Rusty and Cay

Rusty and Cay
My Buddy Cay ~ Wish He was still with us

Thursday, June 25, 2015

5 Social Strategies for Local Business Owners

Social networks have made it much easier for businesses to target local audiences on the Web thanks to features like hashtags, check-ins and ad targeting.

The problem, however, is that many of the businesses that could benefit from these features the most are not using them to their full advantage (or at all). Fortunately, it’s not that difficult or time consuming for businesses to add local elements to their social media marketing initiatives. For some help getting started, check out five social strategies featured below for the everyday local business owner:
  1. Update the Bio/About Section

Local business owners should pay special attention to the bio/about section on their social profiles because this valuable real estate can impact consumers’ decisions to follow or like a brand. Moreover, this section enables businesses to showcase their establishment’s hours of operation, address and contact info, which is both convenient and helpful for local customers.Google+ and Facebook are especially important because of their impact on search results. Information from a business’s Google+ Page, for example, is displayed in relevant searches conducted on Google. Conversely, Facebook’s Graph Search functionality displays information from Pages’ about section in relevant searches conducted on the social network, including natural language searches like “restaurants near me” (see image below).

Facebook-mexican
  1. Ask for Actions

Actions like check-ins, retweets, shares and likes increase a company’s organic visibility on the social Web, so it is not a bad idea to ask audiences for these actions every once in a while. That said, it is important that a brand doesn’t overdo these requests, as doing so can annoy customers.It is important to note that local businesses can ask for actions like retweets and shares within their posts, as well as display check-in reminders inside their brick-and-mortar stores. These reminders can even include incentives, such as a 15 percent discount on purchases for consumers that check in on Facebook during their visit. In addition to increasing a business’s visibility, actions such as check-ins, likes and reviews are displayed on Facebook Pages and likely have an impact on Pages’ rankings in Graph Search results.
  1. Foster a Community

Businesses can use Facebook’s Group and Event features to foster a community of local customers on the social network. Groups can be kept private or open to the public, and provide a direct communication channel for businesses to interact with their audience members. Plus, companies can create and promote events for the local community on Facebook, which is a great way to drive foot traffic to brick-and-mortar stores and create buzz among local customers.Similarly, Google+ offers a “Communities” feature that enables businesses to participate in Hangouts (video chats) with community members and create local events. These features can be leveraged to help business owners foster better relationships with local customers both online and offline.

Bentleys Corner Bakery
  1. Use Hashtags

Hashtags can help any business increase its organic reach on most social networks. To increase visibility with a local audience, however, businesses should use location-based hashtags, such as #chicago, #sanfrancisco or #miami.Take Frank’s Bar for example. The establishment used the city hashtag #Chicago as well as the more specific neighborhood hashtag #LincolnPark to increase its visibility with locals who search for the hashtags on Twitter. In addition, Frank’s Bar used these hashtags during a time when Chicago was trending online, right after the Blackhawks won this year’s Stanley Cup.
  1. Target via Ads

The most effective way to reach locals on Facebook and Twitter is undoubtedly through advertising. Both social networks offer robust targeting options that enable users to reach audiences based on location as well as other data like interests, behavior, keywords and more. #svpPlayerOutter1369v1 {width: 900px; position:relative; margin:10px auto 10px auto; background:url(//teamvfm.com/newsletter/wp-content/plugins/a10-imaio/player/playerskins/carbonfiber/carbonfiber-widescreen.png) no-repeat top left;background-size: contain; }#svpPlayerInner1369v1 {position: absolute;width:94.5127719962157%;height:86.8827160493827%;left:2.74361400189215%;top:4.16666666666667%;}#svpPlayerMid1369v1 {position:relative;padding-top: 1px;padding-bottom: 61.1%; }* html #svpPlayerInner1369v1 {margin-bottom: 45px;margin-bottom: 0;}#svpPlayerOutter1369v1 #svpViral1369v1 {position: absolute;left: 2.74361400189215%;top: 4.16666666666667%;}#svpPlayerInner1369v1 #im5replace1369v1, #svpPlayerInner1369v1 #im5playerDiv1369v1, #svpPlayerInner1369v1 embed, #svpPlayerInner1369v1 object{position: absolute;width:100%;height:100%;left:0px;top:0px;}#im5playerDiv1369v1 .fluid-width-video-wrapper, #im5playerDiv1369v1 iframe { position:absolute !important; z-index:101 !important; padding-top:0 !important; padding-bottom: 0 !important; height:100% !important; width:100% !important; }#svpPlayerInner1369v1 #im5playerDiv1369v1 #im5player1369v1 {position: absolute;width:100%;height:100%;}

Social Media Optimization SMO Strategies Increase Your Marketing

Businesses need Social Media Optimization SMO Strategies to Increase Your Marketing to survive in today’s economy. This video explains how social media optimization techniques used in conjunction with social networks help you get more customers and sales.Business owners may not realize it yet but Social Media Optimization SMO Strategies Increase Your Marketing are now a crucial marketing necessity if their venture is to compete in this economy. The emergence of social networks over the past few years has changed the way businesses reach out to their audience. In fact, it is no longer enough to have a website, get backlinks, and rank well on Google. Today, a successful business needs essential elements: networking, awareness, engagement, trust, and loyalty – all of which are achievable through Social Media Optimization SMO Strategies which will in turn Increase Your Marketing.

For more information on How to use Social Media Optimization SMO Strategies Increase Your Marketing see our channel https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqXEqnxTNkEUG5T9_KA9I5whttps://www.facebook.com/VirtualFocusedMarketinghttp... or email us now for a free consultation on How to use Social Media Optimization SMO Strategies to Increase Your Marketing| 661.524.0626 | info@virtualfocusedmarketing.com

What’s more, Facebook recently launched an advertising format specifically for local businesses, dubbed local awareness ads. This ad format enables businesses to deliver targeted ads to groups of people who are within a certain proximity to the company’s brick-and-mortar store (see image below). Plus, the social network has an “Offer” ad format, which enables businesses to promote discounts or deals that customers can claim on Facebook and redeem in-stores.



Wednesday, June 24, 2015

Knowledge Graph Optimization

A few months ago I offhandedly made a reference to KGO which stands for Knowledge Graph Optimization.Now, I know what you’re thinking. We need another acronym like another hole in the head! But over the past year I feel like there are a set of tactics that can help you optimize your site’s connection to the Knowledge Graph. And that can yield material gains in search visibility.

The Knowledge Graph

Googles Knowledge Graph Here’s a brief explanation from Google for those not familiar with the Knowledge Graph.The Knowledge Graph enables you to search for things, people or places that Google knows about—landmarks, celebrities, cities, sports teams, buildings, geographical features, movies, celestial objects, works of art and more—and instantly get information that’s relevant to your query. This is a critical first step towards building the next generation of search, which taps into the collective intelligence of the web and understands the world a bit more like people do.It’s about searching for things instead of strings. Or without the rhyming, it’s about entities instead of text.Take the query ‘Golden State Warriors’. From a string stand point you’d be looking at the individual keywords which might be confusing. Now, Google got extremely good at understanding terms that were most frequently used together using bigrams and other methods so that this query would yield a result about the NBA basketball team.But with the Knowledge Graph Google can instead identify ‘Golden State Warriors’ as an entity (a thing) that has a specific entry in the Knowledge Graph and return a much richer result.Golden State Warriors Pretty amazing stuff really. (Go Warriors!) Hummingbird was largely an infrastructure update that allowed Google to take advantage of burgeoning entity data. So we’re just getting started with the application of entities on search.

