miercuri, 14 septembrie 2011

SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog

SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog


Refer Your Friends & Get SEOmoz PRO for free!

Posted: 14 Sep 2011 07:10 AM PDT

Posted by JoannaLord

Alright SEOmoz PRO members, are you ready for some good news? Drum roll please...today we launched our PRO Refer-a-Friend Program! What does this mean for you? It means you might not have to pay for your PRO membership ever again. I wanted to take some time today and walk you through the goals of the program and get you all started on your way to a free PRO membership. 

If you are a PRO member and want to jump right in, you can see it live here!

So Why Launch a Referral Program?

Here at SEOmoz we are constantly looking for new ways to reward our awesome PRO members. About a year ago we launched the affiliate program which paid out a $25.00 commission to anyone who sent us a free trial signup. This has been great for our affiliate-minded supporters, but I have heard from a number of people that they don't want to receive checks from us in return for their support. We thought about this for a while, and realized that we had another way to say thank you -- free PRO service. 

As of today if you are a SEOmoz PRO member and you refer us a new free trialer that sticks around after their 30-day trial is over,  we will credit your account $100.00. Exciting huh? We know that many of you pitch us to your clients, to other colleagues, and to your social networks...now you can get free PRO for those. Karma is a beautiful thing.

Whoa, Thats Great! But How Does it Work?

When you login and click "My Account" you will see a "Referrals" link. You can click this or navigate to your referrals dashboard through the Referrals top nav link. 

Referral Nav Pic

This dashboard with be your data hub for your referral program. You can share your unique referral link, monitor people signing up through it, and keep track of your credits. We also have some added some pretty cool analytics (more on that below).

We have provided three ways for you to share your referral link right from the dashboard! You can either:

  1. Use the unique link. This can be used anywhere! Feel like dropping it in a chat with someone? Go for it.
  2. Share it socially! We've given you a one-click option for sharing your unique link on Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn. Go ahead and share with your networks, they need SEO too.
  3. Lastly, we wanted you to have an easy way to share your link via email. You can insert your entire address book if you want, and we will send them an email letting them know a friend has invited them to try SEOmoz PRO. Cool, huh?

    Sharing options

Even better is we have given you the ability to track the source of each successful referral! We know marketers love analytics, so we geeked out a bit here. When someone signs up we track the source and show you, so you will know if sharing socially is more effective for you than email, or more effectively than a direct link sent. Say it with me friends -- data FTW!

In addition to giving you a number of ways to share the link we wanted this experience to be as customized as possible. We know that a personalized experience is key to success. No matter what source you use to share your link, the referral that clicks through will be brought to a custom lander that lets them know you are sharing SEOmoz PRO with them! It looks like this:

custom lander for referral

The entire sharing process has been optimized for maximum success! If you have suggestions on how else we can improve this process so your referrals are more successful, please include them in the comments below or email me at joanna@seomoz.org.

So Let's Talk Tracking

Now that you understand how you can share SEOmoz PRO with friends that need some SEO tools, lets talk about the tracking we've set up. If you click on the tab "My Referrals" you are going to see a real-time tracking dashboard. You can see below we have tried to provide a plethora of valuable data on each person you get to sign up for a free trial. 

My Referral Information

We provide you with the following:

  • Referral: The username that person has signed up with (for privacy reasons we have decided not to put the email here)
  • Days Left in Free Trial: Ths shows how many days are left before a referral becomes PRO, so you can see how close you are to your credit
  • Source: This is where you can see what channel is working for you and optimize your efforts
  • Status: This shows you if they made it from free trial to a PRO member, or if they cancelled
  • Hide: This is where you can delete people out of view, if you want to keep your list more manageable

The goal with this detailed view is to help every PRO member know exactly where they stand with the referrals they have sent out, and also to provide some cool data to help you improve your chance for successful referrals in the future.

