#SEERQandA Recap: “I’m Stuck! SEO Questions”
SEER Interactive is a growing team of 70+ SEO, PPC, and Analytics associates. With all that talent and creativity brewing from coast to coast, it only seemed right that we share some of our knowledge with others. In an attempt to answer the world’s questions about digital marketing, Wil Reynolds and the SEER Interactive team […]
How challenger brand Tesla is Disrupting the Market
Tesla, the Californian electric car maker, is using its position as a challenger brand to disrupt the marketplace. But is its aggressive approach to PR having an impact both on and offline?
Post from James Crawford on State of Digital
How challenger brand Tesla is Disrupting the Market
Combining Social & Content to Earn Visibility & Earn $$$
Tips on how to make your content stand out; the right strategic framework for identifying content opportunities that can enable you to accomplish the right goals; and how to integrate your content directly with your social marketing efforts.
Google Tests Video Search Results Without Thumbnail Images
For the longest time, videos found within Google’s search results contained thumbnail images of a frame within the video. That is how Google has displayed richer search results, ever since the days of Universal Search. It seems like Google is testing making those video results a bit less rich…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
AdWords Scripts Grows Up With MCC Level Scripts
So far, many have dismissed AdWords scripts as a toy that you can only use for small AdWords account setups. There are some ways to build out larger script frameworks that span multiple accounts, but it is clunky and still requires you to install a sni…
Twitter profile redesign looks suspiciously similar to Facebook
A new post from www.davidnaylor.co.uk. BAZINGA!The post Twitter profile redesign looks suspiciously similar to Facebook appeared first on SEO Blog by Dave Naylor – SEO Tools, Tips & News.
Google: We Mostly Ignore Web 2.0 Links
In a Google Webmaster Help thread, Google’s John Mueller said Google mostly ignores Web 2.0 links, specifically calling out Pinterest, YouTube and others.
He wrote:
We’re already mostly ignoring those links (just like we’re ignoring the “web 2…
…
Twitter Updating Profile Page Look
Twitter announced new profile page designs are rolling out to users over the next few weeks or so. People are calling the new design, Facebook-like…
Google’s Matt Cutts: I Don’t Know 10% Of Your SEO Questions
Google’s Matt Cutts said he has to research about 10% of the SEO questions he answers on those daily videos. I always find it interesting trying to understand how complex the algorithm is. So I always wonder how much one person can know about it. No…
Pick up on Current Events for Link Building
Giving your website an active role in current events is a lot more efficient than creating media attention from scratch. Here’s how you prepare your website for future events so you can attract links with your prompt response.
Digital Data Trends – Search, Social & Content Fusion
One of the biggest challenges marketers face is understanding what to do with large amounts of data at hand. Here are some key trends that show how content, search and social (and subsequent measurement) are morphing together.
Schema.org Best Practices: Make the Most of your Markup
Find out how to implement the different types of Schema.org. At ClickZ NY, industry experts share their best practices.
Post from State of Digital on State of Digital
Schema.org Best Practices: Make the Most of your Markup
Tips for Running Promotions on Facebook
Some things social media managers need to consider and be aware of when putting their next promotion together, to ensure that you a) don’t break the law and that b) Facebook don’t unpublish your Page!
Post from Arianne Donoghue on State of Digital
Tips for Running Promotions on Facebook
Is Google About To Put Adwords Keyword Data into Darkness?
A new post from www.davidnaylor.co.uk. BAZINGA!The post Is Google About To Put Adwords Keyword Data into Darkness? appeared first on SEO Blog by Dave Naylor – SEO Tools, Tips & News.
A Peek into our Brands Newsletter: did you get it?
Take a look at the special brands newsletter which was sent out via State of Digital. With content from Dell, Lenovo, Heineken, KLM and many more.
Post from Bas van den Beld on State of Digital
A Peek into our Brands Newsletter: did you get it?
Content-Gap SEO: A Potentially Untapped Opportunity
Posted by randfish
NOTE: This post is mostly theoretical, but I hope potentially helpful and worthy of discussion.
Over the last few years, and particularly since the advent of Hummingbird, I’ve noticed Google becoming more nuanced about the content it ranks, even for queries where they don’t have lots of data on what users click, what they engage with, what they ignore, and their behavioral habits around a search (related searches, usage patterns before/after the query, etc.).
My theory is that this new intelligence presents a dramatic opportunity for marketers and content creators who can identify the patterns and spot queries where critical questions may lie unanswered.
Historically, much of what we’d see from Google’s rankings could be explained through a few big factors:
- Links
- Domain Authority
- Keyword Matching
- Relevance
- Freshness (and, certainly during Google’s partnership with Twitter, social signals)
We know Google’s become more complex, but even from 2010-2012, I’d say the vast majority of searches’ rank ordering could be explained with elements contained in these broad categories.
Today, I’m observing a lot of rankings that seem to connect with brand signals, user/usage data, and a far more nuanced consideration of links, authority, and relevance, but perhaps most uniquely, and especially in queries that have information-gathering intent, there seems to be a set of ranking signals related to what I’ll call “relevance to alternative searcher intents.”
I’ll try to illustrate this with an example. Here’s a query for ”
space pen” in Google US (non-personalized with geo-biasing removed):

