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Archive for September, 2009

30+ New & Free Web Tools You Should Know – 2009 Edition

September 30th, 2009

Roughly a year ago I published a list of 30+ not yet popular web tools you should know here on SEOptimise. It’s the most popular post on this blog ever since. While I considered updating the list I decided to compile a new one with a new generation of tools instead of just fixing broken [...]

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30+ New & Free Web Tools You Should Know – 2009 Edition

Related posts:

  1. The 30 Free SEO Tools You Must Know
  2. 30+ Very Useful Twitter Tools You Must Be Aware Of
  3. 25 Free Social Media Marketing & SEO Ebooks, White Papers + Other Downloads

Source:30+ New & Free Web Tools You Should Know – 2009 Edition

SEO

45 Link Baiting Resources: Ideas, Techniques, Case Studies & Drawbacks

September 30th, 2009

CC Image by radcarper.
Do you remember the term link bait or link baiting? While 2006 and 2007 link baiting was all the rage in recent years it seems people don’t talk or write much about this practice anymore. Has link baiting vanished? Not at all.
Link baiting is daily business right now, it’s the norm.
Indeed I [...]

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45 Link Baiting Resources: Ideas, Techniques, Case Studies & Drawbacks

Related posts:

  1. 30+ Advanced SEO Tactics, Techniques and Resources (55+ Links)
  2. 30 Ways to Get Links Naturally & Stop Link Building
  3. Link Building: Let’s Start With 50 Links

Source:45 Link Baiting Resources: Ideas, Techniques, Case Studies & Drawbacks

SEO

4 R's of SEO: Robots, Ranking, Relevance & Results

September 30th, 2009

Posted by Dr. Pete

Working with small businesses and participating in SEO communities like the one here on SEOmoz, I get to see a lot of SEO mistakes and misconceptions first-hand. These misconceptions are as diverse as the people who practice SEO, but the funny thing is that they almost always fall into one major theme: someone fails to see the forest for the trees. The vast majority of SEO problems come down to narrowly focusing on one area – whether it’s trying to get every page indexed, ranking for one keyword, or obsessing over link quantity, I’d say that 80% of bad SEO boils down to missing the big picture.

So, consider this a back-to-basics post – one that I hope will be educational to newbies and pros alike. Effective SEO requires us to see the big picture, and I’m calling that picture the 4 R’s: Robots, Ranking, Relevance, and Results. For each of the 4 R’s, I’ll provide some tips and tools for how to measure your progress in that area.
1 - Robots
As the lotto commercial says: "You can’t win if you don’t play". You’ll never win the SEO game unless your site gets discovered by bots and indexed. How do you get discovered? You can move to L.A. and wait tables, or you can build relevant inbound links, create a crawlable, spider-friendly architecture, and work to get mentions and citations (through social media, for example).

Tips and Tools:

2 - Ranking
Of course, ranking is the Holy Grail of SEO – we all want to be #1 on Google. I’ve been tough on rankings over the past year, but it’s not because they aren’t important. Clearly, you have to rank if you want to generate search exposure and traffic. My concern, and the message of this post, is that rankings are just one element of the big picture.

Tips and Tools:

  • Sign out of Google and turn off personalization to check rankings.
  • Monitor regularly with rank-tracking tools, such as SEOmoz’s Rank Tracker.
  • Get long-tail data from Webmaster Tools’ Top search queries report.

3 - Relevance
Of course, ranking is only effective if it drives relevant traffic, and I mean "relevant" in the very practical, business-minded sense of attracting visitors who are looking for your products and services. Too many clients want to rank for what they think are the most popular keywords, but that often creates two problems: (1) What they think is popular isn’t always popular, and (2) What’s popular may not be relevant or ultimately drive click-throughs.

Tips and Tools

  • Estimate traffic volume with Google’s search-based keyword tool.
  • Use web analytics to track organic traffic by engine, keywords, etc.
  • Set up a limited PPC campaign to test traffic volume and relevance.

4 - Results
Ok, I know "results" is a bit vague, but hey, I needed another R-word. Seriously, I’m talking bottom-line results here - leads, purchases, and anything else that drives your success as a business ("conversions", in the industry vernacular). Traffic is only valuable if it drives measurable results - otherwise, it’s just costing you money.

Tips and Tools

  • Set up conversion/goal tracking in your analytics software.
  • Track your conversion "funnel" - the steps it takes a visitor to reach your goal.
  • Segment, segment, and segment again.

