Archive for the ‘SEO tips SEO advice’ Category

SEO Q & A – Google Penalization & Climbing out of the sandbox

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

Here’s another great question I got from an old friend through facbook. He writes,

LT

i need your advice. I have a couple of web sites I developed with a friend.
One of them http://www.druglib.com/ was penalized some months ago and dropped to less then half of it’s traffic. It was growing uite nicely until then.
We were at almost 300K visitors/month at the peak.

It’s coming back but slowly.

Any idea why this could be?

I love your posts btw.

Thanks
xyz.

And here’s my 10 cent answer…

Read the google webmaster tools (GWT) guidelines for why you would be penalized. Associations with/Links to less-than-reputable sites or joining a link farm or doing kw spamming are very easily detectable by google. See if you can pin point the source of the loss to better diagnose. Is it loss from all search, or just google. Is it your kw rankings that have dropped? Has you site been up more than a year so you can check %YOY stats?

Just don’t do any black hat stuff and provide you market with as much great content as possible and you’ll be in good standing. There is a way in GWT to ask for reconsideration of your site if and only if you determine that Google has penalized it.

That’s all I can offer without really knowing your site, link associations and analytics. Hope this helps.

(Always get as much information as you can into a problem before asking an SEO. Like this question, most of my answers to Q&A questions are done without looking at the site.)

Written by Lawrence Touitou-

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Lawrence Touitou brings you the best SEO tools, tips and advice on his SEO blog: SEOWithoutBorders.org - a collection of some of the best, SEO best practices from the most prominent SEOs in the industry.

SEO Q & A on nofollow’s – plus alternatives

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

Today I got a great SEO question from a long time colleague that moved on from Fox Interactive where we worked together on RottenTomatoes.com. He Writes,

Hey Lawrence,

How are you? I hope the SEOWithoutBorders venture is doing well.

BTW, I am launching a directory of users and one of my categories would be technology bloggers and would love to add @seowoborders to my directory since I want thought leaders on topics such as SEO. Are you OK with me adding you to my site?

One question for you as I’m optimizing my site for SEO. I learned from you that maintaining link juice is very important so I am no-following almost every external link but I was thinking that I should remove nofollows for external sites that I link to that are relevant to my page.

For example, I will have a page on some movie star. This page will contain links to the star’s official site, to their twitter profile page, to their Facebook fan page, to their IMDB page. I would think that I should NOT nofollow these links since these links directly relate to my page and help boost my Google pagerank. What are your thoughts?

HI xyz (anonymous)!

Sounds like your in deep – which is great. Glad you found a home to use all your talents. Yes, you may add me to your directory if you like, no prb. On your question, the ‘nofollow’ no longer has any value for SEO link sculpting. That is, you can no-longer use a no-follow tag to INCREASE the value of the remaining outbound links or the page that they are linking from.

So the only way to ‘preserve’ link juice to your page(s) is to reduce the total amount of links from that page. (This is what I advised IGN to do which is why it looks (a little) cleaner.) So you may have to create sub pages where those links reside. For example, if you need to link out to 10 external sites, it would be better to create a page called, ‘partners’ from the home page and then from that page, put the 10 partner links so that you only have 1 link off of the home page instead of 10.

The other way is to create links in a technology that SEs don’t read – i.e. javascript.
So again, do not bother with ‘nofollows’ anymore. A robust external linking strategy, even if outsourced, will bring much greater returns for authority, ranking & traffic!

Hope this helps! Best, LT

(This is a great question. I’d like to post this question on my blog if I may…)

On 02/16/10 10:38 AM, xyz wrote:
——————–

Written by Lawrence Touitou-

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Lawrence Touitou brings you the best SEO optimization, tips and advice on his SEO blog: SEOWithoutBorders.org - a collection of some of the best, SEO best practices from the most prominent SEOs in the industry.

Knowledge is power! If so, why are so many companies failing in SEO?

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

I’ve heard it said in the last few days: “People are getting smarter and corporations are getting dumber.” Why? I thought about it and this is what I came up with…

We live in an age of unprecedented information available to us – SEO realted and otherwise – with more and more, moving faster and faster each day. When we think of something, a word, a song or articles about marketing, management whatever, a plethora of information is at our fingertips faster than we could go to the library or hire a consultant just 20 years ago. So much so that learning institutions have a hard time keeping up and staying relevant with the times.

So if knowledge or information is power, and we have an over-abundance of it, why then are so many companies – small & large – not keeping pace with the amount of information out there. Why are many failing in one way or another? I.e. Missing their mark when it comes to creating the right Kewyword Mix, Creating consistent On-Page footprints, Getting a robust linking campaign going, reaching sales/conversion goals, creating a culture conducive to profitable business and meeting revenue goals?

When I studied Physics back in University we learned P=VI. (Power equals Voltage times Current.) Current is information. Voltage is the impetus to deliver that information. It is the combination of these two, that is truly powerful. That is,

Information + Implementation = Transformation.

(Some see knowledge as an end gave. The physical laws of the universe don’t.)

Companies that fail, spend a lot of time placing importance on information, having the best tools and people who keep up with the latest trends in their fields. They go to trade shows to garner more information. Yet most who attend these as employees – and I know this feeling well – sigh, as they know that the culture, management or internal process of the company that they work for can not, or is not open to creating, processes that would allow them to make practical use of this newfound knowledge. The company has no means or impetus to implement the things that they paid the employee to learn. Happens all the time. But alas, the networking and parties at conferences are great! :)

But today companies are tightening up and I believe want to be more efficient in a leaner economy where budgets are getting pitted against results. Companies that have strategy, a plan and a clear method of implementation. I.E internal processes and people that support that strategy are the ones that will consistently win. Those that don’t, typically don’t because they haven’t acknowledged the need to transform and change with the times. I.e. Only trees that bend in the wind remain standing. And the bigger the company, the more important (and challenging) this is.