Entity Challenge

Challenge Accepted You need only look to the Entity Recognition and Disambiguation Challenge co-sponsored by Microsoft and Google to see the writing on the wall.The objective of an Entity Recognition and Disambiguation (ERD) system is to recognize mentions of entities in a given text, disambiguate them, and map them to the entities in a given entity collection or knowledge base.Can it be any more clear? Well, actually, it can.The Challenge is composed of two parallel tracks. In the “long text” track, the challenge targets are pages crawled from the Web; these contain documents that are meant to be easily understood by humans. The “short text” track, on the other hand, consists of web search queries that are intended for a machine. As a result, the text is typically short and often lacks proper punctuation and capitalization.Search engines are chomping at the bit to get better at extracting entities from documents and queries so they can return more relevant and valuable search results.

So …

Wiley Coyote But what exactly are we supposed to do? There has been little in the way of real rubber-meets-the-road content that describes how you might go about optimizing for this new world full of entities. One of the exceptions would be Aaron Bradley’s Semantic SEO post, though it mixes both theory and tactics.Now, I love theory. That’s pretty clear from my writing. But today I want to talk more about tactics, about the actual stuff we can do as marketers to affect change in the Knowledge Graph.

Nouns

Nouns The first thing we can do is make sure we’re using the entity names in our writing. That ERD challenge above? Well, the systems they’re designing are looking to extract entities from text.So if you’re not using the entity names – the nouns – in your writing then you’re going to make it vastly more difficult for search engines to identify and match entities. This does not mean you should engage in entity stuffing and mention every associated entity you can think of in your content.Write clearly so that both humans and search engines know what the hell you’re talking about.

Connect

Connect All The Things Stop hoarding authority and ‘link juice’ by not linking out to other sites. The connections between sites and pages are important and not just in a traditional PageRank formula.I think of it this way. The entities that are contained on one page are transmitted to linked pages and vice versa.Entities are meta information passed in links.

Structured Data

Structured-Data You can make the identification of entities easier for search engines by using schema.org markup along with some other forms of structured data. Not only will this ensure that the number of entities that are transmitted via links increase, it can often make connections to the Knowledge Graph with a very limited amount of data.

Google Maps Entity Hack

So, here’s the actual bit of discovery that I’ve been holding onto for six months and is the real impetus for this entire post. If you go to Google Maps and search for a branded term coupled with a geographic location you often get some very interesting results. Take ‘zillow san diego, ca‘ for instance.Zillow-San-DiegoLook at all those results and red dots! I didn’t ask for realtors, mortgage brokers or appraisers in my query. I simply used the term Zillow in combination with a geography and got these very related and relevant results. They’re not simply looking for a Zillow office located in San Diego.So, lets look at the details here to see what’s going on. I’ll take one of the red dots and investigate further.Zillow-San-Diego-2 So why is this on the map results? First I go to the linked website.mesa-pacific So, there are no links to Zillow anywhere on the site and the address and phone number here don’t match the one on Google Maps. But they are the ones listed on his Zillow Profile.Zillow-mesapac Now the link to the website closes the connection here so it’s not completely linkless, but I still find it pretty amazing. And this is without Zillow fully optimizing the markup. They declare the page as an organization.Zillow-codeBut they don’t detail out the professional information with schema markup.Zillow-code-2Instead they’re using some old(er) school definition list markup for list term and description. Combined with the organization scope it looks like Google can put 1 and 1 together.Google+In doing due diligence I found Mesa Pacific Mortgage also has a Google+ page which reinforces the right address and phone number. So the connection isn’t as startling as it might seem but it’s still intriguing.And I have no idea in what order these things came into existence. It’s pretty clear the Zillow listing probably came first based on the 2006 Member Since date on his profile. Whether the Google+ Local page and associated map listing came directly as a result is unknown.In fact, as you do more and more investigation as to what shows up on the map and what doesn’t it seems like a Google+ Local page is required. However, a fair amount of them have been created by Google. Obviously Google uses a multitude of sources to create these listing. If you can be one of those sources, all the better. But even if you’re not, connecting to these entities delivers value to all involved.Let’s look at another Google Maps result.Zillow-San-Deigo-3If you follow that reviews link you wind up on their Google+ page.Measpac-google-pageOdd that Google isn’t sucking in the reviews from Zillow, which would show a greater connection. Google+ Local Pages provide a vast database of entities for Google. And they rely on the data in Google+ more than that from other sources.Measpac-google-page-2Here the phone number on Zillow doesn’t match the one on Google+ or Google Maps. A quick aside that you’re also seeing the potential to create a relationship between Keke Jones (person) and Pacific Sotheby’s Int’l Realty (place). But I digress.Outside of the website connection and address match in that Professional Information section, the other reason this result shows up for this search is because they use Zillow products on their website.Zillow-Products-PageThe rest of you can run away of these types of implementations based on poor analysis of a Matt Cutts video if you like, but that would be a mistake in my view.Okay, one last example. Lets zoom in and find another result.Roger-Google-Page

The hours data indicates that Roger probably has a Google+ Page. Yup.

Roger-Google-Page-2Now we can see that they’re pulling in reviews from Zillow and Roger does have a profile on Zillow. So why he shows up for a Zillow+Geography search is pretty straight-forward.Interestingly, searching for ‘homethinking san diego, ca’ on Google Maps does not return Roger Ma. Perhaps because they don’t include an address line 1 or because they only use hreview-aggregate and don’t declare a schema.org scope (thank you handy structured data testing tool bookmarklet).Tough to say but you can see how important it might be to ensure you did what was necessary to confirm these connections.

People Talk About

Amber Bristro Now lets home in (pun intended) on the ‘People talk about’ feature. These terms are generated though some process/algorithm that analyzes the review text and pulls out the relevant (depending on who you ask) key phrases.Now, I’m not going to go too far down this rabbit hole, though I think it’s possible Google might be using both review text and query syntax to create these phrases. Bill Slawski did a nice job teasing out how Google finds ‘known for’ terms for entities.What’s important in my view is that these key phrases become more meta information that gets passed back and forth through entity connections.Google is assigning this entity (Roger Ma) a certain cluster of key phrases including ‘sell a home’ and ‘great realtor’. Zillow is connected to this entity, as we’ve demonstrated, which means that those key phrases are, on some level, applied to Zillow’s page and site.Now imagine the aggregated key phrases from connected entities that are flowing into Zillow. Do you think that might give Google a better idea of exactly when and for what queries they should return Zillow content?And Google might very well know the terms people used to get to Roger Ma’s page on Zillow and use that to inform all of the other connected entities. That’s speculation but it’s made with over six months of experimentation and observation.I can’t share many of the details because I’m under various NDAs, but once you make these connections using structured data there seems to be an increased ability to rank for relevant terms.

SameAs

Okay, we veered off a bit into theory so lets get back to tactics. If you have a page that is about a known entity you may want to use the SameAs schema.org property.Property same asIf I had to describe it plainly, I’d say sameAs acts as an entity canonical. Sure, it’s a bit more complicated than that and has a lot to do with confirming identity but in my experience using sameAs properly can be a valuable (and more direct) way of telling search engines what entity that page contains or represents.sameas-codeHere you see that a page about Leonardo DiCaprio a sameAs property to his Wikipedia entry. Now, obviously you could try to spam this property but there would be a number of ways to catch this type of behavior. Sadly, I know that won’t stop some of you.

