Archive for January, 2008

5 Basics of Social Media Marketing :: Text Adds Do’s and Don’ts

Glen Allsopp of ViperChill wrote an interesting piece on Search Engine Land titled 15 Fundamental Truths About Social Media Marketing. I am not going to repeat all 15 of Glen’s truths, but I did want to highlight a couple of the points her brought up.
You must get involved in the top social media sites to […]
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Search Engine Optimization is not an exact science. It takes lot’s of work and research. Trial and Error. Read through our posts here and try to learn from our experience. We offer some of our insight… news and comment. Please feel free to share your thoughts, and ideas. The site does allow "follows" so post your links.

Choosing the Right CMS Platform for Your Website (from an SEO perspective) :: Page Rank Do’s and Don’t!

Posted by randfish

The Question:

I’m starting a new site and have no idea what I should do for software. Do I need to use a content management system, and if so, how do I make sure it’s SEO-friendly?

The Answer: It depends…

I want to try taking a new tact with this blog post and give some direction about how to approach this issue. There’s no way to tackle the question from every angle in every possible way (at least, not without 100 pages of content), but hopefully, when you refer your friend who’s launching a website or your new startup’s VP of Engineering to this page, they’ll find some helpful starting points. NOTE - This post isn’t going to cover specific CMS platforms. There’s some great web resources already out there like www.opensourcecms.com and www.cmsmatrix.org to help manage this task. Instead, this blog post will help you determine the essential questions to ask of your stakeholders before embarking on a web development project.

The first part of the question determines your need for a Content Management System (CMS), and I’ve made a handy flowchart to guide you through the process:

Do You Need a CMS for Your Site?

Nowadays, it’s exceptionally rare for a company or even a private site owner to select a static site, even when a content management system isn’t required due to the inexpensiveness of customizing free platforms like Drupal, Joomla, Wordpress, or Mambo.

On to the second portion of our query - how to ensure that a CMS will be search-engine friendly. Below are 12 basic SEO issues that frequently plague content management systems (both pre-built and custom-made). By dealing with these, you’ll ensure a relatively smooth platform for content delivery:

  1. Title Tag Customization & Rules
    A search-engine friendly CMS must allow for title tags to not only be customized on a page-specific level, but also enable rules for particular sections of a website. For example, if your site offered a blog, several static pages, and a forum, you might want to create a rule that all blog pages would begin with "Yoursite Blog > " while forum pages used "title of post > Yoursite Forum."
  2. Static, Keyword-Rich URLs
    URLs have historically been the most problematic SEO issue for CMS platforms. Nowadays, search-friendly content management systems should feature custom URL creation. Here’s an example from SEOmoz’s custom-built CMS:
    _
    SEOmoz Blog Post Compose Entry
    _
    Notice how the first line allows me to create the title of the post, while the second enables manual sculpting of the URL structure (and an automatic "generate" button if I’d prefer to simply use the post title).
  3. Meta Tag Customization
    The meta description and robots tags are the two critical ones (mentioned in detail here). Enabling editorial control is essential for a good CMS.
  4. Enabling Custom HTML Tags
    A good CMS has to offer extra functionality on HTML tags for things like "nofollow" on links, or <hx> tags for headlines and subheadlines. These can be built-in features accessible through menu options, or the CMS can simply allow a manual editing of HTML in the text editor window when required.
  5. Internal Anchor Text Flexibility
    In order to be "optimized" rather than simply search-friendly, customizing the anchor text on internal links is critical. Rather than simply making all links in a site’s architecture the page’s title, a great CMS should be flexible enough to handle custom input from the admins as to the anchor text of category-level or global navigation links.
  6. Intelligent Categorization Structure
    A close second to poor URLs is poor category structure. When designing an information architecture for a website, there should be no limits placed on how pages are accessible due to the CMS’ inflexibility. CMS that offer customizable navigation panels will be most successful in this respect.
  7. Pagination Controls
    As pagination can be the bane of a website’s search rankings (see here and here), controlling it through careful use of nofollows and meta noindex tags will make your important content get more link juice and crawl attention.
  8. 301-Redirect Functionality
    Many CMS sadly lack this critical feature, disallowing the proper re-direction of content when necessary. 301s are valuable for expired content, pages that have a newer version, and dodging keyword cannibalization issues. 
  9. XML/RSS Pinging
    Although it’s primarily useful for blogs, any content, from articles to press releases, can be issued in a feed, and by utilizing quick, accurate pinging of the major feed services, you limit some of your exposure to duplicate content spammers who pick up your feeds and ping the major services quickly in the hopes of beating you to the punch.
  10. Image-Handling & Alt Tags
    Alt tags are a clear must-have from an SEO perspective, serving as the "anchor text" when an image links and providing relevant, indexable content for the search engines. Images in a CMS’ navigational elements should preferably use CSS-Image Replacement rather than mere alt tags, though the difference in our testing has been fairly small.
  11. CSS Exceptions
    The application of CSS styles in a proper CMS should allow for manual exceptions so a user can modify how a strong, headline, or list element appears visually. If they don’t, writers may opt out of using proper semantic markup for presentation purposes.
  12. Static Caching Options
    Many CMS currently offer caching options, which are a particular boon if a page is receiving a high level of traffic from social media portals or news sites. Bulky CMS often make dozens of extraneous database connections, which can overwhelm a server if caching is not in place, killing potential inlinks and media attention.

