Google’s Matt Cutts: Mobile Sites For “Most Part: Only Impact Mobile Search Results
At SMX West, Google’s Matt Cutts said something very interesting. I tweeted it and Matt Cutts responded but that made it even more interesting…
Everything You Need To Know About LinkedIn
LinkedIn is a popular but often misunderstood B2B social network. In this post Stephanie Frasco gives her expert tips on getting the most out of LinkedIn.
Post from Stephanie Frasco on State of Digital
Everything You Need To Know About LinkedIn
Which Is The Most “Generous” Search Engine To Local Businesses?
Earlier this month, one of our customers asked an interesting question in a training workshop. They wanted to know which search engine displayed the most local results for different types of search terms. Google gets the lion’s share of focus in the SEO world, particularly in Local. They also…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
EU Antitrust Chief Says Google Settlement Essentially Done
Amid criticism from politicians and Google’s critics, EU antitrust chief Joaquín Almunia has essentially said that the current version of Google’s antitrust settlement proposal is a done deal. While he didn’t rule out changes definitively he seems to think complainants’…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Making Sense of Big Data in Search Marketing
Big data doesn’t have to be big and scary if you have simple elements in place. The challenge is harnessing it in a meaningful way. The secret to making big data work for you is in knowing which data sources matter and when to exclude data.
A Dilbert On Search Engine Keyword Research
There was a fun search marketing related Dilbert strip last week on the topic of doing and presenting your keyword research to your boss. The search marketer says: “I did A-B testing and found the search terms that bring the most people to our site.” He then adds “the most…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Yandex Buys Israeli Geo-Location Platform KitLocate
Yandex announced this morning that it has acquired Israeli startup KitLocate. According to third party sources the deal was worth “several million euros.” Yandex will gain and maintain a presence in Tel Aviv though the acquisition. The chief virtue of KitLocate is that it can provide location…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Turning Old Content Into New Links
It’s no secret that in order to build good links, you typically need to build good content. The problem is creating good content takes time and resources, and after the piece has gone live and been promoted, it’s often forgotten about. What a waste! One great way to put that content to good use and…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Excel VLOOKUP Basics & Top 5 Mistakes Rookies Make
An Excel VLOOKUP can be your best friend. It can save you hours of work. Give this formula the information you have and it looks through a long list to return the information you need. Here’s how the formula works and common mistakes to avoid.
Interview with RIMC Speaker Jan Gronberch (Google)
For RIMC 2014 we talked to Jan Gronberch of Google about his job, his talk at RIMC and his expectations of Iceland
Post from Bas van den Beld on State of Digital
Interview with RIMC Speaker Jan Gronberch (Google)
Sexy Content: Seattle MeetUp Recap
While we are very excited for our SearchLove Boston line-up and SearchLove San Diego announcement, Distilled Seattle has been hosting some great conversations and MeetUps!
App Engine IP Range Change Notice
Google uses a wide range of IP addresses for its different services, and the addresses may change without notification. Google App Engine is a Platform as a Service offering which hosts a wide variety of 3rd party applications. This post announces changes in the IP address range and headers used by the Google App Engine URLFetch (outbound HTTP) and outbound sockets APIs.
While we recommend that App Engine IP ranges not be used to filter inbound requests, we are aware that some services have created filters that rely on specific addresses. Google App Engine will be changing its IP range beginning this month. Please see these instructions to determine App Engine’s IP range.
Additionally, the HTTP User-Agent header string that historically allowed identification of individual App Engine applications should no longer be relied on to identify the application. With the introduction of outbound sockets for App Engine, applications may now make HTTP requests without using the URLFetch API, and those requests may set a User-Agent of their own choosing.
Posted by the Google App Engine Team
Announcing Moz Local: Simultaneous Listing Management on All Major Aggregators for $49/Year
Posted by David-Mihm
One of the many things that appealed to me about joining forces with Moz 18 months ago was the empathy that every Mozzer has for business owners and marketers trying to keep up with the frenetic pace of change in local search. Although it’s generally thought of as less competitive than a lot of other disciplines (like news, video, or e-commerce SEO), the prerequisite set of tasks for success in local search continues to grow.
In the shift from desktop to mobile, local search is fragmenting more than ever, and business listings are an increasingly critical foundation. NAP consistency (establishing a canonical Name, Address, and Phone Number for your business location) is one of the top local search ranking factors every year. Establishing a consistent NAP is vital to ranking in local results. All the link building and social media in the world won’t help a business if Google can’t trust its information, and customers can’t reach it.
Whether you’re a small agency trying to serve dozens of mom-and-pops on a limited budget, or a large brand manager tasked with managing listings for hundreds of stores, the time it takes to ensure the accuracy and visibility of business information is overwhelming. Let alone the time it takes to correct errors, align categories, deal with PIN or postcard verifications, or add missing listings. And it’s often prohibitively expensive.
So as we thought about how to evolve GetListed’s original product, we decided to start by helping solve the fundamental pain point of local search: ensuring accurate, consistent business listing information on the most important sites on the web.
What does Moz Local do?
For a high-level overview, check out this video:
Our goal is to make Moz Local the most efficient option for location management, with an easy-to-use interface and an affordable price point.
In a nutshell, Moz Local allows you to upload a spreadsheet of all of your locations, which we then standardize and distribute to all five major U.S. data aggregators:
- Infogroup
- Neustar Localeze
- Acxiom
- Factual
- Foursquare
and three important local directories:
- Superpages
- eLocal
- Best of the Web Local
for $49/year per location.

