Sunday, December 6, 2009

Official Google statement: hard facts about comment spam

It has probably happened to you: you're reading articles or watching videos on the web, and you come across some unrelated, gibberish comments. You may wonder what this is all about. Some webmasters abuse other sites by exploiting their comment fields, posting tons of links that point back to the poster's site in an attempt to boost their site's ranking. Others might tweak this approach a bit by posting a generic comment (like "Nice site!") with a commercial user name linking to their site.

Why is it bad?

FACT: Abusing comment fields of innocent sites is a bad and risky way of getting links to your site. If you choose to do so, you are tarnishing other people's hard work and lowering the quality of the web, transforming a potentially good resource of additional information into a list of nonsense keywords.

FACT: Comment spammers are often trying to improve their site's organic search ranking by creating dubious inbound links to their site. Google has an understanding of the link graph of the web, and has algorithmic ways of discovering those alterations and tackling them. At best, a link spammer might spend hours doing spammy linkdrops which would count for little or nothing because Google is pretty good at devaluing these types of links. Think of all the more productive things one could do with that time and energy that would provide much more value for one's site in the long run.


Promote your site without comment spam

If you want to improve your site's visibility in the search results, spamming comments is definitely not the way to go. Instead, think about whether your site offers what people are looking for, such as useful information and tools.

FACT: Having original and useful content and making your site search engine friendly is the best strategy for better ranking. With an appealing site, you'll be recognized by the web community as a reliable source and links to your site will build naturally.

Moreover, Google provides a list of advice in order to improve the crawlability and indexability of your site. Check out our Search Engine Optimization Starter Guide.

What can I do to avoid spam on my site?

Comments can be a really good source of information and an efficient way of engaging a site's users in discussions. This valuable content should not be replaced by gibberish nonsense keywords and links. For this reason there are many ways of securing your application and disincentivizing spammers.
  • Disallow anonymous posting.
  • Use CAPTCHAs and other methods to prevent automated comment spamming.
  • Turn on comment moderation.
  • Use the "nofollow" attribute for links in the comment field.
  • Disallow hyperlinks in comments.
  • Block comment pages using robots.txt or meta tags.
For detailed information about these topics, check out our Help Center document on comment spam.

My site is full of comment spam, what should I do?

It's never too late! Don't let spammers ruin the experience for others. Adopt security measures discussed above to stop the spam activity, then invest some time to clean up the spammy comments and ban the spammers from your site. Depending on you site's system, you may be able to save time by banning spammers and removing their comments all at once, rather than one by one.

If I spammed comment fields of third party sites, what should I do?

If you used this approach in the past and you want to solve this issue, you should have a look at your incoming links in Webmaster Tools. To do so, go to the Your site on the web section and click on Links to your site. If you see suspicious links coming from blogs or other platforms allowing comments, you should check these URLs. If you see a spammy link you created, try to delete it, else contact the webmaster to ask to remove the link. Once you've cleared the spammy inbound links you made, you can file a reconsideration request.

For more information about this topic and to discuss it with others, join us in the Webmaster Help Forum. (But don't leave spammy comments!)