I’d love to hear more in the comments about particular struggles you’ve had with CMS from an SEO perspective and what other features you think are important for a good CMS to offer. I’d also be interested to know more about anyone’s specific experience with the various CMS platforms available (free and paid), and if you’ve got a favorite.

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Even More Advice for Startup CEO’s :: Link Juice Tips and Tricks

I’ve been extremely busy this week and as such, I missed a totally kick ass post over at seomoz which offered up some advice to people who are ceo’s of startup companies. I’m not saying I agree with the whole post, but a lot of the points were dead

35 Vote(s)


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Search Engine Optimization is not an exact science. It takes lot’s of work and research. Trial and Error. Read through our posts here and try to learn from our experience. We offer some of our insight… news and comment. Please feel free to share your thoughts, and ideas. The site does allow "follows" so post your links.

Self Investment 101: Are You Measuring OPPORTUNITY Cost? :: Link Juice Tips and Tricks

When you evaluate the actual opportunity cost of business opportunities, most client relationships, equity stake deals, and other partnership opportunities fall short of what you could do on your own. The only ways it works out is if their is a symbiotic relationship through different approaches that balance out each other’s shortcomings, or if you can learn something from working with them.

Problems With Many Opportunities

  • Unwilling Clients: Many clients are unwilling to change their sites to add unique content or value to them.
  • Employee / Slave Wage: Work for equity stake partnerships where the partner provides the domain name and you do everything else are both lopsided and useless.
    • At any time the partner with lots of domains can decide to screw up the project you are working on together, and has 0 time investment and limited capital risk by only putting one or a few domains into the partnership.
    • 6 months or a year after working with you they can take all the knowledge you spent years learning and apply it to their more valuable names while giving you nothing for teaching them everything you know. They were not teaching you how to buy domains why they were accumulating them for years. Why give all that knowledge up for a slice of a slice of a slice?
    • Buy an alternative average quality domain and keep all the equity. Build it up with sweat equity and learn your market. Buy great domain names when you can afford them.
  • Follow the Crowd: Many marketers try to saturate a field with affiliates marketing their products and teach affiliates how to market that same product as a piece of the product that is sold. The margins on those opportunities get compressed with each additional competitor you sell that product to.
    • Many marketers show stats out of context, use meaningless sample sizes, and/or lie about the hows and whys.
    • People hype opportunities long after they no longer exist because they are addicted to the easy profits still rolling in from old work building out an affiliate network.

Are You Moving Up the Value Chain?

I am not against any of the above models as a starting point, as everyone has to start from somewhere. But if you….

