Australia - Leading Edge

May 24th, 2007 by christine

I was looking through blogs I subscribe to this morning and this made me laugh. I have to be amused at small things. I work by myself.

Problogger, Darren Rowse posted this morning and there was this exchange in the comments between Darren and a reader:

Wow Darren, you wrote this article from the future?

Brian - no not the future - from Australia : -)

I told you I was amused at small things. I personally like the time difference. I can read through a whole lot of updates in blogs, news and forums first thing in the morning. I know that it won’t be updated much during the day (my day) so I get on with whatever I have to do. It’s an enforced discipline and I know how distracting online interaction can be. I’m sure I would hate twitter.

If you read my blog please leave a comment and tell me where you are :-)

Posted in General | 4 Comments »

Seth Godin on Search Marketing

May 23rd, 2007 by christine

Search Engine Land spoke with Seth Godin on the subject of search marketing. Seth has been critical of search marketers in the past and dishes out a fair bit of criticism in the interview. For example he makes this assertion:

“Spending money on ads or commodity-focused SEO is the last gasp of someone who is short on innovation, imagination and great stuff!”

Well I do spend money on ads, for my search marketing business and for my clients. Same with SEO although I’m not quite sure what is meant by commodity-focused SEO. If there’s a better way then I’d rather be doing it so I made a summary of Seth’s points to consider how to be more innovative.

  1. SEO isn’t a replacement for doing the right things (the right things being building remarkable products, getting your best customers to talk about those products, building relationships and playing the long game without being too impatient to get a quick sale).
  2. Personal recommendations are better than any alternative so the future is in blogging, private channels such as RSS, and human controlled sites such as squidoo. Search in its current form is broken.
  3. Many advertisers are lazy. They don’t customise offers to match ads and instead send people to generic or home pages.

At the core of all this is trust, credibility and relevance. If someone we trust and whose opinion we respect recommends something of interest to us then we are quite likely to take action. If the outcome is good to the point that it’s worth remarking on then we are likely to be motivated to tell someone else.

We know this to be true when we’re talking about actual human interaction. I’ll try a restaurant if a friend tells me she had a fantastic meal there.

However, just because something on the Internet has attributes that might indicate a degree of trustworthiness and credibility doesn’t mean that it can actually be trusted or that someone will accept it as being so. I’m talking about attributes like putting a name and perhaps a photo to blogs and comments, or a third party recommendation for a product rather than the company’s own endorsement. These factors can help but we know social media can be manipulated, abused, and used for short term gain. Social media participants can “cheat” just as search engine optimisers can use aggressive tactics to rank highly.

Seth Godin claims that “search is broken” and elaborates by saying:

“Well, if search worked, then you wouldn’t need a strategy! People would find you when you needed to be found, and find someone else the rest of the time. Of course, search is always going to be a bit broken (though it keeps getting better) and the more human person to person recommending that gets included (including squidoo.com), the better it’s going to work.”

Introducing a human element for recommendations isn’t going to mean the true deservers rise to the top. Search and social media are just different mediums. They can both be manipulated and in both cases the “best” content (whatever that means) can remain hidden because the right things weren’t done to get the most visibility.

The search landscape is certainly changing and there are many more opportunities to get a message out other than ranking highly in Google. As Seth says the message may best come from enthusiastic advocates rather than self promotion. I don’t disagree with that.

Seth does actually say what he’d do in place of unimaginative ad placing:

“If I ran a travel site, I’d engage my best customers to build blogs and Squidoo lenses and to use Digg to point to reviews and insights and things that would make people WANT to seek me out.”

A good proportion of my clients’ prospective customers have never even heard of blogs, squidoo lenses and Digg never mind actually created content or looked at any examples.

I manage a paid search campaign for a travel site. We’re always looking at different ways to promote the products and are starting to see a lot more referrals from sites with consumer generated content such as tripadvisor.com. The reality though is that if someone wants to book accommodation online they are most likely to search using Google. A proportion of these people will find the paid ads to be more relevant than the organic listings. And yes when they click they get to an appropriate page and often a custom landing page if it’s a specific offer. Spending money on ads might not be the most innovative, imaginative thing to do, in comparison with say, creating a squidoo lens, but the good thing is, it works.

Posted in Paid Search, SEO, Search Marketing Industry | 3 Comments »

Universal Search and the Impact on SEM

May 17th, 2007 by christine

The big news this week is that Google is rolling out Universal Search. Danny Sullivan describes it as “the most radical change to its search results ever”.

