Net66 SEO: Has there Been a Google Update?

Word on the forums seems to suggest an update affecting quite a lot of sites around the 21st and 22nd of August. Although the forums are relatively quiet (it is summer and I’m sure a lot of people are on holiday) there were spikes of traffic on both the 20th and the 21st where people were obviously talking about something.

But was it an update?

I’ve checked a few sites and some seem to have really increased whilst others have just hit an absolute average (Analytics shows a near enough straight line of traffic). Although traffic has seemed to fluctuate, there has not been a massive change in rankings. Yes there’s the usual fluctuation but nothing that would make me worried.

There’s quite a few ideas going round the web now as to what Google may have done to cause such a spike in conversation. But until we find out more of the effects of this update we’ll just have to wait and see.

Blog Post by: Greg McVey

 

Net66 SEO: Is Google Deliberately Harming Organic Results?

First of all, The Fold, is what’s immediately viewable on your screen once you’ve performed your internet search (Googled something). If you have to scroll down to view past the paid for content and Google’s own maps service, what does it say about Google’s attitude towards the SEO industry?

We’re all working hard to stay within Google’s strict guidelines, and now it looks like soon enough organic listings will be third in line in results displayed on the SERPs. This cam about because of a new feature Google have implemented. Which means when you run certain searches on Google, what you see straight away is:

> A Carousel. The only purpose this seems to have, is to promote you to refine your search. Each image on the carousel is tied to a different Google search so if you search Hotels (in the example image) each image at the top will have a different search attached to it. Such as “Boutique hotels”, “5 Star Hotels” etc.

> Google Ads. In the bottom left of our example image you can see the bottom left is dominated by Google’s Adwords. A larger than average box ensures that it takes up all the space it can.

> Google Maps. Although we set up Google Maps originally, we have no say whether or not our maps will be chosen with no real way to optimise them. This, again, relies solely on Google.

See the example image for the search “hotels” below:

googles-destroying-seo

 

So what do you think about this new first page Dominance by Google? Is this a deliberate attempt to discourage the SEO Industry? Or is this just simply Google trying to improve search results for us?

Blog Post by: Greg McVey

Net66 SEO: Matt Cutts Reiterates +1s have no Direct Impact on Rankings

Matt CuttsIt’s been touted for a long while that Google takes Social Signals into account for it’s rankings. With that in mind, would Google’s own Social Network be a better platform to have your content shared on that other networks?

The response was prompted mainly by the fact that Moz had published a couple of studies that showed a massive correlation between the numbers of Google +1s and rankings. The more +1s something had, the higher it ranked.

But Matt Cutts was quick to point out that correlation doesn’t imply causality, deeming this the politest way to debunk the myth. He also added, more in reference to Moz’s study of Facebook Likes, that if you create compelling and great content, naturally people are going to take it and share it and link to it.

Implying that it isn’t due to the likes and +1s that the content ranks, it’s down to the actual content itself. It just happens to attract links organically. He also stated:

“But that doesn’t mean that Google is using those signals in our ranking, rather than chasing +1s of content, your time is much better spent making great content.”

So what do you believe? The cold, hard facts of Moz. Or the genial face of Matt Cutts?

Blog Post by: Greg McVey

Net66 SEO: Generate Ideas for Content the Easy Way

Ok, maybe not easy, as there is some work involved. I simply mean you don’t have to sit alone in a room, lit solely by your blank computer screen as you scratch your head for inspiration. I’ve actually done that a few times before thinking “There has to be another way”, and thankfully, there was. See the tips below:

Read User Comments

Writers Block

If you’ve written blog posts in the past then you’ll usually get one a two comments agreeing or disagreeing with what you’ve written. That’s not to say right or wrong, there are many more than 50 grey areas in SEO these days, and that’s where you’ll get an idea from.

If someone has challenged you on a blog post you’ve written, you can either take inspiration from them and see whether you can write a blog post from their view. Or you can dedicate a whole blog post to slam dunking their argument into the bin. It’s up to you.

