Archive for the ‘SEO/SEM News’ Category

John Marshall Video Training & Interviews

Sunday, April 15th, 2007

John Marshall PictureJohn Marshall is the CEO of ClickTracks a Web analytics software that is almost a house hold name among highend marketers.

I have been looking at the Pro version of the software for this site. They have lots of good information over at their site. John has done a series of 10 information videos that are a good listen.

I was visiting the sites of some of ClickTracks Partners here in Canada and I found a blog post with a number of informative video interviews Ross Dunn did with John Marshall at the NY SES this week.

Lee Odden did a video interview of John Marshall at Pubcon 2006. It’s just a plug for Pubcon as Lee didn’t ask any pointed questions but I put it up any way.

Online Video Series: John Marshall — On ClickTracks.com

Ross Dunn interviews John Marshall of ClickTracks — SES NY 2007

Lee Odden interviews John Marshall of ClickTracks — Pubcon 2006

Web Analytics

Saturday, April 14th, 2007

Web Analytics IconI just spend six hours researching web analytics and web analytic software looking for a solution that would meet the needs of SEO Company. Three hours of that was spend on ClickTracks site reviewing their tutorials and Marshall Law’s flash training on Web Analytics Tips and Tricks. The ClickTracks Pro version looks like a very nice product. It looked so good I signed up for a couple of their free live Webianars on that product.

After checked out a number of blogs, product reviews, and web analytics sites during my research I decided to list them here for your enjoyment. After my pageviews doubling from 600,000 a month to 1,200,000 a month in February I decided I really needed to track my visitors better.

Web analytics is defined by Wikipedia as “the measurement of the behavior of visitors to a website or web application. In a commercial context, it especially refers to the measurement of which aspects of the website work towards the business objectives; for example, which landing pages encourage people to make a purchase.”

Software Companies — I raided the e-consultancy Web Analytics Buyer’s Guide 2006 list (see below), Googled up “web analytics” and added a few from the top 20, and some of the companies like Clicktracks are house hold words.
ClickTracks — Offers intuitive, insightful analysis of your web site. It shows you campaigns, site navigation patterns, PPC, SEO and ROI stats instantly. ClickTracks is a web analytics program that uses a radically different architecture, making it easy for marketers to perform desktop datamining activities that are difficult or impossible to implement using traditional web analysis methods.
CoreMetrics — Provides organizations with a single resource for planning, measuring, and testing truly integrated marketing efforts. With groundbreaking visualization tools, Coremetrics offers a complete application for data analysis rather than a simple toolkit for reporting, enabling Coremetrics to deliver targeted business solutions that allow marketers to uncover value quickly and take action.
eVisit Analyst — Web analytics that provides all the functionality of a standard website analysis system but is packed with unique features aimed at helping you to make key business decisions, minimize marketing spend, maximize sales conversions, improve customer retention, optimize website performance and generate a higher return on investment.
Fireclick — Web analytics is made easy through a hosted application service that automatically gathers and stores data for online businesses. No set-up fee. No training fee. No expensive consulting required. To report, present, and share the analysis of data, Fireclick provides a comprehensive suite of tools unmatched in the industry. Fireclick provides integration of Web analytics with paid search engines, e-mail providers, affiliate programs and more in order to provide a consolidated view of all site activity.
Foviance — WebAbacus is powerful online behavioral analysis software that analyses the interactions that users make with a website or other interactive system, such as DiTV or mobile. This data is a rich mine of information and can be easily cross-referenced against demographic or customer data to provide revealing insights about user behavior, segmented in meaningful ways.
Google Analytics — It tells you everything you want to know about how your visitors found you and how they interact with your site. Focus your marketing resources on campaigns and initiatives that deliver ROI, and improve your site to convert more visitors. It has the enterprise level capabilities you’d expect from a high end web analytics offering and also provides timesaving integration with AdWords. Of course, Google Analytics tracks all of your non-AdWords initiatives as well.
HitsLink — Established in 1999, HitsLink is a leading online service to track hundreds of real-time website statistics. Easy to implement, simply paste a small tracking script on your site’s pages and start viewing reports within seconds.
Indextools — Provides accurate, insightful and timely data to help you make informed business decisions about the performance of your website and online marketing campaigns. Is a comprehensive website reporting system that provides real-time insight into visitor behavior, and helps marketers and site managers increase sales, reduce marketing costs and encourage visitor retention.
Lynchpin — Covers all your online marketing channels as required, including: natural and paid search activity, email campaigns, banner advertising and affiliate program activity. And it can show you how these channels are working together and operating over time to give you a bigger picture of how effective your online activity is operating.
Nedstat — More sales, more leads, more savings, more profit. Focuses on increasing online conversions and improving online marketing performance. Offers flexible web analytics services that can grow with your needs.
WebTrends — WebTrends Analytics produce is a award-winning solution for accurate, timely web analytics to help you measure and improve your online marketing ROI. WebTrends Marketing Warehouse complements this solution with an enterprise-class data warehouse to fuel targeted relationship marketing campaigns.
Websidestory — Running a successful online business requires you to continually manage, measure and optimize your web presence. Understanding where your visitors are coming from, what content and products they are most interested in and how they are navigating your site are key to improving your online presence. The product is a comprehensive on-demand web analytics solution, delivering up-to-the-second insight into online visitor and customer behavior. This actionable insight can help you increase sales by targeting your most valuable visitors, monetize your site content and measure and improve your marketing return on investment.

