SearchCap: The Day In Search, December 10, 2013
Below is what happened in search today, as reported on Search Engine Land and from other places across the web. From Search Engine Land: It’s True! Bing Ads Allows Use Of Exclamation Mark In Ad Titles After reading the news yesterday that Bing Ads has made a change to its Editorial Guidelines…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
It’s True! Bing Ads Allows Use Of Exclamation Mark In Ad Titles
After reading the news yesterday that Bing Ads has made a change to its Editorial Guidelines prohibiting third-party sellers from appearing as an original brand, I noticed this notation in the change log from November: We have removed the restriction o…
SMX West Super Early Bird Rates Expire Next Week – Register Now & Save!
Join the most accomplished search marketers in the world at SMX West, March 11-13 in San Jose, CA. Check out the agenda, featuring three days of tactic packed sessions, the highest-level networking anywhere, and much more. Six in-depth workshops offere…
Google’s Matt Cutts: Guest Blogging Abuse & Spam On The Rise
Google’s Matt Cutts posted a video today on the things one should avoid when doing guest blogging. The main point he made was that guest blogging, on a whole, is “growing” in terms of the spam and abuse he sees in the guest blogging space. Now, if you are guest blogging, Matt…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Yahoo Tells SEC: 31% Of Our Revenue Comes From Microsoft
Yahoo has revealed in a US Securities & Exchange Commission filing that nearly one-third of its revenue last quarter — 31% — came from its search deal with Microsoft, according to a Bloomberg report. That’s far higher than the “more than 10%” figure Yahoo…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Checklist and videos for mobile website improvement
Webmaster Level: Intermediate to Advanced
Unsure where to begin improving your smartphone website? Wondering how to prioritize all the advice? We just published a checklist to help provide an efficient approach to mobile website improvement. Several topics in the checklist link to a relevant business case or study, other topics include a video explaining how to make data from Google Analytics and Webmaster Tools actionable during the improvement process. Copied below are shortened sections of the full checklist. Please let us know if there’s more you’d like to see, or if you have additional topics for us to include.
Step 1: Stop frustrating your customers
- Remove cumbersome extra windows from all mobile user-agents | Google recommendation, Article
- JavaScript pop-ups that can be difficult to close.
- Overlays, especially to download apps (instead consider a banner such as iOS 6+ Smart App Banners or equivalent, side navigation, email marketing, etc.).
- Survey requests prior to task completion.
- Provide device-appropriate functionality
- Remove features that require plugins or videos not available on a user’s device (e.g., Adobe Flash isn’t playable on an iPhone or on Android versions 4.1 and higher). | Business case
- Serve tablet users the desktop version (or if available, the tablet version). | Study
- Check that full desktop experience is accessible on mobile phones, and if selected, remains in full desktop version for duration of the session (i.e., user isn’t required to select “desktop version” after every page load). | Study
- Correct high traffic, poor user-experience mobile pages
How to correct high-traffic, poor user-experience mobile pages with data from Google Analytics bounce rate and events (slides)
- Make quick fixes in performance (and continue if behind competition) | Business case
To see all topics in “Stop frustrating your customers,” please see the full Checklist for mobile website improvement.
Step 2: Facilitate task completion
- Optimize crawling, indexing, and the searcher experience | Business case
- Unblock resources (CSS, JavaScript) that are robots.txt disallowed.
- Implement search-engine best practices given your mobile implementation:
- Responsive design: Be sure to include CSS
@mediaquery. - Separate mobile site: Add
rel=alternate mediaandrel=canonical, as well asVary: User-AgentHTTP Header which helps Google implement Skip Redirect. - Dynamic serving: Include
Vary: User-AgentHTTP header.
- Responsive design: Be sure to include CSS
- Optimize popular mobile persona workflows for your site
How to optimize popular mobile workflows using Google Webmaster Tools and Google Analytics (slides)
Step Three: Convert customers into fans!
- Consider search integration points with mobile apps | Announcement, Information
- Brainstorm new ways to provide value
- Build for mobile behavior, such as the in-store shopper. | Business case
- Leverage smartphone GPS, camera, accelerometer.
- Increase sharing or social behavior. | Business case
- Consider intuitive/fun tactile functionality with swiping, shaking, tapping.
Written by Maile Ohye, Developer Programs Tech Lead
9 Easy Ways to Build Links
The techniques being used today to build links to a website have certainly evolved along the constant evolution of search. And apparently, the growth of search as well as the increase in competitiveness led to the birth of many creative, advanced and scalable link building tactics.
However, this doesn’t mean that we have to ignore the basics – knowing that “advanced” is just being really good at the basics.
The post 9 Easy Ways to Build Links appeared first on Kaiserthesage.
Majestic SEO Adds Live Rank Factors & New Link Prospecting to Search Explorer Alpha
Majestic SEO has released an update to their Search Explorer Alpha tool, which now includes live rank factors and a new link prospecting methodology designed to help users surface relevant content from sites likely to be influential on a topic.
Google+ Launches Social Ad Called +Post to Appear Across Display Network
Google+ has launched (in beta) its own social ad called “+Post.” The feature allows brands to promote their Google+ posts across the Google Display Network, in order to attract traffic back to the brand’s page on Google+.
Google Adds Earned Actions in AdWords Reporting for YouTube Advertisers
Google has added several new columns to Adwords reporting for video advertisers, to help them better understand the impact of their ads. Earned views, earned view rate, and earned subscribers are a few of the metrics now available for video ads.
Visitors, Visits, Pageviews, and Clicks – The Breakdown
It’s amazing to take a step back and look at the plethora of different people that are using analytics solutions such as Google Analytics. They cover all kinds of roles and backgrounds: IT, marketing, creative. Many organizations are only just realizing the importance of online (and now offline) measurement, which often means that they don’t […]
Majestic Search Launches Live Rank Factors
Majestic SEO take one more step towards the Search Engines with the announcement of Majestic Search Live Ranking Factors
Post from Jackie Hole on State of Digital
Majestic Search Launches Live Rank Factors
Behind The Scenes of Google Data Centers
Sometimes I think we all take for granted the power & physical space it takes to run Google.
Here is a great image gallery of Google’s Data Centers:
read more
The Actual Impact of PPC on Sales [Case Study]
PPC almost always drives incremental traffic to a website and some of those visitors are likely to convert. Most assume that more visits mean more sales and that fewer visits mean fewer sales. This case study illustrates the true value of PPC visits.
7 Reasons Your Blog Sucks & How to Fix It
It can be difficult to publish engaging, informative and high quality content on a regular basis. If you’re making publishing sporadically, spamming readers with self-promotion, or making another one of these mistakes, your blog just might suck.
International Website Rollouts Don’t Have To Break The Bank
Rolling out a website to new markets might seem like an expensive and daunting task, but there are ways to scale global expansion without breaking the bank.
Post from Gemma Birch on State of Digital
International Website Rollouts Don’t Have To Break The Bank
4 Lessons From a Year of MozCast Data
Posted by BenMorel86
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 Moz, Inc.
We all know that over the past year, there have been some big updates to Google’s algorithms, and we have felt what it has been like to be in the middle of those updates. I wanted to take a big step back and analyse the cumulative effects of Google’s updates. To do that, I asked four questions and analysed a year of MozCast data to find the answers.

