Google AdWords Editor Version 10.2 Supported Upgraded Sitelinks
Google announced that an updated version of the AdWords Editor, version 10.2 supports the upgraded Sitelinks for Enhanced campaigns.
Google notes that version 10.2 is the only AdWords Editor that works with enhanced campaigns properly…
Google Sitelinks With Borders
Chris Ainsworth posted a screen shot of a Google user interface test in the Google search results on his Google+ page. He noticed a subtle change for the sitelinks for branded search results. Specifically…
Google Now A Personal Assistant? Adds Search For My Things.
Google announced a new feature rolling out to U.S., English-speaking users on desktop, tablet and smartphone that makes Google act as your personal virtual assistant. Yes, you don’t have to type…
10 Bad Assumptions About SEM That Might Get You Fired — Part 1
I’ve been a search engine marketer (both paid and organic) for over ten years, and in that time I have made my share of mistakes. I’m not talking about pure accidents here — most of these mistakes were caused by poor assumptions on my part which turned out to be horribly wrong….
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
The Social CEO: 6 Reasons Why the CEO Must Lead the Way
The CEO is responsible for every aspect of the business they lead. The time has come for CEOs to step up and take responsibility for the most direct connection they have with customers, employees, stakeholders and the media – social media.
Google: We Prefer To Assess Reconsideration Requests On Links Within Webmaster Tools However…
What does a webmaster do when they receive a manual action from Google telling them they have a penalty because of paid or bad links pointing to their site? Google has told us back in June that you should use Google’s “links to your site” report within Webmaster Tools to analyze bad links pointing…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Is Paid Social Media The New Paid SEO?
Brands have a new way to pay for external or offsite SEO, a path to influence rankings. It follows the search engines’ terms of service and can lead to the type of links Google says are among the most valuable. Google spokespersons even endorse the principle behind this new paid form of SEO……
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
How to Create YouTube Video Ad Campaigns for Direct Marketing
By understanding each YouTube video ad campaign type, how these ad units function, and understanding proper campaign segmentation, direct marketers can leverage this massive channel to drive more relevant traffic that converts.
Google Maps Adds Location Sharing After Google Latitude Shuts Down
Google quietly announced on Google+ that they have added “location sharing” features to Google Maps for Android.
This was expected since Google Latitude died and was being shut down…
Mastering PPC: Quality Score, Ad Rank and Why They Matter
Search engines are really, really good at extracting every last bit of revenue of every search. We’re never going to fully understand Google or Bing’s algorithm or everything that goes into PPC pricing. What we can do is explore the fundamentals of how the PPC marketplace works, what factors we can control and how we […]
Paid, Earned & Owned. Facebook, Twitter & More. Get It All At SMX Social Media Marketing Las Vegas – See The Agenda!
Struggling to demonstrate the value of Twitter followers? Trying to decipher Facebook’s ever-changing advertising options? Uncertain if Google+, Instagram, Pinterest or Tumblr deserve a slice of your limited time and attention? Attend SMX Social Media Marketing for a jam-packed program of cutting…
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5 Ways to Localize Social to Boost Relevance and Exposure
Unique localized strategies specifically for social media are a must for brands that want to be engaging and stay relevant. Here’s how to ensure businesses with multiple locations can easily be found online and help generate local leads.
What To Do When Using External Links
It almost feels like the 1990s again. No one seems to know what to do with their Websites any more, or how to link out. If you’re living and working within the search engine optimization community you cannot fail to notice that Google has been closing the loopholes on linking schemes all year long. That wild, crazy link-sotted party that has been raging for ten years almost seems to be winding down. Whatever will Web marketers do now that they cannot spam Google’s index so easily any more? Well, let’s think about this, shall we? Link Out to Any Damn Website You Please I watch all of Matt Cutts’ videos. I have never once seen him say, “Google doesn’t want you to link to other Websites”. Quite the contrary, he says that Google encourages people to link out to each other. And nowhere did Matt or any other Googler I follow say you have to throw a “rel=’nofollow’” attribute on the outbound links you choose to give to other Websites. All they ask is that you use “rel=’nofollow’” for your marketing links. They don’t say “marketing links” but that’s really what they are talking about. So if you see a […]
Why Google Webmaster Tools Link Data is Enough for Your Link Cleanup
Whether Google Webmaster Tools link data is reliable enough for a successful link cleanup or not in not a new topic in the SEO community.
Background
Last year John Mueller explained that it’s enough to use GWT data and pointed out that links missing from the report weren’t significant anyway.
…
The post Why Google Webmaster Tools Link Data is Enough for Your Link Cleanup appeared first on DEJAN SEO.
The Anatomy of a Great Guest Post
Lately there has been a lot of talk about how guest posting has gone down hill.While there are tons of guides on how to write a good blog post, there are some things about guest posting that are unique. So I want to focus on Continue reading »
Over 19 Billion Searches In July, Google And Bing Both Up
Earlier today comScore released July 2013 US search market share data. The figures reflect modest growth for Google, stasis for Bing and contraction for everyone else. Google bumped up slightly from last month to 67 percent market share, while Bing hovered just below 18 percent. Yahoo lost a tenth…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
A New Analysis of Google SERPs Across Search Volume and Site Type
Posted by Matt Peters
At Moz, we have been following up on our 2013 Search Engine Ranking Factors study by continuing to analyze interesting aspects of the data. One of our most frequently asked questions is, “Do you see any systematic differences in Google’s search results across search volume or topic category?” By design, our main study used a broad keyword set across all search volumes and industries to capture Google’s overall search algorithm. As a result, we weren’t able to answer this question since it requires segmenting the data into different buckets. In this post, I’ll do just that and dig into the data in an attempt to answer this question.
