Showing posts with label Google+. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Google+. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 21, 2021

Six Steps to Attracting 1,000 Daily Blog Visitors


In this article, you'll learn: Why blogging isn't dead, the importance of good content and networking, how to spread the word about your blog and go viral
Is it time to give up on blogging? Blogging declined 50% among Fortune 500 companies in the last year, a recent study found. But that may say more about how large companies are currently blogging than about what small companies can (and should) be doing.


When done right, blogging can attract a huge pool of prospective customers, yet most entrepreneurs' blogs trudge along with Alexa rankings north of a million.
Your blog doesn't have to suffer that fate. Here's how to go from 0 to 1,000 daily blog readers in six steps.

Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Disavow.txt Smart Code Report to Disavow Spammy Or Low-Quality Links

You need to make sure about the links to be disavowed. The main factor is about low-quality & spammy links those points to the site. The process need to be carried out only if you think the links that are to be mentioned are causing issues to your site's online presence.

# This Disavow Report was created on Date, year (Today) for domain.com
# This report includes links of 2 prior reports submitted on Month Date, Month Date
# This report also contains new data added today, Month Date

# We have request webmaster to remove our links from their domain. The links from the following domain were cleaned up

domain:1xyz.com
domain:2xyz.com
domain:3xyz.com
http://spam.abc.com/article/comments.html

# The webmaster did not respond. The links from the following domain were not cleaned up

domain:1abc.com
domain:2abc.com
domain:3abc.com

# The below blogspot has differnt ccTLDs. We assume Google will apply disavow to all ccTLDs.

domain:xyz.blogspot.com

Customize the disavow text with links as per your requirements. The above format will help Google guys to understand easily. Here Domain: refers to the entire set of links in the domain and the specific link refers itself.

Go to disavow tool by logging using Google webmaster owner account and upload disavow.txt file. You're done. Wait for the changes to happen!

Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Google Webmaster Tools Expands Query Data to 90 Days


Today, Google has expanded the historical search query data to 90 days. The number of queries reported has increased as well: the report will now list the top 2,000 for each day of the selected date range (vs. the previous top 1,000).
This is great news, as this is data not available anywhere else and when looking at trends, the more information, the better. Google has made a few other minor adjustments to this data recently. So if you use Google webmaster tools query data, see below for all the details of how these reports work.
What’s In the Top Search Queries Report

Friday, November 2, 2012

How To Understand Keywords In Searcher Context


In my last column, I created a Web searcher behavior quiz to demonstrate the complexity of query (keyword) classification. I admit that it was a tough quiz. But I made it tough for a reason.
When it comes to keyword classification and context, it is far too easy to inject our personal opinions onto keyword phrases. It is not a “bad” thing to want to relate to, engage, and connect with your target audience.
As search optimizers, we sincerely hope that searchers’ mental models of desired content matches the content we have on our own and our clients’ websites.

SEO Service process overview


SEO Ranking Factors

Keyword Strategy

Choosing the appropriate keywords is a crucial part of search engine optimization. Optimizing various elements of your site for major keywords can have a positive impact on your site's rankings. Be aware of density in search engine optimization when incorporating keywords into your site, and be careful to avoid keyword stuffing.

Google Analytics Now Data Sampling: What’s The Catch?


Google made a significant event out of Leap Day 2012 by releasing a new version of Google Analytics featuring Data Sampling. The idea behind data sampling is commonplace in any statistical analysis: in order to get results faster, you analyze a sub-set of data to identify trends and extrapolate aggregate results based on the percentage of overall traffic represented in the sub-set.
While I’m not a huge fan of sampling data when not necessary, larger data sets put a significant load on servers and sampling becomes a necessary evil when trying to deliver quick high on high volume data sets. As a result, I’m a fan of how the GA team has integrated data sampling into reporting.

Survey Says SEO The Single Most Important Marketing Channel For SMBs


SEO: one channel to rule them all? A new “merchant confidence survey” from lead-gen company MerchantCircle/Reply.com, among 2,500 US small businesses, finds that search engine optimization is the marketing channel they would choose if they could choose only one.
The question asked was: “If you had to put all your marketing time and budget into only one channel, what would it be?” The list of choices included SEO, paid search, mobile, social and traditional media. As you can see below SEO beats everything else by a mile.