Official search engine statement: link building do's and dont's

Bing recently published a document about link building. Although it focuses on how Bing deals with inbound links, it can also help you to get better links for Google, Yahoo and other search engines. The most important points of Bing's document can be found in this article.
The importance of link building
The Bing engineers know that link building is important and they describe link building as follows:
"Link building is a very important form of self-promotion on the Web. You contact webmasters of other, related websites and let them know your site exists. If the value that you have worked so hard to instill in your site is evident to them, they will assist their own customers by linking back to your site. That, my friend, is the essence of link building."
In other words, reciprocal linking is fine. They also remind webmasters that link building is an ongoing process:
"Think of link building as your chance to build your reputation on the Web. As your website is likely one of your business' most valuable assets, consider link building to be a primary business-building exercise. Just don't make the mistake of believing it will result in instant gratification. Successful link building efforts require a long-term commitment, not an overnight or turnkey solution. You need to continually invest in link building efforts with creativity and time. Good things come to those who wait (and work smartly!)."
Things that you can do to get good links to your website
inbound links
Here are the things that Bing recommends:
  • You should develop your website as a brand and brand it consistently. People like to link to high quality websites.
  • You should find relevant bloggers, industry websites and product reviewers and make them aware of your website.
  • You can publish concise and informative press releases online.
  • You can publish expert articles in article directories.
  • You can participate in relevant conversations on blogs and forums and add a link to your website when applicable.
  • You can use social networks to connect to industry influencers. Your profiles should contain links to your website.
  • You can use email newsletters to notify people about new content on your website.
  • You can launch a blog or a forum on your website.
  • You can participate in relevant industry associations and their online forums.
  • You should strive to become a trusted expert voice for your industry while promoting your website.
The link manager in IBP can help you with most of these tasks. It finds relevant blogs, related websites, directories, etc. It also helps you to contact the other websites, keeps track of your contacts, etc.
Warning: the following things will get your website in trouble
Just like Google and other major search engines, Bing doesn't like to be cheated. If they detect unnatural linking patterns, your website might be penalized. The following things can trigger search engine filters:
  • Your website get a lot of additional inbound links a very short time.
  • Many links that point to your website are from unrelated websites or blog comments.
  • Your web pages contain hidden links.
  • You get links from links farms or automated link exchange systems.
  • Paid links point to your website.
  • Known spammers link to your website.
  • Your website links to known spammers.
Here's what Bing does when they find suspicious data that is related to your website:
"When probable manipulation is detected, a spam rank factor is applied to a site, depending upon the type and severity of the infraction. If the spam rating is high, a site can be penalized with a lowered rank. If the violations are egregious, a site can be temporarily or even permanently purged from the index."
Getting inbound links requires some work. The Bing engineers are very clear about this fact: "Make no mistake: getting legitimate and highly valuable, inbound links is not a couch-potato task."

Yahoo! Annual Year In Review: 2009

It’s official, the annual release of the Yahoo! Year in Review for 2009 has arrived! Perhaps bigger and better than ever, this year’s Yahoo! roundup includes in-depth pictorials and a slew of popular topics to sort through, as well as some bonus features  – such as the decade in sports, Yahoo Answers highlights, and a Twitter contest where you can share your top moments of 2009 for a chance to win one of the most popular products of the year, the iPod Touch.

Don’t have the time to scan them all? Here are the highlights of the most popular searches on Yahoo! in 2009:
Top 10 Overall Searches
  1. Michael Jackson
  2. Twilight
  3. WWE
  4. Megan Fox
  5. Britney Spears
  6. Naruto
  7. American Idol
  8. Kim Kardashian
  9. NASCAR
  10. Runescape
Top 10 Celebrity Farewell Searches
  1. Michael Jackson
  2. Farrah Fawcett
  3. Patrick Swayze
  4. Natasha Richardson
  5. Jett Travolta
  6. Billy Mays
  7. David Caradine
  8. Steve McNair
  9. Jade Goody
  10. Ted Kennedy
Top 10 Sudden Fame Searches
  1. Jon & Kate Gosselin
  2. Erin Andrews
  3. Susan Boyle
  4. Kris Allen & Adam Lambert
  5. Nadya Suleman (aka Octomom)
  6. Carrie Prejean
  7. Mark Sanford
  8. Portuguese Water Dog
  9. Falcon Heene (aka “Balloon Boy”)
  10. Sonia Sotomayor
Top Finance Searches
  1. Coupons
  2. Unemployment
  3. Stimulus Plan
  4. Cash For Clunkers
  5. Student Loans
  6. IRS Refund
  7. Foreclosures
  8. Government Jobs
  9. Bernard Madoff
  10. Health Care Bill
“Market Darlings” Related Searches
  1. Facebook
  2. Twitter
  3. Hulu
  4. Bing
  5. iPhone
  6. LinkedIn
  7. Dollar Stores
  8. Palm Pre
  9. Rosetta Stone
  10. Kindle
Top Yahoo! Mobile Searches
  1. Megan Fox
  2. Mobile Games
  3. Michael Jackson
  4. Movies
  5. Rihanna
  6. Mail
  7. Lady Gaga
  8. NFL
  9. Ringtones
  10. iPhone
Top Obama Searches
  1. Obama Inauguration
  2. Obama Biography
  3. Obama Speech
  4. Obama Stimulus Plan
  5. Obama Family
  6. Obama Health Care Reform
  7. Obama Approval Ratings
  8. Obama Facebook
  9. Obama Overseas
  10. Obama Dramas
Among the other must-read lists: Top Travel Destination Searches 2009, Top Viral Videos of 2009, and the Best Bloggers of 2009.
*Michael Jackson highlighted for effect, as he crossed over several categories.

