Google Shows Site Name Instead Of URL Above Title
Google seems to be testing a new interface for their search results.
Instead of showing the URL of the page, Google is showing the name of the site. They’ve done this before, in 2011 but never above the title of the search result…
Google Looks Funky On IE11 Windows 8.1
There are dozens of complaints in the Google Web Search Help forums from those running Windows 8.1 and running Internet Explorer 11. They are saying that Google looks all weird and runs in legacy mode.
Here is a picture from one user of the search re…
Google’s Matt Cutts: Strong vs. Bold Are Treated The Same For Ranking
Google’s Matt Cutts posted a video explaining that the bold and strong HTML tags are treated the same for ranking and SEO purposes.
He is surprised people still use bold over strong but from an SEO and ranking perspective…
Brand Link Building – URL Misspellings
Wil Reynolds recently spoke on Content Ideation + Links for the Lazy Marketer at the Conductor C3 Conference; here he mentioned a brand URL misspelling strategy I had done with one of my clients. This strategy was a quick and easy way to acquire quality links as well as protect a specific brand. In this […]
Searcher Personas: A Case for User-Centric SEO
Today’s SEO is about understanding the user and how they explore search queries. User-centricity is a must for successful SEO and persona building is an important step; Guillaume Bouchard offers guidance on the creation of searcher personas.
5 Ways To Make Your Client Kickoff Meeting A Success
When we moved to agile marketing for our internal process, it changed the way we think. Instead of finding any resources that were available, we had dedicated teams that worked on a smaller number of clients. Instead of working against a 12-month marke…
Majestic SEO Launches Search Explorer; SEO Link Tool Through Keyword Search
Majestic SEO, a popular link explorer tool for SEOs and webmasters, announced the launch of Search Explorer. Search Explorer is a search engine they designed to allow SEOs and webmasters to search by keyword or phrase, and the results would be ranked by Majestic SEO’s own linkage metrics. The…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
10 simple responsive WordPress themes for small businesses and blogs
To clarify, I haven’t tried out all of these themes but I’ve opted for examples that offer a decent user experience and have scored high reviews from site owners.
For more information on this topic check out our post on how to write irresistible headlines and also my article on what I learned from writing more than 1,000 blog posts for Econsultancy…
DW Minion
This free theme offers a very clean, simple layout and supports several different blog post formats.
It also supports a range of social features allowing you to emphasise social sharing.

Blogify
Blogify offers a clean, flat design that has advanced options to allow users to fully customise their site.
It supports all the usual social widgets and looks terrific, which is why it will set you back $35.

Koresponsive
Koresponsive is a free theme that comes with a range of customisable options. It has scored nine out of 10 from more than 85 reviews.
The headlines on the demo site are a bit too small for my liking, but that’s probably something that can be altered in the management panel.

Hiero
Hiero is another simple theme that is perfect for a magazine or portfolio. Users can download it for free after they’ve shared the site via social.

WallPress
Opting for a Pinterest-style layout, WallPress has an emphasis on imagery that means users can potentially create a really good-looking site.
It is available free of charge and also has a social feed that brings all social content together in one place.

Pandora
This magazine theme costs $45 to download, but it looks very professional and has some additional features that aren’t available on the free themes.
Pandora comes with unlimited colour schemes, sidebars, contact forms and many other features, and also allows users to write review-style posts that support rich formats in search results.

Jade
Jade is a pricey option as it costs $45 plus you need to purchase the Genesis framework in order for things to work properly, which will set you back an extra $59.95.
However the site looks great, particularly on mobile, and has loads of customisable features so could be worth the investment.

Magnifique
This free theme is the perfect option for bloggers who want a stripped-down, simple layout.
It offers very little functionality, so is really only for people who want a hassle-free blogging platform.

Nordic
Nordic is aimed at artists but its simple layout could also be used for other portfolio or blogging sites. It costs $40 and of course comes with a range of customisable options.

Tiny
Another incredibly simple theme that would suit single author blogs. Tiny comes with 11 different themes and is available for free in return for a tweeting a link to the site.