Of course, thousands of blog posts have been written about each of these 4 R’s, and most of us are better at some than others, but if you keep the big picture in mind and don’t fall into the trap of narrowly focusing on just 1 or 2 metrics for success, you’ll go a long way toward effective SEO.

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Source:4 R's of SEO: Robots, Ranking, Relevance & Results

SEO

Oslo's SEM Konferansen in Fourteen Photos

September 30th, 2009

Posted by randfish

It’s day two of SEM Konferansen in Oslo, Norway, and rather than try to share content from the conference (which I’ll attempt to do in a more formal post next week), I thought we’d return to some SEOmoz roots and do a photo mashup combined with my terrible sense of humor. Remember kids, no sleep + traveling to foreign countries = weird posts from Rand.

View from the Plane Window
Sunrise over Oslo; if you look closely, you can see all the trolls turning back to stone (that’s why blog comments in Norway are so high quality during the day).

Discotek/Hotel Room
Naturally, the hotel room looks like a disco, complete with catwalk (yes, seriously, there’s even a separate light switch labeled "catwalk")

Oslo's High Street
The Grand Hotel on the High Street in Oslo. Thanks to recent shifts in the exchange rate, lunch is now the same price as a roundtrip first class ticket to Seattle (seriously, Oslo is the most expensive city I’ve ever visited).

Oslo's National Theatre
Notice that once the temperature in Olso registers above freezing, locals immediately remove their shirts to avoid overheating.

Telefon / Telegraph
I’m sure this photo will come in handy for a slide deck in the future. In the meantime, feel free to insert your own caption about relative progress levels of technology

Official Norwegian Building with Guards
Why aren’t there more photos of Rand & Geraldine from day one? This should answer the question (notice the footlong bags under my eyes)

Nightime in Oslo at the Nearby Fortress
A fortress near our hotel is in the process of being renovated by the defense department according to a nearby sign. Supposedly this will add +2 to troll defense systems.

Eniro CEO Jensen
Eniro’s CEO, Jesper Karrbrink, appearing far too fashionable for the search industry.

Lisa Myers Presenting at SEM Konferansen
Lisa Myers of Verve Search (formerly Lisa Ditlefsen) presenting (brilliantly) on SEO at the conference. Despite being Norwegian, Lisa presented in English solely for my benefit (I presume).

Jon Myers, Magne Uppman and Rand
Jon: The only window in our hotel room is floor to ceiling and looks onto the lobby from the bedroom.
Magne: Oh yeah! I saw you in your boxers this morning while eating breakfast downstairs.
Rand: Have you been working out?
Jon: This is getting creepy.

Adam Lasnik sharing insights
Adam Lasnik properly covered his heart to sing the national anthem for Norwegian conference-goers (funnily enough, he does this whenever he’s asked a question he’s not allowed to reveal - part of Google’s new, patriotic plan to deal with search ranking secrets)

Rand at the Conference
"The algorithm moves really fast, so you have to have a beard at least this long to keep up" -Rand

Andrew Goodman at SEM Konferansen
"And then if I push this button … Oh crap … Does anyone know what ’selfen-destructert’ means?" - Andrew Goodman

Drinks in the Grims Grenka Hotel, Oslo
Rand: The more I drink, the more Norwegian I understand.
Jon: Hmm… And yet, the more you drink, the less English you understand.

We now return to our regularly scheduled blog programming. Please forgive this jetlagged lapse.

p.s For more photos, see this set on Flickr. Many thanks to Everywhereist for the camera work.

Do you like this post? Yes No

Source:Oslo's SEM Konferansen in Fourteen Photos

SEO

Terrible SEO Advice: Focus on Users, Not Engines

September 30th, 2009

Posted by randfish

If you’ve been around the SEO world a while, you’ve undoubtedly heard the old adage:

Do what’s right for users and engines will reward you with higher rankings

Along with its peer:

SEO tactics that focus on engines, rather than users, are manipulative (black/gray hat) and will eventually be discounted or penalized

In my opinion, both of these statements are utterly false and tragically misleading. When I first considered the issue, I thought that perhaps, years ago, these opinions were more accurate than they are today. However, after visualizing the issue, I discovered even that isn’t true:

Relative Importance of User-Focused SEO Tactics Over Time

Engine-Focused SEO Tactics Over Time

The value of tactics from each set has risen/fallen over time, leading me to the conclusion that this was never good advice. And yet, thinking back, I’m almost sure that at some point, at a conference and during interactions with clients, I personally repeated this misnomer. I want to issue an apology for that now and set the record straight - SEO is a task that requires paying close attention to the needs of both users and engines. You can’t be an effective SEO without it.

