Google Launches Search Removal Request Form
The form launched Friday and reportedly spurred 12,000 search removal requests. It allows users in all 28 European Union countries, as well as four additional non-EU countries, to request removals, following the “right to be forgotten” ruling.
Tabke: Google Penalized eBay For Dropping AdWords Ads
As you know, eBay was penalized by Google either via a manual action or algorithmic action or both. Google and eBay won’t confirm it, but it is clear from the SearchMetrics charts.
The reason for the penalty is not 100% clear…
Backlinks = Rankings, Rankings = Traffic – Deal With It
Cheap, easy, automated link spamming is no longer an option for those in it for the long haul. Editorial link building is alive and well and more powerful than ever before. Links still matter a lot and they will continue to matter for many years.
How To Run Single-Device Only Enhanced Campaigns. It Can Be Done!
When I speak about Enhanced Campaigns, I invariably get an audience question like this: “How can I create single-device campaigns? I know it’s possible somehow, tell me how!” I recently figured out the answer. Why The Need For Single-Device Campaigns? I am not usually a proponent…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Doonesbury Comic: We Need A Company Slogan; Don’t Be Google
Yesterday’s Doonesbury comic strip mocks Google’s company motto and slogan of Don’t Be Evil. The new “Z + Z Bud” company wants to add a company motto to their branding and they think long and hard about what it should be. They said, Google uses “Don’t Be…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Google Comparison Ads Under Fire In UK
The UK financial services industry regulator Financial Conduct Authority is taking a closer look at Google Comparison Ads. UK price comparison sites have complained that Google is unfairly competing with them by placing its own “product” at the top of search results. Comparison Ads,…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Google To Bring Always-On, “Eyes Free” Search To App
One of the most interesting and talked about features in the Motorola-made Moto X is always-on voice search. Activated by saying “OK, Google,” it permits totally hands-free search. Unfortunately this standout feature didn’t sell enough handsets to keep open Moto’s…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Linkdex Think Tank – Lessons Learnt from Operational SEO
Jo Turnbull captures some of the key highlights from the Linkdex Think Tank in May which featured great speakers from both brand and agency side. Read the tips from Operational SEO and implement them in your organisation.
Post from Jo Turnbull on State of Digital
Linkdex Think Tank – Lessons Learnt from Operational SEO
Here Is How To Remove Content From Google Via Google’s Right To Be Forgotten Form
As you know, the EU’s top court has required Google to enable people to force Google to take down personal information about themselves. This obviously is something that Google is not happy about but they had to and have complied…
Google App Indexing Now Supports Other Languages
Google announced Friday that their App Indexing protocol, the ability to markup your content and have Google deep link to your Android apps content from the search results…
One On One With Google’s John Mueller This Morning
Google’s John Mueller announced on Google+ that instead of the standard Google Hangouts he does where he just answers questions off a list or via prompts, he will be doing one-on-one sessions, with 8 webmasters, giving them 4 minutes each…
Google: You Rank As You Should, It’s Not Panda
I honestly love seeing this because it somewhat upsets me to see, I know weird… But Google’s John Mueller responded to a webmaster in a Google Webmaster Help thread about him losing 90% of his “indexing” after the Panda 4 .0 update. He said…
…
5 Ways Social Data Can Enhance Marketing Data
The integration of social data with traditional marketing data can enhance your understanding of trends and user behavior, and also can be used as an added value for publishers and advertisers for testing creative, researching keywords, and more.
Take the Suck out of Time-Sucking Tasks
Arienne Holland shares 5 great ways to save time on some of the daily and necessary tasks we all do at work. Get advice based on real life experience which you can action today.
Post from Arienne Holland on State of Digital
Take the Suck out of Time-Sucking Tasks
A Content Marketer’s Guide to Data Scraping
Posted by MatthewBarby
As digital marketers,
big data should be what we use to inform a lot of the decisions we make. Using intelligence to understand what works within your industry is absolutely crucial within content campaigns, but it blows my mind to know that so many businesses aren’t focusing on it.
One reason I often hear from businesses is that they don’t have the budget to invest in complex and expensive tools that can feed in reams of data to them. That said, you don’t always need to invest in expensive tools to gather valuable intelligence — this is where data scraping comes in.
Just so you understand, here’s a very brief overview of what data scraping is from Wikipedia:
“Data scraping is a technique in which a computer program extracts data from human-readable output coming from another program.”
