Thursday, June 28, 2012

+1 embrace it... It's not going anywhere.

The Official Google Blog +1

For our international readers, this post is also available in French, German, Italian, Japanese, Portuguese and Spanish (Latin America, Spain). - Ed.

A year ago we started a small project called Google+—to bring friends and family closer together, and to inspire new connections through meaningful conversation. Today more than 250 million people have upgraded to Google+, and we want to give thanks. To you. It's your support and your voice that give the service soul, and we’re grateful.

We figure the best way to show our appreciation is to keep listening and making improvements, so today we're rolling out two major updates in response to your feedback: Google+ for tablets, and Google+ Events.

Google+ for tablets: putting mobile first, on lots more devices
Back in May we introduced new versions of Google+ for Android and iOS phones. In both cases we went native (with gestural navigation, fullscreen media and face-to-face video), and it’s had a powerful impact on community engagement. In fact, more people now use Google+ from a mobile device than a desktop computer, and today’s tablet release will quicken this trend.

Of course, our tablet app isn’t just bigger, like our mobile app isn’t just smaller. It’s designed with the device in mind, and it includes:

  • A beautiful stream that styles content based on popularity, type and orientation
  • A “lean back” Hangouts experience that’s great for the couch or common room
  • Crisper text, fuller photos and easily-tappable actions like +1 and comment

Selected screenshots from today’s tablet release

The Android app is rolling out to phones and tablets later today (v3.0), and the iPad update is coming soon.

Google+ Events: for all the moments that matter—before, during and after
To celebrate is human. It’s how we connect with others, honor friends and family, or simply unwind after a long week. We save the date for picnics, parties and nuptials, and we cherish these moments for a lifetime. Unfortunately, the subtlety and substance of real-world events is lost online.

Today’s online event tools are really just web forms that ask, “Are you going?” Worse yet, they bail when you need them the most: during the actual event, and after everyone leaves. In life we plan, we party and we keep in touch. Software should make all of this more awesome, and that's exactly our aim with Google+ Events.

Before: send beautiful invites, and stay in sync with Calendar integration
Inviting someone to your home, your wedding or your favorite restaurant is a deeply personal act. You’re handpicking who’ll be in the room, after all, so invitees should feel part of something special. That’s why Google+ Events offers meaningful ways to build and send beautiful invitations, including:

  • Cinemagraphic themes for your beach trip, weekend brunch, or baseball game (and a whole lot more)
  • The ability to attach a personalized video greeting from YouTube
  • Unique animations that make your invites a joy to receive

Google+ events also appear in Google Calendar automatically, and guests’ updates arrive instantly in the stream. The end result is a useful and beautiful place to manage your party.

During: share photos live with Party Mode
Photos are the cornerstone of any great event. They get people laughing and smiling, and they let us relive our favorite moments after the fact. The challenge—especially with the explosion in smartphones—is that too many photos get stranded in too many places. We struggle to even find people’s photos, let alone enjoy them all in one spot. Fortunately, Party Mode fixes these problems with a single tap.

Once you’ve enabled Party Mode on your mobile device, all of your new photos get added to the event in real-time. And as more guests turn on Party Mode, more pictures will instantly appear to fellow invitees. In this way Google+ Events gives your party a visual pulse; we’ve even added a "live slideshow" you can proudly project during the event.

After: see everyone’s pictures in one place
Once the guests go home, it's natural to reflect on the evening's events. We reminisce about the food, or the last dance, or the sparkle in someone’s eye. And we bask in the afterglow of shared experience for as long as memory allows. With Google+ Events you can now relive the party whenever you want, with a captivating and comprehensive set of photos.

Just visit your event page after it’s over, and you’ll see everyone’s pictures and comments in chronological order. You can also browse by popularity, photographer or photo tag with a few clicks. It’s easy, immersive and awesome.

Google+ has come a long way in a year, but we know we've got a long way to go. Fortunately we serve a community that's filled with thoughtful, committed individuals, and together we're creating something special. +1 person at a time.

Posted by Vic Gundotra, Senior Vice President


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Tuesday, June 19, 2012

8 Best Practices to Optimize Video Landing Pages for Search

Reel SEO Video Marketing 8 Best Practices to Optimize Video Landing Pages for Search

8 Best Practices to Optimize Video Landing Pages for Search

Last month, I participated in a webinar for Liveclicker all about optimizing e-commerce video for search. I presented on both optimizing video landing pages (onsite) for search as well as SEO for YouTube.  In reality, these best practices are applicable to any video strategy and not specific to e-commerce with the exception of the examples used. The following is a summary of the 8 tips/best-practices that I provided with regard to onsite video landing page optimization, starting with some background on the ever changing nature of search.

Search is evolving at such a rapid clip that it is even difficult for SEO experts to keep up with the pace. According to SEOMoz, Google changes its search algorithm up to 500 – 600 times each year.

One of the biggest changes we’ve seen recently is the incorporation of social elements into search results. Social factors have always supported SEO in an indirect way, in that if you have good content, people want to share it and link to it. However, in December 2011 Google confirmed that it was using social signals such as likes, retweets and +1s for search engine ranking.

Earlier this year, Google announced a radical shift in personalization, Search Plus Your World, where the default search looks at your social connections. If you’re signed into Google with Search Plus Your World turned on, you see different search results than everyone else, which makes it a little more difficult to determine how well you’re ranking.

In this ever evolving world of search, what are the most important steps to take to optimize your video content for search engines?