  • love business
  • love what you are doing
  • want to create a sustainable business
  • can afford short term risk for long term stability

…you need to build equity from your work, and have a controlling stake in the outcome. If it sounds to risky to change then at least start building a site for yourself in your spare time.

What If? …

Sure it would have been nice to have been an early programmer at Google, but for every Google there are thousands of market losers. Investing in yourself is the best investment you can ever make, and you one have to be right once.

What happened if you invested in Google a month ago? It seems those who just bought into that market hype just lost a couple dollars. Will Google go back up? Most likely. Will they increase in value at a rate as quickly as you can? Not likely.

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Search Engine Optimization is not an exact science. It takes lot’s of work and research. Trial and Error. Read through our posts here and try to learn from our experience. We offer some of our insight… news and comment. Please feel free to share your thoughts, and ideas. The site does allow "follows" so post your links.

Ask.com UK Hires Former Google Exec :: SEO Gods… Search Experts!

Vunet.com reports that Ask.com has hired a former Google executive, Cesar Mascaraque, as the company’s new European managing director.

In a statement, Mascaraque said that he’s very excited to join as Ask is the fastest growing search engine.

Forum members, obviously, have a problem with that perception, as Hitwise shows that Ask.com shares haven’t grown significantly over the past few months. Perhaps, though, things are about t change.

Mascaraque was also quoted as saying “I have watched the brand set itself apart from competitors by pioneering new products and offering innovative ways of bringing search to users.”

And a forum member agrees with that sentiment:

Ask does have an interesting media blitz going on and have been for the past 12 months or so. Between the Unibomber Billboards and the TV Commercials, the Ask Brand is getting out there.

Forum discussion continues at WebmasterWorld.


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Search Engine Optimization is not an exact science. It takes lot’s of work and research. Trial and Error. Read through our posts here and try to learn from our experience. We offer some of our insight… news and comment. Please feel free to share your thoughts, and ideas. The site does allow "follows" so post your links.

Learn SEO Copywriting: mmm Make Love to Me :: Keyword Campaign Tools

Hot, hot writing that evokes the feelings, passions, and senses. (It’s SFW, but it’s an intense writing exercise).

28 Vote(s)


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Search Engine Optimization is not an exact science. It takes lot’s of work and research. Trial and Error. Read through our posts here and try to learn from our experience. We offer some of our insight… news and comment. Please feel free to share your thoughts, and ideas. The site does allow "follows" so post your links.

Mixx Hits 100 Days Of Service; Reports Stats and Figures :: Daily Search Engine Optimizations News

So Mixx has been live for 100 days. How has it fared? Here are some stats and figures from the official Mixx blog.

38 Vote(s)


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Search Engine Optimization is not an exact science. It takes lot’s of work and research. Trial and Error. Read through our posts here and try to learn from our experience. We offer some of our insight… news and comment. Please feel free to share your thoughts, and ideas. The site does allow "follows" so post your links.

17 Ways You Can Use Twitter: A Guide for Beginners, Marketers and Business Owners :: Link Marketing News

There’s been a great deal of articles on how Twitter can be used for marketing purposes and I think most of them can be condensed to the simple aim of tracking and directing attention. Twitter allows you to monitor how influencers think or feel, you

49 Vote(s)


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Search Engine Optimization is not an exact science. It takes lot’s of work and research. Trial and Error. Read through our posts here and try to learn from our experience. We offer some of our insight… news and comment. Please feel free to share your thoughts, and ideas. The site does allow "follows" so post your links.

Most Online Newspapers Lack Functional Business Models :: Blog-O-Sphere News

Mediapost referenced a 66 slide powerpoint by The World Association of Newspapers, titled Shapping the Future of the Newspaper.

Each bulleted list below is a slide from their presentation. I grouped some of them together to discuss how/where I think they relate.

