Writing good articles that people want to link to is called ‘link baiting’. Link baiting is inherently viral because it relies on many different sources to pick up on it and spread it. There are a number of ways to get people to link to your articles simply by writing them a certain way. Articles should always be informative, but it takes a little more to make them interesting enough to be link bait.
The goal of a link bait article is to hook the reader enough that they want to link to the material. There are a number of different hooks that can be used in your articles.
Informational Hooks – The goal here is to provide very rare or useful tips and news that benefit the reader. Oftentimes, these come in the form of detailed guides or breaking news articles. This is the most widespread type of hook.
Humor Hooks – Create something funny that catches on across the Web. This is the hardest hook to develop because people like such a wide variety of things and it can be hard to develop something with wide appeal that will generate a lot of links. Lately, humor hooks are generally funny videos.
Negative Hooks – These are articles that are controversial or attack something popular. Negative hooks are not recommended for most business sites because they can also generate negative buzz for the company. They do however generate a lot of traffic and links.
Widget Hooks – Create a tool that is widely needed on your site or create a tool that can be embedded on other people’s Web sites and includes a link back. A great example of this is Adobe’s Acrobat Reader software. It is linked to from thousands upon thousands of Web sites so that users can view PDFs.
Keep in mind that long term link baiting is dependent on quality content. If you are writing content that is not of the highest quality, it will be hard to maintain any kind of long term link bait traffic. It’s also important to keep in mind that viral sources are generally volatile; meaning they are temporary. Humor and negative hooks especially are volatile as trends and fads change rapidly on the Web. So, it is always advisable to work on your link baiting and not rest on your laurels once you have a single popular piece of content.
Opening Up Your Content to the World
The goal of SEO and SMO are essentially the same: to bring content to the masses. They just take different, overlapping, approaches to it. To bring attention to our content, we must first generate it. Text content must be interesting and appeal to your audience. If it does not, you cannot expect people to link back to it and it’ll be hard to rank the page. In this case, it can be tempting to go with a 100% paid linking campaign to make up for the fact that no one will link to your boring content, but it’s more effective to simply write the content right from the beginning. We should be improving the quality of the Web. Keep this in mind at all times when writing your content.
Once we have some good content on the site, we want to make sure everyone has a chance to read it and direct their friends to it. One way is to do it through organic search. This is why SEO works so well with SMO. It ensures we have all our bases covered. SMO directly targets social media sites, but it also refers to the method of making the content easy to share. This can be done through some of the following:
• Company profiles on social media sites such as facebook and myspace
• RSS feeds of your blog entries
• Optimized press releases
• Adding social media submission buttons to your articles
• Providing incentives for Webmasters to link back to your articles
• Online photo galleries through Flickr showing your offices
• YouTube channel for videos
• Submit your RSS feeds and articles to aggregate sites
• Add an ‘email this article to a friend’ button
• Set up a mini PR campaign around a new link bait article
These are all very simple ways to increase your visibility and expose your content to the world, but they are often overlooked. Individually, they are not the biggest traffic generators, but together they can form a powerful source of inbound links and traffic. The more eyes you can get your content in front of, the larger number of backlinks you’ll receive generating both authority and traffic.
]]>“Social Media Optimization” or “SMO” was first coined by Rohit Bhargava to describe the method through which sites generate traffic and publicity through social media Web sites. Bhargava deduced that there were 6 rules for conducting Social Media Optimization:
1.) Increase your linkability
2.) Make tagging and bookmarking easy
3.) Reward inbound links
4.) Help your content travel
5.) Encourage the mashup
6.) Get communities connected
The idea behind Social Media Optimization is to get as many sites to link back as possible to your site using the readily available tools of the large social media Web sites such as digg, stumbleupon, and facebook as well as blogs, forums, RSS syndication sites, press release aggregators, and article hosting sites. Social Media Optimization goes a step further than the standard SEO best practices because it also incorporates video and images as optimal content. Social Media Optimization greatly benefits SEO though through the generation of organic backlinks and Social Media Optimization benefits from the core concepts of SEO forming a symbiotic relationship.