Keeping Up With Google: Bing Launches New “Search Quality Insights” Series


Want to understand better how Bing creates its search results? Bing has announced a new “Search Quality Insights” series to provide a more behind-the-scenes look at its search engine. You know, like “Search Quality Highlights” series that Google launched last December. What’s going on with these? And how does Bing’s latest post help Google on anti-trust grounds?

10 Optimization Secrets To Drive More Mobile Traffic From Facebook


One of the staggering facts in Facebook’s public filing last month was that 50% of their traffic is driven by mobile devices. That’s about 5x more than the average website.
One of the staggering facts in Facebook’s public filing last month was that 50% of their traffic is driven by mobile devices. That’s about 5x more than the average website.
Perhaps even more staggering: the growth rate of their mobile traffic actually exceeded their US growth rate last year (17% vs 16%).
With US smartphone penetration now past 50% (likely to reach 65% by year-end), mobile devices are simply how your Facebook profile is consumed!

Pew: Twitter, Facebook Aren’t Moving As Much News As You Think


We’ve heard that social media is a great source of traffic for news outlets so often that it’s close to textbook. Yes, Facebook, Twitter and the rest are important, according the2012 State of the News Media report by Pew Research Center’s Project for Excellence in Journalism—but not yet as important as the buzz might lead you to think.
That’s not to dismiss the value, rather to put it in perspective in a way that may be hard to see when you spend a lot of time immersed in various forms of social media. Nine percent of the respondents in the latest PEJ annual survey “very often” follow news recommendations from Facebook or Twitter via computer, mobile or tablet—a growing number, up 57 percent from 2009.

AdWords To Automatically Match For Misspellings, Other Variants


Most experienced AdWords advertisers have developed keyword lists that include things like misspellings, plurals, and other variations on a keyword or phrase. Now, Google will do all this automatically — as it does with organic results — with exact and phrase matching, though advertisers will be able to opt out.

Google Webmaster Tools Expands Query Data to 90 Days


Today, Google has expanded the historical search query data to 90 days. The number of queries reported has increased as well: the report will now list the top 2,000 for each day of the selected date range (vs. the previous top 1,000).
This is great news, as this is data not available anywhere else and when looking at trends, the more information, the better. Google has made a few other minor adjustments to this data recently. So if you use Google webmaster tools query data, see below for all the details of how these reports work.

Google “Comparison” Units Get New Look; Change Highlights Paid Inclusion In Some Vertical Search Areas


Google has had what it has called “comparison ads” for some time, but these comparison units are getting a new look in Google’s search results beginning today.
Google hopes the change will better explain to searchers that comparison listings come from companies it has a commercial relationship with. It also highlights how three Google search products now seem to largely operate on a paid inclusion basis. Google was once a vocal opponent to paid inclusion programs.
“We’re changing the design layout of our hotel, flight, credit card and bank account results, which help users complete actions such as booking flights quickly and easily,” a Google spokesperson told us in a statement. “We’ve always disclosed that Google may be paid when a user completes such an action; we want to be clear and consistent in how we do that.”

Google’s April Updates: Bigger & Tiered Index, Document Ranking, Sitelink Changes & More


If it’s the first Friday of the month, it must be time for Google to share its latest list of search quality updates. And, like clockwork, Google didn’t disappoint today — the company has posted a list of 53 changes that affect search results.
This list is particularly interesting because of all the upheaval happening this month, what with Panda updates 3.5 and 3.6 occurring in an eight-day span, along with the Penguin update and aGoogle screwup related to parked domains. Yeah, April was a crazy month for SEO folks.

