If Link Building Really Is Dead, What Do We Do Now?
“He’s dead, Jim.” It’s been shouted from the rooftops, from here to Moz and every blog in between, but I guess it isn’t official until the doctor says so: Link building is dead. Depending on how much you agree with that statement, you’re somewhere in the five…
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A Mature Digital Marketing Industry Provides SEO Opportunity For Small & Ambitious Businesses
As we are approaching the end of the year, I thought it would be worth reviewing 2013 from the perspective of a UK based SEO with a diverse range of multinational clients and what opportunities lie ahead for all things SEO.
Please visit Search Engine …
SMBs Spend An Average 46% Of Marketing Budget On ‘Digital’
In October 2013, BrightLocal teamed up with ChamberOfCommerce.com to conduct an insightful piece of research into the attitudes toward and usage of Digital Marketing by SMBs (small and medium-sized businesses). (In the survey, we used the phrase “Internet or Mobile Marketing” to make it…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
How to Hire (and Keep) Digital Marketing Talent in 2014
Executives are unhappy with the skills of digital and social media team talent. A large talent gap is hurting sales, employee retention, and marketing ROI. But all hope isn’t gone. Check out these tips on hiring and keeping digital marketing talent.
SES Conference & Expo Rebrands to ClickZ Live
SEW’s sister brand, SES Conference & Expo, is undergoing a makeover and rebranding to ClickZ Live. The new conference series will be an extension of ClickZ.com and will incorporate all the many verticals that are available on the online publication.
3 Reasons Why SMBs Should Have a Website-First Marketing Strategy
Your website represents your brand, engages prospective customers, and converts your traffic into customers. Rather than prioritizing channels that drive traffic, focus on your website first, and build the rest of your marketing strategy around it.
SEO Awards: What Constitutes a Success?
Judging SEO has never been easy. This article takes a recent SEO award winner and input from leading industry experts & debates what SEO success looks like.
Post from Ned Poulter on State of Digital
SEO Awards: What Constitutes a Success?
Incisive Media To Kill SES Brand, Rename Conference “ClickZ Live”
SES — formerly Search Engine Strategies — is about to undergo another name change, this time to “ClickZ Live.” The news comes from an email that Incisive Media sent to various contributors. From the email: Tomorrow is a big day for ClickZ and its sister brands Search Engine…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Why Bad Linkbait Needs to Die: How Linkable Assets Deliver 10x More Value
Posted by Cyrus-Shepard
I hate bad linkbait, and it floods my inbox. Bad linkbait wastes our time, money, and our audience’s attention.
On the other hand, I love creating linkable assets. I also love searching the web for linkable assets and sharing them with others. Before we go any further, let’s define what we mean by linkbait, bad linkbait and linkable assets.
Linkbait: Website feature, usually content, meant to attract links for the purposes of SEO.
Bad Linkbait: Content that attracts links without adding additional value. One of the hallmark characteristics of bad linkbait is that it often rehashes the work of others, without creating anything new.
Linkable Assets: Content or features characterized by a high degree of practical utility or emotional engagement. Linkable assets often attract links over time due the high value they offer.

The SEO problem with bad linkbait
Bad linkbait is not only less effective, but it often has very real SEO consequences down the line in terms of types of links earned and the relevance of the content. In extreme examples, we’ve seen instances of poorly executed linkbait leading to Penguin-style Google penalties.
While there is no single type of bad linkbait, the following characteristics are often defining hallmarks:
- Temporary spike in linking followed by a quick drop-off
- Meant to be scalable and easy
- Off-topic or marginally relevant content
- Visitors not likely to return
- Rehashed “Top 10” Lists
- Infographics without the “info”
- Controversy for the sake of controversy
-
Commercial anchor text controlled by creator