Bing’s Very First List Of Most Popular Searches

Technically, it is Bing.com’s very first appearance since officially launching as the decision engine, halfway through the year (see: Meet Bing, Microsoft’s New Search Engine) in early June. Coupled with an $80 million dollar advertising campaign to rebrand the new search engine (formerly Live Search) and attract new users, it may have actually worked – since Bing also appeared on the 2009 Yahoo Year in Review, with searchers asking, “What is Bing?”

In fairness, Bing did officially release their Most Popular Searches for all of 2009, including data from the first half of the year as Live Search. Decidedly, Michael Jackson would have made it to the top of the list, whether it was Bing or Live Search.

Twitter seems to have infiltrated Bing in the same way, clearly users needed help trying to decide, “To Tweet or Not to Tweet?” Or could it be that the Bing-Twitter integration was that big of a deal?

Top Overall Trending Topics on Bing in 2009:
  1. Michael Jackson
  2. Twitter
  3. Swine Flu
  4. Stock Market
  5. Farrah Fawcett
  6. Patrick Swayze
  7. Cash for Clunkers
  8. Jon and Kate Gosselin
  9. Billy Mays
  10. Jaycee Dugard
Top 3 Celebrity Searches:
  1. Perez Hilton
  2. Robert Pattinson
  3. Megan Fox
Bing plans to unveil a relevancy quiz on Facebook, so you can test your knowledge of the most popular searches in 2009. Stay tuned to the Bing blog to find out more.

For a real-time look at what’s popular on Bing, don’t forget about Visual Search, where you can view the Top Albums, Top iPhone Apps, Top Movies and more at any given time.