Essentially, it involves crawling through a web page and gathering nuggets of information that you can use for your analysis. For example, you could search through a site like Search Engine Land and scrape the author names of each of the posts that have been published, and then you could correlate this to social share data to find who the top performing authors are on that website.
Hopefully, you can start to see how this data can be valuable. What’s more, it doesn’t require any coding knowledge — if you’re able to follow my simple instructions, you can start gathering information that will inform your content campaigns. I’ve recently used this research to help me get
a post published on the front page of BuzzFeed, getting viewed over 100,000 times and channeling a huge amount of traffic through to my blog.
Disclaimer: One thing that I really need to stress before you read on is the fact that scraping a website may breach its terms of service. You should ensure that this isn’t the case before carrying out any scraping activities. For example, Twitter completely prohibits the scraping of information on their site. This is from their Terms of Service:
“crawling the Services is permissible if done in accordance with the provisions of the robots.txt file, however, scraping the Services without the prior consent of Twitter is expressly prohibited“
Google
similarly forbids the scraping of content from their web properties:
Google’s Terms of Service do not allow the sending of automated queries of any sort to our system without express permission in advance from Google.
So be careful, kids.
Content analysis
Mastering the basics of data scraping will open up a whole new world of possibilities for content analysis. I’d advise any content marketer (or at least a member of their team) to get clued up on this.
Before I get started on the specific examples, you’ll need to ensure that you have Microsoft Excel on your computer (everyone should have Excel!) and also the SEO Tools plugin for Excel (free download here). I put together a full tutorial on using the SEO tools plugin that you may also be interested in.
Alongside this, you’ll want a web crawling tool like
Screaming Frog’s SEO Spider or Xenu Link Sleuth (both have free options). Once you’ve got these set up, you’ll be able to do everything that I outline below.
So here are some ways in which you can use scraping to analyse content and how this can be applied into your content marketing campaigns:
1. Finding the different authors of a blog
Analysing big publications and blogs to find who the influential authors are can give you some really valuable data. Once you have a list of all the authors on a blog, you can find out which of those have created content that has performed well on social media, had a lot of engagement within the comments and also gather extra stats around their social following, etc.
I use this information on a daily basis to build relationships with influential writers and
get my content placed on top tier websites. Here’s how you can do it:
Step 1: Gather a list of the URLs from the domain you’re analysing using Screaming Frog’s SEO Spider. Simply add the root domain into Screaming Frog’s interface and hit start (if you haven’t used this tool before, you can check out my tutorial here).
Once the tool has finished gathering all the URLs (this can take a little while for big websites), simply export them all to an Excel spreadsheet.

Step 2: Open up Google Chrome and navigate to one of the article pages of the domain you’re analysing and find where they mention the author’s name (this is usually within an author bio section or underneath the post title). Once you’ve found this, right-click their name and select inspect element (this will bring up the Chrome developer console).
Within the developer console, the line of code associated to the author’s name that you selected will be highlighted (see the below image). All you need to do now is right-click on the highlighted line of code and press
Copy XPath.
For the Search Engine Land website, the following code would be copied:
//*[@id="leftCol"]/div[2]/p/span/a
This may not make any sense to you at this stage, but bear with me and you’ll see how it works.

Step 3: Go back to your spreadsheet of URLs and get rid of all the extra information that Screaming Frog gives you, leaving just the list of raw URLs – add these to the first column (column A) of your worksheet.

Step 4: In cell B2, add the following formula:
=XPathOnUrl(A2,"//*[@id='leftCol']/div[2]/p/span/a")
Just to break this formula down for you, the function
XPathOnUrl allows you to use the XPath code directly within (this is with the SEO Tools plugin installed; it won’t work without this). The first element of the function specifies which URL we are going to scrape. In this instance I’ve selected cell A2, which contains a URL from the crawl I did within Screaming Frog (alternatively, you could just type the URL, making sure that you wrap it within quotation marks).
Finally, the last part of the function is our XPath code that we gathered. One thing to note is that you have to remove the quotation marks from the code and replace them with apostrophes. In this example, I’m referring to the “leftCol” section, which I’ve changed to ‘leftCol’ — if you don’t do this, Excel won’t read the formula correctly.
Once you press enter, there may be a couple of seconds delay whilst the SEO Tools plugin crawls the page, then it will return a result. It’s worth mentioning that within the example I’ve given above, we’re looking for author names on article pages, so if I try to run this on a URL that isn’t an article (e.g. the homepage) I will get an error.