Product Packaging

  • Broken information asymmetry: Information is easy to charge for as long as only a few have access to it. Today’s information symmetry makes it increasingly difficult to charge for regular news/information.
  • Losing loyalty: Consumers are increasingly grazing media. If they don’t like it, they immediately move on to greener pastures.
  • Increased individualism: As we see a strong trend of individualism in the society, mass media has the downside of offering the same message to everybody.
  • Design Hype: 50-70 percent of buying decisions are made in the store means more focus on design.

They realize they are no longer able to sell what they once sold and they are losing loyalty each day. Eventually they won’t even be able to pay people to take what they once charged for.

They see that consumers want an individualized focused product. They realize that buying is largely a game of taste and packaging. And yet they do not realize that they are selling news, even if it is free. If packaging matters for products it also matters for information. Niche brands are a good thing. Niche bloggers get this. NTY got this when they bought About.com’s blog network. Why doesn’t the rest of the media get it? Probably because actually changing to give the market what it wants feels risky, and the only niche they appeal to is local.

Authenticity

  • The search for authenticy: In a world of fake stories the authentic and real becomes important.
  • PR and marketing merging: Editorial content has higher impact than ads, which turns PR into a sales activity.
  • Online transactions a new revenue source: As media goes online, transaction revenues for services become an increasingly important revenue stream.
  • New revenue models: Newspapers need new revenue models to keep being profitable. New technology offers endless options to reach the future customers (e.g. rich-media ads, virtual worlds, viral marketing, product placement, parasite distribution, maglogs)

They realize that the perception of authenticity is becoming more important, but their journalistic rules will keep their content too vanila to create it, and they are fine with promoting public relations and looking for new business models including affiliate marketing, product placement, and parasite distribution. Eek.

Complexity & Depth of Coverage

  • Simplified news: “News snacks” are becoming the norm as customer needs are oversaturated. Simplification means a newspaper can only afford to be good enough.
  • Analytic journalism: Newspapers will offer deeper analysis, opinions and explanations of the news in a larger context to help people navigate in an increasingly complex world.

I can’t see news organizations being as efficient as blogs on the news snacks angle. And the in depth reporters are not going to be able to beat out subject matter experts unless they focus on a niche. If they focus on a niche and get a following then they don’t need the news organization behind them. Google or Federated Media or some other ad network can do the selling for them.

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Search Engine Optimization is not an exact science. It takes lot’s of work and research. Trial and Error. Read through our posts here and try to learn from our experience. We offer some of our insight… news and comment. Please feel free to share your thoughts, and ideas. The site does allow "follows" so post your links.

A Few Quick Sunday Thoughts :: Link Juice Tips and Tricks

Just a quick post today as I’m feeling ever so slightly tender from partying too hard last night!
A Thought About my Ebook
Lots of people have been telling me that I should be using the release of my free ebook as an opportunity to capture email addresses and built a list and I said that I […]
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Search Engine Optimization is not an exact science. It takes lot’s of work and research. Trial and Error. Read through our posts here and try to learn from our experience. We offer some of our insight… news and comment. Please feel free to share your thoughts, and ideas. The site does allow "follows" so post your links.

PPC vs SEO Debate Quietly Dies :: Web 2.0 News and Comment

DaveN, well known for SEO, published stats about how PPC ads aided organic conversions. Andrew Goodman’s firm, well known to focus on paid search, now does SEO too. It seems the PPC vs SEO debate has been quiet for a year or more. Hopefully this puts a fork in it.

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Search Engine Optimization is not an exact science. It takes lot’s of work and research. Trial and Error. Read through our posts here and try to learn from our experience. We offer some of our insight… news and comment. Please feel free to share your thoughts, and ideas. The site does allow "follows" so post your links.

19 Insider Secrets to Polishing a Turd (or Social Media vs Influencing Thought Leaders) :: Pay Per Click Campaigns

My big issue with hyping social media is that most things that are popular on social media sites do not actually build credibility, and that you are going to have marginal success building your brand if you start by focusing on these broad third par

30 Vote(s)


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Search Engine Optimization is not an exact science. It takes lot’s of work and research. Trial and Error. Read through our posts here and try to learn from our experience. We offer some of our insight… news and comment. Please feel free to share your thoughts, and ideas. The site does allow "follows" so post your links.

