Monthly Archives: May 2011

Google WebP Gets More Features, Broader Support

There’s an old saying that goes, “Anything electronic will last forever of five years, whichever comes first.” That’s a sentimentderived largely from the Windows 98 era when file extensions changing or new operating systems being released meant you no longer had access to old files. While the saying is still worth remembering (if only for a […]

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Google WebP Gets More Features, Broader Support

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Google Maps 5.5 Adds Check-Ins, Ratings, and Improved Transit

There was once a time when Google Maps was only a small footnote being flicked aside by MapQuest. Now the picture has changed immensely, and largely thanks to mobile application support from Android and iOS devices, Google Maps is a dominant player. Of course, there’s more to it than Google’s cross-promotion. Maps has also been adding features like […]

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Google Maps 5.5 Adds Check-Ins, Ratings, and Improved Transit

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Will Google Take Chrome OS to Smartphones?

Google has a lot of lines of development. I’m not just referring to the numerous products that Google vigorously mixes up with its brilliant minds. I’m also referring to very similar lines of development within a singular product or product category. That’s certainly the case with operating systems. Until recently, Google was running two different […]

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Will Google Take Chrome OS to Smartphones?

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Google Whittles Away Location Targeting Options

There are a few major ways to advertise online, but regardless of the exact medium you choose, there’s one sector that is likely crucial to your business: local ads. Yes, there are online only companies, and that was once the backbone of search advertisement. That’s changed as local businesses have tuned into the search game […]

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Google Whittles Away Location Targeting Options

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PayPal To Sue Google Over ‘Wallet’, Mobile Payment App

PayPal says Google stole its ideas for a new service that is trying to turn smartphones into digital wallets.The allegations emerged in a lawsuit filed Thursday in a California court after Google unveiled its mobile payment service in New York.The comp… Continue reading

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A Bing Tester’s Insights

Ken Johnston isn’t one of the big names in technology. Rather, he’s one of the many technology employees who fills a vital but often unsung role: that of software tester. That’s been Johnston’s path for the better part of two decades, and he’s been doing it for Microsoft since 1998. Over time Johnston has shifted […]

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A Bing Tester’s Insights

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Competitive Link Analysis Tips – Whiteboard Friday

Posted by caseyhen

We all want to build up the reputation and authority of our websites and this week Rand discusses some competitive link analysis tips using Open Site Explorer. He talks about how to avoid some common pitfalls when trying to get similar links that your competitors have and give you a few good ideas on how you should be doing it. If you have any tips that you can share with the community on how you do competitive link analysis, please feel free to share those in the comments.

 

Video Transcription

Hi, everyone. Welcome to Whiteboard Friday. This week, we’re going to talk about competitive link analysis tips. The thing is that a lot of people, when they’re trying to build up their reputation and authority and the rankings of their website, one of the big things that they do is they look at who’s linking to my competitors and can I get some of those links. This is a great practice, but there are a lot of pitfalls and there are also a lot great areas of unexplored opportunity. People typically do a very simple thing, which is just to look at who’s ranking in the top 10, see who’s linking to them, and try to get links. There’s a little more depth.
 
A tool that a ton of people use is Open Site Explorer. It’s a tool that we here at SEOmoz use and tons of people like it. There are other opportunities. There are things like Majestic. There’s Link Diagnosis. There’s obviously Yahoo! Site Explorer, which is very popular, and a few others that are well known as well.
 
Open Site Explorer is pretty simple, has a nice, easy-to-use interface. You can see here, I basically search for a URL up at the top, and it shows me all the places that Open Site Explorer, that the Linkscape Index knows about that link to that particular page. There are some filters up here and some different tabs. Basically, I get a list that looks like this. Here’s the page. Here’s the anchor text that’s linking. Here’s the page authority and domain authority. If I’m on the linking domains, it will also show me the number of linking root domains. It gives me some title information and that kind of stuff. Great. I can get some prospects here.
 
