Posts About ‘SEO’

#SMX London: Hardcore SEO Power Tools

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SEO has been growing exponentially during the last year due to it being more connected to all the other Internet Marketing disciplines. SEO grows more complex and the size of the sites we work on continue to grow.

It’s more important than ever to have a set of high-quality tools that give us both a competitive edge and save our increasingly precious time.

During this session at SMX London, we had Steve Lock of Linkdex, Pete Wailes of SEOGadget, Stacey Cavanagh of Tecmark and Dixon Jones of Majestic SEO showcasing their toolbox of hardcore SEO power tools.

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Why Is My Site Not Ranking?

If you are a small business owner on a small budget the chances are you are learning about everything you can to set-up and promote your business. You are the CEO, the CMO, the bookeeper and the post room and chances are you make a cracking cuppa. Not every startup is VC funded, not every startup has a budget for everything and not every business can afford to have an agency to support every aspect of their marketing efforts. If this is you then perhaps you are hoping to get your online presence ranking in the search engines in order to attract customers through organic search. Whilst in some business sectors this can be very difficult and very competitive, but in some cases, for example local businesses in less populated areas you might have a decent chance at success providing you have some rudiments in place and an understanding of what search engines are evaluating when attempting to rank your pages.

As full-time search professionals those of us agency-side will come across a number of common mistakes or oversights time and time again, when auditing any website, or when talking to friends and contacts about their small business website. Even if you don’t have budget for an SEO campaign there are a number of things to check and to be aware of if your website is nowhere to be seen in the rankings.

First a little disclaimer: search algorithms are rather complex as they evaluate over two-hundred factors, some of which matter more than others. If one of the below “mistakes” effects you, fixing it doesn’t necessarily mean your site will rank overnight, but rather that these are very common mistakes that can often be found with new websites.

1. Disallow: *

You may or may not know that there is a file that allows you to instruct search engine spiders (or bots) as to how to crawl your site. It is called a robots.txt file and here’s an example.

Robots.txt file example

You (or the person that built your website) can put instructions in the file to specific user-agents, such as Googlebot or Bingbot, though in the above case the use of [*] means all. Using the command >Disallow: you can restrict a user-agent from indexing content from the pages/folders that you specify on your website

2. URL Confusion

The State of Search website has a URL or address which I can type into a browser in order to access it directly. The format of the address may differ from site to site, but when you bu a domain for your web business you are purchasing the domain, specific to a TLD or ccTLD.

 

State of Search domain structure

A TLD is a top-level domain, such as .com and a ccTLD is a country-code Top Level Domain, such as .fr (for France). The domain part of it is the name that should be akin to your business name. However as is common practise since the web became popular, many websites choose to precede the domain with what is actually a sub-domain www. You don’t have to have the sub-domain to make your website work and here is where this can cause problems. Publishing your website to both www.yourwebsite.com and http://yourwebsite.com if untreated can mean you have essentially duplicated your website. Search engines do not like duplicated content on URLs as they may struggle to work out which version is the intended or preferred. If your site has been around for a while and has gathered some links that point to it, if there are stronger links pointing to one version rather than the other this may often tip the balance in favour of which version is preferred.

Rather than publishing your website to both versions of the address it is generally best-practise to pick a preferred URL .e.g. www.yourwebsite.com and use a 301 redirect instruction so that the http://yourwebsite.com version simply redirects to the preferred version.

The reason you would want to do this is so that from the get-go the search engines do not have to use other signals to work out why you have a duplicated website and which version is preferred. Perhaps more importantly any equity that you accrue in links is funnelled towards the preferred version of the URL. Even if somebody links to you using the non-preferred version the equity afforded to that URL is passed on via the 301 redirect instruction. A bit like when you move house and get your post redirected.

Check to see what is happening with your website by typing in both versions of the URL. For example with State of Search if I type http://stateofsearch.com into my browser it will redirect e to www.stateofsearch.com without my doing anything. You can easily check if the correct redirection is in place using a free tool like this Redirect Checker.

