SearchCap: The Day In Search, December 16, 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: The 2013 Bing Infographic In Text Format: Bing Indexes A Lot Of Social Content Bing posted their 2013 highlights on…
The 2013 Bing Infographic In Text Format: Bing Indexes A Lot Of Social Content
Bing posted their 2013 highlights on the Bing Search Blog, summarizing some key statistics they wanted to share with everyone. They did it as an infographic, I wonder what Google would think about that? Here is the infographic stats in bullet format fo…
Google’s Matt Cutts: 25-30% Of The Web’s Content Is Duplicate Content & That’s Okay
Matt Cutts, Google’s head of search spam, posted a video today about duplicate content and the repercussions of it within Google’s search results. Matt said that somewhere between 25% to 30% of the content on the web is duplicative. Of all the web pages and content across the internet,…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Google Webmaster Tools Adds Debugging Support in Structured Data Dashboard
Google now will show you any errors or problems with your structured data that Google encounters while crawling the website. Users can click on each content type to see any relevant errors they may have made in their implementation.
Anglo Rank Promises To Rebuild After Google Link Penalty
As many of you remember, Anglo Rank was penalized outwardly by Google, as Google keeps targeting more and more link networks.
Shortly after, some customers began receiving Google penalties and the owner of Anglo Rank has been reversing link orders s…
Google Asks Searchers: Did You Find This Ad Useful?
We’ve seen this before on the organic and paid side, where Google explicitly asks the searcher, did they find the ad or the search result useful. Instead of using actions to measure, in this case…
Backlinks.com: The Next Link Network Penalized By Google
Google’s head of search spam, Matt Cutts, publicly outed on Twitter another link network that Google has penalized. Matt Cutts’ new trend is the share a link from the marketing material of the link network and then add a word or two to say the opposit…
Google Maps Mobile With Google Now Cards
Google announced on Google+ that Google Maps for iOS and Android now support Google Now like features.
If you have upcoming flights, hotel reservations, dining dates, and so forth, you will see the Google Now cards directly in your Google Maps app…
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Google: It’s Not About How Much Or How Many…
Google’s John Mueller gave the typical Google line at this Google Webmaster Help there – quality over quantity…
Throwing shit against the wall and seeing what sticks, this week’s DistilledLive video
How do you know what kind of content will resonate with your audience?
In this week’s DistilledLive, content strategist Hannah Smith explains the importance of trying different ideas in order to see which ones have the most impact.
Google Buys Company That Designs Robots for Military
Google has bought military robotics firm Boston Dynamics as part of a series of deals edging the firm closer to a future of robotics products and services. Google’s intentions remain top secret for eight recent robotics acquisitions.
Microsoft Photosynth Creator Agüera y Arcas Joining Google
Last night the NY Times reported that the man primarily responsible for Microsoft’s Photosyth product, Blaise Agüera y Arcas, is joining Google. Agüera y Arcas is not simply an engineer or technician, he offers a rare combination of technical expertise, design and product vision. Agüera y…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
62% Of Marketers Say Local Search Is Getting Harder
During the recent InsideLocal webinar series, I’ve had the chance to gather the opinions and feelings of the hundreds of search agencies, consultants, “in-bound” marketeers and business owners who logged in to listen. We ran a number of on-the-spot surveys (or polls) during each…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
From Old School to New School: SEO in Transition
SEO is growing up and can no longer operate in a silo. Successful SEO efforts will be one component of a larger marketing plan, but an important and integrated component of that plan. Act now and grab an edge over many of your competitors.
Google Squashes Backlinks.com, Another Link Network Outed By Google’s Matt Cutts
Matt Cutts, Google’s head of search spam, announced on Twitter that Google has gone after another link network, this one is named Backlinks.com. Like with Anglo Rank, the link network Google outed the week prior, Matt Cutts took a line from their marketing material and then said “Au…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Default Campaign Settings In AdWords — The Good, The Bad & The Ugly
Fellow SEM experts, how many times has this happened to you? A newbie joins your company (or a company with which your SEM agency is working) and is convinced that he is an SEM master. He’s read a few SEM books, attended a conference or two, and gone through the AdWords tutorials, after all….
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Best Rates for SMX West End Saturday – Register Now, Save $300
Optimize your paid search, SEO and internet marketing campaigns. Attend SMX West in San Jose, CA March 11-13. Register before rates increase this Saturday. Build your own program by selecting from any of the 60 tactic-rich sessions including: Long-term…
5 Predictions About Real-Time Bidding in 2014
If 2013 wasn’t the year of RTB, 2014 has absolute potential to be the year advertisers and publishers get onboard and start using display inventory to its full potential. Here are five advancements and changes we should expect in the RTB space.
What were the most significant developments for SEO in 2013?
What have the most significant developments been for SEO in the last 12 months?
Julia Logan, Irish Wonder:
Most people will probably say it’s the complete loss of keyword data from Google, but that was coming and we all knew it would eventually get to this.
What seems more striking to me, however, is Google admitting its helplessness in some verticals to an extent where it just introduced handpicked whitelists of what can rank in those verticals.