Use Existing Customers

This can be worked in a few ways. If you’ve had a great success story recently with one of your clients, brag about it. Why not? You’ve put in the hard work, determination and man hours, so a little recognition is what you deserve. Plus this puts your work right in the shop window, giving you something to show off to potential new clients.

Also, you could ask some of your clients for a review of your product or service. You can then thicken this out into a blog post where you agree, disagree and applaud your clients review on the matter. This again puts you in the shop window, as people can see you’re understanding and appreciative of the feedback you have from your clients.

LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn

If you’re proficient in Social Media then you should be on all of these platforms and better still, you should have networked with several other companies who are all in similar industries to you. This way you can peruse their updates and wait for inspiration to strike.

This could be critiquing what they’ve said on a certain matter, or even identifying yourself with what they’ve said, but go into further detail than they have. If they’ve mentioned something along the lines of one topic, this could set the cogs in your head whirring off on a different tangent, one you could write a blog about.

Follow these tips and you should find yourself with plenty to write about, saving yourself from the dreaded writers block.

Blog Post by: Greg McVey

Net66 Google: Google to Respond to Quick Questions Personally with Search Results

I encountered a problem recently when I booked a flight. I wanted to make sure we were going to the right terminal and unfortunately this meant going to my emails, digging out the flight number and then searching that. Well all this is set to change with Google wanting to answer such questions as “Is my flight going to be late?” with a quick answer in their Search Results.

This works by using data collected from you being signed into your Google account, as well as information from the web. So if I had asked my phone “What terminal do I need to go to?” and was signed in to my Android Phone, it could find the flight number in my emails and then search the web for information about that flight. Combining both of these we’d be able to get the answer we wanted with minimal hassle.

Quite similar to Google Now, but Google want to push this out on all platforms turning Google Search into more of a personal assistant. And it works with much more than flights too. You can check the status of your deliveries by having that delivery information stored in your emails, and then entered on the relevant delivery website to find out where your package is. Pretty clever.

It can also help you with the answers you might be looking for that are stored in your Google calendar. Such as “Do I have any meetings today?”. I’m sure there are going to be many and varied applications for this feature and all them as useful as the next.

What do you think?

Blog Post by: Greg McVey

Net66 SEO: Mixed Messages From Google Webmaster?

Link analysisA post I read recently discussed what you need to evaluate when you get a manual penalty from Google. Some people generally get as many link reports that they can and then scythe through them hoping to cull anything that looks a bit out of the ordinary.

But the post I read was talking about just analysing the links from within Webmaster tools itself. However there are other examples which have shown that just analysing the links in Webmaster tools isn’t enough. Matt Cutts, head of the webspam team at Google, has addressed and recognised this by releasing a statement as follows:

It’s certainly the case that we endeavor to show examples from the set of links returned by Webmaster Tools, and likewise we prefer to assess reconsideration requests on that basis of those links. However, if there’s a really good example link that illustrates a problem, we do leave enough room to share that link, especially because it can help point the webmaster in a better direction to diagnose and fix issues.

So it shows that although Google do try, that is all they can do. Try. So if you’re ever on the receiving end of a manual penalty, then don’t rely solely on Webmaster tools to recuperate. Use other link analysis software and make sure to examine as many links as possible to try and find what is hurting your site.

Net66 SEO: Content Marketing Myths

Content MarketingThere has been such a bit buzz around content marketing since it first emerged as a “thing” almost a year ago. As with all things SEO, it has been taken to excess with a lot of people getting it wrong through a combination of over-enthusiasm and impatience. Here are some of the biggest myths concerning Content Marketing:

Shorter Blogs are Better

It makes sense to a degree. Everyone is so pressed for time these days that small, condensed blogs are the right choice as people can read them on the go and want the information there and then. But is that right? A lot of people are saying no and there are a few posts I’ve read that have proved that their sites longer posts have benefitted from more exposure.