Tip #1: You MUST Brush Up on General SEO Best Practices First

Optimizing video for search engines isn’t its own discipline, but simply an extension of SEO. Standard SEO best practices such as well-planned navigation, site structure, internal site links and title tags are important to drive traffic to your website. Once you have a well optimized website, then your video results should rank better as a matter of course.

Take Spanx.com, for example. After completing an SEO audit with Liveclicker and subsequently improving its page titles, metadata and links, they saw a visible uplift in video page views:

A few of the best places to learn about the latest search engine news and guidelines include:

Tip #2: Start with Keyword Research

It doesn’t help to rank first for phrases that no one is searching for. For that reason, you always want to start with keyword research when optimizing video, or anything else for that matter.

YouTube is a great keyword research tool for video (with the exception of their own dedicated keyword tool which is quite useless). Even though we're talking about on-site video SEO for Google, it helps to get an idea of what folks are searching for when specifically looking for video content (which is all you can search for on YouTube) If you go to youtube.com and do some searches, it’s easy to unearth related search queries being used to find video content.

When you filter your search, you see even more examples:

Google’s keyword suggestions are also helpful in determining what people are searching for in Google (regardless of whether looking specifically for a video), as are other keyword research tools that you might have access to:

Tip #3: Submit a Video Sitemap to Google

It can be quite difficult for Google to find videos on your pages. The best way to ensure that Google can find your videos is to:

  1. Create an XML video sitemap that tells the search engine exactly where your page is, and where your video is, along with some information about it.
  2. Submit your video sitemap through Google’s webmaster tools.
  3. Once you’ve done that, Google crawls your page to verify that the video exists and in most cases, indexes your video where it can appear in the universal search results.

How do you know if Google has indexed your videos? The easiest way to check is to go to Google Videos and do a search using site:yourwebsite.com with no spaces to see how many videos on your site are indexed and determine if there’s a mismatch.

Tip #4: Test adding Video Transcripts to Landing Pages

Many e-commerce sites don’t have much text, in which case it may be worthwhile to include transcripts of your videos. Liveclicker studied 37 pages before and after adding transcripts. Pages with transcripts earned on average 16% more revenue than they did before transcripts. Why? The uplift was likely related to increases in traffic through long-tail keyword searches resulting from matches in the transcripts.

How should you include a transcript? Ideally, you want it to be in the source code rather than hidden from your viewers. It’s ok to put the transcript of the video at the bottom of the page, but it must be representative of the content of your video and not stuffed with keywords.  Of course, you can use that same transcript for YouTube, which we'll cover in another post.

Tip #5: Help Viewers Share your Videos with Opengraph

In most cases, it’s sensible to make videos on your website shareable through social widgets such as Facebook like and Twitter retweet. Did you know that you can also allow your videos to be viewed on Facebook directly when someone likes your page? For example, if you were to go to the blog post shown below and click “Like”, the video thumbnail along with the description would show up on your Facebook wall for all your friends to see. When a friend clicks the video thumbnail, the video will then play directly on their wall. If you have a player with integrated Buy Now buttons, that will show up on Facebook as well.

If you want to do this, you can use the following code in the top of your page to tell Facebook where to find your video and its size:

<head> <meta property="og:video" content="http://example.com/video.swf"/> <meta property="og:video:secure_url" content="https://example.com/video.swf"/> <meta property="og:video:height" content="640"/> <meta property="og:video:width" content="385"/> <meta property="og:video:type" content="application/x-shockwave-flash"/> </head>

Tip #6: Leverage your Video Content

The more content you have on your pages that can be ranked within the different verticals in Google – image search, organic search, video search etc... – the more traffic you can drive to your site.

E-commerce retailer, eBags, added several still images from their videos to the bottom of the pages that had video on them. A lot of the images were indexed in Google Images and, as a result, they experienced a 115% uptick in traffic to the video pages.

Tip #7: Create Compelling Thumbnails

This is a no brainer as the thumbnail is the first thing that people look at and the most important. Make sure your thumbnails are eye-catching, relevant and high quality.

Thumbnails should be:

  • Clear, bright and in-focus with good composition
  • Visually compelling to attract a click (close-ups work well)
  • Accurately representative of your video content

Tip #8: Ensure your Landing Pages Load Quickly

One of Google’s new ranking factors is how long it takes for a page to load. Essentially, Google wants people to find what they are looking for. Faster pages improve the user experience while decreasing bounce rates, whether or not they contain video.

Some helpful, free tools that you can use to evaluate your site speed include:

So, there's a bunch of, somewhat random tips and best practices for optimizing video landing pages for search.  Obviously we've covered these in the past, but it never hurts to review best practices, right? We'll dive into part 2, YouTube SEO in an upcoming post.

Reprinted with permission from Video Commerce Consortium Blog.

Tags: algorithm, best practices, e-commerce, Facebook, keyword research, optimization, optimize, search engine, search results, SEO, thumbnails, tips, universal search, video search, Video SEO, video SEO, ^Featured Insights


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Sunday, June 17, 2012

Learn From This Free Internet Marketing Course

If you want to succeed in just about anything in life, you need to follow a good system. And that is definitely true when it comes to online marketing. I'm pretty sure that every single day there are countless people who try to make it online but after months or even years of trying without success, they lose hope. If only they knew the right step-by-step process on how to do it.

I would like to help others, especially those who are determined, to learn the ropes of marketing through the web. For this reason why early this year I launched a free internet marketing course at www.AustralianInternetMarketing.com. It will teach you the basics, and more, about internet marketing: SEO, email marketing, video marketing, social media, etc.

To help spread the word, I sent out a press release which you can read through the link below. Share this post or the press release if you know someone who would like to learn IM. And did I mention that it's free?