TV Companies as Web Content Distributors: Don’t Blow It, Guys :: Page Rank Do’s and Don’t!

It’s happening. While at CES today and yesterday, I spoke to two different manufacturers of HDTVs who plan to launch, or have already launched, televisions that are RSS enabled. In other words, the TV manufacturers are getting into the web content distribution business. Can you taste the convergence? I…
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Search Engine Optimization is not an exact science. It takes lot’s of work and research. Trial and Error. Read through our posts here and try to learn from our experience. We offer some of our insight… news and comment. Please feel free to share your thoughts, and ideas. The site does allow "follows" so post your links.

Comparing Traffic From The Big Three Search Engines :: Link Marketing News

It’s not often that I can truly compare apples to apples and oranges to oranges when looking at search engine stats. It’s also not often that I rank #1 for a major keyword phrase for all 3 search engines (Google, Yahoo, Live). I’ve got quite a few major phrases that aren’t #1 across […]
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Search Engine Optimization is not an exact science. It takes lot’s of work and research. Trial and Error. Read through our posts here and try to learn from our experience. We offer some of our insight… news and comment. Please feel free to share your thoughts, and ideas. The site does allow "follows" so post your links.

Which Do YOU Need: Traffic or Customers? :: Link Juice Tips and Tricks

Posted by inflatemouse

Note from Rebecca: Carlos del Rio is working with us on some conversion and landing page testing, and he agreed to author a few blog posts about the topics. Also check out his previous post in the series, "Can the Long-Tail Hurt Your PPC Campaign?"



Doing business on the Internet means you have an unlimited audience — it also means you have many competitors. Thankfully, you also have numerous options to build your personal path to success on the web. They fall into two rough groups: Traffic and Customers.

Building Traffic

Traffic is all the people that see your site or pass on your brand to another person.

Web Traffic can be built through Search Optimization, both paid and organic. Increasing your volume through the search engines’ results can be a very time consuming process and requires a high level of maintenance. Your results are only as good as your current situation. There are regular changes to the search engines and ad distribution systems, and your many competitors will also be changing to take visibility for themselves.

A search campaign will include a combination of:

  • Research to find keywords, link opportunities, and current positions
  • Site changes to improve architecture and content
  • Link acquisition through content creation, link buying, and link baiting
  • Measuring results
  • And then repeat the process

It is important to remember that the purpose of search optimization is traffic. Some people become obsessive about rank – that is a mistake. If you build your business on a handful of phrases, you are building a tower on wheels.

Search is a great option if you are already doing well, it will help you grow incrementally and increase your position to weather things like search engine changes.

Web Traffic can also be built through offline marketing like television and print. The Internet is not an island, and we are nearly immune to banners. Kia earlier this year aired a commercial that featured a man turning the pages of a book that was titled Kia.com, and every page of the book said in large letters Kia.com. The same goes for Burger King, who recently aired a commercial that ends with www.whopperfreakout.com. Both Kia and Burger King have successfully leveraged TV into web traffic; BK has even manufactured a query space around Whopper Freakout. And this isn’t BK’s first web venture; do you remember the Subservient Chicken?

If you already have an advertising budget, you should be incorporating your websites.

Going Beyond Traffic

If you’re in a position where you already have traffic, or if you don’t have time to wait, you may find a long distance to your next milestone. Traffic begins to degrade very quickly when not attended. If you focus on what you offer, you will find sustaining and growing easier, because a good offer does not disappear while you build traffic.

Unless your only goal is to capture a phrase for vanity, you should start your SEO changes by asking, “What am I going to do with these people once they get here?”

Building Customers

Customers are people that use your site: download, contact you, buy something, etc.

Where Traffic building is largely focused on distribution and visibility, Customer building is focused on people. Building customer base can be approached from a standpoint of retention or acquisition.

