Stephan Spencer's Scatterings

The Scattered Wisdom of a scientist turned web marketing virtuoso

December 2008
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My Powerpoint from Blog Feed Search SEO Panel

As promised, I've posted my Powerpoint deck from the session I gave earlier today here at Search Engine Strategies San Jose.

I was thinking I might create an extended version of my presentation (like 30 minutes instead of 15 minutes) and make it available as a screencast video, if enough of you folks request it. Would you like me to do this?

Posted by Stephan Spencer on 08/08/2006 | Permalink

Comments (6)| Comments RSS | Filed under: Search Engines, Blogging, RSS Marketing , , , , , ,            

Check out my session at SES this morning, or meet up with me later

If you are here in San Jose too for Search Engine Strategies, I hope you'll make it to the "Blog & Feed Search SEO" session at 10:45am. I'll share tips on optimizing your blogs and your RSS feeds for the major engines and for the specialized blog and feed engines. I hope to see you there! Afterwards I'll post the Powerpoint from my session here on this blog, so stay tuned.

And if you would like to catch up with me here at the show but you don't manage to grab me after my session, give me a call on my cell phone at 608-209-2595. We don't have a booth here this time (the booth and my Netconcepts contingent are over at the Etail conference which was scheduled for the exact same week as SES, grrr!).

Posted by Stephan Spencer on 08/08/2006 | Permalink

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Day 1 at SES San Jose, er I mean the Googleplex

Hello from San Jose! Ok, I started the title of this post with something a little misleading, because even though I'm here in San Jose for Search Engine Strategies, I didn't actually make it to the conference at all today. Instead, I got to do something EVEN BETTER!

I arrived from New Zealand in the late morning (not exactly bright eyed and bushy tailed after 16 hrs in transit) but I didn't require coffee to rev me up... I was on an adreneline rush because I got to head straight from the airport to the 'plex (that means Googleplex for those not in the know ;-) for an exclusive "Google Webmaster Roundtable"! It was a small gathering of very smart web people hand-picked by Googlers to attend. I was honored to be one of the chosen few. We are under strict NDA to not discuss anything but generalities that are otherwise publicly available, and I of course will happily comply, so don't check this blog anytime soon in the hopes that I will inadvertently spill any of Google's secrets!

Then my evening was taken up by a Japanese dinner at the fabulous Hakone Gardens organized by online retailer Allan Dick of Vintage Tub and Bath. About 80 people were present, including Danny Sullivan, Chris Sherman, Matt Cutts and Tim Mayer. The highlight of the evening for me was getting to chat extensively with futurist John Smart, the featured speaker of the event (I was fortunate enough to sit next to him during the dinner). If you really want to get thrown for a loop, read about The Singularity. Woah!

Posted by Stephan Spencer on 08/08/2006 | Permalink

Comments (1)| Comments RSS | Filed under: Search Engines , , , , , ,            

Blog and RSS Feed Search SEO

Today I presented at the Search Engine Strategies conference on the "Blog and Feed Search SEO" panel. I spoke on optimization tips and tactics for blogs and for RSS feeds. I had to pack in a lot of material into a short amount of time, but I managed! We got some great questions in the Q&A. The session was blogged at Search Engine Roundtable.

Feel free to download my Powerpoint deck. There's tons of great stuff in there. Over 50 slides.

Getting out of Chicago

Well all us SEOs who stuck around til the end of the Search Engine Strategies conference yesterday had fun trying to fly out of O'Hare. A lot of flights were cancelled because of the weather. My flight out of O'Hare was 3 hours late and I missed my connection. Dangit. Now I'm stuck at SFO til my flight tonight. Anyways, here's a view out the plane window of another plane getting de-iced:

And if you're really interested, you can watch some video of it.

Posted by Stephan Spencer on 12/09/2005 | Permalink

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Coverage of SES San Jose: Favorite SEO Tools

Here we are, the last session of Search Engine Strategies. It's been a great, but exhausting conference. The session I attended was on SEO Tools. Three of the five panelists provided their Powerpoints on their websites (just so happens they were the three best presentations), which you should definitely check out because they show screenshots of these tools in action. Download the first two Powerpoints from www.webuildpages.com/ses and the third from www.epiar.com/ses.