For those interested, the XPath code itself works by starting at the top of the code of the URL specified and following the instructions outlined to find on-page elements and return results. So, for the following code:
//*[@id='leftCol']/div[2]/p/span/a
We’re telling it to look for any element (//*) that has an id of
leftCol (@id=’leftCol’) and then go down to the second div tag after this (div[2]), followed by a p tag, a span tag and finally, an a tag (/p/span/a). The result returned should be the text within this a tag.
Don’t worry if you don’t understand this, but if you do, it will help you to create your own XPath. For example, if you wanted to grab the output of an
a tag that has rel=author attached to it (another great way of finding page authors), then you could use some XPath that looked a little something like this:
//a[@rel='author']
As a full formula within Excel it would look something like this:
=XPathOnUrl(A2,"//a[@rel='author']")
Once you’ve created the formula, you can drag it down and apply it to a large number of URLs all at once. This is a
huge time-saver as you’d have to manually go through each website and copy/paste each author to get the same results without scraping – I don’t need to explain how long this would take.
Now that I’ve explained the basics, I’ll show you some other ways in which scraping can be used…
2. Finding extra details around page authors
So, we’ve found a list of author names, which is great, but to really get some more insight into the authors we will need more data. Again, this can often be scraped from the website you’re analysing.
Most blogs/publications that list the names of the article author will actually have individual author pages. Again, using Search Engine Land as an example, if you click my name at the top of this post you will be taken to a page that has more details on me, including my Twitter profile, Google+ profile and LinkedIn profile. This is the kind of data that I’d want to gather because it gives me a point of contact for the author I’m looking to get in touch with.
Here’s how you can do it.
Step 1: First we need to get the author profile URLs so that we can scrape the extra details off of them. To do this, you can use the same approach to find the author’s name, with just a little addition to the formula:
=XPathOnUrl(A2,"//a[@rel='author']", <strong>"href"</strong>)
The addition of the
“href” part of the formula will extract the output of the href attribute of the atag. In Lehman terms, it will find the hyperlink attached to the author name and return that URL as a result.

Step 2: Now that we have the author profile page URLs, you can go on and gather the social media profiles. Instead of scraping the article URLs, we’ll be using the profile URLs.
So, like last time, we need to find the XPath code to gather the Twitter, Google+ and LinkedIn links. To do this, open up Google Chrome and navigate to one of the author profile pages, right-click on the Twitter link and select
Inspect Element.
Once you’ve done this, hover over the highlighted line of code within Chrome’s developer tools, right-click and select
Copy XPath.

Step 3: Finally, open up your Excel spreadsheet and add in the following formula (using the XPath that you’ve copied over):
=XPathOnUrl(C2,"//*[@id='leftCol']/div[2]/p/a[2]", "href")
Remember that this is the code for scraping Search Engine Land, so if you’re doing this on a different website, it will almost certainly be different. One important thing to highlight here is that I’ve selected cell C2 here, which contains the URL of the author profile page and not just the article page. As well as this, you’ll notice that I’ve included
“href” at the end because we want the actual Twitter profile URL and not just the words ‘Twitter’.

You can now repeat this same process to get the Google+ and LinkedIn profile URLs and add it to your spreadsheet. Hopefully you’re starting to see the value in this, and how it can be used to gather a lot of intelligence that can be used for all kinds of online activity, not least your SEO and social media campaigns.
3. Gathering the follower counts across social networks
Now that we have the author’s social media accounts, it makes sense to get their follower counts so that they can be ranked based on influence within the spreadsheet.
Here are the final XPath formulae that you can plug straight into Excel for each network to get their follower counts. All you’ll need to do is replace the text
INSERT SOCIAL PROFILE URL with the cell reference to the Google+/LinkedIn URL:
Google+:
=XPathOnUrl(<strong>INSERTGOOGLEPROFILEURL</strong>,"//span[@class='BOfSxb']")
LinkedIn:
=XPathOnUrl(<strong>INSERTLINKEDINURL</strong>,"//dd[@class='overview-connections']/p/strong")
4. Scraping page titles
Once you’ve got a list of URLs, you’re going to want to get an idea of what the content is actually about. Using this quick bit of XPath against any URL will display the title of the page:
=XPathOnUrl(A2,"//title")
To be fair, if you’re using the SEO Tools plugin for Excel then you can just use the built-in feature to scrape page titles, but it’s always handy to know how to do it manually!
