Posts Tagged ‘Google’

How to Optimize Your Business’ Google Plus Profile

Tuesday, January 17th, 2012

How to Optimize Your Business Google Plus Profile

With Google’s recent announcement of Search Plus Your World, there seems to be conflicting view points on whether or not the social network is worth our time. It’s clear that at the moment, that the network is not as big as the hype surrounding it. Nonetheless, we know from watching Facebook and Twitter grow that these things take time. In Arnie Kuenn’s post, he concludes that even though Google’s new social updates may not affect each of our search results immediately, they eventually will. This is why it is critical that businesses get their foot in the door, and make their social presence known on Google Plus now. This means not only setting up a profile, but optimizing it properly to ensure higher search engine rankings. This post will discuss all of the key components necessary to do so. Please refer to the Vertical Measure’s Google+ profile at any time during the post when you need an example. (more…)

Sarah Schager

Sarah Schager is an internet marketing strategist at Vertical Measures who specializes in organic search engine optimization. Some of her specialties include social media strategy, link acquisition, local search and content development management.
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What Are Your Top Results in Google Instant?

Tuesday, September 14th, 2010

Guest Post By: Rex Liu, Intern Vertical Measures

google-instant-stats2Google released their latest innovation, Google Instant, yesterday in the hopes of improving the wheel we call a “search engine”.  Google believes that they can save about 2-5 seconds per search for everyday users, which amounts to about 11 hours every second.  This seems like skewed data that is likely based on slow typers.  However, this doesn’t change the fact that this is a pretty sweet innovation Google has come up with.

Here are the Google figures on their Google Instant page.

GoogleInstantResultsWhen you use Google Instant you will notice that the pages update in real time to display results for the top completion of what you have typed, which means that you will be seeing, and maybe visiting, websites much faster than before and likely without using the search function of the page.  You’ll also notice that the search results will be local and personalized, which means that all of your search history and any local search data will be used to propagate the results.  Unfortunately, I haven’t found a way to get Instant to not use my personal data or IP to determine my local results.  These are the results that I came up with when I did my Instant searches using every letter in the alphabet by itself.

Ultimately Google Instant will not change the results displayed in search, but it will change the way users utilize search.  It’s too early to predict how it will change the way users use search engines and how significant the impact will be on SEO.

Your results will likely be different than mine based on your location and your past search history.  How do you feel about Google Instant and what are your results?  And what sort of impacts do you predict Google Instant will have on SEO?

Elise Redlin-Cook

Elise is the Content & Marketing Manager at Vertical Measures, an internet marketing company in sunny Arizona providing services ranging from content marketing, to social media marketing, link building, and advanced SEO. She’s fully immersed herself into the world of content marketing and content strategy and is the managing editor of this blog.

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Link Building Tools Interview with Aaron Wall

Wednesday, May 26th, 2010
aaron-wallMost of you are familiar with SEObook, launched in 2003, one of the oldest standing SEO sites that is still regularly updated. The site originally was designed as a blog that offered DIY SEO tips and helped sell the leading SEO ebook, which had sold well over $1,000,000 in volume. This week, I have the pleasure of interviewing the founder Aaron Wall, and speaking with him about Link Building and the tools of the trade.
 
Elise Redlin-Cook: In the past, and it could be years ago or even just yesterday, what link are you most proud of acquiring for your site or a clients site?
 
Aaron Wall: I thought it was pretty cool when the WSJ did an audio interview of me about SEO stuff and linked to our site. But as far as driving business goes I would say when Danny Sullivan first linked to me that was sorta what helped me become part of the SEO industry. 
 
Elise: What specific tools are in your link building arsenal to help you acquire links for a client who is just getting started?
Aaron: For brand25 x 25 twitter iconnew websites I am generally pretty conservative and suggest starting out with some of the general web directory links and any links you can get from business partners. The best "tool" to start with in my opinion is a great domain name. And when looking for gaps in market opportunities I typically use SEO for Firefox.
 
Where more in depth analysis (and the use of tools like Majestic SEO and Open Site Explorer) can come in handy is after you already have a site with a bit of age & some ranking feedback, and are trying to catch up to established market leaders for some tougher keywords.
 
Elise: Do you employ competitive analysis in your link building strategy for clients?
 
Aaron: We don’t do much client work outside of running SEO Book, but for our own websites we absolutely do look at how competitive the search results look before we decide which markets to enter. The client work we do tend to do (beyond running our membership website and publishing many websites) is mostly down to larger strategic direction. We have also done link building for a few client projects, but generally we have not done tons of that as that type of labor is very time intensive and somewhat hard to price…this is particularly true if you run a small firm and don’t have many employees.
 