Okay Now Let's Talk Money

Now that you have a sense of how it works, and what each piece shows you, let's talk money! We have provided a "Referral Stats" scoreboard on your dashboard to help you see a top-level view of your referrals. You will be able to see;

  • How many total people you have referred into a free trial
  • How many total people have stuck around past the 30-day trial
  • The total dollars we have credited your account as a result

Referral stat scoreboard

Credits to your account will be applied at the end of each day, and you will be able to keep track of the total right there in your scoreboard! If you think about it, if you refer 12 people this week, and they all become PRO members, you will have SEOmoz PRO free for the next year.

You may be also be thinking we are crazy for doing this...and you might be right. However, we know that you guys are the ones working in the SEO trenches everyday, and you guys know better than us who could use our software, and benefit from our service. We are both leaning on you, and rewarding you for your awesomeness. This refer-a-friend program is another way for us to say thank you for supporting us.

So what are you waiting for? Jump on in there, and try it out. I'd love to hear your thoughts on the program below, and if you have ideas on how we can make it better, we welcome those suggestions as well!


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How To Reach Bloggers, Ninja Style

Posted: 13 Sep 2011 02:17 PM PDT

Posted by MOGmartin

Blogger or webmaster outreach is the art of finding the right sites to target to get links on, tracking down who owns or edits them, and building a relationship with them in order to get links.

It's also for my money the only real "pure" linkbuilding exercise that we as search marketing professionals should engage in.

This stuff does take time, but it is possible to scale (I go into some detail on the data gathering side of things in this post), and if executed correctly you will not only be building great links, but building relationships with people who may well become your brand advocates in future – giving you so much more long term value than a simple link could ever bring.

Site Selection:

The first ingredient is keyword selection based on the client or site strategy.

For instance, online retail clients in the UK clothing vertical have the requirement to rank for lots of fashion related terms, examples may be things like "adidas originals hoodies", or "converse all stars".

This is generally decided at an SEO strategy stage which involves the overall campaign goals, and preferably using real world data like PPC costs and conversions.

This type of information is invaluable as it provides the SEO team with a clear picture of commercial value of rankings for certain keywords.

Once we have these keyword lists, we set about selecting sites to target to acquire links. The best place to find sites that Google considers to be relevant for these terms, it turns out, is Google itself!

A simple search for the term alone yields the results that Google find the most relevant, but this often returns sites that you will never be able to secure links on. For example a search for "converse all stars" in the UK yields: Converse.com, Wikipedia, amazon.co.uk, asos.com, totallyshoes.co.uk and other competitors where you will never be able to place a link.


"Advanced search operators" are how we discover the sites that you WILL get a link on though!

Examples are:

Inurl: sites: (with advanced options 100 results selected)

Search for the keyword term being targeted, and use the inurl: operator to filter out types of site that you can conceivably get links on, for instance:

KEYWORD inurl:blog
KEYWORD inurl:forum
KEYWORD inurl:site
KEYWORD inurl:fans

This type of search should yield a couple of dozen potential linking partners. Once you have these keep a record of them in an excel sheet (the data to keep now is the keyword, the landing page Google returns, and the site domain name – we will use this data later).


Allintext: keyword sites

This filter searches for sites that MUST contain each of the words listed within the content of the page. Note, you can also use the plus symbol to return equivalent results, particularly handy when you want to force inclusion of some words but not others.

Again, using the keyword term, plus other operators such as "reviews" "blog" etc. can yield lots of good results to contact.

Site: or –site: operators

Or

These searches restrict the query to either a certain domain, type of domain, or excluding a certain domain.

The purpose in this is to discover sites that have certain TLDs such as .edu, .gov, .info, .me etc. that are either going to be high value links, or unlikely to be the brand website where you can target links. Again, save any potential site in your excel sheet created earlier to contact in future.


Intitle: sites

These search types yield results where the term or terms (to force exact terms use quotation marks) appear in the TITLE: element of the document, be creative with your keyword operators to uncover lots more nice sites.