There’s three potential popular “intents” that searchers have around this query.
- Those seeking Fisher’s branded Space Pen
- Those seeking to learn about the oft-repeated myth around the supposedly costly development of the Space Pen by NASA when Russian cosmonauts used pencils
- Those seeking the Spacepen framework for Coffeescript
And Google’s done a nice job recognizing those unique intents and populating the SERPs appropriately with results to answer all three. Historically I’d have called this “QDD” or “Query Deserves Diversity” (something I
first wrote about way back in 2008).
But actually, I think we’ve seen an evolution from the raw “diversity” inputs (which, in my opinion, mostly revolved around combinations of click behavior in the SERPs and search modification behavior, i.e. people searching for “space pen” then refining to search for “space pen coffeescript”) to a model that has more sophistication.
That more sophisticated model might be better illustrated with this query for ”
most flavorful steak” (also Google US, non-personalized, non-geo-biased):

There are multiple intents around this query, but they’re far more subtle than those for “Space Pen.” Searchers are likely seeking things like a description of the various types of cuts, information about what makes a steak taste better, perhaps some interesting types of steaks they haven’t heard of previously or why certain cuts are more expensive than others.
What’s remarkable is how Google has made shifts in queries like this in the last couple years. If I performed this query in 2012 (which I’m fairly sure I did, but sadly didn’t screenshot), I would have seen a lot more keyword-matching and a much more singular focus on articles that specifically mentioned “flavorful” (or fairly direct synonyms thereof) in the title and headline. Actually, it would look a lot more like
Bing’s results (no offense to them; these results are actually quite good, too, just far more keyword match-focused):

Today, from Google, I’m getting a broader interpretation of the true intent(s) behind the use of the adjective, “flavorful.”
There’s results that touch on expensive cuts of steak, of types of beef itself (like Wagyu & Kobe), on what makes a steak more flavorful, and there’s a site showing up (Niman Ranch) that seems totally out of place when you look at the link numbers, but makes a lot of sense as a highly co-cited brand name. For reference, here’s a
basic keyword difficulty report for the phrase:

My opinion (and this is pure, unvarnished, speculation) is that Google’s using inputs like:
- Relationships between words, phrases, concepts, and entities to get closer to an understanding of language and an evaluation of the content quality itself
- Patterns detected in how authoritative pieces write about/mention the keywords
- User and usage data signals that look at multiple sessions, multiple queries, and identify patterns of searcher satisfaction (possibly using machine learning)
- Topic modeling that tries to identify terms and phrases that are associated with diversity of opinion and topical focus so there’s an element of finding not just useful information, but potentially new and interesting information, too
I don’t believe these are overwhelming signals today. Links are still very powerful. Domain authority is still clearly influential. But for a lot of what I’m seeing in the end of the chunky middle and into the long tail of the keyword demand curve, I think there’s an opportunity for marketers to perform some content gap analysis and win rankings without needing the quantities of links & authority otherwise required.
Here’s my strawman concept for starting out with some Content-Gap SEO (and hopefully y’all can rip into and improve upon it in the comments):
Step One: Identify the keywords you’re targeting that fit in the backside of the chunky middle and long tail.
Step Two: Prioritize your list based on the terms/phrases you believe will be most valuable (and remember that doesn’t always mean highest search volume).
Step Three: Starting from the top, write down 4-6 types of intent and/or pieces of unique information that you believe searchers might have/want when performing each query.
Step Four: Perform the query in Google, and look through the top 10. Do you see results that answer all of the intent/info types you wrote down? Write down how many are missing (including 0 if everything’s already fulfilled).
Step Five: Use your number as a potential prioritizer for the creation of new content or the modification/addition of content to existing pages. Then watch and see if Google feels the same way and begins rewarding you for this.
While this process is speculative and my theories are, too, I will say that I have talked to and emailed with a lot of folks in the SEO field of late who’ve talked over and over about the surprise they’ve had from purely content-based rankings and rankings improvements. I might be wrong about a lot of the details, but I’d be willing to bet that there’s something new going on in how Google analyzes and rewards pages that provide the right kind of content.
For marketers who can identify the patterns, find the content gaps, and fulfill them, I believe there’s opportunity to rank without having to pound nearly the same levels of external links at your pages.
Looking forward to the discussion!
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!
Content-Gap SEO: A Potentially Untapped Opportunity
Posted by randfish
NOTE: This post is mostly theoretical, but I hope potentially helpful and worthy of discussion.
Over the last few years, and particularly since the advent of Hummingbird, I’ve noticed Google becoming more nuanced about the content it ranks, even for queries where they don’t have lots of data on what users click, what they engage with, what they ignore, and their behavioral habits around a search (related searches, usage patterns before/after the query, etc.).
My theory is that this new intelligence presents a dramatic opportunity for marketers and content creators who can identify the patterns and spot queries where critical questions may lie unanswered.
Historically, much of what we’d see from Google’s rankings could be explained through a few big factors:
- Links
- Domain Authority
- Keyword Matching
- Relevance
- Freshness (and, certainly during Google’s partnership with Twitter, social signals)
We know Google’s become more complex, but even from 2010-2012, I’d say the vast majority of searches’ rank ordering could be explained with elements contained in these broad categories.
Today, I’m observing a lot of rankings that seem to connect with brand signals, user/usage data, and a far more nuanced consideration of links, authority, and relevance, but perhaps most uniquely, and especially in queries that have information-gathering intent, there seems to be a set of ranking signals related to what I’ll call “relevance to alternative searcher intents.”
I’ll try to illustrate this with an example. Here’s a query for ”
space pen” in Google US (non-personalized with geo-biasing removed):

There’s three potential popular “intents” that searchers have around this query.
- Those seeking Fisher’s branded Space Pen
- Those seeking to learn about the oft-repeated myth around the supposedly costly development of the Space Pen by NASA when Russian cosmonauts used pencils
- Those seeking the Spacepen framework for Coffeescript
And Google’s done a nice job recognizing those unique intents and populating the SERPs appropriately with results to answer all three. Historically I’d have called this “QDD” or “Query Deserves Diversity” (something I
first wrote about way back in 2008).
But actually, I think we’ve seen an evolution from the raw “diversity” inputs (which, in my opinion, mostly revolved around combinations of click behavior in the SERPs and search modification behavior, i.e. people searching for “space pen” then refining to search for “space pen coffeescript”) to a model that has more sophistication.
That more sophisticated model might be better illustrated with this query for ”
most flavorful steak” (also Google US, non-personalized, non-geo-biased):