After submitting your locations, we provide you with full reporting about the status of each listing (with links to those listings live on the web, where available). We’ll also surface possible duplicate listings we discover across the ecosystem, provide you with the fastest path to correcting or closing those duplicates, and notify you of any unauthorized changes to your NAP that we come across in our local web crawl.

To dive into the product, visit Moz.com/local and download our CSV template. If you currently manage your locations at Google Places, though, you can get a head start by simply uploading that spreadsheet to Moz Local (we accept all the same field names and categories). Full documentation for the product is available here, and FAQs and a deeper description of how the product works are here.
Key features
Upgraded Listing Details page (free to all Moz Community members)
The original single-location lookup functionality from GetListed is still available at moz.com/local/search—and you can also access these Listing Details from your Moz Local dashboard. As part of the Moz Local changeover, we’ve upgraded it with a much snazzier results page and a quicker visual indication of how a business is doing and where you should focus your efforts.

Category Research Tool (free to all Moz Community members)
One of my persistent headaches back when I was a full-time local search consultant was performing category searches for slight wording variations as I was submitting listings across every single local search site.
With that in mind, we designed the Moz Local Category Research Tool to be a huge time- and energy-saver. Start typing the keywords or industry your business is in, and we’ll start refining the list of categories right before your eyes. Selecting a category will then show you how it maps to different search engines or directories when we publish your listing.
If there’s a more specific category on a particular search engine that you’d rather submit for a given listing, simply add it to the Category Overrides field in your CSV spreadsheet.

Duplicate listing notifications
As I mentioned above, we provide reporting on possible duplicate listings in the ecosystem, and where possible, we present you a direct path to closing them. Right now you’ll see a relatively tight set of possible duplicates, but going forward you’ll see a wider possible set to help you clean up old addresses, changed business names, or unwanted tracking phone numbers.

Expanded Learning Center (free to all Moz Community members)
Huge thanks to Miriam Ellis for her assistance in compiling, updating, and editing this greatly expanded version of the GetListed Learning Center. We now offer 41 pages full of local marketing background and best practices. The top pages from the original Learning Center like the local search glossary, marketing priority questionnaire, and the local search ecosystems are all still available.

Features we’re already working on
We’ve already gotten some terrific feedback from our Customer Advisory Board and other customers during a private beta period, and the product we’re releasing today is much better as a result. Going forward, we’re anxious to hear from the Moz community what feature areas you’d like to see us expand into.
Features currently on our list include:
-
allowing for the editing of single locations in-app
-
building custom-branded and emailed reports
-
showing individual listing progress over time
-
adding additional search engine and data partners
(if you’re interested in a data partnership with Moz, please email Ryan Watson!)
I have a feeling it will be a common request, but at this point Moz Local only supports U.S. business locations. International versions of this product aren’t in our near-term roadmap for development.
Thanks all around
There are a lot of people to thank, with such a big product release—it has definitely been a team effort:
-
the entire Local Engineering and Inbound Engineering teams here at Moz
-
the Marketing and Community teams, especially my “point person” for coordinating those efforts, Elizabeth Crouch
-
the Executive Team for giving us the leeway and the budget to build this product
-
Josh Mortenson, Elijah Tiegs, and Elizabeth Crouch for our video
-
Jackie Immel and Courtney Davis for their help in coordinating our beta period
-
our beta testers for their participation and patience!
-
the data aggregators and directories who have partnered with us
-
the users of GetListed who have given us so much great feedback over the years
I’m sure that’s leaving dozens, if not hundreds of people out—but I’m truly grateful for the support of everyone in the local search community over the years. As with many software endeavors, it’s taken us a little longer to get here than we’d hoped, but we also hope that you in the Moz community think it was worth the wait!
The formal press release announcing Moz Local can be found here.
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Google Maps Report a Problem: Does It Work For Local Spam?
After Bryan Seely released the exploits he used to add false and misleading (spammy) listings to Google Maps on Mike’s blog as well as on Valleywag, Google went into full PR damage control and made some changes in how they handle local spam, including ending phone call PIN code verification for new businesses on Places. […]
#adtechANZ: Emotional Intelligence: Balancing Data and Creativity
Next up here at #adtechANZ is Ben Cooper, Group Innovation Director at M&C Saatchi. Ben believes we’re at an intersection right now where BIG DATA has been a buzzword for a couple of years. Everything is moving towards this quantified self, where we are almost predicting the future. However Ben has found that the times […]
Post from Annabel Hodges on State of Digital
#adtechANZ: Emotional Intelligence: Balancing Data and Creativity
Handling Objections From SEO Clients