Retention means loyalty, giving each customer a reason to come back. Take, for example, Zappos — they have a 365-day return policy. This keeps the customers coming back time and time again – because there is very low risk in purchase. The service level is so high that many people buy multiple pairs of shoes and return them many times. One of my friends bought five pairs of shoes in one work week and returned all but one pair.  Zappos is so customer-centric that they will even send flowers if your mom dies.

Zappos has such good service that these repeat customers ignore the poor usability and low success rate in finding a shoe that fits. While good customer service can be labor intensive, it is something you have control over and can create word of mouth traffic.

Also, you can grow through customer acquisition. For the Internet we call this conversion optimization. But what exactly optimizes your conversions?

Really anything that you control can improve your conversion of Traffic to Customers:

  • The colors you use
  • The service that you offer
  • The brand feeling you create

To improve your bottom line you need to make a clear path of action and show clearly where visitors should go and what you want them to do. Making sure that the action that is important to your business becomes valuable to your visitor is the key to successful customer acquisition.

The positive of conversion optimization is that it focuses on things that are in your power. Google changing their algorithm can’t take away your message, guarantees, or loyal customers. Changes that are made for your traffic building campaigns run parallel to changes that affect your conversions — so it makes sense to do them both at the same time.

Kia builds brand, Zappos decreases barrier to entry, and Burger King offers entertainment; all get the same end, more Traffic. But these new thousands of people are no more likely to become customers than the previous thousands.

If you are changing content to optimize for a keyword, you should also be making changes that improve your path to action. When you are building traffic you will quickly find increasingly difficult barriers to scale. Pouring thousands of visitors into a leaky sieve is going to make improvement slow. So, how do you improve quickly?

  • Change your return policy
  • Change the way you handle abandoned purchases
  • Change what you put at the top of your page
  • Think about what you want when you are a customer

If you are currently considering SEO, you should also be considering why you need more traffic. If you need more traffic because you aren’t selling well, you are taking the long road. If you need traffic because you need to scale up, you might as well consider how you can reduce friction for your customers at the same time.

By reaching for the low-hanging fruit in Traffic building and Customer acquisition at the same time, you will reap the most benefits from both.

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Search Engine Optimization is not an exact science. It takes lot’s of work and research. Trial and Error. Read through our posts here and try to learn from our experience. We offer some of our insight… news and comment. Please feel free to share your thoughts, and ideas. The site does allow "follows" so post your links.

The Difference Between Selling Something and Giving it Away :: Search Engine Marketing News

I think these two comments do a nice job of showing the difference between how people perceive something they paid for and something they got for free. If people do not have a tangible opportunity cost they often tend not to respect or value the product or service.

Compare these side by side reviews:

  • the person who bought it thought it was one of the best ebooks they ever purchased.
  • the person who won a free copy thought it was dry, above their head, and has 0 respect for copyright, offering to trade it

To build up publicity and mindshare you have to give away value, but the same product often has a vastly different perceived value based on price point and how they got it. It is so hard to win marketshare by lowering price, but easy to win marketshare by increasing (real and perceived) value.

More SEO News…. (CLICK HERE)
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Search Engine Optimization is not an exact science. It takes lot’s of work and research. Trial and Error. Read through our posts here and try to learn from our experience. We offer some of our insight… news and comment. Please feel free to share your thoughts, and ideas. The site does allow "follows" so post your links.

It’s Time For Services on The Web to Compete On More Than Data :: Keyword Campaign Tools

The recent kerscobuffle around data portability got me thinking out loud about what the value of a social network really is - and by extension, any service that might claim to have “lock in” around our personal data. For years now, a core (unresolved) issue in the Web 2…
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Please be sure to visit our new Social Blog Network, as well as our Social Bookmark Site. Both offer services for free!
Get you latest SEO news fix at AutoPrimeMedia.com!

Search Engine Optimization is not an exact science. It takes lot’s of work and research. Trial and Error. Read through our posts here and try to learn from our experience. We offer some of our insight… news and comment. Please feel free to share your thoughts, and ideas. The site does allow "follows" so post your links.