Mixing and Matching Operators:

You can combine these operators in any way you choose to really drill down on sites and find some hidden gems. Some example searches might be:

+"converse all stars" inurl:blog intitle:review
+"converse all stars" +buy +inurl:forum

Once you start combining multiple operators you normally end up with hundreds of new potential sites.


Cataloguing Results:

All of the above searches yield results that you can contact at a later date to get link placements. It's a good idea to try and keep this all in one place so that you can action the list in an organised way, and also segment it into site types and prioritise them so that you can contact the most valuable ones first.

Excel is the easiest way to do it, and based on above you will have the following information already:

Keyword Targeted, Landing Page, Site URL.

With an excel plugin (seotools.xll) (available here: http://nielsbosma.se/projects/seotools/ ) we can start building up statistics on these sites in order to categorise them and prioritise them for contact.

Information that can help you with this include the Google PageRank (an arbitrary 0-10 measurement of the importance of a website as defined by Google, Google indexed pages (how many pages on a website Google actually knows about and terms worthy of indexing), Facebook Likes (spammy domains are unlikely to have any Facebook likes so it's easy to weed out "rubbish sites" with this).

The results would then look something like this:

The process by which you import this data into excel is by using the following formula’s:

=GooglePageRank(CELL)
=GoogleIndexedPages(CELL)
=FaceBookLikes(CELL)

Once you've got a hundred or more potential targets, it becomes quite easy to work out which ones are more powerful, but overall you're looking for as high a possible numbers on each of the above metrics.


Time to Get in Touch:

Once we’ve got to the stage where we are ready to start contacting webmasters, the first thing we need are their contact details, followed by a good enough reason for them to place a link (time to get creative!).

Finding Contact Details:

Obviously there is no one size fits all here, if the website is a blog or a forum, a lot of the time there will be simple contact forms that you can fill in, or the webmaster may have published his email somewhere on the site for you to get in touch. If that's the case, it's easy enough to get the message out to them – however most of the time it's not that easy.

WHOIS data: any domain name registered has "whois" data associated with it, which generally gives you the name, address and email of the person or entity that owns the domain. This is a publicly searchable database which you can access through a variety of sources.

My particular preference is domaintools.com and you can find site owner details by going to a url like:

http://whois.domaintools.com/seoforums.org

this gives you all of the information you need to contact the webmaster:

 

Occasionally you will find however that the domain is registered to a default address of the registrar, something like "domains by proxy" (a large registrar's private registration service).

If that's the case and the link is perceived to be particularly high value, there are still some options (but we're getting dangerously close to online stalking here!). If you can find the webmaster's name through their blog, site, or forum then you could try searching Facebook or Twitter for them and contact them through those means – or tracking them down (if they are in the UK) on services like 192.com.

If you are going to go to this level however, that link really should be "high" value! Some of the best links I've ever managed to build have been down to this persistence when you know something is worth following. Remember, those links that are hard to get, are the ones that your competitors are least likely to have!


The Pitch:

Once we've got contact details the next, and most important step is coming up with a good enough reason for them to link back to you.

Again, there is no one size fits all routine here, and it depends very much on the type of site you are contacting.

The most normal types of interaction generally follow these frameworks:

Content Provision

Most bloggers would be happy publishing an article on their site if they are provided it, it's well written, and it fits their target market. This can be a powerful way of getting links back to where you want at very little cost other than the time taken to write the article. For most large linkbuilding clients we have an article writing budget so these would be taken from an existing bank we will have ready and waiting for such a purpose.

If you aren't in the position of luxury of having these resources at your disposal, you can build the content once you are in contact with the blogger and it seems likely that they might accept your offer, but to do it effectively at scale, it always helps to have it done in advance.

Infographics could also be used here, if you have access to those for your site or client.

Straight forward Recommendations

"Hi, I read the article on your site xyz.com where you were talking about converse all stars, I was wondering if you could link it to my page so that you're visitors will know where to buy them?"