Google Expands AdWords Bid Simulator To The Campaign Level


Advertisers have long been able to simulate the results of bid changes at the keyword and ad group level, and, now, they can do so at the campaign level, as well, Google has announced.
The change will allow advertisers to model changes even when there’s not enough data to do so at the keyword or ad group level. They can also see what would happen if they raised or lowered all of their bids within the campaign by a certain percentage — say, 5%. Advertisers can see what would result if you changed all campaign bids to the same fixed value.
If a change looks promising, the system will be able to say whether an advertiser would need to increase the campaign budget to avoid being limited at the new bid value.
There’s also the opportunity to download the bid simulation data at the account or campaign level, and users can also download an AdWords Editor-compatible file with bid amounts at the simulated level, along with the ad groups and keywords to which they should be applied.
Campaign bid simulator can be found in the Opportunities tab within the left navigation tree.
Source:  Pamela Parker/ Searchengineland

8 Features Advertisers Really Need From Google AdWords


Google AdWords has seen a flurry of releases recently. Some have been good (Display Campaign Optimizer) and others bad (rotate changes) for advertisers. Many of these features are items Google wants to see as they help increase their bottom line or make it very easy to advertise.
However, these new features are not necessarily what advertisers really need to pull additional revenue from their campaigns.
In today’s column, I’m going to talk about my wish list and why Google should be implementing these features instead of adding yet another ad extension.

Cross Campaign ACE

AdWords Campaign Experiments (ACE) was a blessing when it launched. Suddenly, you had the ability to test ads, match types, ad groups, and much more while controlling your overall risk.
The beauty of ACE is the simplicity of testing. However, there are two main problems with ACE:
Some advertisers see their overall impressions drop significantly when using ACE (uncommon, but really bad bug)
You can’t test campaign settings
Some campaign features such as CPA bidding are very useful when they work; but they do not always work. An experiments feature that allows you to test campaign level settings or just one campaign against another one will let you get to a level of testing that will increase your overall efficiency.

True Ad Rotate

Google recently announced that the rotate setting would be changed. This lead to a lot of controversy from the community, so I went and chatted with some people in-the-know about this; and the most common theme was, “rotate has always been broken, so why does this change really matter?”.
Rotate has always been broken because of quality score and other reasons, but at least it was directionally correct. In my opinion, if something is broken you don’t change the idea behind the feature – you fix the problem.
With the new setting, it will be impossible to conduct a lot of tests within AdWords without working around the system. Testing is so important that Google should fix the problem and just launch a true ad rotate feature.

Search Partner Control

There was much rejoicing when Google finally allowed advertisers to control the display networkby targeting placements and by blocking publishers. Those control settings were launched several years ago, so Google obviously knows how to control and block ad serving by site.
Why do these settings not appear for search partners?
I have some accounts where search partners outperform Google, and I’d love to spend more on them. I have other accounts where search partners are doing very poor. Now, I’m sure that what’s really happening is that some partners are performing well and others are performing poorly.
The problem is, I have to turn on or off all partners. If Google gave me more control over what partners my ads appear on; then overall, my search partner spend would increase.

Accurate Local Search Estimates

In local search, I don’t mean country – I mean a city, region, state, etc. The local search numbers are terrible. You can use the traffic estimator tool and estimate traffic at a metro level; however, I find that the numbers can be between 100%-1000% off. Yes, more than 1000% off is possible.
I was recently working with a company and the local estimates were showing about 0.1 clicks per day; in reality, the keyword receives more than 100 clicks/day. The difference of 3 clicks vs 3000 clicks a month is quite significant.
Normally the estimator is not this far off; but seeing the estimator 300-500% off is fairly common.
If Google really wants to support local businesses, they need to fix the estimates of how much traffic a local business can really receive through AdWords. These estimates just compound the problems that sales reps have in selling and support local businesses.

Detailed Relative Quality Score Numbers

Google recently started showing more information for the quality score; however, in many cases it makes no sense. You can have a keyword that is below average have a 10; you can have a keyword that is all average be a 4; or you could have a keyword that is slightly above average be a 4.
Part of the problem is that the ranges are: average, below average, above average. If average is 1, is 0.99999 below average? If so, then 0.99999 and 0.00001 have both the same message: below average. Showing a more detailed level of relativity would be useful.
Google doesn’t like to show numbers for quality score factors often, so even if the range were: Excellent, good, average, poor, terrible; and each of those was a defined range; then the relative quality score numbers would be useful.

