Nearly A Year Later, Google’s Penalty Notices Remain Confusing
Nearly a year after Google’s Matt Cutts told us penalty notifications will get clearer it seems as if the notifications, in many cases, have gotten harder to understand. I spend a lot of time following penalties issued by Google through examples given to me via email, penalties publicizes on…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Dorothy Irene Height Google Logo Marks Civil Rights Leader’s 102nd Birthday
Today’s Google logo marks the 102nd birthday of civil rights leader and women’s rights activist Dorothy Irene Height. While working at the Harlem YMCA, Height became a force of the civil rights movement after meeting National Council of Negro Women (NCNW) president Mary McLeod Bethune…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Google Slaps Greece Sites With Penalties
It appears that Google has taken action on spammers, potentially link spammers, in Greece recently. Matt Cutts, Google’s head of search spam, responded on Twitter to a webmaster noticing that many websites in Greece received penalties. Matt responded saying “ah, you noticed the action…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
How Combining SEO & Usability Solves 4 Common On-Site Problems
Yes, you can make end users and search engines happy at the same time. Here’s how to implement a powerful combo of SEO and usability to conquer search ranking challenges such as getting more content above the fold, video, PDFs, and disclaimers.
A Content Marketing Manifesto: 10 Principles to Drive Creative Content
Do your guiding values and principles help drive you as you create content for your business or your clients? The basic tenets of this content marketing manifesto can help you define the context under which you make all marketing decisions.
Why PR is more important than ever for SEOs
Banning platforms such as MyBlogGuest is a bitter pill to swallow for many SEOs, but it paves the way for Digital PR!
Post from Jodie Harris on State of Digital
Why PR is more important than ever for SEOs
Getting Reviews the Right Way for Local Businesses
Posted by katemorris
It’s the bane of every business that relies on local traffic: reviews. Reviews are not new to business. We have been dealing with them in business since we had businesses and people could talk. In the last few years, we have been able to participate in the conversations that happen between consumers. Local reviews are just an extension of word of mouth marketing. It’s a permanent record of consumer’s thoughts of your business much like social media.
The worst part is having no reviews, or having reviews (GLOWING reviews) from real customers, and Yelp doesn’t show or count them. Reviews are the links of the local world. They drive new business and are imperative to growth. However, if you ask for one or incentivize their posting, they might not count.
“You shouldn’t ask your customers to post reviews on Yelp.”
“Reviews are only valuable when they are honest and unbiased … Don’t offer money or product to others to write reviews for your business or write negative reviews about a competitor. We also discourage specialized review stations or kiosks set up at your place of business for the sole purpose of soliciting reviews.”
What’s a business owner to do?!
Learn from link building
This is going to come at an odd time as link building (guest posting) is hot in the search media right now, but the link building world has been through this exact situation and local businesses can learn from it.
Don’t chase tactics. Look for inspiration from other businesses but modify ideas to your business and your users. Just like link building, if your reviews show up in a pattern, that pattern is detectable by a computer algorithm and will likely be discounted.
Anything that is pattern-based is detectable, including:
- IP address of the reviewer: Never ask for reviews from your location(s).
- Timeline: This means if a number of reviews come in together over a period of time, think all in one day or one week. It reflects that they were asked to leave a review in one big push.
- Same phrases: If many reviews use the same phrasing, it can look orchestrated.
Scale is the enemy. Along the same lines as the patterns discussion above, trying to scale reviews is going to produce detectable trends. Don’t try to go out and get reviews en masse. You need them, yes, but a slow trend is the better way to get them. This brings us to the next point: influence.
Influence and integrate
We just covered what not to do; now let’s review how to go about getting reviews that are approved, shown, and can help grow your business. Just like links, reviews are best when they are placed there without your interaction, but that doesn’t mean you should ignore the matter completely. Businesses can influence people to leave reviews. Influence, not entice or coerce. Influence with communication.
Guaranteed reviews: knock down, drag-out fantastic customer service
This is the one solid way to get reviews without ever having to mention the word review. I’m talking Zappos, Nordstrom, and Amazon level of customer service. You treat your customers—all of them—like they are kings and queens. Give them no choice but to tell people about you. The following is a review for one of my favorite food trucks in Seattle:

This is a long time investment though and I know not everyone has the time or thinks about leaving reviews. You can’t make great customer service happen IRL sometimes, it’s not always you in control. Regardless, this is still the best long-term solution.