Jim Boykin:
Wayback Machine
Find Age of Website Tool
Poodle Predictor (spider simulator)
Copyscape (website plagiarism search)
URLinfo
Backlink Anchor Text Analyzer
KwMap (a keyword map for the whole Internet)
Hubfinder (looks for co-occurring backlinks, which may be authoritative links that help satisfy topic dependant link authority algorithms. To use Hubfinder enter a subject, and / or competing URLs to analyze linkage data of top ranked competing sites via the Yahoo! API.)
Keyword Tracker

Todd Malicoat:
Domain/server level information: Whois Source, DNS Stuff, and Check Class C IP Address (this last one is to make sure the links that you plan on buying are on different class C blocks)
Competitive information tools: GoogSpy, SwitchProxy extension for Firefox
Backlinks & offpage information tools: Pages Indexed, Backlinks Domain, PageRank, Allinanchor, Keyword Density tool, Yahoo! Link Harvester
Keyword information: Google Sets, Keyword Density tools, Google Suggest, Snap.com Keyword Stats
Header & page level information: Server Header Checker
Spidering & indexability: Xenu's Link Sleuth, Sandbox Detection Tool

Ken Jurina:
Firefox extensions: SEOpen, Web Developer, Search Status, PDF Download, Roboform toolbar, Search Keys, IE View (all downloadable from http://extensionroom.mozdev.org)
Web CEO
Click Tracks
LiveSTATS
Roboform
Marketleap Link popularity check, Search engine saturation, Keyword verification

Bill Hartzer:
OptiLink
OptiSpider
Keyword Combinations
Keyword Helper
URL Trends domain analyzer (it also supports notifying you via email or RSS when changes happen)
Sources of other tools: www.seocompany.ca/tool/seo-tools.html, www.digitalpoint.com/tools/, www.seotoolset.com, www.seochat.com/seo-tools

Paul Bruemmer:
Alexa
RankingManager
Linxviewer
Yahoo! Finance
Hoovers Pro Plus
Print Screen Plus

Well I wanted to blog many more sessions than I did, but it ended up being a lot harder than I thought it would be. Thankfully for you, dear readers, there were many other capable bloggers blogging the SES sessions. In particular check out the coverage on Search Engine Roundtable blog.

By the way, a big hello to all the bloggers I met for the first time at SES, including Scott Miller, Aaron Wall, and Barry Schwartz, to name a few.

Posted by Stephan Spencer on 08/11/2005 | Permalink

Comments (2)| Comments RSS | Filed under: Search Engines , , , ,            

Coverage of SES San Jose: Search Engine Q&A On Links

I'm a bit behind on my conference session blogging. Waaay too many parties going on; doesn't leave much time for blogging. The Google Dance last night. Yahoo! party at Great America the night before. And tonight I've got another party to go to. Yesterday I spoke on RSS. I'll post a recap on that session later.

I just attended "Search Engine Q&A On Links", which was great. Lots of useful advice from Google and Yahoo! about linking (nobody seemed to want to ask poor Ask Jeeves any questions). It was funny how obviously diametrically opposed the engines were to the immediately prior session on "Buying and Selling Links". It's hard to reconcile the two different sets of advice. Matt in the hallway before this session was adamant: "Don't buy links!"

Anyways, without any further ado, here's the session recap:

Kaushal Kurapati from Ask Jeeves:
Be cautious of: reciprocal links and purchasing links
Avoid: link farms, cloaking pages, invisible or hidden links that trick the crawler
Become an authority on a subject
Focus on your busines and content. Rest will follow. [I say: "yeah, right..."]
Teoma uses subject specific popularity: garner respect in your industry, subject-specific text based links can be understood. (hubs and authorities model)

