Archive for the ‘SEO’ category

Building Back Links With Blog Comments

December 30th, 2009

from: http://www.affiliateasshole.com/2009/08/13/building-back-links-with-blog-comments/

Benefits of Commenting

One good way to build back links is with blog comments.  Many Wordpress blogs have comments that do not have a nofollow tag.  Nofollow tags tell googlebot to not consider these true outbound links which means they will have no value towards building your Page Rank.  Commenting on other relevant blogs will not only add back links for your site but it will also bring traffic in.

Getting Traffic From Comments

When you add a comment to someone’s blog, they usually ask for name, email, and website.  When your comment is approved it will display with your name linked to your website.  Not everyone reads the comments, but the ones that do will spend more time reading onyour site.

Comments Are Like Search Engine Results

Comments at the top are more likely to be read than the ones at the bottom.  This is just like search engine results.  Search results on top are more likely to be clicked on than the ones on the bottom.  So you have to get in there early.  After you find a good block related to your niche, subscribe to their feed.  This ensures that right when they post it will show up in your RSS feed reader.  Make sure to comment as quickly as possible, but also make sure to write a good comment.

Writing A Good Comment

Writing a good comment takes some effort.  You have to actually read the article.  Do not just put a garbage comment.  Write something intelligent and thought provoking that actually adds to the conversation.  If you have a question about the post, write your comment and add the question at the end.  Make sure you enter a minimum of 3 sentences.  When I read blog posts I will only look at comments that are at least 3 lines.  Most comments under 3 lines are just kudos or garbage.

Finding Relevant Blogs

Here are a few sites that should help you find relevant blogs.

Google Blog Search is a great site to find blogs relating to your niche.  Enter a few keywords and click search blogs and a ton of blogs will show up.

Blog Catalog is another great site.  It ranks #1 for blog directory.  It will search their blog directory and blog posts for your keywords.

Wordpress.com is one of the world’s largest hosted blog solution.  These blogs are hosted on wordpress.com and not on independent sites.  It is still a good way to get traffic to your site.

Limit Your Comments

Try to limit the number of comments you do a day.  I would say 20 to 30 a day max.  Building links to fast may get you penalized with search engines.  Search engines know that people are trying to game them, so they will flag any activity that seems out of the ordinary.  Building 1000 back links a day with comment posts seems impossible.  Reading a blog post might take 5-10 minutes and there are not 5000 minutes in a day.

Website Optimizer: Start Testing Today

December 21st, 2009

from: https://www.google.com/analytics/siteopt/splash?hl=en

Website Optimizer is an easy-to-use tool for testing site content that delivers actionable results. Below are just three of the many benefits that testing brings

Listen to your visitors

Testing makes it easy to get direct feedback from your site visitors. Our five minute demo explains how.

Increase conversions

Testing makes it easy to increase your site effectiveness and visitor satisfaction, which leads to higher conversion rates and a higher return on your investments.

Eliminate guesswork

With Website Optimizer, you can try any combination of content to find out what leads to the most conversions. Clear reports will tell you what worked the best.

SEO Game Changers – Search Engine / SEO History

November 21st, 2009

from: http://www.stuntdubl.com/2009/06/21/seo-history/

SEO History and Game Changers

There is a misnomer in search marketing and SEO that things change all the time. I think I stopped consuming SEO blogs and news sites on a daily basis about 2 or 3 years ago when I decided enter full time consultancy with no one else’s safety net. There was no extra time for anything accept a low information consumption diet. I had to develop unflinching confidence in the work I was doing to execute on various strategies based on my understanding of how search engines have historically worked, and the assumption that they will continue to function in basically the same manner for some time to come.

SEO ChessThis is from a conclusion that there have only been a handful of changes that affected how I conducted my business. I learned from both blackhats and search engineers both to come up with a strategy that fit my ethical code while indulging my competitive nature and hunger for success. I am convinced that the cat/mouse dynamic between blackhats and engineers has helped to form the current state of information retrieval based on strong needs to stay relevant in certain areas that were exploited solely for capitalistic monetary gain.

I’ve found some great posts and articles about search history and how search engines have evolved over time, but not many mentions of how search optimizers have changed their strategies over time. There are a few good resources listed below, but none quite summed up the changes that affected what I like to refer to as the “SEO mentality”. I’m hoping to create a fairly comprehensive document for Market Motive Internet Marketing Training (where I’ll be discussing this shortly with legendary SEO’s Greg Boser and Marshall Simmonds, to help add to the increasingly comprehensive body of SEO training we’ve developed over the past two years (Over 40 Videos now!).