On average posts between 1,100 and 1,400 words long performed better in popularity than other posts between 300 and 800 words long. I’ve found personally as well, some of the more popular Net66 blogs have more content on there than other short blogs. I’ve verified this through our Google Analytics and can say that it works.

More Frequent Content = Better Content Marketing

If you read the first point about longer blogs performing better, then you can understand already why more frequent content isn’t always the best. To create a blog post in excess of 1,100 words every day is no easy feat. Unless you employ a solitary writer to spend a full day on a blog post each day of course, which of course isn’t really viable.

So what should you do? The answer is simple, take your time. Quality beats quantity every time, so here’s some tips on writing a more quality blog post:

> Find a subject worth pursuing
> Gather the correct stats
> Source some brilliant images
> Allow yourself the time to do it properly

After you’ve done all that you should feel suitably tired and mildly as if you’ve wasted time that could have been spent doing something else. Well you’re wrong! What you’ve done is draw up some quality content, backed it with stats and presented it beautifully. Much better than rushing out 200 words on something vaguely related to your subject.

If you follow the above two tips then you’ll soon find yourself with a lot more time to spend researching your blog posts and allowing yourself time to create them.

Blog Post by: Greg McVey

Net66 SEO: How to Apply Schrödinger to SEO

Today Google pays homage to Erwin Schrödinger on his 125th birthday. See the Doodle below:

Schrödinger's Cat

 

The principle itself is quite complicated to understand but I’ll do my best to explain it. You start off with three items; a cat, a glass phial containing a lethal poison and small piece of radioactive material. These three items are put into a box with the glass phial set to detect radioactivity, and If the phial does detect radioactivity (which it surely will) then the glass will shatter, releasing the poison and killing the cat.

At this moment I’d like to explain that this is a thought experiment. No cats were harmed in the construction of this blog post.

As there is an air of inevitability about the poor cats demise you can then apply the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics (you’ll have to take me at my word for that) to state that the cat is both alive and dead at the same time. Alive because not enough time has passed for the phial to smash, and dead because the cat is inevitably doomed.

It’s meant to pose the question of when does quantum superposition (cat both alive and dead) end and when does reality kick in to determine the outcome of the cat’s fate i.e. peering into the box.

Interesting no doubt but how does this apply to SEO? Sit tight and I’ll tell you, we’ll just be making a few simple swaps.

Instead of a cat you have blog post you’ve written. Instead of a box you have someone else’s blog/email address. The radioactive material is instead you requesting to publish a blog, and the glass phial is the blog owner who will smash/publish a post when it detects a request and a blog post.

So, you find the blog you wish to publish on (the box) and put in your blog post (the cat), the author (the glass phial) and your request for the author to publish it (radioactive material).

So as it stands it is inevitable that your blog post will get published on the authors blog. But when you put them in the box together the author still needs to detect the request which will then trigger him to publish your article. So at the same time, again applying the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics, your blog post is simultaneously published and unpublished. The same as the cat being alive and dead.

The only way to then stop the quantum superposition of this is to then “peer in the box” by checking the blog.

Simple really. I think?

Blog Post by: Greg McVey

Net66 SEO: View manual actions in Webmaster Tools

For a long time now there have been many issues with people believing that they have been penalised by Google and have received a Manual Action Penalty. This is when some one at Google takes the time to evaluate your site and then applies a penalty to the site manually.

In days gone by you were never officially alerted to this fact and were left wondering whether the site was down to algorithmic changes or Manual actions. But now Google, who have in the past promised to streamline and clarify their webspam actions, have added a feature in Webmaster Tools where you can see if your website has been the victim of a Manual Action penalty.

If you log in to your Webmaster account and navigate to where it says “Search Traffic” then you can see under that list is the option entitled “Manual Actions”. This is what you’d click to see if you have a penalty against you, most of the time though you’ll see “No manual webspam actions found” which is mainly due to the fact that only 2% of websites on the internet have been affected.