Linking for Product

In certain circumstances, its easiest and quickest to offer the webmaster some free product, preferably relating to the post/link that you require as it will have the highest chance of being accepted. This could be anything in value from $10 up to $1,000+ depending on numerous factors, including the statistics of the page that we gathered above, the difficulty of the keyword term itself, and the commercial gains from a high ranking position.

Offering Competitions

In many cases clients would be prepared to offer a free pair of "converse all stars" to a community as part of a contest where people have to enter a reason why they deserve the product. This is a great mechanism both to attract the initial link and generate good PR and buzz.

Widget Placement (advanced, and only relevant occasionally)

Another method is to place a widget on the site (with the webmasters permission of course) This could be something as simple as a survey script, along the lines of "If Converse released a special edition Leather boot, would you buy it?". These types of linkbuilding exercise are normally quite easy, as long as it's either humorous or adds genuine value.

Also, if you have the development resource, and more importantly data that would be valuable to bloggers in that niche it makes sense to use both together to build a data-driven widget that provides real value to the target sites audience, this of course is harder to execute – but done right can yield some pretty spectacular results.

It's also possible to get these kinds of placements to go viral if it's handled in the right way and seeded onto a handful of authority sites.

The Endgame:

Like in so many areas of SEO, the biggest challenge is scale. We all want great results for our sites or for our customers so it's important to sort out your processes around blogger outreach, as it can quickly snowball out of control and yield very few results.

I'm not a fan at all of automated emailing to your target list, each and every contact you make must, I repeat must, be backed up by having looked first at the target site, picking out some relevant content on the page, commenting on it and personalising the email as much as possible.

This is time consuming, but it increases the likelihood of getting a reply hugely, and should not be overlooked.

The other parts of the research however you can scale quickly into the thousands of sites depending on your vertical using things like the SEOtools.xll file that I linked to earlier in the post.

If you follow these steps – you can start building tonnes of (white hat) semantically related, powerful links!


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The White House is Open For Questions: The American Jobs Act

The White House Your Daily Snapshot for
Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011
 

The White House is Open For Questions: The American Jobs Act

Today, White House officials will answer your questions about how the American Jobs Act will impact young people live on WhiteHouse.gov/live. Questions can be submitted on WhiteHouse.gov, Facebook, and on Twitter using the hashtag #WHChat.

Tune in and watch the event on WhiteHouse.gov/live:

  • Today, September 14th at 4:00 p.m. EDT: Michael Pyle, Special Assistant to the President for Financial and International Markets at the National Economic Council and Roberto Rodriguez, Special Assistant to the President for Education Policy.

Photo of the Day

First Lady Michelle Obama talks with Washington, D.C., area high school students who attended the Teen Design Fair, in the Red Room of the White House prior to the Cooper-Hewitt Design Awards luncheon, Sept. 13, 2011. (Official White House Photo by Lawrence Jackson)

In Case You Missed It

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

President Obama: "Every Child Deserves a Great School"
President Obama travels to Columbus, Ohio to lay out how the American Jobs Act will put teachers back in the classroom and get construction workers, carpenters and electricians back on the job modernizing America's schools.

Office Hours 9/13/11 or "We Need the American Jobs Act Now": David Plouffe Answers Your Questions on Twitter
Senior Advisor David Plouffe answers questions on the American Jobs Act during a special session of White House Office Hours

More Organizations and Businesses Respond to the American Jobs Act
Organizations and businesses continue to support the President’s call to put partisanship aside and do what is right for the American people by passing the American Jobs Act.

Today's Schedule

All times are Eastern Daylight Time (EDT).