A nice extra touch for analysis is to look at the number of words used within the page titles. To do this, use the following formula:
=CountWords(A2)
From this you can get an understanding of what the optimum title length of a post within a website is. This is really handy if you’re pitching an article to a specific publication. If you make the post the best possible fit for the site and back up your decisions with historical data, you stand a much better chance of success.
Taking this a step further, you can gather the social shares for each URL using the following functions:
Twitter:
=TwitterCount(<strong>INSERTURLHERE</strong>)
Facebook:
=FacebookLikes(<strong>INSERTURLHERE</strong>)
Google+:
=GooglePlusCount(<strong>INSERTURLHERE</strong>)
Note: You can also use a tool like
URL Profiler to pull in this data, which is much better for large data sets. The tool also helps you to gather large chunks of data from other social networks, link data sources like Ahrefs, Majestic SEO and Moz, which is awesome.
If you want to get even more social stats then you can use the SharedCount API, and this is how you go about doing it…
Firstly, create a new column in your Excel spreadsheet and add the following formula (where
A2 is the URL of the webpage you want to gather social stats for):
=CONCATENATE("http://api.sharedcount.com/?url=",A2)
You should now have a cell that contains your webpage URL prefixed with the SharedCount API URL. This is what we will use to gather social stats. Now here’s the Excel formula to use for each network (where
B2 is the cell that contaiins the formula above):
StumbleUpon:
=JsonPathOnUrl(B2,"StumbleUpon")
Reddit:
=JsonPathOnUrl(B2,"Reddit")
Delicious:
=JsonPathOnUrl(B2,"Delicious")
Digg:
=JsonPathOnUrl(B2,"Diggs")
Pinterest:
=JsonPathOnUrl(B2,"Pinterest")
LinkedIn:
=JsonPathOnUrl(B2,"Linkedin")
Facebook Shares:
=JsonPathOnUrl(B2,"Facebook.share_count")
Facebook Comments:
=JsonPathOnUrl(B2,"Facebook.comment_count")
Once you have this data, you can start looking much deeper into the elements of a successful post. Here’s an example of a chart that I created around a large sample of articles that I analysed within Upworthy.com.

The chart looks at the average number of social shares that an article on Upworthy receives vs the number of words within its title. This is invaluable data that can be used across a whole host of different on-page elements to get the perfect article template for the site you’re pitching to.
See, big data
is useful!
5. Date/time the post was published
Along with analysing the details of headlines that are working within a site, you may want to look at the optimal posting times for best results. This is something that I regularly do within my blogs to ensure that I’m getting the best possible return from the time I spend writing.
Every site is different, which makes it very difficult for an automated,
one-size-fits-all tool to gather this information. Some sites will have this data within the <head> section of their webpages, but others will display it directly under the article headline. Again, Search Engine Land is a perfect example of a website doing this…

So here’s how you can scrape this information from the articles on Search Engine Land:
=XPathOnUrl(<strong>INSERTARTICLEURL</strong>,"//*[@class='dateline']/text()")
Now you’ve got the date and time of the post. You may want to trim this down and reformat it for your data analysis, but you’ve got it all in Excel so that should be pretty easy.
Extra reading
Data scraping is seriously powerful, and once you’ve had a bit of a play around with it you’ll also realise that it’s not that complicated. The examples that I’ve given are just a starting point but once you get your creative head on, you’ll soon start to see the opportunities that arise from this intelligence.
Here’s some extra reading that you might find useful:
- http://findmyblogway.com/scraping-communities-with-xpath/
- http://builtvisible.com/data-entry-is-a-waste-of-time/
- http://www.seotakeaways.com/data-scraping-guide-for-seo/
- http://okdork.com/2014/04/30/the-step-by-step-guide-to-10x-growth-for-any-blog/
TL;DR
- Start using actual data to inform your content campaigns instead of going on your gut feeling.
- Gather intelligence around specific domains you want to target for content placement and create the perfect post for their audience.
- Get clued up on XPath and JSON through using the SEO Tools plugin for Excel.
- Spend more time analysing what content will get you results as opposed to what sites will give you links!
- Check the website’s ToS before scraping.
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!
The Rigged Search Game

SEO was all about being clever. Still is, really. However, SEO used to reward the clever, too. The little guy could take on the big guys and munch their lunch by outsmarting them.
It was such an appealing idea.
The promise of the internet was that the old power structures would be swept aside, the playing field would be made level again, and those who played the smartest game would prosper.
