vineri, 14 martie 2014

Keyword Targeting, Density, and Cannibalization - Whiteboard Friday

Keyword Targeting, Density, and Cannibalization - Whiteboard Friday


Keyword Targeting, Density, and Cannibalization - Whiteboard Friday

Posted: 13 Mar 2014 04:17 PM PDT

Posted by randfish

Keyword targeting is still an integral part of online marketing, but it isn't the same as it used to be, and we want to make sure you're able to keep up with the changes. In today's Whiteboard Friday, Rand covers today's best practices for keyword targeting, and clears up some common misconceptions about keyword density and cannibalization.

For reference, here's a still of this week's whiteboard!

Video transcription

Howdy Moz fans and welcome to another edition of Whiteboard Friday. This week I'm going to talk a little bit about some keyword targeting, density, keyword density, and cannibalization issues. These are issues that I've seen come up a few times. I've received some email questions about them, and so I thought maybe it's a good time to readdress some of these best practices and to talk about how things like Hummingbird, in particular, have changed some of the ways that we think about keyword targeting, as Google's engine has really evolved to be more sophisticated with how they identify and process keyword use than they have historically.

So, first off, I'm going to start by identifying this page, actually a really wonderful blog and website from a local Seattle blogger, talking about Seattle Espresso. So I did a search for Seattle's best espresso, because that's a topic of us many here at the Mozplex and many of you who come to visit Seattle are often interested in, and I found this wonderful page.

Now, there are some interesting things about it. It ranks very well. I think it's ranking number four, and another blog post from the same guy from the next year of his reviews is ranking number five. So he's got sort of two positions in there. But what's interesting to me is there's not a lot of keyword targeting. In fact, this particular gentleman even has something on his About page that says, "If you're an SEO or a social media person, don't even contact me." So clearly this is not a guy who's thinking tremendously about SEO, doesn't have a lot of keyword targeting in mind, but is doing a tremendously good job of ranking, and that's because he's, perhaps unintentionally, following a lot of really smart rules.

So first off, as opposed to early keyword targeting world of SEO, today I really don't stress repetition. I think repetition is something we can almost avoid. So I don't worry about, "Hey, I only have four instances of the term 'Seattle's Best Espresso' on the page. That's not enough. I really need six or I need seven or I need five or I need three." I don't worry about the number. I do, generally speaking, like to make sure that at least somewhere on the page, at one point or another, the phrase is mentioned once or twice is generally good enough, and sometimes if it makes sense to have it in the copy anyway, for user experience reasons, for readability reasons, for content reasons, great, fine. That's okay.

Also, I never, ever use a density metric. It used to be the case that density was somewhat reasonably okay, reasonably correlated with better keyword targeting. But, honestly, that went out the window so long ago. I think when I started in SEO, in 2002, it was already dying. People were already talking about keyword density being a relatively useless metric.

Let me just explain what density is very briefly for anyone who might not know. So there's a lot of content here, in fact 67 unique words, and what I've done is highlight in purple these Seattle, espresso, best espresso, espresso, 67 unique words. Keyword density basically says, "Well, there are four instances of espresso. Out of 67 words, that's a 5.97% density of espresso." Can you see how incredibly useless this is?

So search engines evolved dramatically beyond keyword density, probably as soon as the late '90s. So we're talking a long time ago, and yet there are still a tremendous number of SEOs who look for a keyword density analysis and density tools and think this is a good way to do the best practice. It really is not. I would urge you not to use density as a metric, not to think about it. You won't find it in our keyword tools. You won't find it in most good keyword tools.

Title is very useful. It's a very useful place to employ your keywords, but a click-worthy title is actually worth a lot more than just a perfectly keyword-targeted title. So perfectly keyword-targeted would be keyword phrase right at the beginning, exact match, so something like "Seattle's Best Espressos," and then "I review 113 different coffee places in the city." Okay, that's not a terrible title. You could imagine clicking that.

