marți, 26 octombrie 2010

Michael Gray - Graywolf's SEO Blog

Michael Gray - Graywolf's SEO Blog


Creating and Using an SEO Editorial Calendar

Posted: 26 Oct 2010 07:30 AM PDT

Post image for Creating and Using an SEO Editorial Calendar

I’ve mentioned the benefits of having an editorial calendar several times on this blog, and Lisa has done an excellent job of explaining why you need an editorial calendar from a content production point of view; however, what I haven’t talked about is how to use an editorial calendar from an SEO perspective.

From an SEO perspective, an editorial calendar can has several points worth noting:

  • You need to produce, publish, and link build to new content at least 30-45 days before you can expect it to rank (unless its a QDF term)
  • You need to have a recycling strategy in place for old content
  • You need to maximize the value of previous social media campaigns and think about how you are going use current and upcoming ones.

While these strategies are important for every website, they are especially important for websites with seasonal content, like Halloween, the World Series, or new car models, as you only get a once-a-year opportunity to get it right.

Let’s say you have website that talks about cooking. You want to start cycling links to your existing Halloween content 30-45 days before the peak searching time. I prefer to put those links on the homepage for maximum effect (see making your homepage more dynamic). You can determine when the peak searching time is by using tools like Google Trends and Google insights

Search Volume for Halloween Cupcakes

Search Volume for Halloween cupcakes

Be sure to use Google insights for keyword research and post ideas (see Four Ways Bloggers can Use Google Insights)

Keyword Ideas From Google Insights

If you can, try to do some natural linkbuilding or scraper link building in conjunction with moving the links to the home page. If you are creating new content, you’ll need to decide if it’s evergreen or social. If it’s evergreen, you’ll need to push it out sooner if you want it to rank; if its social, you’ll need to wait till the event is about 7-10 days out from peak search time, or the time when it’s front of mind. For example, “Extreme Valentine’s Day Gifts” will work fine if you publish it on February 5th. If you publish it on December 15th, it will probably fail miserably.

If you have any link bait from the previous year, my suggestion is not to 301 redirect the URL to a more commercial page. Instead, leave the content in place, and link to commercial pages, or revise the content, making it more commercially oriented. Don’t be afraid to repeat some of your past successes year after year, just give them a new wrinkle. For example, Cosmopolitan Magazine has been putting out “how to have better sex” and “look great naked” articles every few months since it hit the newsstands in the 1970′s. Just remember to give it a fresh approach and new content.

If you have content that changes/updates every year, you have two choices: you can go with a living URL approach or you can take an archive approach. The archive approach goes something like this: every year, Ford puts out a new mustang, so the URL for the current year should be something like this:

example.com/ford/mustang/

When the 2011 comes out, create a new URL and move the existing content to it. The URL should be something like this:

example.com/ford/mustang/2010/

Then put the 2011 model information on:

example.com/ford/mustang/

Your old page hopefully has links and traffic. If you redirect it, you are sacrificing it for no good reason. By shifting the content but keeping the URLs permanent, you maximize what you already have.

So what are the takeaways from this post:

  • Put links to existing content on the home page or other frequently crawled pages 30-45 days before peak search volume days
  • Use Google trends or Google insights to determine peak search volume days
  • Rewrite or interlink existing social media pages to maximize their value
  • Schedule new social media on time that coincide with maximum search volume
  • Use a living URL or archive strategy so you don’t sacrifice any existing link equity

Creative Commons License photo credit: Jorge-11

This post originally came from Michael Gray who is an SEO Consultant. Be sure not to miss the Thesis WordPress Theme review.

Creating and Using an SEO Editorial Calendar

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Daily Snapshot: Ask Axe

The White House Your Daily Snapshot for
Tuesday, October 26, 2010
 

Ask Axe: Today at 1 p.m. EDT

David Axelrod, Senior Advisor to the President, is answering your questions in a live video chat on WhiteHouse.gov today at 1:00 p.m. EDT. Axelrod has been with the President in the White House since Day One and knows his perspective on major policy issues across the board. Ask Axe your questions about the economy, health care, energy -- or whatever else is on your mind.

Submit your question and watch live.

