Technical SEO as Part of a Multi-Signal Search Strategy – #brightonseo

technical-seo-brightonseoAt BrightonSEO, Richard Falconer (Head of Technical Search at LBi) provides interesting insight & useful tips how to gain a better understanding of your technical SEO set up.

Post from on State of Search
Technical SEO as Part of a Multi-Signal Search Strategy – #brightonseo

How Phone Data Might Change Your Search Strategy – #brightonseo

brightonseo logoIn his BrightonSEO talk, Ali White from T W White & Sons explained how advanced call tracking helped him redefine his SEO and PPC campaigns.

Post from on State of Search
How Phone Data Might Change Your Search Strategy – #brightonseo

Authorship Brownouts Due to “FaceRank”?

Several months ago my author photo stopped showing on my articles in the Google search results. I double checked all of my settings several times and they appeared correct.  I didn’t really have time to fool with it until the end of last month when I reached out to Matt McGee, AJ Kohn and Aaron […]

Google Announces Availability of a Google+ Widget for New Dashboard

Google has just updated their dashboard post in the forum detailing the new Places for Business Dashboard with the following one button upgrade of your listing to the fully social G+ page. Update: Alex Cordes of LocalSEOupdate.com uncovered an interesting tidbit. If you have a non verified local G+ Page at the same email as […]

SABS with Social Local G+ Page – Hide Your Address Now

The process of merging a social G+ Page with a non social G+ Page (AKA a G+ local listing, a Place Page, a non merged G+ page for local) was never intended for use by service area businesses (SABs in Googletalk) that were supposed to hide their address. That didn’t stop them and many of […]

Google Notes That Recent Review Take Downs Might Be Reversed

Jade noted in the forums that: Just letting you know that we’ve found a technical issue last week with reviews where some were incorrectly taken down. We’re working on fixing the issue, so sit tight! This was in response to the spate of reports of reviews being taken down last week in what appeared like […]

The Noise Becomes the Signal – Voice Queries and Accent Scores

Might a twang or a drawl influence the search results you see at Google? If you’re prone to calling an elevator a lift, and tend to speak the Queen’s English in an accent similar to hers, you might see different search results than if you grew up in the Bronx or in New Orleans. If […]

The post The Noise Becomes the Signal – Voice Queries and Accent Scores appeared first on SEO by the Sea.

Is Google’s Cache Your Traffic or Google’s Traffic?

I have real-time analytics on my wall in the office and every now and then I bump into an odd case of search traffic. This time I spotted a very unusual keyword:

cache:http://dejanseo.com.au/anchor-text-proximity-experiment/

keyword

It’s impossible to search Google for the above as a regular query (unless you use quotes) and users are taken to Google’s cache of the page and not your own site.

The post Is Google’s Cache Your Traffic or Google’s Traffic? appeared first on DEJAN SEO.

How the Google Panda Algorithm Works

In 2005 Google published its “Web Authoring Statistics” report, which provided a unique insight into how a large search engine views the Web at the very basic HTML level. In August 2009 Matt Cutts invited Webmasters to help test a new indexing technology that Google had dubbed Caffeine. The SEO community immediately fell to rampant speculation about how Caffeine would affect rankings (in fact, the only effect was unintentional). By February 2010 even I had fallen prey to Caffeine Speculationitis. On February 25, 2010 Matt McGee confirmed that Google had not yet implemented the Caffeine technology on more than 1 data center (at this time, in April 2013, there are only 13 Google Data Centers around the world). On June 8, 2010 Google announced the completion of rolling out its Caffeine indexing technology. Caffeine gave Google the ability to index more of the Web at a faster rate than ever before. This larger, faster indexing technology invariably changed search results because all the newly discovered content was changing the search engine’s frame of reference for millions of queries. On November 11, 2010 Matt Cutts said that Google might use as many as 50 variations for some of its 200+ ranking […]

Introducing "x-default hreflang" for international landing pages

Webmaster Level: All

The homepages of multinational and multilingual websites are sometimes configured to point visitors to localized pages, either via redirects or by changing the content to reflect the user’s language. Today we’ll introduce a new rel-alternate-hreflang annotation that the webmaster can use to specify such homepages that is supported by both Google and Yandex.

To see this in action, let’s look at an example. The website example.com has content that targets users around the world as follows:

Map of the world illustrating which hreflang code to use for which locale

In this case, the webmaster can annotate this cluster of pages using rel-alternate-hreflang using Sitemaps or using HTML link tags like this:


<link rel="alternate" href="http://example.com/en-gb" hreflang="en-gb" />
<link rel="alternate" href="http://example.com/en-us" hreflang="en-us" />
<link rel="alternate" href="http://example.com/en-au" hreflang="en-au" />
<link rel="alternate" href="http://example.com/" hreflang="x-default" />

The new x-default hreflang attribute value signals to our algorithms that this page doesn’t target any specific language or locale and is the default page when no other page is better suited. For example, it would be the page our algorithms try to show French-speaking searchers worldwide or English-speaking searchers on google.ca.

The same annotation applies for homepages that dynamically alter their contents based on a user’s perceived geolocation or the Accept-Language headers. The x-default hreflang value signals to our algorithms that such a page doesn’t target a specific language or locale.

As always, if you have any questions or feedback, please tell us in the Internationalization Webmaster Help Forum.

Posted by Pierre Far, Webmaster Trends Analyst

NEW – Export Up TO 5000 Rows in Google Analytics Dashboard

I’m not sure when this happened – but today at least now you can export up to 5000 rows in Google Analytics dashboard. This is a welcome change, though there have been other ways of doing this in the past (I’ve included this below) How To display and export more than 5000 rows in Google […]

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