But businesses have immediate needs, so here is how to address getting more reviews now.
Define your customer lifecycle
The key is laying out the standard lifecycle of a customer. I am going to pick on a favorite local business that inspired this post: Dreamclinic Seattle. The blue is online interaction, purple is in-person interaction. You can get more color coded with medium (email, organic, yellow pages, etc.) but I went with simple.

The main point of outlining the customer lifecycle is to see the cycle part of it and realize you have more than one opportunity to influence a review. Most businesses that rely on reviews have a customer lifecycle. If you haven’t defined yours, do that now.
Integrate with all email marketing
1. Define email contact points
Once you have the customer lifecycle, add in when you normally contact your customers via email. You want to know when they are already online and thinking about you (this is key to online engagement!). There should be a few opportunities like newsletters, offers, post-purchase, post-visit, and confirmations. It doesn’t matter if you are selling a good or a service, there should be communication throughout the customer lifecycle.
2. When will the customer be in the right frame of mind to leave a review?
Now consider when the customer is going to be able to write the best review. Sometimes it’ll be almost immediately after the purchase, sometimes a few weeks after. For example: Dreamclinic needs to have a “Drink water!” reminder email an hour after a massage with a mention of social media and scheduling the next appointment (the mentions being side thoughts and the water being the main purpose).
3. Communicate for something other than a review.
Once you know when the best time is, line that up with a communication with the customer that is not about a review. Find another reason to get a hold of them. It can be a customer service survey or just a check in about their purchase. In this email, don’t attempt to sell them anything, be genuinely interested in how they are feeling. If you get a reply (an engaged customer), then be sure to mention (one-on-one) that you would appreciate a review.
Notice that this whole process is basically identifying people that want to leave a review, are engaged with your brand, and are conversing with you individually. There is nothing about scale here; it’s all about identifying people individually and helping them help your business.
Mention social media in all communication
Beyond email, you should be mentioning your best converting and favorite social media outlets for your business to your customers. Not for reviews, but for engagement. Reviews will come with engagement.
Start with the questions:
- Where do you get the most community involvement?
- Are you a new business? If so, where do your competitors see more engagement?
List those places, don’t just use Facebook and Twitter because you “should.” Once you know your top converting communities, mention them to your customers in all parts of the life cycle. Think about your business cards, mailers, receipts, the chalkboard outside, your menu, and more. Check out some inspiration I found from Heidi Cohen.
Remember, mention your online communities and integrate the mentions into the whole lifecycle, and the reviews will roll in naturally.
Speaking of local search issues, have you heard about the new Moz Local?
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!
Analyzing your audience
About three weeks ago, I wrote a post about the necessity of knowing your audience. We ourselves are currently investigating our audience. We asked our newsletter readers to fill out a questionnaire. After we have collected the results of our survey, I started analyzing the results. It has been a great week for me! In…
This post first appeared on Yoast. Whoopity Doo!
Trust is the Most Valuable Currency Online, Is It Your Top Priority?
Trust has been a factor in the human economy forever. On the web, trust is at a premium. Smart businesses will focus substantial effort on creating trust for themselves via search engines, social media, and online reviews.
Why You Run with Spammers
Google may always be on the losing side in the propaganda wars it wages if only because the sheer weight of numbers is against Googlers’ collective voice. Recent research suggests that large groups’ decision-making processes are influenced by two important…
Google Logo All Stripes? It’s Abstract Art For Agnes Martin Birthday
Today’s Google Doodle, Google logo, is for the 102nd birthday of Agnes Martin. That is why the logo looks like stripes or big vertical lines. Agnes Martin…
An Open Letter to Matt Cutts, Eric Schmidt, et. al.
In light of Google’s FUD move to make an example of Ann Smarty’s high-profile MyBlogGuest site with an unfounded penalty, as well as a manual penalty leveled against his own website, Doc Sheldon po
read more
Agnes Martin Google Logo Celebrates Abstract Painter’s 102nd Birthday
Today’s Google logo marks what would have been the 102nd birthday of abstract painter Agnes Martin, adding another female to the list of women Google has honored on its homepage this year. Born in Canada, Martin spent much of her career first in New York City, and then New Mexico. She is best…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
What Do Users Really Think Of The New Google Design?
