Posts on State of Search about ‘Events’

Speaking in Tongues: Mastering Multinational Search – SMX London 2011

Good afternoon everyone. Here is the last panel I’ll be covering for you folks from SMX London but keep your eyes on the blog for more updates and more posts from the rest of the team.

I decided (in spite of all of the International Search Summit coverage coming your way from State of Search) that I would cover the session on Speaking in Tongues and how to handle multinational search. This is something our team has been working on a lot lately and have been trying to figure out the best way to integrate across our global offices and make use of local market knowledge. Really excited to bring you this topic!

Image via: apbeatty on Flickr

We’ll be highlighting the best tips from the panel which includes Eric Papczun of Performics, John Mueller of Google, Richard Falconer of Big Mouth, Preston Carey of Yandex and Andy Atkins Kruger of WebCertain.

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Credit where Credit is due: Demystifying Attribution

This is a write up of the panel session “Credit where Credit is due: Demystifying Attribution” at SMX London 2011.

Chris started this session by discussing the value of the keyword in terms of conversion rate and sales. This is a discussion that often uses the last click wins mentality when calculating ROI values. Attribution is often far more complex than this and this session aimed to clarify many approaches.

The following are the top tips from each presentation:

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Keyword Research “Ninja” Tactics – SMX 2011

Good morning again folks. Here with Christine Churchill of Key Relevance, Rich Baxter of SEOgadget,  Lasse Clarke Storgaard of MediaCom Denmark and Kev Gibbons of SEOptimise. Really excited for this panel as it was one that I spoke on last year and I think they may even have been paying homage to the title of my presentation (though I take little pride in the “ninja” term a year later :) ).

Should be really good and hopefully some exciting tips to come out of this one! (more…)

Search Analytics and Competitive Intelligence

Good morning from SMX London Folks! Today we’ve got Dave Sottimano of Distilled and John Straw from Linkdex talking us through Search Analytics and Competitive intelligence. I had a sneak-peek at Dave’s presentation and know he’s got a fun tool to give away and am also very excited to hear what John has to say!

Without further ado…. (more…)

What’s Really Important for Technical SEO? – SMX London

As the last format seemed to work quite well I’m going to focus on just the top tips today. We’ve got Rich Baxter from SEOgadget, Martijn Beijk of Onetomarket (also a fellow State of Search blogger), Jonathan Hochman of JE Hochman and Associates, and finally John Mueller from Google Webmaster Trends.

Really looking forward to this one, so away we go! (more…)

SMX Advanced London 2011: Link Alchemy – Creative Ways of Conjuring SEO Gold

Next up today is a panel on everyone’s favourite topic – link building. But looking at it from a little more of a creative perspective.

First to speak is Patrick Altoft from Branded3 on  his  methods to build ‘Golden Links’. First up,  he focuses on social links:, things like Twitter and Facebook. A point worth noting:

Standard links to a page benefit the entire domain. (e.g. a link back from the BBC)

Benefits from social links are URL-specific. (e.g. a link back from Twitter)

Key Takeaway: So what to do? Make sure you don’t waste links from social media on competition pages – point them to the product/category page.  (more…)

SMX London Keynote Address – The State of Search Marketing

Good Morning folks! I’ll be starting us out with our first post of our live coverage from SMX Advanced London.

Up first is Chris Sherman talking to us about “The State of Search Marketing” and the big picture as well as changes to the market in general.

Recent Google Updates

-Google instant has come into play since the last conference and he also mentioned that the image search catalogue has increased widely and made reference to some of the opportunities this may create.

-Of course, the notorious Panda/Farmer update (a big shock that has caused a lot of fallout for a lot of people).

-Chris also made mention of the forthcoming Plus 1 buttons and made a joke about the fact that they are basically an identical copy of Facebook Likes. For what it’s worth, I do think these will be on every blog with a Twitter or Facebook share button though I am still somewhat sceptical of the impact they will have on search results as there is so much opportunity for abuse.

- Google makes 300-500 changes per year on an ongoing basis – be more careful than other and not inadvertantly do something that gets caught up here. Radical “Panda” like events are very uncommon, but we see loads of new changes. (more…)

SEO for Google vs Bing: How Different are They?

google-vs-bing-intro

This post is part of our coverage of SMX Advanced London 2011. It is a panel discussing the differences between Google and Bing and how or if we should be optimizing for these differently.

In this post we will describe the talks from Gill Reich, VP of Product Management, at Answers.com and Daniel Ruby, Research Director at Chitika. They took an in depth look at the differences between the search engines.

Demographics

Firstly some basic demographics:

- The biggest difference between the browsers: 87% of Bing users come from IE vs 47% of Google users from IE

- Users of Bing predominately come from the US -  83% vs just under 50% for Google

- Top cities are all US for Bing vs Google where only NYC is the only American city in its top 10 traffic-generating cities.

Bing’s Growth

Yahoo! and Bing are potentially monetising better than Google and seeing significant growth. This double combination is enough to warrant a second look. Users of Bing are generally less tech savvy therefore generate a greater value per impression, this is worth taking into account.

There are varying views on how well/poorly Bing/Yahoo! will do over thecoming months. Some (Mashable apparently) say that at  this rate, Bing could potentially surpass Google within the next year.

Sounds more than a little optimistic to me. Others (Henry Blodget) suggest that the traffic acquisition costs are more than three times their revenue as they try to hit scale.

Bing is buying their traffic at the moment, hoping this will pay off in the long run. Whether it will or not remains to be seen.