Reports — Both these sites are well known from their quality reports.
e-consultancy — Web Analytics Buyer’s Guide 2006
MarketingSherpa — Buyer’s Guide to Web Analytics 2006: Software to Measure Your Web Site Performance

Books — These are all written by Eric so this is not a very deeply researched list. I have read enough in the PDFed Web Analytics Demystified sample chapters to know that Eric is producing quality stuff.
Big Book of Key Performance Indicators, The — The Big Book of Key Performance Indicators promises to be the final word on the subject, written by Eric T. Peterson, a worldwide authority on the subject. Mr. Peterson regularly advises some of the world’s largest companies on their KPI-deployment strategies.
Web Analytics Demystified: A Marketer’s Guide to Understanding How Your Web Site Affects Your Business — Is about the field of Web traffic data and how it can be leveraged to improve one’s Web site. This is a book about making data actionable and turning information into insight.
Web Site Measurement Hacks: Tips and Tools to Help Optimize Your Online Business — This is a brand new book from Eric T. Peterson and O’Reilly & Associates covering all aspects of web measurement and analysis. Web Site Measurement Hacks is the first truly complete book on the subject of web analytics ever published.

Blogs — I borrowed from Avinash Kaushik’s Top Ten Analytics Blogs list and then worked the blogrolls and came up with these quality blogs.
Google Analytics Blog — An unofficial Google analytics blog by ROI Revolution.
Inside Web Analytics: Matt Belkin — Blogs on inside Web Analytics. Matt is VP of best practices for Omniture and has a long history in web analytics.
Instant Cognition: Clinton Ivy — Discusses visual report design and web analytics. Clinton is a board of directors for the Web Analytics Association.
Occam’s Razor: Avinash Kaushik — Analytics Evangelist for Google.
Official Google Analytics Blog, The — The latest news, tips, and resources straight from the Google Analytics team.
Tracking Techniques: C. Furlong — Dedicated To Making Web Analytics Professionals More Successful. Furlong works with a VOIP startup company.
Web Analytics Demystified: Eric Peterson — Practical guide to web analytics, business intelligence, and database marketing. Eric is an author of a number of web analytic books.
Web Metrics Guru: Marshall Sponder — Blogs on web analytics, web metrics and how to use them to track and improve conversions.
Website Conversation & Analytics: Robbin Steif — How to use web analytics to increase conversion rates. Robbin is the CEO and founder of LunaMetrics.

