Saturday, November 29, 2014

The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly of SEO

Matthew Capala is the author of  "Away with the Average," an NYU Professor, and Founder of SearchDecoder.com. This adapted excerpt comes from Matthew's latest book, "SEO Like I'm 5."


"80 percent of success is showing up," Woody Allen famously said about life. Marketing in 2014 is not much different. You need to show up when consumers search for your product or service on Google, when you are spoken about on social media, or when you receive a review or a comment.

Why? Because showing up equals cash:

  • 80 percent of consumers search for a product/service before purchasing it
  • 70 percent read online reviews before making purchase decisions
  • 68 percent of consumers begin their decision-making while searching for a keyword
  • Websites that blog regularly receive 55 percent more traffic and over 80 percent more leads compared to websites that don't
  • Over 70 percent of search clicks are organic

You don't need a litany of statistics to know that showing up on the Internet reaps big profits. You already know it.

We all turn to Google, social media, review blogs, and other places on the Web when we make most decisions in life in 2014, including purchase decisions. It's a fact.

Yet, many brands still miss out on the vast opportunities search engines, blogs, and social media have to offer. They fail to show up when consumers search for or talk about them. At the focal point of decision making, when the purchase intent is as high as it gets, they leave money on the table.

Do you show up?

Screen Shot 2014 11 25 at 11.34.26 AM 730x158 The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly of SEO

Do a quick test, right now and right here on your mobile phone. Google a couple of keywords that best describe your product or service. Not your brand keywords, but more generic terms.

If they can't find you, you don't exist. If you don't talk to them, you are not relevant. Without awesome content, you are boring.

In a world where 80 percent of consumers search for a product or service before purchasing it, invisibility is a fate much worse than failure.

Are your sales falling despite skyrocketing investments in ads? It's because only around 0.10 percent of people click on banner ads today. So the ad industry counts and charges for 'impressions,' a third of which are not even seen by humans. About 86 percent skip TV ads, and 44 percent of direct mail never gets opened. The list goes on.

There is just too much going over the Internet for consumers to ever enjoy being interrupted. Marketing in 2014 and beyond is not about interrupting consumers when they enjoy content. It is about 'being' that content.

The good news is that new digital tools have emerged to make it possible for individuals and businesses to make millions of dollars online without any significant cost to start a business and promote it. The barriers to entry do not exist anymore. Marketing is now democratized.

Avoiding getting in trouble with Google

There are many reasons why you may not be using inbound marketing channels (such as SEO, blogging, social media, and newsletters) to drive leads.

You might have tried, got burned and given up. I hear it all the time. Trust me, it's not that inbound marketing is not working for you, it's the other way around; you haven't made it work for you.

Or…you might have gotten in trouble with Google for being irresponsible. Examples include outsourcing your SEO to Philippines that guaranteed to 'get you on top of Google for 10 keywords' for a couple hundred bucks. 

Here is what Stephen C. Baldwin, Author of 'Net Slaves: True Tales of Working the Web,' (McGraw-Hill) and Editor-in-Chief at Didit had to say on the topic:

I've had a chance to interview a number of SEO spammers in my career as a journalist. Sadly, they all share an obsession with fast money, contempt for the searchers tricked into consuming their low-quality content, and the strangely irrational belief that they'll always be able to operate outside the reach of the law.

The good news is that marketers who are using smart SEO approach will actually profit much more over time than those using the crude, risky optimization tactics of the past.

The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly of SEO

Over the years, SEO 'practitioners' have contributed to a massive amount of spam and poor quality content on the Web.

They broke directories, stuffed content with keywords, spammed the comments on blogs, bought and traded links in order to game Google's algorithm and push mediocre content toward the top in keyword rankings. Well, it was bad, and sometimes ugly, but it worked! I often call this period the 'Wild West Era' of SEO.

