The New Emphasis On Link Building: What’s Behind It And How To React
There seems to be a fresh interest in link building. Why now? What do the search engines have to say? How should agencies and companies approach link building? Why The New Interest In Link Building? Why are search engine optimizers and agencies more in…
Easy Landing Page Testing Using DoubleClick Search
Landing page testing should be near the top of your list of optimization techniques. Here’s how to use DoubleClick Search to learn how users are reacting to your landing pages and tweak those pages to increase conversion rates in a few simple steps.
Search In Pics: Grayson Perry At Google, Red Bing Street View Car & I Danced At Google Shirt
In this week’s Search In Pictures, here are the latest images culled from the web, showing what people eat at the search engine companies, how they play, who they meet, where they speak, what toys they have, and more. Red Bing Street View Car: Source: Google+ Google Dublin’s New…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
10 interesting digital marketing stats we’ve seen this week
The soft skills revolution
- Research conducted for Econsultancy’s new Skills of the Modern Marketer Report indicates that marketers are attributing more value than ever to so-called ‘softer skills’, alongside the more traditional vertical expertise that recruiters look for.
- For example, three-quarters (75%) of marketers said that the ability to embrace change was important, while almost two-thirds (63%) highly value the ability to spot opportunities and adapt strategies quickly.
How important would you say the following softer skills or behaviours are to being an effective marketer in the modern digital world?

#GiveGregTheHoliday
- Not so much a digital stat as a heart-warming tale of social media users clubbing together to get one lucky guy a trip to Vegas.
- A security guard from the Arcadia retail group was the unwitting hero of a viral campaign after his holiday request was accidentally sent to the companies 3,500 staff.
- The hashtag #GiveGregTheHoliday trended in the UK for most of Thursday 22 May, resulting in TrekAmerica offering him a free trip to Las Vegas.
- Several other brands also got involved to offer him products to such as a suit and cosmetics. You can read all about it here.
We’re taking action and have decided to #givegregtheholiday. A TrekAmerica mini adventure with flights to Vegas. #GregGotTheHoliday!
— TrekAmerica (@trekamerica) May 22, 2014
How should email marketers spend their time?
- Data from a new Econsultancy/dotMailer Email Marketing Speed Imperative Study reveals that email marketers are spend most of their time working on creative/content.
- The report is based on an online survey of more than 500 client-side and agency email professionals across a range of sophistication, company size and sector, conducted in the fourth quarter of 2013.
How does the average email marketer divide their time?

Almost half of UK shoppers like to showroom
- Almost half of British consumers regularly practice ‘showrooming’, according to new research by EE.
- The survey suggests that more than 20m consumers (equivalent to 44% of total shoppers) now visit physical stores to browse products while using mobile devices to find the best deals online.
- Demographically, the trend is most popular with young people – 53% of 18 to 34 year olds say they showroom while out shopping.
- The results are based on an online survey of 2,000 UK consumers conducted during March 2014.
The real reason your marketing costs are increasing
- Differing user behaviours are leading to an increase in marketing costs, according to analysis of client data by Fusion Unlimited.
- It looked at data from a range of clients and compared path length reports from Q1 2013 to Q1 2014.
- The results showed that nearly 80% of the clients were seeing an increase in visits to purchase YoY, with an overall average increase of 8% and several over 20%.
- One and two visit journeys still make up 50%-80% of conversion volume, but this was down on average by 4% and 1% respectively YoY.
- The most significant trend though was in longer journeys to sale. Journeys of 10 steps were up 30%, 11 steps 50% and 12 or more steps were up a huge 85% on average YoY.

Old people aren’t afraid of the web
- Stereotypes of old technophobes being left behind by tech-savvy youth are unfounded, according to new research from iProspect.
- The survey found that internet usage actually increases with age, with 63% of 70+ spending 11-30 hours per week online, compared with 60-69 (47%), 50-59 (43%) and 30-49 (39%).
- Furthermore, younger and older generations are similarly confortable with the level of data security on most popular and recognised websites – 66% of 30-49 year olds and 67% of 50+ don’t see data security as a barrier when shopping online, rising to 69% among 60-69 year old and 70+.
Mobile traffic does not equal mobile conversions
- New research from Econsultancy and Adobe shows that even now many companies still haven’t implemented an effective mobile strategy.
- In fact only a third of respondents (36%) agree that they have a mobile strategy compared to 45% who disagree.
- The Finding the Path to Mobile Maturity Briefing Report also show that mobile traffic does not equal mobile conversions.
