Competitive Bid Opportunities Arrive On Bing To Help Advertisers Analyze Themselves Against Rivals
A new tool allows advertisers to stack themselves up against the competition, and instantly make changes where they see fit.
The post Competitive Bid Opportunities Arrive On Bing To Help Advertisers Analyze Themselves Against Rivals appeared first on …
Case Studies: Fixing Hacked Sites
Webmaster Level: All Every day, thousands of websites get hacked. Hacked sites can harm users by serving malicious software, collecting personal information, or redirecting them to sites they didn’t intend to visit. Webmasters want to fix hacked sites …
Cause I Can’t wait Until Thursday: Wayback Wednesday – If your product is GREAT it doesn’t NEED to be GOOD
I just rediscovered this post that i’ve had bookmarked for years about that you don’t need to have add ons and extra shit…pick the critical three things you want to get right and do them gr
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See All Of The New Google AdWords Updates On One Web Page
Google creates a new page that acts as a release notes document for showing advertisers the latest updates and feature releases to Google AdWords.
The post See All Of The New Google AdWords Updates On One Web Page appeared first on Search Engine Land….
Why Reviews are Hard – A look at the numbers
Reviews are hard. Particularly at Yelp. Most Americans have no desire to leave a review. When you combine that fact with fragmented market share and review site policies it becomes even more difficult. Here are some numbers to put the difficulties with Yelp in perspective. Let’s start with emailing 100 of your customers to calculate how … Continue reading Why Reviews are Hard – A look at the numbers →
Google Webmaster Tools Fetch and Render tool Includes a Submit to Index Feature for “Critical Cases”
Per SE Roundtable, there’s an interesting recap of a thread John Mueller was involved in where he discussed the uses cases for the Submit to Index feature of the Fetch and Render tool in GWMT.
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Aligning Your Blog With Business Goals
If you’re not blogging, you’re not branding. Whether you own a small mom-and-pop business or are part of a large Fortune 500 entity, your business’s blog is a great way to establish who you are to your customers (and potential customers).…
The post Aligning Your Blog With Business Goals appeared first on SeerInteractive.com.
SEO: Building Backlinks Workshop
The process of building your reputation in the eyes of the search engines continues to grow in importance and complexity. Many of the failsafe tactics of just a few years ago will not only no longer work, but may result in you moving backwards rather than forwards. The new world of link building requires creativity and ingenuity but also the ability to understand how SEO can better interact with complimentary disciplines like PR, content strategy and social media.
This course will help you navigate those changes and equip you with the strategic framework and tactical understanding to build a future-proof SEO and Link Building campaign.
32 simple SEO tips for small businesses
Think content
We rank well thanks to the content we produce. It’s the best way to make your site relevant to the terms people are searching for and to give people a reason to visit your site.
This means making sure the content on every page works as hard as it can.
Start a blog
It worked for us. It shouldn’t be done purely as an SEO play, as simply producing content to cram in keywords won’t work in the long term.
Instead, write for your audience and produce a blog that brings people to the site again and again. That’s content marketing for you.
It can be easier to write for some business types than others, but there’s generally an angle to be found. If dental clinics can find ideas for articles, so can you.

The side effect of this blogging activity is that, over time, you’ll have relevant and frequently updated content for search engines to index.
Put the customer or reader first
Don’t become obsessed with cramming every keyword you can into a blog post or product description, aim to produce relevant and interesting pages first and foremost.
Don’t write for the search engines, write for your readers.
Set up pages on social sites
Social media is a great way for small businesses to build their online presence full stop, and it’s well worth experimenting to find the sites that work best for your business.
As a first step, set up profiles with accurate contact and web address details on the major social sites.
Don’t trust agencies that promise guaranteed results
There are no easy shortcuts to rank organically. A good SEO agency will help you to rank as highly as your site can, but it simply isn’t possible to guarantee page one rankings.
Agencies promising such nonsense are likely to do more harm than good in the long term, and help to give SEO a bad name.
Also, you don’t necessarily need an agency to improve your SEO efforts.