Associations — No explaining needed here.
Web Analytics Association — A group of corporations and individuals excited by the opportunity to contribute to the birth of a strong and unified industry voice for web analytics.

Notes
If I am missing quality software, books, blogs or anything else you would like to see on this post drop me a comment and if it is quality I will add it up.

Any one have a license for ClickTracks Pro Software they want to sell (or even Pro SMB)? Pro retails at $9344 and even at 30% off the resellers price ($6540) it is a pretty big bite. Optimizer is cheap at $795, Pro SMB at $3594 could be conceiveable but I like that A/B testing, KPIed graphic timeline, and the data dissection report that lets you build custom performance statistics reports.
Note*: I have emailed ClickTracks to check if the software licenses are tranferable.

Or perhaps there is something else out there that is better than ClickTracks. I want site search reporting, graphic timeline search engine rankings for Google/Yahoo/MSN Live, A/B testing (many page sets, returns cookie’ed to same page version set, multiple pages in a set, side by side set compares) , visitor labeling, superimposed data on site pages for visual navigation reporting, one sceen PPC campaign compares for Adwords/YPN/adCenter, e-commerce and ROI intergration, KPIs in time line, API access and search engine spider reporting. Did I miss any thing?

Thanks to Agent Interactive for the graphics off their Traffic Analyzer page.

Search Engine Strategies NY 2007 April 12

Friday, April 13th, 2007

SMS Icon

Agenda for SES NY on Thursday, April 12

Coverage for Thursday’s sessions:

Ad Testing - Research & Findings:
Search Marketing Standard: Ad Testing: Research & Findings

Social Search Overview:
Bruce Clay Blog: Social Search Overview
SE Roundtable: Social Search Overview

B2B Tactics:
SE Roundtable: B2B Tactics

Search Arbitrage Issues:
New Media Age: PPC Specialists Slam Portals Over Arbitrage Sites

Creating Compelling Ads
SE Roundtable: Creating Compelling Ads

Images & Search Engines:
SE Roundtable: Images & Search Engines

Searcher Behavior Research Update:
SE Roundtable: Search Behavior Research Update

SMO - Social Media Optimization:
DMNews: Social Media Only Effective Marketing Channel if Users Trust
SE Roundtable: SMO: Social Media Optimization
A Media Circus: SMO: Social Media Optimization
Search Marketing Standard: SMO: Social Media Optimization

Local Search Marketing Tactics:
Bruce Clay Blog: Local Search Marketing
DMNews: Big Brands and Small Businesses Both Act Locally

Organic Listings Forum:
SE Roundtable: Organic Listings Forum

Bookmark Strategies:
Bruce Clay Blog: Bookmark Strategies
SE Roundtable: Social Bookmark Strategies
Small Business SEM: Bookmarking Strategies

Shopping Search Tactics:
DMNews: SES Panelists Discuss Shopping Tactics
SE Roundtable: Shopping Search Tactics

Microsoft adCenter Today and Tomorrow:
SE Roundtable: Microsoft adCenter: Today and Tomorrow

Wikipedia & SEO:
SE Roundtable: Wikipedia & SEO
Search Marketing Standard: Wikipedia & SEO

Auditing Paid Listings & Click Fraud Issues:
Bruce Clay Blog: Auditing Paid Listings & Click Fraud Issues
SE Roundtable: Auditing Paid Listings & Click Fraud Issues

Evening Forum with Danny Sullivan:
Bruce Clay Blog: Evening Forum with Danny Sullivan
SE Roundtable: Evening Forum with Danny Sullivan

Search Engine Strategies NY 2007 April 11

Thursday, April 12th, 2007

SMS Logo

NY SES Conference Agenda on Wednesday April 11

Some highlights of Wednesday’s conference include:

Keynote Conversation with Steve Berkowitz (Microsoft):
Bruce Clay Blog: Keynote Conversation with Steve Berkowitz
SE Roundtable: Keynote Conversation with Steve Berkowitz
ZDNet: Microsoft Steve Berkowitz Upstaged by Ms. Dewey
A Media Circus: Keynote Conversation with Steve Berkowitz
ZDNet: Berkowitz: More Integration Coming Across for Microsoft’s Online Properties
New Media Age: Microsoft Boss Admits to Marketing Mis-Step
DMNews: Lagging in Search, Microsoft Still Looking to Be No 1: Berkowitz
Pandia: Microsoft’s Steve Berkowitz on Search and Advertising

Link Building Basics
SE Roundtable: Link Building Basics

Web Analytics and Measuring Success:
Bruce Clay Blog: Web Analytics and Measuring Success
SE Roundtable: Web Analytics & Managing Success
DMNews: Marketers Still Searching for a Search Measurement System
Pandia: How to Measure Success in Search Engine Marketing

Duplicate Content & Multiple Site Issues
SE Roundtable: Duplicate Content & Multiple Site Issues

Writing for Search Engines
SE Roundtable: Writing for Search Engines

Fun With Dynamic Websites
SE Roundtable: Fun With Dynamic Websites

Sitemaps & URL Submissions:
SE Roundtable: Sitemaps & URL Submission
Ask.com: Sitemaps Autodiscovery
A Media Circus: Sitemaps and URL Submissions
DMNews: Sitemaps Pivotal to Improving Index Freshness

Getting Traffic From Contextual Ads
SE Roundtable: Getting Traffic From Contextual Ads

Domaining & Address Bar-Driven Traffic:
SE Roundtable: Domaining & Address Bar-Driven Traffic
WebProNews: Changing Domain Name

SEO Through Blogs and Feeds
SE Roundtable: SEO Through Blogs and Feeds

Converting Visitors into Buyers:
SE Roundtable: Converting Visitors Into Buyers
DMNews: Define Goals, Demographics, and Keywords for Conversion

Meet the Search Ad Networks:
Bruce Clay Blog: Meet the Search Ad Networks
SE Roundtable: Meet the Search Ad Networks

Creating Compelling Ads:
WebProNews: The Ad Conversion Zone

Landing Page Testing & Tuning
SE Roundtable: Landing Page Testing & Tuning

Successful Site Architecture
SE Roundtable: Successful Site Architecture

Putting Search into the Marketing Mix:
Bruce Clay Blog: Putting Search into the Marketing Mix
SE Roundtable: Putting Search Into the Marketing Mix
DMNews: Online, Offline Integration Still Lagging

Search & Branding
SE Roundtable: Search & Branding

Robots.txt Summit:
Bruce Clay Blog: Robots.txt Summit
SE Roundtable: Robots.txt Summit
Search Engine Land: Up Close & Personal With Robots.txt

Contextual Ads & Adsense Clinic:
SE Roundtable: Earning Money From Contextual Ads
Pandia: Website Owner? Earn Money Using Contextual Ads

Search Engine Strategies NY 2007 April 10

Wednesday, April 11th, 2007

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NY SES Conference Agenda on Tuesday April 10

Coverage of Tuesday’s conference:

Introduction to Search Marketing
SE Roundtable: Introduction to Search Marketing

Video Search Optimization:
Search Marketing Standard: Video Search Optimization
SE Roundtable: Video Search Optimization
WebProNews: Pumping Up Video Search Optimization
DMNews: Think Like a Video Searcher
Pandia: How to Succeed with Online Video Content

Compare and Contrast Ad Program Strategies:
SE Roundtable: Compare and Contrast: Ad Program Strategies

In House: Big SEO
Bruce Clay Blog: Organic SEO With Big Companies
Small Business SEM: In-House: Big SEO
Pandia: In House Search Engine Optimization for Big Brands

Online Video Advertising:
Bruce Clay Blog: Online Video Advertising
SE Roundtable: Online Video Advertising
Googlewatch: 15 Viral Video Lessons
DMNews: Community Integration Key for Online Video Campaigns