The end goal of Social Media Optimization is to drive traffic to a site and generate backlinks. Backlinks are links from another Web site to your Web site. They help to increase your authority in the search engines and improve rankings. Organic links, such as those from social media sites, also generate traffic. Organic links are links that develop without payment to the third party Web site. These are ideal links and provide the most value to a site. They provide both authority with the search engines as well as good amounts of traffic. This essentially places Social Media Optimization on the crossroads between SEO, online reputation management (ORM), and general Web marketing.
SMO as an Integral Part of SEO
The core practices of SEO are sound, but restricting. With any SEO campaign, there is always the subject of inbound linking to consider. There are many ways to go about it, but the very best links are generated organically. These links are much harder to get which is why they are more highly valued. They also make a statement about the quality of your content. Only great content has a lot of organic backlinks. The search engines know this and rank pages accordingly. Because of this, organic linking must be a part of an SEO campaign for it to be truly optimal. For many sites, organic linking and paid linking can be made to work together to maximize the number of backlinks.
If we take a typical SEO campaign that addresses text content, META tags, architecture/URLs, and inbound links, then inbound linking comprises approximately 60% of your rank. This means that it is the single most important aspect determining where you rank in the engines. Of course content is important, but the major engines consider links to be the most accurate description of a site’s authority. The keywords you actually rank for are determined by the text content on the site and the text in the inbound links, but the power and authority of a site is derived from the quantity and quality of inbound links.
This has a very powerful effect on the effectiveness of an SEO campaign. You can write the best text content on the Web on the most search engine friendly site around, but without links you will find it hard to rank for even non-competitive terms. Social Media Optimization dictates that we not get tunnel vision on the search engines and consider the millions of other sites that might also like our content and direct their users to it. In this way, we are really optimizing a site for not only search engines, but Webmasters in general as well. SEO provides what the search engines want and Social Media Optimization provides what other sites want. Together, they provide the most effective campaign possible.
]]>How do you know if your site is right for one of our SEO packages?
1.) You have a small to medium sized site.
2.) You would like to receive better visibility in the search engines.
3.) You would like to grow your business.
Coupled with our new SEO packages are brand new linking packages. These linking packages are built to maximize the effectiveness of all of our SEO packages and go a long way in ensuring your dominance in the organic search results. We highly recommend having your site looked at by one of our professionals to determine which linking package would be most beneficial for your site.
To learn more about our SEO packages and what all they include, please see our ‘packages’ page on the site by clicking here.
]]>We will be following up this Starter Kit with other training modules in the next few months. We hope you enjoy it and discover a lot of new information.
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Using the advanced image search, even more filters are opened up. The options for type and size are available as well as filetype and color as seen below.
Prior to these updates, Google image search was kind of a mess of various images that might be related to the search, but simply aren’t what you’re looking for. I’ve done quite a bit of testing on the new filters and I love them. I was able to easily find cartoon drawings and charts with almost no photos or unwanted images presented. Overall, it’s a really great update.
]]>We estimate the first module (Keywords and Best Practices) will be completed and available to the public in February 2009. Currently, we plan on building 5 modules that will cover the entire scope of SEO from keyword analysis to inbound linking.
]]>Today we’re launching SearchWiki, a way for you to customize search by re-ranking, deleting, adding, and commenting on search results. With just a single click you can move the results you like to the top or add a new site. You can also write notes attached to a particular site and remove results that you don’t feel belong. These modifications will be shown to you every time you do the same search in the future. SearchWiki is available to signed-in Google users. We store your changes in your Google Account. If you are wondering if you are signed in, you can always check by noting if your username appears in the upper right-hand side of the page.
This could mean a lot of things for search in the future. I’m very curious as to how popular this feature will be. If the masses are very interested in customized searches, it could mean a whole new era for the SEO industry for both good and bad. This could be used to help weed out poor sites that manipulate rankings, but it could also be used to ensure large popular sites further dominate search results. For right now, there appears to be no plans to use data from the SearchWiki in the main algorithm.
]]>1.) Keywords and Best Practices
2.) Onsite Optimization
3.) Offsite Optimization
4.) Dynamic Sites
5.) Tracking Results
We are really proud of the material we have so far and are looking forward to getting this out to everyone. There is no reason that someone should have to search 20 locations to get good, trustworthy information on SEO when the knowledge is already compiled in any easy-to-follow training format. No quick overview. No sales pitch masquerading as training. Just the complete story from A to Z on how to get your Web site optimized.
We will continue to bring you updates as soon as they are available.