I actually really like the title that this blogger's put together: "The Best and Worst in Seattle Espresso, 2011 Edition." This isn't perfectly keyword-targeted. I searched for "Seattle's best espresso," which is, by far, the most common phrasing that searchers are going to use. But he's got "best" separated from "Seattle Espresso." It's not right at the front of the title. It's still a great title.

You know what's even smarter, that I really like, is the way that he writes it. "The Best and Worst in Seattle Espresso" is almost more compelling to me than just knowing the best. I'm really curious about the worst. The worst holds a curious fascination for me. If I see some coffee shop that I really love on the worst list, well, I'm going to get all inflamed about that and riled up. But what a great way to write headlines, to write titles. He's employed the keywords intelligently, but he's made me want to click, and that's something that I think we should all take away from.

On page is very useful. So putting the keyword on the page, especially important in the headline. Why is it so important in the headline? It's not because SEO is about perfect keyword placement and getting that H1 tag. It's not actually that important or critical that you get it in the H1 or the H2. It's a best practice, and I would generally recommend it, but it's okay if you don't.

The reason I really recommend this is because when someone clicks on this title in the search results, "The Best and Worst in Seattle Espresso, 2011 Edition," if they land on a page that does not have that headline, that title at the top of the page in some bigger font, instantly searchers will get the impression that they've landed on the wrong page and they'll click the Back button. As we know, pogo-sticking is a real problem. People jumping from a result over to the search results and then jumping back to search results, that gives the engine an indication that people were not satisfied and happy with this result. They're going and they're scrolling down and clicking on other people's results instead. You don't want that. You want to own that experience. You want to be the provider of the best possible relevancy and searcher experience that you can.

That's why one of the other recommendations that I have, when it comes to on page, is never sacrificing user experience. If you're thinking to yourself, "Well, Rand said I should really have the keyword on the page in some sort of exact format, like at least twice and in the headline," yes, but if you think that's making a worse user experience, then mixing it up a little bit like this blogger did, mix it up a little bit. Go for the better user experience every time. Particularly because of things like what Google did with Hummingbird, where they've gotten much more sophisticated about text, contextual analysis, relevancy, the way that they interpret things, you can see a lot of search results now where it is not keyword targeting that's winning the day, but really searcher intent. Meaning, if I'm going and searching and this blogger has done a really good job of connecting up the terms and concepts that Google has identified that they associate with best espresso, they're going to rank particularly well.

Let me show you some really smart things that perhaps unintentionally this blogger did. He mentions coffee shop names -- Victrola, Cortona. He's got Vivace down there later. He has Herkimer Coffee. Herkimer is the maker of the espresso that they serve at Cortona Cafe. This is incredibly intelligent because when Google scans the Web and they see lots of people talking about Seattle's best espresso, these coffee shops and roasters are mentioned very frequently. There's a high degree of network connectivity, keyword connectivity between these terms and phrases.

So when I see, as Google, Seattle's best espresso and I don't see any mention of Herkimer or Vivace or Victrola or Ballard Coffee Works, Seattle Coffee Works, I'm going to get a little suspicious. If I see things like Starbucks and Tully's and Seattle's Best Coffee, which is a brand, I'm going to think, "Gosh, I don't know if they've actually localized. I don't know if this is relevant to that searcher's query." In fact, if you look at the front page for Seattle's best espresso, you will not find places that list, well, most of the results do not list places like Starbucks and Seattle's Best Coffee and Tully's, and these bigger national brands or regional brands.

The last thing that I'll mention on targeting is that providing unique value is essential. I did a whole Whiteboard Friday about providing unique value and the uniqueness of content. But those topically relevant terms that I just mentioned can be very helpful here. But really it's about providing something that you'll never find anywhere else. Not just unique content, meaning this text is unique to the Web, but meaning the value provided by it is truly unique. I can't find this value. I can't get what I get from this article anywhere else on the Web. That's critically important.