I learned what SEO was in about 2002 – shortly after offpage factors started to strongly determine relevance. I spent several years and thousands of hours on forums reading, learning, an interacting and teaching to figure out how search engines worked. When I made the choice to work for myself at home after another great year of learning and consulting at We Build Pages (with Jim Boykin – one of the sharpest SEO’s I’ve ever known), I decided it was time to start doing. I built sites, and strategies for myself, using consulting money to fund development of website projects, and parlaying to thinks like being able to even afford the insane cost of living in the SF Bay area. It was based on the unwritten understanding of the changes that are mentioned below, and not listening to a lot of the SEO garbage that is spewed all over on the interwebs.

When I started doing – I realized that not much changes with SEO in terms of strategic execution. It is a pretty logical art and science of determining risk to reward ratios, and implementing strategies in a sequential fashion following certain established rules based on intended outcome. I’ve developed a playbook and these SEO rulesets by understanding the HISTORICAL GAMECHANGERS in SEO. Feel free to add some on twitter with #seogamechangers

I’ve been taking a mental inventory of these game changes for a few months, and here is what I have them broke down to:


1. Onpage factors (1995 – 1999)
2. Offpage factors (2000)
3. Florida update (2003)
4. Fresh Crawl/ Everflux (2004)
5. Sandbox effect (2005)
6. Duplicate content filtering (2006)
7. Human editorial (2006)
8. Onebox/ Universal Search (2007)
9. Paid linking handling (2007)
10. No follow (2008)
11. User data validation and segmentation (2009)
12. Brand Mentions (update Vince – 2009)

Some of my dates may be a bit off, but for the most part these are the major factors that affect my actionable SEO Strategies. These are the major changes that contribute to the hurdles, filters, and challenges of ranking a site on a search engine.

I’d love to hear from other folks on the things that you think should be included in the list. There are MANY minor things that full under these categories, but after revisiting most and asking twitter, I think this is pretty comprehensive, as things like local search 10 pack, personalization, geotargetting all fall under one of these other areas (even if the dates aren’t exact). Please let me know if you can think of anything I missed. I’ll try to watch the comments on the post closely for once:) Please post any great resources, or suggestions for adding/updating to the list.

Resources

Related Posts

The Internet Marketing Handbook

November 20th, 2009

from: http://www.seomoz.org/dp/the-internet-marketing-handbook

The Internet Marketing Handbook is a free resource that contains almost 100 tools and learning resource that help to master Internet Marketing. It was compiled by Danny Dover and is the result of literally hundreds of hours of study and practice in marketing online and search engine optimization techniques. The information below represents the web’s best resources and tools. All of the items listed below are available to the general public and most are free of charge. Enjoy!

How to Find SEO Competitor Keywords, Social Media & Backlinks

November 9th, 2009

from: http://www.searchenginejournal.com/how-to-find-seo-competitor-keywords-social-media-backlinks/7827/

In the past I did quite a few posts on competitive research:

Today I am going to focus on what you can learn from your competitors if you are smart enough.

First of all, a few things to take note of:

  1. Your established competitors, who have been in play long enough, have probably come across numerous pitfalls and learned how to cope with them;
  2. The fact that your competitor has been exploring the niche much longer than you doesn’t mean he is now doing everything right;
  3. Promoting a site without proper competition research means to promote it blind;
  4. By merely copying your competitor, you will never be able to surpass him;
  5. If you focus on finding what your competitor is doing profoundly wrong, you have good chances to get ahead of him.

Keeping all that in mind, let’s see what you actually can learn from your competitors.

The Keywords

Keyword research is both difficult and tricky. The only way to effectively refine your list is to test it in practice (PPC campaign may help you with that).

Your competitor may have already tested the keywords and chosen the best ones that both generated good traffic and converted. I do not suggest relying on his keywords completely. But if you take time analyzing and comparing several of your competitors’ on-page and off-page keyword targeting, you can make your list much better.

How can you do that?

Quick tip: don’t forget to compare which terms your competitor tried to rank (i.e. which terms he is using throughout the site) and which terms he ended up ranked for. Thus, you will be able to do better than him.

The Backlinks

Those who linked to your competitor, will most probably want to link to you. Again, the key here is not to copy step by step but to do better. So:

The Social Media

Check where your competitor has found his topical community. Make sure to analyze how the social media users react to your competitor, their feedback and comments, what they like and dislike.