Wikipedia

wikipedia Like it or not Wikipedia is still a primary source of data for the Knowledge Graph. If you’ve got a lot of time, patience and can be objective rather than subjective you can wade into Wikipedia to help create company profiles, provide reference links (more important than you may imagine) and generally ensure that your brand is represented in as many legitimate places as possible.Your goal here isn’t to spam Wikipedia but to simply crack the Kafka-like nature of Wikipedia moderation and provide a real representation of your site or brand that adds value to the entire corpus and platform.

Freebase

Freebase on the other hand has a different type of challenge. Instead of obstinate editors and human drama, Freebase is just … a byzantine structure of updates. The good news? It’s a direct line to the Knowledge Graph.For instance if you search for Twitter this is the Knowledge Card you get as a result.TwitterThere’s no Google+ part of the Knowledge Card because there is no reference to a Google+ Page under Social Media Presence.twitter-social-media-presenceTurns out they don’t have a Google+ Page. Seriously? Man, get with it Twitter. Compare this to StumbleUpon.StumbleUponThey’ve got the business specific information as well as the Google+ integration with the Recent posts unit. Why? They’ve got a Google+ entry in their Social Media Presence on Freebase.StumbleUpon-Freebase

How about Foursquare?

FoursquareOy! Not so good. They’ve got their Google+ account in Freebase.social-media-presence-2However, the business section on their ‘Inc.’ entry in Freebase (different from the standard entry) is empty.inc-entry Now, the interplay between a standard entry and a business entry on Freebase can be strange and some entities don’t even need this dual set-up, which makes understanding how to enter it all really complex. So, it’s not just you who thinks updating Freebase is hard. But … it’s totally worth it.Because Freebase really is where the Knowledge Graph flows as I’ve just shown. For just one more example, look at the Knowledge Card for Garret Dillahunt and then look at the data in his Freebase entry. Match the elements that show up in the Knowledge Card. Convinced?You might ask why Google links to Wikipedia in the Knowledge Cards and not Freebase? Have you looked at Freebase!? It’s not a destination site anyone on the Google search team would wish on a user. That and Wikipedia has a solid brand that likely resonates with a majority of users.

KGO

Knowledge Graph Optimization is just getting started but here are the real things (pun intended) you can do to start meeting this new world head on.

Use Entities (aka Nouns) In Your Writing

Make it easy for users and search engines to know what you’re talking about by using the actual names of the entities in your writing.

Get Connected and Link Out To Relevant Sites

Stop hoarding link juice and link out to relevant sites so that the entity information can begin to flow between sites.

Use Structured Data To Increase Entity Detection

Make it easier for search engines to detect, extract and connect entities to the Knowledge Graph by using various forms of structured data.

Go A Step Further and Use the sameAs Property

When appropriate use the sameAs property to reference the exact Freebase or Wikipedia entry for that entity. Think of it as an entity canonical.

Claim and Optimize Your Google+ Presence

There’s no doubt that Google+ sits in the middle of a lot of the knowledge graph, particularly about places. So claim and optimize your presence, which also extends to getting reviews.

Get Exposure on Wikipedia

Put on some music and slug it out with Wikepedians who seem straight from Monty Python’s Argument sketch and edit your profile and add some appropriate references.

Edit and Update Your Freebase Entry

Update your Freebase entry and make it as complete as possible. I hope to have a more instructive post on editing Freebase some time in the near future.Knowledge Graph Optimization (KGO) is about making it easy to connect to as many relevant entities as possible so that search engines better understand your site on a ‘thing’ level and can pass important meta information between connected entities.Guest Poster:

// AJ Kohn // March 10th 2014 // KGO + SEO


Tuesday, June 16, 2015

VFM Website Audit Report, Seo Analysis, Web Site Promotion

A website audit report can show why your website is not ranking on Google & driving your sales.

Through their website, small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs) are able to compete with larger corporations that are equipped with bigger marketing budgets. It’s no surprise that SMB owners ranked “website” as their top digital marketing solution. They also think it’s more effective than email and social media. With owners putting this much value on their website, it’s normal to think that they are also investing heavily on site troubleshooting, maintenance, and optimization… or so we thought.

When was the last time your website underwent a thorough audit report? Six months ago? Last year? If you answered “never,” you’re part of the majority of SMB owners who may be in trouble. Because really, terrible Google rankings and poor user experience are just the tip of the iceberg. Discover how you can detect your website’s major issues today, before it’s too late.

Call or email us now for a free consultation | 661.524.0626 | info@virtualfocusedmarketing.com




The Collateral Damage of Google’s Link Policy

Monday, June 8th, 2015 at 4:04 pm
Google’s “com­pany phi­los­o­phy” states “Google search works because it relies on the mil­lions of indi­vid­u­als post­ing links on web­sites to help deter­mine which other sites offer con­tent of value.” Over the last two years Google has rolled out a series of algo­rithm updates and pub­lic rela­tions tac­tics that have lead the SEO indus­try to ques­tion this fun­da­men­tal premise. Are links good or bad? What is the real dif­fer­ence between build­ing and earn­ing links? Has Google bro­ken the Internet?

A Brief His­tory of Linking

Before the Inter­net, writ­ers would cite their sources in foot­notes or a bib­li­og­ra­phy. The web allowed peo­ple to give a direct link to those sources for more infor­ma­tion on a topic. Google started using links as an indi­ca­tor that a site was a good one and moved that web­site to a place where more peo­ple would find it: Page one of the search results. Fig­ur­ing out ways to cre­ate back­links became a new indus­try. Some pur­posely man­u­fac­tured links made for Google search results that weren’t nec­es­sar­ily the best results. That’s when every­thing went hay­wire.
Fear?

Some­times

Brett Bastello of Inseev Inter­ac­tive received this mes­sage from a reporter who quoted him in an arti­cle: “Per our com­pany guide­lines, all the out­siders links are nofol­low links.” Bastello assumes this has to do with fear of a Google penalty and says, “unfor­tu­nately this think­ing couldn’t be fur­ther from the truth and the amount of mis­in­for­ma­tion cir­cu­lat­ing around this topic is astound­ing. Just as Wikipedia ref­er­ences out­side web­sites, Google likes to see blogs and web­sites ref­er­enc­ing other qual­i­fied and author­i­ta­tive web­sites on sim­i­lar top­ics. The rea­son the links on Wikipedia are nofol­lowed is because it is User Gen­er­ated Con­tent with a high pos­si­bil­ity of abuse, how­ever, as an edi­tor of a web­site you have 100% of the con­tent con­trol, and thus, this elim­i­nates vir­tu­ally any pos­si­bil­ity of abuse, there­fore, these sites should be dofol­low­ing the links.”

Agreed.