Tim Mayer from Yahoo!:
Here's some important news!! Yahoo! has just launched a brand new service: Site Explorer from Yahoo! Search. Stop scraping the Yahoo site for backlink results and use Site Explorer instead. Access via an API is offered too. And you can export as a CSV file.
Yahoo has 19.2 billion web objects in its index. Over 20 billion objects, when you include the audio and video.
Plans to use community to improve search quality. Social search = within a trusted network, where someone within your network vouches for a site.
Create natural linking strategies. when things start to look unnatural, is when you'll start getting into trouble. We look at intent (linking to plasma TVs, diamonds, and Viagra all on the same page) and extent (i.e. what looks normal. Having everything on the page as links or 200 links on the page is too much!)
Yahoo! offers a much more comprehensive sample of backlinks than Google, but not a complete set of backlinks. New system (Site Explorer) will be reasonably comprehensive, in his opinion the most comprehensive out there.
It's unnatural to link to sitemap-1 sitemap-2 sitemap-3 sitemap-4 sitemap-5. If you are doing this, you're headed in the wrong direction.

Matt Cutts from Google:
Good links are earned links, links that are based on editorial discretion.
Create services that really useful. e.g newsletters, an article a day, syndicate through RSS (attribute my article and give me a link). start a blog.
Matt launched his blog today: mattcutts.com
Think outside the box.
Only SEOs and librarians do backlink searches. Historically we decided to dedicate a subset of our servers to backlinks. Only a sampling of backlinks would be displayed but only for a threshold of PageRank 4 or higher pages. A suggestion was made to show backlinks for lower PageRank pages too. We liked that idea so we now show a random sampling of backlinks, including low PageRank scoring pages too. We show twice as many backlinks as shown before, but still it's only a sampling of the backlinks.
In graph theory, a clique in every node in the graph is very unnatural. So don't link to every single node in your network of sites; it'll get flagged.
For dynamic sites, you're very safe if you have fewer than 2 parameters; keep the values of those parameters to fewer than 5 digits, and don't name a parameter "id". Googlebot sometimes tries variations of URLs by dropping parameters, but we only do that deep level analysis on big, quality sites.
Another good approach that alltheweb came up with: spider would always go 1 dynamic page deep from a static page.
Search engines only grab 100k or 200k or 500k so be careful loading up a huge page with a lot of links.
PageRank isn't as important as SOME people make it out to be. BUT it's NOT like "PageRank? Oh yeah let's shuffle that one under the rug! That was sooo 4 years ago!"
"BO" = backlink obsession
We export PageRank only once every 3 months or so.

Technorati tag: Search Engine Strategies

Coverage of SES San Jose: Search Algorithms, The Patent Files

I attended the "Search Algorithms: The Patent Files" session first thing this morning. The panelists were Rand Fishkin, CEO of SEOmoz.org, Ani Kortikar, Founder and CEO, Netramind, Dr. E. Garcia of Mi Islita.com, and Jon Glick, Senior Director of Product Search, Become.com. My favorite presentation was from Jon. He was not overly technical (Dr. Garcia lost me at the advanced mathematics talking about calculating dot products of vectors) yet he gave solid advice. Here's what he had to say, in summary:

Take these patents with a grain of salt, because...
- patent applicants don't need to use all the stuff they include in a patent application.
- patent applicants don't have to disclose all of its features in a patent application.
- and they recognize that SEOs and their competitors are pouring over their patent apps.

With that said, there are some valuable learnings from the 2003 Google patent. Search engines may take into account: CTR on your page in SERPs, rapid changes in content, rapid growth of in-links, and length of time users spend on your site.

So which of these actually impact your rankings? Some are red herrings, such as:
- Clickthrough rate (CTR): it's too easy to distort (e.g. through clickbotting, which is evil and likely to get you penalized). Probably CTR is used for demotion only. In other words, high CTR won't help your organic rankings, but low CTR may lower your rankings.
- Time spent on a site: when users hit the back button almost immediately, it can signify an irrelevant page or 404 error. However, if this was used then this would in effect reward black hat tactics like mousetrapping and endless pop-ups -- tactics that trap users within a site.
- Rate of change in content: Most recent crawl date, last time the content changed, registration date, and first crawl date mostly impacts crawl frequency, not ranking. Duplicate detection technologies are used to find meaningful changes in site content. Meaningful changes in site content do not include putting today's date or today's weather on the page -- it doesn't help rankings. When a site changes its IP address, it is often re-evaluated because it is possibly under new ownership.