Our approach
We used a subset of the data from our 2013 Ranking Factors study, focusing on a few of the most important factors. In the main study, we collected the top 50 search results for about 15,000 keywords from Google, along with more then 100 different factors. These included links, anchor text, on-page factors, and social signals, among others. Then, for each factor we computed the mean Spearman correlation between the factor and search position. Here’s a great graphic from Rand that helps illustrate how to interpret the correlations:
In general, a higher correlation means that the factor is more closely related to a higher ranking than a lower correlation. It doesn’t necessarily mean that there is causation!
In addition to search results and factors, we collected the categories from AdWords (e.g. “Home and Garden”) and the monthly US (local) search volume. This allows us to examine correlations across these different segments.
Search volume
First up is search volume. We segmented each keyword into one of three buckets depending on the average local (US) monthly search volume from AdWords: less than 5,000 searches per month, 5,000-15,000 searches per month, and more than 15,000 searches per month.
To begin exploring the data, here is the median page and domain authority in each bucket, along with the total percentage of results with a domain name exactly matching the keyword:
Not too surprisingly, we see the overall page authority, domain authority and the exact match domain (EMD) percentage all increase with search volume. This is presumably because higher-volume queries are targeted by larger, more authoritative sites.
Now, an overall higher page authority for high-volume queries doesn’t necessarily mean that the correlation with search position will be larger. The correlation measures the extent to which page authority (or any other factor) can predict the ordering. As a example, consider two three-result SERPs, one with page authorities of 90, 92, and 88 for the first three positions; and another with values of 30, 20, and 10. The first SERP has higher values overall, but a lower correlation. To examine how these impact search ordering, we can compute the mean Spearman correlation in each bucket:
And for those who prefer a chart:
From left to right, the table lists link-related factors (page authority, domain authority, and exact match anchor text); a brand-related factor (number of domain mentions in the last 30 days from Fresh Web Explorer); social factors (number of Google +1s, Facebook shares, and tweets); and keyword-related factors (keyword usage on the page, in the title, and EMD).
Looking at the data, we can see a few interesting things:
- The correlations increase noticeably with search volume for link, brand, and social media factors.
- The correlations are mostly constant for keyword-related factors (keyword usage on the page or in the domain name).
Primarily, point #1 says that these factors do a better job at predicting rank as search volume increases. We’d expect to see a larger discrepancy in the link or social metrics throughout the SERPs in higher volume queries than in lower-volume queries. One corollary is that SERPs from lower-volume queries are more heavily influenced by factors that aren’t represented in the table (e.g. positive or negative user signals).
One implication of point #2 is that Google’s keyword-document relevance algorithm is the same for high- and low-volume queries. That is, their method for determining what a page is about doesn’t depend the query popularity.
We can make this more concrete by considering two different queries and SERPs: one high volume (“cheap flights” with more than 1 million searches per month), and one low-volume (“home goods online” with less than 500 searches per month). For reference, here are the top results for each search, with the page and domain authority from the MozBar:
Above: Google SERP for “cheap flights”
Above: Google SERP for “home goods online”
When a user enters a query, Google first determines which of the many pages in its index are relevant to the query, then ranks the results. A popular query will likely have several relevant pages (or more) with many links, since they are targeted by marketers. In this case, Google should have plenty of signals to determine ranking. A relevant page with high page authority? Check, put it in the top 10. On the other hand, pages in the dark corners of the internet with relatively few links are likely most relevant to low-volume queries. In the low-volume case, since the link signals aren’t as clear, Google is forced to rely more heavily on other signals to determine ranking, and the correlations decrease. This example oversimplifies the complexity of the algorithm, but provides some intuitive understanding of the data.
Site category
We can repeat the analysis for the different AdWords categories. First, the median page and domain authority and EMD percentage:
And the mean Spearman correlations:
Overall, the trends are similar to search volume, with significant differences in the link correlations, and smaller differences in the keyword-related correlations. The explanation for these results is similar to the one above for search volume. The industries with the largest link and social correlations — “Health” and “Travel & Tourism” — tend to have broad-based queries targeted by lots of sites. On the other hand, the industries near the bottom of the table — “Apparel,” “Dining & Nightlife,” and “Retailers & General Merchandise” — all tend to have specific or local intent queries that are likely to be relevant to specific product pages or smaller sites.
Takeaways
In this post, we have explored how a few individual ranking factors vary across search volume and keyword category. Correlations of link- and social-related metrics increase with search volume, but correlations of keyword-related factors (usage on page and in the domain name) are constant across search volume. Taken together, this suggests that Google is using the same query document relevance algorithm for both head and tail queries, but that link metrics predict SERPs from popular queries better then tail queries. We see something similar across site categories with the largest differences in link related correlations. Industries like “Health” that have broad, informational queries have higher correlations than industries like “Apparel” that tend to have queries with specific product intent.
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SearchCap: The Day In Search, August 14, 2013
Below is what happened in search today, as reported on Search Engine Land and from other places across the Web. From Search Engine Land: Google Brings More “Now” To Search With New Quick Answers Google is bringing more of the capabilities of Google Now to the search box and providing a…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
‘Geo-Conquesting’ Drives Customers Away from Local Competition with Mobile Ads [Study]
xAd has released its Q2 2013 Mobile-Location Insights Report, which showed “geo-conquesting” – a way for mobile advertisers to grab attention away from local competition – is on the rise and businesses are seeing success with the strategy.
Oklahoma Uses YouTube TrueView Ads to Boost Tourism for a Song [Case Study]
Oklahoma’s Tourism and Recreation Department, using only 20 percent of its marketing budget on YouTube TrueView ads, increased website visits by 486 percent year over year. TrueView ads accounted for 44 percent of all their site traffic.