I want to be careful about a few things when I’m looking through here. Number one, whose links are you looking at? One of the problems that we see a lot of the time is that the people who rank in the top 10, particularly in a short-term time frame, sometimes can be spammers or manipulative folks who have earned links that get them into the top 10 but only very briefly. By very briefly, I mean somewhere between 30 days and 3, even 6, months sometimes. If you’re examining sites and you’re looking at their links and you think to yourself, "Boy, these are really scummy sites. The site quality is low. I don’t know why anyone would organically want to link to this page," looking at their links may only help you in a really short-term scenario. You might find a ton of junky stuff, stuff you have to pay for, stuff that’s manipulative, stuff that requires you to reciprocally link back to them, or jump through all these hoops. You don’t necessarily want those.
 
What you do want are folks who are long lasting in the top 10. If I look at a list of top 10 folks and I see oh, wow, this is a domain that’s very well trusted and I’ve heard the name of the brand before, it’s a popular and good brand, then I’m really interested in who’s linking to this guy. If I see a three-hyphen domain.info, maybe I don’t need to investigate his links. Or maybe I want to look at them, but I don’t necessarily want to pursue them. I just want to be more careful about how I interpret those.
 
The other thing is that folks will be really simplistic about this. As opposed to just looking at the top 10 of who’s ranking here, I can go deeper into the results. I can go into the top 20 or 30. I can look at different keywords. I can look at keywords that are more broad. Let’s say I’m trying to rank for "used Toyota cars." I might look at used Toyotas. I might look at Toyota in general. Who’s ranking in the top 50 or 60 for a super competitive phrase like Toyota? Who are those big important sites? There might be a bunch of places that are linking to other listings that could link to me. Or the people who are in the results themselves could be link opportunities.
 
There’s also the issue that when you do that kind of expansion, you’ll just find that many more places that have diversity of links. Earning those can give you a step up on the competition, because when they look at your links, they’re going to go, "Wow. Where did they get all those? How did they find all those? It’s amazing."
 
The other thing I want you to pay attention to is, are these the links that matter? The same scrutiny that you give the websites in the top 10, I think we should all be giving that same scrutiny to the links that point in here. A lot of the time, there will be links that are fairly manipulative and low quality and temporary. They will appear in here because Open Site Explorer and Linkscape doesn’t have anything like the sophistication of Google’s webspam algorithm. Google webspam has a whole team working in a big building down in Mountain View. They’re some of the best-paid and most highly talented scientists in the world. They’re working on this problem of solving spam. Open Site Explorer has a few simplistic things. PA and DA, page authority and domain authority, use symmetrics to calculate how important we think it is. We get fooled all the time by spammers. The links that you see in here might not necessarily be the ones that count. You have got to use good judgment.
 
There are two great ways to do this. Number one is does it rank? What I want you to do is look at this page itself, the linking page. Go to that page. Figure out the keywords that it’s trying to target in the title or grab a snippet of 7 to 10 words in a sentence there. Put them in quotes and put it into Google. Does that page rank? If it’s not ranking in Google, I’d be very suspicious about how it’s doing. Number two, who does it link to? If it’s linking to reputable sources and really good places, that’s a very good sign. If it links to places that are very suspect and a lot of those places aren’t ranking very well for their keywords, I’m usually a little more concerned. Those two things will really help you see whether this is the right link or not.
 
Do pay close attention to another thing, the page and domain level metrics. If you see something that’s like wow, this is a very low page authority but high domain authority, that might be a really good link opportunity. In fact, that domain might be a great link opportunity. I worry when I see folks who are like, "Low page authority, I’m not interested." I wouldn’t go that route. If domain authority is high, that means it’s a big, important, powerful domain. I would much rather, in my SEO, have a link from a powerful, important domain than from a powerful page but on an unimportant domain. If it’s the homepage of Mikes-House-of-Viagra.info, I totally don’t care. I don’t care that it’s homepage. I don’t care that he has a page rank of four or five on his homepage. I’m not interested. If it’s some super deep page way down on the Scientific Americans website, wow. PA may only be a 35 or a 40 or something, but the domain authority is going to be like an 88 or 90. I’m looking for those links. I’d encourage you to do the same thing.
 
You can actually resort in Open Site Explorer by DA. There’s a little arrow there. You can resort your links if you want. You can also export. There’s an export to Excel function. You can get the top 10,000 links. Then you can sort however you want inside Excel.
 