SEO Melbourne

Thursday, June 14, 2012

Internet Marketing For Small Business Web Updates

I got all the best bits in tech news for small/medium sized business owners and complied it for you in this post. So if you are doing your own internet marketing for small business then you better check out these suggestions.

Here's what I spotted this week:

===

Matt Cutts on penalties vs. algorithm updates {fantastic insight from Google}
www.searchengineland.com/live-blog-you-a-with-matt-cutts-at-smx-advanced-123513

World's greatest SEO audit {the best I've seen}
www.davidjenyns.posterous.com/how-to-perform-the-worlds-greatest-seo-audit

Google places merges with Google plus pages {you need to be on top of this}
www.searchengineland.com/google-places-is-over-company-makes-google-the-center-of-gravity-for-local-search-122770

Google+ Local {the word right from the Google's blog}
www.googleblog.blogspot.com/2012/05/localnow-with-dash-of-zagat-and.html

No-nonsense ways to build backlinks {some good ones Post Panda here}

SEO Melbourne

Monday, June 11, 2012

3 Website Optimization Tips You Should Try

[caption id="attachment_7679" align="aligncenter" width="420" caption="Big sites usually win."][/caption]

If you think putting your keywords on your pages is enough, you better think twice. To help your site quickly and properly crawled by Google you need to do these website optimization tips.

Setup a Google sitemap

A clever way to ensure Google finds and indexes all of your content is to register an account at Google Webmasters (www.google.com/webmasters/) and select Site Configuration>>Sitemaps. You can then create an xml sitemap by uploading an xml file containing a list of every page on your website.

To help you do this, either search ‘google xml sitemap generator’ to find some free software to do this or pass the job over to your webmaster.

Use your internal linking to link to the pages you want to rank.

Internal linking is as important as creating links on other websites that point to your website.

Firstly, make sure there is a link to every page

SEO Melbourne

Friday, June 8, 2012

How to Perform the World's Greatest SEO Audit

SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog

Posted by Steve Webb

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.

World's Greatest Audit MugNow that tax season is over, it's once again safe to say my favorite A-word... audit! That's right. My name is Steve, and I'm an SEO audit junkie.

Like any good junkie, I've read every audit-related article; I've written thousands of lines of audit-related code, and I've performed audits for friends, clients, and pretty much everyone else I know with a website.

All of this research and experience has helped me create an insanely thorough SEO audit process. And today, I'm going to share that process with you.

This is designed to be a comprehensive guide for performing a technical SEO audit. Whether you're auditing your own site, investigating an issue for a client, or just looking for good bathroom reading material, I can assure you that this guide has a little something for everyone. So without further ado, let's begin.


SEO Audit Preparation

When performing an audit, most people want to dive right into the analysis. Although I agree it's a lot more fun to immediately start analyzing, you should resist the urge.

A thorough audit requires at least a little planning to ensure nothing slips through the cracks.

Crawl Before You Walk

Before we can diagnose problems with the site, we have to know exactly what we're dealing with. Therefore, the first (and most important) preparation step is to crawl the entire website.

Crawling Tools

I've written custom crawling and analysis code for my audits, but if you want to avoid coding, I recommend using Screaming Frog's SEO Spider to perform the site crawl (it's free for the first 500 URIs and £99/year after that).

Alternatively, if you want a truly free tool, you can use Xenu's Link Sleuth; however, be forewarned that this tool was designed to crawl a site to find broken links. It displays a site's page titles and meta descriptions, but it was not created to perform the level of analysis we're going to discuss.

For more information about these crawling tools, read Dr. Pete's Crawler Face-off: Xenu vs. Screaming Frog.

Crawling Configuration

Once you've chosen (or developed) a crawling tool, you need to configure it to behave like your favorite search engine crawler (e.g., Googlebot, Bingbot, etc.). First, you should set the crawler's user agent to an appropriate string.

Popular Search Engine User Agents:

Next, you should decide how you want the crawler to handle various Web technologies.

There is an ongoing debate about the intelligence of search engine crawlers. It's not entirely clear if they are full-blown headless browsers or simply glorified curl scripts (or something in between).

By default, I suggest disabling cookies, JavaScript, and CSS when crawling a site. If you can diagnose and correct the problems encountered by dumb crawlers, that work can also be applied to most (if not all) of the problems experienced by smarter crawlers.

Then, for situations where a dumb crawler just won't cut it (e.g., pages that are heavily reliant on AJAX), you can switch to a smarter crawler.

Ask the Oracles

The site crawl gives us a wealth of information, but to take this audit to the next level, we need to consult the search engines. Unfortunately, search engines don't like to give unrestricted access to their servers so we'll just have to settle for the next best thing: webmaster tools.

Most of the major search engines offer a set of diagnostic tools for webmasters, but for our purposes, we'll focus on Google Webmaster Tools and Bing Webmaster Tools. If you still haven't registered your site with these services, now's as good a time as any.

Now that we've consulted the search engines, we also need to get input from the site's visitors. The easiest way to get that input is through the site's analytics.

The Web is being monitored by an ever-expanding list of analytics packages, but for our purposes, it doesn't matter which package your site is using. As long as you can investigate your site's traffic patterns, you're good to go for our upcoming analysis.

At this point, we're not finished collecting data, but we have enough to begin the analysis so let's get this party started!


SEO Audit Analysis

The actual analysis is broken down into five large sections:

  1. Accessibility
  2. Indexability
  3. On-Page Ranking Factors
  4. Off-Page Ranking Factors
  5. Competitive Analysis

(1) Accessibility

If search engines and users can't access your site, it might as well not exist. With that in mind, let's make sure your site's pages are accessible.

