joi, 8 septembrie 2011

SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog

SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog


WBF's - The Anatomy of a Successful Web Video Series

Posted: 08 Sep 2011 04:23 AM PDT

Posted by Ben@wistia

We’ve been hosting SEOmoz's video for a little over a year now. During that time SEOmoz has published about 60 Whiteboard Fridays. One thing to know about Wistia (in addition to our penchant for ping pong and video SEO) is that we have an unhealthy obsession with video analytics. As sort of an "anniversary" gift for the Mozzers we decided to analyze their series and see what kind of juicy statistical nuggets we could pull out of the data.

Road to Moz

Creating a web video series is an amazing way to engage with and build an audience, but it's difficult to find metrics or benchmarks to define success. Given SEOmoz's amazing transparency in everything they do, we thought it would be useful to create a resource that other companies could use to "see inside" a successful web video series.

Below, you'll find the full infographic, but here are a few highlights:

  • Over 132,000 unique people have watched at least one SEOmoz video...10x the number of SEOmoz customers!
  • Loyal viewers (those that have watched more than one video) spend more than 6x the amount of time viewing SEOmoz videos than casual viewers (those that have watched only a single video).
  • When someone watches a single SEOmoz video, they are twice as likely to watch another SEOmoz video than someone who hasn't viewed any of their videos.

Improve Engagement Metrics with Video

One of the most surprising findings from the data was that users who watched more than one video, the average engagement time was 35 minutes. Even those visitors who only watched a single video were engaged an average of 6 minutes, well above the average time on site for the typical SEOmoz visitor.

Consider the effect this has for engagement metrics such as time on site, page views, and even conversions.

4 Video Tips

Some tips to help increase engagement with video:

  1. Suggest Similar and/or related videos on the same page. How many times have you watched one video, and then instantly watched another when one was available? Give this option to your visitors and they will take advantage of it.
  2. Inspire viewers to want to investigate further with a cliffhanger or a preview. Or use the video to highlight special sections of your site that they can visit on their own.
  3. Provide a user-friendly landing page that contains a full list of all the videos on your site. This makes a great content hub.
  4. Encourage visitors to sign up for email notifications when new videos in the series are released.

Without further adieu, "The Road to Moz"...

View this infographic full-size.


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Do Social Signals Drive Traffic?

Posted: 07 Sep 2011 11:48 AM PDT

Posted by Dr. Pete

As a regular blogger on SEOmoz, I’m very interested in what drives traffic to our posts. Of course, there’s the usual realm of referrers and keywords, but lately I’ve been curious about how social signals (including Google’s new +1) correlate with traffic. In other words, how much more traffic will a post get because it gets more Tweets, Likes, or +1s?

So, I set out to do an informal correlation study, looking at how Tweets, Likes, +1, and our own internal social metrics – Thumbs Up and Thumbs Down – impact Unique Pageviews (UPVs) over two sets of data. The first set is the Top 50 posts (by UPVs) for the first half of 2011. The second set is all main-blog posts after the launch of Google+.

(1) Top 50 Posts of 2011

The first study was pretty straightforward. I looked at the traffic for all main-blog posts (including promoted YOUmoz posts) from January 1st to June 30th of 2011 and pulled the Top 50 by Unique Pageviews. For each post, I gathered data on Thumbs Up, Thumbs Down, Tweets, Likes and +1s, and calculated their correlations with UPVs. The graph below shows the correlations:

Correlations for Top 50 posts

Just a quick refresher – the correlation coefficient (r) varies from -1 to 1, with 0 indicating no relationship and 1 being a perfect positive correlation (when one variable goes up, the other variable goes up). Correlation does not imply causation, but I’ll get into the details of that below, because it’s very interesting for this data set. On a technical note, these are Spearman correlations – the social signal data isn’t normally distributed. All values with asterisks (*) were statistically significant (p<0.01). Finally, I’d like to give a shout-out to our resident stats guru, Dr. Matt Peters, for working through the math with me.

We wouldn’t normally expect one signal to drive traffic, but thumbs up from the community and Google +1s had a solid impact. Twitter’s relationship with Unique Pageviews seemed surprisingly low, and thumbs down didn’t seem to encourage or discourage views, but neither of those measures were statistically reliable (p>0.10).

(2) All Posts Since Google+

The +1 data in the first study is surprising, since Google+ didn’t launch until June and the button wasn’t implemented for most of the first half of the year. Many of these +1s arrived well after the original posts were published.

So, I ran a second study, using only blog posts published between June 18th (the launch of Google+) and August 15th. This amounted to 44 posts, not too different a sample from the first study. Although the +1 button rolled out prior to Google+, I felt the roll-out date was a good cutoff, since that’s when people really took notice.