Account Budget

I have many accounts where there are tens or hundreds of campaigns. For each campaign, I have to control the budget. In reality, I set the campaign budget to the most I want to spend on a campaign, but I often don’t care if one campaign goes over or under by 10%. What I do care about is the entire account budget.
This has been on my wishlist since 2002 when AdWords launched. For a while, I was using invoicing as an account level budget control as Google wouldn’t spend over the defined spend. It wasn’t ideal; but it was a workaround that worked. What advertisers really need is both a campaign and an account budget.

Ad Group Level Extensions

The idea behind extensions is a great one: append more information to a plain text ad and give consumers additional details or options about a business. Of course, extensions also help CTR so Google is reaping the benefits of more ad clicks.
However, extensions are only at the campaign level. This means that if you really want to control sitelinks, or you are advertising for several business locations, you end up with more campaigns than you want. And because there’s no an account budget, you end up in a budgeting mess trying to control overall budgets.
If Google just allowed ad group level extensions, this would all be fixed. They could even take some inspiration from adCenter and use the cascading rules. Allow an extension to be at the campaign level. If ad group also has extension, use the ad group extension. If the ad group does not have an extension, then use the campaign level one.
Google has been very innovative with their extensions; however, if they go a step further it would transfer a lot more control; and therefore better ads, to the advertisers.

Fix Google Analytics Integration

When I first tried to see AdWords data inside of Google Analytics, I was really excited. Finally, I could see interactive data that would help make decisions about keywords and placements. I was examining how I could trigger CPA bidding off of events. The list of possibilities was endless.
Until I realize the integration is often broken.
If the integration works (and it doesn’t always work); then you can usually only set AdWords conversion information off of the first goal in a group. While you can work around this by moving your goals around; the more concerning issue is the data.
Sometimes the analytics data matches the AdWords data closely. Other times, the data is completely different. When the data is different, then you lose faith in the system. The possibilities of being able to set bid rules based upon analytics data is endless. I’ve always thought the best bid managers would be part of your analytics data. However, that has not proven true over the years – and much of it is due to data integration.
Google, you own both AdWords and Google Analytics. Your ability to provide consistent data between the two sources should be something you could accomplish better than any 3rd party provider. Why are you not better at it?

Conclusion

I don’t want this to seem like Google bashing. Google has been fantastic over the past few years about launching features. The additions of extensions, display campaign optimizer, ACE, modified broad match, and more, have often lead to more advertiser control and options.
In some cases, such as modified broad match, they were fixing something they broke when broad match became expanded broad match.
In other cases, such as extensions, these were brand new features that helped advertisers accomplish marketing goals.
Google cannot stop innovating, but they do have a difficult balancing act between giving advertisers control versus maintaining an ecosystem where small advertisers can still do well.
However, if they would just launch (or fix) these features; advertisers would be happier with the inventory. Happy advertisers spend more money. So Google, are you ready to help us spend more money by launching some of these features?
Source: searchengineland

Amid Advertiser Complaints, Google Makes Changes To New AdWords Rotation Feature


It looks like the powers-that-be at Google are listening to thoughtful feedback like Matt Van Wagner presented just a few days ago in these pages. The company is making changes to recently-implemented AdWords rotation settings, and also allowing advertisers to opt-out of the auto-optimization altogether.
As a reminder, in late April, Google said that a week later, the company would eliminate the option advertisers once had to evenly rotate creatives in their AdWords ads. All ads would be automatically optimized after 30 days.
Some of the feedback on our news coverage included: “This may be the worst change to Google AdWords … ever!” and “The fork in the back feels great. Thanks G!” Tell us what you really think, marketers. The concerns are sparked by advertisers and agencies who used the rotate evenly setting to test different creatives, and resented Google removing one of the tools at marketers’ disposal.
Now, the automatic optimization won’t start until 90 days, and advertisers who want ads to rotate evenly in perpetuity can get what they want — by contacting their account rep or filling out this form. If enough advertisers choose to opt out, the company says it will add the option back to the AdWords interface. Both of the changes will take place on June 11.
The tension here seems to be between Google’s efforts to serve a class of advertisers with a “set it and forget it” mentality, who would prefer that the company auto-optimize on their behalf, and the company’s need to serve more sophisticated marketers who are making full use of all of the options available to them.
“We’re confident that the changes we’ve made to ad rotation enable us to show higher quality ads to our users and better performing ads for our advertisers,” wrote Nick Fox, VP of product management at Google, in a blog post. “However, we also realize that it is important to provide you with the freedom and time to decide what works best for you and that’s why we’re announcing these changes today.”
Source: searchengineland