The reason bad linkbait sucks so much energy is that you get almost no return on investment for the effort you put into it.
An example seen all the time is an infographic that is only marginally related to the subject matter of the website, such as those that Rand discussed in last week’s Whiteboard Friday. Imagine a plumbing company that makes an infographic called “10 Most Horrific Water Deaths Ever.”
- The SEO company convinced them that the keyword “water” is related to plumbing, and this will help them to rank if they can get the infographic distributed widely enough. Maybe it will, but not nearly as much as if they created something truly new that was actually related to their core business.
- The links they earn spike when they are actively pouring money and effort into sharing, but stop almost immediately after that.
- The plumbing website has no other content about “horrific water deaths,” so the topic is only marginally related.
- The links all have the same anchor text due to the widget used to embed the infographic. Google’s Penguin algorithm picks this up and penalizes them for “water” related keywords.
- After 2 weeks, traffic trickles to almost nothing. The SEO company moves onto the next infographic.
Is there an easy solution? Take the same amount of time and money spent to create 2-3 pieces of mediocre linkbait, and spend that energy creating a truly remarkable linkable asset.
How linkable assets deliver 10x the value
The great thing about linkable assets is that, when successful, they take on a life of their own and the SEO benefit can grow to 10 or even 100 times what was originally anticipated.
Good linkable assets earn repeat visits and traffic over time. Links aren’t pushed but earned in unexpected places with natural and topically relevant anchor text. Plus, when you publish valuable content actually related to your core subject matter, you help establish yourself as an authority on that topic, and more likely to appear in search results for topically relevant queries.
Because good linkable assets often earn a greater variety of links spread over time through value instead of aggressive link promotion, they are less likely to ever earn a Google penalty.
Examples of linkable assets include this worldwide guide to etiquette, this online salary calculator or even Moz’s Google Algorithm Change History.
Questions used to help identify linkable assets:
- Does it create something new?
- Does it make something easier?
- Is it likely to be used again and again?
- Does it reveal new insight or knowledge?
- Does it create something beautiful?
- Does it evoke a strong emotional response?
- Does it provide practical value?
Can linkable assets also be linkbait?
The most successful linkable assets possess the better qualities of fine linkbait. In fact, for SEO benefit, it’s essential that your linkable asset invoke a strong emotional response or be perceived as having high practical value.
This is the “sweet spot” in the middle that combines the best marketing value of linkbait with the added value of linkable assets.
Linkable assets: exemplary examples
Visual assets
Rand mentioned a good number in his recent Whiteboard Friday Why Visual Assets > Infographics, so I wanted to list a few more that offer high practical value and succeed in earning natural, highly-topical links.
Can an infographic act as a linkable asset? Yes, when it meets the requirements defined above.
This excellent Radiation Dose Chart infographic created by xkcd not only inspires awe but has been linked to thousands of times due to people wanting to share its practical utility.
Which Local Review Sites Should You Try to Get Review On? by LocalVisibilitySystem.org displays a ton of knowledge in a succinct and successful format.

Moz’s Web Developers SEO Cheat Sheet provides a visual asset we’re quite proud of.

For pure visual appeal, this Cheetah infographic by Jacob Neal is one of my all-time favorites. It stretches the boundaries of visual design and I found myself reading every word as a result.

Tools
ShareTally – Similar in function to SharedCount, ShareTally gives you a free and quick overview of important social metrics for any URL. This is one you bookmark.

Creative assets
Robby Leonardi’s Interactive Game Resume feels like playing a game and has led Robby to win multiple design awards.

Data sharing
Everyone has data if you look hard enough. Done at scale, the results can be truly outstanding.
The (not provided) Global Report aggregates data from over 5000 websites to display near real-time reporting of Google’s (not provided) keywords worldwide.

Studies
One of our favorite email providers, MailChimp, recently studied email subject line open rates. This graphic explores the effect of including a subject’s first and last name across various industries.

Moz’s own Search Engine Ranking Factors is consistently one of the most popular studies we publish.
Videos
Look no further than Wistia’s learning center for best practices on producing videos for your business. Check out this one they made on advanced video SEO with they guys from Distilled.
Endless possibilities for linkable assets
You can turn any unique knowledge into a linkable asset without shooting a video or adding fancy graphics. Think of folks like Seth Godin or Patrick McKenzie who regularly share their valuable thoughts with the world.
The key is to deliver the content in both a valuable and emotionally engaging way. If you are a talented writer, this is probably your best avenue. If not, then thinking outside the blog post box may be required.
What are your favorite examples of examplary linkable assets? Let us know in the comments below.
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SearchCap: The Day In Search, November 18, 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: Google’s Matt Cutts: Don’t Duplicate Your Meta Descriptions Google’s Matt Cutts, the head of search spam, released a video today providing an…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Creating an Experience for Your Product

