Tag Archive | "SEO"

Number of Words per Search Query Increases

Tags: ,


New data from HitWise shows that web search users are using more words in their search queries compared to behavior from a year ago. The Marketing Pilgrim, Andy Beal, compares the recent HitWise data to a OneStat report from 2004.

I used the data from Feb, 2004 and Feb, 2009 to create the following graph. It’s visually clear that in the past 5 years, users are increasing the number of words in their search queries. In 2004, more than 50% of the searches had only 1 or 2 words. In 2009, the trend has reversed. Now more than 50% of searches contain 3 or more words.  

While it’s great to rank for 1 or 2 word search phrases, in order to maximize impact, your seo efforts need to include a variety of phrases that contain 3 or more words.

Follow PubCon South Presenters on Twitter

Tags: , ,


TwitterWant to follow speakers, moderators or panelists from PubCon South in Austin Texas but you’re having a hard time finding them? Here’s a list of more than fifty 2009 PubCon speakers that can be found on Twitter.

Name Twitter Blog or Homepage
Adam Jewell @AdamJewell http://www.netplusmarketing.com/
Amanda Watlington @amandaw http://www.searchingforprofit.com/
Bill Hartzer @bhartzer http://www.vizioninteractive.com/
Brian Massey @bmassey http://ConversionScientist.com/
David Naffziger @brandverity http://www.brandverity.com/
Brian Combs @BrianPCombs http://www.apogee-search.com/
Michael Brito @Britopian http://www.britopian.com/
Brett Tabke @btabke http://www.webmasterworld.com/
Michael Dorausch @chiropractic http://www.planetc1.com/
Chris Brogan @chrisbrogan http://www.chrisbrogan.com/
Chris Winfield @chriswinfield http://www.10e20.com/
Brian Clark @copyblogger http://www.copyblogger.com/
Carolyn Shelby @cshel http://www.cshel.com/
Dan Zarrella @danzarrella http://danzarrella.com/
Dave Snyder @davesnyder http://www.searchandsocial.com/
Eric Bramlett @ericbramlett http://www.ericbramlett.com/
Michael Martin @googleandblog http://www.googleandblog.com/
Michael Gray @graywolf http://www.wolf-howl.com/
Guy Kawasaki @guykawasaki http://www.garage.com/
Janet Driscoll Miller @janetdmiller http://www.search-mojo.com/
Jay Berkowitz @JayBerkowitz http://www.tengoldenrules.com/
Jessica Bowman @jessicabowman http://www.jessicabowmanseo.com/
Joe Laratro @jlaratro http://www.tandem-interactive.com/
Joanna Lord @JoannaLord http://www.theonlinebeat.com/
John Lessnau @John_Lessnau http://www.lessnau.com/
Joseph Morin @josephmorin http://www.linkedin.com/in/joemorin
Kate Morris @katemorris http://www.longhornkate.com/
Kenny Hyder @kennyhyder http://positiontech.com/
Christine Churchill @keyrelevance http://www.keyrelevance.com/
Krista Neher @KristaNeher http://www.themarketess.com/
Laura Alter @lauraa http://lauraalter.com/
Laerence Coburn @lawrencecoburn http://www.sexywidget.com/
Lee Odden @leeodden http://www.toprankmarketing.com/
Lisa Buyer @lisabuyer http://www.thebuyergroup.com/
Lisa Riolo @lisariolo http://lisariolo.com/
Lyndsay Walker Blahut @lyndseo http://www.lyndseo.com/
Roger Montti @martinibuster http://www.martinibuster.com/
Matt Cutts @mattcutts http://www.mattcutts.com/
Pat Strader @matterhornpat http://www.matterhornmarketing.com/
Melanie Mitchell @melaniemitchell http://www.foliofn.com/
Matt Genovese @mgenovese http://door64.com/
Mike Chapman @MikeChapman http://everydotconnects.com/
Guillaume Bouchard @nvi http://www.nvisolutions.com/
Todd Friesen @oilman http://www.positiontech.com/
Ken Clark @onwardsearch http://www.onwardsearch.com/
Ethan Giffin @opie http://www.groovecommerce.com/
Taylor Pratt @pratt http://www.nfusion.com/
Reem Abeidoh @rabeidoh http://www.reemabeidoh.com/
Jon Henshaw @RavenJon http://raventools.com/
Rhea Drysdale @Rhea http://outspokenmedia.com/
Rob Snell @robsnell http://www.robsnell.com/
Roger Dooley @rogerdooley http://www.neurosciencemarketing.com/blog/
Scott Polk @scottpolk http://www.scottpolk.com/
Sean Jackson @seanthinks http://www.leadmaverick.com/
Gillian Muessig @SEOmom http://seomoz.org
Shari McConahay @ShariMcConahay http://www.anniescostumes.com/
Wayne Sutton @waynesutton http://socialwayne.com/

There were a few speakers/moderators/panelists that I couldn’t find on Twitter. If you know of any, please drop a comment.