But, read Rand Fishkin’s blog post about an unwar­ranted Google penalty. No won­der peo­ple are afraid!
Hold­ing onto the Link Juice Simon Ensor of Yel­low­ball, believes that “some web­sites have a pol­icy of not link­ing out to web­sites, usu­ally due to a fairly archaic rule of attempt­ing to con­serve their PageR­ank (or ‘link juice’). This ‘rule’ is highly con­tested nowa­days with co-occurrence and co-citation being pre­ferred by the major­ity of the SEO world, how­ever web­sites are usu­ally slower to change poli­cies than SEOs. In my expe­ri­ence it is often the case that the per­son man­ag­ing it is either adher­ing to poli­cies set years ago or has heard about con­tain­ing PageR­ank and is cling­ing to it as a valu­able source of SEO knowledge!”
From Josh Rubin of Cre­ative Cal­i­for­nia: “For some rea­son, the con­cept of link juice bleed­ing started to get some­what pop­u­lar when Page Rank was in the heights of its usage. A web­mas­ter who has his ear to SEO a lit­tle bit might have heard that you can bleed link juice by hav­ing out­go­ing links, and doesn’t want to lose the value of the page. It’s wrong, but that’s the thought.” John Holtkamp of Aper­ture Inter­ac­tive has heard ref­er­ences to Link Juice when he’s been denied a link, he said: “The basic idea is that sites gain juice by get­ting linked to, and they give away juice by link­ing to other sites. I know it sounds silly, but it is real.” And Bill Elward of Cas­tle Ink Car­tridges says: “The issue is a mis­un­der­stand­ing around SEO. Too many peo­ple still think that link­ing out to third par­ties squan­ders PageR­ank. In real­ity Google likes to see exter­nal links when they aren’t con­trived and enhance the user experience.” Allen Wal­ton of SpyGuy Secu­rity was inter­viewed for a story about entre­pre­neur­ship and pro­vided a lot of valu­able infor­ma­tion. He said: “It was a great arti­cle, but they didn’t link to me. So I asked why. They told me, ‘Sorry, we don’t know any­thing about your com­pany and can’t endorse it.’ Even though I gave them all sorts of info and advice they posted on their own web­site! Crazy link-juice hogs.”

Don’t Push Your Luck

Many sites accept guest posts and cer­tainly, authors who write a piece of con­tent that is wor­thy of being pub­lished on the site deserve to get a link for their efforts. But James Rice of Wik­i­Job says, “by ask­ing for spe­cific anchor text in the link you are ask­ing for a less nat­ural link, and the site owner may (jus­ti­fi­ably) start to worry about a poten­tial search engine penalty. Don’t go down this route. Just request the link itself and leave it up to them to link as they choose.” That sounds rea­son­able. But too many sites stick with the “brand link in the bio” pol­icy and won’t give a link in the con­tent itself, even when the link leads to crit­i­cal infor­ma­tion for the reader.

But, That’s Where I Found It

Mike Juba of EZSolution.com can point to mul­ti­ple occa­sions where peo­ple post his info­graph­ics with­out a source link. “Some­times, they link to visual.ly where they found it, and I ask to link to the orig­i­nal source and they refuse because they claim since they found it on visual.ly they use them as the source,” he com­mented.
In Decem­ber, my agency posted data from a sur­vey of dig­i­tal mar­keters. Numer­ous web­sites ref­er­enced the data; some linked to it, some didn’t. One writer linked to a press release about the sur­vey, most likely because that’s where she found it. Upon reach­ing out to the writer and request­ing a link to the actual sur­vey data, the writer redi­rected the link. Link­ing to the real source would cer­tainly be more use­ful for the reader. But was ask­ing for the link unnat­ural or manip­u­la­tive?
TeamVFM SEO
Cameron Gra­ham of TechnologyAdvice.com asserts that: “Rep­utable sites almost never have an issue with link­ing to con­tent that they cite. Occa­sion­ally they may not know where a stat orig­i­nated from, but if we reach out and pro­vide a link to the report, they’re often more than happy to update the post.”
There’s no harm in reach­ing out to ask the site owner to link to your site if you are in fact the orig­i­nal source. You’ve earned that link! Out­reach doesn’t always work though.

That Other Site is Bet­ter than Yours

Chris of cutcabletoday.com broke a big story in his indus­try that got picked up by major pub­li­ca­tions like Engad­get and TechCrunch. The major sites linked to his site as a source for the story, but a num­ber of oth­ers who picked up the story didn’t men­tion his site, opt­ing instead to cite the big­ger sources. He’s reached out to the sites that ran this story with­out link­ing or men­tion­ing his site and they either ignored his request or didn’t add the link for one rea­son or another. Chris’ the­ory: “These web­sites pre­fer to link to a pop­u­lar main­stream pub­li­ca­tion than a smaller blog like mine. Maybe they feel it gives them more cred­i­bil­ity link­ing to a site like Engadget.” It is true that a well-known site that ref­er­ences con­tent on a lesser-known site will get linked to like crazy. For exam­ple, Hub­spot pub­lishes “ulti­mate lists” with data from numer­ous sources. Bet they get lots of links and the orig­i­nal sources don’t. And bet some of those orig­i­nal sources spend pre­cious time try­ing to get the link redirected.

Not to be Self­ish, But…

Brock Mur­ray of SEO­plus was recently inter­viewed by the Finan­cial Post; he asked for a link on the online ver­sion of the arti­cle and the author didn’t do it. “My thought is they dis­cour­age link­ing out as much as pos­si­ble so as to keep the read­ers on their site rather than link­ing out. It’s pretty com­mon, par­tic­u­larly in the news media indus­try.” Jor­dan Bauer of Ver­sique finds that “a com­mon objec­tion is they want to keep users on their web­site instead of giv­ing them an exit por­tal.” And Sean Graw of Brad’s Deals thinks “some sites don’t like link­ing because they want to keep users on-site and drive up pageviews. That’s gen­er­ally the expla­na­tion I get from reporters.“
Of course a busi­ness wants to keep vis­i­tors on site. Of all the rea­sons for not adding an earned link, that makes the most sense. When quoted in arti­cles about finan­cial plan­ning, Dale Degagne has been denied links due to “cor­po­rate pol­icy.” He says, “They did not inform me of this pol­icy until I asked. They get what they want — a story and a solid ref­er­ence, and I did both inter­views with­out a link pro­vided because in the end, it’s still good publicity.”
Prob­a­bly true, when it’s a local news site that might gen­er­ate busi­ness, or a well-known site like New York Times or CNN. An obscure site that won’t give you a link in exchange for your exper­tise is prob­a­bly not worth your time.

Links are a Hot Commodity

“Many web­sites and blogs have now come to real­ize the impor­tance of links and just how valu­able they really are and expect finan­cial remu­ner­a­tion for exter­nal links. They equate link­ing out to other plat­forms with the pro­vi­sion of a ser­vice,” says Wojtek Mazur of Ele­phate­SEO. Jonathan Bentz of Netrepid agrees that in many cases, it’s “No pay? No play!” Bentz says “Of all the rea­sons I’ve had link requests rejected, this is prob­a­bly the most com­mon rea­son.“
So that’s still going on… and pay­ing for links is a vio­la­tion of Google policy.
SEO illu­mi­nati make things sounds sim­ple — “Just cre­ate great con­tent and it will earn links.” But Google has a long his­tory of putting out vague guide­lines and infor­ma­tion about links, which has cre­ated this cul­ture of hav­ing to care­fully nego­ti­ate your way into get­ting a link that you’ve earned. #thanks­google
Has Google bro­ken the Inter­net? What is it like on the ground for you?