]]>This is a massive blow to Yahoo who was really looking to this deal to bring in some much needed revenue. Now that the Microsoft deal is dead, I’m not sure what Yahoo is going to do.
Yahoo’s management has been under pressure since rejecting the $33 a share offer from Microsoft, which valued the company at $47.5bn (£29.4bn).
Yahoo shares were trading at $14 each on Wednesday.
Now that the Google deal has fallen through, Yahoo may find itself having to try to do another deal with Microsoft, although Microsoft has publicly said it is no longer interested.
Carl Icahn, a Yahoo investor who now sits on its board, went as far as to try to sack the entire Yahoo board to try to resurrect the Microsoft deal.
Of course, the other option is for Yahoo to find some way to salvage their ad program and not rely on a competitor to power its advertising. I remember seeing the grand unveiling of their new ad platform and it actually caused their stock price to drop further. Seems like nothing but bad news for Yahoo today.
]]>I have to admit, I’m a little shocked by the statistic that 80% of SEO spending is spent on in-house initiatives as opposed to outsourcing to SEM companies. It’s apparently become very commonplace for medium to large businesses to hire an SEM team in-house to take care of their organic SEO needs.
Another thing to note is that according to these figures, people are becoming more and more search savvy. Longer keyword searches are up while single term searches are down. Searchers are realizing more and more that looking for more specific information provides better results.
]]>1.) Flash / JavaScript Navigations
It’s no secret that search engines have trouble spidering certain links. The goal should always be to make things as easily as possible for the search engine spiders. Though Flash navigations may look nice, they generally are not spidered well. Links in JavaScript are not spidered at all. The engines do not render pages, they only look at code. As a rule of thumb, all links on the site should appear as standard HTML. Text links are optimal. Image links are spiderable, but not as effective for SEO. Image maps are spiderable, but are sometimes a unpredictable.
We always recommend drop down navigations to increase internal linking, but is it important that the links themselves are not in JavaScript. It is always ok to use JS to power animation or appearance, but the links themselves should be in basic HTML. Usually, a good dropdown menu will use CSS in conjunction with JS to provide a good, spiderable menu system.
2.) Poor Architecture
There is nothing harder to change after-the-fact than poor architecture. If the site is built on a poor foundation, there is only so much you can do to fix it without redesigning. It is of dire importance that good internal linking and prominence be considered prior to designing a site. Because the search engines try to view a site’s architecture as a user would, this should be Web marketing 101, but some sites still struggle with this. Here are the rules you should always abide by:
3.) Splash Home Page / Splitter Page
Splash pages can completely kill a site’s internal linking. The home page of a site is given the most authority and links on them are very valuable. The rationale is that any page linked from the home page (which has limited space) must be a very important page for users. If you place a splash page on your site instead of a home page, then you are dramatically reducing the potential internal link authority of the site. The home page should be a portal to the site…not an intermediary page in front of a pseudo home page. This is compounded even worse when the splash page is really a splitter page with an HTML form. Pages like these attempt to split incoming traffic into mini sites.
For example, a site that has a consumer and corporate section might place a splitter page in the root that asks the user to choose which version of the site they want to visit. If we were to place this choice inside a dropdown HTML form, we would literally have the worst possible home page. HTML forms are not spiderable. This practice is commonly seen with sites that have international/language versions of a site. When going to the home page you are prompted to choose a language with an HTML form and redirected to the applicable version of the site. VERY bad idea.
4.) Non-spiderable / Non-existent Text Content
It is not that uncommon to find sites that have the vast majority of their text content in Flash, JavaScript, images, called via an IFRAME, or just completely missing. It’s nearly impossible to rank (with the exception of using heavy inbound link manipulation) a page that doesn’t even mention the keywords once in a form that is visible by the engines. It may look good to have your content written in script through the use of images, but the engines cannot read it and you won’t get credit for it.
If you cannot determine what is visible and isn’t to the engines, use one of the many online spider simulator tools. They basically strip out the visible text content and show you what the spiders see. Some good ones are:
http://www.seochat.com/seo-tools/spider-simulator/
http://www.webmaster-toolkit.com/search-engine-simulator.shtml
]]>I would take special note of the keyword density and proximity tools. I haven’t found a better tool for checking keywords on the Web yet. Most software packages don’t even include that level of detail when checking densities. Definitely take a look at their tools. I find them really helpful during the optimization process.