 9:15 AM: The President and The Vice President receive the Presidential Daily Briefing

9:50 AM: The President departs the White House en route Joint Base Andrews

10:05 AM: The President departs Joint Base Andrews en route Raleigh-Durham, North Carolina

10:45 AM: The Vice President hosts a Cabinet meeting to discuss the latest efforts to cut waste, fraud, and abuse as part of the Administration’s Campaign to Cut Waste WhiteHouse.gov/live

11:05 AM: The President arrives Raleigh-Durham, North Carolina

11:40 AM: The President tours WestStar Precision Facility

12:55 PM: The President delivers remarks on the American Jobs Act WhiteHouse.gov/live

2:20 PM: The President departs Raleigh-Durham, North Carolina en route Joint Base Andrews

3:25 PM: The President arrives Joint Base Andrews

3:40 PM: The President arrives at the White House

3:45 PM: The President meets with The Vice President

8:20 PM: The President and The First Lady attend the Congressional Hispanic Caucus Institute’s 34th Annual Awards Gala; The President delivers remarks WhiteHouse.gov/live

WhiteHouse.gov/live Indicates events that will be live streamed on WhiteHouse.gov/Live

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What is your favourite UK search conference?

Posted: 13 Sep 2011 09:28 AM PDT

Earlier today I thought it would be interesting to find out what peoples favourite search conference in the UK is.

This has generated a great response already (150 votes to-date) – this is still running so please feel free to vote and invite your friends to do the same! Unfortunately it doesn’t look like you can embed the results from the Facebook poll (if it is, please let me know how!) – but I’ve published a screenshot of them here instead:
Most Popular UK Search Conference

Here’s what the actual numbers look like currently:

  1. Think Visibility Leeds – 44 votes
  2. SAScon Manchester – 43 votes
  3. BrightonSEO – 22 votes
  4. a4uexpo London – 16 votes
  5. SearchLove London – 15 votes
  6. SMX London – 5 votes
  7. SES London – 4 votes
  8. Conversion Conference London – 1 vote

As I said on the poll, each conference has different target audiences so this may reflect the results – but I think it’s interesting nonetheless to see what the most popular conference is within the UK search industry.

We’ll be attending (and in some cases, speaking) at all of the upcoming events – so come and say hi. Plus next week, Marcus will be speaking at social media marketing & monitoring on Monday, for those who are around Oxfordshire, we’ll be at Oxon Digital on Weds and we’ll be at the OMN London on Thurs! Busy week – would be great to see you there too!

© SEOptimise - Download our free business guide to blogging whitepaper and sign-up for the SEOptimise monthly newsletter. What is your favourite UK search conference?

Related posts:

  1. Get 15% Off Conversion Conference London
  2. Do You Buy Links? An Anonymous Poll
  3. SES Chigaco 2010 – What is the future of search marketing?

SEOs – time to brush up on your grammar?

Posted: 13 Sep 2011 05:27 AM PDT

As a self-confessed grammar geek, I'm frequently dismayed by the sloppy standard of writing I am continually confronted with throughout the course of the seven days a week I spend exploring the weird and wonderful world wide web. Whether it's a blog post, a tweet or even a company website, it seems that a lax approach to grammar has become the norm – even, most shockingly of all, among professional copywriters I've hired. The most frequent offender in the huge array of rudimentary English errors is the misplaced or missing apostrophe, a grammar violation which winds me up so much that Stuart Tofts and Kevin Gibbons make a point of including one in every email they send me, just so that they can see my reaction.


Before you ask, no – "Trampoline" is not the name of the shop!

Not long ago, in a moment of above average exasperation, I sent out a tweet which said:

So imagine my satisfaction when the following correction from Google was brought to my attention not long after:

We're all used to Google correcting misspellings, but this was the first time I had seen it suggest correct punctuation. Interestingly, it has not automatically displayed results for "women's clothing" with a different option for "search instead for womens clothing", as it usually does with misspellings. Furthermore, doing the same search but for "mens" and "childrens" did not produce a "Did you mean" suggestion.

A quick glance down the search results for the search seen above showed sites with title tags using both correct and incorrect punctuation ranking for both terms (though title tags are obviously not the only consideration!). However, changing the search from "womens" to "women's" did change which websites appeared on the first page – so it does seem to have some bearing on rankings. The top ranking websites were the same, but lower on the first page the results were different – meaning that some sites (Debenhams, for example) lost out on a first page ranking. The humble apostrophe makes a difference!