If the current war on SEOs by Google wasn’t bad enough if you own the site you work on, then it is doubly so for the SEO working for a client. When the SEO doesn’t have sufficient control over the strategy and technology, it can be difficult to get and maintain rankings.
In this post, we’ll take a look at the challenges and common objections the SEO faces when working on a client site, particularly a client who is engaging an SEO for the first time. The SEO will need to fit in with developers, designers and managers who may not understand the role of SEOs. Here are common objections you can expect, and some ideas on how to counter them.
1. Forget About SEO
The objection is that SEO gets in the way. It’s too hard.
It’s true. SEO is complicated. It can often compromise design and site architecture. To managers and other web technicians, SEO can look like a dark art. Or possibly a con. There are no fixed rules as there are in, say, coding, and results are unpredictable.
So why spend time and money on SEO?
One appropriate response is “because your competitors are”
Building a website is the equivalent of taking the starting line in a race. Some site owners think that’s all they need do. However, the real race starts after the site is built. Every other competitor has a web site, and they’re already off and running in terms of site awareness. Without SEO, visitors may find a site, but if the site owner is not using the SEO channel, and their competitors are, then their competitors have an advantage in terms of reach.
2. Can’t SEOs Do Their Thing After The Site Is Built?
SEO’s can do their thing after the site is built, but it’s more difficult. As a result, it’s likely to be more expensive. Baking SEO into the mix when it is conceived and built is an easier route.
Just as copywriters require space to display their copy, SEO’s require room to manoeuvre. They’ll likely contribute to information architecture, copy, copy markup and internal linking structures. So start talking about SEO as early as possible, and particularly during information architecture.
There are three key areas where SEO needs to integrate with design. One, the requirement that text is machine readable. Search engines “think” mostly in terms of words, so topics and copy need to relate to search terms visitors may use.
Secondly, linking architecture and information hierarchies. If pages are buried deep in the site, but deemed important in terms of search, they will likely be elevated in the hierarchy to a position closer to the home page.
Thirdly, crawl-ability. A search engine sends out a spider, which grabs the source code of your website, and dumps it back in the search engines database. The spider skips from page to page, following links. If a page doesn’t have a crawlable link pointing to it, it will be invisible to search engines. There are various means of making a site easy to crawl, but one straightforward way is to use a site map, linked to from each page on the site. The SEO may also want to ensure the site navigation is crawlable.
3. We Don’t Want The SEO To Interfere With Code
SEO’s do need to tweak code, however the mark-up is largely inconsequential.
SEO’s need to specify title tags and some meta tags. These tags need to be unique for each page on the site, as each page is a possible entry page. A search visitor will not necessarily arrive at the home page first.
The title tag appears in search results as a clickable link, so serves a valuable marketing function. When search visitors consider which link on a search results page to click, the title tag and snippet will influence their decision. The title tag should, therefore, closely match the content of each page.
The second aspect concerns URL’s. Ideally, a URL should contain descriptive words, as opposed to numbers and random letters. For example, acme.com/widgets/red-widgets.htm is good, whilst acme.com/w/12345678&tnr.php, less so.
The more often the keyword appears, the more likely it will be bolded on a search results page, and is therefore more likely to attract a click. It’s also easier for the search engine to determine meaning if a URL is descriptive as opposed to cryptic.
4. I’ve Got An SEO PlugIn. That’s All I Need
SEO Plugins cover the on-site basics. But ranking well involves more than covering the basics.
In order to rank well, a page needs to have links from external sites. The higher quality those sites, the more chances your pages have of ranking well. The SEO will look to identify linking possibilities, and point these links to various internal pages on the site.
It can be difficult, near impossible, to get high quality links to brochure-style advertising pages. Links tend to be directed at pages that have unique value.
So, the type and quality of content has more to do with SEO than the way that content is marked up by a generic plugin. The content must attract links and generate engagement. The visitor needs to see a title on a search result, click through, not click back, and, preferably take some action on that page. That action may be a click deeper into the site, a bookmark, a tweet, or some other measurable form of response.