All right. Next piece is cannibalization, and keyword cannibalization is sort of a tough, meaty topic. It's not quite as important as it used to be, because Google has gotten much more sophisticated, more advanced in being able to tell. Basic idea behind cannibalization is, "I've got a page targeting Seattle's Best Espresso, and then I have another page targeting Wallingford's Best Espresso, which is a neighborhood here in Seattle. Should I be really careful not to use the word Seattle on my Wallingford Best Espresso page? How do I link between them? How do I make sure that Google knows which one to rank well?" In the past, Google was not smart enough, and a lot of times you would see these not as relevant pages outranking the one you really wanted to rank. So people in the SEO world came up with this term keyword cannibalization, and they tried to find ways to make Google rank the page that they wanted. Google's gotten much better about this. There are still a few best practices that we should keep in mind.

So, first off, on page targeting for a unique keyword phrase is optimal. So if we know that we want a page that's Seattle's Best Espresso, great. Having that term in the title, in the headline of a unique page is a very good idea. If we know that we want another one that's Wallingford, that's great too. Bt it is okay if you have multiple pages employing part of a keyword term or phrase. So, for example, I've got my Wallingford page. It's okay on the Wallingford page if I also mention Seattle. I could say "Seattle's Wallingford Neighborhood," or "The Best Espresso in Seattle's Wallingford Neighborhood," or "In Wallingford, Seattle." That's okay to do. That's not going to create the cannibalization that it might have in years past.

Linking with appropriate anchor text is very helpful. So let's say here's my coffee addict's guide to Seattle, and I've got links in here: "Best coffee roasters in Seattle," "Best espresso in Seattle," "Best coffee online from Seattle's roasters." Great. So now I have unique keyword phrases that I'm targeting, and I'm going to link out to each of these pages, and then from each of these pages, if I've got my best online coffee from Seattle roasters page, I probably do want to link to my best espresso in Seattle page with that anchor text. Call it what the page is. Don't just say, "For some great espresso places in Seattle, click here." No. "Click here," not great anchor text. "Best espresso in Seattle," that's the anchor text I generally want to have, and that's not just for search engines. It's also for users.

Number four, the last part about keyword cannibalization is if you have older pages, this happens a lot for bloggers and content marketers who are producing pages, lots of unique content over time, but some of it is repetitive. So if you have an older page, it can be very wise to retire that content in favor of something newer and fresher, and there's a number of ways to do this. I could 301 from the old URL to the new one. I could use a rel=canonical to point from my old piece of content to my new one on the same topic. Or I could refresh the existing page, essentially take the same URL, dump the old content, and put the new content on there. I could even archive the old content on a brand new page that's sort of like, "Hey, if you want the old version of this, here it is."

You can see we've done that at Moz several times with things like MozCon, with our industry survey, with our old ranking factors. We sort of move that old content off to another URL and put the new stuff up at the URL that's been ranking, been performing so that we don't have the challenge of having one trying to compete against another.

These techniques can be really helpful for those of you who've got sites and you're producing lots of content, you're targeting many keywords, and you're trying to figure out how to organize these things.

I look forward to some great comments. Thanks very much gang. I'll see you again next week for another edition of Whiteboard Friday. Take care.

Video transcription by Speechpad.com


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Seth's Blog : Better than free?

 

Better than free?

Without a doubt, free enables an idea to spread, it creates opportunity for sampling, it can open the door to engagement.

But when you buy something, you're paying for something that you can never get when it's handed to you.

Buying requires emotional commitment. Even a small payment has been shown to change the way people set expectations, not just for what they receive but how much energy and effort they're willing to contribute. It begins with confirmation bias, because if you paid for it, it must be worthwhile. But in the constantly-free world of digital media, I think it goes beyond this. 

In my new Skillshare course on modern marketing, I see this every day. Instead of clicking away and giving up, people devote more energy and effort to pushing through the hard stuff. That energy and effort, of course, opens ever more doors, which creates a virtuous cycle of learning.

One way to play in the digital age is to appeal to those that browse, the window shoppers, the mass audience that can't and won't commit. The alternative is to focus on impact, not numbers, and impact comes from commitment.

Price is more than an exchange of coins. Price is a story, a powerful tool for changing minds and one way we persuade ourselves to make a change. Lowering your price (all the way to free) isn't the only way (or even the best way) to move your market.

Commitment is a benefit.

