SearchCap: Weird Google Quick Answers, Google Maps Ads & Luxury Paid Search Spend
Below is what happened in search today, as reported on Search Engine Land and from other places across the web. From Search Engine Land: Top Luxury Brands Spent $22 Million On Google Text Ads In The U.S. Last Year [Study] Paid search research firm, AdG…
Top Luxury Brands Spent $22 Million On Google Text Ads In The U.S. Last Year [Study]
Paid search research firm, AdGooroo, has analyzed the paid search activity by luxury brands and retailers in the U.S. across five categories: apparel, beauty & cosmetics, shoes, handbags and watches. According to the study, five of the top personal luxury companies spent nearly $22 million on…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
The Long and Short of Responsive Design
This is a guest post from Corey Eastman of design and development whizz kids, Climax Media, the enterprise web architect agency who help both large enterprises and funded startups innovate through connected web platforms. When conjuring up ideas for our Creative month here on the blog, we couldn’t think of a better bunch to rope in than these guys, the experts behind a whole slew of great blue papers.
Bing Now Works Within Google’s Chrome New Tab Page
Bing announced that in the most recent Google Chrome browser update, that when you change your default search provider from Google to Bing…
Google Issues Manual Action For Links On Moz’s YouMoz
The co-founder of Moz, Rand Fishkin, posted on Twitter and also on the Moz blog that one of the YouMoz, the user generated content portion of Moz, contributors received a Google Manual action for a link violation and it cited an article posted on YouMo…
Oh No! Clients Requesting Negative SEO
I am a bit tired of covering the negative SEO topic but no one can fully deny that it does not exist…
Ads On Google Maps Now Show In New Scrolling List View, In-Map Ads Get A New Look
Google has formally announced that it is surfacing and displaying ads on Google Maps and Google Maps for Mobile in the scrolling list view it debuted recently. The ads appear above the organic listings and can include location extensions and call exten…
Hearing The Rhythms Of Human Search Behavior: What We’ve Learned
Watching people search is great entertainment. It’s not a one-note performance. It’s an all-day, around-the-clock jazz show, with the performers constantly changing their themes, rhythms, even their instruments. Along the way, one gains some great insight into human behavior and how…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Automated Tools To Help Local Businesses Tackle Online Marketing
When asked to rate their biggest challenges with managing digital media for their business, 47% of local business owners said they don’t have enough knowledge or expertise; 43% said they don’t have enough time; and 26% said they don’t have enough resources, according to a Local…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Using Majestic’s Topical Trust Flow to Find Online PR Opportunities
Using this powerful filter you can isolate the categories you’re interested in, explore the source links to see the news coverage in editorial context, and identify specific journalists to see what type of stories they’re interested in.
Some Of The Weird Issues When Google’s Quick Answers Comes From Random Sources
As Google’s Hummingbird algorithm continues to shape the answers within Google’s search results, webmasters, SEOs and searchers ask themselves, why is Google showing this knowledge graph or that quick answer. Often webmasters find themselves at a loss because Google takes their content…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Summer School: Learning from the Experts: Nichola Stott
What is the best education, what background is important? Nichola Stott, Founder and Managing Director at theMediaFlow tells you what to do.
Post from Bas van den Beld on State of Digital
Summer School: Learning from the Experts: Nichola Stott
How to Optimize Your Content Strategy With Social Listening
If you understand what your customers are saying, what they need, and how they want to get it, you can craft the right content that meets their needs. Here’s how social listening can help you optimize your content strategy.
Google AdWords Now In Google Maps List View
Google announced on Google+ that they’ve expanded more AdWords ads to the Google Maps desktop and mobile app interface.
Now they may show ads within the search results for places like restaurants and hotels in a list view below the search box…
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New: Google Analytics Display Targeting Reports
Google Analytics has added a new report that interacts with your Google Ads Display Targeting campaigns. They announced it on Google+ saying “this new report allows advertisers to see how their advertising on the Google Display Network (GDN) is perfor…
How to Ensure Your SEO Strategy Delivers the Right Traffic
When it comes to SEO, achieving first page rankings and getting more traffic is one thing, but here’s how to make sure those rankings deliver the right type of traffic to your website, traffic that will actually convert into new customers.
Content and SEO are Not Always the Answer
SEOs often look to content as the driving force for their strategies. But sometimes content, and SEO itself, is not the answer, as this case study shows.
