Google Top Ten List

Many have requested a Top Ten list of the items to concentrate on the most when building or revamping a site with Google in mind. This is more of a list on taking either a new site, or a struggling site and getting better performance.

1. You will need your web hosting company to assign you a unique IP address for your domain. Make sure it is a new IP address and not a recently recycled one. If they do not have a new one available, make sure you ensure that the IP address is clean from being on any blacklist. Having your own clean IP address is critical to start out on the right foot with Google. We will have a series about how to pick the right web hosting company and even tell you about a few that we use and why we do. Also included is who to avoid.

2. Create the redirect so non-www URLs resolve to www. This is more important than you think which is why I put this as step #2 after getting a web host. Do this first thing so it off your list.

3. Create a robots.txt file and upload it to your server (same place where your index.html file is located).

4. Create all CSS and JavaScript as external files. This is vital not just for the page size, but also the indexing. Testing shows that by removing CSS and JavaScript from the content of the HTML improves all aspects of your site being indexed.

5. Check your site for compliancy. You need to have a good understanding of HTML to know what to change and what to keep. You need, or your webmaster needs, to understand the difference between “W3C Compliancy” and “Search Engine Bot Compliancy”. You also want to be “Google Compliant” too. Keeping yourself familiar with the webmaster guidelines is just a good idea.

6. Keyword research should be done to target keywords that can be converted into sales, not just clickthroughs for traffic. Shoot for keywords in “the long tail”, meaning those people who are deep into the buying cycle and are close to making a decision. Usually these are phrases in the 3-6 word range. Your pages (in the body) should be in the 400-600 word range, with a strong headline (keyword included) and a keyword density of 1-2%. You also need to Create Solid Title Tags. This is often very misunderstood for SEOs. You should also review the on page factors.

7. Google Sitemaps. This is an absolute must. If you are having difficulty with Google, often this is how you find the cure to your ills. New site? This is how you don’t get into trouble. Spend 2 hours on Friday, every Friday going through and fixing problems that Sitemaps shows you and you will see continued increases in your traffic.

8. Submit your site to the top directories.

9. Get moving on solid link exchanges – and obtaining links inward to your site – not just to the home page, but to subpages as well

10. Get a blog and post to the blog every other day (at least) and get on a schedule to update your content, and add new content on a weekly basis. This will ensure that Googlebot will continue to come back and index your site on a regular basis.

Debunking Google Myths

Every so often it is good to address this topic again as a refresher. All of these statements are backed with testing results.

1. Google gives more weight to the “body” of the document more than they do the top, left, right and bottom navigation areas. TRUE. This is especially true with links. Placing links in the body of the document cause massive upswings compared to links in the navigational areas on the same page. This was also confirmed in Vegas by an engineer. It seems it is one of the gauges they use to detect duplicate content.

2. Having non-compliant (W3C) code on your site will increase your rankings. FALSE. This was a “link bait” article that was debunked by us last year. It is total garbage.

3. On the flip-side, having compliant (W3C) code on your site will increase your rankings. FALSE. While a couple of years ago I noticed trends of increased spidering and ranking per compliant code, that has ceased. Instead, the search engines are looking for “bot compliant” code, which you can test with Leslie Rohde’s OptiSpider, which is a program I am completely hooked on.

4. Using a hyphenated domain name will harm your rankings. FALSE. What usually happens is spammers use hyphenated domains due to their push a few years ago, and thus they will practice “spamming tactics” which causes a drop in the SERPs not the hyphens in the domain.

5. Buying links will get your site banned or penalized. FALSE. Buying the wrong links can do that, but link buying in general is standard advertising practice. My advice is to deal directly with the webmaster as too many link brokers are selling “Fake PageRank” links.

6. Using Google Sitemaps will get your site banned or penalized. FALSE. If this were true, there would be a lot more articles about this.

7. Google uses human editors to change the SERPs (Search Engine Results Pages). FALSE. Google’s index is too massive and searches in the trillions. There is a human factor and that is filtering out Spam that the filters let through. Google has an office in India where they are doing just that.

8. Using a Dedicated IP increasing ranking. FALSE. Unless, of course, you are sharing an IP with a known spammer and you risk getting nailed by the penalty they suffer. Mostly, having a dedicated IP is for business protection as previously discussed in other articles.

9. Pages in the Supplemental Results indicates a serious problem with the site. FALSE. Google has pages in the Supplemental Index. I have pages in the Supplemental Index. Being in the Supplemental Index is usually caused by:

a) lack of links to the page
b) no internal link pointing to the page
c) indexing error when fetching the page
d) dynamically generated content
e) site is untrusted

10. PageRank isn’t important. FALSE. The main issue here is too many people just don’t understand PageRank. While pages with no PageRank appear in the top ten of the SERPs, that doesn’t diminish the value of PageRank.