Portals and Platforms

Take the MSN homepage  as an example– not only is there a search box that points to Bing but it  also includes footer links and sidebar links that point to search results on Bing.

Looking at upstream traffic to Bing – 21% comes from MSN whereas Google has a wider variety of sources including 17% Facebook followed by YouTube etc.

Bing SERPs are clearly centred around their own properties – e.g. above the fold predominately centred around links back to MSN pages. Google is much more open, it powers the entire web. E.g. Adsense  = a large chunk of pages on web are advertising Google and monetising large amount of the web.

Bing is focusing on being a portal. Google a platform.

How Gill came to Understand Search Engines’ Importance

Search engines were  previously always used to help you find websites. Now search engines, particularly Google, is how you find information. Often you barely even know you are on another site. This makes it very difficult for webmasters.

People no longer think of search engines as a way to find a website with an answer, they see it as a direct means to an end.

Summary of the talk by Gill Reich

  • Users are different (Country, browser)
  • Searches are different (context, number of words)
  • Engines are different (technology & business models)

Bing has got significantly better but Google’s technology is still in a league of its own. This sets it apart.

A more in-depth look at Bing

Daniel Ruby, Research Director at Chitika.

Why should I care about Bing?

Volume

Yahoo/Bing has become the first volume related competitor to Google in years. Based on traffic generated by search engines – even though Bing serves much more as a portal, it does still drive traffic. 15-18% for Chitika.

Value per impression

Both Yahoo! and Bing users are more likely to click on an ad, so they’re worth more as monetisation tool.

What affects my Bing Postioning?

By and large, it’s similar to Google – content, links etc.

The differences between Bing and Google?

1. Bing does not like forums, 90% of forum results show up further down Bing results than Google results.

Many forum results that Google positions on the front page don’t appear in Bing’s top 100.

2. Bing does not like content farms

Even post-Panda, Bing tends to rank low quality content sites lower than Google positions.

3. Bing is significantly worse than Google at broad matching keywords such as 401k – Retirement Plan

Verbatim keyword matching is much more important for Bing traffic. Be more verbatim in your keyword strategy for Bing, don’t expect it to understand synonyms and context as well as Google does.

4. URL results are ineffective

If a user searches for a url, Google will assume that the user is looking for information on the url and will also show results with that URL as keyword

5. Bing is more likely to show related searches, sites that are similar to that original searched-on url

6. Phone number searches

Bing provides fewer results, assumes that if you don’t find the number you are looking for within the first couple of pages –  there is no point in showing more ‘spammy’ types of results.

7. Ambiguous searches

If a search has multiple possible meanings, Bing will err of the side of local results whereas Google is more likely to err on the side of brand.

General observations

Bing more likely to censor ‘questionable’ content such as watching copyrighted tv shows online, finding free essays, cheats etc. It also seems to struggle with parsing PDF files compared with Google.

Summary of the talk by Daniel Ruby

- The number one long-tail results on Google will appear on Bing’s first page 67% of the time, Bing/Google have a lot of fractured results crossover.
- So do I need to focus on Bing? Yes, according to Daniel. And yes again.
- The traffic is growing and it is valuable.

Yandex

Someone who could be a competitor is Yandex. The session at SMX ended with a few words from Andy Atkins-Kruger on his experience of Yandex having visited Moscow and met its founder Ilya Segalovich recently.

Yandex is focusing increasingly on MLR (Machine-Learned Ranking), which some are suggesting is also the preferred route for Bing. Google uses this to a much lesser degree, favouring it only for the Adwords algorithms. This could lead to increased differences further down the line.

All in all, Bing is growing and isn’t about to go away. It can provide valuable new visitors that may not reach your site if you focus all of your efforts solely on Google. It’s worth taking the time to consider it.

(Thanks to Razorfish for the image!)

More posts about Bing vs Google that might interest you:

- Google or Bing: The Royal Wedding
- Searches on Bing More Successful than on Google
- The Bing and the Beautiful
- Bing keeps denying copying Google and accuses Google of clickfraud
- Osama Bin Laden killed: how did Google and Bing respond?
- Why Bing will be trailing on Google and why it should hook up with Apple and Facebook

SEO in 2011 What’s Working, What’s Not? – SMX London 2011

Google Instant

Hi again folks, in an effort to get posts out as quickly as possible I’m going to stick with a “Top Tips” format for this next session. Today we’ve got Max Thomas of Thunder SEO, Mikel deMib Svendsen of deMib and Christine Churchill of Key Relevance.

As an aside may I just interject the fact that Mikel deMib Svendsen is wearing an excellent patterned suit and the cover slide of his presentation deck looks a bit like it was inspired by a GeoCities website, very excited about this one! We’ll definitely link to it once the decks go live.

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Linkbuilding Tactics, Tools and Traps: Wise Words from Dixon Jones of Majestic SEO

Dixon car

Editorial: With wide open arms we welcome Claire Carlile to our blogging team! We have seen some of her blogging in the past and know she can write. We have seen her work and know she knows what she is talking about and we have met her so we know she is a great person. All ingredients to be part of the State of Search blogging team. Welcome a board Claire, good luck! Below you find her first post entitled “Linkbuilding Tactics, Tools and Traps: Wise Words from Dixon Jones of Majestic SEO”.

OK, so here goes, my inaugural post on State of Search, please be gentle with me.

I’m a big fan of live blogging and follow up posts on conferences and presentations for a number of reasons:

• Firstly you get to attend a conference (triple win: professional development, networking and party combined!)
• Secondly if your blog is any good you’ll earn links and social shares, which is always nice.

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