       

 

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joi, 13 martie 2014

Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis

Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis


Facebook CEO Calls Obama Regarding Out of Control NSA; Change You Can't Believe In

Posted: 13 Mar 2014 10:49 PM PDT

President Obama promised changes on NSA. Changes, except to the worse, are nowhere to be found. This prompted a call from Facebook CEO straight to president Obama.

Please consider Facebook's Zuckerberg Called Obama on NSA Frustration
"The U.S. government should be the champion for the Internet, not a threat," he wrote in a post on his Facebook page yesterday. "They need to be much more transparent about what they're doing, or otherwise people will believe the worst."

Zuckerberg's comments follow reports that the National Security Agency has been disguising itself as Facebook to gain access to users' computers for spying, according to documents leaked by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden to the online news site The Intercept. It was the latest in a string of revelations about government surveillance that led Facebook, along with Google Inc., Apple Inc. and others, to call on the U.S. to disclose more about government requests for user data.

"We encrypt communications, we use secure protocols for traffic, we encourage people to use multiple factors for authentication and we go out of our way to help fix issues we find in other people's services," Zuckerberg said. "When our engineers work tirelessly to improve security, we imagine we're protecting you against criminals, not our own government."

Caitlin Hayden, spokeswoman for Obama's National Security Council, confirmed the conversation between Zuckerberg and the president. She declined to give any details.
So Mr. President, where is the change you promised?

I think Obama needs a new slogan "change you can't believe in".

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com

Crude Headed to $80s? Massive Speculative Positions vs. It's the Economy Stupid

Posted: 13 Mar 2014 02:09 PM PDT

With the slowdown in China, and global slowdown in general, inquiring minds may be wondering "where is the price of oil headed?"

No one can answer that question with certainty, but Saxo Bank has an opinion worth considering.

Via email Steen Jakobsen, chief economist of Saxo Bank explains ...
It's not my role to run Saxo's official view on Crude. That job I leave to my expert Ole S. Hansen, who by the way is doing an excellent job.

This is how we see the rest of 2014 using our data:

Oil in US Dollars



This is "brave" call but when you consider the speculative size of the market – you get the "potential" on the downside.

Massive Speculative Positions



It's the Economy Stupid

  • Asia is driving global growth down led by China – due to the desperate need for rebalancing away from topline growth
  • Q1 and Q2 will be disappointing on growth. No, it's not the weather – it's the economy stupid! – this will drive demand down.

The one risk remains escalation of geopolitical risk but supply from Latin America, Africa and US/Canada/Mexico will flow more richly, Ole S Hansen even tells me that the supply/demand function should dictate lower oil prices.

We are long APR-16, 95.00 strike puts (0.55 cents vs. price of 1.25 now)

Safe travels,
Steen
Long Liquidation

I pinged my friend Pater Tenebrarum at Acting Man for his thoughts and he replied ...
The idea that the positioning introduces a lot of downside risk? Absolutely. Last time a new record in net spec length was hit, crude had a pretty steep correction. Of course, the geopolitical risk is precisely the problem - there is lots of it right now. So it is unknowable when the positioning will matter, but eventually it will.
Wine Country Conference II

Want to hear Steen Jakobsen's thoughts on the Global economy in person? You have a chance.

Steen is one of many excellent speakers at Wine Country Conference II. Please register today if you haven't already.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com

Democrat Sponsored "Income Inequality"; Law of Bad Ideas, Yet Again

Posted: 13 Mar 2014 10:21 AM PDT

Debate rages over "income inequality".

CEOs makes hundreds or thousands of times more than workers. That is one aspect of income inequality. And it's easily explained: The Fed's inflation policies, bank bailouts, Fractional Reserve Lending, and crony capitalism are to blame.

That blame is nonpartisan.

Rather than attack the problem, "progressive" partisans howl over minimum wages.

Democrat-Sponsored Income Inequality

There is one major aspect of "income inequality" that you never hear president Obama or the Democrats mention, precisely because they are to blame.

Democrat-sponsored "income inequality" is even more insidious because it directly affects middle-class Americans who pay high taxes so public employees can retire in comfort with gold-plated guaranteed-for-life pensions.