Dr Pete Meyers, Marketing Scientist at Moz:
Not to be unoriginal, but I think [not provided] has to lead the list for me. While good SEOs take a broad perspective, keywords are still a big part of our job, and this one really hurt.
As a tool provider, it’s reshaped many of our conversations. That’s good and bad, but it was certainly jarring. I think Google’s radical push to redefine mobile has changed our world much more than we know.
It’s terrified of how mobile consumption could (and has) impact ad revenue, and mobile features are now leading desktop features. It’s a big shift in direction that will have profound implications next year.
Kevin Gibbons, UK MD at Blueglass:
The integration of SEO being driven by marketing strategy has been the biggest shift I’ve seen. I wrote about how agency models are changing earlier in the year and we’ve seen lots of people edge away from SEO over the last year.
This is not so much because SEO isn’t important anymore, (as long as there’s organic search is sending traffic/sales it’s always going to be valuable), but as the lines become more blurred SEO is now more commonly being viewed, quite rightly, as a single channel within a wider strategy.
Andrew Girdwood, Media Innovations Director at LBi:
There has been very many but the one which feels most important has been the changing numbers among the SEO tribes.
This isn’t a scientifically researched observation but my perception is that the number of agency and in-house SEOs who embrace the earned model with outreach, engagement, content, editorial pitches now outnumber those who cling to the more ‘traditional’ model of process based link building.
A number of developments are responsible for that swing. I’d suggest it’s the combination of Panda (to identify bad content), Penguin (to punish you for too many links from bad content) combined with Google being more transparent or verbose about action that has caused this change.
Will Critchlow, Founder and CMO at Distilled:
I’d call out three things that are significant in different ways:
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The rapid change to 100% (not provided). Although the writing was on the wall before this year, it was easy to believe that Google would find some way not to take away the last shreds of organic keyword data.
I don’t buy the public reasons given for the change or like the alternatives they talk about. I think this is almost purely an anti-competitive play.
- Hummingbird has had a negligible impact on actual search marketing strategies (at least for anyone who had been looking to the future before it dropped). It deserves a mention though as we believe it will be ultimately as significant as the changes enabled by the Caffeine update. You can see more of our thoughts on this in this video discussion.
- Google’s ongoing PR offensive and treatment of businesses under penalty has continued through 2013 and has really started reaching the mainstream marketing consciousness. We’re seeing fewer requests for the shady stuff. Previously we would see a lot and we would have to talk them out of it, now fewer businesses are keen to go down that route.

Teddie Cowell, Director of SEO, Mediacom:
Hummingbird was a major overhaul of the underlying algorithms that power Google and an important milestone in the evolution of search. Instead of being based on design concepts that were around over 10 years ago, the new infrastructure is designed to enable Google to evolve and do want they want in the next ten years.
The key components of Hummingbird are its ability to understand information better and return ‘answers’ to questions much more quickly.
It also opens up the possibility for a more natural ‘conversational’ style interaction with Google search, which will be required to break out of the current search box paradigm and enable hands free search experiences on mobile and Google Glass etc.
Matthew Barnes, SEO Executive at Stickeyes:
There’s been a lot of discussion over the last 12-months about keyword data being made unavailable to the masses, making it more difficult for SEO marketers to define and set the most effective strategy for their clients across unbranded keywords.
This challenge will force agencies to work smarter and more closely with their insights, content, social, paid search and strategic insight teams.
However, the most unappreciated changes are yet to come. Recently many Google users have experienced the paid search results which look almost identical to organic results.

This, combined with various other elements such as knowledge graph, in depth articles and news, is starting to take the attention away from organic search, increasing the competitiveness to grab the all-important click-through.
Richard Baxter, CEO at SEOGadget:
Developments in SEO have very obviously been fuelled by changes to the way Google’s working. I think I have to reflect on how my agency has changed in the past 12 months to answer this question.
We started the year, pretty much like any other agency – building links with mostly articles and infographics, cranking out audit work, keyword research, all the usual things you’d expect, with a bit of bespoke consulting for more difficult projects with a sprinkling of USP for good measure.
Then, this thing happened – we decided we wanted to enjoy the work a little more beyond simply ‘building quality links for rankings’. At the same time, and somewhat fortuitously, Google were starting to really grind away at low quality link profiles, penalising sites left right and centre.
I think our evolution is clearly tracking in response to how SEO has been pushed to develop in the last 12 months. We have such a general content marketing, revenue led focus to the work we do and that’s definitely because of Google.
We’re not an industry of link builders anymore. We’re an industry of aspiring marketers, longing to find that sweet spot between attracting hundreds of links to our clients sites while converting the traffic generated to our new assets into sales.
It sounds an awful lot like advertising and I think that we’re looking at the big ad agency guys in some detail for inspiration on our company structure, creative capabilities and marketing channels.
One Easy Way to Jumpstart Your Creativity and Become a Better Writer
I wanted to share this concept today because it’s something that has helped me out a lot since I first read about it over the summer. If you can work this practice into your writing routine, even somewhat regularly, you’ll become a better writer over time, and clear up some much needed head space to […]