When Google started testing the new look for its search results pages which ditches the shading behind the ads and replaces it with yellow “ad” icons, contradictory outcries of this sort began popping up, “Ad click-through rates are going to plummet because the ads are too obvious…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
SearchCap: The Day In Search, March 21, 2014
Below is what happened in search today, as reported on Search Engine Land and from other places across the web. From Search Engine Land: How To Tell Search Engines What “Entities” Are On Your Web Pages Search engines have increasingly been incorporating elements of semantic search to…
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Matt Cutts: If You Have Multiple Breadcrumbs, Google Picks the First One
How should you structure your breadcrumb navigation if a product or an article belongs in multiple categories of your website? “If you do breadcrumbs, we will currently pick the first one,” says Google’s Matt Cutts.
How To Tell Search Engines What “Entities” Are On Your Web Pages
Search engines have increasingly been incorporating elements of semantic search to improve some aspect of the search experience — for example, using schema.org markup to create enhanced displays in SERPs (as in Google’s rich snippets). Elements of semantic search are now present at…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
AdWords Brings Keyword Bid Simulator Estimates Into Reporting Columns
With a handy new set of columns, Google is bringing the AdWords bid simulator into fuller view. From the keyword tab, advertisers can now add several columns to their reporting from the new Bid simulator section offered in the Customize Columns menu. A range of bid simulator estimates can then be…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Optimize your offline marketing online: lessons from Planet Fitness
This brings us to lesson one…
1: If you’re going to use offline marketing, make sure you’re ready to receive online interest
The Planet Fitness commercials go after a demographic who are reluctant to be active and/or have had a bad gym experience.
Even if this commercial sparks their interest, they probably won’t go straight to the front desk of their nearest Planet Fitness.
Likelier than not, they’ll go online to research or look for reviews. Naturally, after these commercials, they’ll be wondering: Why is planet fitness not a gym? What’s gymtimidation? What’s a lunk?
The same (bad) thing happens when you search for any of these queries.

The number one result is a Men’s Health article, “Planet Fitness Is Not a Gym,” subtitled, “And it’s stupid to keep pretending it is.” It’s not a complimentary article.
It isn’t until the fourth result that we see Planet Fitness’s domain. The result is the About Us page, which goes to show that there’s no preferred landing page to receive these queries.
What Planet Fitness should have done (and what you should do to optimize your offline marketing efforts) is the following:
- Start tracking and monitoring keywords that could become popular because of your offline campaign. Think about what viewers will remember and what they will be skeptical about. Generate variations of those queries and begin to refine them as results come in.
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Create preferred landing pages for important queries. People are going to have questions about your brand, especially if you’re galvanizing them with an offline marketing campaign. While you don’t have to create a landing page for every question, an FAQ page probably won’t rank with the answer.
A good preferred landing page will rank well and move your target audience down the buyer’s journey and closer to a purchase decision.
2: Control your video assets.
What a hilarious planet fitness ad I just saw on TV! I think I’ll go watch it again.

The first video result was uploaded by YouTube user “JasonHadley1” months before the official Planet Fitness channel got around to it.
Planet Fitness, number two on the SERP for its own asset, is losing social equity for its channel. It’s losing likes, plus ones, and other social signals.
Try any number of similar “Planet Fitness commercial” queries, you’ll see that the Planet Fitness account is consistently outranked or not present at all.
Given that 96% of consumers find video useful when buying online, it’s crucial to protect these assets.
Here’s what Planet Fitness should have done (and you should do to optimize your offline marketing efforts):
- Be the first to upload your video. Make sure it’s optimized with a memorable phrase or action from your video. That way, you get maximal social equity for your channel and you have more control over commenting and engagement.
- Consider self-hosting your video. By hosting the video on your site, you get valuable traffic and natural links right to your domain. (More on the benefits of self-hosted videos here.)
People are turning more and more to the web to do research before a purchase (particularly the couch potato demographic). Not only that, if an offline marketing campaign has spurred a consumer to investigate online, they’re in a later stage of the buyer’s journey.
It’s just commonsense: if you start a conversation offline, be ready to continue it online. Get the most out of your offline marketing campaigns by carefully coordinating online collateral.
Interview with “chief web guy at Lenovo” Ajit Sivadasan, speaker at RIMC 2014
For RIMC 2014 we talked to Ajit Sivadasan of Lenovo about his job, his talk at RIMC and his expectations of Iceland
Post from Bas van den Beld on State of Digital
Interview with “chief web guy at Lenovo” Ajit Sivadasan, speaker at RIMC 2014