Robots.txt

The robots.txt file is used to restrict search engine crawlers from accessing sections of your website. Although the file is very useful, it's also an easy way to inadvertently block crawlers.

As an extreme example, the following robots.txt entry restricts all crawlers from accessing any part of your site:

Robots.txt Example

Manually check the robots.txt file, and make sure it's not restricting access to important sections of your site. You can also use your Google Webmaster Tools account to identify URLs that are being blocked by the file.

Robots Meta Tags

The robots meta tag is used to tell search engine crawlers if they are allowed to index a specific page and follow its links.

When analyzing your site's accessibility, you want to identify pages that are inadvertently blocking crawlers. Here is an example of a robots meta tag that prevents crawlers from indexing a page and following its links:

Robots Meta Tag Example

HTTP Status Codes

Search engines and users are unable to access your site's content if you have URLs that return errors (i.e., 4xx and 5xx HTTP status codes).

During your site crawl, you should identify and fix any URLs that return errors (this also includes soft 404 errors). If a broken URL's corresponding page is no longer available on your site, redirect the URL to a relevant replacement.

Speaking of redirection, this is also a great opportunity to inventory your site's redirection techniques. Be sure the site is using 301 HTTP redirects (and not 302 HTTP redirects, meta refresh redirects, or JavaScript-based redirects) because they pass the most link juice to their destination pages.

XML Sitemap

Your site's XML Sitemap provides a roadmap for search engine crawlers to ensure they can easily find all of your site's pages.

Here are a few important questions to answer about your Sitemap:

  • Is the Sitemap a well-formed XML document? Does it follow the Sitemap protocol? Search engines expect a specific format for Sitemaps; if yours doesn't conform to this format, it might not be processed correctly.
  • Has the Sitemap been submitted to your webmaster tools accounts? It's possible for search engines to find the Sitemap without your assistance, but you should explicitly notify them about its location.
  • Did you find pages in the site crawl that do not appear in the Sitemap? You want to make sure the Sitemap presents an up-to-date view of the website.
  • Are there pages listed in the Sitemap that do not appear in the site crawl? If these pages still exist on the site, they are currently orphaned. Find an appropriate location for them in the site architecture, and make sure they receive at least one internal backlink.

Site Architecture

Your site architecture defines the overall structure of your website, including its vertical depth (how many levels it has) as well as its horizontal breadth at each level.

When evaluating your site architecture, identify how many clicks it takes to get from the homepage to other important pages. Also, evaluate how well pages are linking to others in the site's hierarchy, and make sure the most important pages are prioritized in the architecture.

Ideally, you want to strive for a flatter site architecture that takes advantage of both vertical and horizontal linking opportunities.

Flash and JavaScript Navigation

The best site architecture in the world can be undermined by navigational elements that are inaccessible to search engines. Although search engine crawlers have become much more intelligent over the years, it is still safer to avoid Flash and JavaScript navigation.

To evaluate your site's usage of JavaScript navigation, you can perform two separate site crawls: one with JavaScript disabled and another with it enabled. Then, you can compare the corresponding link graphs to identify sections of the site that are inaccessible without JavaScript.

Site Performance

Users have a very limited attention span, and if your site takes too long to load, they will leave. Similarly, search engine crawlers have a limited amount of time that they can allocate to each site on the Internet. Consequently, sites that load quickly are crawled more thoroughly and more consistently than slower ones.

You can evaluate your site's performance with a number of different tools. Google Page Speed and YSlow check a given page using various best practices and then provide helpful suggestions (e.g., enable compression, leverage a content distribution network for heavily used resources, etc.). Pingdom Full Page Test presents an itemized list of the objects loaded by a page, their sizes, and their load times. Here's an excerpt from Pingdom's results for SEOmoz:

Pingdom Results for SEOmoz

These tools help you identify pages (and specific objects on those pages) that are serving as bottlenecks for your site. Then, you can itemize suggestions for optimizing those bottlenecks and improving your site's performance.

(2) Indexability

We've identified the pages that search engines are allowed to access. Next, we need to determine how many of those pages are actually being indexed by the search engines.

Site: Command

Most search engines offer a "site:" command that allows you to search for content on a specific website. You can use this command to get a very rough estimate for the number of pages that are being indexed by a given search engine.

For example, if we search for "site:seomoz.org" on Google, we see that the search engine has indexed approximately 60,900 pages for SEOmoz:

Google site: Command for SEOmoz

Although this reported number of indexed pages is rarely accurate, a rough estimate can still be extremely valuable. You already know your site's total page count (based on the site crawl and the XML Sitemap) so the estimated index count can help identify one of three scenarios:

  1. The index and actual counts are roughly equivalent - this is the ideal scenario; the search engines are successfully crawling and indexing your site's pages.
  2. The index count is significantly smaller than the actual count - this scenario indicates that the search engines are not indexing many of your site's pages. Hopefully, you already identified the source of this problem while investigating the site's accessibility. If not, you might need to check if the site's being penalized by the search engines (more on this in a moment).
  3. The index count is significantly larger than the actual count - this scenario usually suggests that your site is serving duplicate content (e.g., pages accessible through multiple entry points, "appreciably similar" content on distinct pages, etc.).

If you suspect a duplicate content issue, Google's "site:" command can also help confirm those suspicions. Simply append "&start=990" to the end of the URL in your browser:

Google site: Example URL

Then, look for Google's duplicate content warning at the bottom of the page. The warning message will look similar to this:

Google Duplicate Content Warning

If you have a duplicate content issue, don't worry. We'll address duplicate content in an upcoming section of the audit.