In a recent post I talked about the benefits of productizing your business model along with some functional ways to achieve productization.
A product, in and of itself is really only 1/2 of what you are selling to your clients. The other 1/2 of the equation is the “experience”.
It sounds a bit “fluffy” but in my career as a service provider and in my purchasing history as a consumer the experience matters. I would even go so far as to say that in some very noticeable cases the experience can outweigh the product itself (to some extent anyways).
These halves, the product and the experience, can cut both ways.
Sometimes a product is so good that the experience can be average or even below average and the provider will still make out and sometimes the experience is so fantastic that an otherwise average or above average product is elevated to what can be priced as a premium product or service.
Let’s get a few obvious variables out of the way first. It is understood that:
- Experience matters more to some people than others
- Experience matters more in certain industries than others
- The actual product matters more to some
- The actual product matters more in some industries
If we stipulate that the 4 scenarios mentioned above are true, which they are, it still doesn’t change the basic premise that you are probably leaving revenue and growth on the table if you settle on one side or the other.
While it’s true that you can be successful even if your product to experience ratio is like a seesaw heavily weighted in one direction over the other, it is also true that you would probably be more successful if you made both the best each could be.
Defining Where Product Meets Experience
I’ll layout a couple of examples here to help illustrate the point:
- The “Big Four” in the link research tools space; Ahrefs, Link Research Tools, Majestic, and Open Site Explorer
- The two more well-known “tool/reporting suites” Raven and Moz outside of much more expensive enterprise toolkits
In my experience Ahrefs has been the best combination of product and experience, especially lately. Their dataset continues to grow and recent UI changes have made it even easier to use. Exports are super fast and I’ve had quick and useful interactions with their support staff. Perhaps it isn’t a coincidence that, from groups of folks I interact with and follow online, Ahrefs continues to pop up more often in conversation than not.
To me, Majestic and Link Research Tools are examples of where the product is really, really strong (copious amounts of data across many segments) but the UI/UX is not quite as good as the others. I realize some of this is subjective but in other comparisons online this seems to be a prevailing theme.
Open Site Explorer has a fantastic UI/UX but the data can be a bit behind the others and getting data out (exporting) is bit more of a chore than point, click, download. It seems like over a period of time OSE has had a rougher road to data and update growth than the other tools I mentioned.
In the case of two of more popular reporting and research suites, Moz and Raven, Raven has really caught up (if not surpassed) Moz in terms of UI/UX. Raven pulls in data from multiple sources, including Moz, and has quite a few more (and easier to get to and cross-reference) features than Moz.
Moz may not be interested in getting into some of the other pieces of the online marketing puzzle that Raven is into but I think it’s still a valid comparison based on the very similar, basic purpose of each tool suite.
Assessing Your Current Position
When assessing or reassessing your products and offerings, a lot of it goes back to targeting the right market.
- Is the market big enough to warrant investment into a product?
- How many different segments of a given market do you need to appeal to?
- Where’s the balance between feature bloat (think Zoho CRM) versus “good enough” functionality with an eye towards an incredible UX (think Highrise CRM)?
If the market isn’t big enough and you have to go outside your initial target, how will that affect the balance between the functionality of your product and the experience for your users, customers, or clients?
If you are providing SEO services your “functionality” might be how easy it is to determine the reports you provide and their relationship(s) to a client’s profitability or goals (or both). Your “experience” is likely a combination of things:
- The graphical presentation of your documents
- The language used in your reports and other interactions with the client
- The consistency of your “brand” across the web
- The consistency of your brand presentation (website, invoices, reports, etc)
- Client ability to access reports and information quickly without having to ask you for it
- Consistency of your information delivery (are you always on-time, late, or erratic with due dates, meetings, etc)
When you breakdown what you think is your “product” and “experience” you’ll likely find that it is pretty simple to develop a plan to improve both, rather than beating the vague “let’s do great things” company line that no one really understands but just nods at.