Screen Shot 2014 11 25 at 11.35.04 AM 730x458 The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly of SEO

Until 2011, when Google released its first major anti-spam algorithm called Panda, you got on top of Google by buying links and banging out tons of low-quality content.

Recent Google algorithm updates, both Panda and Penguin, rendered most of the old SEO tactics obsolete.

You still need to understand how the search algorithm works to make your content perform on Google or on Facebook's Graph Search. The game change is that, as marketers, we can't be merely concerned about the 'keyword.'  Instead, we must optimize our content to relate to 'who' typed it into the search box.

Google's algorithm is essentially a machine trying hard to think like a human. Thus social signals, author authority, and any type of user engagement metrics are becoming a big part of how Google decides what goes on the top.

Instead of chasing Google's algorithm, get in front it. Put the user first.

In 2014 and beyond, marketers need to align their keyword strategy along the user journey, emphasizing the connection between content and intent (i.e. keyword) through methodical audience profiling, research and analysis.

The Good: White Hat SEO

The key to SEO success is to focus on quality: quality optimization, quality content and quality relationships! With quality on your side, both users and the algorithms will be on your side as well.

Quality Optimization. Optimizing your website to help search engine spiders understand what your content is about through on-site technical SEO.

Quality Content. Creating valuable content for your target users that is both shareworthy and linkworthy.

Quality Relationships. Building strong relationships with others in your industry through social media to amplify your content and improve your chances of gaining valuable backlinks to your website.

The Bad: Black Hat SEO

There are many SEO companies and consultants for whom time stopped in 2011. Every second, as we speak, a new business gets sold on $200 hassle-free SEO packages guaranteed to get them on the top pages of Google for a number of keywords. Do you really believe in fairy tales? There is no such thing as a free lunch in SEO.

The end result is often more harm than benefit if any of the following practices are involved:

Buying Links. Participating in any type of link schemes or farms. Paying for links is a major violation of Google's terms of service.

Acquiring poor quality links. Creating hundreds of low-quality backlinks manually through directory submissions and commenting. Google knows better; you should too.

Article spinning. Rewriting and publishing low-quality content at scale across the Web. Those links are garbage.

The Ugly: SEO Spam

There are many forms of spam that the shady Internet element of hackers and unethical SEOs thought of over the years. It's a big problem for Google, which is constantly trying to filter its search results from spam.

You can get flagged for spamming and get thrown out of Google's index for practicing any of the below spammy SEO tactics:

Fake accounts, reviews or comments. You can also get sued and fined.

Content spam. These techniques involve keyword stuffing, doorway pages, or hidden or invisible text straight from the 1990s playbook.

Spam blogs. Blogs built on stolen, duplicate content with thousands of useless web pages. These sites exist only for monetization and provide no value to the user.

Want to more learn more? Check out my book "SEO Like I'm 5: The Ultimate Beginner's Guide to Search Engine Optimization."

Read next: Google's Penguin is flapping again – but what about the much-feared guest post penalty?


Yahoo! Courting Apple And Competing With Google

News sources have recently confirmed that Yahoo! (YHOO) is wooing Apple (AAPL) to make it the default search engine for Safari which is omnipresent in the Apple hardware landscape and benefits from its significant user base. In fact, Apple was using Google (GOOG) as the search engine for Safari till date but the contract is expected to expire in 2015. Hence, Yahoo! and Microsoft (MSFT) are both courting Apple, as the Google-Safari search deal is about to close by next year. If such a deal gets finalized with Yahoo! then what would happen to Google, its immediate competitor in search optimization. Let's also find out how Yahoo! benefits from the Safari association. Here's the real story.

Non-renewal of contract to affect Google

If makes a shift in the partnership and agrees to go with Yahoo!, Google's search engine would be the default on only the Chrome browser and on Android run mobile devices. That means that there might be a sharp decline in market share held by Google in the U.S. search engine market where it currently holds a significant portion of search share. Presently, Google is ruling over 60% of the U.S. market share benefitted by Chrome, Android run devices, as well as the different versions of Safari. If Safari is going to Yahoo!'s kitty, Google will face a considerable dip in market share as noted by NetMarketShare.