Index Sanity Checks

The "site:" command allows us to look at indexability from a very high level. Now, we need to be a little more granular. Specifically, we need to make sure the search engines are indexing the site's most important pages.

Page Searches

Hopefully, you already found your site's high priority pages in the index while performing "site:" queries. If not, you can search for a specific page's URL to check if it has been indexed:

Google Example URL Search

If you don't find the page, double check its accessibility. If the page is accessible, you should check if the page has been penalized.

Rand describes an alternative approach to finding indexed pages in this article: Indexation for SEO: Real Numbers in 5 Easy Steps.

Brand Searches

After you check whether your important pages have been indexed, you should check if your website is ranking well for your company's name (or your brand's name).

Just search for your company or brand name. If your website appears at the top of the results, all is well with the universe. On the other hand, if you don't see your website listed, the site might be penalized, and it's time to investigate further.

Search Engine Penalties

Hopefully, you've made it this far in the audit without detecting even the slightest hint of a search engine penalty. But if you think your site has been penalized, here are 4 steps to help you fix the situation:

Step 1: Make Sure You've Actually Been Penalized

I can't tell you how many times I've researched someone's "search engine penalty" only to find an accidentally noindexed page or a small shuffle in the search engine rankings. So before you start raising the penalty alarm, be sure you've actually been penalized.

In many cases, a true penalty will be glaringly obvious. Your pages will be completely deindexed (even though they're openly accessible), or you will receive a penalty message in your webmaster tools account.

It's important to note that your site can also lose significant traffic due to a search engine algorithm update. Although this isn't a penalty per se, it should be handled with the same diligence as a true penalty.

Step 2: Identify the Reason(s) for the Penalty

Once you're sure the site has been penalized, you need to investigate the root cause for the penalty. If you receive a formal notification from a search engine, this step is already complete.

Unfortunately, if your site is the victim of an algorithmic update, you have more detective work to do. Begin searching SEO-related news sites and forums until you find answers. When search engines change their algorithms, many sites are affected so it shouldn't take long to figure out what happened.

For even more help, read Sujan Patel's article about identifying search engine penalties.

Step 3: Fix the Site's Penalized Behavior

After you've identified why your site was penalized, you have to methodically fix the offending behavior. This is easier said than done, but fortunately, the SEOmoz community is always happy to help.

Step 4: Request Reconsideration

Once you've fixed all of the problems, you need to request reconsideration from the search engines that penalized you. However, be forewarned that if your site wasn't explicitly penalized (i.e., it was the victim of an algorithm update), a reconsideration request will be ineffective, and you'll have to wait for the algorithm to refresh. For more information, read Google's guide for Reconsideration Requests
and Bing's guide for Getting Out of the Penalty Box.

With any luck, Matt Cutts will release you from search engine prison:

Matt Cutts Prison Guard

(3) On-Page Ranking Factors

Up to this point, we've analyzed the accessibility and indexability of your site. Now it's time to turn our attention to the characteristics of your site's pages that influence the site's search engine rankings.

For each of the on-page ranking factors, we'll investigate page level characteristics for the site's individual pages as well as domain level characteristics for the entire website.

In general, the page level analysis is useful for identifying specific examples of optimization opportunities, and the domain level analysis helps define the level of effort necessary to make site-wide corrections.

URLs

Since a URL is the entry point to a page's content, it's a logical place to begin our on-page analysis.

When analyzing the URL for a given page, here are a few important questions to ask:

  • Is the URL short and user-friendly? A common rule of thumb is to keep URLs less than 115 characters.
  • Does the URL include relevant keywords? It's important to use a URL that effectively describes its corresponding content.
  • Is the URL using subfolders instead of subdomains? Subdomains are mostly treated as unique domains when it comes to passing link juice. Subfolders don't have this problem, and as a result, they are typically preferred over subdomains.
  • Does the URL avoid using excessive parameters? If possible, use static URLs. If you simply can't avoid using parameters, at least register them with your Google Webmaster Tools account.
  • Is the URL using hyphens to separate words? Underscores have a very checkered past with certain search engines. To be on the safe side, just use hyphens.
Additional URL Optimization Resources:

When analyzing the URLs for an entire domain, here are a few additional questions:

  • Do most of the URLs follow the best practices established in the page level analysis, or are many of the URLs poorly optimized?
  • If a number of URLs are suboptimal, do they at least break the rules in a consistent manner, or are they all over the map?
  • Based on the site's keywords, is the domain appropriate? Does it contain keywords? Does it appear spammy?

URL-based Duplicate Content

In addition to analyzing the site's URL optimization, it's also important to investigate the existence of URL-based duplicate content on the site.

URLs are often responsible for the majority of duplicate content on a website because every URL represents a unique entry point into the site. If two distinct URLs point to the same page (without the use of redirection), search engines believe two distinct pages exist.

For an exhaustive list of ways URLs can create duplicate content, read Section V. of Dr. Pete's fantastic guide: Duplicate Content in a Post-Panda World (go ahead and read the entire guide - it's amazing).

Ideally, your site crawl will discover most (if not all) sources of URL-based duplicate content on your website. But to be on the safe side, you should explicitly check your site for the most popular URL-based culprits (programmatically or manually).

In the content analysis section, we'll discuss additional techniques for identifying duplicate content (including URL-based duplicate content).

Content

We all know content is king so now, let's give your site the royal treatment.

To investigate a page's content, you have various tools at your disposal. The simplest approach is to view Google's cached copy of the page (the text-only version). Alternatively, you can use SEO Browser or Browseo. These tools display a text-based version of the page, and they also include helpful information about the page (e.g., page title, meta description, etc.).

