New data refresh of Panda starts rolling out tonight. ~1% of search results change enough to notice. More context: goo.gl/huekf— A Googler (@google) July 24, 2012
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Wednesday, July 25, 2012
Google Pushing Out Panda Update 3.9 Tonight
Google says it will roll out the latest update to its Panda algorithm later tonight.
The company posted the news a few minutes ago on Twitter, saying this update will affect about one percent of search results.
By our count, this is Panda Update 3.9. The previous update, 3.8, occurred just about a month ago — on June 25th.
Panda rolled out initially in February 2011 and was designed to remove low-quality/thin content from Google’s search results.
For more background on the Panda algorithm, see our Panda Update News archive.
Tuesday, July 17, 2012
Search Engine Facts newsletter 17 July 2012
If your web pages are difficult to understand, you might not make as much money as you could with your website. A simple tool can help you to check the readability of your pages.
In the news: Google's Marissa Mayer becomes Yahoo's new CEO, Blekko releases a social news site, and Google might be preparing a Google marketplace to compete with Amazon.
Table of contents:
- Facts of the week
- Search engine news and articles of the week
- Recommended resources
- Previous articles
We hope that you enjoy this
newsletter and that it helps you to get more out of your website. Please pass
this newsletter on to your friends.
1. Cephalalgiawhat? How to get more
sales without it.
2. If your web pages are difficult to understand, you might not
make as much money as you could with your website. A simple tool can help you
to check the readability of your pages.
3.
4. Difficult language = fewer sales
5. Many websites use technical language that is very difficult
to understand for the average web surfer. Some webmasters also like long and
complicated sentences.
6. Long and complicated sentences are not a sign of
professionalism. They just show that the author of the sentences doesn't care
about the readers.
7. The more complicated the text on your web pages, the more
likely it is that a visitor will leave your website.
8. How to check the readability of your web pages
9. The Flesch Reading Ease test is a United States governmental
standard to determine how easy a text is to read. It measures the approximate
level of education necessary to understand the web page content.
10. Higher scores indicate that the text is easier to read, and
lower numbers mark harder-to-read texts.
A high Reading Easy Score means that
a text is easy to understand. The Grade Level shows the number of years of
education that are required to understand the text.
How to improve the readability of
your pages
There are several things that you
can to do improve the readability of your web pages:
·
Write short sentences.
·
Use many paragraphs.
·
Use headings to structure the
content.
·
Use bullet lists.
·
Avoid complicated words. Don't say
"cephalalgia" when you can also say "headache".
·
Use images on your pages.
Make it easy to understand your web pages, make it easy to
navigate them and make it easy to buy on your website.
Wednesday, July 11, 2012
Avoid 5 Things in Content Marketing
Inbound marketing tactics, like content marketing,
have proven to be effective ways to attract and engage target audience
members. Online marketing strategists constantly sing the praises of
content marketing and businesses are finally starting to listen.
However, bad content marketing is even worse than no content marketing.
If you are going to spend time creating and sharing content, it’s important to avoid the following mistakes:
Spelling/Grammar
If you have a good idea and the words are flowing quickly, that’s great,
but that’s also often when spelling and grammar errors pop up. It’s
amazing that some content marketers don’t follow the rules that they
should have learned in elementary school. Always go back and proof your
work! Even better- proof it and then ask someone else to do the same.
A second pair of eyes may pick up on something that you are missing.
Creating Too Much or Too Little
Content marketing online is a tactic that never really ends. It should
be ongoing, but you need to determine what the right amount of content
is. You don’t want to pump out too much content because it is a drain
on resources, will affect the quality of the content, and target
audience members don’t have time to read it all anyway. On the other
hand, not having enough content means that you won’t get noticed. Find
the right pace that works for your business and suits the needs of your
target audience.
Posting the Same Content Everywhere
Gone are the days of posting the same article on numerous article
directory sites. The focus is now on original content since article
directory sites took a major hit after the Google Panda update. Instead
of posting the same article everywhere, re-write it and take a
different approach and only post it to a handful of places where you
know your target audience is. Posting content to the same site over and
over means that you aren’t capturing a new audience. Spend time
looking for new opportunities.
Not Optimizing
Content published anywhere on the web can be crawled and indexed by the
search engine spiders so it’s important to think about SEO when creating
it. Target specific keywords in the heading/title and throughout the
body content naturally. Do some keyword research using a keyword
research tool or by analyzing Google suggested searches to find out how
people are searching and what kind of information they are searching
for.