Signing the contract with Yahoo!

Apple might just decide to adopt the strategy of keeping friends closer rather than enemies. Yahoo! is Apple's closest friend as it helps the former to serve its users' with weather and stock information. Meanwhile, Google is the immediate contender of Apple, and Apple might just want to untangle itself from having any ties with the rival. If Apple takes this path, it might serve as a headwind to Google's search engine popularity and usage. This partnership shift would aid Apple to receive a bigger cut by partnering with Yahoo! rather than with Google.

However, there is only one flaw that Apple might face – its Safari users have been using Google till now as search engine, a shift in web browser might lead to technical snags for the users accustomed with Google as search engine partner.

As far as Yahoo! is concerned, it's the best way to promote itself as a search engine to be sought more than often. After all, the various versions of Safari hold about 35% market share in the U.S. Hence, if Yahoo! convinces Apple to use its search engine before the Google-Safari contract expires, placement of Yahoo! Search on Safari would market Yahoo! to 35% of all search queries from smartphone, PCs, laptops or any other communication devices. Yahoo!'s CEO, Marissa Mayer has reportedly already talked with quite a few Apple executives about the future potential of Yahoo! Search on iOS. But the final decision from Apple's end is yet to be announced.

What's the best bet for Safari

Though the final word on who's going to serve as Safari's search engine is yet to be decided, analysts are of the opinion that Apple might treat Yahoo! as the first choice, then think over Microsoft and if it gets reasons for going with Google instead of the other two, it might do so as the third choice. In fact, Apple's Mac and iOS is an alternative universe from Microsoft's Windows – then why should Apple make Microsoft's Bing Safari's default web browser. There more or less not going to happen, so the other best choice for Apple is nobody else but Yahoo! Let's stay tuned and watch out who finally wins the new search engine contract for Apple's Safari, but as of now it should be either Yahoo! or Google.

About the author:

reports.droy

We are a group of analysts exploring and analyzing different domains of business and writing reviews based on information available in public domain web portals. We do not hold any stock or investment position in any of the companies that we write for.

Google SEO - Bing News

Google Webmaster Tools is a powerful resource for website owners, webmasters and SEOs alike. Once you've set up Google Webmaster Tools, you might be wondering what to do next. If you need basic tips, check …business2community.com · 11/26/2014

As should be the case with any SEO professionals, we're constantly on the lookout for new information and ideas that can aid us in helping our clients improve their results. While at a recent event, we had the luxury …Search Engine Land · 11/25/2014

Apple has spent a great deal of time distancing itself from Google ever since its erstwhile partner launched Android back in 2008. Google Maps and YouTube haven't been bundled as default apps on iPhones or iPads …cultofmac.com · 11/26/2014

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In-depth coverage

Monday, November 24, 2014

Is Google Worried About Yahoo’s Search Engine Business?

A couple of days ago, we wrote an article titled: 'Yahoo! Search Engine Gets A Better Launch Pad' in which we illustrated how Yahoo! was revamping its search engine business to make it big in the sector. Shortly after the revelation of a partnership between Yahoo! (YHOO) and Mozilla, the streets are abuzz with speculations from all quarters as to how it is going to affect the search engine giant Google (GOOG). An analyst said, "While CEO Marissa Mayer comes from Google, trying to compete with the search juggernaut doesn't seem like a good use of resources." Yahoo! search will officially become the default page of Mozilla Firefox. 

Yahoo Facts

On Nov. 19, Yahoo! and Mozilla announced that Yahoo! will become the default search engine on Mozilla's Firefox. The move will also enhance the market share of Yahoo's search engine business which will eventually see Yahoo's revenue and margin improving significantly; the market is predicting the rise in revenue to be in billions.