Sadly, this promise didn’t last long.
Power
The names may have changed, but traditional power structures were soon reasserted. The old gatekeepers were replaced with the new gatekeepers. The new gatekeepers, like Google, grew fat, rich and powerful. They controlled the game and the game was, once again, rigged in favor of those with the most power. That’s not a Google-specific criticism, it’s just the way commerce works. You get big, you move markets simply by being big and present. In search, we see the power imbalance as a side-effect, namely the way big players are treated in the SERPs compared to small players.
SEO for big, established companies, in terms of strategy, is simple. Make sure the site is crawlable. Run PR campaigns that frequently mention the name of the big, established company – which PR campaigns do anyway – and ensure those mentions include a back link. Talk to a lof of friendly reporters. Publish content, do so often, and make sure the important content is somewhere near the top.
That’s it.
The market reputation of the entity does most of the grunt work when it comes to ranking. So long as their ship is pointed in the right direction, they’re golden.
The main aim of the SEO who works for a big, established entity is to stop the big, established entity doing something stupid. So long as the SEO can prevent the entity doing stupid things – often a difficult task, granted – the big, established entity will likely dominate their niche simply by virtue of established market power.
That didn’t used to be the case.
When SEO started, and for a number of years after, the little guy could dominate niches by being the most relevant. The little guy could become the most relevant by carefully deconstructing the algorithm and giving the search engine what the search engine wanted. If the search engines weren’t careful, they were in very real danger of getting exactly what they asked for!
That temporary inversion of the traditional power structure made SEO a lot of fun. You did some clever stuff. You rose to the top. You collected the rewards. I think it’s grown less fun now because being clever isn’t enough. SEO works, but not quite as well as it used to for small players as the cost/reward equation favors big players.
Do A Lot Of Clever SEO Stuff, Get Nowhere
These days, a glass ceiling exists. SEOBook members can read a detailed post by Aaron outlining the glass ceiling here.
Here’s how it often plays out…
About a 8 months ago we launched one of the most viral pieces of content that we have ever done (particulary for a small site that doesn’t have a huge following) … it was done so well that it was organically referenced/hardcoded into Wikipedia. In addition it was cited on news sites, dozens and dozens of blogs (likely north of 100), a number of colleges, etc. It got like a couple hundred unique linking domains….which effectively doubled the unique linking domains that linked into the parent site. What impact did that have on rankings? Nada.
For link building to work well, the right signals need to exist, too. There needs to have high levels of reach and engagement. Big companies tend to have high levels of reach and engagement due to their market position and wider PR and advertising campaigns. This creates search keyword volume, keyword associations, engagement, and frequent mentions in important places, and all this is difficult to compete with if you have a small budget. The exception appears to be in relatively new niches, and in the regions, where the underlying data concerning engagement, reach and interest is unlikely to be particularly deep and rich.
Yet.
So, the little guy is often fighting a losing battle when it comes to search. Even if they choose a new, fast growing niche, as soon as that niche becomes lucrative enough to attract big players, traditional power will reassert itself. The only long term option for the little guy is to become a big guy, or get bought up by one, or go work for one.
Slavery
Abraham Lincoln thought wage labour was a stage workers pass through, typically in their 20’s or early 30s. Eventually, they become self-employed and keep all the profits of their labour.
Adam Smith maintained markets only work as intended if everyone had enough to participate. They also must have sufficient control over their own means of production. Adam Smith, father of modern capitalism, was not a big fan of corporate capitalism:
Merchants and master manufacturers are . . . the two classes of people who commonly employ the largest capitals, and who by their wealth draw to themselves the greatest share of the public consideration.
A side-effect of big players is they can distort markets. They have more purchasing power and that purchasing power sends a signal about what’s important. To big companies. The result is less diversity.
It’s self evident that power changes the search game. The search results become more about whoever is the most powerful. It seems ironic that Google started as an upstart outsider. The search results are difficult to conquer if you’re an upstart outsider, but pretty easy to do if you’re already a major player. Adwords, quality score being equal, favours those with deep pockets.
What’s happening is the little guy is getting squeezed out of this landscape and many of them will become slaves.
Huh? “Slaves”? By Aristotle’s and Lincoln’s definition, quite possibly:
If we want to have markets, we have to give everybody an equal chance to get into them, or else they don’t work as a means of social liberation; they operate as a means of enslavement.