AOL’s List Of Lists – Top Searches 2009

AOL has weighed in with a heavy hitting list of 2009’s top searches in the categories below.
AOL’s top searched celebrities for 2009
  1. michael jackson
  2. robert pattinson
  3. rihanna
  4. farrah fawcett
  5. kim kardashian
  6. megan fox
  7. jon and kate
  8. miley cyrus
  9. patrick swayze
  10. natasha richardson
Oh, Edward. Patrick Swayze should roadhouse you from heaven. It surprising that AOL is the only search engine where Rihanna made the Top 10, given her year of very public struggles, although Ask does get an honorable mention for a popular Rihanna rumor being questioned.
AOL’s top searched news stories for 2009
  1. barack obama
  2. cash for clunkers
  3. madoff scheme
  4. octomom
  5. jasmine fiore
  6. health care reform
  7. sonia sotomayor
  8. craigslist killer
  9. chimp attack
  10. balloon boy
Like Yahoo!, President Barack Obama probably should have earned his own political category following his inaugauration in January. But AOL users did seek out some stories that didn’t make the cut on other portals, including the murder of reality TV personality Jasmine Fiore, and the Craiglist killer. Move over “sex sells”, “murder makes pageviews” is coming after you.
AOL’s top searched movies for 2009
  1. twilight
  2. star trek
  3. terminator salvation
  4. transformers 2
  5. harry potter
  6. 2012
  7. slumdog millionaire
  8. watchmen
  9. gi joe
  10. taken
Not being a Twilight fan has its privileges, including the lack of desire to talk about how it made it the top of AOL’s list, as well as the others  – but it has merit from a marketing strategy perspective. Consider how the Twilight saga of books and the movies were released in very specific time waves throughout 2009, keeping the entire topic tops throughout the year is thanks to the buzz created.
AOL’s top searched for sporting events in 2009
  1. march madness
  2. super bowl
  3. us open
  4. tour de france
  5. kentucky derby
  6. wimbledon
  7. british open
  8. masters tournament
  9. french open
  10. world series
Seriously surprising that Lance Armstrong’s return to the Tour de France didn’t fuel it higher in the list, but there’s always next year. However, with 2010 being an Olympic year, look for Vancouver to take top honors.
AOL’s top searched mobile devices for 2009
  1. iphone
  2. ipod touch
  3. psp
  4. palm pre
  5. zune
  6. blackberry storm
  7. garmin nuvi
  8. blackberry curve
  9. sidekick
  10. amazon kindle
Apple continued to reign supreme with the most popular mobile products, yet consider how this list might be different if “blackberry” searches were combined, or the Google/Motorola Droid phone had been released earlier in the year.
AOL’s top searched for coupons in 2009
  1. dtv coupons
  2. bed bath and beyond coupons
  3. macy’s coupons
  4. kohl’s coupons
  5. best buy coupons
  6. home depot coupons
  7. target coupons
  8. pizza hut coupons
  9. lowes coupons
  10. kfc coupons
Like other lists, consumers looking for the best deals possible got on board with coupon searches. AOL took it to another level, giving us a more in-depth look at the brands which drove significant coupon traffic. The notable exception would be for the “DTV” receiver coupons available (and then the corresponding extension)  from the government in the switch to digital television. There’s also evidence of the “Oprah Effect” at #10, when the KFC coupon mad grab made headlines.
AOL’s top “What Is… “ questions of 2009
  1. what is twitter
  2. what is my house worth
  3. what is my ip address
  4. what is a short sale
  5. what is gout
  6. what is love
  7. what is a good credit score
  8. what is swine flu
  9. what is skype
  10. what is lupus
Again, we see Twitter is tops on everyone’s “need to know” list, but economic concerns (house worth, short sale, credit score) still kept creeping into the searches by AOL users.
AOL’s top searched television shows for 2009
  1. american idol
  2. dancing with the stars
  3. lost
  4. the biggest loser
  5. big brother
  6. the bachelor
  7. jon and kate plus 8
  8. survivor
  9. ncis
  10. true blood
AOL’s most searched for vacation destinations for 2009
  1. disney vacations
  2. las vegas vacations
  3. florida vacations
  4. hawaii vacations
  5. mexico vacations
  6. myrtle beach vacations
  7. costa rica vacations
  8. italy vacations
  9. colorado vacations
  10. grand canyon vacations
The travel segment looks very different from 2008, as AOL combined USA and  international travel destinations. Not surprisingly, domestic travel choices ate up all but three spots, as consumers were looking to stay close to home, but also get the best budget vacations. Mexico was going cheap thanks to the swine flu.
AOL’s 10 searched for health conditions in 2009
  1. swine flu
  2. lupus
  3. diabetes
  4. pregnancy
  5. depression
  6. herpes
  7. fibromyalgia
  8. autism
  9. hpv
  10. breast cancer
AOL’s top searched car brands  for 2009
  1. toyota
  2. ford
  3. honda
  4. nissan
  5. bmw
  6. chrysler
  7. lexus
  8. hyundai
  9. audi
  10. jeep
You can check daily hot trends on AOL here, and they’ll shortly be putting up a summary of the above list.

MJ, Twilight Top Yahoo Overall Searches in 2009

After Bing, it’s now Yahoo’s turn to release their list of top searches for 2009.   And guess what’s the most searched term in Yahoo this year? – Michael Jackson of course.  Following MJ is none other than Twilight. Bing’s No.2 most searched keyword was Twitter. Aside from the said two search terms, the rest of the Yahoo’s top searches are different from those of Bing’s.
yahooyearinreview
The rest of the top 10 overall searches in Yahoo for 2009 is as follows:
Top 10 Overall Searches
  1. Michael Jackson
  2. Twilight
  3. WWE
  4. Megan Fox
  5. Britney Spears
  6. Naruto
  7. American Idol
  8. Kim Kardashian
  9. NASCAR
  10. Runescape

Other highlights of Yahoo’s  Year in Review include the following:

  • Top Celebrity Farewell Searches – Michael Jackson
  • Top Sudden Fame Searches – Jon & Kate Gosselin
  • Top Economy Related Searches – Coupons
  • Top Obama Searches – Obama Inauguration
  • Top Science Related Searches – Swine Flu/H1N1
  • Top Business Success Searches – Facebook
  • Top Yahoo Mobile Searches – Megan Fox
  • Top Yahoo! Blogger Searches – TMZ

Yahoo has also put up a microsite for its 2009 Year in Review. This site will updated for significant search trends as the year comes to a close.