Here are the Spearman correlations for the second study:

Correlations for posts since Google+

With the exception of Thumbs Up, every signal’s relationship with Unique Pageviews increased in the second study (and all correlations were statistically significant). It’s likely that social factors are more powerful for the recent past, and some of the posts in the first study are a couple of years old (even though the traffic stats are for this year).

Facebook Likes came out on top in this study, and Google +1s weren’t far behind. Given the kind of data we’re working with, a correlation of 0.83 is impressive. Tweets were roughly as strong as Thumbs Up in predicting traffic levels.

Did the Signals Cause Traffic?

Here’s where things get interesting. As statisticians like to say (and we frequently repeat), correlation does not imply causation. Let’s not just nod our heads and pretend we know what that means, though – let’s explore exactly what it could mean for this data set. A strong correlation between Facebook Likes and Unique Pageviews could mean any of the following:

  1. Facebook Likes could be driving Unique Pageviews
  2. Pageviews could be driving Likes (visitors click the button)
  3. Some Mystery Factor could be driving BOTH Likes and UPVs

Possible explanations of causation

Unless there’s an obvious 3rd factor in the mix, chasing after mysteries isn’t usually time well spent. The most likely alternative here is (2) – blog posts with more Unique Pageviews mean that more people click the Like button (+1 button, etc.). If this is the case, then we should see a relationship between Likes and +1s. If visitors drive Likes and +1s (and not the other way around), then Likes and +1s should be correlated (assuming some people click both).

The other piece of data we can look at it is referral traffic driven by Facebook and Google+. Although this is a little hard to pull out on the page/post level, blog posts often get direct visitors, so the referrer and the entrance source are similar. If Likes are well correlated with Facebook traffic and +1s are well correlated with Google+ traffic (admittedly, that connection is a bit more complicated), then it could point back to cause (1) – social signals drive traffic.

So, I pulled those three correlations (Spearman, again) for the post-Google+ data:

Supplemental correlations

In a perfect world, causality-wise, either the green bar would be high and the blue bars low, or vice-versa. In this case, all 3 correlations were reasonably strong. Clear as mud, huh?

Social Chicken or Social Egg?

Part of the difficulty is that we have a bit of a chicken and an egg problem here – what came first, the visitors or the social signals? The reality is that it’s probably a little of both, and what we have over time may look something like this:

Likes drive UPVS drive Likes, etc.

Social signals drive traffic, which drives more people to click social signals, which drives more traffic, and on and on. Social traffic also jumps the tracks – people who click on Like may also click on +1, driving more Google traffic, which drives more +1s, etc.

What Does It All Mean?

Although this was an exploratory study, I don’t want to just leave you with: “Hey, it’s complicated.” I do think that some of the correlations here are compelling, and that we can start to piece together a few conclusions:

(1) Social Signals Are Getting Stronger

Although the second study was a cleaner data-set, in the sense of the timeframe, the jump in the social signal correlations was notable. I think it’s pretty clear that social signals are gaining momentum and driving more traffic in 2011.

(2) People Use Multiple Social Signals

While there’s such a thing as overkill, people will click on both the Like button and +1 button, so don’t shy away from using both. I didn’t analyze Tweets in the follow-up, since a Re-tweet feels like a qualitatively different action (it’s more than a vote).

(3) +1s Are Working (In Our Industry)

At least for now, and at least for our audience, +1s are driving traffic, and their relationship, pound per pound, is almost on par with Facebook/Likes. If you’re not using the +1 button and you’re in a techie-oriented niche, now is the time to give it a try. The future of Google+ is anyone’s guess, but for now it’s having some positive impact.

We’re exploring whether these kinds of numbers would make for useful reports and tools down the road. If anyone has comments about what kind of advanced social stats they’d find useful or how they’d like to see these kinds of studies expanded, please let us know.


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Jobs Speech Tonight at 7:00 p.m. EDT – Watch Live

The White House Thursday, September 8, 2011
 

Jobs Speech Tonight at 7:00 p.m. EDT – Watch Live

Tonight at 7:00 p.m. EDT, President Obama will lay out his plan for creating American jobs and growing our economy in a speech before a special joint session of Congress.

Last night, Senior Advisor David Plouffe recorded a short video to preview tonight's speech and highlighted some key points:

Watch the Video

Make sure you watch the enhanced live stream of the speech with charts, graphs, and quick stats highlighting key points in the President's speech at WhiteHouse.gov/Jobs-Speech.

Watch the Speech at WhiteHouse.gov/Jobs-Speech

Immediately following the President's speech, the White House will offer a live panel where policy experts from the White House will answer your questions. Learn more about the panel and how you can submit your questions:

WhiteHouse.gov/Your-Questions

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SEOptimise

SEOptimise


74% of SEOs Buy (or Would Consider Buying) Links!

Posted: 08 Sep 2011 02:13 AM PDT

The results are in! We now have 202 votes for yesterday’s ‘do you buy links for SEO‘ poll – and it’s fair to say the results are very interesting.