Think Like a Search Engineer :: SEO Gods… Search Experts!

Posted by bookworm-seo

What do Dan Thies, Aaron Wall, Dave Naylor, Dave Davis, and select others (*cough Hamlet Batista*) have in common? They think like search engineers.

Dan Thies wrote an excellent piece at SEO Fast Start on the supplemental index (imitated in simpler langugage here, with the addition of sources for getting links with which to pull out of the Supplemental Index). Elsewhere on his site he explained why the index came into being: to save computational cycles. (Note: Google has since done away with the supplemental index, but Dan’s writing is illustrative of the mentality I’m trying to point you to.) 

Aaron Wall explains the search engines and their perspective in his SEO Book. He puts it, succinctly and intelligently, as focusing on using fewer computing cycles (e.g., saving money on electricity and computer/server resources) and making maximal money (read: sell as much advertising as possible). While there are obviously exceptions, it does capture the mindset fairly accurately.

DaveN’s been consulting with the SEs (you going all whitehat now, Dave?) and did some videos with Rand that should be pay-per-view (OK, please don’t make them PPV!) because they exposed such terrific analytical thinking. (Pay-per-view - now there’s a model for monetizing YouTube! Seriously!) One example amongst many that had me grinning from ear-to-ear like a kid in a candy shop was his point about normalizing link analysis for linkbait link spikes (which would likely have killed Oatmeal’s chances at ranking for online dating keywords if this were already in place).

Dave Davis (whose Red Fly Marketing just released an excellent Firefox extension for local search marketing uses) pointed out in a comment at Hamlet Batista’s site that you can see how targeted your landing page is in AdWords’ eyes by dropping an AdSense block on it.

 

Some ideas to get you started thinking like an engineer:

  1. To make your links more natural, throw in some "click here" anchor texts (or combine with keywords). Use stop words in the anchors, as these will probably be ignored. Have a look at SEO Book.com, for example: The first link in his content has the anchor text: "The SEO Book." So I can link to Pawsites Online’s pages  with the text this dog page here and to SEOmoz’s client’s lending page (not to be confused with a landing page ;) ).
  2. Consider Wiep’s link value factors article. You’ll see some of the comments on the ‘text surrounding a link’ factor. If you use "click here" anchor text, you can make the surrounding text work for you: click here to get your insurance quote. And you’d be doing a good job, too! From the Anatomy paper by Brin and Page (emphasis mine):

    "First, it has location information for all hits and so it makes extensive use of proximity in search. 

    "Each document is converted into a set of word occurrences called hits. The hits record the word, position in document, an approximation of font size, and capitalization. Every hitlist includes position, font, and capitalization information.

    "Hits occurring close together in a document are weighted higher than hits occurring far apart. The hits from the multiple hit lists are matched up so that nearby hits are matched together. For every matched set of hits, a proximity is computed. The proximity is based on how far apart the hits are in the document (or anchor) but is classified into 10 different value ‘bins’ ranging from a phrase match to ‘not even close’."

    In plain English, this means that Google looks at the text around a word to get an idea of what context it tends to occur in. Which is why when you type in Sante (looking for French language health information), you get suggestions about Santa Fe and so on.

    (And if you want to think like a grey/blackhat, that means you find typos and ambiguities like these that the search engines have trouble with. You build a powerful site/network on the easier meaning of the keywords/niche to later boost your other site.)