Google Releases its Zeitgeist 2009, MJ Tops again

Following Bing and Yahoo’s year-end search trend report, Google has also released its search Zeitgeist 2009. As expected, searches for the King of Pop, Michael Jackson again leads the top 10 fastest rising queries made on Google search worldwide. And while it was nowhere to be found on both Bing and Yahoo’s report it seems that Google users are searching about Facebook more on Google Search as it made it to the number 2 spot.At the number 3 spot is Tuenti, a Spanish social networking site followed by queries for Twitter at number 4. The rest of the fastest rising search queries on Google speaks of how Google search in general are used by users – that is to satisfy their curiosity for everything popular.

Google’s 2009 Year-End Zeitgeist was a result of the aggregated queries that Google users typed in on Google’s search box all through out  the year and took into account Google’s various data services including Insights for Search, Google Trends as well as its other internal data tools.

The searches were ranked in order of the queries, with the search term that got the largest volume on top of the list.
Here are the rest of Google’s 2009 Year-End Zeitgeist:

Fastest Rising (Global)

  1. michael jackson
  2. facebook
  3. tuenti
  4. twitter
  5. sanalika
  6. new moon
  7. lady gaga
  8. windows 7
  9. dantri.com.vn
  10. torpedo gratis

Fastest Rising in Entertainment (Global)

  1. michael jackson
  2. transformers
  3. eminem
  4. naruto shippuden
  5. beyonce
  6. peliculas id
  7. paranormal activity
  8. anime online
  9. natasha richardson
  10. poker face lyrics

Fastest Rising in Food & Drink (Global)

  1. acai berry
  2. picnic
  3. クックパッド
  4. tesco direct
  5. senseo
  6. peanut butter recall
  7. nespresso commande
  8. habibs delivery
  9. mocktail
  10. masterchef australia

Fastest Falling (Global)

  1. beijing 2008
  2. euro 2008
  3. heath ledger
  4. barack obama
  5. amy winehouse
  6. kraloyun
  7. dailymotion
  8. bebo
  9. wii
  10. emule

Fastest Rising in Sports (Global)

  1. real madrid
  2. us open
  3. ufc
  4. sahadan
  5. livescore
  6. pacquiao vs cotto
  7. wbc 速報
  8. pga tour leaderboard
  9. confederations cup
  10. l’equipe football

Host Images Using Free Image Hosting Services: Essential Guide

Many people will tell you that using external (free) image hosting to host your website images is the same as using free hosting overall: unsafe, unreliable and generally unadvisable…. Well, this is not exactly like that. So before we go any further, let’s discuss the pros and cons.

Why using a free external image hosting service might be a good idea?

(1) It’s a good way to save on hosting and bandwidth (especially if you publish multiple images regularly); 
(2) It can be one of steps to take to speed up your site.


Of course, there are some cons:

(1) Less control over your images (the service can decide to cancel your account, delete your images, etc); 
(2) Less reliable: the service may once just close down, etc.


Am I using them? – Yes, for those sites where there are many images.

Note: Of course, I do optimize the image size before publishing it, but if I have multiple images per page, the page load time will still leave much to be desired (even with a fairly good hosting package) – unlike when those images are hosted on Flickr for example: the page loads pretty fast even with like 50 images on it.

Main (Most Reliable) Image Hosting Services: Overview

Free account limitations One image max size Speed URL structure
Flickr 100 MB - Fast dynamic
Photobucket 100 MB - Fast /username/image-name.jpg
Blogger and Picasa 1Gb 20MB max. Fast dynamic
ImageShack - 1.5MB max. Moderately fast …/imagename.jpg
TinyPic - 1600 pixels max. Moderately fast dynamic
Wordpress.com 3Gb - Fast /year/month/image-name.jpg
Note: The table lists only those services I’ve had some serious experience with.