- On average, businesses surveyed for this study reported that 31% of their web traffic comes via mobile, however 71% of company respondents achieve less than 20% of overall ecommerce revenue through mobile devices.
- The report is based on a global survey of 600 client-side and agency marketers carried out in March and April 2014.
How much of your / your clients’ total website traffic is via mobile devices? (including tablets and smartphones) 
Ebay bashed by Panda 4.0
- Google rolled out another Panda update this week, impacting 7.5% of English search queries.
- Preliminary research by Searchmetrics shows that eBay and ask.com appear to be the most high profile sites affected by the update.

Pace of video sharing has increased massively
- Research published by Unruly shows that the pace of social video sharing has almost doubled in 12 months and 42% of video shares now happen in the first three days of launch.
- The average number of shares on the day following launch, when the most shares usually happen, has almost doubled from 10% to 18% over the last 12 months, while shares in the first week have also risen from 37% to 65% during the same period.

And finally…
Here is a rather lovely infographic on content marketing in the UK form MSLGROUP…

Learning Front-End – Brighton SEO 2014
“SEO’s don’t need to code.” Strictly speaking this is true, but it’s a bit like saying it’s not worth learning your times tables. Sure, you can cruise along just fine without this skill – by relying on a calculator or copying the kid next to you – but it’s almost certainly going to make your […]
The post Learning Front-End – Brighton SEO 2014 appeared first on Builtvisible – A Creative Digital Agency.
Google Ads Everywhere: *Evil Laugh*
A few days ago, Google scared the world when the SEC report revealed Google that Google wants to place ads everywhere.
In fact, one of the items listed was placing ads in thermostats…
The Difference Between App to App and Web to App Advertising
Mobile devices – and the apps contained within them – are increasingly “always on.” This presents a perfect opportunity for advertisers to drive meaningful engagement where messages are an integrated and seamless part of the user experience.
Ripoff Report Is Back In Yahoo Australia’s Search Results, But Not Completely
After what we think was about a week of being de-indexed, the controversial Ripoff Report website is showing up again in search results on Yahoo’s Australian website. But a company spokesperson tells us that some URLs are still blocked. Late Wednesday night (May 21), we noticed that a…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
SEO vs. SEM Timelines: A Medical Analogy
How do you explain to your boss or client how SEO works and when to expect results? Use this doctors and medication analogy to help them realize the time and effort it takes to run a successful SEO campaign and avoid being inundated with questions.
Google Chrome Desktop Now With Okay Google Voice Detection
Google announced yesterday on Google+ that Chrome, Google’s popular browser, now supports the ability to say “Okay Google” to activate voice search by default from the Google search page…
Faces Go Missing From Google’s Search Results For About 75 Minutes
Yesterday, the SEO space got into a bit of a panic when Google suddenly dropped authorship images from their search results page.
Twitter Twitter and Google+ went made (I am just sharing one thread from each but there were tons)…
SEO: I Got Comfortable & It Resulted In Being Hit By Google’s Panda Filter
The ongoing thread about Google Panda 4.0 at WebmasterWorld has an interesting post from someone who was hit by Panda a while back and is slowly recovering.
In short, he blames himself. He said, he got comfortable and lazy and didn’t invest in his sit…
Please Remove My Link. Or Else.
Getting links removed is a tedious business.
It’s just as tedious for the site owner who must remove the links. Google’s annoying practice of “suggesting” webmasters jump through hoops in order to physically remove links that the webmaster suspects are bad, rather than Google simply ignoring the links that they’ve internally flagged, is causing frustration.
Is it a punitive punishment? If so, it’s doing nothing to endear Google to webmasters. Is it a smokescreen? i.e. they don’t know which links are bad, but by having webmasters declare them, this helps Google build up a more comprehensive database? Bit of both? It might also be adding costs to SEO in order to put SEO out of reach of small companies. Perhaps it’s a red herring to make people think links are more important than they actually are.
Hard to be sure.
Collateral Damage
SEOs are accustomed to search engines being coy, punitive and oblique. SEOs accept it as part of the game. However, it becomes rather interesting when webmasters who are not connected to SEO get caught up in the collateral damage:
I received an interesting email the other day from a company we linked to from one of our websites. In short, the email was a request to remove links from our site to their site. We linked to this company on our own accord, with no prior solicitation, because we felt it would be useful to our site visitors, which is generally why people link to things on the Internet.