As users do searches on Firefox, they'll be redirected to a Search Engine Result Page (SERP) where Yahoo's ads run. Contrary to the street expectations, I feel the numbers are more likely to stay in the hundreds of millions rather than billions. Nonetheless, it will add to Yahoo's business books and should be an encouragement for their investors and patrons.

A couple of years ago, Bing, the Microsoft search engine, had a revelation that the most searched term for many years on Bing was "Google." The name Google has become synonymous with web search, so the question is will Yahoo! face the same fate as Bing?

No matter what happens, Google doesn't have much to worry about.

The Down-trending Market Share of Firefox

Firefox saw its hay-days when it had signed up with Google a decade ago to break the monopoly of Internet Explorer and Microsoft (MSFT), and they successfully dented the Explorer-Microsoft duo's clientele. But over time, Google matured as a search engine as well as a web service provider. Google came up with its own web browser service, Google Chrome, which rose to success in no time and became the web browser with the heaviest internet traffic.

The rapid popularity of Google Chrome was not just due to the dent in Internet Explorer users, but also took away a huge chunk of Firefox users owing to the fact that users were more attached to the search engine and the convenience it provided in terms of search results than the actual browser. The drop Firefox's market share is likely to continue, especially because Firefox has barely any market share on mobile devices.

Should Yahoo! worry about the revenue drop?

Stephen Ju, a Credit Suisse analyst, said this about the effect of Firefox's revenue drop on Yahoo!:

"If we are to bracket a range of 60%-80% revenue share to Mozilla in TAC payments, this implies about $375 million - $500 million in Gross Network Revenue, correspondingly about $75 million - $200 million in Net revenue, and likely $60 - $160million in Adjusted EBITDA if we assume 80% margin on this stream of revenue. Against our current 2015 estimates, this is about 2.5%-3.3% of Network Gross Revenue, 1.4%-3.6% of Network Net Revenue, and 0.2%-0.5% of Adjusted EBITDA. And this is all baking in a scenario in which 100% of Mozilla users elect NOT to toggle the default search engine back to Google. Now don't get me wrong: I like to see companies grow revenue every year and never lose any. But really, a 0.2%-0.5% adjusted EBITDA is just not that much for Google to worry about. Investors shouldn't worry about it either. Instead, investors should be looking at the overall online climate of ad spending. The amount of money spent online in the United States alone is expected to eclipse $80 billion by 2018. While I don't expect Google to get it all, I anticipate Google will continue to collect a growing lion's share."

Going by the analyst report published in Yahoo! Finance, Google is expected to add about $10 billion revenue to its current figures of $62.67 billion next year. Considering the diversity of usage that Google enjoys across devices, the loss quantum due to it parting ways with Mozilla seems to be inconspicuous.

Our Take

While Yahoo! definitely stands to gain from the liaison, whatever might be the quantum of gain, it should be of no worry for Google since Google has already established itself as a self-sufficient service globally and does not stand to lose much from the Yahoo! – Mozilla deal and the magnitude of loss would not be significant enough for its investors to take note of.

But for Yahoo!, the additional revenue could pad the search division and give Yahoo! the time it needs to invest in its own search technology rather than relying on Bing. However, this still does not put Google into any kind of stake and it is highly unlikely that Google would have to lose the throne of being world's number one search engine. The bottom-line is while Google investors do not really need to worry about the recent advents of Yahoo! in the search engine segment, investors can certainly add some position in Yahoo! and reap the advantage from the rise in revenue of Yahoo! due to this liaison.

About the author:

reports.droy

We are a group of analysts exploring and analyzing different domains of business and writing reviews based on information available in public domain web portals. We do not hold any stock or investment position in any of the companies that we write for.

Friday, November 21, 2014

Europe: Break up Google!

Europe wants Google to split off its eponymous search engine.

The European Parliament is gearing up to demand a breakup of the tech giant amid growing concerns about its dominance and allegations over search engine "abuse," a new report said.