So what is it? This is what I can gather after reading a few different blog reports:

  1. Google has different indexes for different types of data such as web pages, images, video, blogs, news etc. Currently when you do a search you mostly get web pages and occasionally images depending on the query. When Universal Search is rolled out, results will be drawn from all of these media types and blended together on the main results page. This will depend on the search query and how relevant Google determines particular data types to be. So for some queries you might still get a list of web pages. For others there will be a mix of web, video, images etc.
  2. These results have always been available from a navigation menu on the Google search page. What is new is that the user won’t have to specifically request different types of results by clicking on the navigation links. Google will present a selection of results on one page depending on what is considered most relevant for the query.
  3. The searcher can still have an input to this. So, if for example “video” wasn’t initially included as a relevant data type, the searcher can opt to include videos in the search.

The impact from an SEO viewpoint:

  1. Searchers will be much more aware of the full range of media options whereas previously they’ve been somewhat hidden from the average person who doesn’t explore the nav menu. Consequently, there will be much more incentive to optimise for video, image, news etc if these results are going to have far greater prominence. How to optimise is going to be important and early players in this game will have an advantage.
  2. The competition for page one spots for web pages will be greater. For some search queries there may only be 5 or 6 spots available.

The impact in Australia?:

  1. There might be a delay in the rollout of Universal Search here. I haven’t seen any specific mention of timelines for specific countries so we may see it at the same time as users in the US or we may get to see the impact there before it comes into play here.
  2. There are opportunities for people who take advantage of the changes early on. I haven’t paid that much attention to the other data types so far but I searched in “video” for a popular, competitive keyword relevant to one of my clients. There was only one result so if that was blended into the main search page the impact would be noticeable.

The impact on paid search?:

  1. Will it make paid search more desirable? I’m not sure whether they have to be looked at as two separate things entirely or whether you take the attitude that there are 20 slots on the page and it might be easier to pay for an ad than optimise for video. I don’t know yet.
  2. Also, I’m wondering how users will react to these changes. Presumably, the usability tests have been done but if users find the organic results less relevant rather than more relevant then I think they are more likely to look to the paid ads to find what they want.

Any thoughts?

Posted in Universal Search | 3 Comments »

Does the age of an adWords campaign affect the amount of traffic?

May 13th, 2007 by christine

There’s sometimes a start-up period for a new adWords campaign when ads aren’t shown for all keyword matches and so the traffic is lower than it “should” be.

I covered it in this post on what to expect from a brand new PPC campaign.

My assessment of the reasons for lower traffic has been that it’s because a new campaign has no history and therefore the keyword quality scores are predictive and probably pessimistic. Google doesn’t show all variations of broad matches for keywords (accounts?) with a low quality score hence the waiting period for the full quota of traffic due. When actual data comes into the equation a high performing campaign can have superior quality scores and traffic will start to increase when ads are shown on broader variations of keywords.

There’s another interesting theory about the adWords “sandbox” on the RevenueWire PPC super affiliate blog. This is that Google puts a “go slow” on new campaigns until they have established that the advertiser can pay the bill.

Posted in Google AdWords Advanced | No Comments »

Found Agency Loses Google Rankings

May 11th, 2007 by christine

Is search engine optimisation still about rankings?

Lee Odden’s post in toprankblog is titled “Are Search Engine Rankings Are Dead?”. (I’m guessing the original title was “Search Engine Rankings Are Dead” and then he decided maybe it wasn’t so clear cut so he changed it to a question).

Anyway, The Australian had an article this week about Found Agency, a leading SEM firm in Sydney “Google slaps ‘black hat’ penalty on top search ranking”. Apparently Found Agency have plummeted in the rankings for the term “search engine optimisation”, having held a high position for this phrase for a while. Google didn’t like the fact that a good proportion of their links are coming from a hit counter that websites are using to record the number of visitors. The hit counter in question has a link to the Found Agency website. These links have been devalued by Google and the Found Agency no longer ranks for “search engine optimisation” and other relevant phrases. Actually they don’t even rank for their name any more. A search for “Found Agency” has in the number one slot the latest newsletter article from Search Engine Room “Found Agency tumbles in Google Rankings”. On page one, half of the results are about the Found Agency “penalty” for “black hat techniques”.

I doubt if the drop in rankings will have a significant impact on their business. This gets back to the points made in Lee Odden’s post about rankings having much less significance now particularly with the advent of personalisation and the growing impact of social media.