Looking back over the last year – or more precisely the last 15 months through 1st September 2013 – I aimed to answer four questions I felt are really important to SEOs and inbound marketers. These questions were:
- Are there really more turbulent days in the SERPs than we should expect, or are all SEOs British at heart and enjoy complaining about the weather?
- If it’s warmer today than yesterday, will it cool down tomorrow or get even warmer?
- It sometimes feels like big domains are taking over the SERPs; is this true, or just me being paranoid?
- What effects have Google’s spam-fighting had on exact and partial domain matches in SERPs?
Before We Start
First, thanks to Dr. Pete for sending me the dataset, and for checking this post over before submission to make sure all the maths made sense.
Second, as has been discussed many times before on Moz, there is a big caveat whenever we talk about statistics: correlation does not imply causation. It is important not to reverse engineer a cause from an effect and get things muddled up. In addition, Dr. Pete had a big caveat about this particular dataset:
“One major warning – I don’t always correct metrics data past 90 days, so sometimes there are issues with that data on the past. Notably, there was a problem with how we counted YouTube results in November/December, so some metrics like “Big 10” and diversity were out of whack during those months. In the case of temperatures, we actively correct bad data, but we didn’t catch this problem early enough…
All that’s to say that I can’t actually verify that any given piece of past data is completely accurate, outside of the temperatures (and a couple of those days have been adjusted). So, proceed with caution.”
So, with that warning, let’s have a look at the data and see if we can start to answer those questions.