Follow me on Twitter @johnfairley, I’ll be at pubcon too.

SEO Tools I Use Every Day

Tags: , ,


At a recent local SEO meetup, I discussed many tools that I use that help me with my SEO projects. Below is a list of the tools mentioned. If you are new to SEO, I recommend using the free tools first to learn and discover if each is a fit for your process/methodology.

Keyword Research Tools

Paid:

Free

Local Optimization

Analytics

Link Checking

Site Keyword Ranking

Toolbar

(#of backlinks; pagerank; traffic; domain age; highlight nofollow links; rank checker; etc.)Â

Check Domain

(WHOIS, number of sites on IP, geolocation of IP; domain age, etc.)Â

On Page

SEO Strategy – Building Blocks for Success

Tags: ,


One of the common hurdles for implementing Search Engine Optimization for your website is determining an effective strategy and an implementation plan. Should I first address page titles, or a site map? Should I nofollow footer links to my “Terms of Service” page or add unique META descriptions to my pages first? The list goes on-and-on. The options may leave you scratching you head thinking “How do I develop an SEO Strategy?”

SEO Building Blocks

If you want to maximize results and minimize the time to implement, then I recommend you develop a strategy that builds upon a strong SEO foundation. I’ve identified seven building blocks for SEO success. The lower blocks form the SEO foundation for your website.

SEO Success Building Blocks

High level overview of the 7 SEO Building Blocks for Success:

1. Configuration
Start out right by choosing the right domain name, making needed server configurations, choosing and configuring a content management system and installing an SEO friendly analytics package.

2. Research & Targeting
Align your business and SEO goals, then perform targeted keyword research.

3. On Page Factors
Make it easier for the search engines to figure out what content is included on your pages and what the topics are. Optimize titles, descriptions, header tags, etc.

4. Information Architecture 
Information Architecture forms the skeleton or frame of your website. The joints are the links between pages. Search Engines use these links to discover pages and determine which pages are heirarchically more important than others. Links include main navigation, category navigation, sitemap, footer, tag clouds breadcrumb trails and more.

5. Building Awareness
The rest of the world, including search engines, needs to be aware of your website and the content it contains. Techniques for building awareness include syndication, XML site maps, link building and social media optimization.

6. Accelerators
Managing the distribution of page rank juice, expanding keyword research, strategic link building and generating buzz about your website will amplify or accelerate your results.

7. Measure & Refine
Once search traffic starts flowing in, results should measured agains business goals. Use analytics and advanced keyword research to find new opportunities to add new targeted content to the website.

Prioritze

Analyze your websites current SEO state in each of the first six blocks: Configuration, Targeting, On-Page Factors, Information Architecture, Awareness, Acceleration. For each block, determine the current depth of coverage.

Address configuration & targeting issues first. Deepen coverage at each level before moving up. You can and should work on multiple block levels at a time.

Try to avoid top heaviness. A good rule of thumb is: To improve SEO results, for any given block, the effort required is higher if blocks below are smaller. Smaller = less coverage.

Implementation Plan

  1. Set goals for SEO
  2. Analyze current SEO state (focus on foundation blocks)
  3. Prioritize (based upon current state analysis)
  4. Perform keyword research
  5. Identify target keywords (consider search volume; business goals; brand; user roles; purchase phases; etc)
  6. Implement improvements in foundation blocks
  7. Add targeted content
  8. Build awareness, accelerate & refine

For the clients that I work with every day, following this overall strategy drives an ever growing amount of targeted search traffic to their websites.

Chicago SEO Meetup Group

Tags: ,


If you live in Chicago and are interested in SEO, you may want to checkout the Chicago SEO Meetup Group. Once a month we meet to network and discuss strategy, tactics and trends in SEO.