Google Webmaster Tools Cleans Up With Dashboards, New Navigation & More


Google announced on the Webmaster Central blog that they have cleaned up Google Webmaster Tools. The three changes include:
(1) Updated Dashboard (2) New Left Hand Navigation (3) Home Compact View
Here is a picture of the revised dashboard:
The new navigation was changed to be more representative of the content and tools within the portal. Google explained:
Configuration: Things you configure and generally don’t change very often.
Health: Where you look to make sure things are OK.
Traffic: Where you go to understand how your site is doing in Google search, who’s linking to you; where you can explore the data about your site.
Optimization: Where you can find ideas to enhance your site, which enables us to better understand and represent your site in Search and other services.
Source: Google blog

First Report Of Google Penguin Recovery


The Google Penguin update first touched down on April 24th and many webmasters that were hit by this update were frantically making changes to their web site in anticipation for a Penguin refresh. That refresh happened late Friday evening and we have one report that appears to be a legit Penguin recovery.
SEOmoz story named How WPMU.org Recovered From The Penguin Update has a pretty good case of a likely Penguin recovery. How can we know it is a pretty good case of a recovery? The Google Analytics graphs show a huge dip in traffic on April 24th and then a huge spike on May 26th, returning the site to pre-Penguin traffic levels.
We have reached out to Google to see if this site did indeed recover from the Penguin update but from the looks of it, it has.
This site claimed the reason it recovered was because it was able to remove over a half a million links from sites using their WordPress themes. These sites used a WordPress theme supplied by WPMU.org, all with a link and anchor text “WordPress MU” pointing back to the site. They were easily able to get that link removed and over 500,000 links disappeared over night. They did not go after additional potential link profile issues prior to the Penguin refresh because they did not have time.
Other changes they made but don’t believe made a difference were:
- Pinged blogs that were originally highlighted by Matt Cutts in a conversation with the Syndey Harold – only one removed links, but they did come from a significant volume of splogs on the Blogdetik.com domain
- Submitted WPMU to the Penguin review form, twice, specifically referencing this article that was being beaten out by the links that referenced it
- Used SEOmoz campaign data to implement some canonical URLs to clean up crawl errors and also kill some unnecessary links across the site
- Did a bit of “SEO cleanup” that revealed WPMU.org sitemaps did not exist and/or were broken. Implemented sitemaps and submitted the feeds to Webmaster Tools, which was not happening previously
- Cleaned up numerous duplicate title tag issues as reported by Webmaster tools
- Continued to build natural links to the site and promote other positive signals such as referring traffic and social shares
- Very notably and importantly, got this specific use case in front of Google and also the greater SEO community that highlighted it
Source: Barry Schwartz/ searchengineland

Thursday, May 31, 2012

Top 5 SEO Extensions for Google Chrome


As we all know there are thousands of SEO extensions for Google Chrome. Here are the 5 SEO tools I would recommend to understand and improve the site SEO factors.

(1) SEO for Chrome

This tool SEO for Chrome provides SEO Tools like to find Pages indexed, competitive analysis, keyword research, backlink checks, pagerank checks etc.

https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/oangcciaeihlfmhppegpdceadpfaoclj

2) SEO SERP

A simple SERPS tool to check the position for a list of websites for a given keyword.

https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/ofoaoaloeipdofknnaapbmdddddioklg

(3) SEO Site Tools

This tool provides the Social Media information, external page data, HTML and CSS Validation etc.

https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/diahigjngdnkdgajdbpjdeomopbpkjjc/

(4) SEO Professional Toolbar

This tool stores the rank and backlinks history for selected sites.

https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/adecfhccdknoobplgempjhbojlbpahhn

(5) Mozbar 

This tool shows the important SEO metrics and also compares link metrics for Google, Bing and Yahoo! with the SERP.

https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/eakacpaijcpapndcfffdgphdiccmpknp/

These SEO extensions for chrome can help you get an overall audit of your website popularity and these tools can help to improve the site performance in a better way.