Analysis: MozCast gives us a metric for turbulence straight away: temperature. That makes this one of the easier questions to answer. All we need to do is to take the temperature’s mean, standard deviation, skew (to see whether the graph is symmetric or not), and kurtosis (to see how “fat” the tails of the curve are). Do that, and we get the following:
| Mean | 68.10°F |
| Standard Deviation | 10.68°F |
| Skew | 1.31 |
| Kurtosis | 2.60 |
What does all this mean? Well:
- A normal day should feel pretty mild (to the Brits out there, 68°F is 20°C). The standard deviation tells us that 90% of all days should be between 46°F and 90°F (8°C and 32°C), which is a nicely temperate range.
- However, the positive skew means that there are more days on the warm side than the cool side of 68°F.
- On top of this, the positive kurtosis means we actually experience more days above 90°F than we would expect.
You can see all of this in the graph below, with its big, fat tail to the right of the mean.

Graph showing the frequency of recorded temperatures (columns) and how a normal distribution of temperatures would look (line).
As you can see from the graph, there have definitely been more warm days than we would expect, and more days of extreme heat. In fact, while the normal distribution tells us we should see temperatures over 100°F (38°C) about once a year we have actually seen 14 of them. That’s two full weeks of the year! Most of those were in June of this year (the 10th, 14th, 18th, 19th, 26th, 28th, 29th to be precise, coinciding with the multi-week update that Dr. Pete wrote about)
And it looks like we’ve had it especially bad over the last few months. If we take data up to the end of May the average is only 66°F (19°C), so the average temperature over the last three months has actually been a toasty 73°F (23°C).
Answer: The short answer to the question is “pretty turbulent, especially recently”. The high temperatures this summer indicate a lot of turbulence, while the big fat tail on the temperature graph tells us that it has regularly been warmer than we might expect throughout the last 15 months. We have had a number of days of unusually high turbulence, and there are no truly calm days. So, it looks like SEOs haven’t just been griping about the unpredictable SERPs they’ve had to deal with, they’ve been right.

Analysis: The real value of knowing about the weather is in being able to make predictions with that knowledge. So, if today’s MozCast shows is warmer than yesterday it would be useful to know whether it will be warmer again tomorrow or colder.
To find out, I turned to something called the Hurst exponent, H. If you want the full explanation, which involves autocorrelations, rescaled ranges, and partial time series, then head over to Wikipedia. If not, all you need to know is that:
- If H<0.5 then the data is anti-persistent (an up-swing today means that there is likely to be a down-swing tomorrow)
- If H>0.5 the data is persistent (an increase is likely to be followed by another increase)
- If H=0.5 then today’s data has no effect on tomorrow’s
The closer H is to 0 or 1 the longer the influence of a single day exists through the data.
A normal distribution – like the red bell curve in the graph above – has a Hurst exponent of H=0.5. Since we know the distribution of temperatures with its definite lean and fat tails not normal, we can guess that its Hurst exponent probably won’t be 0.5. So, is the data persistent or anti-persistent?
Well, as of 4th September that answer is persistent: H=0.68. But if you’d asked on 16th July – just after Google’s Multi-week Update but before The Day The Knowledge Graph Exploded – the answer would have been “H=0.48, so neither”: it seems that one effect of that multi-week update was to reduce the long-term predictability of search result changes. But back in May, before that update, the answer would again have been “H=0.65, so the data is persistent”.
Answer: With the current data, I am pretty confident in saying that if the last few days have got steadily warmer, it’s likely to get warmer again tomorrow. If Google launches another major algorithm change, we might have to revisit that conclusion. The good news is that the apparent persistence of temperature changes should give us a few days warning of that algo change.

Analysis: We’ve all felt at some point like Wikipedia and About.com have taken over the SERPs. That we’re never going to beat Target or Tesco despite the fact that they never seem to produce any interesting content. Again, MozCast supplies us with a couple of ready-made metrics to analyse whether or not this is true or not: Big 10 and Domain Diversity.
First, domain diversity. Plotting each day’s domain diversity for the last 15 months gives you the graph below (I’ve taken a five-day moving average to reduce noise and make trends clearer).

Trends in domain diversity, showing a clear drop in the number of domains in the SERPs used for the MozCast.
As you can see, domain diversity has dropped quite a lot. It dropped 16% from 57% in June 2012 to 48% in August 2013. There were a couple of big dips in domain diversity – 6th May 2012, 29th September 2012, and 31st January 2013 – but really this seems like a definite trend, not the result of a few jumps.
Meanwhile, if we plot the proportion of the SERPs being taken over by the Big 10 we see a big increase over the same period, from 14.3% to 15.4%. That’s an increase of 8%.