Guest Post By:

Adam Stet­zer
Jun 4, 2015
Adam Stetzer

SMBs Hit Hardest By Mobilegeddon

Monday, June 8th, 2015 at 6:00 pm
If you are a Small or Medium busi­ness owner, you prob­a­bly didn’t know or did noth­ing to pro­tect your­self against Google’s’ Mobi­leged­don. Your NOT alone most SMBs/SMOs didn’t do any­thing to pro­tect their web­sites and online pres­ence and you will soon now be feel­ing it’s rath! Though many con­sider Mobi­leged­don to have been much ado about noth­ing, dig­i­tal agency

Googles Mobilgeddon
Koozai found that Google’s mobile-focused algo­rithm has had a sig­nif­i­cant impact on small and medium-sized busi­nesses (SMB).


Accord­ing to Koozai’s May sur­vey of 2,000 SMBs with 50 or fewer employ­ees, 46 per­cent of respon­dents have expe­ri­enced changes in rank­ing. From that group, 41 per­cent have seen a drop in rank­ings by at least three places, result­ing in drops in traf­fic — as much as 50 per­cent in some cases. “The hype that the Google mobile update would cause car­nage in the search engine rank­ings missed the larger pic­ture,” says Ben Nor­man, chief exec­u­tive (CEO) of Koozai. “Exag­ger­at­ing the impact meant that busi­nesses didn’t antic­i­pate that even small changes in their rank­ing can have a big impact on their organic mobile search results.“
Google takes around 200 dif­fer­ent fac­tors into account when deter­min­ing rank. So while the search pow­er­house stressed the impor­tance of mobile-optimization, it’s hardly the be all, end all of deter­min­ing a company’s posi­tion. Koozai found that 27 per­cent of busi­nesses dropped in rank­ings despite hav­ing opti­mized their sites for mobile. Nor­man says that many busi­ness own­ers are frus­trated, feel­ing like they’re expe­ri­enc­ing a neg­a­tive impact after act­ing on Google’s warn­ings. He says that speaks to how fre­quently SMBs fail to under­stand SEO and e-commerce analytics. “Many con­sumers today will research on mobile and then pur­chase on desk­top,” he says. “Many SMBs are miss­ing out on these lead-creation oppor­tu­ni­ties if they don’t know if their e-commerce sites aren’t giv­ing their poten­tial cus­tomers a good expe­ri­ence on mobile.” Of the busi­nesses sur­veyed, 37 per­cent were con­cerned that the algo­rithm update would impact their sales, while 44 per­cent were not wor­ried, due to the major­ity of their sales com­ing from desk­top. Nearly half the respon­dents said they were unsure about the rela­tion­ship between dif­fer­ent devices and didn’t know whether mobile had impacted any of their desk­top sales. And 12 per­cent didn’t even know whether their sites were mobile-friendly or not. Back in April, even before Google rolled out its update, Bran­don Pret­ty­man, an SEO account manager-turned-website strate­gist, pre­dicted that the small­est busi­nesses would be hit the hardest. “Small busi­nesses lack the assets and knowl­edge to make the adjust­ment on their sites,” Pret­ty­man said.

Guest Blog­ger:

Mike O’Brien
June 4 2015
Search Engine Watch


Longer Search Queries Are Becoming the Norm: What It Means for SEO

Monday, June 8th, 2015 at 5:04 pm

Searchers are becom­ing more refined in their search inquiries by using “sen­tence” type queries into the search fields of the search engines, so what does that mean for Small Busi­ness owners? User search queries can no longer be con­sid­ered in terms of the basic key­words and key­word phrases that com­prise them. In the early days of SEO, many peo­ple relied on short phrases to find what they were look­ing for, but the way peo­ple use search engines is chang­ing. Peo­ple are rely­ing on longer queries to find what they’re look­ing for, and this increas­ing trend demands action on the part of search mar­keters everywhere.

Why Search Queries Are Becom­ing Longer

As with most mar­ket trends, there’s no sin­gle rea­son why user queries are get­ting longer. It’s the result of a com­bi­na­tion of dif­fer­ent fac­tors and it cer­tainly didn’t hap­pen overnight. Under­stand­ing the back­ground and con­text of these longer search queries can help you bet­ter pre­pare for the result­ing changes in user search patterns.

Seman­tic Search Capabilities

First, a fun­da­men­tal change in how Google inter­prets user queries has dri­ven the change in user behav­ior. Back when Google first started, it broke apart user queries into its fun­da­men­tal com­po­nents (key­words), and searched for those com­po­nents as they appeared exactly on the web. Sites that had the most key­words match­ing the user’s query would rank on top. Today, Google uses a process called “seman­tic search,” which ana­lyzes the inten­tion of a user’s query, then searches for sites whose capa­bil­i­ties make them good fits for serv­ing that inten­tion. Because of this change, users are find­ing the tra­di­tional, short, keyword-based queries to be less effec­tive at get­ting rel­e­vant results than longer, more con­ver­sa­tional queries. In fact, many users are ask­ing full, spe­cific ques­tions rather than search­ing for a gen­eral topic.

Avail­abil­ity of Information

The sheer amount of infor­ma­tion avail­able on the web has increased dra­mat­i­cally since the dawn of the dig­i­tal era, and it con­tin­ues to increase expo­nen­tially every day. In order to find the most rel­e­vant infor­ma­tion in the clut­tered, pos­si­bly over­sat­u­rated web, users are forced to come up with longer, more spe­cific queries. Sim­ple, generic, or ambigu­ous searches will only return gen­eral infor­ma­tion like Wikipedia arti­cles or the home pages of major brands. To get bet­ter, more use­ful infor­ma­tion, longer queries are necessary.

Mobile Devices and Voice Searches

Few peo­ple enjoy typ­ing. Because typ­ing has been the pri­mary means of sub­mit­ting search queries, users have stuck to a min­i­mal­ist approach. With the rise in pop­u­lar­ity of mobile devices, typ­ing has actu­ally become even more dif­fi­cult and annoy­ing for many users as screen sizes are smaller, lead­ing to more dif­fi­culty from a dex­ter­ity stand­point. To add to this, fea­tures like auto­cor­rect bring accu­racy into the fold as a major issue. The alter­na­tive, which exists in the form of per­sonal dig­i­tal assis­tants like Apple’s Siri, is voice-based search­ing. More peo­ple are using voice func­tion­al­ity to run their searches, and because of this, more queries are becom­ing con­ver­sa­tional and infor­mal. That means users are rely­ing on more col­lo­quial and sentence-based struc­tures to do their searching.

How Busi­nesses Can Take Action

Now that you real­ize the moti­vat­ing fac­tors for this increas­ing trend, you can take action to get in front of it. As with any SEO strat­egy, it’s going to take time for these tac­tics to start tak­ing effect, so start early and stay con­sis­tent in order to see the great­est even­tual results.

Elim­i­na­tion of Key­word Based Strategies

Your first step is to elim­i­nate any trace of keyword-based SEO tac­tics from your over­all cam­paign. Stuff­ing your site’s titles, descrip­tions, and arti­cles with key­words in the hopes of rank­ing for asso­ci­ated user queries is no longer effec­tive. Google doesn’t even con­sider key­word match­ing as part of its rank­ing algo­rithm any­more, and user queries are so long and com­plex that it wouldn’t mat­ter even if it did. Add to that the fact that over-stuffing your site with key­words can actu­ally earn you a rank­ing penalty, and try­ing to rank by using spe­cific key­words becomes a poten­tial disaster.