And check out the subsequent discussion on Hacker News. Matt Cutts first post is somewhat disingenuous:
Situation #1 is by far the most common. If a site gets dinged for linkspam and works to clean up their links, a lot of them send out a bunch of link removal requests on their own prerogative
Webmasters who receive the notification are encouraged by Google to clean up their backlinks, because if they don’t, then their rankings suffer.
But, essentially from our point of view when it comes to unnatural links to your website we want to see that you’ve taken significant steps to actually remove it from the web but if there are some links that you can’t remove yourself or there are some that require payment to be removed then having those in the disavow file is fine as well.
(Emphasis mine)
So, of course webmasters who have received a notification from Google are going to contact websites to get links removed. Google have stated they want to see that the webmaster has gone to considerable effort to remove them, rather than simply use the disavow tool.
The inevitable result is that a webmaster who links to anyone who has received a bad links notification may receive the latest form of email spam known as the “please remove my link” email. For some webmasters, this email has become more common that the “someone has left you millions in a Nigerian bank account” gambit, and is just as persistent and annoying.
From The Webmasters Perspective
Webmasters could justifiably add the phrase “please remove my link” and the word “disavow” to their spam filters.
Let’s assume this webmaster isn’t a bad neighbourhood and is simply caught in the cross-fire. The SEO assumes, perhaps incorrectly, the link is bad and requests a take-down. From the webmasters perspective, they incur a time cost dealing with the link removal requests. A lone request might take a few minutes to physically remove – but hang on a minute – how does the webmaster know this request is coming from the site owner and not from some dishonest competitor? Ownership takes time to verify. And why would the webmaster want to take down this link, anyway? Presumably, they put it up because they deemed it useful to their audience. Or, perhaps some bot put the link there – perhaps as a forum or blog comment link – against the webmasters wishes – and now, to add insult to injury, the SEO wants the webmaster to spend his time taking it down!
Even so, this might be okay if it’s only one link. It doesn’t take long to remove. But, for webmasters who own large sites, it quickly becomes a chore. For large sites with thousands of outbound links built up over years, removal requests can pile up. That’s when the spam filter kicks in.
Then come the veiled threats. “Thanks for linking to us. This is no reflection on you, but if you don’t remove my link I’ll be forced to disavow you and your site will look bad in Google. I don’t want to do this, but I may have to.”
What a guy.
How does the webmaster know the SEO won’t do that anyway? Isn’t that exactly what some SEO conference speakers have been telling other SEOs to do regardless of whether the webmaster takes the link down or not?
So, for a webmaster caught in the cross-fire, there’s not much incentive to remove links, especially if s/he’s read Matt’s suggestion:
higherpurpose, nowhere in the original article did it say that Google said the link was bad. This was a request from a random site (we don’t know which one, since the post dropped that detail), and the op can certainly ignore the link removal request.
In some cases Google does specify links:
We’ve reviewed the links to your site and we still believe that some of them are outside our quality guidelines.
Sample URLs:
ask.metafilter.com/194610/get-me-and-my-stuff-from-point-a-to-point-b-possibly-via-point-cPlease correct or remove all inorganic links, not limited to the samples provided above. This may involve contacting webmasters of the sites with the inorganic links on them.
And they make errors when they specify those links. They’ve flagged DMOZ & other similar links: “Every time I investigate these “unnatural link” claims, I find a comment by a longtime member of MetaFilter in good standing trying to help someone out, usually trying to identify something on Ask MetaFilter.”
Changing Behaviour
Then the webmaster starts thinking.
“Hmmm…maybe linking out will hurt me! Google might penalize me or, even worse, I’ll get flooded with more and more “please remove my link” spam in future.”
So what happens?
The webmaster becomes very wary about linking out. David Naylor mentioned an increasing number of sites adopting a “no linking” policy. Perhaps the webmaster no-follows everything as a precaution. Far from being the life-giving veins of the web, links are seen as potentially malignant. If all outbound links are made no-follow, perhaps the chance of being banned and flooded with “please remove my link”spam is reduced. Then again, even nofollowed links are getting removal requests.
As more webmasters start to see links as problematic, fewer legitimate sites receive links. Meanwhile, the blackhat, who sees their sites occasionally getting burned as a cost of doing business, will likely see their site rise as they’ll be the sites getting all the links, served up from their curated link networks.
A commenter notes:
The Google webspam team seems to prefer psychology over technology to solve the problem, especially recently. Nearly everything that’s come out of Matt Cutt’s mouth in the last 18 months or so has been a scare tactic.