Just think of all the specific tasks we perform that we’d never do if it weren’t for search engines:

  • Title tags: We might still make them, but agonize over keyword usage and positioning, uniqueness and flow? I doubt it.
  • Meta tags: Nope. No reason to even bother.
  • XML Sitemaps: I’m pretty sure no human has ever visited this file in an attempt to sort out the pages on your site.
  • Webmaster Tools Registration: Without engines, there wouldn’t be any.
  • Keyword Research: I think this practice would be more like advertising copy - think Mad Men.
  • Keyword Targeting: Why worry about keyword placement for anything other than conversion rate optimization?
  • URL Canonicalization: No need - visitors are getting the content either way.
  • Accessible Link Structures: So long as you’re not worried about the >2% of visitors who can’t see Flash, go ahead and build rich applications to your heart’s content.
  • Robots.txt & Meta Robots: No engines, no reason to direct engines.
  • Link Building: Unless it’s specifically to draw in relevant traffic, why bother?
  • Creating Vertical Search Feeds: That’s going to be time wasted.
  • Information Architecture: While there’s good reasons to do some of this for users, a significant portion of the accessibility and link hierarchy arguments are made moot.
  • Redirection: Without engines, we can use whatever method is convenient - javascript, meta refresh, 302 - it makes little difference to the user.
  • Rel="Nofollow": Internally or externally, it becomes a pointless attribute.

I think the problem with the classic "build for users" advice is that it sounds so compelling and, on a surface level, makes a lot of sense. Maybe this is a good warning not to adhere to any advice just because it seems logical on its face - knowledge and expertise may not make for simple messaging, but, outside of politics, accuracy is far more valuable than fitting into a sound byte.

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Source:Terrible SEO Advice: Focus on Users, Not Engines

SEO

Establishing Web Credibility

September 29th, 2009

After discovering a paper on establishing web credibility on the Web [PDF] published by Stanford University in 2001 I was astounded by the timelessness of Web credibility. While you might imagine that a study conducted 8 years ago would be outdated by now like IE6, the browser every developer loves to hate, the main points, [...]

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Establishing Web Credibility

Related posts:

  1. Active vs Passive SEO
  2. PageRank Sculpting: Advanced SEOs Fooled by Cat Blogger
  3. 15 Questions You Should Be Asking Your SEO Agency

Source:Establishing Web Credibility

SEO

45 Link Baiting Resources: Ideas, Techniques, Case Studies & Drawbacks

September 29th, 2009

CC Image by radcarper.
Do you remember the term link bait or link baiting? While 2006 and 2007 link baiting was all the rage in recent years it seems people don’t talk or write much about this practice anymore. Has link baiting vanished? Not at all.
Link baiting is daily business right now, it’s the norm.
Indeed I [...]

© SEOptimise. Signup for the SEOptimise monthly newsletter and hire us for Search Engine Marketing!

45 Link Baiting Resources: Ideas, Techniques, Case Studies & Drawbacks

Related posts:

  1. 30+ Advanced SEO Tactics, Techniques and Resources (55+ Links)
  2. 30 Ways to Get Links Naturally & Stop Link Building
  3. Link Building: Let’s Start With 50 Links

Source:45 Link Baiting Resources: Ideas, Techniques, Case Studies & Drawbacks

SEO

30+ New & Free Web Tools You Should Know – 2009 Edition

September 29th, 2009

Roughly a year ago I published a list of 30+ not yet popular web tools you should know here on SEOptimise. It’s the most popular post on this blog ever since. While I considered updating the list I decided to compile a new one with a new generation of tools instead of just fixing broken [...]

© SEOptimise. Signup for the SEOptimise monthly newsletter and hire us for Search Engine Marketing!

30+ New & Free Web Tools You Should Know – 2009 Edition

Related posts:

  1. The 30 Free SEO Tools You Must Know
  2. 30+ Very Useful Twitter Tools You Must Be Aware Of
  3. 25 Free Social Media Marketing & SEO Ebooks, White Papers + Other Downloads

Source:30+ New & Free Web Tools You Should Know – 2009 Edition

SEO

4 R's of SEO: Robots, Ranking, Relevance & Results

September 29th, 2009

Posted by Dr. Pete

Working with small businesses and participating in SEO communities like the one here on SEOmoz, I get to see a lot of SEO mistakes and misconceptions first-hand. These misconceptions are as diverse as the people who practice SEO, but the funny thing is that they almost always fall into one major theme: someone fails to see the forest for the trees. The vast majority of SEO problems come down to narrowly focusing on one area – whether it’s trying to get every page indexed, ranking for one keyword, or obsessing over link quantity, I’d say that 80% of bad SEO boils down to missing the big picture.