Photo of the Day

Carved pumpkins depicting President Barack Obama, Abraham Lincoln, and the White House sit on a stone wall next door to where the President was attending a dinner reception in Providence, Rhode Island, Oct. 25, 2010. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

Today's Schedule

All times are Eastern Daylight Time 

9:45 AM: The President receives the Presidential Daily Briefing

10:15 AM: The President receives the Economic Daily Briefing

10:45 AM: The President meets with senior advisors

12:45 PM: The Vice President attends an event for Representative Tim Bishop

1:00 PM: Briefing by Press Secretary Robert Gibbs WhiteHouse.gov/live

1:00 PM: Tuesday Talk with David Axelrod WhiteHouse.gov/live

4:30 PM: The President meets with Secretary of Defense Gates

5:45 PM: The Vice President attends an event for Senator Kirsten Gillibrand

WhiteHouse.gov/live  Indicates Events that will be livestreamed on WhiteHouse.gov/live.

In Case You Missed It

Here are some of the top stories from the White House blog

President Obama in Rhode Island: "When You Vote Against Small Business Tax Relief..."
The President tours American Cord & Webbing in Woonsocket, Rhode Island, explaining how the small business will benefit from the Small Business Jobs Act that was blocked for months by Republicans in Congress.

Eliminating Lifetime Limits Helps Paul Focus on Care
Paul was born with hemophilia, so his experience with health insurance has been a “lifelong endeavor.” Provisions in the Affordable Care Act eliminating lifetime limits make keeping coverage easier for Paul.

DOT, EPA Propose Nation's First-Ever Emissions, Fuel-Efficiency Standards for Trucks and Buses
Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood and Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lisa P. Jackson announce a proposal for the first national standards for greenhouse gas emissions and fuel efficiency for medium and heavy-duty trucks, vans, and buses.

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Seth's Blog : How media changes politics

[You're getting this note because you subscribed to Seth Godin's blog.]

How media changes politics

If you want to get elected in the US, you need media.

When TV was king, the secret to media was money. If you have money, you can reach the masses. The best way to get money is to make powerful interests happy, so they'll give you money you can use to reach the masses and get re-elected.

Now, though...When attention is scarce and there are many choices, media costs something other than money. It costs interesting. If you are angry or remarkable or an outlier, you're interesting, and your idea can spread. People who are dull and merely aligned with powerful interests have a harder time earning attention, because money isn't sufficient.

Thus, as media moves from TV-driven to attention-driven, we're going to see more outliers, more renegades and more angry people driving agendas and getting elected. I figure this will continue until other voices earn enough permission from the electorate to coordinate getting out the vote, communicating through private channels like email and creating tribes of people to spread the word. (And they need to learn not to waste this permission hassling their supporters for money).

Mass media is dying, and it appears that mass politicians are endangered as well.

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luni, 25 octombrie 2010

Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis

Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis


Liquidity Traps, Falling Velocity, Commodity Hoarding, and Bernanke's Misguided Tinkering

Posted: 25 Oct 2010 11:19 AM PDT

John Hussman has an interesting post this week on the misguided policies of the Bernanke Fed and how quantitative easing promotes commodity speculation and hoarding but does nothing for the real economy. Please consider Bernanke Leaps into a Liquidity Trap
The belief that an increase in the money supply will result in an increase in GDP relies on the assumption that velocity will not decline in proportion to the increase in money. Unfortunately for the proponents of "quantitative easing," this assumption fails spectacularly in the data - both in the U.S. and internationally - particularly at zero interest rates.

How to spot a liquidity trap

The chart below plots the velocity of the U.S. monetary base against interest rates since 1947.



Few theoretical relationships in economics hold quite this well. Recall that a Keynesian liquidity trap occurs at the point when interest rates become so low that cash balances are passively held regardless of their size. The relationship between interest rates and velocity therefore goes flat at low interest rates, since increases in the money stock simply produce a proportional decline in velocity, without requiring any further decline in yields. Notice the cluster of observations where interest rates are zero? Those are the most recent data points.

