Archive for the ‘Search Engine Optimization’ Category

Frequently Mentioned On The Web New SERP Carousel

Friday, September 14th, 2012 by Commander Riker

Google has rolled out a new feature which was referenced in mid-August by many sources by being Google’s next step in their quest for global knowledge. The feature which is shown below seems to be an addition to their Knowledge Graph, which is Google’s effort for discovering answers to questions you may have, giving you factual information about a topic you are looking for. Here are the search results for “universities in boston:”

The typical search results are shown, except at the top there is a sliding carousel where you can see universities and colleges in Boston. If you click on one of them, the search results updates with the results using the name of the school you picked, for example Suffolk University:

This is a helpful step for searchers because it provides the most relevant search results in a visual way. Also, the results at the bottom of the page are given more prominence because people like clicky carousels with pictures.

What does this mean for search marketing? Well, it seems that those spots in positions 6-10 on the page just got a little more visibility if people are searching for things that are included in the Knowledge Graph. Also this does not impact search engine rankings, so SEOs can breathe a sigh of relief. It will be interesting to see what kind of queries will start bringing up information that you are looking for in this new way. I’ve figured out “popular movies of (year)”, “colleges in (city)”, and “attractions in (city)” produce results this way as well. Play with it; you just might find what you are looking for a whole lot easier. Thanks Google.

FYI: This information in the new feature seems to have Knowledge Graph information only, and it does not mean you will be featured in the carousel if your site is a typical listing.

Google News Sitemaps – What You Need to Know

Wednesday, September 5th, 2012 by abourret

In SEO, sitemaps submitted to a Search Engine’s Webmaster Tools allow a webmaster to index URL’s on a given site. This allows crawlers to easily identify which URL’s are relevant, in return boosting rankings in SERPs. The traditional sitemap is known as an XML sitemap.

Google now offers News Sitemaps which allow easier discoverability and crawling of timely articles on your site. The benefits are highlighted by Google and are presented below:

  • Discover news articles faster: Sitemaps allow Google News to quickly find all of the news articles on a site.
  • Crawl and index all news articles: Sitemaps point our crawler directly to each news articles URL, ensuring full coverage of the content on your site.
  • Extract and display article information more accurately: Sitemaps identify the article titles, as well as the publication date for each article.
  • Characterize article content more accurately: Sitemaps specify the different types of content in your articles by using <access> and <genres> tags.
  • Annotate articles with metadata: Sitemaps clearly identify each article’s content based on specific description such as related keywords or stock tickers. (http://support.google.com/webmasters/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=75717)

So, what are the differences between XML sitemaps and News Sitemaps? One major difference in how frequently News Sitemaps are updated.  XML sitemaps are updated a lot less frequently, while News Sitemaps update every time a new story is published (just like any trusted news source). This leads to the next difference. News Sitemaps can only contain the latest articles and links published in the last two days, therefore the sitemap is a lot shorter. XML sitemaps contain a whole site’s list of indexed links and can be quite long. Another relevant difference is the reliance News Sitemaps have on Timestamps. Since news is constantly changing and users rely on timely information, the Timestamps indicates to the Search Engine when the article first appeared on the site.

It should be noted that Google News does not favor the use of News Sitemaps in page rank results, however it is recommended in order to provide relevant and dynamic content to your audience.

Google Cracks Down On Unnatural Links

Friday, August 3rd, 2012 by Commander Riker

Google recently made a post regarding its Webmasters Tools and unnatural link profiles and removing potentially harmful links. If you’ve received a message regarding these unnatural links pointing to your domain, or are worried about getting that slap on the wrist or the potential banishment of Google, here are a couple quick things you can do to help the situation.

Google unloaded 20,000 of these messages last week, which is one tenth of what they usually deliver each month (200,000 a month is a lot!).  These messages are to domains who potentially contributed to any of the following: widgetbait, paid links, blog spam, guestbook spam, excessive article directory submissions, excessive link exchanges, and other types of link spam. Google advises that if you’ve received this message, to purge your link profile. You can log into webmasters tools and do this through the “Traffic” tab, under “Links to your site”, downloading the pages to your site conveniently by date to a CSV or put it on Google docs.

Then next step is checking these links to make sure there are unnatural ones. This could be a very large process if you have a large site, so spot checking may be best fitting for this. Take away all spammy looking links (saving this list to give to Google), and then after you are done you can send in a reconsideration request. Google is letting people know to keep this in mind and not to have webmasters freak out over this, however definitely take a look and see what kind of link profile you’ve accumulated so you don’t get penalized.

With Google cracking down even more on unnatural links, it’s clear that Google is trying to “clean up the internet” by doing this, and with each previous search algorithm change in the past couple years. If your website wants to be tidy, SEO compliant and be on Google’s good side (who doesn’t?), it’s best to keep things cool with your relationship with the search engine giant.