There are multiple intents around this query, but they’re far more subtle than those for “Space Pen.” Searchers are likely seeking things like a description of the various types of cuts, information about what makes a steak taste better, perhaps some interesting types of steaks they haven’t heard of previously or why certain cuts are more expensive than others.
What’s remarkable is how Google has made shifts in queries like this in the last couple years. If I performed this query in 2012 (which I’m fairly sure I did, but sadly didn’t screenshot), I would have seen a lot more keyword-matching and a much more singular focus on articles that specifically mentioned “flavorful” (or fairly direct synonyms thereof) in the title and headline. Actually, it would look a lot more like
Bing’s results (no offense to them; these results are actually quite good, too, just far more keyword match-focused):

Today, from Google, I’m getting a broader interpretation of the true intent(s) behind the use of the adjective, “flavorful.”
There’s results that touch on expensive cuts of steak, of types of beef itself (like Wagyu & Kobe), on what makes a steak more flavorful, and there’s a site showing up (Niman Ranch) that seems totally out of place when you look at the link numbers, but makes a lot of sense as a highly co-cited brand name. For reference, here’s a
basic keyword difficulty report for the phrase:

My opinion (and this is pure, unvarnished, speculation) is that Google’s using inputs like:
- Relationships between words, phrases, concepts, and entities to get closer to an understanding of language and an evaluation of the content quality itself
- Patterns detected in how authoritative pieces write about/mention the keywords
- User and usage data signals that look at multiple sessions, multiple queries, and identify patterns of searcher satisfaction (possibly using machine learning)
- Topic modeling that tries to identify terms and phrases that are associated with diversity of opinion and topical focus so there’s an element of finding not just useful information, but potentially new and interesting information, too
I don’t believe these are overwhelming signals today. Links are still very powerful. Domain authority is still clearly influential. But for a lot of what I’m seeing in the end of the chunky middle and into the long tail of the keyword demand curve, I think there’s an opportunity for marketers to perform some content gap analysis and win rankings without needing the quantities of links & authority otherwise required.
Here’s my strawman concept for starting out with some Content-Gap SEO (and hopefully y’all can rip into and improve upon it in the comments):
Step One: Identify the keywords you’re targeting that fit in the backside of the chunky middle and long tail.
Step Two: Prioritize your list based on the terms/phrases you believe will be most valuable (and remember that doesn’t always mean highest search volume).
Step Three: Starting from the top, write down 4-6 types of intent and/or pieces of unique information that you believe searchers might have/want when performing each query.
Step Four: Perform the query in Google, and look through the top 10. Do you see results that answer all of the intent/info types you wrote down? Write down how many are missing (including 0 if everything’s already fulfilled).
Step Five: Use your number as a potential prioritizer for the creation of new content or the modification/addition of content to existing pages. Then watch and see if Google feels the same way and begins rewarding you for this.
While this process is speculative and my theories are, too, I will say that I have talked to and emailed with a lot of folks in the SEO field of late who’ve talked over and over about the surprise they’ve had from purely content-based rankings and rankings improvements. I might be wrong about a lot of the details, but I’d be willing to bet that there’s something new going on in how Google analyzes and rewards pages that provide the right kind of content.
For marketers who can identify the patterns, find the content gaps, and fulfill them, I believe there’s opportunity to rank without having to pound nearly the same levels of external links at your pages.
Looking forward to the discussion!
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!
Not Provided Comes To Paid Search: What Will The Impact Be?
If you’re reading this, you probably already know that Google is making changes that will bring the much-maligned “(not provided)” to paid search. The AdWords world has been abuzz about the change for the past few days. The gist of the development is that when people using secure…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
SearchCap: Official: Google Brings “Not Provided” To Ads, Will Withhold Search Query Data From Paid Clicks
Below is what happened in search today, as reported on Search Engine Land and from other places across the web. From Search Engine Land: Official: Google Brings “Not Provided” To Ads, Will Withhold Search Query Data From Paid Clicks As suspected, Google is moving to secure search for…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Google Starts Blocking Access to Paid Search Keyword Data
Everyone has been concerned about the potential of Google expanding “(not provided)” to also encompass paid search. Google has confirmed that AdWords is removing the query from the referrer on ad clicks originating from SSL searches on Google.com.