Content that lends itself to this type of interaction includes blog posts, news feeds, and content intended for social network engagement. In this way, SEO-friendly content can be functionally separated from other types of content. Not every page needs to be SEO’d, so SEO can be sectioned off, if necessary.
5. The SEO Is Just Another Technician
If your aim, or your clients aim, is to attract as much targeted traffic as possible then SEO integration must be taken just as seriously as design, development, copy and other media. SEO is more than a technical exercise, it’s a strategic marketing exercise, much like Public Relations.
SEO considerations may influence your choice of CMS. It may influence your strategic approach in terms of what type of information you publish. It may change the way you engage visitors. Whilst SEO can be bolted-on afterwards, this is a costly and less-effective way of doing SEO, much like re-designing a site is costly and less effective than getting it right in the planning stage.
6. Why Have Our Ranking Disappeared?
The reality of any marketing endeavour is that it will have a shelf-life. Sometimes, that shelf life is short. Other times, it can run for years.
SEO is vulnerable to the changes made by search engines. These changes aren’t advertised in advance, nor are they easily pinned down even after they have occurred. This is why SEO is strategic, just as Public Relations is strategic. The Public Relations campaign you were using a few years ago may not be the same one you use now, and the same goes for SEO.
The core of SEO hasn’t changed much. If you produce content visitors find relevant, and that content is linked to, and people engage with that content, then it has a good chance of doing well in search engines. However, the search engines constantly tweak their settings, and when they do, a lot of previous work – especially if that work was at the margins of the algorithms – can come undone.
So, ranking should never be taken for granted. The value the SEO brings is that they are across underlying changes in the way the search engines work and can adapt your strategy, and site, to the new changes.
Remember, whatever problems you may have with the search engines, the same goes for your competitors. They may have dropped rankings, too. Or they may do so soon. The SEO will try to figure out why the new top ranking sites are ranked well, then adapt your site and strategy so that it matches those criteria.
7. Why Don’t We Just Use PPC Instead?
PPC has many advantages. The biggest advantage is that you can get top positioning, and immediate traffic, almost instantly. The downside is, of course, you pay per click. Whilst this might be affordable today, keep in mind that the search engine has a business objective that demands they reward the top bidders who are most relevant. Their auction model forces prices higher and higher, and only those sites with deep pockets will remain in the game. If you don’t have deep pockets, or want to be beholden to the PPC channel, a long term SEO strategy works well in tandem.
SEO and PPC complement one another, and lulls and challenges in one channel can be made up for by the other. Also, you can feed the keyword data from PPC to SEO to gain a deeper understanding of search visitor behaviour.
8. Does SEO Provide Value For Money?
This is the reason for undertaking any marketing strategy.
An SEO should be able to demonstrate value. One way is to measure the visits from search engines before the SEO strategy starts, and see if these increase significantly post implementation. The value of each search click changes depending on your business case, but can be approximated using the PPC bid prices. Keep in mind the visits from an SEO campaign may be maintained, and increased, over considerable time, thus driving down their cost relative to PPC and other channels.
ad:tech Sydney: Keynote – What’s the Big IDEO? #AdtechANZ
Jo Turnbull covers the keynote from ad:tech Sydney and discovers why creative thinking is so important in the success of business.
Post from Jo Turnbull on State of Digital
ad:tech Sydney: Keynote – What’s the Big IDEO? #AdtechANZ
ad:tech Sydney: The Death of Platform – The Birth of Brand
Annabel Hodges covers Helen Kellie’s talk on building your brand around your audience at Ad:Tech Sydney
Post from Annabel Hodges on State of Digital
ad:tech Sydney: The Death of Platform – The Birth of Brand
ad:tech Sydney Keynote: Data Disruption – The Next Five Years
Annabel Hodges covers Tim Trumper’s talk at Ad:Tech Sydney on data, its importance and common themes over the next five years.
Post from Annabel Hodges on State of Digital
ad:tech Sydney Keynote: Data Disruption – The Next Five Years
SearchCap: The Day In Search, March 17, 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: 10 Key Takeaways From Meet The Search Engines @ SMX West Another SMX is in the books! This show definitely had one …