Example of Experience in Action
In just about every Consumer Reports survey Apple comes out on top for customer satisfaction. Apple, whether you like their products/”culture” or not, creates a fairly reliable, if not expensive, end to end experience. This is doubly true if you live near an Apple store.
If you look at laptop failure rates Apple is generally in the middle of the pack. There are other things that go into the Apple experience (using the OS and such) but part of the reason people are willing to pay that premium is due to their support options and ability to fix bugs fairly quickly.
To tie this into our industry, I think Moz is a good parallel example here. Their design is generally heralded as being quite pleasant and it’s pretty easy to use their tools; there isn’t a steep learning curve to using most of their products.
I think their product presentation is top notch, even though I generally prefer some of their competitors products. They are pretty active on social media and their support is generally very good.
So, in the case of Moz it’s pretty clear that people are willing to pay for less robust data or at least less features and options partly (or wholly) due to their product experience and product presentation.
Redesigning Your Experience
You might already have some of these but it’s worthwhile to revisit a very basic style guide (excluding audience development):
- Consistent logo and colors
- Fonts
- Vocabulary and Language Style (the tone of your brand, is it My Brand or MyBrand or myBrand, etc)
Some Additional Resources
Here are some visual/text-based resources that I have found helpful during my own redefining process:
- How to quantify user experience
- Krug’s Rocket Surgery Made Easy
- Don’t Make Me Think Revisited
- Lynda.Com Developing a Style Guide
- A free course from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania on branding and marketing
These are some of the tools you might want to use to help in this process:
- Running copy through Word for readability Scores- Office 2013
- A Windows tool that can help improve your writing- Stylewriter
- A Mac tool to help with graphics and charts- Omnigraffle
- A Windows tool to help with charts and graphics- SmartDraw
- A cloud-based presentation tool that helps the less artistically inclined (like me)- Prezi
- Online proposal software- Proposable
- A text expander for Mac, comes in handy with consistent “messaging”- TextExpander
- Windows alternative that syncs with TextExpander- Breevy
Google Blocks Child Abuse Images on 100,000 Search Terms
Google will block more than 100,000 unique search terms that could lead to the discovery of child abuse images. Google has added 200 people dedicated to finding and removing sex abuse images. Microsoft is also preparing to announce its own efforts.
Rand & Wil Answer the Newbie’s Questions: ‘What is Content’ by Our Favorite CEOs
My name is Charlotte, and I have been working in SEO for the past 2 years and still consider myself very new to the SEO world. When we were told that the CEO swap was really going to happen, I decided to put together 10 questions to ask Rand and Wil about a topic that really matters […]
Google: 25,000 Government Requests for Data in First Half of 2013
Data released by Google shows that requests rose from 21,389 to 25,879 between the second half of 2012 and the first half of 2013. In total 42,500 user accounts were targeted and Google said 65 percent of requests led to some data being given up.
Google’s Matt Cutts: Don’t Duplicate Your Meta Descriptions
Google’s Matt Cutts, the head of search spam, released a video today providing an SEO tip on meta descriptions. Matt said, do not have duplicate meta descriptions on your site. Matt said it is better to have unique meta descriptions and even no meta descriptions at all, then to show duplicate…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Google Wins Book Lawsuit: Judge Rules Digitization Service ‘Fair Use’
Google has won its eight-year battle with The Authors Guild over its Books service, with a judge ruling that Google’s use of copyrighted material was allowed under fair use. Google lets users search and view “snippets” of more than 20 million books.
After Two Years Of Broken Promises, Does Google Need To Explain More to Maintain Trust In Search?
For two years running, Google’s broken major promises about search. It began doing paid inclusion in 2012, which it once called “evil.” This year, it’s experimenting with banner ads it said would never be allowed. Both represent major philosophical shifts for the company…
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Make Way for YouTube Partner Channels in Online Video Rankings
The latest data from comScore showed that 189 million Americans, 87.1 percent of the U.S. Internet audience, watched 49.1 billion online content videos in October 2013, while the number of video ad views totaled 24.5 billion that month.
Was There A Google Update On November 14th?
Some of the automated tracking tools for detecting shifts in Google’s search results and thus showing evidence of a Google update went haywire on Thursday, November 14th.
Mozcast reported 102 degrees…