]]>Our next step is TreeHouse Labs. This is being built with the intention of being the single best place on the Web for training material related to SEO. Over time, we want to expand it to also incorporate design and development best practices to form a complete resource for Web identity. Stay tuned for more updates as we complete new portions of the site!
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1.) Hide stuff. Instead of improving the site, create two totally different experiences on the same page; one for users and one for engines. Hide your text content using CSS or something as simple as white text on a white background. This will ensure the engines pick up the SEOd content and the users never see it. A great way to move up in the rankings until you get caught and banned.
2.) Ignore the part of the campaign that is inconvenient. Instead of attending to all aspects of an effective campaign, simply leave out the parts that take too much work. For example, if you can’t write text content, simply ignore that part and continue working on the rest of the items. This will ensure a partial optimization (which is an oxymoron I think).
3.) Make up for weak areas by overcompensating in other areas. This one is super common among SEOs as well as less-than-informed clients. Instead of ignoring parts of the optimization that are inconvenient, we try to make up for it by greatly escalating another area. This is dangerous territory because it always leads to over optimization. For example, let’s say a site has very poor inbound linking. Instead of doing everything in our power to increase inbound links, we would instead bring their keyword density up to a crazy level. This may sound like a good idea, but it’s like fighting fire with gasoline. Now we not only have a site with a poor inbound linking scheme, but we also have a site with spammy content.
Some of these items may sound a little obvious, but almost all SEO mistakes originate from one of them. Often, they just appear more complex, but always go back to either hiding content, ignoring part of the optimization, or overcompensating. In the long term, they never lead to good results. Don’t be fooled.
]]>1.) Your pages must be authoritative for their keywords. If you don’t write the best content, then you can’t really expect to be ranked high. Assume that each potential visitor searching for your keywords is looking for good information relating to them. Does your site provide that information? If it does not, no amount of ethical SEO is going to overcome that. Also keep in mind that the search engines read the META headers, alts, titles, and formatting tags such as H1 and use them in their calculations. Your page should be very targeted and the best page on the Web related to your keywords. If you create the most authoritative pages, the rest of the optimization is much easier.
Also remember that the search engines base the majority of their calculations on links and text. If your text is very low density, not visible to the engines, or poorly written, you cannot expect to rank higher than someone who writes well thought out articles. Check out your competition and see what they are doing…then do something better.
2.) Your site must be vouched for by other sites. The search engines have placed the burden of determining what sites are credible and which are not on the Web itself. They do this through analyzing the quantity, quality, and relevancy of links pointing to a specific site. The more high quality links you have, the more authority the site has and the easier it is to rank. Link building is an ongoing process and should never stop. Consider it to be public relations for your Web site.
This ties back to the number 1 fundamental. If you write good authoritative content, people will naturally link to it. Getting inbound links is not easy, but it’s much more bearable when you have good content that prompts other Webmasters to link to it organically. Write good articles/content, get the word out there, and watch the links come in.
3.) Your site must have a good history with the engines. It’s no secret that search engines have trust issues with new sites. When a spam site gets banned from the index, the spammer simply puts up a new site. Because of this, search engines are always a little hesitant to trust new sites. The longer the site is around, the more trust it obtains. It is always easier to rank domains with a longer track record than brand new domains. Keep this in mind when deciding whether to use an existing domain or start a new site on a new domain.
The end goal of SEO should always be to improve a site, better target it to selected keywords, and increase its inbound links. This is definitely the 10,000 foot overview, but it’s good to go back to the basics to remind us what we’re doing.
]]>1.) Make your home page a portal to the site. The home page should be a showcase of all your content which means linking to as many internal pages as possible (within reason). If your home page does not support internal pages, the site will suffer.
2.) Write an informative article and submit it to article syndication sites. People are on the Web looking for information. Provide it and reap the rewards.
3.) Begin converting your site to CSS instead of tables. Tables are a terrible clutter of code space and the search engines have no use for them. Make as much formatting as possible external through CSS.
4.) Cross link your text content. When a keyword from page A shows up on page B, link it to page A. I call this ‘wikipedia style linking’. Having individual content pages support other content pages is a great way to optimize internal linking.
5.) Check the keyword density of your optimized pages. Does the keyword show up on the page at all? The engines will not rank a page that does not even contain the keyword in the text content once.
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