Archive for July, 2009

Bing Rumored to Take Over Yahoo Search – SEO Firms Beware!

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

If you haven’t already heard the whispered rumors and news bits about Bing taking over Yahoo Search, here’s a brief summary.

Since Bing has completely taken over MSN’s search engine by engaging visitors with a myriad of search decisions, and Yahoo has been looking for a search engine to buy since 2004 this may be the answer for both parties. However, with Bing’s new vertical search ability, SEO firms  and Webmasters may have to completely rethink and revamp Websites to gain top search rankings on Bing.

SEO firms should evaluate how their Websites fare in Bing now versus MSN and Yahoo although a deal may be months away it’s still a good idea to research and plan a strategy.

According to WebmasterWorld, “You may want to research what factors influence Bing ranking and think about how that can safely be integrated into future optimization efforts if a deal with Yahoo is announced.”

Start with these helpful tips from BingDevelop and stay of abreast of forthcoming Bing SEO news, tips and trends from Search Circus, an ethical and expert SEO firm.

Do the Latest AdWords Changes Signal a Shift in Google’s Local Internet Advertising Strategy?

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

479037731_09bc20477f_mThere hasn’t been much information coming out of the usually-bustling Google AdWords department, but a recent announcement makes up for that lull in local Internet advertising news. The latest AdWords feature is something that could greatly impact the way many may want to approach local Internet advertising. The new feature is called “location extensions,” and it lets business owners attach their address to their local Internet advertising campaigns.

So why is tacking on addresses so important to local Internet advertising? This latest feature lets businesses set up ad campaigns that will link their individual ads to several local addresses. Say you’re a woodworker who makes furniture that’s sold in stores across the country. With location extensions, you’ll be able to match your brand or company name to every address that sells your product. Now, when a consumer sees your ad on their computer or mobile device, Google’s local search feature will match your closest business location to their location. So if you sell furniture in a Miami store, and a user is in Miami, they’ll be given the address to the Miami store that stocks your goods—even if your company headquarters is in Seattle.

This is all a part of Google’s attempt to merge their local and national AdWords. It looks like, overall, Google wants to make AdWords simpler and more streamlined. For now, AdWords claims that local ads aren’t going anywhere, but it will be interesting to see whether or not this is an early step in rearranging the AdWords delivery system.

Changing Nofollow Rules to Affect SEO Web Site Design

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

nofollow

Have you implemented the

“nofollow” HTML tag on your SEO Web site design yet? If your answer is no, then don’t go scurrying off add it, since it looks

like Google has put an end to nofollow’s usefulness in SEO Web site design. But we’re getting ahead of ourselves. First we’ll explain what nofollow is.

Nofollow is a tricky HTML SEO Web site design attribute to describe. According to Wikipedia, “nofollow is an HTML attribute value used to instruct some search engines that a hyperlink should not influence the link target’s ranking in the search engine’s index.”

That’s kind of jargony. So here’s a definition in plain English: nofollow is a SEO Web site design tag that tells search engines to not “count” a certain outbound link. There are several ways that Google decides how Webpages are ranked, and one of the most important is by the number of links that a Website is getting. A Website that’s getting many links coming to it means that Website has more authority. Say you wanted to link to a Website, but you didn’t want to contribute to its authority. The nofollow tag means that Google won’t count your link when it compiles that Website’s authority.

That’s the first SEO Web site design principle that’s important to understand. The second is that Webpages with authority have more link power. And when that Webpage links to others, it portions out its link power evenly to those other sites. Say you have a nice, authoritative home page that links to every other page on your Website, just as a proper home page should. But why should you give that valuable link power to rarely-visited pages, like the Terms of Service page? Or the FAQ page? Wouldn’t it be better if you could somehow channel that link power to pages you actually want people to find in search engines?

Until recently, you could do just that with the nofollow SEO Web site design tag. When you placed the nofollow tag before the links to your FAQ or ToS pages, you would be sacrificing those page’s potential for authority (since Google wouldn’t count those links from your homepage), while boosting the link power sent to your other, more crucial pages.

But things have changed. According to Matt Cutts, Google’s in house SEO guy, nofollow doesn’t allow Webmasters to portion out link power to preferred pages anymore. So what can Webmasters do? First, they should remove all nofollow tags, since they’re basically of no value. Then, they should concentrate on the best methods of creating a Website that gets great search rankings: ethical link building, fresh content and lots of relevant pages.