Wednesday, December 31, 2008

SearchDay: Use Caution When Growing Your Site

Today's Columns: » Use Caution When Growing Your Site  » Taking a Small Business to the Big Time Through Search  » The Paid Links Debate Rages On  » Will Social Networks Become the New Inbox? Part 2 
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SearchDay December 31, 2008
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Today's Top Story:

SEW Expert - Eric Enge Eric
Enge


Use Caution When Growing Your Site
More BY THE NUMBERS BY THE NUMBERS
If you're planning on rapidly expanding the size of your site, exercise some care. Devise a strategy that will lead to pages that have something to offer users, and you will stay out of trouble with search engines, and better serve your users at the same time.
» Full story » Print version



Search Engine Watch Experts Columns

SEW Expert - Aaron Shear Aaron
Shear


Taking a Small Business to the Big Time Through Search
More BIG BIZ BIG BIZ
So you own a small e commerce shop and are wondering how to expand your business? As you may or may not know by now, search can drive an incredible amount of traffic to your site.
» Full story » Print version


SEW Expert - Mark Jackson Mark
Jackson


The Paid Links Debate Rages On
More AU NATURAL AU NATURAL
Most ethical SEOs will tell you that paid links are a dangerous path to go down. Google will tell you that paid links will get you into hot water. At the same time, you see rankings which are obviously being generated through paid links. What's an ethical SEO to do?
» Full story » Print version


SEW Expert - Erik Qualman Erik
Qualman


Will Social Networks Become the New Inbox? Part 2
More BRAND EQUITY BRAND EQUITY
Many companies still believe they need to get users into their prospecting databases in order to market to them. But businesses capture a lot more information via social media about their consumers than they've ever had before. Good businesses realize though, that the relationship still needs to be cultivated. Just like dating, companies need to learn how to court their customers in social networks.
» Full story » Print version


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News from the Search Engine Watch Blog

50 Most Memorable Moments in Search for 2008
Posted by Nathania Johnson  Dec 31, 2008

It was one heck of a year for the search industry. The convergence of outside economic forces, a wild presidential election and the 2008 Beijing Olympics were all signs of an industry becoming more and more mainstream and global. Here's a look at the completely subjective biggest stories in search ...
» Continue reading

Online Holiday Shopping Down 3% Overall for 2008
Posted by Nathania Johnson  Dec 31, 2008

It's the news I hoped I didn't have to share, but alas it has arrived. We hoped during the flat Black Friday and decent Cyber Monday that we could edge out the holiday season with a slight gain. But while web site traffic was up by 5% to retail sites ...
» Continue reading

Marissa Mayer To Leave Google?
Posted by Frank Watson  Dec 31, 2008

Rumor has it Google VP Marissa Mayer will be leaving the company in 2009, Gawker reported. Mayer, vice president of search products and user experience, joined Google from Stanford's graduate computer science department in 1999 as the company's first female engineer. She also is a part-time introductory computer programming teacher ...
» Continue reading

Cuil May Sound Cool But Did Not Kill Google This Year
Posted by Frank Watson  Dec 31, 2008

Touted as a possible Google killer when it launched July this year, Cuil has had a disappointing start. Traffic numbers reflect the company's lack of stickiness following its launch. TechCrunch sees it as flat lining. Interesting that Business Week has it amongst its most promising start ups of 2008. Kevin Ryan gave us ...
» Continue reading

Watch a Live Stream of the Times Square New Year's Celebration
Posted by Nathania Johnson  Dec 31, 2008

TimesSquare.com is offering a free, live stream of the most famous New Year's celebration in the world. It will begin the stream at 4pm and last until 12:15am. Mogulus will provide the streaming technology. This way you can enjoy Times Square without being surrounded by thousands of drunk, screaming people, having ...
» Continue reading

Will Google Track the Stomach Bug Like It Did the Flu?
Posted by Nathania Johnson  Dec 31, 2008

If you missed my posts on Monday, it's because I was up at 3am blowing chunks into the porcelain throne the night before. It takes a lot for me to not blog, even when I'm sick, so you know I was hit with something awful. And no, I wasn't hungover. Instead, ...
» Continue reading


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Search Engine Watch Forum Discussions

How much shall I ask for PPC?  Dec 31, 2008
Hi all, I was working as an inhouse SEO before I have just begun working on my own. I am responsible from an adwords account for a US company.I have to prepare a proposal and I do not know very well pricing about PPC. Could you please tell me how the pricing ...
» Join the discussion


Q4 2008 PageRank Update done!  Dec 31, 2008
Image: http://www.adolu.com/v/vahanga.com-pr3.jpg my PR increased from 0 to 3:rolleyes:
» Join the discussion


Google tips on link building  Dec 30, 2008
I missed this one iin Oct. but Google actually gave insights into what type of link building they like http://googlewebmastercentral.blogspot.com/2008/10/good-times-with-inbound-links.html
» Join the discussion


What was Google's Greatest Achivement of 2008?  Dec 30, 2008
Okay am looking for opinions on this one... and debates over them. What do you think was Google's greatest achievement in 2008 - good or bad. How their stock price gutted my kids' education fund would be a major bad one! Interestingly I wrote a review yesterday that seems to have grabbed a ...
» Join the discussion





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Secrets to Search Engine Success - Dec 2008

SEO.com Secrets to Search Engine Success

December 2008


News Fuse

Get More in 2009

5 Things You Need More of in the New Year

The new year is a great time to take a step back and look at what went right this past year and what we can do better this coming year. I want to offer up 5 things related to online marketing that we could all use more of this coming year.

