit.ly/bfjBGR 10:42 AM Feb 24th
  25. RT @DaveChaffey: Uploaded: my talk for #tfma yesterday on integrating email and social media: http://bit.ly/cKbpla 5:17 AM Feb 24th
  26. Why Your Company Should Ban Facebook: http://bit.ly/dbJeIr 1:40 AM Feb 24th
  27. How does Google handle competing search engines’ results in it’s SERPs? Another complaint… http://bit.ly/cKp1v3 11:06 PM Feb 23rd
  28. SEO for Ecommerce Sites: 7 Great Tips from #SEJ http://bit.ly/bsrhJz 9:29 AM Feb 23rd
  29. Europe’s top online spenders are British: average Brit spending $1,766 online in 2009. http://bit.ly/brJwza 12:25 PM Feb 21st
  30. 6 Tips for Writing Well for the Web http://bit.ly/94EwYr 9:28 AM Feb 11th
  31. BBC has change of heart regarding social media – http://bit.ly/aXCZ5f
  32. Why Google Analytics is essential for any business that wants success – http://bit.ly/cYE8BI 6:28 AM Feb 10th
  33. Live for less than a day but we already doubt Google Buzz: RT @wayneb77 A Social Media Revolution? http://bit.ly/aXCZ5f
  34. Don’t like what you find when you Google yourself? How to manage your online reputation http://bit.ly/dsEMx9 RT @ksaxoninternet: 7:44 AM Feb 10th
  35. DoH spends a massive £2.7 million in one year on Adwords campaign – http://bit.ly/ab2kYR
  36. PayPal is unable to process Wire Transfers to bank accounts at the moment. That means you can’t get your money out of #PayPal. 7:42 AM Feb 5th
  37. Email Marketing: Even mighty Amazon makes mistakes sometimes : http://bit.ly/9Mt73b 12:12 AM Feb 4th
  38. Need to present information in tables on your website? Great design ideas. http://bit.ly/9HHEoY 1:51 PM Feb 3rd
  39. Want to make great linkbait? Practical tips and examples here: http://selnd.com/bE7wSc 4:55 AM Feb 3rd
  40. Birmingham City Council: case study of a successful Social Media Newsroom. http://bit.ly/aQaola 2:44 AM Feb 3rd
  41. What’s Google been up to in 2009? Matt Cutts gives an overview in The State of the Index. http://bit.ly/bwVnkr (Video/PPT) 2:22 PM Feb 1st
  42. Google Webmaster Quiz! Test your knowledge: http://bit.ly/6sI5Px RT @IanLockwood: 10:30 PM Jan 19th via TweetDeck
  43. How important are inbound links from Facebook & Twitter? Matt Cutts discusses. http://bit.ly/6T00fS 8:45 AM Jan 17th via TweetDeck

How To Write Great Linkbait In 5 Easy Steps

Friday, March 26th, 2010

Inbound links: we all want them, but how do you get them? One SEO tactic is to create Linkbait.

Linkbait can be anything that will get website owners, social media mavens and bloggers across the Internet linking to you. You can use video, images or good old-fashioned words to get the link love flowing. But for now I’m just going to tell you how to write great linkbait in 5 easy steps:

1. Solve a Common Problem

First up, pick your topic wisely. One thing that people love to read about (and link to) is a simple solution to their everyday problems.

Are you a mechanic? Tell us how to pass our MOT. An account? Give us a budgeting trick that’ll make our money go further, or discuss the government’s most recent budget. And photographers? I think everyone wants a few secrets for how to look great in every photo.

Think about the questions you get asked time and time again and turn that into great linkbait.

2. Entertain us

Or why not just entertain us. Do you have a shocking/funny/stupid story to do with your product or service? Can you compile a list of the most ridiculous accidents with/misuses of your product? As long as it sharing it won’t harm your brand go right ahead.

3. Create a Catchy Headline

You need to give your article a title that will stand out in a crowd and make people want to read on. Something short and descriptive should do it. If you’re really stuck “How to…” is often a good place to start.

4. List It Out

People, especially Internet users, love lists. Numbered lists especially. They’re easy to read, easy to digest and you know roughly how long it’ll take to read.

Whether you’ve decided to be funny “Top Ten Mobile Phone Disasters” or helpful “How to Pass Your MOT in 5 Easy Steps”, use a numbered list. It’ll help you to write short, snappy paragraphs that people will want to read.

5. Be Controversial

Love it or hate it, being controversial is a sure fire way to get you noticed. You might just decide to deliberately leave someone out of your top five to get attention. Or you might write a bad review, create a “Top 5 Worst…” or just add an alternative point of view to an ongoing debate.

Warning! Don’t be rude, abusive or libellous just to be controversial. It won’t get you the right kind of attention – and may get you into trouble legally.