The last thing I’m going to talk about is do be cautious. A lot of people will go right up to here and they’ll use the filter that lets you exclude no-followed links. I wouldn’t be too worried about that. Some of the time, maybe you only want to care about the followed links. A lot of the time, what we’ve seen is that no-followed links present link opportunities of their own. They’re often social opportunities, opportunities in social media or on social sites for social profiles. Some of them are engagement and interaction stuff, like blog comments, forum participation. Those can actually be great places to do inbound marketing, get people aware, pay attention to the community, get opportunities for content, get opportunities to interact, and that will lead to good SEO things in the future.
 
Hopefully, you’ve got some good competitive link analysis tips out of this. We look forward to seeing you again for another edition of Whiteboard Friday. Take care.

Video transcription by SpeechPad.com

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AdMob and Google Celebrate Their Anniversary with New Features

Stone age, bronze age, iron age, gunpowder age, computer age, smartphone age. That seems to be the progression anyway. We’re in the middle of a shift from home computer systems to mobile computing platforms. Tablets and smartphones both play a critical role in this change, and Google is spearheading the shift (alongside Apple) thanks to […]

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AdMob and Google Celebrate Their Anniversary with New Features

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Big Update to the SEOmoz Toolbar for Firefox!

Posted by adamf

I’m happy to share a bit of good news for all of you Firefox toolbar aficionados–we have just launched the MozBar V2 . This is the biggest update we have made to the toolbar in the past year, and includes a bunch of great new features, big and small.

Here’s a quick rundown:

1. Enhanced link and keyword highlighting

We have always offered the ability to highlight nofollow links, but what about when you want to quickly see all of your followed links, or perhaps see the links that link to external sites? We now offer all of that. We also added the ability to highlight keywords to so you can easily assess the keyword on the page.

 Highlight Keywords

 

2. Ability to create custom search profiles based on search engine, country, and/or region

Say, for instance, you have a pizza chain in three cities and you spend a lot of time checking local listings in each. Or, perhaps you’re keeping tabs on the search results for the term "SEO" in 5 different countries. This new feature allows you to save up to 10 search engine profiles that you commonly use and quickly open and compare the results for each. Just run a search from your favorite search engine, and the SERP Control Panel will open up on the top right of the page. Select a profile to open that search in a new browser window.

 SERP Control Panel

Click Add a New Profile to create a new search engine profile, and choose a name can find it easily.

 AddSearchProfile

3. CSV Export from your SERP result pages

On the same control panel, you also have the ability to export that page of results, along with all of the high-level link data shown in the SERP overlay.

 CSV Export for SERP Data

4. IP Location at a glance

You will now notice a new button with a flag that shows up in the toolbar as you surf the web. This new toolbar addition shows the country where this site is hosted. Click on the flag to see more details about the location and IP address. If you want to learn more, click on the IP to access WhoIs information.

 IP Location Flag

5. A lot of other improvements to get you the data you want faster

  • A new dropdown in the domain metrics section of the toolbar lets you switch between root domain and subdomain metrics

Domain Type Selection

  • Link counts in the toolbar are now clickable and will take you straight to Open Site Explorer

Link to Domain Metrics

  • The Page Analysis button (with the magnifying glass icon) now allows you to jump to the data you want directly
    • Page Elements: tags and metadata straight from the page source
    • Page Attributes: detailed information about the page, including data like page load time, outbound link counts, and HTTP status codes for the current page and any redirects that directed you to the current page.
    • Link Data: All of our top link metrics from our Linkscape index

Analyze Page Menu

  • Quicker access to make your browser look like the search engine of your choice and see your site like the search engines do. In your settings, just go to Browse As, and select a search engine to automatically set your user agent string, turn off javascript, and turn off your images. A handy overlay will let you return to normal browsing with one click.

Browse As Menu

Do You Like Movies?

If you want an even clearer picture of what is available in the toolbar, Cyrus has created an all new screencast walking through the top features of the toolbar:

 

Many thanks to those of you who have shared your suggestions and feedback for toolbar improvements. Without you, most of these features would never have been conceived. If you have more ideas for features you would like to see included in our next update, please visit our feature request forum and let us know what we can do to make the toolbar even better.

Get the MozBar

P.S. For those of you who prefer Chrome to Firefox, we are just starting work on a big update for Chrome as well. Keep an eye out for it in the coming months.

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Visualize Your Career With LinkedIn’s Connection Timeline

Looking for a “This Is Your Life” type experience when it comes to your professional career? Well, LinkedIn has released a tool th… Continue reading

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