google

Does Google Age Backlinks Over Time?

2 Comments
July 25  |  Link Building  |   Ryan Clark

I’m sitting here, drinking my much needed Triple Grande Latte from Starbucks near my condo, of course taking in my daily dose of Webmaster World Forums. I love the topics that come up here, and there is no better forum on the net to learn about Google, as well as in depth link building chat. I cannot tell you how much I appreciate these forums, and even more happy that they haven’t turned into a the likes of Digital Point Forums. The topic that caught my eye this morning was a thread title “Does Google Age Your Backlinks?“.

This to me is a very good question and I’d love to hear what my readers think about it. I fully believe they do mainly from what I’ve seen during my work over the years, and it makes sense…no? You get a link on resource page A, and over time that page gets more links, ranks better and obviously should be passing a little more link juice. Perhaps the life cycle of an authoritative page from birth to old age?

So what do you folks think?

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Ecommerce Sites and Google Mayday

5 Comments
June 16  |  Link Building  |   Ryan Clark

A lot of you know I do a lot of Ecommerce Link Building and it can be a sour lover sometimes to fight the uphill battle against Google. The recent Mayday update from Google took a good look at the long tail search arena, and hit a few Ecommerce sites harder than a lot of people expected. I’ll try and give you folks a few pointers to either keep your long tail traffic, improve it or gain back the losses from the past 45 days.

There are a lot of iffy factors that come into play with online shops, and for those who handle them as a one man team know they’re life is already hell. The duties included with running the shop online are plentiful, and marketing is not really something a lot of you folks have time to handle. Now when your traffic gets hit by a large, noticeable amount, what is a person to do? I currently have several Ecommerce clients, and only one had a strange issue within the past month. I’ve had the chance to also look over my shop online which didn’t take a hit, it is well on its way to double the natural search traffic this month!

Content Fit For A King:

The one very important, and obvious factor that I noticed right away was the structure of the shops content. My clients with lengthy, unique descriptions above the fold saw nothing but improvement in the SERPs. Matt Cutts mentioned that this is specifically what they were going after;

This change seems to have primarily impacted very large sites with “item” pages that don’t have many individual links into them, might be several clicks from the home page, and may not have substantial unique and value-added content on them. For instance, Ecommerce sites often have this structure. The individual product pages are unlikely to attract external links and the majority of the content may be imported from a manufacturer database. Of course, as with any change that results in a traffic hit for some sites, other sites experience the opposite. Based on Matt’s comment at Google I/O, the pages that are now ranking well for these long tail queries are from “higher quality” sites (or perhaps are “higher quality” pages).

So that’s definitely something to worry about for people with thousands of products. I only have shops with 40 or less products, so I’ve been lucky enough to have unique content for each of my pages. I have had a couple hotel chains come to me after being hit, too many of the same short info pages for their hotels.

My product pages also bring in my social media from around the web such as embedded Youtube videos on the product, the latest tweets and customer reviews which add unique content value. You would be surprised how many Ecommerce sites I see without customer reviews allowed. It’s easy enough to manage to get something going because it also can inspire the confidence needed to make that shopper complete the sale.

Internal & External Linking:

Mr Cutts also mentions that the pages were often not linked well, and this is something I almost always see. Great examples of doing it too good are of course Zappos and Overstock.com, so give them a real good look into for inspiration. While external link building takes time, you can start with a few easy internal link building options.

– provide links from your blog to internal pages…blog about your products!

– provide internal links from related product pages

– add more content to already indexed pages…then yes, add a few related internal links

As for link building, you should be utilizing all avenues that relate to your business including business directories, guest blogging, social media and content marketing. Keep things flowing at a normal rate and you’ll eventually get to the point where the snowball effect takes over, and your rankings grow in due time.

Related Reads:

http://pro-webs.net/blog/2010/06/02/google-mayday/

http://www.ecommerce-guide.com/article.php/3887726

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WJ6CtBmaIQM

http://www.webmasterworld.com/google/4125460.htm

http://www.seomoz.org/blog/whiteboard-friday-googles-may-day-update-what-it-means-for-you

http://www.searchenginejournal.com/google-mayday-update-a-closer-look-at-impact/21384/

http://www.webmasterworld.com/google/4144824.htm

http://searchengineland.com/google-confirms-mayday-update-impacts-long-tail-traffic-43054

http://www.redflymarketing.com/blog/view-from-the-other-side-of-the-may-day-update/

http://econsultancy.com/blog/6092-google-may-day-update-five-tips-for-e-commerce-sites

http://www.buckdat.com/2010/06/did-google-fix-mayday-effect-on-june.html

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Google Pac-Man Logo FTW

4 Comments
May 21  |  News  |   Ryan Clark

 

 

Today is Pac-Mans 30th Birthday and the folks at Google decided to create a playable logo for their US customers only. I didn’t even see any news until I used a US datacenter IP to check some rankings…thank goodness I do SEO. I played it a bit and managed to waste at least 30 minutes playing the game so I thought; might as well write about it.

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Google May Update Explained

1 Comments
May 20  |  News  |   Ryan Clark

Go PRO Today with SEOmoz PRO!

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Google Patent #20050071741 Analyzed

1 Comments
May 18  |  Link Building  |   Ryan Clark

I thought this would be a good read for anyone of any skill level, link builder or not. Google has a lot of patents and I’ve been wading through them in what is left of my spare time. They usually give a good insight into what Google is currently implementing, and what they might consider in the future. This document, to the best of my knowledge, was created by the fine folks at SEOmoz, perhaps Rand?

Google Patents

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Google Follows Twitter Links?

5 Comments
May 15  |  Link Building  |   Ryan Clark

Well it is not secret that Google doesn’t always pay attention to the nofollow code. Don’t believe me? That’s fine I don’t really care. There’s nothing wrong with a nofollow link in the first place, at least that’s what I think. You have to have them, they’re natural and they make your link profile look good, so what’s going on with Twitter here? Well I’ve done my own testing, so should you, but some folks at Webmaster World got a discussion going on about Twitter links. Seems a brand new site was indexed and ranked pretty quickly from just a Tweet…let me know what you think.

Read more: http://www.webmasterworld.com/google/4131659.htm

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Strange Google Listing Result

8 Comments
April 28  |  News  |   Ryan Clark

I was just Googling around for some local search stuff, non client related when I came across this strange anomaly within the SERPs. Forgive me if this isn’t something new, but I’ve never seen a Google listing pick up those characters from on page like this before, and it surely caught my eye. The link goes to a local Craigslist ad in which you can see why Google picked this up and is now showing it as is…so strange! Anyone got anything to say about this?

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How Does Google Treat Links From Social Sites

17 Comments
January 14  |  Link Building  |   Ryan Clark
Here’s the latest question that Matt Cutts got asked by Mani from Delhi. Mani is trying to see how Google treats links from social media sites like Twitter and Facebook…ok not a bad question. While it reminds me of the kind of crap you’d hear on Digital Point, it’s not a bad n00b question. What caught my ear was the point about how .edu and .gov links don’t pass any more value that some .com. So many people are under the illusion that extra link weight is giving to those domain extensions.

 

what a lot of people who are just getting into the world of link building must understand that it’s the domain’s overall stance that gives out a certain power of link juice. So why do people obsess about getting .edu and .gov links? Well that’s mainly because of the hype, but for the most part those .edu/gov pages have been indexed and around for years and years. Most websites don’t really deserve links from sites like these, and the spam to obtain them is going to do nothing but bring it all down.

What do you think?

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