A draft parliament proposal to be submitted as early as next week recommends Google's search engine business be separated from its other operations, including YouTube and Google Maps, the Financial Times reported on Friday.

Google, which accounts for between 90 and 95 percent of all searches in Europe, has been accused of prioritizing its own services — such as Google Maps and YouTube — above services from other providers.

While the European Parliament has no real power to force a split, the move could pressure the European Commission in its newly reopened antitrust probe into the matter.

The investigation was re-opened in September amid complaints about the EC's proposed antitrust settlement following an investigation that first kicked off in 2010.

The EC said the proposed changes to the search engine just weren't good enough, its antitrust chief said at the time.

Google's Chairman Eric Schmidt has denied the antitrust allegations.

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Thursday, November 20, 2014

Topic matches for "google"

  1. Friday, November 21, 2014 12:00 am

    Yahoo will supplant Google's search engine on Firefox's Web browser in the U.S., signaling Yahoo's resolve to regain some of the ground that it has lost in the most lucrative part of the Internet's ad market.

  2. Thursday, November 20, 2014 10:21 am

    NEW YORK (AP) — The good news for Thanksgiving travelers: the price of gas is at five-year lows. The bad news: a lot more people will be on the road.

  3. Thursday, November 20, 2014 6:07 am

    Your daily look at late-breaking news, upcoming events and the stories that will be talked about today:

    3 images

  4. FILE - A worker walks into Yahoo headquarters in Sunnyvale, Calif., in this July 29, 2009 file photo. Yahoo will supplant Google's search engine on Firefox's Web browser in the U.S., signaling Yahoo's resolve to regain some of the ground that it has lost in the most lucrative part of the Internet's ad market. The five-year alliance was announced Wednesday Nov. 19, 2014. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuima, File)

  5. Wednesday, November 19, 2014 6:01 pm

    Powerman 5000 - How To Be A HumanPurchase on iTunes: http://smarturl.it/Powerman5000Purchase on Amazon: http://smarturl.it/Powerman5000ExplicitPurchase on Google Play: http://smarturl.it/Powerman-gMusic video by Powerman 5000 performing How To Be A Human. (C) 2014 Universal Music Enterprises, a Division of UMG Recordings, Inc.
  6. Wednesday, November 19, 2014 5:30 pm

    Yahoo may be getting more serious about search again.

  7. Tuesday, November 18, 2014 5:45 pm

    SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — WhatsApp, the globally popular instant messaging system owned by Facebook, has begun using a powerful new encryption program aimed at protecting users' conversations from unwanted surveillance and snooping.

  8. Tuesday, November 18, 2014 9:23 am

    AMSTERDAM (AP) — Google says it will buy the entire output of an 18-turbine, 62-megawatt Dutch wind energy project in the Netherlands to supply power to a major data center it is building.

  9. Monday, November 17, 2014 1:00 am

    (BPT) - So you put together a stellar resume, wrote a winning cover letter and landed an interview for your dream job. The hard work's done, right? Wrong. Don't think you can just rely on your dazzling personality to win over your interviewer. There's no substitute for being prepared, and with some expert tips, you'll ace the interview and be one step closer to a job offer.

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  10. Thursday, November 13, 2014 3:51 pm

    SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — BlackBerry is expanding its efforts to sell mobile-security software on its rivals' smartphones and tablets to help counter the waning popularity of its own devices.

    3 images

  11. Thursday, November 13, 2014 2:26 pm

    GENEVA (AP) — Just when you thought the turmoil surrounding FIFA couldn't get any more tangled, along comes a new twist to stir things up even more.

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  12. Thursday, November 13, 2014 3:20 am

    WASHINGTON (AP) — Nineteen automakers accounting for most of the passenger cars and trucks sold in the U.S. have signed onto a set of principles they say will protect motorists' privacy in an era when computerized cars pass along more information about their drivers than many motorists realize.