Podcast & Audio Search Optimizing:
Small Business SEM: Podcast and Audio Optimization
SE Roundtable: Podcast and Audio Search Optimization
DMNews: Devil’s in the Details for Successful Podcasting
Pandia: Search Engine Optimization for Podcasts

Ads in a Quality Score World:
Bruce Clay Blog: Ads in a Quality Score World
SE Roundtable: Ads in a Quality Score World
Search Marketing Sage: Ads in a Quality Score World
Webpronews: Search Speaks Up on Ad Quality Scores
Search Marketing Standard: Ads in a Quality Score World
SearchViews: Ads in a Quality Score World

In House: Big PPC
DMNews: Integration of Channels is Key to a Search Campaign
SE Roundtable: In House Big PPC

Advertising in Social Media:
Search Engine Watch: Blending Advertising and Social Networking
SE Roundtable: Advertising in Social Media
DMNews: Target Non-Click-Through Customers Too
A Media Circus: Social Media Optimization

Search Engine Friendly Design:
Bruce Clay Blog: Search Engine Friendly Design
DMNews: Want Search-Friendly Design? Stick to the Fundamentals
Pandia: How to Design Search Engine Friendly Websites

Mobile Search Optimization:
SE Roundtable: Mobile Search Optimization
Pandia: Mobile Search Optimization
DMNews: Mobile Optimization Should Focus on Minimizing Scrolling

Benchmarking an SEM Campaign:
Bruce Clay Blog: Benchmarking an SEM Campaign
SE Roundtable: Benchmarking an SEM Campaign

Where are You Spending Your Clients’ Money?:
SE Roundtable: Where Are You Spending Your Clients’ Money?
DMNews: 2007 Budgets for Video, Mobile Social Networking Campaigns Up

Advanced Paid Search Techniques:
Bruce Clay Blog: Advanced Paid Search Techniques
SE Roundtable: Advanced Paid Search Techniques

SES New York is Underway

Tuesday, April 10th, 2007

Search Engine Strategies logo

The Search Engine Strategies conference in New York has started. Here are some key places to get coverage:

Bruce Clay’s Blog
SE Roundtable
WebmasterRadio.FM
Pandia
Inside Google
Search Engine Watch
DMNews

Lots of exciting things are happening in New York. Steve Berkowitz, Microsoft’s Senior Vice President of Online Services, is giving the keynote address. Eric Ward, one of the top search marketers in the world and king of link building, is presenting on link building strategies–the price of the conference is worth it for this class alone.

Other high points include an intro to SEO with Danny Sullivan, keyword research with Dan Thies of SEO Research Labs, search engine copywriting with Jill Whalen and Heather Lloyd-Martin, and a contextual ad clinic with Jenn Slegg of Jensense.com and Jeremy Shoemaker (Shoemoney).

Check back here for continuing conference news and links to other coverage on the web.

Google Reinclusion Request

Monday, February 5th, 2007

jail.jpgWhile the main criteria for a successful reinclution request to Google has not changed, the location to submit a request has changed a number of times in the last 2 or 3 years.

Matt Cutts noted in a January 2007 blog post Undetectable spam that the main criteria for a successful reinclusion request to Google is still “remove the spam and find a way to assure us it won’t happen again.”

Back in September of 2005 Matt posted on his blog a post on how to Filing a reinclusion request and listed in that post that the best locatoin to make a reinclusion was on the Web Search Help Center page. While the September post still applies and is a good read the location of where to submit the request doesn’t apply.

In August of the 2006 Matt did a video that was a short update to his September 2005 post mentioning that Google Webmasters Tools was now the place to submit your reinclusion request. (Matt noted in this video that the reinclusion link was in the lower left. It is now on the right side in the middle of the page.)

I just transcribed this video and posted it on my blog under the title Matt Cutts Video Reinclusion Requests.