(Notice that while information is a readily quantifiable thing, implementation can be more difficult to gauge because it requires structure, method, people and performance measurement.)

So it’s really not how much you know. It’s how quickly and efficiently you can take basic information, like SEO Best Practices, and implement it. If you focus on the whole picture, you’ll be sure to lead the pack!

Written by Lawrence Touitou-

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Lawrence Touitou brings you the best SEO tools, tips and advice on his SEO blog: SEOWithoutBorders.org - a collection of some of the best, SEO best practices from the most prominent SEOs in the industry.

What’s the first thing you do? (the answer may surprise you.)

Monday, January 18th, 2010

So you’re starting a new blog, website or your assigned to a site that is new to you. What is the very first thing you do? Look at the on-page? check the keywords? Check the pages indexed? Backlinks? What’s really the very first thing you need to do before you even think about SEO?

I’ve had the privilege of working with some of the best and one of them was my former boss, friend and mentor at Fox Interactive, Bill Maciatis. I could talk all day about Bill and the countless lessons I learned from him ( I’ll push you a link to his public LinkedIn profile at the end) but for now I’ll just say that Bill was all about ‘RESULTS”. He taught us that it’s all about the numbers and he would often say, I don’t care if you work from home or you want come to work in your bath robe and slippers, as long as you keep your numbers up, I’m happy.

I remember a story he told us that stands out in my mind till this day – this was back in ‘07 btw… He was talking about the Bears (Bill’s a big sports fan from Chicago) and how no matter how great the coach is, at the end of the season if the team doesn’t perform, make the playoffs and make it to the Superbowl (Which is coming up in just a few weeks actually) someone’s going to have to pay. There going to find a new coach.

With that said, the first thing that he, back then, and I today advocate, before you even think of SEOing a site, is to know how you will measure RESULTS. i.e.

  • Is there an analytics platform in place?
  • What metric will you use (and be evaluated by) to determine results?
  • Do you have access to it ( login / someone to send it to you on a weekly stats)?
  • Have you created a baseline?

Creating a baseline is your starting point. If you have a brand new property, your baseline is ‘0′. The good news is the biggest opportunities for growth lie with new properties. Regardless where you are at in terms of SEO maturity for your site, the things to remember are; don’t start SEO until you see where’s your starting point, document it (take a snapshot in excell or a screenshot) and make sure everyone is aware of it and agrees fully that that will be the number or metric that your efforts (your results, don’t forget) will be judged by.

Then, you can track what’s working on a MOM (% month over month) and YOY (% year over year basis). And this comes from the understanding that ideally, nothing in SEO or any type of online marketing is left to chance. You must test what’s working at all times and evaluate your level of effort against your results to see if what you’re doing is working and how well.

So in summary, to get RESULTS (as Bill Says…) you must know where you’re at to start with. And to know that, the first thing you do, is find the data that shows where the site’s at now, look at the traffic from search, and draw a line that says,

“SEO started here!”

Then share it with those you work for so everyone’s on the same page! (Thanks Bill! http://www.linkedin.com/in/bmacaitis )

…hope this helps! :)

Written by Lawrence Touitou-

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Lawrence Touitou brings you the best SEO tools, tips and advice on his SEO blog: SEOWithoutBorders.org - a collection of some of the best, SEO best practices from the most prominent SEOs in the industry.

Being Relevant

Saturday, January 16th, 2010

Picture this: You find yourself up in front of a room of people speaking – which many of us do on occasion, in our work or making a toast or announcement at a wedding, party, holiday dinner, etc. You get everyone’s attention and you start talking about the 49ers, or the static on the radio or the lint on your dress after getting it back from the dry cleaners, etc., your going to find, best case scenario, people’s interest is going to wane, bigtime… They’ll think, “What the heck is this girl/guy talking about?” What’s the relevance? They may even say, “Hey Joan/Jonny, maybe we need to stick to the reason why we’re all here…”

(And the only reason they’re not walking out on you is because these people are your family, friends and coworkers and being polite!)

When you’re not being relevant online, the response is quick, simple and brutally honest; people leave your page. How does that relate to SEO? SEO is the technical extension of what I call, “the first rule of marketing” and that is, “CLOSE THE FREAKEN DEAL!”

You promise something? Deliver it! (That’s the most basic premise of marketing, and relationship building and seems so obvious that it’s hard to believe that so many people, small businesses and companies have such a hard time fulfilling that simple request.)

When you order something online, or grab a product off a shelf at the store, or order something at a restaurant (I think I’m hungry as I write this :) and it says it will do something, or be something and you’re all excited when you get it and it goes (audio here please…) waaaa, waaaa, waaaa, waaaa…

(And it doesn’t do what it says…) How do you feel? Totally ripped-off, no? Will you shop there again? Or buy that product from that company again?

When we tell search engines that a page is about xyz (a keyword phrase) and a user finds our results in SERPs, and clicks on Link, we need to damn well be sure that that page is providing RELEVANT info about that topic.

Being Relevant is CLOSING THE FREAKEN DEAL for an SEO. All the technical means that Search Engines (SEs) use to detect that relevance comprise the endemic knowledge of our craft, and the business of Searh Engines, but the underlying impetus which is often missed is just plain and simple; “Be Relevant” and give people what they want, without too much else.

Written by Lawrence Touitou-

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Lawrence Touitou brings you the best SEO tools, tips and advice on his SEO blog: SEOWithoutBorders.org - a collection of some of the best, SEO best practices from the most prominent SEOs in the industry.