Elise: What are your views on no-follow vs. do-follow links?
 
Aaron: I think followed links are great if you can get them, but if you have a relevant mention to add to a high traffic location (and are doing it in a way that doesn’t reflect poorly on your brand) then certainly it can be worth getting that exposure as well. As a relevant example of the latter, I read an official blog post on how stack exchange was changing their business model, and the first comment on it was a person who said that there were other relevant options like an open source one he started building. Can that sort of exposure easily look tacky and/or tick people off? Sure. But it can be done in ways that are relevant and do not reflect poorly.
 
Elise: How have your link building techniques changed over the years as the search industry has evolved?
 
Aaron: On WebmasterWorld Brett Tabke made a post recently about Google’s linkless internet. Most links are paid for, or as a side effect of exposure, or shared out of ego, etc. Further, whatever natural useful stuff is being mentioned is no longer being mentioned on blogs anywhere near the rate it was a few years ago because of the likes of Twitter and other social platforms that slap a nofollow on everything. Thus 25 x 25 twitter iconin many ways you need to invest in things like relationship building and branding and exposure if you want to compete with the big boys in the biggest markets. 
 
When I got in search link analysis and a touch of creativity was enough to compete, but as more people have become aware of the value of links the model for linkbuilding has from some degree moved from push toward pull.

Elise: I’d love to hear about what inspired you to start SEObook?

Aaron: When Google did their algorithm update named Florida back in 2003 I quickly became popular and way overwhelmed by potential projects. Then the popularity quickly died down. That made me realize how feast or famine consulting would be as a business model. I thought there could be an in-between product or service for people interested in SEO that helped people learn about it without having to pay consulting fees. And that is where the idea of a book with blog updates came in. Why I made it an ebook was because it was conventional wisdom that all print books about SEO were out of date. And then as my popularity grew so did piracy of my work and the complexity of the search industry. Today PPC is far more complex than SEO was when I got into the game. And there are entire verticals of searches and categories which didn’t exist a few years ago. Given search’s increasing complexity it made me think that having 1 linear guide wouldn’t be as strong as an offering as having a modular training program with support forums, which is what we switched our business model to a couple years ago. 

Elise: Yes, that makes a lot of sense. Well, how about now…do you have any exciting projects that you are involved in right now that you’d like to discuss?

Aaron: My wife is hoping to do some pretty cool stuff with PPC Blog in the near future. We are hoping to evolve that into the #1 site for pay per click marketing information in the coming months.

Elise: Would you say that you are you driven by any great passions outside of the business arena?

Aaron: My wife and my dog. :) I also like reading books, playing video games, and learning about economics and investing.

 What are your thoughts about Aaron’s answers? Agree or disagree?

 

Elise Redlin-Cook

Elise is the Content & Marketing Manager at Vertical Measures, an internet marketing company in sunny Arizona providing services ranging from content marketing, to social media marketing, link building, and advanced SEO. She’s fully immersed herself into the world of content marketing and content strategy and is the managing editor of this blog.

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Google to open SEO agency called Google SEO

Thursday, April 1st, 2010

 

Google SEO

Vertical Measures has learned that Google, Inc. is expected to unveil plans to launch its own SEO agency as early as May 2010, according to sources close to the situation. Google SEO Headquarters

Google is putting together an SEO team of approximately 100 employees because it feels like it needs to set the standard in an industry that often gets criticized from the outside. Google SEO will strive to only use the most ethical best practices to increase rankings without adding to the spam glut on the Internet. This implies that Google SEO will become the only search agency in the world that can guarantee first-page rankings because they have total access to the infamous algorithm.
 
But these rankings will come with a price. Early estimates call for the average minimum spend per client to be in the $25,000 a month range, so only serious players need apply here.
 
The formal announcement, expected next week, is sure to send shockwaves through the SEO industry. "Google entering into the search sphere will change the game," said Vertical Measures President Arnie Kuenn. "How can you compete with Google itself? No longer are we just dancing with the elephant, we are competing with it for our very livelihood."
 
That is the question SEOs around the world will be asking themselves. With Google sure to take on many of the powerhouses of the Web, the rest of the world’s website search engine optimization services will need to focus on other aspects of the search marketing business, as winning the most competitive keywords will now be even more impossible.
 
On the flip side, SEO agencies distraught by this breaking news can take solace in one thing. There’s always Yahoo and Bing.
 
Click here for the very latest on SEO.Google.com.