The Google Keyword Tool does recognise a small difference in search volumes for the two versions, but the number of searches for each is roughly equal. So why is Google making this correction in the search results?

This interesting video from Google shows the process used by Google engineers when they make algorithm changes – which they apparently do on a daily basis:

The video explains the rationale behind the "did you mean" suggestions:  sites with misspellings are typically of a poorer quality. So as far as I can see, it's a logical assumption that sites with a poor standard of grammar should be treated with the same approach.

In the light of the Panda update, we're all getting used to the idea that Google is cracking down on low-quality sites, placing increasing emphasis on high-quality content that provides value for its users (the majority of whom are also Google's users). Of course, many people are lazy when it comes to typing terms into Google, and will omit punctuation such as apostrophes because it takes marginally less time to type, and because they feel it makes little difference. But I would argue that the presence of poor grammar on a website could end up being a negative quality indicator because it diminishes a user's trust in that website.

Google does use comments from real users in addressing problems of identifying what counts as a low-quality website. See this excerpt from a Wired.com interview with Google:

Wired.com: How do you recognize a shallow-content site? Do you have to wind up defining low quality content?

Singhal: That's a very, very hard problem that we haven't solved, and it's an ongoing evolution how to solve that problem. We wanted to keep it strictly scientific, so we used our standard evaluation system that we've developed, where we basically sent out documents to outside testers. Then we asked the raters questions like: "Would you be comfortable giving this site your credit card? Would you be comfortable giving medicine prescribed by this site to your kids?"

Cutts: There was an engineer who came up with a rigorous set of questions, everything from. "Do you consider this site to be authoritative? Would it be okay if this was in a magazine? Does this site have excessive ads?" Questions along those lines.

Singhal: And based on that, we basically formed some definition of what could be considered low quality. In addition, we launched the Chrome Site Blocker [allowing users to specify sites they wanted blocked from their search results] earlier , and we didn't use that data in this change. However, we compared and it was 84 percent overlap [between sites downloaded by the Chrome blocker and downgraded by the update]. So that said that we were in the right direction.

The incorporation of user feedback into algorithms was also confirmed on the official Google Webmaster Central Blog. Personally, if I visit a company website and the first thing I notice is that it's riddled with poor grammar, it puts me right off that company. My most likely course of action would be to go back to the search results and find a competitor with a well-written website – and I know I'm not alone in this.

I lament falling standards of English and argue that proper use of grammar DOES matter. Poor grammar is unprofessional and makes a company look sloppy, as though they just don't care. If they have that kind of attitude towards their professional image – if they can't even be bothered to get their English right – what might their attitude be to customer service? How can I trust them with my business? Google wants the best results for its users, websites they can place trust and confidence in – and part of that means companies who know how to present themselves in a professional way. It's only one step from correcting misspellings to correcting grammar abuse.

So it's certainly not impossible that Google may pay more careful attention to grammar in the future. If that happens, using an apostrophe or not could mean the difference between ranking competitively for a term and not; it could also mean that a PPC ad, with apostrophes dropped to keep within the character limit, might not appear on the searches you want it to appear on. If there are any algorithm updates involving grammar in the offing, they are still only in their infancy; but if you ask me, this would be a good time for online marketers to sharpen up their grammar skills and recommend that their clients do the same.

Image credit
Zawtowers on Flickr

© SEOptimise - Download our free business guide to blogging whitepaper and sign-up for the SEOptimise monthly newsletter. SEOs – time to brush up on your grammar?

Related posts:

  1. 74% of SEOs Buy (or Would Consider Buying) Links!
  2. Reverse Engineer the Search User
  3. Keyword Density – Finally Useful for SEOs and Penguins

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Emerging is what a platform and support and leadership allow you to do. Emerging is what we need from you.

 

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