Gold-Plated Retirements

In support of my above thesis, please consider In San Jose, Generous Pensions for City Workers Come at Expense of Nearly All Else.
Here in the wealthy heart of Silicon Valley, the roads are pocked with potholes, the libraries are closed three days a week and a slew of city recreation centers have been handed over to nonprofit groups. Taxes have gone up even as city services are in decline, and Mayor Chuck Reed is worried.

The source of Reed's troubles: gold-plated pensions that guarantee retired city workers as much as 90 percent of their former salaries. Retirement costs are eating up nearly a quarter of the city's budget, forcing Reed (D) to skimp on everything else.



Employee costs are growing nearly five times faster than revenues leading to fewer workers and budget deficits.

"This is one of the dichotomies of California: I am cutting services to my low- and moderate-income people . . . to pay really generous benefits for public employees who make a good living and have an even better retirement," he said in an interview in his office overlooking downtown.

In San Jose and across the nation, state and local officials are increasingly confronting a vision of startling injustice: Poor and middle-class taxpayers — who often have no retirement savings — are paying higher taxes so public employees can retire in relative comfort.

"I got sick and tired of cutting services to my people — 10 years of services cuts — in order to balance the budget," Reed said. "We got to the point where we were facing service delivery insolvency."

In California, cities large and small are struggling to pay the growing public-sector retirement tab. Meanwhile, 55 percent of the state's private-sector workforce — 6.3 million — have no retirement plan on the job.

Other governments are also struggling. In Chicago, Mayor Rahm Emanuel (D) has been pushing to scale back pensions for city workers, warning that without reform, city services will wither. Rhode Island enacted pension reforms in 2011 that trimmed retirement benefits for new workers and for those already on the payroll.
Enter the Law of Bad Ideas

Instead of admitting the system is hopelessly broken, Sacramento lawmakers want to create the nation's first retirement savings plan for private-sector workers in which the state manages the money and guarantees a minimum rate of return.

Both cities and the State of California are struggling to pay pensions, yet the proposed solution by California lawmakers is to have the state guarantee even more pensions.

Worst yet, this guarantee would come when treasury yields are in the gutter and stocks 50% overvalued and poised for losses in any time period shorter than seven years according to John Hussman (and I happen to agree). For details, please see It Is Informed Optimism To Wait For The Rain

Note: John Hussman is one of many great speakers at Wine Country Conference II. If you haven't yet signed up, please do. 

For such ideas to be proposed at the worst time is mind-boggling, yet strictly in accordance with "The Law of Bad Ideas".

A number of corollaries clearly apply.

Corollary Three: Those in positions of political power not only have the worst ideas, they also have the means to see those ideas are implemented.

Corollary Four: The worse the idea, the more likely it is to be embraced by academia and political opportunists.

Corollary Five: No politically acceptable idea is so bad it cannot be made worse.

The reason CEOs make out like bandits is explained in Monetarism, Abenomics, QE, and Minimum Wage Proposals: One Bad Idea Leads to Another, and Another 

Brief History

  • Monetarists act on the theory falling prices are a bad idea
  • The Fed prints money and holds rates too low
  • Housing bubble builds
  • Medical and education prices soar
  • Student loans soar to "help" the students
  • Because housing is not affordable numerous affordable housing programs appear causing still more unwarranted housing demand. Few see the bubble because housing is not in the CPI
  • Housing crashes
  • The affordable housing advocates are abhorred by falling prices
  • Fed bails out banks and steps in to support housing prices
  • Income inequality soars
  • Students remain stuck with debt

Because of one idiotic notion, that "falling prices are a bad thing", the Fed has generally managed to keep the CPI rising, with some prices rising much faster than others.

That leads to corollary number six, mentioned in the above link:

Law of Bad Ideas Corollary Six: Bad ideas lead to more bad ideas to fix problems caused by previous bad ideas.

And so here we are. To bail out the absurd idea that public pension promises are supportable, complete with 7.5 to 8.0 percent annual returns, when 10-year treasuries yield 2.67%, California proposes insuring private pensions as well.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com