Another thing to be very careful about which I have seen on many occasions is when different content has been published to each version of a URL, for example you may have put a holding page at http://yourwebsite.com and then the finished website at www.yourwebsite.com. I’ve even seen examples of entirely different websites on both versions. This can really inhibit your progress and potential in organic search.

3. Missing Tracking Code

I asked some of my peers at other SEO agencies which common mistakes they see with new websites and Hannah Smith of Distilled pointed out a great one that is more to do with a lack of traffic than rankings and that is when your tracking (e.g. Google Analytics) code has been mistakenly removed. Perhaps you have started out with some traffic showing in your Google Analytics account and then suddenly it all disappears. This is something that can send people looking into all sorts of places and reasons such as Google penalties or a website hack. Sometimes the simplest explanation is the answer and the first place to start is to check that the code has not simply been removed somehow; though normally by human error.

4. Crawling (Or Not)

For a site to rank broadly and well it has to be crawlable. Search engines use crawlers as mentioned in the first point 1 above, in order to discover pages on your site, crawl and index the content on them. If your site is hard to access or contains a lot of image and video content there’s a lot more work to be done to make such content accessible to such bots. In fact in a timely post on Search Engine Watch today, author Danny Goodwin cites Google head of webspam Matt Cutts as saying that this is the number one problem he sees with websites not ranking.

5. Time and Patience

Another of my fellow writers and peers Barry Adams of Pierce Communications says that the biggest mistake is one of perception. All too often Adams gets the question why isn’t my site ranking? It has been live for over a week! Simply having a functioning website does not mean that it is going to rank. Certainly a large part of getting your pages crawled, indexed and ranking well is dependent on how many links point to it. Much like reviews for a bed & breakfast, or references on a Linkedin profile, good links don’t happen overnight unless you have a huge marketing budget or you are the source of a scandal! Do beware of any service that offers you X links in X weeks. If the offer seems too good to be true then it almost certainly is, and poor quality links can actually do your site far more harm than good.

If you suspect that a lack of links to your youthful site is inhibiting your progress then we have a wealth of content on this site and by our bloggers on linkbuilding the right way.

Going Beyond Rankings With Google Analytics

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Imagine a world without search engine ranking data.

Imagine a world without keyword data.

With the introduction of personalised and localised search as well as the dreaded (not provided) data in Google Analytics, this is where I think we will be in the very near future. I don’t know about you but I am finding ranking data and keyword data more and more unreliable as the weeks go on, which is what has led me to writing this post.

We need to open our eyes to other measurement metrics so we can start to re-educate clients and CEOs to other ways of tracking performance that does not include rankings. I am going to focus on showing you different reports from within Google Analytics to help you achieve this.

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Creating Content For Online Stores (when people don’t really read)

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Last week I was lucky enough to attend BrightonSEO – and right from session one it became clear that content is a BIG topic for digital marketers in 2013 and the years to come. I’m pretty lucky since my job requires me to attend various search conferences and I have seen that even the exhibitor landscape has slightly changed since Google’s Panda and Penguin updates in 2012 – whereas you’ll now find numerous article writing services promising “services for unique and exclusively written content created to your specification”.

This slight conference exhibitor shift emphasises the surge in demand for content creators. Plenty of blog posts are advising us to think twice before hiring a new addition to our marketing team – we might want to consider hiring a writer rather than a career marketer – I am sure this is old news for you though. What triggered my curiosity though were the findings of a Nielsen study I came across a few weeks ago. (more…)

How to spot a bad link – Paul Madden at #BrightonSEO

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Paul Madden, formerly of Automica, recently teamed up with Gareth Hoyle nad became a partner of Manual Link Building. I really enjoyed Paul’s talk at SearchLove earlier this year, where he outlined how he scaled automated SEO processes using Odesk.

With Penguin, Google sold us the idea that using the disavow tool and simultaneously reporting on spurious agencies was a good idea. They targeted sites with poor link profiles and penalized thousands of sites overnight. (more…)

Future-proofing your Link Building Strategies

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Ever since Google announced the first iteration of the penguin update, future-proofing their SEO output has been a major focus for lots of agencies. Lots of us have seen signs of agencies frantically removing links (both high and low quality) and changing their approach in order to hide from ‘the penguin’.