Keep an eye on your agency’s methods
Following on from the previous point, quick results have been achieved in the past by techniques such as aggressive link building.
Even if this does work short-term, the methods used are likely to have repercussions further down the line, perhaps in the form of a Google penalty.
Keep an eye out, and if you suddenly have hundreds of inbound links from Polish tractor forums, then it’s time to worry.
Use a simple, clear URL structure
People should be able to guess the topic of a page by looking only at its URL.
Write content with a longer shelf life
This is content that doesn’t age too quickly. Unlike news-related posts, evergreen content should keep visitors coming to your site long-term.
This is great for search too, as this kind of content is more likely to rank on a long-term basis.
For example, this post on PPC landing pages was published in July 2013 but is still ranking highly for this competitive term.

Look at your competitors
Find out what the sites ranking on page one for your target keywords have done, on-site and off-site, to achieve this.
Use Google’s Keyword Planner
This is great for generating ideas for keywords and seeing how competitive they are.
In this example, we’ve used our own blog as the ‘landing page’, but you could use URLs of competitors to find new phrases to consider writing about.
This is explained in more detail here, but basically the tool will extract a bunch of keyword suggestions based on the content found via the URL you submit.

Have a strategy for internal linking
Smart use of internal linking can help you to rank for certain target keywords, as well as helping your visitors to find useful or related content.
Careful with those keywords
Keyword stuffing is something Google will spot easily. It also looks bad for visitors and affects the quality of pages.
Think of one or two keywords and phrases to target and use them naturally. Use semantically related words and phrases to avoid repetition.
Use your site search data for target keywords
The terms that people enter into your site search box can help you to identify target keywords.
This is because the keywords that people use to search within your website, for products or information, are very likely to be the same keywords they use on search engines.
Set up a Google Local listing
This is free, and an easy way to increase your presence in local search results.
Here, David Moth explains how to go about this.
Encourage customers to leave reviews on Google listings
Good reviews will help to give your result more prominence on Google.
Don’t expect quick results
SEO is a long-term strategy and may take time to produce results, especially in competitive sectors.
If you’re doing the right things, it will work in the long term.
Optimise for mobile
Google is focusing heavily on mobile optimisation, adding text and labels to mobile search results to indicate those sites which are ‘mobile-friendly’.
You need to provide the best mobile experience you can for users.

Images
Ensure your images have alt tags on them and include keywords (naturally) in the filename.
Set up Google analytics
Make sure analytics tracking code is installed – the standard version is still free and unless you have a strong reason to opt for an alternate platform this is the one you should be using.
It’s very quick and easy to install regardless of platform so it shouldn’t cost you more than 30 minutes of their time. Here’s some more detail.
Use Webmaster tools
Having a GWMT account means Google can tell you about any specific problems it’s having accessing your site.
Or if it believes your site has been hacked and delisted from the search results, view and query your links and traffic sources (according to Google), lets you submit sitemaps, tell Google how you want your site to appear in the SERPS and much more.

Use Schema markup
Schema markup is explained in more detail here, but basically it’s a way to help your site’s results stand out a little more.
It’s the difference between this:

and this…

Add useful information to you local pages
Create unique content for each physical location, but make sure it is relevant to the user.
Opening times, contact details and store address should be there, but think of other ways to make these pages more useful, such as adding images, menus, facilities on offer and so on.
Even better, create this content at a local level if possible, using store staff.
Think about UX
Google is increasingly focusing on things which affect the user experience when ranking sites – mobile optimisation, site speed and so on.
Making your site easy to use is not only good for your customers (and sales) but also helps with your SEO efforts
Optimise local pages for target local keywords
The page’s title tag should include the brand name, the keyword being targeted and the location. You should also think about this with the meta description of the page.
This should be possible to achieve without making either page or meta description come across as unnatural, as the objective remains to optimise for both users and search engines.
Find out who is linking to you
You can do this on Webmaster Tools under the ‘search traffic’ menu, as below:

Finding out who is linking, and the pages they’re linking to can help you to find out which content is working for you.
Ensure that citations, NAP listings and on-page address references are consistent
NAP (name, address, phone number) citations are a key ranking factor in local SEO and Google looks at them in a similar way to how they look at links in conventional SEO. NAP citations from relevant and authoritative websites provide more value, just like with links.
Google also recognises partial citations, so references of business name + address or address + phone number.
Write your own product descriptions
Quite often retailers are caught up with ‘samey’ product copy and certainly for branded items which are sold through various websites it can be difficult to differentiate your product copy.
I would recommend, where it is feasible, to write specific copy for each item. This is great for your own conversion rates, and also gives Google more unique content to crawl.
It doesn’t have to be quite as florid as J Peterman’s copy, but it should speak to your customers.