The Best Free Tool's to Use

Ok like I promised, I have written a potentially great article. You might want to bookmark this page for future reference!

AdSense Calculator – Forecast future earnings with projected page views, Click Through Rates and Cost Per Click.
Best Use: What would happen to your AdSense earnings if you increased your CTR by 0.2%? Run it through this tool to figure out if the projected payout will be worth the effort.
Text Link: http://www.seochat.com/seo-tools/adsense-calculator/
AdSense Preview – How focused is your page based on the theme you are targeting? Check quickly with this tool that will show you ads based on the content of the page. You can check any page, not just the pages you control.
Best Use: Not sure how a page is “themed” according to Google? Run this preview. Whatever type of ads show is the “theme” Google has tagged your site. While this isn’t perfect, it is one of the quickest ways to score your content SEO work.
Text Link: http://www.seochat.com/seo-tools/google-adsense-preview/
Alexa – owns by Amazon, Alexa uses a toolbar (i.e. spyware) in order to track visitor behavior and rank websites by traffic.
Best Use: Don’t install the toolbar, instead go direct to Alex.com or use the Search Spy Firefox extension to get key Alexa data. Alexa ranks websites in reverse order (the lower the number the more traffic).
Text Link: http://www.alexa.com/
Archive.org – Use the Way Back Machine to see how a site looked in the past.
Best Use: Before you buy that expired domain, look it up in the Way Back Machine to make sure it wasn’t used for “other” purposes (i.e. pr0n).
Text Link: http://www.archive.org/
BlogPulse – Search the “Blogosphere.”
Best Use: Trend Search and Featured Trends are excellent areas to find “holes” in your market to exploit.
Text Link: http://www.blogpulse.com/
Code to Text Ratio – Is your webpage code heavy? Find out with this tool. Often, pages I struggle getting top ranking for are “code heavy.”
Best Use: Shoot for a level of 30% or more. Often you can improve the ratio by referencing your JavaScript and CSS to external files.
Text Link: http://www.seochat.com/seo-tools/code-to-text-ratio/
Cool SEO Tool – From WeBuildPages this tool allows you to compare your page’s ranking to the Top Ten Google ranking
Best Use: You can use this tool along with NicheWatch in order to get solid understanding of the SEO competition. Make sure you pay attention to the site’s age in the Way Back Machine.
Text Link: http://www.webuildpages.com/cool-seo-tool/
Copyscape – Protect your web content from being copied.
Best Use: Worried that your site’s content might be hijacked? This is a great tool to find out. I like using this tool to keep “ghost writers” honest. Many sell the articles they wrote for you to others.
Text Link: http://www.copyscape.com/
DNS Report – From DNS Stuff. Check if there are problems with your DNS hosting.
Best Use: A great way to verify that your domain is setup properly, including getting a SPF record setup to limit the amount of phony Spam showing as coming from your domain.
Text Link: http://member.dnsstuff.com/pages/dnsreport.php
Domain Tools – Formerly WhoIs.sc. This is the place to do WHOIS lookups.
Best Use: This site is your best friend. Get to know it well. Look to upgrade your account so you can do a “reverse IP check” and more.
Text Link: http://www.domaintools.com/
Evolt Browser Archive – A great archive of older browsers for testing.
Best Use: While not needed as it was a few years ago, if you need to see how a your site looked in an older browser, this is where to get it.
Text Link: http://browsers.evolt.org/
Google Alerts – This is a must to track your sites, your competitor sites or your industry.
Best Use: Track your name, company name and your domains so you are alerted each time they are referenced in Google.
Text Link: http://www.google.com/alerts
Google Cache – From WeBuildPages see the last time pages were cached by Google.
Best Use: Any page that was last cached 90 days or more needs to be updated, more quality links obtained, and a better internal linking structure.
Text Link: http://www.webuildpages.com/cache/cachetoolpublic.pl
Link Analyzer – Will grab all internal and external links and show the anchor text of each link.
Best Use: A quick way to determine the anchor text, or lack of anchor text, used in the links on any page.
Text Link: http://www.seochat.com/seo-tools/site-link-analyzer/
Ranks NL Spider Checker – A comprehensive keyword density checker that is free to use online.
Best Use: Look in the “header data” to ensure the information that is being reported is what you want the search engine to see. Pay attention to the “Last Modified” line. Make sure that date isn’t more than two weeks old.
Text Link: http://www.ranks.nl/tools/spider.html
SEO Browser – See your site the same way a search engine sees it.
Best Use: Not a great tool, but if you are really struggling with ranking, check your site and see if there is something “off” with how your site is being shown to a spider.
Text Link: http://www.seo-browser.com/
Server Header Check – Often your first step in determining issues if your pages are not being indexed or if a competitor is using cloaking.
Best Use: Check competitor URLs and marketing URLs for redirects. See exactly which URL the redirect is going to and which type (301 or 302). I like running any URL that redirects through this tool to understand what process is being executed.
Text Link: http://www.seochat.com/seo-tools/check-server-headers/
Traffic Estimate – Approximate traffic levels for last 30 days.
Best Use: Use this tool as an estimate only, not intended to be exact. Using with Alexa, you can make a good determination of a site’s actual traffic levels.
Text Link: http://www.trafficestimate.com/
Yahoo! vs. Google – Compare by graph the search results in Google and compare with Yahoo!.
Best Use: This gives me a good understanding how different or similar the search engines are for my targeted keyword phrase. Often, if the results are fairly similar, if I get a top ten listing in Google, the same should occur in Yahoo! as well.s
Text Link: http://www.seochat.com/seo-tools/google-vs-yahoo/
Xenu Link Checker – One of the best free link checkers available.
Best Use: Use this tool to do a complete “link audit” once a month.
Text Link: http://home.snafu.de/tilman/xenulink.html