Long-Tail Key­word Optimization

Instead of rely­ing on key­word tac­tics, start look­ing at things from a higher per­spec­tive: long-tail key­words. Don’t let the “key­word” por­tion of that term fool you; long-tail key­words are just top­ics and extended phrases that peo­ple are search­ing for. For exam­ple, “who is the best podi­a­trist in Orlando” is an exam­ple of a long-tail key­word phrase. Rather than opti­miz­ing for these phrases by includ­ing them ver­ba­tim on your site (like with a con­ven­tional key­word strat­egy), you’ll be writ­ing top­ics that address these phrases and improv­ing your site pages to make sure Google clearly under­stands the pur­pose and posi­tion of your company.

Niche Con­tent Top­ics
Finally, because user queries are becom­ing even more tar­geted and the web is fill­ing up with even greater vol­umes of con­tent, it’s more impor­tant than ever to have a niche. Your area of exper­tise as a busi­ness should be as spe­cific as pos­si­ble, and accord­ingly, your top­ics should give very spe­cific answers to very spe­cific ques­tions. If your strat­egy is too generic or too broad, you’ll eas­ily become lost in the fold.
SEO is always evolv­ing. Google rolls out more and more updates to increase the sophis­ti­ca­tion and capa­bil­i­ties of its search func­tion­al­ity, and users adapt to use that search func­tion in newer, bet­ter ways. If you want to stay ahead of the com­pe­ti­tion and get the most online vis­i­bil­ity for your brand, you’ll need to under­stand and respond to these changes proac­tively. If you haven’t already started opti­miz­ing for longer user search queries, now is the time to start.

Guest Blog­ger:

Jayson DeMers
June 8, 2015
Search Engine Watch
Jayson-DeMers

VFM Website Design Development-Mobile Responsive Websites

Responsive Web Design Makes Your Website Mobile and Customer Friendly.
Attract mobile visitors and customers with a responsive web site. This video explains how Responsive Web Design helps prevent loss of potential leads and sales. According to a study commissioned by Google, 74% of users are more likely to return to a mobile-friendly site. But that’s not all. Some 67% of users are more likely to buy if the site is mobile friendly. On the other hand, if your website is not friendly to mobile viewers, you could be in trouble. On the same study, it was found that 48% of users are “frustrated” and “annoyed” by a non-mobile-friendly website. Some 48% said a company “doesn’t care” about its business if its site is not mobile friendly.

Some 52% of users are unlikely to engage with a business that has a non-mobile-friendly site. How We Can Help You If your website is not mobile friendly, you won’t be able to take advantage of these trends. Worse, your customers will be looking to your competitors for the products and services you can provide. And all of this is because they bounced off your “frustrating” non-responsive website.

Whether they are mobile or desktop users, we’re here to help you attract those visitors, so you can turn them into leads and sales and dominate your competition. Get Free In-Depth Consultation We’d like to know more about how we can help you. That’s why we offer our web design clients free in-depth consultations. Unlike other web design service providers, we sit down with our clients and discuss what their business is and who their targets are. We believe it’s important to understand how your business works so we’ll know exactly how to help you using our responsive web design services. Call us now or send us a message to schedule your free consultation on Responsive Web Design.

http://teamvfm.com/portfolio/ Call or email us now for a free consultation | 661.524.0626 | info@virtualfocusedmarketing.com



Tuesday, June 9, 2015

Longer Search Queries Are Becoming the Norm: What It Means for SEO

Searchers are becom­ing more refined in their search inquiries by using “sen­tence” type queries into the search fields of the search engines, so what does that mean for Small Busi­ness owners? User search queries can no longer be con­sid­ered in terms of the basic key­words and key­word phrases that com­prise them. In the early days of SEO, many peo­ple relied on short phrases to find what they were look­ing for, but the way peo­ple use search engines is chang­ing. Peo­ple are rely­ing on longer queries to find what they’re look­ing for, and this increas­ing trend demands action on the part of search mar­keters everywhere.

Why Search Queries Are Becom­ing Longer

As with most mar­ket trends, there’s no sin­gle rea­son why user queries are get­ting longer. It’s the result of a com­bi­na­tion of dif­fer­ent fac­tors and it cer­tainly didn’t hap­pen overnight. Under­stand­ing the back­ground and con­text of these longer search queries can help you bet­ter pre­pare for the result­ing changes in user search patterns.

Seman­tic Search Capabilities

First, a fun­da­men­tal change in how Google inter­prets user queries has dri­ven the change in user behav­ior. Back when Google first started, it broke apart user queries into its fun­da­men­tal com­po­nents (key­words), and searched for those com­po­nents as they appeared exactly on the web. Sites that had the most key­words match­ing the user’s query would rank on top. Today, Google uses a process called “seman­tic search,” which ana­lyzes the inten­tion of a user’s query, then searches for sites whose capa­bil­i­ties make them good fits for serv­ing that inten­tion. Because of this change, users are find­ing the tra­di­tional, short, keyword-based queries to be less effec­tive at get­ting rel­e­vant results than longer, more con­ver­sa­tional queries. In fact, many users are ask­ing full, spe­cific ques­tions rather than search­ing for a gen­eral topic.

Avail­abil­ity of Information

The sheer amount of infor­ma­tion avail­able on the web has increased dra­mat­i­cally since the dawn of the dig­i­tal era, and it con­tin­ues to increase expo­nen­tially every day. In order to find the most rel­e­vant infor­ma­tion in the clut­tered, pos­si­bly over­sat­u­rated web, users are forced to come up with longer, more spe­cific queries. Sim­ple, generic, or ambigu­ous searches will only return gen­eral infor­ma­tion like Wikipedia arti­cles or the home pages of major brands. To get bet­ter, more use­ful infor­ma­tion, longer queries are necessary.

Mobile Devices and Voice Searches

Few peo­ple enjoy typ­ing. Because typ­ing has been the pri­mary means of sub­mit­ting search queries, users have stuck to a min­i­mal­ist approach. With the rise in pop­u­lar­ity of mobile devices, typ­ing has actu­ally become even more dif­fi­cult and annoy­ing for many users as screen sizes are smaller, lead­ing to more dif­fi­culty from a dex­ter­ity stand­point. To add to this, fea­tures like auto­cor­rect bring accu­racy into the fold as a major issue. The alter­na­tive, which exists in the form of per­sonal dig­i­tal assis­tants like Apple’s Siri, is voice-based search­ing. More peo­ple are using voice func­tion­al­ity to run their searches, and because of this, more queries are becom­ing con­ver­sa­tional and infor­mal. That means users are rely­ing on more col­lo­quial and sentence-based struc­tures to do their searching.

How Busi­nesses Can Take Action

Now that you real­ize the moti­vat­ing fac­tors for this increas­ing trend, you can take action to get in front of it. As with any SEO strat­egy, it’s going to take time for these tac­tics to start tak­ing effect, so start early and stay con­sis­tent in order to see the great­est even­tual results.

Elim­i­na­tion of Key­word Based Strategies

Your first step is to elim­i­nate any trace of keyword-based SEO tac­tics from your over­all cam­paign. Stuff­ing your site’s titles, descrip­tions, and arti­cles with key­words in the hopes of rank­ing for asso­ci­ated user queries is no longer effec­tive. Google doesn’t even con­sider key­word match­ing as part of its rank­ing algo­rithm any­more, and user queries are so long and com­plex that it wouldn’t mat­ter even if it did. Add to that the fact that over-stuffing your site with key­words can actu­ally earn you a rank­ing penalty, and try­ing to rank by using spe­cific key­words becomes a poten­tial disaster.