The reason I asked this question in the first place was because I wanted to forget about the usual best practice advice we always hear and get an honest and realistic representation of what it actually takes to achieve top rankings in Google.

So let’s get straight to the answers:

So what can we read into this?

  • 26% answered with “No – we keep clear of any link buying activity”. I decided against the post title of “26% of SEOs are liars!”. I actually think this number sounds very accurate, although it does depend on where you draw the line on what you classes as a paid link.
  • 22% answered with “Yes – depending on the niche and competitiveness”. This was my answer too; in my opinion, as long as you are 100% transparent with the client and are looking at long-term organic success, as opposed to risky quick-win strategies, in some niches it can be very difficult to compete for top rankings without buying links. I’m not saying it’s impossible, but if buying links is clearly working for your competitors, then realistically it’s going to be more difficult to catch/outrank them with touching paid links. You just have to be more careful as there is obviously a risk element involved.
  • 20% voted for “No – but would consider depending on the scenario”. I think that’s very similar to the above answer – you may not have felt it necessary to buy links yet, but it would be a different story in competitor niches where this is a more important strategy for competitors.
  • 16% say that “Yes – link buying is a major part of our SEO campaign”. To put this into context, this was 33 votes – which I think is very high. Obviously it’s a risky tactic to rely too heavily on paid links for any search campaign – but I also received many private comments such as “yes, it’s essential – we couldn’t rank without them!” and “we tried dropping our £xx,000 paid link budget but rankings dropped dramatically – so we had to start buying them again”. This makes things very difficult for the client or agency – because you want to have a long-term, ethical organic SEO approach. But you also want to do what works right now – and if that’s paid links, you have to decide if you want to maximise online revenue right now, or whether you are prepared to lose out to competitors in the hope that long-term you will come out on top as Google improves its paid link detection algorithm. In my experience, nobody ever likes to lose out to competitors!
  • 13% voted for “Yes – as a small percentage of our link building campaigns”. Personally I thought this may have been higher. There are paid links which clearly still work – Google wouldn’t even have the paid link reporting tool if their algorithm caught them all – but it’s going to be less of a sign to Google if it only accounts for a small proportion of your backlinks. That’s why big brands often get away with buying links, but it’s always going to be far more noticeable for smaller sites.
  • And 3% voted other – ignore some of the comments, such as the SEOptimise one, that wasn’t us. But the results are interesting nonetheless, mainly because it’s that question again:  where do you draw the line on paid links? Does online PR for SEO count as paid links? Are you buying links as soon as you hire an agency for SEO?

Which countries buy the most links?
I found this very interesting to compare how the answers differed across different countries:
Link buying in different countries

It’s interesting to look at the differences in ethics and laws/guidelines which may influence SEO strategies here. Although, with the largest samples sizes you can read much more into the UK and US results – unless you believe that in Greece they don’t buy links!

Comparing the US and UK is interesting though – the major difference being that 34% of SEOs in the US don’t buy links, compared with the lower 25% in the UK. The other options being very similar across the two.

Would be great to hear your comments on the results? Do you think this is accurate? When do you feel link buying is acceptable (if at all)? And where do you draw the line between a paid and a non-paid link?

© SEOptimise - Download our free business guide to blogging whitepaper and sign-up for the SEOptimise monthly newsletter. 74% of SEOs Buy (or Would Consider Buying) Links!

Related posts:

  1. Do You Buy Links? An Anonymous Poll
  2. 40 Paid Links Resources
  3. How to Get Links by Creating Content People Actually Want to Link To

Do You Buy Links? An Anonymous Poll

Posted: 07 Sep 2011 06:45 AM PDT

Following Matt’s SEO ethics post and having had many interesting discussions about buying links with some SEO’s recently, I thought it would be interesting to run a quick anonymous poll to find out whether buying links still has a part to play in your SEO strategy.

So here goes:

This is intended to show what is actually happening in the industry, perhaps against best practice advice – so I think it will be interesting to see the results. Obviously this is an anonymous poll and only vote information is collected. If you’d like to show us examples, feel free to leave them in the comments. But I’d probably advise against it to be honest!

© SEOptimise - Download our free business guide to blogging whitepaper and sign-up for the SEOptimise monthly newsletter. Do You Buy Links? An Anonymous Poll

Related posts:

  1. 74% of SEOs Buy (or Would Consider Buying) Links!
  2. 40 Paid Links Resources
  3. What Checking Broken Links Can Teach You About the Web & Linking Out

Seth's Blog : Getting serious about your org chart

Getting serious about your org chart

2011.06.27_organizational_charts

Manu's funny brilliance aside, this collection of org charts might help you think hard about why your organization is structured the way it is.

Is it because it was built when geography mattered more than it does now? Is it an artificact of a business that had a factory at its center? Does the org chart you live with every day leverage your best people or does it get in their way?

 

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