Make it Known Who Created It
The whole point of content marketing is to get noticed by target
audience members and get them to eventually visit your website and take
some kind of action. Don’t forget to write a strong “About the Author”
byline that includes links back to your website.
Friday, June 22, 2012
Google Penalty or Algorithm Update: What’s the Difference?
Many sites were impacted by Google Penguin, the latest SEO update from Google. Sites that were hurt by the algorithm update saw a major loss of traffic on April 24th,
and many sites are still struggling to figure out exactly where they
went wrong and what they can do to recover. I’ve spoken with numerous
site and small business owners in the past month that want to know how
they can remove this “penalty” from their site, and it’s important to
understand that if your website was affected by Penguin you did not
suffer an manual penalty, your site was caught in an algorithm update.
Manual Google Search Engine Penalty
According to Matt Cutts,
head of Google’s web spam team, “Google’s definition of a ‘penalty’ is
when manual action is taken against a site.” A “penalty” is when an
actual human being at Google takes manual action against a website. One
of the most recent (and attention grabbing) examples of Google taking
manual action against a website and penalizing it was last year and the J.C. Penney paid links scandal.
JCP was ranked first in the SERPs for “Samsonite carry on luggage”
(ahead of the official Samsonite website) and then dropped to number 71
when Google applied its penalty. The length of the manual penalty is
based on how badly a site was breaking Google’s webmaster guidelines and
how severe the penalty issued was. Sites that suffer from a manual
penalty can submit a reconsideration form after they’ve addressed the
issue that led them to be penalized in the first place, which doesn’t
guarantee a recovery but can help speed up the process.
Algorithm Update
A
site that is whacked by an algorithm update is not suffering from a
manual penalty; Google did not single your website out for gross
violation of their Webmaster Guidelines. Penguin (and its predecessor
Panda) was an algorithm update and a lot of sites got caught in its net.
In order for a site to recover from an algorithm update, site owners
need to remove the spam tactics (i.e. keyword stuffing, link exchanges,
cloaking, etc) that the algorithm update went after. Once Google
recrawls and processes the site and pages, if you did everything right,
your site should bump back up in the search results to where it was
before the algorithm went live.
Why is it important to understand the distinctions between the two?
First off, when your site is impacted by an algorithm update you
shouldn’t submit a reconsideration request, even after you fix the
deeper issues on your site. If you do, chances are you will get a
message in your Webmaster Tools account that looks something like this,
We reviewed your site and found no manual actions by the webspam
team that might affect your site’s ranking in Google. There’s no need to
file a reconsideration request for your site, because any ranking
issues you may be experiencing are not related to a manual action taken
by the webspam team.
Of course, there may be other issues with your site that affect
your site’s ranking. Google’s computers determine the order of our
search results using a series of formulas known as algorithms. We make
hundreds of changes to our search algorithms each year, and we employ
more than 200 different signals when ranking pages. As our algorithms
change and as the web (including your site) changes, some fluctuation in
ranking can happen as we make updates to present the best results to
our users
When dealing with an algorithm update it all comes down to waiting
for the next update to roll out. Google doesn’t recrawl most websites on
a set schedule, so you could make the necessary tweaks to your site and
not see any improvement for several weeks or longer. It’s important
that you don’t panic during this time. Focus on creating quality content
and inbound links; invest in other sources of traffic and sit tight—it
will get better if you make the right changes!
If you’re not sure where your site went wrong and don’t want to play
guess and check for the next six months, consider hiring an SEO firm to
run a full SEO audit on
your site. They can analyze the back end of your website to uncover any
black or grey hat SEO tactics that might have resulted in a penalty
(either manual or from an algorithm update) for your site.
Wednesday, June 6, 2012
How to make your website relevant
The context of the keyword is important
The same keyword can have multiple meanings and the same search can have multiple intentions. Do you mean Taj Mahal the monument, or Taj Mahal the musician?
People are interested in knowing what books Charles Dickens wrote, whereas they’re less interested in what books Frank Lloyd Wright wrote, and more in what buildings he designed.
In the past, search engines simply looked for the words that were used in the query. Now the meaning and the intention also plays a role.
