Archive for January, 2008

Google Patent -2

Posted on January 27th, 2008 in DirectorySEO.org News | No Comments »

Continue from our previous post, I will talk about the next 2 critical points of Google Patent.

What Google is Attempting to Measure

Google wants to measure or is attempting to actively measure each of the following:

  • Domain information
    • Registration date
    • Length of renewal (10 years, 5 years, 1 year, etc)
    • Addresses and Names of admin & technical contacts
    • DNS Records
    • Address of Name Servers
    • Hosting Location & Company
    • Stability of this data
  • Information on User Behavior Online
    • CTR (Click-Through Rate) of individual results in the SERPs
    • Length of time spent on a given site/page
  • Data contained on your computer
    • Favorites/Bookmarks List
    • Cache & Temp Files
    • Frequency of visits to particular sites/pages (history)

My thoughts:

Don’t get suprised. Even the expiration date of your domain and how often you renew your domain could impact your website’s ranking. This is all about credibility. If you only regersiter your domain for 1 year, what does this indicate to Google. Google interpret this as you will shut down your online business after 1 year. If this assumption is true, Why Google would bother to rank you? This all makes sense because Google wants to provide reliable source for searchers and Google trust websites has been online for 5-10 years.

Google also monitors how many people would go back to your sites to visit. Return visitors means more to Google as more return visitors implies you have a lot of useful information on your site and that is what Google would expect from an authority. The same theory applies if there are lots of people bookmark your site.

The Impact of this Patent

At last, the author encourages every webmasters read the article completely as quoted from the author “Although it is long, I urge every SEO/Webmaster to read this page completely. I have attempted to make the information legible and readable, and only pulled out parts that are important to the active practice of SEO”.

See the entire article about Google Patent at:
http://www.seomoz.org/article/google-historical-data-patent

Ever Heard of Google Patent ?

Posted on January 23rd, 2008 in SEO Resource | No Comments »

Put it simply, Google patent is a information retrieval based on historical data. You can get a thorough review of this topic at SEOmoz http://www.seomoz.org/article/google-historical-data-patent. So why would you read here? Well, I am just going to talk about my own experience and my own thoughts.

There are 5 critical points in that paper:

Google’s Concept of “Document Inception”

The date of “document inception”, which can refer to either a website as a whole or a single page is used in many different areas by Google. This data can come from the registration info, the date Google first found a link to the site/page or the site/page itself. Google will be using this data to rank documents and establish credibility and relevance.

My thoughts:
That is exactly why when you have a new page, you can get it indexed by Google in 24 hours if you can get a backlink from a high PR website. If you have a new site, you don’t need to spend big bucks to get a high quality link. You can use a free service from site like squidoo or hubpage. If you start writing some topic there and link back to your site, you site should get indexed by Google in 72 hours.

How Changing Content can Affect Rankings

Changing content over time has a huge impact in Google’s measures according to this patent. They use changes to determine “freshness” or “staleness” of websites and pages and how that data impacts the value of the links on the page as well its rankings. They’ll also measure large, “real”, content changes vs. superfluous changes and rank based on that data.

Google also says that for some types of queries, particular results are more valuable - stale results may be desirable for information that doesn’t need updating, fresh content is good for results that require it, seasonal results may pop up or down in the rankings based on the time of month/year, etc.

My thoughts:
Yes, freshness! Google loves new content and that is why blogs can do better than other types of sites. Thus, you need to provide your visitor updated information. You ever wondered why sometimes e-commerce sites rank better than a content-driven site? New and fresh content would be the reason. E-commerce site always update their product listings and show new promotions while some content driven sites shows only static shopping guides. Another finding is that it seems the more product listings a page has, the better ranking. But I am not sure about this.

freshness-content.jpg

Spam Detection & Punishment

Google is employing many new systems of spam detection and prevention according to the patent. These include:

  • Watching for sites that rise in the rankings too quickly
  • Watching for registration information, IP addresses, name servers, hosts, etc that are on their “bad list”
  • Growth of off-topic links
  • Speed of link gain
  • Percentage of similar anchor text
  • Topic/Subject shifts or additions

My thoughts:
Aggressive link building strategy probably won’t work anymore. I have worked for a company that decides to spend lots of $$ for getting a keyword ranked. We bought tons of articles, did tons of directory submission and did a lot of blog posts. Guess what, 1 month later, it worked. The company’s web page get to the 1st page of Google for a very competitive keywords. However, this only lasted for 3 months, and now get pushed back to 3rd page again.

spam.jpg

I will talk about next 2 factors in my next post.

SEO tool - Hittail

Posted on January 18th, 2008 in SEO Resource | No Comments »

While i was watching video on youtube, i found a video called top 10 SEO tools. Actually, in this video, it only talked about 3 tools. One tool that interests me is the one called Hit tail. This tool lets you view real time search hits and provides keyword suggestion for your website. It offers the service for free but you can get more features with the plus version. I signed up with the free version and looked at the feature myself. At some point, the results provided is better than Google Analytics. It is easy to follow but yet very meaningful.

Look at this image below, it shows what search terms drives traffic to your site and it shows exactly how many visitors found your site with each search term. For example, 223 people found your site with the keyword “seo service” and 112 people found your site by search “seo tips”. What’s more, you can filter the results by different search engines, so you can see which search engine is your site currently optimized to.

Hittail

On this page, you can see the exact referral URL sorted by time.

Hittail-referral

On this page, you can see a list of keywords that Hittail suggest you to improve. If you can work on the ranking for these certain kind of keywords, you will be able to get more qualified traffic.

Hittail-suggestion

Google is changing algorithm ?

Posted on January 10th, 2008 in DirectorySEO.org News | 1 Comment »

This video from web pro news talking about Google’s changing algorithm. No confirmation made yet, but it is worth watching it.

Track your external ad results with Google Analytics

Posted on January 8th, 2008 in Marketing Case Study | 1 Comment »

Whenever you buy ads from other people, you need to know how effective your ad is, to be more specific, you need to know whether your ad makes visitor do what you expected them to do. Sometimes, just a visit from your ad is not what all you waned, you may want a little bit more than that. For example, you may want your users to sign up for newsletter or you may simply want the visitor to buy something from your site. You can mention how effective your ad is with the free Google Analytics. Here is the steps you can take:

First, determine the landing page of your ad placed on other sites, an example of be: http://www.yoursite.com/page1.php Then determine what your goal page is, this is the final page you want your visitors to go to, it could be http://www.yoursite.com/thank-you-for-purchasing.php. After you determined all these pages, put them into the conversion goal setting section, see the following image:

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After you have completed this step, then you need to determine a couple of things and build a understandable URL. For example, i want to buy a text link ads on SiteA, if you just use the link: http://www.mysite.com, you get nothing on Google Analytics, however, if you use the URL like: http://www.yourdomain.com/landingpage.html?utm_source=SiteA.com&utm_medium=textlinkads&utm_campaign=specialsale, then you would able to track the results. Google has a very handy tool to build a URL like this:

http://www.google.com/support/analytics/bin/answer.py?answer=55578&topic=10998

On that page, it explains terms clearly such as what is the campaign source, campaign medium…etc

After you’ve done this, in Google Analytics, you can track the results by clicking traffic source and then select campaign names that you want to track. You can see how much traffic has a specific ad campaign brought to you and you can see how these traffic has contributed to your final objective (the goal you set up previously).

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