Regardless of the tools you use, the following questions can help guide your investigation:

  • Does the page contain substantive content? There's no hard and fast rule for how much content a page should contain, but using at least 300 words is a good rule of thumb.
  • Is the content valuable to its audience? This is obviously somewhat subjective, but you can approximate the answer with metrics such as bounce rate and time spent on the page.
  • Does the content contain targeted keywords? Do they appear in the first few paragraphs? If you want to rank for a keyword, it really helps to use it in your content.
  • Is the content spammy (e.g., keyword stuffing)? You want to include keywords in your content, but you don't want to go overboard.
  • Does the content minimize spelling and grammatical errors? Your content loses professional credibility if it contains glaring mistakes. Spell check is your friend; I promise.
  • Is the content easily readable? Various metrics exist for quantifying the readability of content (e.g., Flesch Reading Ease, Fog Index, etc.).
  • Are search engines able to process the content? Don't trap your content inside Flash, overly complex JavaScript, or images.
Additional Content Optimization Resources:

When analyzing the content across your entire site, you want to focus on 3 main areas:

1. Information Architecture

Your site's information architecture defines how information is laid out on the site. It is the blueprint for how your site presents information (and how you expect visitors to consume that information).

During the audit, you should ensure that each of your site's pages has a purpose. You should also verify that each of your targeted keywords is being represented by a page on your site.

2. Keyword Cannibalism

Keyword cannibalism describes the situation where your site has multiple pages that target the same keyword. When multiple pages target a keyword, it creates confusion for the search engines, and more importantly, it creates confusion for visitors.

To identify cannibalism, you can create a keyword index that maps keywords to pages on your site. Then, when you identify collisions (i.e., multiple pages associated with a particular keyword), you can merge the pages or repurpose the competing pages to target alternate (and unique) keywords.

3. Duplicate Content

Your site has duplicate content if multiple pages contain the same (or nearly the same) content. Unfortunately, these pages can be both internal and external (i.e., hosted on a different domain).

You can identify duplicate content on internal pages by building equivalence classes with the site crawl. These classes are essentially clusters of duplicate or near-duplicate content. Then, for each cluster, you can designate one of the pages as the original and the others as duplicates. To learn how to make these designations, read Section IV. of Dr. Pete's duplicate content guide: Duplicate Content in a Post-Panda World.

To identify duplicate content on external pages, you can use Copyscape or blekko's duplicate content detection. Here's an excerpt from blekko's results for SEOmoz:

blekko Duplicate Content Results for SEOmoz

HTML Markup

It's hard to overstate the value of your site's HTML because it contains a few of the most important on-page ranking factors.

Before diving into specific HTML elements, we need to validate your site's HTML and evaluate its standards compliance.

W3C offers a markup validator to help you find standards violations in your HTML markup. They also offer a CSS validator to help you check your site's CSS.

Titles

A page's title is its single most identifying characteristic. It's what appears first in the search engine results, and it's often the first thing people notice in social media. Thus, it's extremely important to evaluate the titles on your site.

When evaluating an individual page's title, you should consider the following questions:

  • Is the title succinct? A commonly used guideline is to make titles no more than 70 characters. Longer titles will get cut off in the search engine results, and they also make it difficult for people to add commentary on Twitter.
  • Does the title effectively describe the page's content? Don't pull the bait and switch on your audience; use a compelling title that directly relates to your content's subject matter.
  • Does the title contain a targeted keyword? Is the keyword at the front of the title? A page's title is one of the strongest on-page ranking factors so make sure it includes a targeted keyword.
  • Is the title over-optimized? Rand covers this topic in a recent Over-Optimization Whiteboard Friday.

When analyzing the titles across an entire domain, make sure each page has a unique title. You can use your site crawl to perform this analysis. Alternatively, Google Webmaster Tools reports duplicate titles that Google finds on your site (look under "Optimization" > "HTML Improvements").

Meta Descriptions

A page's meta description doesn't explicitly act as a ranking factor, but it does affect the page's click-through rate in the search engine results.

The meta description best practices are almost identical to those described for titles. In your page level analysis, you're looking for succinct (no more than 155 characters) and relevant meta descriptions that have not been over-optimized.

In your domain level analysis, you want to ensure that each page has a unique meta description. Your Google Webmaster Tools account will report duplicate meta descriptions that Google finds (look under "Optimization" > "HTML Improvements").

Other <head> Tags

We've covered the two most important HTML <head> elements, but they're not the only ones you should investigate. Here are a few more questions to answer about the others:

  • Are any pages using meta keywords? Meta keywords have become almost universally associated with spam. To be on the safe side, just avoid them.
  • Do any pages contain a rel="canonical" link? This link element is used to help avoid duplicate content issues. Make sure your site is using it correctly.
  • Are any pages in a paginated series? Are they using rel="next" and rel="prev" link elements? These link elements help inform search engines how to handle pagination on your site.

Images

A picture might say a thousand words to users, but for search engines, pictures are mute. Therefore, your site needs to provide image metadata so that search engines can participate in the conversation.

When analyzing an image, the two most important attributes are the image's alt text and the image's filename. Both attributes should include relevant descriptions of the image, and ideally, they'll also contain targeted keywords.

For a comprehensive resource on optimizing images, read Rick DeJarnette's Ultimate Guide for Web Images and SEO.

Outlinks

When one page links to another, that link is an endorsement of the receiving page's quality. Thus, an important part of the audit is making sure your site links to other high quality sites.