If you do find that you have a manual action against you, the new reporting tool gives you more of an inclination as to what the penalty is for and in some cases will give an example. In Matt Cutts Blog Post for the official Google Webmaster Blog he uses his own website as an example of the tools reporting prowess, you can see the screenshot below:

Matt Cutts Website

Once you’ve then dealt with whatever was causing the Manual Action Penalty then you can submit a reconsideration request from the same place. In doing this the whole process is streamlined and will lead to much better results in the search engine listings.

Blog Post by: Greg McVey

Google’s Link Scheme Guidelines: Press Releases should use nofollow links just like adverts

It was recently confirmed that Google have changed the webmaster guidelines when it comes to link schemes. The main rule they have concentrated on is the keyword rich anchor text within press releases and the links should include the nofollow attribute. Similar to that of paid advertisements, this ensures that paid links do not pass on any value to search engines.

The precise line in the updated link schemes guidelines is:

Links with optimized anchor text in articles or press releases distributed on other sites.”

I researched more about this and have found a Google Hangout video by John Mueller who is the head webmaster trends analyst, it is clear that Google are turning to press releases as advertisements hence the change in link scheme. Press releases will still drive a lot of traffic to your website but take note of these new guidelines and instead of linking with your keyword use brand name, url or generic anchor text as these will still carry the follow attribute, therefore passing on PageRank.

Another interesting point is that in the past Matt Cutts has publicly came out and said that links within articles and press releases do not pass link juice, when many people who work in the SEO world know that it is not true in the slightest!

It seems to me that Google are taking a more direct approach about paid advertising and link schemes but also to the overuse of paid links within articles. Take a look at the Google Hangout video with John Mueller and let us know what you think.

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Blog Post by Jordan Whitehead

Net66 News: What Wonderful Clients we Have.

It’s Friday, the sun is shining, people are happy and our clients love us. Especially two of them.

Pathways Training and Brite White Teeth have both seen fit to send recommendations our way today who both, on the strong recommendations of their friends have signed up.

So at Net66 we want to say a massive thank you to our clients, and that

we love you too!

Thank You

 

Net66 SEO: Matt Cutts on Linking 20 Sites Together

First of all, 20 domains different sites on 20 different domains is quite a lot. Like, really a lot. So why would you want to link them all together? See Matt Cutts’ video response here:

The Practice of Choice

SEO Choices

Oh Dear Oh Dear I cannot make up my mind !
How many times do we all here that,and how many times do we all say that, and think that

Surely this conundrum has been around forever, and in this modern world we live in there is more and more choice about more and more things.

Linux vs Windows, Google vs Bing(no competition) , Libre Office(Open Office) vs MSWord, Apple vs PC, Organic SEO vs Pay per Click (PPC)

Was there ever a time when life was less complicated and we go about our business without a care, probably not.

For small businesses some of these choices are vital.
There is a compelling case for small businesses to use Linux, so as to save a small fortune sending license fees to Microsoft. Then again, unless you are a Linux fan, and have a tame Linux boffin you may be best sticking with Windows, as the world is full of Windows “experts”
The international space station now uses Linux and has moved away from Windows, so if it is good enough for them, it is more than good enough for the office

Libre Office , in my opinion is a good choice, I have used it for years and it has been a stalwart. And to back me up no less than the Australian Government has now standardised on the open source formats that Libre Office use

Now I need to declare an interest before I go on, as I am about to favour Organic whitehat SEO over PPC.

But now we are back to choice, it is more than possible to obtain best value long term results from organic SEO
But to do this you need to choose an SEO practitioner with care.
There are many to choose from, some good, some bad and some brilliant.

My advice is to talk to your SEO regular, and ask their advice. If you get the same old lines of sales talk, think again.

The practice of SEO is wide and varied, and there are no quick fixes, so if your SEO professional suggests new and varied strategies, this is because they are keeping up with the ever vigilant and innovative technicians at Google HQ

The relationship between an SEO company and the Webmaster should be a collaborative partnership, so to coin an old phrase “It is good to talk”

Neil McVey

Net66 SEO: Black Hat SEO Rookie Mistakes

black-26743_640

We focus a lot on White Hat SEO here at Net66, but as with all things understanding what goes through the anti-Net66 helps. So we keep up to date with the latest black hat techniques. Not that we would ever use them, we do this just so that we can see what Google will be penalising in the future.