One might argue that while short-term interest rates are essentially zero, long-term interest rates are not, which might leave some room for a "Hicksian" effect from QE - that is, a boost to investment and economic activity in response to a further decline in long-term interest rates. The problem here is that longer-term interest rates, in an expectations sense, are already essentially at zero. The remaining yield on longer-term bonds is a risk premium that is commensurate with U.S. interest rate volatility (Japanese risk premiums are lower, but they also have nearly zero interest rate variability). So QE at this point represents little but an effort to drive risk premiums to levels that are inadequate to compensate investors for risk. This is unlikely to go well. Moreover, as noted below, the precise level of long-term interest rates is not the main constraint on borrowing here. The key issues are the rational desire to reduce debt loads, and the inadequacy of profitable investment opportunities in an economy flooded with excess capacity.

One of the most fascinating aspects of the current debate about monetary policy is the belief that changes in the money stock are tightly related either to GDP growth or inflation at all. Look at the historical data, and you will find no evidence of it.

You can see why monetary base manipulations have so little effect on GDP by examining U.S. data since 1947. Expand the quantity of base money, and it turns out that velocity falls in nearly direct proportion. The cluster of points at the bottom right reflect the most recent data.



Just to drive the point home, the chart below presents the same historical relationship in Japanese data over the past two decades. One wonders why anyone expects quantitative easing in the U.S. to be any less futile than it was in Japan.



Simply put, monetary policy is far less effective in affecting real (or even nominal) economic activity than investors seem to believe. The main effect of a change in the monetary base is to change monetary velocity and short term interest rates. Once short term interest rates drop to zero, further expansions in base money simply induce a proportional collapse in velocity.

Look at the price of gold since 1975. When real interest rates have been negative (even simply measured as the 3-month Treasury bill yield minus trailing annual CPI inflation), gold prices have appreciated at a 20.7% annual rate. In contrast, when real interest rates have been positive, gold has appreciated at just 2.1% annually. The tendency toward commodity hoarding is particularly strong when economic conditions are very weak and desirable options for real investment are not available. When real interest rates have been negative and the Purchasing Managers Index has been below 50, the XAU gold index has appreciated at an 85.7% annual rate, compared with a rate of just 0.1% when neither has been true. Despite these tendencies, investors should be aware that the volatility of gold stocks can often be intolerable, so finer methods of analysis are also essential.

Quantitative easing promises to have little effect except to provoke commodity hoarding, a decline in bond yields to levels that reflect nothing but risk premiums for maturity risk, and an expansion in stock valuations to levels that have rarely been sustained for long (the current Shiller P/E of 22 for the S&P 500 has typically been followed by 5-10 year total returns below 5% annually). The Fed is not helping the economy - it is encouraging a bubble in risky assets, and an increasingly unstable one at that. The Fed has now placed itself in the position where small changes in its announced policy could have disastrous effects on a whole range of financial markets. This is not sound economic thinking but misguided tinkering with the stability of the economy.
That is a decent sized snip, but I assure you there is much more in the article to merit a complete read.

Commodity Hoarding

Commodity hoarding and speculation and credit growth is rampant in China, as noted in Massive Inflation in China, US Inflation Nonexistent

I also happen to have had an email exchange with someone in the apparel industry regarding cotton over the past few days.

"AI" Writes ...
Mish,

As you know I work in the apparel industry. One item that the media is not discussing is the massive price increases for clothing that is coming in 2011. Retailers are beginning to feel the pricing pain as we speak. For now they and their vendors are absorbing through modestly lower margins. By early spring product shortages will become an issue. As we move into July and August we WILL see pricing for many items increase by 20% or more because of cotton shortages and hoarding in China.

I know of one "factory" that made a cash purchase of a substantial amount of "cotton"/piece goods. To their surprise only 20% was delivered along with a refund for the balance. The supplier said they plan to hold the goods longer as prices continue to increase rapidly.

"AI"
Definition of "Factory"

Since "Factory" was in quotes, I had to ask exactly what that meant. "AI" responds ...
A factory can be an actual production facility or it could be a sourcing agent who outsources production to various facilities. The term is often used interchangeably so I felt the quotes were needed. The same can be said for cotton as it is sometimes used when people are referring to fabric/piece goods. The hoarding example I provided was for actual fabric.
Apparel Price Increase Looms?

"AI" thinks a huge price increase looms. I am not so sure. Prices can only rise if consumers are willing to pay that price. Are they? For how long?