To help evaluate the links on a given page, here are a few questions to keep in mind:

  • Do the links point to trustworthy sites? Your site should avoid linking to spammy sites because it reflects poorly on the trustworthiness of your site. If a site links to spam, there's a good chance that it's also spam.
  • Are the links relevant to the page's content? When you link to another page, its content should supplement yours. If your links are irrelevant, it leads to a poor user experience and reduced relevancy for your page.
  • Do the links use relevant anchor text? Does the anchor text include targeted keywords? A link's anchor text should accurately describe the page it points to. This helps users decide if they want to follow the link, and it helps search engines identify the subject matter of the destination page.
  • Are any of the links broken? Links that return a 4xx or 5xx status code are considered broken. You can identify them in your site crawl, or you can also use a Link Checker.
  • Do the links use unnecessary redirection? If your internal links are generating redirects, you're unnecessarily diluting the link juice that flows through your site. Make sure your internal links point to the appropriate destination pages.
  • Are any of the links nofollowed? Aside from situations where you can't control outlinks (e.g., user generated content), you should let your link juice flow freely.

When analyzing a site's outlinks, you should investigate the distribution of internal links that point to the various pages on your site. Make sure the most important pages receive the most internal backlinks.

To be clear, this is not PageRank sculpting. You're simply ensuring that your most important pages are the easiest to find on your site.

Other <body> Tags

Images and links are not the only important elements found in the HTML <body> section. Here are a few questions to ask about the others:

  • Does the page use an H1 tag? Does the tag include a targeted keyword? Heading tags aren't as powerful as titles, but they're still an important place to include keywords.
  • Is the page avoiding frames and iframes? When you use a frame to embed content, search engines do not associate the content with your page (it is associated with the frame's source page).
  • Does the page have an appropriate content-to-ads ratio? If your site uses ads as a revenue source, that's fine. Just make sure they don't overpower your site's content.

We've now covered the most important on-page ranking factors for your website. For even more information about on-page optimization, read Rand's guide: Perfecting Keyword Targeting & On-Page Optimization.

(4) Off-Page Ranking Factors

The on-page ranking factors play an important role in your site's position in the search engine rankings, but they're only one piece of a much bigger puzzle. Next, we're going to focus on the ranking factors that are generated by external sources.

Popularity

The most popular sites aren't always the most useful, but their popularity allows them to influence more people and attract even more attention. Thus, even though your site's popularity isn't the most important metric to monitor, it is still a valuable predictor of ongoing success.

When evaluating your site's popularity, here are a few questions to answer:

  • Is your site gaining traffic? Your analytics package is your best source for traffic-based information (aside from processing your server logs). You want to make sure your site isn't losing traffic (and hence popularity) over time.
  • How does your site's popularity compare against similar sites? Using third party services such as Compete, Alexa, and Quantcast, you can evaluate if your site's popularity is outpacing (or being outpaced by) competing sites.
  • Is your site receiving backlinks from popular sites? Link-based popularity metrics such as mozRank are useful for monitoring your site's popularity as well as the popularity of the sites linking to yours.

Trustworthiness

The trustworthiness of a website is a very subjective metric because all individuals have their own unique interpretation of trust. To avoid these personal biases, it's easier to identify behavior that is commonly accepted as being untrustworthy.

Untrustworthy behavior falls into numerous categories, but for our purposes, we'll focus on malware and spam. To check your site for malware, you can rely on blacklists such as DNS-BH or Google's Safe Browsing API.

You can also use an analysis service like McAfee's SiteAdvisor. Here is an excerpt from SiteAdvisor's report for SEOmoz:

SiteAdvisor Results for SEOmoz

When investigating spammy behavior on your website, you should at least look for the following:

  • Keyword Stuffing - creating content with an unnaturally high keyword density.
  • Invisible or Hidden Text - exploiting the technology gap between Web browsers and search engine crawlers to present content to search engines that is hidden from users (e.g., "hiding" text by making it the same color as the background).
  • Cloaking - returning different versions of a website based on the requesting user agent or IP address (i.e., showing the search engines one thing while showing users something else).

Even if your site appears to be trustworthy, you still need to evaluate the trustworthiness of its neighboring sites (the sites it links to and the sites it receives links from).

If you've identified a collection of untrustworthy sites, you can use a slightly modified version of PageRank to propagate distrust from those bad sites to the rest of a link graph. For years, this approach has been referred to as BadRank, and it can be deployed on outgoing links or incoming links to identify neighborhoods of untrustworthy sites.

Alternatively, you can attack the problem by propagating trust from a seed set of trustworthy sites (e.g., cnn.com, mit.edu, etc.). This approach is called TrustRank, and it has been implemented by SEOmoz in the form of their mozTrust metric. Sites with a higher mozTrust value are located closer to trustworthy sites in the link graph and therefore considered more trusted.

Backlink Profile

Your site's quality is largely determined by the quality of the sites linking to it. Thus, it is extremely important to analyze the backlink profile of your site and identify opportunities for improvement.

Fortunately, there is an ever-expanding list of tools available to find backlink data, including your webmaster tools accounts, blekko, Open Site Explorer, Majestic SEO, and Ahrefs.

Here are a few questions to ask about your site's backlinks:

  • How many unique root domains are linking to the site? You can never have too many high quality backlinks, but a link from 100 different root domains is significantly more valuable than 100 links from a single root domain.
  • What percentage of the backlinks are nofollowed? Ideally, the vast majority of your site's backlinks will be followed. However, a site without any nofollowed backlinks appears highly suspicious to search engines.
  • Does the anchor text distribution appear natural? If too many of your site's backlinks use exact match anchor text, search engines will flag those links as being unnatural.
  • Are the backlinks from sites that are topically relevant? Topically relevant backlinks help establish your site as an authoritative source of information in your industry.
  • How popular/trustworthy/authoritative are the root domains that are linking to the site? If too many of your site's backlinks are from low quality sites, your site will also be considered low quality.