So, consider this a back-to-basics post – one that I hope will be educational to newbies and pros alike. Effective SEO requires us to see the big picture, and I’m calling that picture the 4 R’s: Robots, Ranking, Relevance, and Results. For each of the 4 R’s, I’ll provide some tips and tools for how to measure your progress in that area.
1 - Robots
As the lotto commercial says: "You can’t win if you don’t play". You’ll never win the SEO game unless your site gets discovered by bots and indexed. How do you get discovered? You can move to L.A. and wait tables, or you can build relevant inbound links, create a crawlable, spider-friendly architecture, and work to get mentions and citations (through social media, for example).

Tips and Tools:

2 - Ranking
Of course, ranking is the Holy Grail of SEO – we all want to be #1 on Google. I’ve been tough on rankings over the past year, but it’s not because they aren’t important. Clearly, you have to rank if you want to generate search exposure and traffic. My concern, and the message of this post, is that rankings are just one element of the big picture.

Tips and Tools:

  • Sign out of Google and turn off personalization to check rankings.
  • Monitor regularly with rank-tracking tools, such as SEOmoz’s Rank Tracker.
  • Get long-tail data from Webmaster Tools’ Top search queries report.

3 - Relevance
Of course, ranking is only effective if it drives relevant traffic, and I mean "relevant" in the very practical, business-minded sense of attracting visitors who are looking for your products and services. Too many clients want to rank for what they think are the most popular keywords, but that often creates two problems: (1) What they think is popular isn’t always popular, and (2) What’s popular may not be relevant or ultimately drive click-throughs.

Tips and Tools

  • Estimate traffic volume with Google’s search-based keyword tool.
  • Use web analytics to track organic traffic by engine, keywords, etc.
  • Set up a limited PPC campaign to test traffic volume and relevance.

4 - Results
Ok, I know "results" is a bit vague, but hey, I needed another R-word. Seriously, I’m talking bottom-line results here - leads, purchases, and anything else that drives your success as a business ("conversions", in the industry vernacular). Traffic is only valuable if it drives measurable results - otherwise, it’s just costing you money.

Tips and Tools

  • Set up conversion/goal tracking in your analytics software.
  • Track your conversion "funnel" - the steps it takes a visitor to reach your goal.
  • Segment, segment, and segment again.

Of course, thousands of blog posts have been written about each of these 4 R’s, and most of us are better at some than others, but if you keep the big picture in mind and don’t fall into the trap of narrowly focusing on just 1 or 2 metrics for success, you’ll go a long way toward effective SEO.

Do you like this post? Yes No

Source:4 R's of SEO: Robots, Ranking, Relevance & Results

SEO

Design Trends: The Single Purpose Homepage

September 29th, 2009

Posted by randfish

It’s been a long time since I last blogged on design topics, but I think it’s time to break that streak. This post focuses on a design style that’s both retro (it’s been around a long time) and emerging (the popularity, at least to me, feels like it’s on the rise) - the single-purpose homepage.

First, a brief example:

Spokeo.com's Homepage

In the above design, Spokeo has just one, singular, all-consuming goal - get your email address so they can show you how their product works. There may be a few secondary links for registered users to login, access to the blog and about pages, and some logos to help improve credibility, but basically, we’re looking at remarkably driven intent behind the design.

Five Reasons I Like the Single-Purpose Homepage:

  1. It Gets the Message Across Quickly
    With only a single headline and call to action, visitors quickly parse the critical message you’re attempting to push. In longer, more complex pages, designers and marketers constantly have to worry about the percentage of people who are actually exposed (in any meaningful way) to the intended triggers.
    _
  2. It Forces Simplicity in Communication
    This singularity of messaging also means that the language, words and images chosen have to communicate simply or risk failure. Simplicity in web design has proven itself over and over again as a driver of success, and simple messages are the easiest to understand and to transmit virally - a marketer’s dream.
    _
  3. It Reveals What Matters (and Obscures What Doesn’t)
    When external forces compel us, we tend to find our greatest strength is all that remains. That principle is in clear effect with these designs, as the unecessary is completely stripped away, leaving only  those items (graphics, font, layout, links and messaging) that serve the singular purpose of the page. If you’ve ever fought over which ten things to put on the homepage, get ready to trade that in for which ten words can express the entirity of your business (not necessarily an enviable trade, but it can be a net positive).
    _
  4. It Sorts the Visitor Wheat from the Chaff
    Visitors who reach this page will instantly know whether the product is for them or not. The uninterested are immediately disengaged, leaving only true potential candidates for marketing and targeting. This means every piece of data you can collect and refine about your remaining audience is precious — but it does remove the "noise" that’s often mixed in with an unfocused audience.
    _
  5. It Makes it Easy to Optimize the Funnel
    If you’re doing lots of A/B and multivariate testing (and if this doesn’t convince you that you should, abandon all hope), the simplicity of having only a few input boxes, links and headlines is a miracle. Tests run faster, produce more compelling results and give you the focus you need to improve click-through and conversion rates efficiently. Tiny changes in these percents are frequently responsible for millions of dollars of revenue (which is generally a good thing).

Is It Good for SEO?

It depends… If you have the type of site that’s very product focused and single-purpose in nature, this can be an ideal page type. Even if you run a blog, promote articles, or have other types of secondary content, you can always embed links to them in smaller, more background-style fonts and retain crawlability and good information architecture.

The only real trouble may come from the homepage’s loss in ability to send traffic to more viral, less product-specific parts of the site (which will then cost links, which will in turn cost SEO opportunity). If this is a danger, it may be a viable reason not to implement this style of design. You also definitely shouldn’t be using this style if it doesn’t fit with your strategic goals - publishers, blogs, newspapers and most retailers probably don’t want to go this direction (though taking cues from it in deeper, more focused pages is probably very wise).

Eight Examples of Single-Purpose Homepages in Action:

J.mp Homepage

The URL shortening service j.mp (run by Bit.ly) is remarkably focused on helping provide their product with little surrounding clutter. I particularly like the approach of stretching the URL bar so it’s always the dominant focus - and once you use j.mp, you’ll never go to any other service (part of the reason they can focus so heavily on getting the product used in the first 5 seconds of the first visit).

Tumblr Homepage

Tumblr’s message "the easiest way to blog" is made credible by the fantastically simple signup process. They’ve also smartly broken the "single purpose" literal interpretation by having a callout in the green box of "21 Reasons Why You’ll Love Tumblr." Just for the record - even though I’m an advocate of this style for the right type of site, I do strongly encourage testing often and early. The beautiful part is how easy pages like this are to test (in comparison to their portal-entry-like peers)

Shopify Homepage 

Shopify employs simplicity and text-based callouts to highlight its messaging. I like the layout visually, but I wonder if they’ve done extensive testing about the impact of the three text boxes.

Umbrella Today Homepage

If you’ve seen the dozens of popular weather sites around the web, you know how horrifyingly cluttered they can be. UmbrellaToday breaks with tradition and provides possibly the dead-simplest method for getting solid weather reports. I’m a fan of the clever name and branding, too - I love personality in startups :-)

Silverback Homepage

Although Silverback’s homepage is a bit long-form vertically, the message is singular - convey what the app does and why you need it, then get a click on that download link. I’m not sure if they have tested it, but I’d love to see a version that puts the "What does Silverback do?" graphic in the text bubble spoken by the Gorilla. 

Kayak Homepage

Popular travel site Kayak technically has multiple foci, but the strength of the homepage’s conviction that you want to find airline pricing and their ability to stick with it for so many years (and probably through hundreds of rounds of testing) illustrates the single-purpose homepage brilliantly. It’s also in sharp contrast to their competitors in the travel market, who insist on promoting specials, deals, partnerships, news, reviews and a thousand other disparate items that distract from the intended goal of both website and visitor.

The Resumator Homepage

When I first visited Resumator, I wasn’t sure it belonged on this list. However, after spending ~9 seconds actually reading the copy on the page, I was impressed. I instantly knew what they did and actually considered sending it over to some folks inside SEOmoz for consideration (since we’re going to be on the hunt for new hires soon). Single message - check. Delivered quickly - check. Focused direction to one action - check. All that, and it looks pretty useful :-)

Gist Homepage

Gist plugs your email in with the web’s social features to help give context and content around your inbox and contacts. It’s a pretty spiffy piece of software, particularly for those in sales, and the homepage does a good job of conveying the value proposition quickly and simply.

Google Homepage

You’ve probably never heard of this tiny, Mountain View, CA company, but apparently, they do pretty well :-)

Your thoughts?

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Source:Design Trends: The Single Purpose Homepage

SEO