As for hoarding, there is always the risk of a price collapse. Given the fragile state of the economy, a sudden collapse in the price of cotton or commodities cannot be ruled out.

Cotton Weekly



Charts like that seldom turn out well for buyers at these prices.

Liquidity Trap?

I agree with what Hussman is saying about liquidity traps in general and how this "pushing on a string" cannot work. However, the entire notion of a "liquidity trap" is a Keynesian construct that implies "something" must be done.

In reality, the best thing to do is nothing. Eventually prices will fall low enough where real demand will pick up. The speculators (in this case the banks), would have been wiped out and the bondholders (mainly the wealthy), would have taken a hit.

Sadly that is not what we did. We did not even do the second best thing of funding genuine infrastructure needs. Instead, we bailed out the banks at taxpayer expense, paved a bunch of roads at huge expense that did not need paving, and gave money to states that squandered much of it on public unions.

In short, it would be hard pressed to find a policy response worse than what we did. QE cannot work as the charts from Hussman proves. Yet Bernanke is committed to a policy of more of the same from the Fed.

Meanwhile, Congress is apt to head the other direction (thankfully) and tighten up, even though Krugman is screaming his fool head off. Please see Krugman and the Inevitable "I Told You So" - Tim Duy "Bad Things Happen When You Fight the Fed"; Final End of Bretton Woods 2? for more detail.

The only remaining question is how big various commodity, stock market, and corporate bond bubbles get in the meantime, before things blow sky high once again. Risk is enormous and growing.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List


Gallup: Consumers Plan on Spending Less this Christmas

Posted: 25 Oct 2010 08:44 AM PDT

A new Gallup poll says Consumers Issue a Cautious Christmas Spending Forecast
Gallup's initial measure of Americans' 2010 Christmas spending intentions finds consumers planning to spend an average of $715 on gifts, roughly on par with the $740 recorded in October 2009.



The $25 decrease in Americans' holiday spending intentions between October 2009 and October 2010 (not a statistically significant change) contrasts with a $61 year-over-year reduction in intended spending found last October and a $108 reduction found a year prior.



Gallup will update this measure in early November and again in early December. The December forecast has historically been a strong indicator of the direction of holiday retail sales, forecasting the extent to which sales will be higher or lower than the previous year. The October figure is not always predictive of the December forecast.

Americans' average prediction of the total amount they will spend on Christmas gifts this year is not highly encouraging for retailers, who may be hoping for a return to pre-recessionary buying habits.

The good news, however, is that the $25 decline in this year's October forecast is far less than what Gallup found in each of the prior two years at this stage in the season and, according to Gallup modeling, would point to a fairly flat year in holiday retail sales if it holds at this level through December.
Retail Key Unknowns

We don't know three things yet.

1. What's Priced In
2. Actual Spending
3. What Type of Stores Will Do Best

This is the third consecutive decline. On that basis any decline is significant. However, the final poll in December is a better forecast than this poll.

Perhaps people will feel better (or worse) after the mid-term elections. Certainly we are going to see sweeping changes, with Republicans highly likely to take the House, and a decent outside chance of taking the Senate as well.

Given the rebound in the stock market, there is a decent chance of a pickup in luxury items. In aggregate, however, the easy guess right now is flat +- 1% for overall spending.

Consumers are still tapped out and in need of deleveraging.



Projections Not In Line With Hiring Plans

Gallup projections are not in line store hiring plans. Note that Stores Plan Increased Hiring While Offering Increasingly Large Discounts. If stores hire a lot of temporary help, expecting a better season than happens, profits will suffer, especially if there are increasingly large discounts.

One key question is "What's Priced In?" We may not know that until January, but I suspect a lot more is priced in than flat +- 1%.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List


SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog

SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog


How To: Allow Google to Crawl your AJAX Content

Posted: 24 Oct 2010 04:14 PM PDT

Posted by RobOusbey

This post begins with a particular dilemma that SEOs have often faced:

  • websites that use AJAX to load content into the page can be much quicker and provide a better user experience
  • BUT: these websites can be difficult (or impossible) for Google to crawl, and using AJAX can damage the site's SEO.

Fortunately, Google has made a proposal for how webmasters can get the best of both worlds. I'll provide links to Google documentation later in this post, but it boils down to to some relatively simple concepts.