  3. "Both the URLserver and the crawlers are implemented in Python." So, if you want to crush the spider under your heel, consider what can/not be done in Python (assuming that Python is still Google’s main language). The tools you use directly affect the results you can get. 
  4. Similarly: "Most of Google is implemented in C or C++ for efficiency and can run in either Solaris or Linux." If you know of differences between Linux and Microsoft for server efficiency, you can take a guess at how the code might look for specific purposes. It might also help you figure out how Google managed to get rid of the supplemental index. 
  5. Rand pointed out in the above WBF with Dave N that CTR data can be important. But this is open to manipulation by automated bots, as Rand commented to Vanessa (and noted by yours truly regarding Claria’s RelevancyRank). Here’s more coverage by the talented SEO known as Slingshot
  6. Bounce rates are equally important. So? So consider testing DaveN-style cloaked instant redirects to break the referral chain back to the SE. That is, set up your cloaking to put the intermediary page in the way of someone trying to go back to the engine, and have the intermediary be a SERP result - but with your adsense on it! (Dave, you’re so devious it’s genuinely entertaining :D !) Naturally, be wary of using G analytics on your site if you’re doing this.
  7. With regards to conversion data, be wary of using Google analytics (or any engine’s analytics, for that matter) to track your conversions. As Andrew Goodman wrote in his Winning Results with Google Adwords (highly recommended reading, by the way), giving the engines your conversion data is like sharing your sales volume with the landlord.

    If you’re doing well, he can easily charge you more rent (increase bid minimums). If you’re doing poorly, he might not want your performance affecting the rest of the mall (i.e., people’s willingness to click on AdWords) and therefore give you the boot.

    Moreover, given the bidding system for keywords, sharing your analytics with the SE means that your competition will be fed your best keywords the next time they use the SE’s keyword research tools. After all, the engines want advertisers to succeed so that they’ll keep advertising. Feeding them successful keywords drives prices up, as happened in my PPC management case study.  Which leads us to the fact that…

  8. Search engines want to maximize their auction revenues. And engineers want this to happen so that they get nice raises every year. Showing keyword data helps them get people bidding more on the short tail. But people are lazy and ignore KWs not in the tools or with low volume. 
  9. Expect the SEs to share your KWs with competitors, especially if you guys have similar KWs in other campaign ad groups. Split up your campaigns across different accounts (QS won’t matter so much with no one bidding against you on the longtail) and across campaigns. Also split them up across different domains (using minisites and or redirects) to defeat the likes of Spyfu and KeyCompete. 
  10. Consider working out arrangements with competitors to split short-tail KW advertising opportunities in time to reduce click costs. It may not work in every market, but with fewer bidders in the auction at any one time, your CPC should drop. It shouldn’t run afoul of pro-competition legislation (anti-trust) because you’re not colluding to fix prices or not compete at all … just to split the weeks/times of day/short tail KWs where you advertise.  
  11. The engines could use a supplemental index type idea in terms of what they rank. Search engines must necessarily follow users. That’s the whole premise of PageRank: the likelihood of a random surfer to visit any particular page (which is why AdWords should pass PR: they increase the likelihood that someone will visit a page). Users only look at the first page, sometimes the second.
  12. The SEs could save computer cycles by only working to return a ranking of the 10 most relevant pages, leaving the rest to do when someone actually clicks to page 2, 3, etc. Kinda like cleaning up your lobby and dining room when guests come over but leaving the bedroom mess as is (unless you’re expecting the guests to end up in bed with you, which is another matter…) 
  13. As far as naming stuff, Googlers at least like to go their roots: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Googolplex. And they do like their irony and hypocrisy: Though the big engine plays dumb when people type in SEO, there’s no "Did you mean "Googol"?" when people type Google into the search bar. 
  14. When asking questions at a conference, don’t try to get the engineers to reveal parts of the algorithm. Ask for specific actions you might take on your site (but phrase the question broadly so the lesson can work for others, too). Then replicate those actions with test sites on made up KWs ("omfhfdsawtfoohlaled" and its stemmed version: "omfhfdsawtfoohlala"), and see what effects the actions have. You can likely draw useful inferences about the algo as a result. See my buddy (and smart fellow) X for more on running SEO experiments.

Please share your ideas for thinking like a search engineer in the comments, and while you’re at it, subscribe to the YOUmoz RSS feed. (And if you’re a search engineer whose name rhymes with Sam’s Clubs, you’re wanted here and here. Ditto the other clever thinkers mentioned above, regarding the first here.)

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