You have to show Google that your website is relevant
If you want to get high rankings for the keyword "custom bikes" then it is no longer enough to have that keyword on your web page. There are several things that you can do to improve the position of your page:
- A single page should be as
closely related to a single aspect of the keyword as possible. The more
targeted your page is to that aspect, the more likely it is that it will
be chosen for the results.
- To make your website relevant
to a topic, it helps if you have multiple pages that deal with different
aspects of the topic. For example, one page on your site could be about
the definition of custom bikes, other pages could be about custom bike
parts, other about low-rider custom bikes, etc.
- Use different words that
describe the topic of your site. Use "bikes",
"bicycles", "motorcycles", "custom
choppers", etc. depending on what your website is about.
The right keywords are very important but it is also important that you use them correctly on your web pages. Create targeted and focused web pages and optimize as many pages as possible on your website.
The more highly relevant web pages your website has, the more likely it is that your website will get high rankings on Google. The Top 10 Optimizer in IBP is fully compatible with Google's latest algorithm and it helps you to optimize your pages for your keywords.
Monday, June 4, 2012
Title Tag Writing Best Practices for Search Engine Optimization
As part of the on site optimization phase of an SEO campaign, it’s best
practice to write well optimized meta tags that include targeted keywords.
Perhaps the most important of the meta tag elements is the title tag. Why? For
a few reasons. First, unlike other meta elements (like the meta keyword
element) the search engines index the title and second, it’s the clickable link
that appears on a SERP (search engine results page).
When writing title tags for SEO, here are a few guidelines to
follow:
Each Title Should Be Unique
Every page of content is unique (or should be, anyway), so each page of content
should have a unique title tag to go along with it. If every page has the same
title tag it makes it difficult for the search engines and searchers to
differentiate the pages or decide which page is most relevant to their needs.
Include Keywords
Select the most relevant one to two keywords that you are targeting on the page
and include them in the title, preferably at the beginning of the title. Unless
your company name includes the keywords that you are targeting, place the
company name at the end of the title instead of the beginning.
70 Characters at Most
70 characters is the maximum amount that will show up on a SERP. If your title
is longer, it will appear as “…” at the end. Keep titles clean and succinct and
follow the 70 character (including spaces) policy.
Don’t Stuff Keywords
While it’s important to include keywords, you don’t want to go overboard and
try and get every potential keyword in the title. It’s obvious (and frowned
upon) to the search engines and provides a poor user experience. Just because
you are allowed 70 characters doesn’t mean that you need to jam that space with
as many keywords as possible. If you write a good title tag that is only 60
characters, that’s perfectly fine.
Include Location for Local
If you are targeting a local audience, the city, state, neighborhood, etc. in
which you are located should be incorporated into the title tag for every page
of content. This not only helps the search engines but also qualifies the
visitor.
Friday, June 1, 2012
Google Product Search To Become Google Shopping, Use Pay-To-Play Model
Google Product Search is getting a new name, Google Shopping, and a new business model where only merchants that pay will be listed. It’s the first time Google will decommission a search product that previously listed companies for free. The company says the change will improve the searcher experience, but it will also likely raise new worries that Google may further cut free listings elsewhere.
“This is about delivering the best answers for people searching for products and helping connect merchants with the right customers,” said Sameer Samat, vice president of product management for Google Shopping, when explaining that by moving to an all-paid model, Google believes it will have better and more trustworthy data that will improve the shopping search experience for its users.
Perhaps this will be so; perhaps not. We’ll only have a better idea when the transformation is complete. The process begins now with experiments, launches more fully in the summer and will take through the fall to finish in the
Next year, the change to paid inclusion will happen outside the
Starting Now: Experiments
Beginning today, Google will run a variety of experiments on Google.com, for
a small percentage of searchers at first, that merge listings from Google
Product Listing Ads and Google Product Search together. To understand better,
consider this “before” example:The screenshot also shows the “free” listings that Google provides, those that come from Google crawling the web, as well as those from Google Product Search. The listings from Google Product Search come from Google’s web crawl as well as from data feeds that merchants send to Google.
In contrast, below is an example of how one of the new experiments may look:
Rather than the Product Listing Ads and Google Product Search results being separate, both will be combined into a single Google Shopping box. Here’s another example, with a close-up on the Google Shopping box:
Goodbye
Google Product Search & Free Listings
As said earlier, Google Product Search currently gets its listings from
Google crawling the web or by retailers submitting product data and feeds
through the Google Merchant Center.