The biggest problem for the Found Agency is how they will manage their online reputation. They’ve put a notice on the home page of their website denying the rumours that they’ve been banned or blacklisted. I haven’t seen much blogging activity on the news yet despite the claim in the Australian that it has “spread like wildfire through the search marketing industry”.

I’ll conclude with a link for anyone unfortunate enough to be in this position.

Guide to Online Reputation Monitoring and Management

Posted in Online Reputation Management | No Comments »

My Pick of the ProBlogger Top 5 Lists

May 10th, 2007 by christine

These are my picks from the problogger group writing project. There were some great entries and I found some new blogs I like. The first 3 are on topic for my blog. I naturally gravitated towards the seo and ppc posts and these all contain good information. The last 2 were entries unrelated to search marketing but ones I particularly liked.

It was an interesting process. I found myself analysing why I clicked some titles and not others so it drilled home some copywriting lessons.

Top 5 Top Blog Posts in SEO by Michael Jensen

Top 5 Ways Ignorant Advertisers Lose Money to Google via AdWords by Richard Ball

Top 5 Ways to Lose Your Great Search Engine Rankings Fast! by DazzlinDonna

Top 5 Ways to Become a Major Poet or Problogger (With Apologies to W. H. Auden). by Geoffrey Philp

Top 5 Things About My Ex by Katie Baird

Also, I made it on to a favourites list which felt good :) I’ll include the link because his picks were good ones (in addition to my entry I mean :) )

My Life With IT

Posted in Blogging | 1 Comment »

Google Hell: Top 5 Reasons You Are There And How to Escape

May 8th, 2007 by christine

By way of some background, Google has two indexes, the main index and a supplemental index. The supplemental index has been given the name Google Hell amongst others. There are some good reasons why you don’t want pages of your website or blog to be in the supplemental index.

  • Pages from the main index show up first so if you are stuck in supplemental your pages will be way down in the rankings for anything competitive
  • Google doesn’t crawl the supplemental index as often so once there it can take a long time to get back

To ascertain whether your pages are in Google Hell use the search query site:www.yourwebsite.com.au

The supplemental pages will have supplemental result after the url.

Top 5 Reasons

  1. Duplicate or Similar Content

Pages with very similar or duplicated content are likely to end up in the supplemental index. Blogs can have a problem if posts are short and therefore pages are similar to each other with elements such as navigation, blogrolls etc repeated on each page. Longer posts with unique content will fix this as will comments.

  1. Similar Page Titles

Give each page a unique page title. With blogs beware of generated page titles that are all very similar because the blog name is prefixed to the title. This is more of a problem with long blog names. Don’t leave these titles as they are or Google will determine that all your pages are about the same thing and will regard them as duplicates. There are plugins for wordpress blogs that allow you to customise the page title. Seo Title Tag is one.

  1. Similar or Duplicated Page Descriptions

The same applies to the description metatag. Make sure that you enter a unique description for every page. The Seo Title Tag plugin has this feature for wordpress blogs.

  1. Poor Quality External Linking

One of the the top reasons for a page being in the supplemental index is a lack of relevant links from quality sites. Write good quality content that is worth linking to and get trusted links. Don’t take part in link exchange programmes.

  1. Poor Internal Linking Structure

It can be hard at first to get good quality external links but you do have control over links to pages from other pages on your website or blog. If a page ends up in the supplemental index a few internal links pointing to it, in addition to fixing any duplicate problems outlined above, can get it out.

(This post is part of the problogger group writing project. I’d like to welcome any first time visitors who clicked through from problogger).

Posted in Blogging, SEO | 19 Comments »

Google Analytics - New Version Released

May 8th, 2007 by christine

There’s a new version of Google Analytics out and all accounts will be upgraded over the next few weeks. Most of the analytics bloggers on my list wrote about it yesterday.

My accounts haven’t been upgraded yet so I can’t see the changes first hand but this is a great write up on Google Analytics V2 from Avinash Kaushik with screen shots.

Posted in Web Analytics | No Comments »

PPC Affiliate - Blog Recommendation

May 1st, 2007 by christine

I read about 20 blogs each day and there are others that I look at on occasion. This is one of my favourites at the moment so here’s a link. It’s relatively new and there have been some good posts. Also check out their keyword manager. I’ve been a big fan of Aaron Wall’s keyword tool for a while and this is similar with a couple more features.

Here’s the link:

PPC Super Affiliate Blog

Posted in Keywords, Paid Search | 2 Comments »