Because with Google, the house always wins. You might have a good one, a great one in fact, but Google will find your black hat and will slam your website into the ground nose first.

I’m bringing this up because as an SEO I like to think I have a grasp of what’s good and what’s bad. But on a recent expedition into the other side, I discovered that just like White Hat SEO, Black hat SEO has it’s noobs (newbies – newcomers) as well. A realisation I was surprised at as I’d assumed all black hats had a handle on things.

But the question was this:

“If I put black text links on a black background, will Google find them?”

Any SEO worth their salt would tell them this is a bad idea and that’s exactly what happened (bar the trolls who told them it was a great idea). But there are rookies now in all aspects of SEO and it reminded me of me when I was just started out and asked perceived daft questions, often receiving daft answers.

So don’t be afraid to ask any questions as you can only learn from the answers you get.

Blog Post by: Greg McVey

 

SEO – makes the World a Safer Place

After the fury that Edward Snowden caused by telling us all something that we probably already suspected that, our Governments are looking after us and are actively looking for the bad guys out there who want to do us harm, how does SEO fit into all of this ?

Google, and other search engines, have amassed a huge amount of technology in automatically reading absolutely huge amounts of text, and then somehow making sense of it.

Your average search engine can crawl through millions of webpages, index them and selectively serve them back up to us as and when we enter a search query, all within time scale of “two shakes of a lambs tail”

I do not know what goes on at Spy Central, but I guess a liberal use of the software and technology that search engines use is borrowed and adapted to find recurring key words and phrases in communications that fly around the world.

How much of the research and development and blue sky thinking that are put into making our search life easier is diverted to make our real lives safer, is anybodies guess

This is not the place to be political, there are many other other blogs that can discuss those matters so much better than I.

So next time I am toiling away in my office Manchester trying to SEO a phrase to death, and nothing bad has happened, and the lights are on as they should be, and the world carrying on as it should, I will spare a thought for all of the technicians and machines all over the world that are working to keep us all safe.

I think it would be milking it a bit to claim that all SEOs are heros, but all of us who practice the noble art of SEO have made a contribution, however small

Ps If you are a machine in Spy Central and you are reading this “Good day to you”

Neil McVey

Manchester – The Home of Innovation

Manchester – Home of Digital Enterprise

Call me biased, and you would be right, I am Manchester born and bred, and proud of it.
Ok, I have spent my life wondering when it going to stop raining, and recently cannot understand why the Manchester scallies always talk through their nasal passage( yes I said nasal , although I have heard some talk other ways)

But what a City, what a history of inventions and innovation!

The device you are reading this is on a distant offspring of the first computer to store its own programme which was built and developed at Manchester University by Alan Turing. Henry Royce made his first car luxury here, Coronation Street is made here, the Trades Union Congress was formed here mainly because Manchester was at the heart of the Industrial Revolution.
We also have some top drawer footie teams in Manchester City and United.

And now we have the BBC.
OK, most of those media types had have a general anaesthetic before they came “Up North” but some of them have woken up and realised that there is something going on up here.

Now we have a vibrant and lively digital community, springing out from the Manchester Technology Park.
Graphics, Design, Development and SEO, are all being being pushed to the limits by a whole community of boffins.

SEO in Manchester is being developed and adapted in the way that Mancunians have always done, pushing the boundaries of Search Engine Optimisation in inventive ways

There is a healthy competition between all of the SEO technicians in Manchester and that can only be a good thing as we all compete to get the best search results for our clients

Yes I am biased and I love Manchester, and yes I am biased and love my company Net66, so if you do need any SEO I wholeheartedly and unashamedly recommend you come to us in the Northern Quarter of this fair city

In the interest of fairness → Other Cities and other SEO companies are available

Neil McVey