There has been no charge for either. Indeed, Google has never charged for being
in its shopping search engine since it began
back in December 2002 and was called Froogle.That’s ending. There’s no firm date on exactly when the free ride will be over, other than it should happen by the fall of this year.
Merchants may continue to be listed within Google’s free web search results. That’s not changing. But those wanting to appear in a dedicated shopping search engine — and in the Google Shopping boxes that will appear as part of Google’s regular results — will need to pay.
Hello Google Shopping & Paid Inclusion
The forthcoming Google Shopping will operate on what’s been known in the
search industry as a paid inclusion model. That’s where companies pay to be
listed but payment doesn’t guarantee that they’ll rank well for any particular
terms.In particular, Google says advertisers will provide data feeds or create product listings through Google AdWords, in campaigns that are set to run on Google Shopping. It will work very similarly to how Product Listing Ads work now. Merchants won’t bid on particular keywords but rather bid how much they’re willing to pay, if their listings appear and get clicks or produce sales. Getting a top ranking will depend on a combination of perceived relevance and bid price.
As part of the changes, Google Shopping will incorporate Google Trusted Stores badges into the listings, for those merchants who participate in the program. Google has already been testing the use of these within AdWords.
Google also says the new Google Shopping listings will be able to show if merchants have any special deals or offers — these can also be sent within the merchant’s data feed.
Product Listing Ads as a product will be phased out when Google Shopping takes over, but Google says using the PLA system now is the best way for merchants to prepare for the Google Shopping change. That’s why Google is offering two incentives to get merchants going with them now, if they’re not already:
- All merchants that create
Product Listings Ads by August 15 will receive 10% credit for their total
PLA spend through the end of the year
- Existing Google Product
Search merchants will get a $100 AdWords credit if they fill out a form
before August 15
Didn’t Google Hate Paid Inclusion?
The paid inclusion model will be familiar to many merchants, who know it’s
commonly used with other shopping search engines. But it’s new to Google. In
fact, it’s a model that Google once fought against, even to the degree of
characterizing it as evil. Those days are over. Google Shopping will becomes
the fourth “vertical” or topically-focused search engine from Google to use
paid inclusion.Once Deemed Evil, Google Now Embraces “Paid Inclusion” is my column from yesterday at our sister site
Froogle [what's now called Google Product Search and will be
called Google Shopping] enables people to easily find products for sale online.
By focusing entirely on product search, Froogle applies the power of our search
technology to a very specific task—locating stores that sell the items users
seek and pointing them directly to the web sites where they can shop. Froogle
users can sort results by price, specify a desired price range and view product
photos.
Froogle accepts data feeds directly from merchants to ensure that product
information is up-to-date and accurate. Most online merchants are also
automatically included in Froogle’s index of shopping sites. Because we
do not charge merchants for inclusion in Froogle, our users can browse product
categories or conduct product searches with confidence that the results we
provide are relevant and unbiased.I bolded the key part. Eight years ago, Google viewed paid inclusion in general as some type of evil the company should avoid and in particular something that could cause shopping search to have poor relevancy or be biased.
What happened to cause such a change?
Reversing Its Stance
For one, Google’s official line seems to be that it hasn’t changed its mind
about anything. That’s because it’s changing the definition of what paid
inclusion is, to effectively claim that it’s not doing it. This is the
statement I was sent after my column appeared yesterday:
Paid inclusion has historically been used to describe
results that the website owner paid to place, but which were not labelled
differently from organic search results. We are making it very clear to
users that there is a difference between these results for which Google may be
compensated by the providers, and our organic search results.
As I did yesterday, I’ll disagree again. Paid inclusion has been
historically used to describe when people pay to appear in a search engine’s
results but without any guarantee of prominent placement. What’s happening with
Google Shopping is classic, textbook paid inclusion. It matches up precisely
with the US Federal Trade Commission’s own definition
of paid inclusion:
Paid inclusion can take many forms. Examples of paid
inclusion include programs where the only sites listed are those that have paid;
where paid sites are intermingled among non-paid sites; and where companies pay
to have their Web sites or URLs reviewed more quickly, or for more frequent
spidering of their Web sites or URLs, or for the review or inclusion of deeper
levels of their Web sites, than is the case with non-paid sites.
Again, I’ve bolded the key part, a part that defines exactly what’s going to
happen with Google Shopping.The fact Google considered paid inclusion evil in the past is an embarrassment that some will have a good chuckle about. But companies do change stances. The bigger issue in all this is whether the shift is good for searchers and publishers.