To do a reinclusion request, login at Google Webmasters Tools. On the right side of the screen there is a Tools link. Click on the plus button by the Tools link and it expands so you can select the submit a reinclusion request link.

Click that link and you will be taken to the reinclusion submission form. On that page you will be required to click a checkbox that states by submitting this form you acknowledge the following three points.

  1. I believe this site has violated Google’s quality guidelines in the past.
  2. This site no longer violates Google’s quality guidelines.
  3. I have read and agree to abide by Google’s quality guidelines.

Below that check box you will find the following instructions.

Tell us more about what happened: what actions might have led to any penalties, and what corrective actions have been taken. If you used a search engine optimization (SEO) company, please note that. Describing the SEO firm and their actions is a helpful indication of good faith that may assist in evaluation of reinclusion requests. If you recently acquired this domain and think it may have violated the guidelines before you owned it, let us know that below. In general, sites that directly profit from traffic (e.g. search engine optimizers, affiliate programs, etc.) may need to provide more evidence of good faith before a site will be reincluded.

And below the instructions is the field where you provide the above requested information.

The following is a list of 6 points I have prepared that you should have in mind while you are reviewing your site, fixing any issues you find, and writing your reinclusion request.

1. If you have done some thing spammy admit it. Even if had another company or consultant do it and you knew it was spammy confess that you knew about it. Honesty is the best policy.

2. Hire a quality white hat SEO firm and have them look over your site and come up with a list of practices that they consider spammy. You should only name this firm on your reinclusion request if they are a strict white hat SEO firm that doesn’t advocate, sell, or publish SEO techniques on their website that don’t follow the Google guidelines. This would include practices like buying directory submissions and trading them with relevant sites for a link to your site; The selling of text link ads for Pagerank vote and link juice; The selling of blog submissions to get you inbound links for ranking weight; The automated building of landing pages where the content is not original etc.

3. Provide a time line of when the spam was added to your website and when you noticed that you had a penalty and when you removed the spam from your site. The more information you give the better.

4. Note each and every spammy practice that is found on your site and the corrective measures you have taken.

5. Make sure you correct all spammy techniques use and have a quality white hat SEO firm go over your site before you submit you reinclusion request.

6. You need to make a commitment to follow the Google guidelines and to not do anything spammy on your site any more. If you are generating revenue from the traffic Google is sending to your site you may need to provide more evidence that you have cleaned up your act. In some cases you may want to consider firing the person or SEO firm that was responsible for implementing the practices that were contrary to the Google guidelines and providing proof that this has been done. Including a link to the dismissal letter would not be out of order in some cases.

If you are looking for a white hat SEO company to provide you with help in going over your site and writing your reinclusion, SEO Company has a Search Engine Penalty Consulting package that will help get you back into Google index.

Matt Cutts Video Reinclusion Requests

Monday, February 5th, 2007

mattcutts.jpgMatt and Emmy answer Google Questions: - How do I do a reinclusion request? - What should I put into a reinclusion request? - What does Google need to know before it reincludes a site in its index?
Matt Cutts Video Reinclusion Requests 2 min 44 sec Aug 5, 2006

Hey, this is Matt and Emmy coming to you on Thursday after hockey at the Googleplex. Yes sure your a good cat. Let’s talk ah, I don’t know, reinclusion requests. So, I did a blog post about reinclusion requests awhile ago, um, the proceedure has changed a little bit though. So imagine if you spammed or some one you have hired as a webmaster has spammed, and you are now no longer in Google, what do you do now.

So, the best thing that I would recommend, is to, ah, register in sitemaps that’s our webmaster console or webmaster central, what ever you want to call it. And ah, it’s basically the place where you can get all kinds of information. Some times you can ever find out if you have penalties on your site. So we can’t show all the penalties that we have just because ah, you know, that will clue in malicious spammers as well. But if there are real, yes, legit sites that have ah, that hahaha Emmy hahaha, that have valid content, good girl, ah we want them to be able to be found so we can show penalties for some sites. Ah there you go.