Trends in the five-day moving average of the proportion of SERPs used in the MozCast dataset taken up by the daily Big 10 domains.
Answer: The diversity of domains is almost certainly going down, and big domains are taking over at least a portion of the space those smaller domains leave behind. Whether this is a good or bad thing almost certainly depends on personal opinion: somebody who owns one of the domains that have disappeared from the listings would probably say it’s a bad thing, Mr. Cutts would probably say that a lot of the domains that have gone were spammy or full of thin content so it’s a good thing. Either way, it highlights the importance of building a brand.

Analysis: Keyword-matched domains are a rather interesting subject. Looking purely at the trends, the proportion of listings with exact (EMD) and partial (PMD) matched domains is definitely going down. A few updates in particular have had an effect: One huge jolt in December 2012 had a particular and long-lasting effect, knocking 10% of EMDs and 10% of PMDs out of the listings; Matt Cutts himself announced the bump in September 2012; and that multi-week update that cause the temperature highs in June also bumped down the influence of PMDs.

Trends in the five day moving averages of Exact and Partial Matched Domain (EMD and PMD) influence in the SERPs used in the MozCast dataset.
Not surprisingly, there is a strong correlation (0.86) between changes in the proportion of EMDs and PMDs in the SERPs. What is more interesting is that there is also a correlation (0.63) between their 10-day volatilities, the standard deviation of all their values over the last 10 days. This implies that when one metric sees a big swing it is likely that the other will see a big swing in the same direction – mostly down, according to the graph. This supports the statements Google have made about various updates tackling low-quality keyword-matched domains.
Something else rather interesting that is linked to our previous question is the very strong correlation between the portion proportion of PMDs in the SERPs and domain diversity. This is a whopping 0.94, meaning that a move up or down in domain diversity is almost always accompanied by a swing the same way for the proportion of SERP space occupied by PMDs, and vice versa.
All of this would seem to indicate that keyword matching domains is becoming less important in the search engines’ eyes. But hold your conclusions-drawing horses: this year’s Moz ranking factors study tells us that “In our data collected in early June (before the June 25 update), we found EMD correlations to be relatively high at 0.17… just about on par with the value from our 2011 study”. So, how can the correlation stay the same but the number of results go down? Well, I would tend to agree with Matt Peters‘ hypothesis in that post that it could be due to “Google removing lower quality EMDs”. There is also the fact that keyword matches do tend to have some relevance to searches: if I’m looking for pizzas and I see benspizzzas.com in the listings I’m quite likely to think “they sound like they do pizzas – I’ll take a look at them”. So domain matches are still relevant to search queries, as long as they are supported by relevant content.
So, how can the correlation stay the same but the numbers of results drop? Well, the ranking factors report looks at how well sites rank once they have already ranks. If only a few websites with EMDs rank but they rank very highly, the correlation between rankings and domain matching might be the same as if a number of websites rank way down the list. So if lower quality EMDs have been removed from the ranking – as Dr. Matt and Dr. Pete speculate – but the ones remaining rank higher than they used to, the correlation coefficient we measure will be the same today in 2011.
Answer: The number of exact and partial matches is definitely going down, but domain matches are still relevant to search queries – as long as they are supported by relevant content. We know about this relevance because brands constantly put their major services into their names: look at SEOmoz (before it changed), or British Gas, or HSBC (Hong Kong-Shanghai Banking Corporation). Brands do this because it means their customers can instantly see what they do – and the same goes for domains.
So, if you plan on creating useful, interesting content for your industry then go ahead and buy a domain with a keyword or two in. You could even buy the exact match domain, even if that doesn’t match your brand (although this might give people trust issues, which is a whole different story). But if you don’t plan on creating that content, buying a keyword-matched domain looks unlikely to help you, and you could even be in for a more rocky ride in the future than if you stick to your branded domain.

Whew, that was a long post. So what conclusions can we draw from all of this?
Well, in short:
- Although the “average” day is relatively uneventful, there are more hot, stormy days than we would hope for
- Keyword-matched domains, whether exact or partial, have seen a huge decline in influence over the last 15 months – and if you own one, you’ve probably seen some big drops in a short space of time
- The SERPs are less diverse than they were a year ago, and the big brands have extended their influence
- When EMD/PMD influence drops, ERP diversity also drops. Could the two be connected?
- If today is warmer than yesterday, it’s likely that tomorrow will be warmer still
What are your thoughts on the past year? Does this analysis answer any questions you had – or make you want to ask more? Let me know in the comments below (if it does make you ask more questions I’ll try to do some more digging and answer them).
Sign up for The Moz Top 10, a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don’t have time to hunt down but want to read!
Can We Write About That? An Interview With Content Strategist Kim Stiglitz
I’m always on the hunt for people who are doing content marketing really well. It’s inspiring to find sites that are taking this whole process to heart. It also acts as a great resource anytime I need to boost my own creativity during this ongoing hunt for the perfect piece of content.
New: The MozCast Feature Graph – Tracking Google’s Landscape
Posted by Dr-Pete
Over the last year-and-a-half of tracking Google’s daily “weather”, it’s become painfully clear to me that there’s much more to future-proofing your SEO than just the core algorithm. From Knowledge Graph to In-depth articles, Google is launching new features faster than ever, and pages with nothing but ten blue links will soon be a memory.
So, we started working on a way to track how features change over time, and today I’m happy to announce the launch of the MozCast Feature Graph. It looks a little something like this:

Three tools in one
The Feature Graph is really three tools in one. The top graph shows a 30-day history of four major groups of features: Ads, Local, Knowledge Graph, and Verticals. The legend is color-coded to the bars at the bottom, which show the current density of each feature and the day-over-day change for that feature. So, for example, “Adwords (Top)” in the graph above shows that 77.9% of the queries tracked by MozCast displayed ads at the top the last time we checked them.
The third tool is my favorite, and the one that probably delayed this project the most. I’ve attempted to put some of the power of the raw data into your hands, and we’ve created a mini laboratory to find and preview SERPs.
The SERP mini-lab
Let’s say you’re looking for a SERP that has a Knowledge Graph entry, image results, and shopping results. Just check on the boxes next to those three features. As you add each feature, you’ll see the “Matched Queries” box populate with a list of search terms:

Click on any of those queries, and you’ll be taken to the corresponding Google search (parameterized to match the original capture as closely as possible). For example, if I click on “vespa”, I get the following:

You can see the paid product placements and Knowledge Graph on the right, as well as the image results after the third organic listing. Note that these links are to live SERPs on Google.com – in some cases, the page may be slightly different from the one we visited the night before. This is especially true of AdWords placements, which can vary considerably from visit to visit.
When you select a feature or set of features, you don’t just get sample queries – the 30-day graph at the top changes to match your search:

The lines on the graph now show the trends for each of the individual features you’ve selected. You can mouse over any point for the exact percentage on that day.
Bonus feature: new ads
There’s one feature that works a bit differently than the rest. We’ve started tracking the prevalence of Google’s new AdWords format, which is in large-scale testing but not fully live yet. The “New Ad Format” feature tracks the percentage of ads using the new format across the queries that displayed ads (not the entire query set). Please note that the new ad format is only rolled out for some users, so the search/preview function won’t work properly (you may see the old ads). I’ve added this feature simply to track the roll-out over time.
Some technical notes
The Feature Graph is powered by the MozCast 10K, a set of 10,000 queries across 20 industry categories. Half of the MozCast 10K is delocalized and half is locally targeted (1,000 keywords each to 5 major cities). Local SEO features are measured only from the local data (5,000 total queries). All results are depersonalized.
A few thank-yous
I’d like to thank the inbound engineering team (Casey, Devin, and Shelly) for their help making this a reality, and our design leads, Daan and Derric, for hashing out a few ideas with me. Special thanks to Devin, who had the thankless job of translating my old-school PHP into something Moz-friendly that won’t break 50 times/day.
Have fun with it
The Google SERP Feature Graph is live as of last night. This data has powered quit a few insights and blog posts over the past few months, and I’m excited to release it to the public. My hope is that people will use the tool to surface new SERP combinations and make their own discoveries. Let me know what you find.
Editor note: We had non-launch related outage of Mozcast around 12:30am PST, 12/10/13, if you had errors then. Service has been completely restored at 1:20am PST, and the new features are working. Enjoy.
Sign up for The Moz Top 10, a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don’t have time to hunt down but want to read!
Search Reputation Management Advice for ORM Professionals
Of all people whom one might expect to keep a squeaky clean online profile, I would say that anyone engaged in search reputation management marketing or social media brand management should be included in that relatively small class. Everyone has some dirty laundry in their past. Dig deep enough and you’ll find I was once engaged in pretty nasty flame wars over … books. At the time it was a consuming passion, defending myself against lies from people who really didn’t matter to me. The reputation I built from that period followed me around for years. Occasionally I still run across some obscure nitwit who repeats the lies that were written about me. But I set about the hard task of putting all that nastiness (not participating in it any more) behind me many years ago. It helps that some of the hard core liars have died and can no longer work their evil against me or anyone else. But I cannot take back the words I wrote, the nasty things I said, or recover the good will I lost among people who once respected my opinion … about books. I didn’t realize it at the time but that experience […]