The table is pretty clear but it does require a few comments. While the second and the third columns are more about general features, the last two are aimed to evaluate the SEO-relevant features of the service: load speed and search referral traffic:

1. “Speed” column reflects my personal opinion. I didn’t do any serious tests, this is from my experience of the load time when a page contains numerous images hosted on one of these services.

2. The last column was included there for a reason: “readable” file names in the file paths boost the Google image search referral traffic (if you care about it). I managed to have great results with image search rankings with sites like Photobucket that build the image file path based on the image name.

Yahoo to Connect with Facebook in 2010

Yahoo is about to do what others have been wanting to do for so long now - integrate Facebook in their online service. Just announced is Yahoo’s soon to be implementation of Facebook Connect. This practically means that once implemented you can now share Yahoo’s various content including ratings, photos, article comment and more to your Facebook streams or updates.

Likewise, you can now seamlessly see your Facebook friends’ activities on your Yahoo account. The integration would also mean that you will now have an option on where to update your status message – that is either on any of the supported Yahoo properties or on Facebook instead.

Although Yahoo has somewhat integrated Facebook before, it was only on the individual Yahoo account portal. This time, it will be a full integration across all Yahoo sites.

Obviously, Yahoo is the one taking advantage of  Facebook’s popularity and massive userbase in this deal.  Since Bing is already ahead of  them with its Twitter integration, it is but logical for Yahoo to turn to Twitter’s closest rival – Facebook in the hopes of increasing user engagement on Yahoo’s content sites.
Yahoo is set to roll out Facebook Connect in the early part of 2010.

Microsoft Announces Bing Maps, Mobile App, Toolbar and Visual Search

This could be Bing’s last hurrah for the year, as Microsoft launches Bing Maps in beta while at the same time announces a new Bing mobile app, a new toolbar and a visual search experience in the coming days.  While all these new features seem pretty exciting, Bing Maps beta which runs on Microsoft’s Silverlight looks to be the most promising.

Feature-rich Bing Maps

Screen shot 2009-12-03 at 4.37.37 AM

Bing Maps is obviously Microsoft’s latest effort to take on one of Google’s most successful product – Google Maps.  Bing combines Streetside and Photosynth imaging technologies to provide a seamless mapping experience for users the same way that Google Maps does. Interestingly, Bing maps delivers something which Google Maps don’t have – integration of  third party applications including Twitter Maps, Hyperlocal mapping and Nearby Location service. Other features of Bing Maps include Streetside imagery (Google Street View?)

Bing’s New Mobile Apps

In addition to Maps, Bing is also rolling out a new mobile application which promises the following mobile features – voice-enabled search, improved auto-locate feature for showing your current location and accessing maps, driving directions and traffic information, locate and bookmark specific local business locations, and a facility to save search results into a list for easy access later on.

Bing Toolbar Improved plus New Visual Search Experience

For Firefox and IE users, Bing Toolbar has been greatly improved with the following features – search assist, browse plus and no-fail cash detector which helps you find Bing Cashback deal on a product-related search.
In addition to the Bing toolbar, Bing is also integrating Facebook and Twitter feeds to enable users to find status updates of friends and followers on those two social networks. These updates can be sorted through various ways including upcoming birthdays.

Google Adds Site Performance Feature to Webmaster Tools

Google’s fascination at making the web faster stretches on to the Webmaster Tools via Site Performance analytics feature.  Site Performance which is currently under Webmaster Tools Labs provides you with various information that indicates how fast your site loads from the user’s end.Site Performance gives you the average page load time of the different pages comprising your websites or blogs. It also provides you with appropriate suggestions that you can do to improve problem areas of your sites loading performance.

Google collects your site’s performance data from users who are using Google Toolbar and have enabled PageRank feature.

Site Performance is a pretty cool feature of Webmaster Tools. It’s quite interesting to see how your websites and blog design affects your site’s performance.