Those were 20 tools which will most definitely give you an unfair advantage. Use them to your advantage. If you have any more such sites, please do not forget to post here. I will add them to the list. If you like this post, please bookark it and link back to it from your blog.

Keyword analysis: Everything You Ever Wanted to Know

What is keyword analysis?

The process of uncovering the words your target customers are Googling is called ‘keyword analysis’ or ‘keyword research’. There are quite a few reliable keyword analysis tools out there. You enter a term that you think your target visitors are Googling, and they tell you how many people are actually Googling that term. They use real search data – usually from the previous one or two months. Your want relevant words and phrases that heaps of people are searching for. Obviously it’ll be easier to rank well for keywords that relatively few other sites are targeting, though, and some of these tools will help you there too.

Keyword analysis complexities:

You’ll find these tools very helpful and very powerful. They’ll give you a great insight into what people are searching for. But they won’t tell you everything. Ultimately, they just provide the raw data. Once you’ve uncovered that raw data, you need to analyze it to make some decisions. And this is trickier than it sounds. You’ll need to apply all of your knowledge of your business, the benefits you offer your customers, and how prospective customers think and talk about your products and services (which may be entirely different from how actual customers think and talk, and is almost guaranteed to be different from how people in the industry think and talk). You also need to have a good understanding of what your competitors are doing, and why. And finally, always remember that search engines don’t read as humans do. They’re nowhere near that smart. So sometimes you have to make allowances for them. Following is a rundown of some issues that quite often have people tearing their hair out.

Intent of the Searcher:
When you’re considering the merits of a particular keyword, you also need to carefully consider the intent of people searching for it. It’s not enough that a word is relevant; it also has to be a word that someone would use when they’re ready (or not far off ready) to buy your product, engage your service, subscribe to your mailing list, or do whatever it is that you want them to do.

I’ll use my own copywriting website as an example. “Copywriting” is more popular than “copywriter”, but I didn’t choose it because I know people Google it when they’re looking for copywriting jobs, copywriting advice, copywriting tips, copywriting articles, etc. When people want to engage the services of a copywriter, they usually Google “copywriter.”

Can’t I just use Google Analytics?

No. Google Analytics will tell you what searches brought your current visitors to your site. It won’t tell you anything about your target visitors. E.g. Let’s say you run a cinema website and the majority of your visitors arrived after Googling “movies”. That doesn’t means you should necessarily target “movies”. What if 10 times that many customers are finding a competing cinema after Googling “cinema”?

Single keyword or keyword phrase?

If you’re a niche business, target niche keyword phrases, not single keywords. Include extra detail, points of difference or your location. For example:
• “cheap second hand computers” instead of “computers”
• “small business income tax accountant Sydney” instead of “accountant Sydney”
• “thai restaurant delivery Highland Park” instead of “restaurant”
• “small blue widgets” instead of “widgets”

Why? Because:
1. The more specific the keyword, the fewer websites there will be targeting it. This means you’ll move up the rankings faster, and you’ll find it easier to achieve a high ranking.