Although Google made this proposal a year ago, I don't feel that it's attracted a great deal of attention - even though it ought to be particularly useful for SEOs. This post is targeted to people who've not explored Google's AJAX crawling proposal yet - I'll try to keep it short, and not too technical!

I'll explain the concepts and show you a famous site where they're already in action. I've also set up my own demo, which includes code that you can download and look at.

The Basics

Essentially, sites following this proposal are required to make two versions of their content available:

  1. Content for JS-enabled users, at an 'AJAX style' URL
  2. Content for the search engines, at a static 'traditional' URL - Google refers to this as an 'HTML snapshot'

Historically, developers had made use of the 'named anchor' part of URLs on AJAX-powered websites (this is the 'hash' symbol, #, and the text following it). For example, take a look at this demo  - clicking menu items changes named anchor and loads the content into the page on the fly. It's great for users, but search engine spiders can't deal with it.

Rather than using a hash, #, the new proposal requires using a hash and an exclamation point: #!

The #! combination has occasionally been called a 'hashbang' by people geekier than me; I like the sound of that term, so I'm going to stick with it.

Hashbang Wallop: The AJAX Crawling Protocol

As soon as you use the hashbang in a URL, Google will spot that you're following their protocol, and interpret your URLs in a special way - they'll take everything after the hashbang, and pass it to the site as a URL parameter instead. The name they use for the parameter is: _escaped_fragment_

Google will then rewrite the URL, and request content from that static page. To show what the rewritten URLs look like, here are some examples:

  • www.demo.com/#!seattle/hotels becomes www.demo.com/?_escaped_fragment=seattle/hotels
  • www.demo.com/users#!name=rob becomes www.demo.com/users?_escaped_fragment_=name=rob

As long as you can get the static page (the URL on the right in these examples) to display the same content that a user would see (at the left-hand URL), then it works just as planned.

Two Suggestions about Static URLs

For now, it seems that Google is returning static URLs in its index - this makes sense, since they don't want to damage a non-JS user's experience by sending them to a page that requires Javascript. For that reason, sites may want to add some Javascript that will detect JS-enabled users, and take the to the 'enhanced' AJAX version of the page they've landed on.

In addition, you probably don't want your indexed URLs to show up in the SERPs with the '_escaped_fragment_' parameter in them. This can easily be avoided by having your 'static version' pages at more attractive URLs, and using 301 redirects to guide the spiders from the _escaped_parameter_ version to the more attractive example.

E.G.: In my first example above, the site may choose to implement a 301 redirect from
www.demo.com?_escaped_fragment=seattle/hotels to www.demo.com/directory/seattle/hotels

 

A Live Example

Fortunately for us, there's a great demonstration of this proposal already in place on a pretty big website: the new version of Twitter.

If you're a Twitter user, logged-in, and have Javascript, you'll be able to see my profile here:

However, Googlebot will recognize that as a URL in the new format, and will instead request this URL:

Sensibly, Twitter want to maintain backward compatibility (and not have their indexed URLs look like junk) so they 301 redirect that URL to:

(And if you're a logged-in Twitter user, that last URL will actually redirect you back to the first one.)

 

Another Example, With Freely Downloadable Code

I've set up a demo of these practices in action, over at: www.gingerhost.com/ajax-demo

Feel free to have a play and see how that page behaves. If you'd like to see how it's implemented from a 'backend' perspective, hit the download link on that page to grab the PHP code I used. (N.B.: I'm not a developer; if anyone spots any glaring errors, please feel free to let me know so I can correct them!)

 

More Examples, Further Reading

The Google Web Toolkit showcase adheres to this proposal; experimenting with removing the hasbang is left as an exercise for the reader.

The best place to being further reading on this topic is definitely Google's own help pages. They give information about how sites should work to fit with this proposal, and have some interesting implementation advice, such as using server-side DOM manipulation to create the snapshot (though I think their focus on this 'headless browser' may well have put people off implementing this sooner.)

Google's Webmaster Central blog has the official announcement of this, and John Mueller invited discussion in the WMC Forums.

Between Google's blog, forum and help pages, you should find everything you need to turn your fancy AJAX sites into something that Google can love, as well as your users. Have fun!

 


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