For instance, if you’re using a generic WordPress template, Site Performance can tell you whether multiple Javascripts and CSS templates are actually affecting your site loading time.

You may also install the Page Speed Browser-On from your Webmaster Tools account. This browser add-on will help you evaluate the performance of your pages as well as suggestion on how to improve them.

Gain Links Or Make Friends - Which is Better Online?

There's much to be said about the respective values of social media and SEO, both as individual entities and a collective. A cornerstone of search engine optimization is linking, while social media is all about being, well, sociable. But which is better today?

That's very much a question that's open to debate, depending on who you ask, you could expect to hear a whole range of answers. Networking has become ingrained in the Internet marketer's psyche, building relationships while interacting with your fellow professionals and consumers. But can it really compete with building an impressive linking infrastructure when it comes to marketing your website online?

Let's start with the positives...

Both techniques work in very different ways. You build links by making requests, payments (only to the right people - directories and the sort) and creating content that causes a stir. Networking can of course help this process. When you get noticed by more people, they may be inclined to link to you; there's no certainty of course, but social media is a way of raising a profile and showing off your expertise to the world - prime link bait conditions.

There are easy ways to get links and hard ways. Even if you create a fantastic blog, a great new piece of shareware or a stunning design, there's no assurance that people will find you. Quality links are often those that happen organically, the kind of thing that you can't force. Article submission and press releases will assure you of at least one (sometimes more) link back to your site; while the every little bit helps strategy is a good one, that link can take time to gain and time is precious, particularly when the outcome doesn't quite justify the means.

Of course the main reason most people create an article or release, at least in an SEO capacity, is to get it picked up and syndicated across a number of sites. The dream ticket is a major news agency picking up a story on their newswire and sending it global; this, of course, is extremely rare. For this to happen, it needs to be relevant, it needs to be interesting and it needs to provide something new. Regurgitating the same stuff over and over again may save time, but that could well prove to be a false economy.

But once again we're thrust back into the realms of Web 2.0. If you want to get people talking about your content, you may first need to start shouting about it. Herein lies the weakness though of social media.

...Now for the negatives

There is still a cloud of mysticism that hangs over the social side of the Internet. Just how effective is it? If you have the time to dedicate to interact with the wider community day in day out, then the benefits can't be argued. Normal people have become celebrities, while the celebrities themselves have been out there growing legions of new fans. All very positive. But what is the value of a follower or a friend? Commenting on blogs, reciprocating tweets and conversing offers a fantastic community spirit; allowing users worldwide to get involved in a continuous conversation.

What all this won't do, necessarily, is improve your site and its strength. You might get traffic, in fact you will almost certainly get traffic, but if this comes from the same basic group of people, none of whom have the slightest interest in using your business or buying your products, is it really worth the investment of time? Friends and followers aren't just an ego trip; it shows a level of influence and provides a wider sphere of influence. A strong linking strategy though goes further.

Every link you earn will join a wider group of inbound pointers. Google likes websites that people like pointing to. Therefore, Google likes nothing more than a site with links going to all pages, coming from a variety of sources and in a natural fashion. While there are dangerous links out there, toxic ones that will cause more damage than good, these can be avoided and banished if need be.

Whether it's on a directory, bolted onto an article or has come from a respected source organically, the power of the link is hard to question. Aside from a permanent new gateway for targeted traffíc to find you, it adds vital strength to your website's overall profile. PageRank maybe all but defunct, but that doesn't mean that links are treading the same path.

We wouldn't ever discourage people from using social media; it has fantastic potential and is evolving all the time. But if website promotíon and search engine marketing is what you're looking to do, the tried and trusted link may well prove a more constructive use of your time. It maybe a quieter way of going about things, anti-social even, but links get you seen on search engines and search engines get you seen by consumers.

Your online profile may ebb and flow, your popularity wane, but when you build a strong link profile you create stability and open the door to continued development. They are the foundation to any successful site; so while it's always nice to have flighty friends, the stability and long-term benefit of a link is still very much the method of choice for most.