Enslavement in the sense that the people with enough power, who can get the market to work on their behalf…
Right — bribing politicians to set up the system so that they accumulate more, and other people end up spending all their time working for them. The difference between selling yourself into slavery and renting yourself into slavery in the ancient world was basically none at all, you know. If Aristotle were here, he’d think most people in a country like England or America were slaves.
What’s happening in search is a microcosm of what is happening elsewhere in society. Markets are dominated and distorted by corporations at the direct expense of the small players. Yes, it’s nothing new, but it hasn’t always been this way in search.
So what is my point?
My point is that if you’re not getting the same business benefits from search as you used to, and the game seems that much harder, then it’s not because you’re not clever. It’s because the game is rigged.
Of course, small companies can prosper. You’ll find many examples of them in the SERPs. But their path to getting there via the search channel is now much longer and doesn’t pay as well as it used to. This means fewer SEOs will be hired by small companies because the cost of effective SEO is rising fast whilst the rewards are shrinking. Meanwhile, the big companies are increasing their digital budgets.
Knowing all this, the small operator can change their approach. The small operator has one advantage. They can be nimble, flexible, and change direction quickly. So, looking forward over the not-too-distant horizon, we either need a plan to take advantage of fast emerging markets before the big guys enter them, or we need a plan to scale, or we need to fight differently, such as taking brand/USP centric approaches.
Or go work for one of the big guys.
As a “slave”. Dude :) (Just kidding)
What’s In A Name?

Many SEO love keyword-loaded domain names. The theory is that domains that feature a keyword will result in a boost in ranking. It’s still a contentious topic:
I’ve seen bloggers, webmasters and search aficionados argue the case around the death of EMDs time and time again, despite the evidence staring them in the face: EMDs are still all over the place. What’s more, do a simple bulk backlink analysis via Majestic, and you will find tons which rank in the top 10 while surrounded by far more authoritative domains.
No matter what the truth of the matter as to the ranking value of EMDs, most would agree that finding the right language for describing and profiling our business is important.
Terminology Changes
Consider the term “startup”.
This term, which describes a new small business, feels like it has been around forever. Not so. Conduct a search on the time period 1995-1998 and you won’t find results for start-up:
It’s a word that has grown up with the web and sounds sexier than just business. Just like the word “consultant” or “boutique” sounds better than “mom and pop” or “1 person business”. (You must remember of course when “sanitation engineer” replaced “trash man”.) oI just did a search to see the use of the word startup from the period 1995 to 1998 and came up with zilch in terms of relation to business
Start up does sound sexier than “mom n pop” or “one person business”, or “a few stoner mates avoiding getting a job”. A pitch to a VC that described the business as a “mom n pop” may not be taken seriously, whereas calling it a startup will.
If we want to be taken seriously by our audience, then finding the audience’s language is important.
SEO or Digital Marketing Or…..?
Has SEO become a dirty word? Has it always been a dirty word?
SEO’s don’t tend to see it that way, even if they are aware of the negative connotations. They see SEO as a description of what they do. It’s always been a bit of a misnomer, as we don’t optimize search engines, but for whatever reason, it stuck.
The term SEO is often associated with spam. The ever-amiable Matt Cutts video’s could be accompanied by a stern, animated wagging finger and a “tut tut tut” subtext. The search engines frown on a lot when it comes to SEO. SEO is permanent frown territory. Contrast this with PPC. PPC does not have that negative connotation. There is no reputation issue in saying you’re a PPC provider.
Over the years, this propaganda exercise that has resulted in the “SEO questionable/PPC credible” narrative has been pretty effective. The spammer label, borrowed from the world of email spam, has not been a term the SEO has managed to shrug off. The search engines have even managed to get SEOs to use the term “spammer” as a point of differentiation. “Spam is what the other SEOs do. Not me, of course.” This just goes to show how effective the propaganda has been. Once SEOs used spam to describe their own industry, the fate of the term SEO was sealed. After all, you seldom hear doctors, lawyers and retailers defining what they do against the bad actors in their sector.
As traffic acquisition gets broader, encompassing PR and social media, new titles like Digital Marketer have emerged. These terms have the advantage of not being weighed down by historical baggage. I’m not suggesting people should name themselves one thing or the other. Rather, consider these terms in a strategic sense. What terms best describe who you are and what you do, and cast you in the best possible light to those you wish to serve, at this point in time?
The language moves.
Generic Name Or Brandable?