Authority

A site's authority is determined by a combination of factors (e.g., the quality and quantity of its backlinks, its popularity, its trustworthiness, etc.).

To help evaluate your site's authority, SEOmoz provides two important metrics: Page Authority and Domain Authority. Page Authority predicts how well a specific page will perform in the search engine rankings, and Domain Authority predicts the performance for an entire domain.

Both metrics aggregate numerous link-based features (e.g., mozRank, mozTrust, etc.) to give you an easy way to compare the relative strengths of various pages and domains. For more information, watch the corresponding Whiteboard Friday video about these metrics: Domain Authority & Page Authority Metrics.

Social Engagement

As the Web becomes more and more social, the success of your website depends more and more on its ability to attract social mentions and create social conversations.

Each social network provides its own form of social currency. Facebook has likes. Twitter has retweets. Google+ has +1s. The list goes on and on. Regardless of the specific network, the websites that possess the most currency are the most relevant socially.

When analyzing your site's social engagement, you should quantify how well it's accumulating social currency in each of the most important social networks (i.e., how many likes/retweets/+1s/etc. are each of your site's pages receiving). You can query the networks for this information, or you can use a third party service such as Shared Count.

Additionally, you should evaluate the authority of the individuals that are sharing your site's content. Just as you want backlinks from high quality sites, you want mentions from reputable and highly influential people.

(5) Competitive Analysis

Just when you thought we were done, it's time to start the analysis all over for your site's competitors. I know it sounds painful, but the more you know about your competitors, the easier it is to identify (and exploit) their weaknesses.

My process for analyzing a competitor's website is almost identical to what we've already discussed. For another person's perspective, I strongly recommend Selena Narayanasamy's Guide to Competitive Research.


SEO Audit Report

After you've analyzed your site and the sites of your competitors, you still need to distill all of your observations into an actionable SEO audit report. Since your eyes are probably bleeding by now, I'll save the world's greatest SEO audit report for another post.

In the meantime, here are three important tips for presenting your findings in an effective manner:

  1. Write for multiple audiences. The meat of your report will contain very technical observations and recommendations. However, it's important to realize that the report will not always be read by tech-savvy individuals. Thus, when writing the report, be sure to keep other audiences in mind and provide

Thursday, June 7, 2012

Corporate SEO Training Can Get Your Business Up To Speed

Every business should have a website. If your customers can't find you on the web, then you are losing out on a lot of potential sales or at least leads. That is why if you have an office here in Australia and you are still in the dark of how to make that all important online presence for your business, I'm definite our corporate SEO training can help you.

Here is a common scenario:

You build a website. You put all your great copy and product images in there. It looks amazing. However, months go by and you are not getting any visitors through it. You can't even find your website ranking in the Google search results. That's because having a nice looking site is not enough; you need the best SEO and internet marketing strategy to pull in the most number of traffic. And not just any visitors, but people who are interested in your business.

Our corporate SEO training service was just launched early this year and if you want to know more why your business needs it, read our press

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Wednesday, June 6, 2012

How To Do Keyword Optimization For Your Pages Part 2

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In our previous post, we talked about using keywords in the title tag. Below you will know the other places in your website where you should do keyword optimization.

Use the keyword in the Description Tag

The Description Tag is usually used as the descriptive text that appears below the headline in the Google search results and appears in the code, close to the Title Tag.

After the Title Tag, the Description Tag is probably the most important element of Onsite SEO. Each page should have a unique Title and Description Tag, so you should not simply copy and paste.

The Description Tag should be two to three sentences long – no longer- and here is a chance to display you copywriting skills again. Your keyword should be in the Description Tag, but should not appear more than three times. The construction of the Description Tag is different to the Title Tag

SEO Melbourne

Monday, June 4, 2012

Web Video Production In Melbourne Just Got A Lot Easier

If you are a small business owner in Melbourne and you are looking for a more cost-effective way of reaching your clients, then it is time you try video production.

The sign of the times is all over. A lot of people are spending time watching web videos, mostly on YouTube, and you'll be mad if you don't acknowledge the huge potential of videos for your business. I know what you're thinking. That creating videos is hard. Well, it used to be but we have recently launched a service, aptly named Melbourne Video Production, so you can just sit back, relax and let us do the rest for you. Professionally done and will not cost you a fortune.

Anyway, we have recently sent out a media release about this new video service. Read it and find out why your online success now lies in web videos more than ever before.

http://www.prweb.com/releases/videoproduction/melbourne/prweb9453874.htm

[caption id="attachment_7568" align="aligncenter" width="553" caption="Web video is the lowest

SEO Melbourne

Sunday, June 3, 2012

How To Do Keyword Optimization For Your Pages

Many people have the mistaken belief that Google ranks websites. That is not true – Google ranks each individual page separately. So what we prescribe here should be applied to every single page on your website, individually.

Select one keyword phrase for every webpage that you optimize and make it the primary focus. If you have several synonyms to choose from, look them up in Google’s Keyword Tool and choose the keyword phrase which receives the most traffic. You can also use closely related secondary phrases, but make sure the primary keyword remains front and centre.

This is where you should start with your keyword research, but proper selection of keywords will come with more experience. It is really a matter of combining the science and art of selection. Ultimately you want to choose the words which are being selected by your searchers who are looking to make a purchase.

One tool which can be of help here is the Market Samurai tool. They also provide free

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