  13. FILE - In this Nov. 11, 2010 file photo, the Amazon.com logo adorns an Amazon.com fulfillment center in Goodyear, Ariz., one of several centers in the Phoenix metro area to open in recent years. The politically-fraught issue of forcing big, multinational companies to pay more tax will be high on the agenda at G-20 summit on Nov. 15 and 16, 2014, in Brisbane. There has been an ongoing effort by governments to crack down on tax avoidance, with companies such as Google and Amazon facing criticism for moving profits earned in one country to other countries with lower tax rates. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin, File)

  14. FILE - In this June 5, 2014 file photo, a man walks past a Google sign at the company's headquarters in Mountain View, Calif., U.S.A. The politically-fraught issue of forcing big, multinational companies to pay more tax will be high on the agenda at G-20 summit on Nov. 15 and 16 in Brisbane, Australia. There has been an ongoing effort by governments to crack down on tax avoidance, with companies such as Google and Amazon facing criticism for moving profits earned in one country to other countries with lower tax rates. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez, File)

  15. Thursday, November 13, 2014 1:17 am

    BRISBANE, Australia (AP) — The politically-fraught issue of forcing big, multinational companies to pay more tax will be high on the agenda at this weekend's G-20 summit in Brisbane.

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  16. Thursday, November 13, 2014 1:00 am

    (StatePoint) As so much reading moves into digital spaces, coffee table books with their lavish designs and entertaining content remain a perennial staple in any home, say literary experts.

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  17. Thursday, November 13, 2014 12:31 am

    WASHINGTON (AP) — Nineteen automakers accounting for most of the passenger cars and trucks sold in the U.S. have signed onto a set of principles they say will protect motorists' privacy in an era when computerized cars pass along more information about their drivers than many motorists realize.

  18. Thursday, November 13, 2014 12:04 am

    WASHINGTON (AP) — The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is extending many of the financial protections of bank accounts to prepaid cards.

  19. Thursday, November 13, 2014 12:00 am

    Yahoo is buying digital video advertising service BrightRoll for $640 million in the Internet company's latest attempt to boost its revenue after years filled mostly with financial futility.

  20. Wednesday, November 12, 2014 4:30 pm

    NEW YORK (AP) — It's been 15 years since Sun Microsystems CEO Scott McNealy infamously quipped "You have zero privacy anyway. Get over it." You'd think we would have gotten the message by now, with all the news of online data breaches, revelations about broad government surveillance, and advertisers tracking your every move as you travel around the Web.

  21. This product image provided by Google shows a new tab devoted exclusively to music on the YouTube website. This option is meant to make it easier for the video site's 1 billion users to find specific songs and even entire albums, even if they aren't subscribers. (AP Photo/YouTube)

  22. This product image provided by Google shows a new tab devoted exclusively to music on the YouTube mobile app. This option is meant to make it easier for the video site's 1 billion users to find specific songs and even entire albums, even if they aren't subscribers. (AP Photo/Youtube)

  23. Wednesday, November 12, 2014 2:19 pm

    NEW YORK (AP) — Android's sweet new "Lollipop" flavor brings security improvements and easier ways to view and respond to notifications. The new Google software for mobile devices even lets you lend out your phone without worrying about a friend circulating your naked selfies on Facebook.

    3 images

  24. This screen shot taken from a Google Nexus 6 smartphone running the new Android Lollipop software shows individual tabs in the Chrome browser, bottom and second from bottom, and other open apps, including the battery settings. With the new Lollipop version of Android, users will be able to go directly to an individual tab rather than having to go to an app and then choose the tab. (AP Photo)

  25. This screen shot taken from a Google Nexus 6 shows a message notification in the center of the lock screen of a Google Nexus 6 smartphone running the new Android Lollipop software. In older versions, uses would have to pull down the notification tray from the top, as you would a lamp shade. With Lollipop, users can expand messages and reply right from the lock screen. (AP Photo)

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