Keyword loaded names, like business.com, are both valuable and costly. The downside of such names, besides being costly, is they severely limit branding opportunities. The better search engines get, and the more people use social media and other referral channels, the less these generic names will matter.
What matters most in crowded markets is being memorable.
A memorable, unique name is a valuable search commodity. If that name is always associated with you and no one else, then you’ll always be found in the search results. SEMRush, MajesticSEO, and Mo are unlikely to be confused with other companies. “Search Engine Tools”, not so much.
Will the generic name become less valuable because generic names are perhaps only useful at the start of an industry? How mature is your industry? How can you best get differentiation in a crowded market through language alone?
The Strategy Behind Naming
Here are a few points to consider.
1. Start Early
Names are often an afterthought. People construct business plans. They think about how their website looks. They think about their target market. They don’t yet have a name. Try starting with a name and designing everything else around it. The name can set the tone of every other decision you make.
2. Positioning
In mature markets, differentiation is strategically important. Is your proposed name similar to other competitors names? Is it unique enough? If you’re in at the start of a new industry, would a generic, keyword loaded name work best? Is it time for a name change because you’ve got lost in the crowd? Has your business focus changed?
Does your name go beyond mere description and create an emotional connection with your audience? Names that take on their own meaning, like Amazon, are more likely to grow with the business, rather than have the business outgrow the name. Imagine if Amazon.com had called itself Books.com.
3. What Are You All About?
Are you a high-touch consultative company? Or a product based, functional company? Are you on the cutting edge? Or are you catering to a market who like things just the way they are?
Writing down a short paragraph about how you see yourself, how the customers see you, and your position in the market, will help you come up with suitable names. Better yet, write a story.
4. Descriptive Vs Differentiation
Descriptive can be safe. “Internet Search Engine” or “Web Crawler”. There’s no confusing what those businesses do. Compare them with the name Google. Google gives you no idea what the company does, but it’s more iconic, quirky and memorable. There’s no doubt it has grown with the company and become a natural part of their identity in ways that “Internet Search Engine” never could.
Sometimes, mixing descriptions to create something quirky works well. Airbnb is a good example. The juxtaposition of those two words creates something new, whilst at the same time having a ring of the familiar. It’s also nice to know if the domain name is available, and if the name can be trademarked. The more generic the name, the harder it is to trademark, and the less likely the domain name is available.
5. Does Your Name Travel Well?
Hopefully, your name isn’t a swear word in another culture. Nor have negative connotations. Here are a few comical examples where it went wrong:
Nokia’s new smartphone translates in Spanish slang to prostitute, which is unfortunate, but at least the cell phone giant is in good company. The name of international car manufacturer Peugeot translates in southern China to Biao zhi, which means the same thing.
This is not such an issue if your market is local, but if you plan to expand into other markets in future, then it pays to consider this angle.
6. There’s No Right Answer
There is probably no universally good name. At least, when you first come up with a name, you can be assured some people will hate it, some will be indifferent, and some will like it – no matter what name you choose.
This is why it’s important to ground the subjective name-choosing process in something concrete, like your business strategy, or positioning in the market. You name could have come before the business plan. Or it could reflect it. You then test your name with people who will likely buy your product or service. It doesn’t matter what your Mom or your friends think of the name, it’s what you think of the name and what your potential customers think of the name that counts.
7. Diluting Your Name
Does each service line and product in your company need a distinctive name? Maybe, but the risk is that it could dilute the brand. Consider Virgin. They put the exact same name on completely different service lines. That same brand name carries the values and spirit of Virgin to whatever new enterprise they undertake. This also reduces the potential for customer confusion.
Creating a different name for some of your offerings might be a good idea, Say, if you’re predominantly a service-based company, yet you also have one product that you may spin off at some point in future. You may want to clearly differentiate the product from the service so as not to dilute the focus of the service side. Again, this is where strategy comes in. If you’re clear about what your company does, and your position in the market, then it becomes easier to decide how to name new aspects of your business. Or whether you should give them a name at all.
7. Is your name still relevant?
Brands evolve. They can appear outdated if the market moves on. On the other hand, they can built equity through longevity. It seems especially difficult to change internet company names as the inbound linking might be compromised as a result. Transferring the equity of a brand is typically expensive and difficult. All the more reason to place sufficient importance on naming to begin with.
8. More Than A Name
The branding process is more than just a name and identity. It’s the language of your company. It’s the language of your customers. It becomes a keyword on which people search. Your customers have got to remember it. You, and your employees, need to be proud of it. It sets you apart.