IMO all this does is further encourage the development of “churn and burn” websites from blackhats who have being penalized in their business plan. So why should I risk all the time and effort it takes to generate quality web content when it could all come crashing down because an imperfect and overzealous algorithm thinks it’s spam? Or worse, some intern or non-google employee doing a manual review wrongly decides the site violates webmaster guidelines?
And what’s the point of providing great content when some competitor can just take you out with a dedicated negative SEO campaign, or if Google hits you with a false positive? If most of your traffic comes from Google, then the risk of the web publishing model increases.
Is Google broken? Or is your site broken? That’s the question any webmaster asks when she sees her Google click-throughs drop dramatically. It’s a question that Matt Haughey, founder of legendary Internet forum MetaFilter, has been asking himself for the last year and a half, as declining ad revenues have forced the long-running site to lay off several of its staff.
Then again, Google may just not want what MetaFilter has to offer anymore.
(In)Unintended Consequences
Could this be uncompetitive practice from Google? Are the sites getting hit with penalties predominantly commercial sites? It would be interesting to see how many of them are non-commercial. If so, is it a way to encourage commercial sites to use Adwords as it becomes harder and harder to get a link by organic means? If all it did was raise the cost of doing SEO, it would still be doing its job.
I have no idea, but you could see why people might ask that question.
Let’s say it’s benevolent and Google is simply working towards better results. The unintended consequence is that webmasters will think twice about linking out. And if that happens, then their linking behaviour will start to become more exclusive. When links become harder to get and become more problematic, then PPC and social-media is going to look that much more attractive.
Content Visibility Tactic: Tweet Piggyback
Embedding tweets within content can add greater context to our stories and connect our readers with people and brands of interest. There is a hidden benefit, though, and it’s the way Twitter handles related content.
By embedding a tweet into your page you automatically apply for the “Related headlines” section and may qualify if you meet Twitter’s relevance and quality criteria.…
The post Content Visibility Tactic: Tweet Piggyback appeared first on DEJAN SEO.
What the Mainstream Media Doesn’t Get about Panda
It seems the mainstream media has finally caught up – not everyone who gets screwed by Google is a spammer getting his just deserts. MetaFilter has apparently been dying a slow and painful death as a result of the Google Panda updates. And, I’m sad to say a little part of me smiled. Am I […]
The post What the Mainstream Media Doesn’t Get about Panda appeared first on Sugarrae.
Silly Marketer, Title Tags Are for Robots!
Posted by jennita
Like all good marketers, we think carefully about our title tags before publishing new content. Then we just take that carefully crafted title and plop it into the OG tags for social shares, right?
Think again!
In today’s Whiteboard Friday, Jen Lopez explains why we need to put in a little more effort than that.
Video transcription:
Hey, Moz fans, welcome to yet another edition of Whiteboard Friday. I’m Jen Lopez, the Director of the Community here at Moz, and today I’m going to take you on a tale of two marketers.
We have the SEO, right? We focus on making sure that the robots and that the spiders are crawling through our sites and can get to them. Then when we want things to show up in the SERPs, we make sure that our title tags are keyword rich and our meta descriptions are super enticing, right? We make sure that when somebody clicks from the search engine results page, that they see exactly what we want them to see. And that’s smart, right? Those keywords are actually a high ranking factor. All of these things that we focus on, we work very hard to make sure that our keywords are at the beginning of the title and that sort of thing.
But then we have the social media marketer. Yes, I drew that. I’m sorry, all social media marketers. I know you don’t actually look at that. We think about the people, right? How are people going to look at it? How are people going to re-share this? And so as a social media marketer, we’re thinking like, “How can we change the Open Graph tags so that people on Facebook and people on Google+ and people on LinkedIn are seeing these things exactly the way we want to see them?” We want to see big images. Who cares about keywords? That’s what that SEO person does, right?
What about Twitter cards? You want to make sure that when you send something in a tweet or somebody tweets your blog post or your infographic, or whatever it may be, that it’s coming across exactly the way you want to see it. You’re thinking about rich pins, and you salivate when you’re on Pinterest and you see a recipe and it actually shows all of the ingredients in the recipe. That might just be me, but in general that’s often what we do.
What tends to happen is people are getting better about using the Open Graph tags and the Twitter cards and that sort of thing. But what we normally do is we take what we have, put in the title tags and meta description, and we make it the default so that it’s really simple. So we’re doing the basics. We’re being lazy. That’s exactly what we’re doing.