So if you do have a penalty or if you suspect you might have a penalty, go ahead and go to ah, register in site maps and then fill out a reinclusion request. I think it is like at the bottom left or some think like that, and the more information you can give the better. So for example, ah if you were using a SEO or some body that ah, your website got hacked or what ever, you know, give as much specifics as you can. Ah you also want to give some kind of time line, or here’s what was going on, ah here’s the mistake we made.

The most important thing is Google needs to know that your, it’s not going to happen again. So some way of letting us know or convincing us that what ever you think the problem was, ah usually you might have a pretty clear idea, some thing like hidden test, doorway pages, sneaky redirects using Javascript, any thing like that. Um, we need to know that those pages, those violations of our quality guidelines are not going to come back.

So that’s the procedure I would go with, try to include as much detail as possible about how it might of happened, ah and what you are going to do it make sure it doesn’t happen again, and then that goes into a queue which we check and try to find out okay, ah has the hidden text been removed, stuff like that.

So um, reinclusion requests definitely get looked at by people and that is the procedure that I would recommend to use, ah to put one in.

Google Algorithm Change

Sunday, January 28th, 2007

The Official Google Webmaster Central Blog did a post on Google’s new algorithm change that addressed the Googlebomb issue.

A Googlebomb, some times called a linkbomb or cyber-graffit, is where a number of links are pointed to a webpage with the keyword in the anchor text the person wants that page the link is pointed at to rank for.

Two of must well know Gogglebombs were “Miserable Failure” and “Waffles”. I say were because they no longer are working. The first pointed to a White House biography page of George W. Bush (it redirects to the /president/ page) and the second points to John Kerry’s offical website.

Let’s take a look at how the other search engines are dealing with this terms. Yahoo ranks Kerry’s site #4 for Waffles and Bush’s bio page Miserable Failure is #1. Microsoft’s Live Search has the president page #1 for Miserable Failure but John Kerry’s site is #20 for Waffles. Ask.com has Bush’s bio page at #2 for Miserable Failure and Kerry’s site is not in the first 100 sites for Waffles.

While ranking for “Miserable Failure” would be pretty easy (Google shows 823,000 results when it is put in quotes), “Waffles” would be a bit harder with 5,050,000 results showing in Google.

Googlebombing and this algorithm change show us two things about Google and in general all search engines. The first one is the important of inbound links and how much ranking weight is given them. The second is how search engines perfer to not do hand bans but to build let their search algorithm filter sites that are practicing techniques that go against the search engines guidelines for webmasters.

More to come…

SEO Video Tutorial

Saturday, December 9th, 2006

There are some great free SEO (Search Engine Optimization) tutorial videos available online by Gareth Davies of GSINC. All the videos are very small and precise with an average length of 2-4 minutes. It mainly covers the basics of SEO along with some lessons on Google searching.

The videos are presented and structured well by Gareth, which makes it easy for his viewers to understand the SEO basics without knowing any of the technical jargon.

The topics which are included in the free video pack are:

1. Importance of Title tags
2. The site command
3. Allintitle command
4. The tilde command
5. Google’s Cache
6. Google’s allinanchor command

If you are a pro in SEO then there is nothing much for you in those videos, but if you are new to SEO and eager to make your hands dirty then these videos can definitely help you to get some very useful information on SEO. All the videos are well structured, easy to understand and most importantly it’s going to take very little time of yours. You can watch or download the SEO tutorial videos from here.

If you want SEO tutorial videos for more advanced learners try the amazing Search Engine Optimization 2006 video by VTC. It’s a 7 hour video tutorial by James Gonzalez, who teaches the ins and outs of SEO with his 111 non stop lessons.

This is also a good time to tell you all about link baiting. It has became a very important part of a strong link building strategy so be sure to read Andy Hagan’s article on this topic.