The language is important. And strategic.
Link Building for Real Estate Websites
Professional home stagers transform homes into showrooms. To get more links to your real estate website and attract more traffic, you also need to stage it. Here are tips on how to optimize your site so it’s more appealing to prospective linkers.
Pandas, Penguins, and Popsicles
Are you still working through your newsfeed of SEO material on the 101 ways to get out of panda 4.0 written by people that have never actually practiced SEO on their own sites? Aaron and I had concluded that what was rolling through was panda before it was announced that it was panda, but I’m not going to walk here on my treadmill and knock out yet another post on the things you should be doing if you were gut punched by that negative a priori algorithm (hat tip to Terry, another fine SEObook member, for pointing out to me those public discussions that showed the philosophical evolutionary shift towards the default assumption that sites likely deserve to be punished). I’d say 90% of those posts are thinly veiled sales pitches; I should know since I sell infographics to support my nachos habit. Speaking of infographics, there’s already a great one that covers recovery strategies that still work right here.
Should I write about penguin? Analysis of that beast consumed the better part of 2 year years of my waking time. Nope. Again, I think it has already been adequately covered in a previous blog post. There’s nothing particularly new to report there either since the next update may be completely different, might be just another refresh that doesn’t take into account those slapped in the 1.0 incarnation of the update, or may actually be the penguin everyone hopes it is, taking into account the countless hours agencies have spent disavowing links and spamming me with fake legal threads should I not remove links they themselves placed. I wouldn’t hold your breathe on that last one. Outside of crowdsourcing pain for future manual penalties, I don’t expect much relief on that front.
Instead, I think I’m going to talk about popsicles. That seems like the kind of tripe that a SEO blog might discuss. I bet I can make it work though. I’m a fat dude in the Phoenix area and we already had our first 100F day, so I’m thinking of frozen treats. Strap in.
Search tactics and I’d even go so far as to say even certain strategies are like popsicles. When they are brand new they are cool and refreshing, but once exposed to the public heat they fade…fast. Really fast. Like a goop of sticky mess, which users of ALN and BMR can probably tell you.
Bear with me.
If you have a tactic that works, why would you expose it to the public? Nothing good can come of that. Sure, you have a tactic that works 100% but since I’m a loyal subscriber you’re willing to share it with me for $297. Seems legit. I’m not saying all services/products pitched this way are inherently ‘bad’, I’m just saying you aren’t going to get a magic bullet, yet alone one hand-wrapped and delivered by filling out a single wufoo form…sans report.
Would you share with a really close friend? I suppose, but even still the popsicle isn’t going to last as long since it is now being consumed at an accelerated rate. There’s the thought of germs, contamination, and other nasty thoughts that’d prevent me from going down that route. Cue the “Two SEOs, one popsicle” reaction videos. No. There are two ways to make the best use out of that popsicle.
- Practionioner: eat it quietly, savor it, make it last.
- Strategist w/ resources: figure out the recipe and mass produce it as quickly as possible, knowing that after enough public heat is on, the popsicles will start melting before they can be eaten, and no one likely that weird, warm orange sticky stuff that tastes like a glucose intolerance test.
There’s another caveat to the two above scenarios. Even if you’re a strategist with deep resources, unless you’re willing to test on your own sites, you’re just effectively selling smoke on an unproven tactic.
So there you have it, tactics are like popsicles. Disappointed? Good. I’ve been doing SEO since 1997, so here’s a secret: try to create engaging content, supported by authoritative off-page signals. There’s an ebb and flow to this of course, but it can be translated across the full black/white spectrum. Markov content in a free wordpress theme can be engaging when it is cloaked with actionable imagery, with certain % of back-buttons disabled, or when you make the advertising more compelling than the content (just ask eHow). Similarly, well-researched interactive infographics can engage the user on the other side of the spectrum…just more expensive. Comment spam and parasitic hosting on “authority” sites can tap into those authority signals on dark side, as can a thorough native campaign across a bunch of relevant sites backed by a PR campaign, TV commercials, and radio spots for the light side. Budget and objectives are the only difference.
Go enjoy a popsicle everyone. Summer is here; I expect a lot more heat from Google, so you might need one.
About the author: Joe Sinkwitz is the Chief Revenue Officer at CopyPress. He {Tweets / posts / comments / shares his thoughts} on navigating the evolving SEO landscape on Twitter here.
eBay 1 Year After Dropping AdWords
Pay up or get booted.