How to Track a Keyword within a Twitter List

I already looked at some useful things you can do with Twitter lists. Today I am sharing another tool that makes sense of Twitter lists and lets you track updates by any group of Twitter users united in the same list.
Listiti is a new tool that sends you an email alert once a word is used in Twitter list. Here’s how it works:
1. Create a Twitter list of people who Tweet about the topic you are interested in;
2. Go to Listiti and create an alert by providing:
  • The Twitter list slug,
  • Key terms (you can choose to track the exact match or any of the words);
  • Your email to send the alerts:
listiti - create an alert
3. You should now go to your email box and confirm the alert:
listiti - confirm
4. After confirming you will see your alert status:
listiti - confirm
5. Now, once the Twitter users within the list (or any of them) mention the word you are tracking, you’ll receive an email alert that looks like this (yes, this is me mentioning the word just for the sake of the test):
listiti - alert
I haven’t used the tool long enough to share some success story, but this seems like a very useful utility that can be used both in keyword research and reputation management.

Google Analytics Unloads 7 Powerful Features

In case you have not noticed from your Google Analytics account yet, Google has recently added 7 new features into the already useful site traffic analysis tool. These new features are – Analytics Intelligence with Custom Alerts, Expanded Goals and New Engamenet Goals, Expanded Mobile Reporting, Unique Visitors Metric, Advanced Analysis Features, Advanced Segments and Custom Reporting Templates, and Multiple Custom Variables.
Screen shot 2009-12-04 at 5.47.17 AM
So, briefly here’s what each of these features can do for your Google Analytics account:
Analytics Intelligence with Custom Alerts - monitors your site’s data patterns on a daily, weekly and monthly periods. It brings up significant data trends and insights and lets you create custom alerts for monitoring site dimensions and metrics.
Expanded Goals and New Engagement Goals – lets you track site conversions per up to 20 goals. It also measures user engagement and branding success through Time on Site  and Pages per Visit.
Expanded Mobile Reporting – lets you track your mobile websites performance through your iPhone or Android phones. It lets you track non-Java-Script enabled phones as well.
Unique Visitors – a nice feature that tracks how many actual visitors with unique cookies got into your sites
Advanced Analysis Features - find deeper meaning into your Analytics data with pivoting, secondary dimensions and advanced table filtering features.
Share Advanced Segments and Custom Report Templates - allows you to share URL link for Advanced Segment and Custom Report to any Analytics user. This will import the pre-formatted template into the person’s account.
Multiple Custom Variables – lets you customize Google Analytics for collecting unique site usage data. It also lets you define and track visitors based on various attributes – visitor, session and page-level.
Overall these are nice addition to the already powerful features of Google Analytics. And these more than add for the reasons why Google Analytics is the only site-monitoring tool that I’ve used since I started managing my blogs.

New Google Option Translates Search Results

Language is no barrier for a new search option that Google announced today. It’s called “translated search” and has been available already in Google Translate; now it’s also available as one of the choices on Google’s Search Options panel.
Google will start rolling out a new search feature aimed aimed at bridging  the language barrier across web search results. This new feature called, Translated Search will  let you quickly find Google search results written in languages other than English.
The new option will take a search query, look for results written in other languages, and translate those results for you. Google suggests it could be useful when looking for restaurant reviews written in the native language of a country you’re visiting.
translatedsearch
Google will try to choose the right languages automatically, but users can manually choose languages via the panel shown above.
This new search option is launching over the next day, Google says.

While you can practically translate web sites to other languages using Google Translate, translated search will allow you to do same right on Google SERPs.
To try out this feature, simply click on “Show Options” at the top of the search results page and then select “translated search”.  When you enter your search term, Translated search will then select various languages to best translate your query into, and presents you with the list of search results written in those languages.
Results of  Translated Search is displayed on top of the regular search results and are higlighted with gray borders to indicate that those results are written in foreign languages.
Now, even more interesting is when you enter search keywords written in your own language. Google will translate this into other languages and presents you with relevant results written in your own language but translated into English.
You can also easily switch between languages by selecting any language from the link option at the upper portion of the search results page. It will even allow you to select up to five different languages at the same time.
Sounds good? Actually it does, if only Google has activated it now. Unfortunately “Translated Search’ will go live in the next couple of days or perhaps couple of hours.