2. The search results for the more generic keywords tend to be dominated by the big multinationals. Search for “computers” and you’ll see there are around 955 million results and the top rankings are dominated by the big authority sites, like Wikipedia, Computer.org, Apple, etc.
3. Searchers know they’ll find what they want faster, if they’re specific. According to OneStat.com, 58.93% of people search for either a 2-word phrase or a 3 word phrase.
4. Most people Google generic keywords when they’re researching a purchase and specific keywords when they’re ready to buy. So by targeting a more specific keyword, you’ll attract more qualified traffic.

Of course, if you need to target hotly contested generic keywords, go ahead. But I’d still recommend starting out with a niche phrase that includes your generic term. E.g. It won’t take you long to rank for “small business income tax accountant Sydney”, and this will generate income while you’re waiting for your link profile and site authority to grow enough to rank for “accountant Sydney”.

Plural or singular?

The simplest answer is to look at what the majority of your target visitors are Googling, and go for that. But if searches are equally split, think about intent. Maybe people Google “tennis shoe” when they’re deciding whether to buy a tennis shoe or a running shoe. And maybe they Google “tennis shoes” when they’re ready to buy a pair online. As an online shoe shop, you’d choose “tennis shoes”. As a shoe manufacturer, you’d choose “tennis shoe”. Still no closer to a decision? Consider the number of competing sites. If you sell televisions, you’d be better off targeting “TVs” than “TV”, because then you’re not competing against all the TV stations and TV guides. If even that doesn’t help (i.e. there’s no statistical, semantic or competitive reason to choose one over the other), then just choose whichever one is easiest to optimize for. Or go with both (that would certainly be the easiest to implement).
Google’s smart enough to index you for both if there’s no good reason not to.
Split, merged and hyphenated words:
“Copywriter”, “copy writer” or “copy-writer”? Google knows they’re different words so, as always, go with whatever version your target visitors are Googling most. If there’s no clear distinction, again, consider intent and competition. Failing that, just choose whatever’s easy to optimize for. Google’s smart enough to know that they all refer to the same animal. Search for “copy-writer” and you’ll find plenty of results that contain only “copywriter”. (In fact, Google bolds “copywriter” even when you search for “copy-writer” or “copy writer”.)

Related words:

All the important search engines use a thesaurus when analyzing your site’s content. Once they identify what your target keywords are, they then check to see if the rest of your content is related to those keywords. (Actually, they use a fancy name for it: “latent semantic indexing (LSI)”, and it’s a lot more complicated than I’ve indicated here. But if you think of it as a thesaurus, you’ll be just fine.) For example, a naturally evolved site about tennis shoes wouldn’t just contain “tennis” and “shoes”. It would also contain words like “footwear”, “sole”, “foot”, “feet”, “upper”, “inner” and “surface”. And probably “grass”, “clay” and “court”. Possibly even “racquet”, “basketball” or “running”. If it does, the search engines will deduce that it’s very relevant to people who’re searching for “tennis shoes” (and that it’s less likely to be a cheap spam site that’s just stuffed full of the single term “tennis shoes”). Of course, the corollary of this logic is that if your site has evolved naturally and is actually useful, you won’t need to worry about these issues too much.
In the next post, I will detail how to do keyword research and recommend the correct tools.

Free Money Making eBook

Hi guys,

I recently found an ebook which detailed different ways to make money. I must sayit is not something new but, it talks about all the latest methods that one can use to make a living online. If you are a beginner to this thing, you will find it pretty usefull I must say. Experienced users I must say will find little use for this except as a checklist when going into a new venture. Nonetheless, I urge you to try this.

Free eBook

Yes it is an affiliate link. I would appreciate it if you would use that.

Google Definitions

Every once in awhile, I get someone who refers to an issue with the wrong term, or using a term incorrectly. Worse yet is getting that blank stare when I am talking SEO. So, here are some quick definitions to help clear up any issues for you.

PageRank: It is a measure of “popularity”, “quality” and “connectivity”. Simply, PageRank is calculated by counting up the number of sites that link to the page (not the site) and taking the numerical value of each link received and comparing the total to a numerical range. PageRank is not the main source for the algorithm with Google. PageRank is overrated and if you have “Green Bar Addiction” we are working on a 12-step program for you. ;-)

Sandbox: This is an area that a new site “sits” while it waits to be “trusted” by Google. Many claim that the Sandbox doesn’t exist, including Google. This is real despite what Google says. We will be updating our Getting out the Sandbox article soon. It was interesting that once this term became popular Google called the keyword research tool inside of AdWords the “Sandbox”.

Supplemental Index: This is Google’s “second index” and is a bad place to be. Normally, pages that are here are about to be dropped from the index.

Latent Semantic Indexing (LSI): This is a process where the English language has been converted into numerical data for easy storage and retrieval. Words that are similar have numerical values that are very close. This rewards “theme based” sites. I have seen strong evidence that Google is using LSI in their algorithm. This is how a page can be #1 for a keyword that is not on the page, nor in incoming anchor text.