Post from Kate Morris on State of Digital
Content and SEO are Not Always the Answer
Understanding Customer Value
Why do customers buy things? The obtuse answer would be because they need them. But this does not really answer the question. Not so long ago our choices were limited. There were fewer brands as we call them today. There were less choices to make. It was a seller’s market. Sellers focused on decreasing costs […]
The post Understanding Customer Value appeared first on Builtvisible – A Creative Digital Agency.
Ripoff Report to Revise Removal Policy: May Accept Court Orders
Ripoff Report has been notorious for its “no removal” policy, refusing to remove reports for any amount of money, pleading, or legal litigation. However, Ripoff Report is reportedly making some important changes to this iron clad rule.
Dear Google, Links from YouMoz Don’t Violate Your Quality Guidelines
Posted by randfish
Recently, Moz contributor Scott Wyden, a photographer in New Jersey, received a warning in his Google Webmaster Tools about some links that violated Google’s Quality Guidelines. Many, many site owners have received warnings like this, and while some are helpful hints, many (like Scott’s) include sites and links that clearly do not violate the guidelines Google’s published.
Here’s a screenshot of Scott’s reconsideration request:

(note that the red text was added by Scott as a reminder to himself)
As founder, board member, and majority shareholder of Moz, which owns Moz.com (of which YouMoz is a part), I’m here to tell Google that Scott’s link from the YouMoz post was absolutely editorial. Our content team reviews every YouMoz submission. We reject the vast majority of them. We publish only those that are of value and interest to our community. And we check every frickin’ link.
Scott’s link, ironically, came from this post about Building Relationships, Not Links. It’s a good post with helpful information, good examples, and a message which I strongly support. I also, absolutely, support Scott’s earning of a link back to his Photography SEO community and to his page listing business books for photographers (this link was recently removed from the post at Scott’s request). Note that “Photography SEO community” isn’t just a descriptive name, it’s also the official brand name of the site Scott built. Scott linked the way I believe content creators should on the web: with descriptive anchor text that helps inform a reader what they’re going to find on that page. In this case, it may overlap with keywords Scott’s targeting for SEO, but I find it ridiculous to hurt usability in the name of tiptoeing around Google’s potential overenforcement. That’s a one-way ticket to a truly inorganic, Google-shaped web.
If Google doesn’t want to count those links, that’s their business (though I’d argue they’re losing out on a helpful link that improves the link graph and the web overall). What’s not OK is Google’s misrepresentation of Moz’s link as “inorganic” and “in violation of our quality guidelines” in their Webmaster Tools.
I really wish YouMoz was an outlier. Sadly, I’ve been seeing more and more of these frustratingly misleading warnings from Google Webmaster Tools.

Several months ago, Jen Lopez, Moz’s director of community, had an email conversation with Google’s Head of Webspam, Matt Cutts. Matt granted us permission to publish portions of that discussion, which you can see below:
Jen Lopez: Hey Matt,
I made the mistake of emailing you while you weren’t answering outside emails for 30 days. :D I wanted to bring this up again though because we have a question going on in Q&A right now about the topic. People are worried that they can’t guest post on Moz: http://moz.com/community/q/could-posting-on-youmoz-get-your-penalized-for-guest-blogging because they’ll get penalized. I was curious if you’d like to jump in and respond? Or give your thoughts on the topic?
Thanks!
Matt Cutts: Hey, the short answer is that if a site A links to spammy sites, that can affect site A’s reputation. That shouldn’t be a shock–I think we’ve talked about the hazards of linking to bad neighborhoods for a decade or so.
That said, with the specific instance of Moz.com, for the most part it’s an example of a site that does good due diligence, so on average Moz.com is linking to non-problematic sites. If Moz were to lower its quality standards then that could eventually affect Moz’s reputation.
The factors that make things safer are the commonsense things you’d expect, e.g. adding a nofollow will eliminate the linking issue completely. Short of that, keyword rich anchortext is higher risk than navigational anchortext like a person or site’s name, and so on.”
Jen, in particular, has been a champion of high standards and non-spammy guest publishing, and I’m very appreciative to Matt for the thoughtful reply (which matches our beliefs). Her talk at SMX Sydney—Guest Blogging Isn’t Dead, But Blogging Just for Links Is—and her post—Time for Guest Blogging With a Purpose—helps explain Moz’s position on the subject (one I believe Google shares).
I can promise that our quality standards are only going up (you can read Keri’s post on YouMoz policies to get a sense of how seriously we take our publishing), that Scott’s link in particular was entirely editorial, organic, and intentional, and that we take great steps to insure that all of our authors and links are carefully vetted.
We’d love if Google’s webmaster review team used the same care when reviewing and calling out links in Webmaster Tools. It would help make the web (and Google’s search engine) a better place.
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