There are lots of ways of creating linkbait for even the most unexpected products and services. The Will It Blend? videos by Blendtec prove that it just takes a bit of creative thinking. Get brainstorming, trying to see what you do from a different angle and soon you’ll be creating some quality linkbait.

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Katie Saxon

Google “Did you mean” vs “Search instead for”

Friday, March 19th, 2010

Flying fingers mean typos, and Google offers two ways of handling spelling mistakes in its search results.

Search instead for…. means Google has anticipated what you meant with your incorrect spelling.  It auotcorrects your spelling, and presents search results with the correctly spelled search phrase, with the option to rerun your search with your incorrect spelling.  In this example I have misspelled the word solicitor, and Google has taken the decision to present the results with the correct spelling:

GoogleFixesMySpellingMistakes

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I’m more familiar with Google searching for my incorrect spellling, and presenting the mispelled results.  In those instances if offers me the option to rerun my search with the option “Did you mean…”

spelling mistake

Some interesting questions to ask:

  • Have you investigated the spelling mistakes Google recognises, and incorporate it into your SEO strategy?
  • Will Google changing the way I typed in my search in any way change the intention of my search?  Skew my search results?
  • What implications does this have for SEO? What words does Google “know”the correct spelling for? And what implications does this have for SEO companies optimising for mispellings?

Local Search: Tips for creating a perfect Google Local listing

Thursday, March 18th, 2010

When was the last time you reached for phone book when you needed a hotel, a florist, or indeed…. a solicitor? We’re much more likely to reach for Google rather than the good old Yellow Pages, and “Local Search” is way the Internet presents geo-targeted information about your business, including location maps, customer reviews, and detailed information about your services.

Google reports that one in every thirteen searches includes a map in the search results. That means a lot of people searching for local businesses, and one of those people might be your prospective new client.

Local searching isn’t limited just Google web search. Yahoo! has a local business listing service (http://uk.local.yahoo.com) and Microsoft’s Bing search engine shows local listings and a map for most local searches (http://www.bing.com/maps).

Nevertheless, the major player in Local Search is, of course, Google. Run a search for a local business type, say “Solicitor Newcastle”, and you will trigger search results from the Google Maps service that includes a list of 7 local business listings, including mapping information. This display is known as the Local Onebox and the 7 business listing is the Local 7-pack.

SolicitorNewcastle

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If there aren’t enough suitable businesses to generate a 7-pack, then Google might display the local 3-pack, and indeed sometimes just a single company listing is displayed, for instance for a search for your company name.

TwoWheelCentre

You can submit your business to the free Google Maps service at the Google Local Business Centre. You will require a Google account to list your business, and it is likely that your company will already have an account if it is using Google services like AdWords advertising, Google Analytics, or Gmail.

There is a very good chance that Google will have your company listed already even if you haven’t provided the information yourself. Google gathers information from a number of Internet Directory sources, and it may have created a generic listing for you. If that is the case, it is essential for you to claim the listing as your own. If you do not claim your listing yourself, you may find yourself victim of the scam known as “hijacking.” At its simplest, that means another organisation claims your listing, but changes the phone number to be their phone number, thus siphoning off your phone calls. Reclaiming a hijacked listing is tedious, so prevention is much better than the cure.

As you enter your company information into the Google Local Business Centre, keep in mind that how you enter the information will have a significant influence in whether your firm appears in the all important Google 7-pack.

Google publishes Google Local Business Listing Quality Guidelines and in particular these rules stipulate

you can only list

Tips for creating the perfect Google Local listing:

Name of your firm: it is important to use your official company name in the Title of your listing, but also making it clear what you do. So, if your firm is called Smith & Jones and you are solicitors, then make your entry Smith & Jones Solicitors. It is against Google guidelines to cram in keywords, phone numbers, or other SEO trickery in your company name.

Business address: ensure your business address matches exactly the address you are listing on your website, and the address that is listed on other Internet directory sites. The more identical addresses Google discovers for your website, the better.  You can only have one Google listing for each physical address of your business.

Phone number: 0800 numbers do not indicate any geographic area, so be sure to include your local dialling code phone number. You can add your 0800 number, but make your local number the first number.

Business description: You have up to 200 characters to describe your business, and you will want to include keywords in here. Keep in mind, however, that this content is intended for humans, so it will need to read well, and cramming too many keywords in here may get you banned.

Business categories: The categories you choose to classify you firm are exceptionally important, so choose them carefully. You should choose some categories from the suggestions provided by Google, as well as creating your own categories.

For Internet searchers using their mobile phones, Google Mobile Search uses the My Location feature to pinpoint your precise location and provides you with search results targeted to your physical location. Put in the word “curry” into your Google Mobile search, and you’ll find every curry house in the vicinity. (http://www.google.com/mobile.)

In addition to the search engines’ own local business directories, firms should be creating listings in the major Internet Yellow Pages (IYP) websites. Many of these listings are free, and offer you a way to provide consistent contact information for your company. These directories can be generic business listings like Yell (www.yell.com), City Visitor (www.city-visitor.com/), FreeIndex (www.freeindex.co.uk ) or Touch Local (www.touchlocal.com).