Long-Tail Key­word Optimization

Instead of rely­ing on key­word tac­tics, start look­ing at things from a higher per­spec­tive: long-tail key­words. Don’t let the “key­word” por­tion of that term fool you; long-tail key­words are just top­ics and extended phrases that peo­ple are search­ing for. For exam­ple, “who is the best podi­a­trist in Orlando” is an exam­ple of a long-tail key­word phrase. Rather than opti­miz­ing for these phrases by includ­ing them ver­ba­tim on your site (like with a con­ven­tional key­word strat­egy), you’ll be writ­ing top­ics that address these phrases and improv­ing your site pages to make sure Google clearly under­stands the pur­pose and posi­tion of your company.

Niche Con­tent Top­ics
Finally, because user queries are becom­ing even more tar­geted and the web is fill­ing up with even greater vol­umes of con­tent, it’s more impor­tant than ever to have a niche. Your area of exper­tise as a busi­ness should be as spe­cific as pos­si­ble, and accord­ingly, your top­ics should give very spe­cific answers to very spe­cific ques­tions. If your strat­egy is too generic or too broad, you’ll eas­ily become lost in the fold.
SEO is always evolv­ing. Google rolls out more and more updates to increase the sophis­ti­ca­tion and capa­bil­i­ties of its search func­tion­al­ity, and users adapt to use that search func­tion in newer, bet­ter ways. If you want to stay ahead of the com­pe­ti­tion and get the most online vis­i­bil­ity for your brand, you’ll need to under­stand and respond to these changes proac­tively. If you haven’t already started opti­miz­ing for longer user search queries, now is the time to start.

Guest Blog­ger:

Jayson DeMers
June 8, 2015
Search Engine Watch
Jayson-DeMers

The Collateral Damage of Google’s Link Policy

Monday, June 8th, 2015 at 4:04 pm
Google’s “com­pany phi­los­o­phy” states “Google search works because it relies on the mil­lions of indi­vid­u­als post­ing links on web­sites to help deter­mine which other sites offer con­tent of value.” Over the last two years Google has rolled out a series of algo­rithm updates and pub­lic rela­tions tac­tics that have lead the SEO indus­try to ques­tion this fun­da­men­tal premise. Are links good or bad? What is the real dif­fer­ence between build­ing and earn­ing links? Has Google bro­ken the Internet?

A Brief His­tory of Linking

Before the Inter­net, writ­ers would cite their sources in foot­notes or a bib­li­og­ra­phy. The web allowed peo­ple to give a direct link to those sources for more infor­ma­tion on a topic. Google started using links as an indi­ca­tor that a site was a good one and moved that web­site to a place where more peo­ple would find it: Page one of the search results. Fig­ur­ing out ways to cre­ate back­links became a new indus­try. Some pur­posely man­u­fac­tured links made for Google search results that weren’t nec­es­sar­ily the best results. That’s when every­thing went hay­wire.
Fear?

Some­times

Brett Bastello of Inseev Inter­ac­tive received this mes­sage from a reporter who quoted him in an arti­cle: “Per our com­pany guide­lines, all the out­siders links are nofol­low links.” Bastello assumes this has to do with fear of a Google penalty and says, “unfor­tu­nately this think­ing couldn’t be fur­ther from the truth and the amount of mis­in­for­ma­tion cir­cu­lat­ing around this topic is astound­ing. Just as Wikipedia ref­er­ences out­side web­sites, Google likes to see blogs and web­sites ref­er­enc­ing other qual­i­fied and author­i­ta­tive web­sites on sim­i­lar top­ics. The rea­son the links on Wikipedia are nofol­lowed is because it is User Gen­er­ated Con­tent with a high pos­si­bil­ity of abuse, how­ever, as an edi­tor of a web­site you have 100% of the con­tent con­trol, and thus, this elim­i­nates vir­tu­ally any pos­si­bil­ity of abuse, there­fore, these sites should be dofol­low­ing the links.”

Agreed.

But, read Rand Fishkin’s blog post about an unwar­ranted Google penalty. No won­der peo­ple are afraid!
Hold­ing onto the Link Juice Simon Ensor of Yel­low­ball, believes that “some web­sites have a pol­icy of not link­ing out to web­sites, usu­ally due to a fairly archaic rule of attempt­ing to con­serve their PageR­ank (or ‘link juice’). This ‘rule’ is highly con­tested nowa­days with co-occurrence and co-citation being pre­ferred by the major­ity of the SEO world, how­ever web­sites are usu­ally slower to change poli­cies than SEOs. In my expe­ri­ence it is often the case that the per­son man­ag­ing it is either adher­ing to poli­cies set years ago or has heard about con­tain­ing PageR­ank and is cling­ing to it as a valu­able source of SEO knowledge!”
From Josh Rubin of Cre­ative Cal­i­for­nia: “For some rea­son, the con­cept of link juice bleed­ing started to get some­what pop­u­lar when Page Rank was in the heights of its usage. A web­mas­ter who has his ear to SEO a lit­tle bit might have heard that you can bleed link juice by hav­ing out­go­ing links, and doesn’t want to lose the value of the page. It’s wrong, but that’s the thought.” John Holtkamp of Aper­ture Inter­ac­tive has heard ref­er­ences to Link Juice when he’s been denied a link, he said: “The basic idea is that sites gain juice by get­ting linked to, and they give away juice by link­ing to other sites. I know it sounds silly, but it is real.” And Bill Elward of Cas­tle Ink Car­tridges says: “The issue is a mis­un­der­stand­ing around SEO. Too many peo­ple still think that link­ing out to third par­ties squan­ders PageR­ank. In real­ity Google likes to see exter­nal links when they aren’t con­trived and enhance the user experience.” Allen Wal­ton of SpyGuy Secu­rity was inter­viewed for a story about entre­pre­neur­ship and pro­vided a lot of valu­able infor­ma­tion. He said: “It was a great arti­cle, but they didn’t link to me. So I asked why. They told me, ‘Sorry, we don’t know any­thing about your com­pany and can’t endorse it.’ Even though I gave them all sorts of info and advice they posted on their own web­site! Crazy link-juice hogs.”

Don’t Push Your Luck

Many sites accept guest posts and cer­tainly, authors who write a piece of con­tent that is wor­thy of being pub­lished on the site deserve to get a link for their efforts. But James Rice of Wik­i­Job says, “by ask­ing for spe­cific anchor text in the link you are ask­ing for a less nat­ural link, and the site owner may (jus­ti­fi­ably) start to worry about a poten­tial search engine penalty. Don’t go down this route. Just request the link itself and leave it up to them to link as they choose.” That sounds rea­son­able. But too many sites stick with the “brand link in the bio” pol­icy and won’t give a link in the con­tent itself, even when the link leads to crit­i­cal infor­ma­tion for the reader.