According to Jon, what's not a red herring is:
- Rate of change in links: Most Search Engines limit how quickly a site can gain connectivity (sandboxing, link aging). A sudden jump in in-links (e.g. from link farming and interlinking and triangle linking lots of domains) can draw scrutiny. There are exceptions for "spike" sites (editorial review, lots of accompanying news/blog posts, lots of web searches).

Posted by Stephan Spencer on 08/08/2005 | Permalink

Comments (5)| Comments RSS | Filed under: Search Engines , , , , , , , , ,            

Coverage of SES San Jose: Earning from Search & Contextual Ads

Hello from sunny San Jose. I'm at the Search Engine Strategies conference - THE place to be if you care about search. I'm going to be blogging the sessions, so stay tuned over the next 4 days.

Here's my first installment: a recap on the session I attended before lunch today on "Earning from Search & Contextual Ads". Panelists were: Jason Calacanis, Co-Founder, Weblogs, Inc., Will Johnson, Yahoo! Search Marketing, Scott Meyer, President & CEO, About, Inc., Gokul Rajaram, Group Product Manager of Google AdSense, Google Inc. and Jen Slegg, Owner, JenSense.com.

Jen from JenSense.com started the panel off:
Jen started off by comparing and contrasting AdSense w/ Yahoo's new YPN (Yahoo Publisher Network). Similarities include...
- very large pool of advertisers
- real time stats
- neither will tell you the revenue split
- can't show both YPN and AdSense ads on the same page

Differences include...
with AdSense:
- 4 ads in smaller font
- international publishers ok
- offers additional tools & services
- more competition for higest paying
- multiple ad units per page
- "smart pricing" (CTR taken into account in pricing)

with YPN:
- 3 ads in a much larger font
- beta for US publishers
- only traditional ad units
- fewer publishers means less competition
- same ads on multiple units
- no smart pricing
- in future will be able to transfer your earnings to your advertising account

Many alternatives to AdSense and YPN:
- Kanoodle brightads: avg $0.35 earnings per click (EPC). 30,000 advertisers in network.
- Adsonar: thousands of advertisers
- Clicksor: avg $0.20 EPC. 4,000 advertisers running 20,000 campaigns. Will pull ads from other ad networks if insufficient clicks.
- Chitika: avg EPC $0.50
- Mirago: avg EPC .21p (approx $0.31 USD). you must invoice them. 12,000 advertisers
- ContextWeb: over 40,000 advertisers
bidclix: avg EPC 0.30. 11,000 advertisers
- Others include Miva Adrevenue xpress, Quigo, etc.
Rhetorical question from Jen: "When will MSN jump in?"

Optimizing tips:
- Placement: Bottom of page is bad. Good practice is to make link color the same as other links on the site. Anther good tactic is to place the ads on the left column where the nav usually is.
- Proximity:
- Ad unit selection: Try a variety of sizes and test.
- Ad unit colors & borders: Don't use the standard ad unit colors / layout. Mix things up to prevent banner blindness. Try both complimentary and contrasting colors. Most sites find hidden borders yield highest CTR. like 2 or 3 times
- URL filters: Don't do it as a way to get higher paying ads to appear. Only block your direct competitors or your own websites.

Testing:
- Use AdSense or YPN channels to track highest CTR & earnings pages. AdSense or YPN may perform better. Try both.
- Test on non-holiday weeks
- Try switching ad placement, ad unit sizes and colors
- Keep track of what works and what doesn't
- Never assume that what works on one site will work on another.

Read more »

Bloggers unite! At Search Engine Strategies

This Sunday I fly out to San Jose for the famed Search Engine Strategies conference. (I'll be speaking there again... about RSS.) I'd like to propose that all us bloggers attending the conference meet up for drinks some evening, or for coffee during a break, or lunch, or something. If you are a blogger and you're going to be at SES, then drop me a line at sspencer at netconcepts.com with your availability, and I'll try to coordinate a time when we're all available.

Posted by Stephan Spencer on 08/05/2005 | Permalink

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