 

Michael Schwartz

Michael Schwartz is an Internet marketing strategist at Vertical Measures as well as an accomplished reporter, blogger and editor. He covers the link building beat.

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Journalists need to embrace search now more than ever

Tuesday, March 9th, 2010

 

Search and journalism share a symbiotic relationship.

Journalism needs search so writers’ articles get found, and search needs journalism to provide some of the freshest content in the SERPs.

But some journalists feel that search represents an inherent contradiction to their job of serving the public good by disseminating timely, accurate and interesting information. It doesn’t feel natural to deliberately try to appease Google and Bing, with some journalists feeling it borders on being unethical.

That was the response that Vertical Measures President Arnie Kuenn and I got from college journalists and professors when we spoke at the Associated College Press National College Journalism Convention in Phoenix as well as the News21 Spring Training at ASU a couple weeks ago.

As we explained the basics of SEO and started to talk about optimizing headlines at the News21 conference, we got a question about the “elephant in the room” from a veteran journalist who explained that there’s some “dismay” in journalism around focusing on keywords for the purpose of ranking in Google.

This is a very valid question, a debate that will continue to rage as search becomes more and more important in the world of journalism.

My opinion goes back to the main point of Arnie’s presentation: when people are searching for your keyword they will either find you or they will find your competitor.

It goes without saying that you want to do everything you can to ensure that they find you, and I don’t feel like you’re doing anything unethical so long as your headlines are not misleading like the sensationalized heds popularized in the days of yellow journalism. So long as your headline still encompasses the core meaning of your story, it’s just smart to optimize that headline by throwing in a keyword as close to the beginning of the title as possible.

In my other life as the chief blogger for the ESPN-affiliated Phoenix Suns blog ValleyoftheSuns.com, I recently did an experiment trying to optimize my site for Amare Stoudemire-related keywords in the weeks leading up to the Feb. 18 trade deadline, as the Phoenix Suns star forward’s name swirled in many rumors about a potential trade.

This strategy involved pumping out lots of quality content and then optimizing for long tail keywords such as “Amare Stoudemire trade rumors,” “Amare Stoudemire trade rumors 2010,” “Amare Stoudemire trade to Cleveland,” and you get the picture.

The results? After getting 12.3 percent of my traffic from search in my site’s previous history, I got a whopping 31 percent of my traffic from search during this time. In just over three weeks, I got about 86K pageviews and 58K uniques. In an average month I generally get about 40K pageviews and 30K uniques, so the increased traffic from search certainly made a major difference.

So hooray for me, now how can you replicate that?

First, use the Google AdWords Keyword Tool to see what people are searching in your vertical, looking for keywords with a good ratio of how much they are searched to competition. Google Trends can also help you find highly-searched keywords in your vertical, and both of these tools are a big part of the research stage of content development.

Also, think ahead and optimize long tail keywords that you know will be hot for a specific period of time ahead of time, like I did with keywords such as “Amare Stoudemire trade rumors 2010″ that would be dormant for most of the year but provided a lot of easy traffic during those three weeks.

Next, write content around what people are searching for, and here’s where it gets tricky. I have a journalism degree, so I know the goal of an ethical journalist (as I strive to be) is to report the news and nothing but the news.

By looking at my analytics and seeing that Amare Stoudemire-related stories were so hot during the weeks leading up to the trade deadline, I feel I was merely following the laws of supply and demand by supplying the kind of content my readership demanded. There’s nothing unethical about creating quality, timely content on topics people want to read.

A big part of the optimization process involves the headline, as touched on earlier. Optimizing for a public figure’s name that gets a lot of searches is often a smart strategy for news stories. You may notice some major newspapers such as the LA Times write different headlines for their print and online editions, often spelling out a public figure’s full name online for search purposes.

Since my site is a part of Google News, my articles often got top billing above the top natural results in a “News” section at the top of the SERP. With so many people searching for articles on this particular topic, there’s no question that this was a source of many of my clicks. 

There once was a time when journalists worried only about the print edition, with the online edition being just another way to display their regular product.

But with pageviews and uniques becoming everything in the online world of journalism, it’s just one more thing that has to change in the ever-changing industry of journalism.

Every journalist must decide for themselves where they draw their ethical line when it comes to optimizing content, but I see no issue with rearranging a couple words in a title of an article that you would write anyway to make your article easier to find than the one written by your competitor.

See below, for Michael and Arnie’s full presentation for News 21.
 

Vertical Measures Internet Marketing from News21 on Vimeo.

Michael Schwartz

Michael Schwartz is an Internet marketing strategist at Vertical Measures as well as an accomplished reporter, blogger and editor. He covers the link building beat.

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