Paid Relationships Can Be Good
When it comes to searchers, Google’s view is that by having a paid relationship,
it can better ensure the quality of what it lists in Google Shopping.“We believe a commercial relationship with partners is critical to ensuring we receive high quality product data, and with better data we can build better products,” Samat told me.
Today’s blog post from Google reflects the same view:
We believe that having a commercial relationship with
merchants will encourage them to keep their product information fresh and up to
date. Higher quality data—whether it’s accurate prices, the latest offers or
product availability—should mean better shopping results for users, which in
turn should create higher quality traffic for merchants.
A good example of the potential here is something we covered
last November. Google had warned merchants in Google Product Search to include
tax and shipping costs in their feeds. But well past Google’s deadline,
merchants were still flouting those rules.Potentially, those merchants risked being kicked out of Google Product Search. But being a free service, it possible the merchants might come back in another way. There was a low barrier to entry. That low barrier also means much more has to be policed.
When payment is involved, it’s harder to be abusive. Merchants risk losing their accounts, along with any trust built up to those accounts. In addition, when they’re paying by the click or by the sale, there’s more incentive to ensure listings are relevant.
But There Was No Other Way?
Still, this is an unprecedented move by Google. The company has
never eliminated a search product that had free listings and shifted to an
all-paid model.I couldn’t think of any examples of this in the past, and Google confirmed this was a first. At best, it offered that Boutiques.com — purchased in 2010 and integrated into Google Product Search in 2011 — had a similar pay-to-play model. But Boutiques.com wasn’t an existing service that was shifted from free to fee.
For a company with such a long history of trying to be inclusive, it’s shocking. It’s more so when Bing Shopping accepts free listings. Google couldn’t find a way to do what Microsoft does?
“We’ve looked at a number of different aspects to approach this, but we have to evolve our experience. We believe consumers have a higher expectation of shopping online,” Samat said.
Will It Stay Comprehensive?
One thing I’ve generally loved about Google Product Search is that if I
couldn’t find some odd product on Amazon (which tends to be
a pseudo-shopping search engine for me), Google seemed able to ferret it
out. But with the change to a paid inclusion model, will the ability to get
into the nooks and crannies of the retail web be lost?Google told me that it currently has tens of thousands of merchants listed in Google Product Search for free. I asked if the company had any idea how that might change when payment is required or if there would be an impact on comprehensiveness?
“We really want all kinds of merchants to participate,” Samat said. But he also said, ”It’s hard to speculate on how this will play out. Our objective here is to deliver a better experience. We are doing a number of things to help the users’ experience get better.”
Going Forward
In the end, Google is shifting to what’s been the industry standard when it
comes to shopping search, to have a paid inclusion program. The curious can
take a look here
at SingleFeed for a rundown on who offers paid plans or here
at CPC Strategy. Most shopping search engines do. Even Bing, which is listed as
being free, also does paid inclusion through a partnership with
Shopping.com, saying
that doing this will increase visibility.One thing about the change is that it will probably cause all the shopping search engines out there to better disclose the paid relationships they have. As I covered in my column yesterday, the FTC has seemed to ignore that some don’t have any disclosure at all, as required. Google’s move has the potential to raise the bar here, and that’s sorely needed.
For searchers, Google’s trying to find the balance between having incredibly comprehensive results and the noise that can harm relevancy when there’s too much junk and not enough signal, it seems. As I said, it remains to see if they’ll get that balance right.
For publishers, there’s a whole lot of worry here. If Google can turn one search product to an all-paid basis, nothing really prevents it from doing the same for others. Could Google News only carry listings from publishers that want to pay? Will Google Places, already just transformed into a part of the Google+ social network, be changed to a pay-or-don’t play yellow pages-style model?
Even web search could be threatened. All the arguments about wanting to get better data and filter out noise are just as applicable to web search. The main reassuring thing here is that there’s little likelihood that Google could get hundreds of millions of web sites to do paid inclusion at the risk of not being listed. Pure paid inclusion works better in the world of vertical search, where there are only thousands of companies you’re dealing with.
Meanwhile, with Google Play selling content, will Google eventually decide that Google Shopping should make the next logical step and provide transactions, the way that Amazon does? At some point, Google the search engine that is supposed to point to destinations may turn into too much of a destination itself.
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