But, That’s Where I Found It

Mike Juba of EZSolution.com can point to mul­ti­ple occa­sions where peo­ple post his info­graph­ics with­out a source link. “Some­times, they link to visual.ly where they found it, and I ask to link to the orig­i­nal source and they refuse because they claim since they found it on visual.ly they use them as the source,” he com­mented.
In Decem­ber, my agency posted data from a sur­vey of dig­i­tal mar­keters. Numer­ous web­sites ref­er­enced the data; some linked to it, some didn’t. One writer linked to a press release about the sur­vey, most likely because that’s where she found it. Upon reach­ing out to the writer and request­ing a link to the actual sur­vey data, the writer redi­rected the link. Link­ing to the real source would cer­tainly be more use­ful for the reader. But was ask­ing for the link unnat­ural or manip­u­la­tive?
TeamVFM SEO
Cameron Gra­ham of TechnologyAdvice.com asserts that: “Rep­utable sites almost never have an issue with link­ing to con­tent that they cite. Occa­sion­ally they may not know where a stat orig­i­nated from, but if we reach out and pro­vide a link to the report, they’re often more than happy to update the post.”
There’s no harm in reach­ing out to ask the site owner to link to your site if you are in fact the orig­i­nal source. You’ve earned that link! Out­reach doesn’t always work though.

That Other Site is Bet­ter than Yours

Chris of cutcabletoday.com broke a big story in his indus­try that got picked up by major pub­li­ca­tions like Engad­get and TechCrunch. The major sites linked to his site as a source for the story, but a num­ber of oth­ers who picked up the story didn’t men­tion his site, opt­ing instead to cite the big­ger sources. He’s reached out to the sites that ran this story with­out link­ing or men­tion­ing his site and they either ignored his request or didn’t add the link for one rea­son or another. Chris’ the­ory: “These web­sites pre­fer to link to a pop­u­lar main­stream pub­li­ca­tion than a smaller blog like mine. Maybe they feel it gives them more cred­i­bil­ity link­ing to a site like Engadget.” It is true that a well-known site that ref­er­ences con­tent on a lesser-known site will get linked to like crazy. For exam­ple, Hub­spot pub­lishes “ulti­mate lists” with data from numer­ous sources. Bet they get lots of links and the orig­i­nal sources don’t. And bet some of those orig­i­nal sources spend pre­cious time try­ing to get the link redirected.

Not to be Self­ish, But…

Brock Mur­ray of SEO­plus was recently inter­viewed by the Finan­cial Post; he asked for a link on the online ver­sion of the arti­cle and the author didn’t do it. “My thought is they dis­cour­age link­ing out as much as pos­si­ble so as to keep the read­ers on their site rather than link­ing out. It’s pretty com­mon, par­tic­u­larly in the news media indus­try.” Jor­dan Bauer of Ver­sique finds that “a com­mon objec­tion is they want to keep users on their web­site instead of giv­ing them an exit por­tal.” And Sean Graw of Brad’s Deals thinks “some sites don’t like link­ing because they want to keep users on-site and drive up pageviews. That’s gen­er­ally the expla­na­tion I get from reporters.“
Of course a busi­ness wants to keep vis­i­tors on site. Of all the rea­sons for not adding an earned link, that makes the most sense. When quoted in arti­cles about finan­cial plan­ning, Dale Degagne has been denied links due to “cor­po­rate pol­icy.” He says, “They did not inform me of this pol­icy until I asked. They get what they want — a story and a solid ref­er­ence, and I did both inter­views with­out a link pro­vided because in the end, it’s still good publicity.”
Prob­a­bly true, when it’s a local news site that might gen­er­ate busi­ness, or a well-known site like New York Times or CNN. An obscure site that won’t give you a link in exchange for your exper­tise is prob­a­bly not worth your time.

Links are a Hot Commodity

“Many web­sites and blogs have now come to real­ize the impor­tance of links and just how valu­able they really are and expect finan­cial remu­ner­a­tion for exter­nal links. They equate link­ing out to other plat­forms with the pro­vi­sion of a ser­vice,” says Wojtek Mazur of Ele­phate­SEO. Jonathan Bentz of Netrepid agrees that in many cases, it’s “No pay? No play!” Bentz says “Of all the rea­sons I’ve had link requests rejected, this is prob­a­bly the most com­mon rea­son.“
So that’s still going on… and pay­ing for links is a vio­la­tion of Google policy.
SEO illu­mi­nati make things sounds sim­ple — “Just cre­ate great con­tent and it will earn links.” But Google has a long his­tory of putting out vague guide­lines and infor­ma­tion about links, which has cre­ated this cul­ture of hav­ing to care­fully nego­ti­ate your way into get­ting a link that you’ve earned. #thanks­google
Has Google bro­ken the Inter­net? What is it like on the ground for you?

Guest Post By:

Adam Stet­zer
Jun 4, 2015
Adam Stetzer
Rat­ing: 0.0/10 (0 votes cast)

SMBs Hit Hardest By Mobilegeddon

If you are a Small or Medium busi­ness owner, you prob­a­bly didn’t know or did noth­ing to pro­tect your­self against Google’s’ Mobi­leged­don.

Googles Mobilgeddon
Your NOT alone most SMBs/SMOs didn’t do any­thing to pro­tect their web­sites and online pres­ence and you will soon now be feel­ing it’s rath!
Though many con­sider Mobi­leged­don to have been much ado about noth­ing, dig­i­tal agency Koozai found that Google’s mobile-focused algo­rithm has had a sig­nif­i­cant impact on small and medium-sized busi­nesses (SMB). Accord­ing to Koozai’s May sur­vey of 2,000 SMBs with 50 or fewer employ­ees, 46 per­cent of respon­dents have expe­ri­enced changes in rank­ing. From that group, 41 per­cent have seen a drop in rank­ings by at least three places, result­ing in drops in traf­fic — as much as 50 per­cent in some cases. “The hype that the Google mobile update would cause car­nage in the search engine rank­ings missed the larger pic­ture,” says Ben Nor­man, chief exec­u­tive (CEO) of Koozai. “Exag­ger­at­ing the impact meant that busi­nesses didn’t antic­i­pate that even small changes in their rank­ing can have a big impact on their organic mobile search results.“
Google takes around 200 dif­fer­ent fac­tors into account when deter­min­ing rank. So while the search pow­er­house stressed the impor­tance of mobile-optimization, it’s hardly the be all, end all of deter­min­ing a company’s posi­tion. Koozai found that 27 per­cent of busi­nesses dropped in rank­ings despite hav­ing opti­mized their sites for mobile.
Nor­man says that many busi­ness own­ers are frus­trated, feel­ing like they’re expe­ri­enc­ing a neg­a­tive impact after act­ing on Google’s warn­ings. He says that speaks to how fre­quently SMBs fail to under­stand SEO and e-commerce analytics. “Many con­sumers today will research on mobile and then pur­chase on desk­top,” he says. “Many SMBs are miss­ing out on these lead-creation oppor­tu­ni­ties if they don’t know if their e-commerce sites aren’t giv­ing their poten­tial cus­tomers a good expe­ri­ence on mobile.” Of the busi­nesses sur­veyed, 37 per­cent were con­cerned that the algo­rithm update would impact their sales, while 44 per­cent were not wor­ried, due to the major­ity of their sales com­ing from desk­top. Nearly half the respon­dents said they were unsure about the rela­tion­ship between dif­fer­ent devices and didn’t know whether mobile had impacted any of their desk­top sales. And 12 per­cent didn’t even know whether their sites were mobile-friendly or not. Back in April, even before Google rolled out its update, Bran­don Pret­ty­man, an SEO account manager-turned-website strate­gist, pre­dicted that the small­est busi­nesses would be hit the hardest. “Small busi­nesses lack the assets and knowl­edge to make the adjust­ment on their sites,” Pret­ty­man said.

Guest Blog­ger:

Mike O’Brien
June 4 2015
Search Engine Watch