Demographics and Interests: Coming to a Google Analytics Profile Near You
Learn how to access and activate interest, age and geo audience reporting in Google Analytics. Columnist Carrie Hill guides marketers through set-up and reporting with these new Google Analytics features, currently rolling out to a wider user base.
Google Logo Doubles As Parachute Game Before Answering The Question: When Was The First Parachute Jump?
The Google logo team has been busier than usual this week. After celebrating salsa singer Celia Cruz yesterday, today’s Google logo includes an interactive image to mark the first parachute jump. Performed by Andre-Jacque Garnerin on October 22, 1797, the jump occurred 216 years ago at Parc…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Majestic SEO to Build a Pure Link-Based Search Engine
Majestic 12, the UK company behind Majestic SEO, has announced its intention to expand in the search space with a new product, called Search Explorer
Post from Bas van den Beld on State of Digital
Majestic SEO to Build a Pure Link-Based Search Engine
How B2B Advertisers Can Use Q4 to Dominate Q1
Q4 doesn’t have to be a wasteland. Till the soil of this fertile time of year so that your crops in Q1 will be bigger and better! This list of tactics will help make you as highly visible to your audience as possible now to ramp up sales in Q1.
Say Hello to Fresh Alerts: New Mentions and Link Notifications in Your Inbox
Posted by Cyrus-Shepard
Imagine a product similar to Google Alerts, only much better. It’s built specifically for marketers and SEOs. This product not only finds mentions of your keywords and brand, but also reports new links to any website or URL you choose. It comes equipped with advanced search operators to discover new opportunities, and its exportable metrics are sortable by both date and Feed Authority.
To top it all off, it now alerts you via email whenever it finds something new.
Announcing Fresh Alerts from Fresh Web Explorer
For the past few months we’ve enjoyed using Fresh Web Explorer, which has quickly become my favorite new marketing tool. Since then, our engineers and developers have been working to add email alerts to the mix to vastly improve its value.

Starting today, when you use Fresh Web Explorer, you can now set up alerts for up to 10 queries of your choice. The emails are sent daily whenever anything new is discovered. Because Fresh Web Explorer refreshes its index every 8 hours, this means you can be notified of new links and mentions literally within hours after they appear on the web.
When you run a query in Fresh Web Explorer, you have the opportunity to create an alert based on that search.

One key feature is the ability to set your timezone. This helps tailor the reporting specific to your area of the world, so the alerts are more relevant to you.
Fresh Alerts for SEO and inbound marketing
I’ve had the opportunity to beta-test Fresh Alerts for two months, and I can say without hesitation that it’s literally changed the way I do SEO and inbound marketing. We also tested the product with 1,000 Moz beta users, and the feedback has showcased the variety of ways folks are using Fresh Alerts.
1. Link building
While we built Fresh Alerts as a mentions tool, it does a remarkably good job at helping to build links through the process of link reclamation. By using the built-in search operators, you can set your alerts to find non-linking mentions of your brand or keywords on the web.
For example, if I want to search for folks who mention MozRank (a Moz branded term) but don’t include a link to Moz, I’d set up my Fresh Alert like this:
mozrank –rd:moz.com (mentions of Mozrank that don’t link to the root domain moz.com)

With this alert set, every day I would get a new Fresh Alert in my inbox with a list of mentions. Looking at the number of non-linking mentions above, I’d better get link building!
2. Reputation management
Using Fresh Alerts, you can easily be notified whenever anyone mentions you name or brand on the web. Hopefully the information is positive which gives you the opportunity to open a relationship or simply stay on top of the information. If negative, you can reach out and try to mitigate the damage.
Here’s a Fresh Alert email set up for mentions of Rand Fishkin. (In this case, only included mentions that don’t link to moz.com are included.)

You could also use reputation-based alerts to send daily emails to your clients and monitor the conversation about your brand across the web.
3. Competitive intelligence
You can easily set up Fresh Alerts to notify you when your competition is in the news. Better yet, use the search operators to notify you when specific media outlets mention your competition.
In the example below, FEW shows us whenever “Amazon” is mentioned specifically on TechCrunch.