We do it on our own blog. You go to our blog, the title that you see on the page, the title of the post, the title that you see shared on social network, it’s always the same. You’re going to see it across the board, and it is time for us to stop being lazy because think about if you did this.
Now let me give you first an example — Huffington Post. I recently wrote a post for Huffington Post, and being a SEO myself, I worked very hard at making sure that the title tag was something that would come across in the SEO world very nicely so that it would show up in SERPs great and it would do all this stuff. What was interesting was, that without my prompting, that something that the Huffington Post editorial team did, is after I submitted my post with all of my information, they told me it took several days. I get this email that says, “Congratulations, your post is on Huffington Post.” I did a little happy dance because now I can put in Google+ that I contribute to Huffington Post.
Besides that, the first thing I did is I went to share it on Facebook. What’s interesting is when I shared it on Facebook, it was not the image that I’d used. It was not the title that I’d used nor was it the description. It was very specific to social.
So I went back to my page thinking, “What the hell, did they change all of my stuff?” No, my title tag and images and everything are still exactly the same. However, they’ve set the Open Graph and the Twitter cards to be specific to social. I had this like “Oh my gosh moment,” when I realized: Why in the world aren’t we all doing this? Why aren’t we taking one piece of content and making it so that not only do the robots see it and do we care about the keyword rich title and meta description that looks good in the SERPs and getting all the schema just right so that it looks right there? Why don’t we do that plus we make sure that the Open Graph tags are great, that you have an image that’s super shareable, that you have a description and the title that can be somewhat up worthy?
I’m not a huge fan of, “This woman wrote on a Whiteboard, and you’ll never guess what happened next.” I really don’t like those, but people click on that stuff. You put a different image, a different image here than a different image you have here, and you make it something. You put a circle around somebody’s face in the background. We’ve all seen those on Facebook, right? They work really well. It’s brilliant. You take one piece of content, and you make it work really well for the robots, and you find that happy place. You get the people plus robots equals love. That’s because you’re making your content that you’ve worked really hard at, you’ve put time and effort into this, you’re making sure that it’s easily consumable by the people who want to share it and re-share it hopefully and make it viral because you want that virality here. But you also want it to be stable, and you want the robots to see it and you want the spiders to be able to get to it and all of that.
So my quest, you have a quest. I am doing this hopefully internally as something that I’m pushing very hard, and I would like to see you step up your game as well. So rather than just keeping those defaults of, “Here is my title tag and I’m going to use it in all of the places,” that you’re going to take the time to write not only your title tag and meta description for SEO purposes, but that you’re going to work hard at taking these and doing really great things with your social meta tags as well.
Below, I’m going to give you some resources to specific posts that talk about how to do this well and how to do this well and then take those and combine them. When you do that, you are going to find that people are going to love the heck out of your stuff. I will be the first one when we get that set up on our site, I will tell you exactly how it’s working for us. So stop being lazy, do the hard work, and make your stuff super
shareable all over the Web.
That’s it for today. I hope to see you again soon. Have a great weekend.
Additional resources
For more info on title tags:
New Title Tag Guidelines & Preview Tool
For more info on social meta / open graph (OG) tags:
Must-Have Social Meta Tags for Twitter, Google+, Facebook, and More
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Everything You Wanted To Know About Duplicate Business Listings…
…but not really. I mean who really wants to understand how duplicate business listings are created and how the problem can be solved? It’s not exactly cocktail party conversation. But if your business is affected by them, like every business that relies on local search traffic is, perhaps you might want to take a few […]
The post Everything You Wanted To Know About Duplicate Business Listings… appeared first on Local SEO Guide.
SearchCap: MetaFilter Filtered By Google, RetailMeNot Debates Panda Reports & Google Drops Authorship
Below is what happened in search today, as reported on Search Engine Land and from other places across the web. From Search Engine Land: Google Drops Authorship Rich Snippets From Search Results. A Bug? For the past 20 minutes, if you search anything o…
Daily Search Forum Recap: May 22, 2014
Here is a recap of what happened in the search forums today, through the eyes of the Search Engine Roundtable and other search forums on the web.Search Engine Roundtable Stories:
Poll: How Did Google’s Panda 4.0 Impact You…
Google Drops Authorship Rich Snippets From Search Results. A Bug?
For the past 20 minutes, if you search anything on Google, the authorship images, where it shows a picture of the individual who wrote the content shown in the Google results, no longer shows up. Here is a picture of what a search results look like wit…