Hilltop: This is a theory that Google uses this algorithm structure for their results. Hilltop is essentially based on an expert rating system according to Aaron Wall. An example would be if Page A relates to Page B and Page B relates to Page C, then a relationship, or connection between Page A and Page C is assumed. This is strong as this gives topic sensitive sites more of a boost, which would make the SERPs cleaner and more relevant. The areas that are strong for Hilltop are Page Titles, Page Headings, and Bolded Text. Link Popularity is also highly scored. Despite my numerous conversations with Google reps, they will not confirm, nor deny the use of Hilltop in the Google algorithm. It is almost always a “I cannot comment on that.”

Data Center: Refers to the servers where Google stores the data for their index. Google has several data centers, and they constantly test the results and the most consistent is the one that is used. These data centers sit on specific IP addresses rather than domains. When doing testing, Google often serves a different data center to the east coast of the US and another to the west coast. If you are seeing the SERPs “bounce” this means that they are swapping out data centers while they make changes to their algorithm.

Location Script For Your Sites

So I wanted to introduce my visitors with my name and telling them I live in “their location” to help make my sales pitch more presentable, this will be great addition to landing pages by providing a personal touch.

The script is quite simple, replace “Demo Town” with a town you would like it to say if there town can’t be read from there own location, and “Demo State “ with a state you would like.

Go ahead and copy the code and place wherever you’d like on your page, no need for any other styles, it’s based on Google

Script:

<p><em>My name is Hari Varrier – I live in <script src=”http://www.google.com/jsapi” type=”text/javascript”></script><script type=”text/javascript”><!–
if (typeof(google.loader.ClientLocation.address.city) != null) {
document.write(google.loader.ClientLocation.address.city
+”, ”
+google.loader.ClientLocation.address.region);
} else {
document.write(“Demo Town, Demo State”)
}
// –></script> and I would love some backlinks to this blog</em></p>

Demo:

My name is Hari Varrier – I live in and I would love some backlinks to this blog

Demystifying Split Testing

Split testing is a method of finding out which of two items is more popular, converts better, etc. It’s based on the profound wisdom that “you don’t know what your customer likes best… they do.” For the purpose of this article, I’ll talk about a simple text advertisement on a webpage. But know that you can use this same concept for graphics, products, colors… in fact, for just about anything that contains two choices that you want to determine which is the most popular or effective.
So suppose you’re creating a short webpage, and you want to improve your conversion click-thru’s… the number of people who see your ad and are interested enough to find out what’s on the other side by clicking on it. One thing you’d want to try is two different headlines, to try to get more people clicking than before. What you’d do is write your two headlines, and create two copies of the webpage you’re using it on. Version 1 has Headline 1 on it; Version 2 has Headline 2 on it. And here’s the important point:
NOTHING ELSE IS CHANGED on the two pages. They’re identical except for the different headline. Now, using whatever traffic method you choose, send at least 100 people to your site. But do it like this…** send 50 people to Version 1 page, and the other 50 to Version 2. **
After you see how many people clicked through to your next desired action on each separate page, you’ll know which one was more effectiveattractive to the viewers. So if 10 out of 50 people clicked thru on Version 1, and 3 out of 50 clicked thru on Version 2, then Version 1 was more than 3 times as effective in converting viewers. And since the only difference between the pages was the headline, you know that Headline 1 was the winner. Now you might decide to try testing something else, maybe page color for example. So do the same thing… put up two different pages with identical text, graphics, headlines, etc. and change ONLY THE BACKGROUND COLOUR between the pages.
Split your traffic evenly and randomly between them, and very soon you’ll know which the most popular color was. And on and on! Split-testing gives you a scientifically accurate way of determining what works best. You have to provide a statistically valid sample before making a decision (that’s why I suggest at least 100 viewers).
Note: It’s best to run the test elements at the same time, to the same audience, under the same conditions, etc. That way, your test ‘sample’ contains only the single variable you’re trying to test. No point in testing a page in October, then trying a different headline for a test in April… too much has happened between those times, you’d have no idea what mood the viewers were in.

New Google Bug

There seems to be a new google bug. It involes the keyword “hyves“. If you add the term to your domain either as subdomain or if you are lucky enough to create a new hyves domain with any tld, it will have an instant PR (pagerank) of 7. This is pretty cool! Here is a screenshot with proof of that I am saying.

the-new-google-bug

Some webmasters are hyping up their website PR using this. So to fellow webmasters out there, please refrain from doing this. You will be “google slapped”!