In addition to the changes that Google has made so far, it’s fundamentally important for SEOs to be thinking ahead of the curve, in order to protect the work they’re doing for their clients and also their business.

The following tips are focused on what I believe Google will be doing in the not so distant future in order to improve the quality of their results and prevent websites from ranking through manipulating their algorithm. (more…)

Entrepreneurship & Content Marketing Half Day #SearchLondon

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Wednesday the 20th March saw the first of Search London’s half day events taking place in Google Campus in London, an area widely referred to as the Silicon Roundabout. The event was set to focus on Entrepreneurship and Content Marketing, and, having been to a number of Search London events before, I knew that it wasn’t due to disappoint. If you don’t know, Search London is a long running and much revered London SEO meetup, ran by passionately by State of Search’s very own Jo Turnbull, amongst others. The half-day promised a line up of great speakers, including: (more…)

Can SEO Be Made Obsolete?

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A common criticism levied against SEO is that it should be unnecessary. A lot of web professionals who don’t work in SEO say that a good website, built properly and filled with great content, will rank organically on its own merits without needing any SEO applied to it.

Now, as a SEO practitioner, I have an almost instinctual resistance against that argument. But it’s too easy to dismiss it out of hand. SEO is after all a multidisciplinary activity, relying on a great many disparate facets to be optimally deployed.

So let’s explore the issue in a bit more depth. Can SEO be made obsolete, if all other aspects of making and maintaining websites are performing at their best? Is it feasible to spread the role of SEO out amongst other web professionals, and not require a dedicated resource? (more…)

Baidu Comes to Britain: New Opportunities for Online Marketing in China

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Today welcomed some interested news in the search world and particularly those with an Easterly looking view. The announcement that Johnny Zhu’s CharmClick and Sri Sharma’s Net Media Planet will form an exclusive deal to partner with Baidu, China’s biggest search engine. I took the time to speak to them both to help State of Search readers understand what this new deal meant for European brands and how this exclusive partnership could help efforts targeting Chinese searchers. (more…)

I act on impulse and I go with my instincts – Applying Ramsay logic to SEO

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I like most Mondays after football sat watching Channel 4′s Gordon Ramsays Kitchen Nightmares. For those that don’t watch this – particularly the US version its well worth a watch if not to revel in some US loving for the evening. Its not often I watch these programmes and can relate back to SEO but for some reason last nights episode seem to relate back to SEO – particularly in the light of recent changes to SEO.

What I am referring to is the barrage of Google updates which SEO’s have had to deal with over the course of the last 12 to 24 months. In that time, SEO has changed immeasurably – some would say for the worse, but when one surveys the SEO is approached certainly at an agency level, one can only say these changes have been for the positive. There’s no doubting snake oil still exists – and one would certainly be foolish to think that bad SEO doesn’t exist but in terms of a more mature approach to marketing things are certainly better than they have ever been – If only Google would work out accountability doesn’t just apply to channels which provide Google with revenue. (more…)

Where Does SEO Belong in the Overall Marketing Mix?

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I believe that there is a problem that SEO is facing in 2013, and will continue to face moving forward. I believe there is the risk that, as SEOs, we will spend too much time focusing on what we’re going to call ourselves and forget exactly what it is that we should be doing. Both to raise the profile of SEO as an industry, and continue to push the boundaries. While we’ve heard the pleas that ‘SEO is dead’ for a long time now, and SEO has had it’s fair share of criticism. I believe this is unfounded, spend in SEO is burgeoning and grown hugely, and it is not going to go anywhere soon.

However, a spate of new monikers or ‘rebranding’ in the industry has only served to confuse things in a way that we are siloing ourselves and causing alienation amongst the broader online marketing community. (more…)

Tools Week Presentation Demo: Majestic SEO

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During the State of Search Tools Week we have given you several demo’s from tools, the last one in the series is Majestic SEO. Dixon Jones showed us the product and took the time to answer questions afterwards, which you can also listen to in the video below.

After the video there is information about what was said in the Q&A so you can skip directly to the part you find interesting. Below more information on Majestic SEO.

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