How to Get Buy-in From IT on SEO Initiatives

Tags: , ,


You’re in charge of an SEO initiative that requires the IT team’s buy in. How can you boost your chances of getting the IT team on-board with the project? Follow these 6 steps to increase your chances of buy-in from IT and the rest of the organization.
SEO IT Meeting Buy-in
1. Do Your Homework First
2. Communicate the Business Rationale
3. Define the Scope & Effort
4. Phase the Rollout
5. Don’t Rule Out the Intangibles
6. Don’t Give Up

1. Do Your Homework First
You should have a solid grasp on the current state of SEO for your website and the opportunity that optimizing presents before attempting to gain support for your initiative.

Analyze current on-page SEO, URL structure, internal link structure, external links, etc to determine which areas need to be addressed. Be prepared to highlight both successes and shortcomings. Highlight the successes as something to build on.

Use whatever existing analytics data you have to determine the current amount of organic traffic. Perform keyword research, using tools such as Word Tracker’s Free Keyword Suggestion Tool (http://freekeywords.wordtracker.com/), to identify target keywords for which you want to attract traffic. It’s important to understand the relative quantity of searches made by users in order to narrow the list to the highest opportunity keywords.

Next compare your rankings against your competitors for these key terms. Use tools such as SEO Books Rank Checker (http://tools.seobook.com/firefox/rank-checker/) to determine how your website stacks up.

With this information you are ready to build your case for SEO and develop an implementation strategy.

2. Communicate the Business Rationale
Everyone wants their initiative to be the “top priority” for IT. You must make the case why this SEO initiative should be made a priority. Use the current SEO state analysis, competitor analysis and keyword opportunities to assemble your business case.

Make sure that senior management on the business side is on-board before going to IT. IT wants to know that the initiative has clear support within the organization and how the project aligns to the business goals of the company.

Now you are ready to talk to IT about the details of the initative.

3. Define the Scope & Effort
Using your analysis put together a list of prioritized items you would like the IT team to implement. Note: Depending on your current state, some efforts might be undertaken before others. For example, if your on-page SEO is poor, then you may wish to target this aspect before you attack internal link structure. Massive duplicate content might be addressed before implementing a site map.

Your list should also be prioritized by what you believe would have the greatest positive impact on meeting the business goals. Let the IT team determine the effort (for their responsibilities) and you provide the effort for your area of responsibilities.

Don’t expect an immediate determination of effort. The IT team will likely want to provide a more educated effort and risk analysis. Ask for a date to receive their estimate. If the date is too far out, ask for something looser that can be used to gauge relative efforts.

4. Phase the Rollout
The IT team doesn’t have unlimited resources and most likely won’t be able to take on all the items on your list. Be flexible and willing to work with IT on how this initiative fits into their schedule.

Companies that commit themselves to SEO should understand that it is a long term initiative. Impact is seen over time and conditions change so set expectations that SEO is something that should be built into processes and regularly re-evaluated.

5. Don’t Rule Out the Intangibles
Individual IT team members are generally more excited to work on projects that they learn a great deal from or ones that enhance valuable skills. SEO projects often allow them to expand their skill sets and challenge their creative thinking.

If the project has high visibility within the organization, then convey this fact to the team. Their contributions to success will be made evident.

6. Don’t Give Up
Since your project will like have to be prioritized with all other initiatives, you likely won’t get everything you want exactly when you want it. Discuss regularly with IT the progress of the initiative, including regular updates (monthly, quarterly) containing your analysis of the impact based upon analytics. Positive results will motivate the IT team to want to work more on the initiative.

When presenting results to the business side of the organization, make sure you highlight IT’s cooperation and essential contributions to the project. The IT team will appreciate the recognition and you will gain respect for not hogging the spotlight. 

Following these 6 steps should increase the likelihood that the IT team will be on-board with your SEO initiatives.

SEO for Social Media Websites at SocialDevCamp Chicago

Tags: , , , , , ,


I’ll be presenting at SocialDevCamp Chicago on August 9th, 2008. This Midwest unconference is geared towards people interested in social networks, web applications, platform development, new media, and any of the exciting (but messy) topics in-between.

I’ll be presenting (see final presentation below) on SEO for social media websites. This presentation is geared towards how to design a Search Engine Optimized social media website. The presentation will use real world examples of three social media websites: twitter, digg and stumbleupon to illustrate best practices and pitfalls for SEO.

@johnfairley on Twitter - (follow me)