Review websites play an important role in local search, so make sure your firm is being reviewed in services like Qype (www.qype.co.uk) and Yelp (www.yelp.co.uk)

And finally, in addition to your listings on other websites, you need to ensure your own website is giving off clear local signals. Make sure you are including your physical address, including postcode and local phone number on every page of your website; typically this will be included in a footer on the page.

There are many more factors that influence local search rankings, but if you address these as your top priority you should start to see good results. The importance of Local Search for law firms in the UK cannot be underestimated, and the process of providing complete, accurate and consistent location information is what you need to do in order to take advantage of this relatively new and low cost marketing tool.

Why Isn’t the Search Engine Indexing My Website?

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

Recently we did a web review for a company and noticed something strange about their site.  Their old web pages could be found in Google, but none of their most recent new web pages were visible. The company in question holds regular public events and their website is one of their main channels for promoting them.  Google (and other search engines) simply were not see any of their new events information and so couldn’t include it in their search engines results pages.

It’s easy to check what content from your site is in the search engine database or cache. Just type in the command Cache:TheWebAddressYouWantToCheck

GoogleCacheSearch

And Google will display the date that the spider last crawled that page, in this example on 4 March 2010 at 18:17:

GoogleCacheResult

What our client was seeing was an error message saying the page was not in the Google index:

CacheNoPageIndexed

Clearly there is a problem, and so the next place to check is your Google’s Webmaster Tools. This will show you when the Googlebot is visiting your site – and how many pages it indexes each time.

Login to your account in you’ll be able to see the spider indexing your site. It is typically to have a “deep crawl” periodically, with regular “small crawls” on a daily basis.

WebMasterToolsCrawlStatistics

Our client didn’t have Webmaster Tools, or they probably would have seen a flat line with no indexing taking place.

A little bit of investigating soon worked out why the Googlebot wasn’t crawling our client’s site – an incorrectly configured Robots.txt file.
Robots.txt is a file on your server designed for guiding the search engines spiders as  they crawl your site.  But get it wrong and you could be doing your rankings some serious damage.   A basic example looks like this:

User-agent: *
Disallow:

In the first line, User-agent refers to the web robot you are addressing your instructions to , and the * means all robots.

In the second, line, Disallow tells the robots which areas of your website they can’t visit.  In our example no areas of the website are off-limits.

But our client’s robots.txt file looked like this:

User-agent: *
Disallow: /

That second line is the source of all of their problems – their robots.txt file is telling all web robots not to crawl their website.  They are disallowing access to everything on their site, effectively putting up a big sign saying “no robots allowed”.

Their old content had previously been crawled and hence was in the Google index.

But none of their new content was being discovered.

Why had the web designer done this? Because they had moved their website to a new server, and  somehow this error crept in.

Of course this also had a knock-on effect on the ranking of their website.  Within weeks of correcting their robots.txt file the site has shot up to the first page of the rankings for many of their main keyword searches. That’s without any extra Search Engine Optimisation work being done.

This company was still getting traffic from Google, to pages that were indexed before the robots.txt was accidentally changed, and so it took a web review for them to notice the mistake.  But if they had used Webmaster Tools they would have spotted the problem immediately.  They are free and available to all site owners, so if you are serious about SEO it’s worth getting an account.

Robots.txt can be really useful, but an incorrect file could have a major impact on the success of your site.  Do yourself a favour and use the free tools out there to ensure that your website is in peak condition.

Good luck!

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Katie Saxon

The Internet Conference 2010

Friday, March 12th, 2010

The Internet Conference 2010

Join me and my handpicked selection of Internet marketing experts for a full day of discussing the latest tools and techniques for promoting your business on the Internet. Book now for your early bird registration discount.

Date: 14 May 2010
Location: East Midlands Conference Centre
Cost: Early Bird Registration only £195 +VAT, rising to £245
Full Details: www.theInternetConference.co.uk

Google Stars: Your Own Personal Google

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010

Google have announced another new search feature:  Google Stars.  Click the little star icon next to any particular search result, and you are tagging in and creating a set of pages that will feature in your own personalised version of the search results.

In this example, I’m searching for the infamous Turkey Point Lighthouse, which now has the greyed out star beside it’s entry which I have highlighted in yellow in this image:

TurkeyPointLightHouseStar

If I choose to click on the star, next time I search, my starred items appear in a new category called “Starred Results” appearing at the top of my (and only my own) search results:

TurkeyPointLighthouse

The real benefit of this, as compared to the former SearchWiki feature, is that you’re not changing the search results, just pulling together your favourite sites into an easily accessible set of selections.

You need to be logged into your Google account to use this feature

Learn more at

http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2010/03/stars-make-search-more-personal.html

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