Track your keywords
Tracking target keywords can help you to see how your SEO efforts are working out.
If you make some changes on site or produce some content, what effect does this have on rankings?
There are plenty of paid tools to track large numbers of keywords, but at the most basic level you could track them manually with the help of a spreadsheet.
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Don’t obsess over rankings
Without wishing to contradict the previous point, it’s important to remember that search rankings are fluid and can change according to the searcher’s location, device, search history and so on.
Look for general up and down trends rather than worrying about moving every term up one or two places.
Search rankings are fluid, and can vary according to the searcher’s location, device and so on.
User reviews
It good to encourage user reviews, first and foremost to improve conversions, but also because they can help for SEO.
Keep an eye on SEO trends
Google’s algorithm changes regularly, and SEO tactics that may work now could become obsolete in the near future, just as guest blogging for links has become a no-no.
Keep an eye on Google’s Webmaster Central blog, and sites like Moz and Search Engine Land are great for keeping up with SEO trends.
Don’t rely on search traffic
Yes, you should try and rank as highly as possible, but SEO shoudn’t be chased as the expense of other channels.
Imagine what would happen if Google removed all your results – would you still have enough traffic from other sources to keep going?
We value search traffic, but we work hard on other channels too. If Google banned us from its results it would hurt, but we’d still have plenty of visits from email and social.
Being too reliant on search makes your business vulnerable to the whims of Google’s algorithm changes.
We value search traffic, but we work hard on other channels too. If Google banned us from its results it would hurt, but…
For more detail on SEO, see the comprehensive, 400 page behemoth that is the Search Engine Optimisation Best Practice Guide
Buy This Zip Code: CraveLabs Launches ‘DropIn’ Location Targeting to Help Local Businesses Reach Customers
Want to only advertise in select local zipcodes? That is now a possibility with cravelab’s new version of its loction based mobile advertising software ‘Drop In’.
Google News Title Tags & H1 Tags Should Be Consistent For Ranking
Yesterday Google News Stacie Chan and Google Webmaster Trends Analyst John Mueller hosted a Google News Publisher hangout on Google+, which was filled with great information…
Google Honors Alessandro Volta, The Inventory Of The Battery, On His 270th Birthday
Today on the Google home page throughout all Google properties worldwide is a Google Doodle, aka Google logo, remembering the life of Alessandro Volta on his 270th Birthday…
Google News Sitemap Index Count Not Accurate
Google has told us time and time again that using the site command in Google web search will not give you the accurate count of pages Google has indexed for your web site, that instead…
Facebook Product Ads
Facebook announced a new ad format yesterday called Product Ads.
Product Ads let e-commerce sites promote their products directly in Facebook. Merchants can upload their product catalog and create campaigns targeting certain products to specific audie…
No Google Panda Update In Over Four Months
It seems like Webmasters and SEOs are getting restless again, this time with the Panda update or lack there of.
The last time webmasters had an official Google Panda update was on September 25, 2014, Google Panda 4.1…
Introducing crawlbin – A Service for Testing SEO Directives and HTTP Responses
Towards the end of last year, I joined Tom Anthony in the R&D division at Distilled (you can read more about that here).
5 Techniques That May Be Killing Your Website (and SEO)
What are the most misunderstood site design and layout techniques that could be killing your website?
Innovative Marketers, Transformative Technologies – Attend MarTech in San Francisco, March 31-April 1
Next month, the community of innovators pioneering marketing technology adoption and operations will gather at MarTech: The Marketing Tech Conference. Secure your spot and save $250 by purchasing by this Saturday, February 21. Register now. Join us Mar…