You can also monitor when and where your competitors earn new links. For example, if you wanted to set up a link alert for yourcompetition.com, simply use the Root Domain search operator, like so:
rd:yourcompetition.com (alerts for all new links to the root domain)
By understanding how your competitors earn links and mentions, you may discover new opportunities that are easy to replicate.
4. Reporting and content performance
This is a tip I don’t hear people talk about, so I thought I’d share it. Whenever we publish a big piece of content here at Moz, I set up a Fresh Alert to notify me whenever someone mentions it.
For example, we recently published the 2013 Search Engine Ranking Factors. Because this was an important piece of content for us, I set up 2 different Fresh Alerts:
- One Fresh Alert notified me whenever people mentioned “Search Engine Ranking Factors” but didn’t link to Moz
-
Another alert to tell me when people linked to the report itself
In the first example, I can reach out to those people who mentioned us without linking to see if I can start a relationship and possibly earn a link.
In the second example, as seen in the graph below, I can monitor our link-building efforts.

5. Discover publishing and guest-post opportunities
Fresh Alerts has to be one of the easiest ways to find distribution, publishing and guest-post opportunities for your content. Yes, high-quality guest posting, when combined with quality content and smart placement, remains a powerful tactic when integrated with other marketing opportunities.
For example, let’s say your subject is “dragons” and you want to find blogs that have posted guest posts in the past few days. You can simply create an alert for “dragons” AND “guest post”.

This alert will notify you whenever a new post is published mentioning both “guest post” and “dragons”.
This technique isn’t limited to guest posting, either. Getting creative, you could find other publishing opportunities for your specific niche.
The details
Starting now, we’ve made Fresh Alerts available to subscribers of Moz Analytics. If you’re not a PRO member, you can sign up for a 30-day trial to give them a spin if you’d like, which also includes access to our new Moz Analytics and full suite of inbound marketing tools.
Here’s what you need to know about Fresh Alerts:
- Activate up to 10 Alerts per Moz Analytics account
- When Fresh Web Explorer finds new mentions or links, you receive an email within 24 hours
- Alerts are sorted by Feed Authority, our new metric created specifically for FWE
- All advanced operators used by Fresh Web Explorer are available with Fresh Alerts
Have you tried Fresh Web Explorer already? If so, let us know your best ideas for Fresh Alerts in the comments below.
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SEO: An Important Part of the Bigger Picture
Although the internet is the most important business development of the past 50 years, an astounding number of companies still don’t know the first thing about marketing themselves online. To be honest though, why should they? Jack Daniels was doing just fine before all this talk of branded micro-sites and integrated marketing campaigns came along […]
Post from Matt Beswick on State of Digital
SEO: An Important Part of the Bigger Picture
URL Canonicalisation: How to Diagnose & Rectify Errors
A couple of months back, I provided some advice for an article on TheNextWeb entitled ‘How to Improve Your Site’s SEO’, which focused on providing tips for small businesses. One of the tips I provided here was for individuals to check and ensure that their domain resolves at the correct URL, something that us SEOs refer to […]
Post from Ned Poulter on State of Digital
URL Canonicalisation: How to Diagnose & Rectify Errors
A [Poorly] Illustrated Guide to Google’s Algorithm
Posted by Dr-Pete
Like all great literature, this post started as a bad joke on Twitter on a Friday night:

If you know me, then this kind of behavior hardly surprises you (and I probably owe you an apology or two). What’s surprising is that Google’s Matt Cutts replied, and fairly seriously:

Matt’s concern that even my painfully stupid joke could be misinterpreted demonstrates just how confused many people are about the algorithm. This tweet actually led to a handful of very productive conversations, including one with Danny Sullivan about the nature of Google’s “Hummingbird” update.
These conversations got me thinking about how much we oversimplify what “the algorithm” really is. This post is a journey in pictures, from the most basic conception of the algorithm to something that I hope reflects the major concepts Google is built on as we head into 2014.
The Google algorithm
There’s really no such thing as “the” algorithm, but that’s how we think about it—as some kind of monolithic block of code that Google occasionally tweaks. In our collective SEO consciousness, it looks something like this:

So, naturally, when Google announces an “update”, all we see are shades of blue. We hear about a major algorithm update ever month or two, and yet Google confirmed 665 updates (technically, they used the word “launches”) in 2012—obviously, there’s something more going on here than just changing a few lines of code in some mega-program.
Inputs and outputs
Of course, the algorithm has to do something, so we need inputs and outputs. In the case of search, the most fundamental input is Google’s index of the worldwide web, and the output is search engine result pages (SERPs):

Simple enough, right? Web pages go in, [something happens], search results come out. Well, maybe it’s not quite that simple. Obviously, the algorithm itself is incredibly complicated (and we’ll get to that in a minute), but even the inputs aren’t as straightforward as you might imagine.
First of all, the index is really roughly a dozen data centers distributed across the world, and each data center is a miniature city unto itself, linked by one of the most impressive global fiber optic networks ever built. So, let’s at least add some color and say it looks something more like this:

Each block in that index illustration is a cloud of thousands of machines and an incredible array of hardware, software and people, but if we dive deep into that, this post will never end. It’s important to realize, though, that the index isn’t the only major input into the algorithm. To oversimplify, the system probably looks more like this:

The link graph, local and maps data, the social graph (predominantly Google+) and the Knowledge Graph—essentially, a collection of entity databases—all comprise major inputs that exist beyond Google’s core index of the worldwide web. Again, this is just a conceptualization (I don’t claim to know how each of these are actually structured as physical data), but each of these inputs are unique and important pieces of the search puzzle.
For the purposes of this post, I’m going to leave out personalization, which has its own inputs (like your search history and location). Personalization is undoubtedly important, but it impacts many areas of this illustration and is more of a layer than a single piece of the puzzle.
Relevance, ranking and re-ranking
As SEOs, we’re mostly concerned (i.e. obsessed) with ranking, but we forget that ranking is really only part of the algorithm’s job. I think it’s useful to split the process into two steps: (1) relevance, and (2) ranking. For a page to rank in Google, it first has to make the cut and be included in the list. Let’s draw it something like this:

In other words, first Google has to pick which pages match the search, and then they pick which order those pages are displayed in. Step (1) relies on relevance—a page can have all the links, +1s, and citations in the world, but if it’s not a match to the query, it’s not going to rank. The Wikipedia page for Millard Fillmore is never going to rank for “best iPhone cases,” no matter how much authority Wikipedia has. Once Wikipedia clears the relevance bar, though, that authority kicks in and the page will often rank well.
Interestingly, this is one reason that our large-scale correlation studies show fairly low correlations for on-page factors. Our correlation studies only measure how well a page ranks once it’s passed the relevance threshold. In 2013, it’s likely that on-page factors are still necessary for relevance, but they’re not sufficient for top rankings. In other words, your page has to clearly be about a topic to show up in results, but just being about that topic doesn’t mean that it’s going to rank well.
Even ranking isn’t a single process. I’m going to try to cover an incredibly complicated topic in just a few sentences, a topic that I’ll call “re-ranking.” Essentially, Google determines a core ranking and what we might call a “pure” organic result. Then, secondary ranking algorithms kick in—these include local results, social results, and vertical results (like news and images). These secondary algorithms rewrite or re-rank the original results:

To see this in action, check out my post on how Google counts local results. Using the methodology in that post, you can clearly see how Google determines a base set of rankings, and then the local algorithm kicks in and not only adds new features but re-ranks the original results. This diagram is only the tip of the iceberg—Bill Slawski has an excellent three-part series on re-ranking that covers 40 different ways Google may re-rank results.
Special inputs: penalties and disavowals
There are also special inputs (for lack of a better term). For example, if Google issues a manual penalty against a site, that has to be flagged somewhere and fed into the system. This may be part of the index, but since this process is managed manually and tied to Google Webmaster Tools, I think it’s useful to view it as a separate concept.
Likewise, Google’s disavow tool is a separate input, in this case one partially controlled by webmasters. This data must be periodically processed and then fed back into the algorithm and/or link graph. Presumably, there’s a semi-automated editorial process involved to verify and clean this user-submitted data. So, that gives us something like this:

Of course, there are many inputs that feed other parts of the system. For example, XML sitemaps in Google Webmaster Tools help shape the index. My goal it to give you a flavor for the major concepts. As you can see, even the “simple” version is quickly getting complicated.
Updates: Panda, Penguin and Hummingbird
Finally, we have the algorithm updates we all know and love. In many cases, an update really is just a change or addition to some small part of Google’s code. In the past couple of years, though, algorithm updates have gotten a bit more tricky.
Let’s start with Panda, originally launched in February of 2011. The Panda update was more than just a tweak to the code—it was (and probably still is) a sub-algorithm with its own data structures, living outside of the core algorithm (conceptually speaking). Every month or so, the Panda algorithm would be re-run, Panda data would be updated, and that data would feed what you might call a Panda ranking factor back into the core algorithm. It’s likely that Penguin operates similarly, in that it’s a sub-algorithm and separate data set. We’ll put them outside of the big, blue oval:

I don’t mean to imply that Panda and Penguin are the same—they operate in very different ways. I’m simply suggesting that both of these algorithm updates rely on their own code and data sources and are only periodically fed back into the system.
Why didn’t Google just re-write the algorithm to account for the Panda and/or Penguin intent? Part of it is computational—the resources required to process this data are beyond what the real-time infrastructure can probably handle. As Google gets faster and more powerful, these sub-algorithms may become fully integrated (and Panda is probably more integrated than it once was). The other reason may involve testing and mitigating impact. It’s likely that Google only updates Penguin periodically because of the large impact that the first Penguin update had. This may not be a process that they simply want to let loose in real-time.
So, what about the recent Hummingbird update? There’s still a lot we don’t know, but Google has made it pretty clear that Hummingbird is a fundamental rewrite of how the core algorithm works. I don’t think we’ve seen the full impact of Hummingbird yet, personally, and the potential of this new code may be realized over months or even years, but now we’re talking about the core algorithm(s). That leads us to our final image:

Image credit for hummingbird silhouette: Michele Tobias at Experimental Craft.
The end result surprised even me as I created it. This was the most basic illustration I could make that didn’t feel misleading or simplistic. The reality of Google today far surpasses this diagram—every piece is dozens of smaller pieces. I hope, though, that this gives you a sense for what the algorithm really is and does.
Additional resources
If you’re new to the algorithm and would like to learn more, Google’s own “How Search Works” resource is actually pretty interesting (check out the sub-sections, not just the scroller). I’d also highly recommend Chapter 1 of our Beginner’s Guide: “How Search Engines Operate.” If you just want to know more about how Google operates, Steven Levy’s book “In The Plex” is an amazing read.
Special bonus nonsense!
While writing this post, the team and I kept thinking there must be some way to make it more dynamic, but all of our attempts ended badly. Finally, I just gave up and turned the post into an animated GIF. If you like that sort of thing, then here you go…

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SearchCap: The Day In Search, October 21, 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: Bing Ads Accredited? Get Updated Badges And Certificates You may have noticed, Microsoft rolled out new branding fo…
Bing Ads Accredited? Get Updated Badges And Certificates
You may have noticed, Microsoft rolled out new branding for Bing and Bing Ads over the past month. Now, that new look has carried over to the Bing Ads Accredited Professional program. Updated certificates and badges are available for use on your websit…
New PPC Login Required: Bing Ads Moves To Microsoft Account Logins Starting Today
Bing Ads users may start seeing a new screen at login asking them to sign in with a Microsoft account, in much the same way AdWords users are required to have a Google account. Once you make the switch, you’ll need to use your Microsoft account name and password to access Bing Ads and Bing…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Bing Webmaster Tools Adds Smart Search Page Preview Tool
Bing announced on their Webmaster Blog that they have introduced a new feature within Bing Webmaster Tools for managing your Smart Search Previews. The Page Preview tool, under the “Configure My Site” section in Webmaster Tools, enables webmasters manage their page previews. It allows…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