  1. More Content - The search engines love content. Your customers love content. You need more of it. Start a blog, write an ebook, share your knowledge with the world and you will be rewarded for it.

  2. More Links - It takes a lot of time and hard work to get people to link to your site, but links still play a HUGE part in the SEO equation, so you have to keep getting more links to your site. Quality is more important than quantity, but you need more of those quality links.

  3. More Connected - Get involved in your industry associations, social networks, relevant blogs, and forums. Set up your profile on Facebook, Linkedin, and Twitter. The web is social, so start making friends!

  4. More Testing - Don't settle for average conversion rates. Test out different landing pages, offers, and marketing messages to continually improve your results.

  5. More Analytics- Make sure you're tracking all the right metrics. Don't overlook important key performance indicators. A few things you might not be tracking, but should consider are newsletter signups, bounce rate, assisting keywords and brand awareness.

I hope we can all get MORE in 2009. Happy New Year from all of us at SEO.com!



Blog Cog

Blog Cog

Churning Out Great SEO Pearls of Wisdom

Below you will find a few interesting anecdotes from the most recent entries on our SEO.com blog: http://www.seo.com/blog/

"The real question most webmasters are thinking, however, is how to utilize these videos for the benefit of their website, to draw traffic and improve their visibility, and most importantly make money. Here are a couple of basic guidelines to help your site out if you are thinking about incorporating video into your overall internet marketing strategy." - Scott Smoot

"Some people love to do the least amount of work possible to get a job done. They find great pleasure in finding shortcuts and discovering what the minimum requirements are to still complete a task. Sometimes finding shortcuts and doing as little as possible is OK, but not when it comes to building a successful web site." - Brock Hadley

“Do you search Google for your trophy keyword every morning to see if you're still on the first page? Do you check more than once a day? If so, you are a rankings junkie and it's time to shake the habit… You should be focusing on how much traffic is coming from search, which keywords are driving that traffic, and most importantly, which keywords are driving sales.” - Dave Bascom

“A major item that a lot of sites overlook and a lot of SEO's don't really understand is the “site search” function on a site. I'm going to give you a scenario that three of our clients have faced, with similar results. Let's say you own a real estate site with information being pulled from the MLS database via IDX or some other listing server. None of the content that your on-site search result displays is in any way unique from all the other real estate sites online. ” - Adam Torkildson

“…Some of the ones mentioned most often were Digg, Stumbleupon, Facebook, MySpace, and Twitter. I was surprised that I never heard any mention of Squidoo. Now, you are probably wondering why that would surprise me, so I am going to tell you about some of the basic features of Squidoo and why I would expect to hear it mentioned as a good social network.” -Dustin Williams

 

 

 

  News Fuse

News Fuse

What Matters in the World of SEO

 

Microsoft “not interested” in Yahoo

Google releases SEO Beginners Guide

Yahoo CEO steps down

Launch of Google's Search Wiki

Google Chrome Past Beta Phase

 

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By The Numbers: Use Caution When Growing Your Site

Today's Column: » Use Caution When Growing Your Site 
About | SEW Blog | Forums | SEW Experts | Search 101 | Ratings & Stats | View Online
SearchEngine Watch SEW Experts By the Numbers
ClickZ - Internet Marketing Solutions for Marketers ClickZ Events - World's Largest Online Resource of Interactive Marketing News Search Engine Watch - Tips About Internet Search Engines and Search Engine Submission Search Engine Strategies - the intersection of search, marketing & commerce
Search Engine Watch - Search Engine Marketing Tips & Search Engine News Subscribe to SEW Newsletters Subscribe to SEW RSS Feeds Find/Post Jobs How to Advertise on SEW Member Login


SES London 2009


Top Jobs

Senior PPC Manager
Austin, United States

Internet Marketing Manager
Northwestern Mutual Milwaukee, United States

912435
Target , United States

906597
Target , United States

Account Executive- Platform Sales
ContextWeb New York, United States

More Jobs More Jobs
SEW Expert - Eric Enge
Use Caution When Growing Your Site
More BY THE NUMBERS BY THE NUMBERS

By Eric Enge, Search Engine Watch, Dec 31, 2008
Columns  |  Contact Eric  |  Biography

Thinking of dropping 100,000 new pages onto your 20,000-page site? Think again, as this may be a horrible idea. Many times, publishers will rapidly expand their site size in order to chase search volume from the long tail of search. Note that for purposes of this article, we will initially assume that the addition of such a large number of pages means that they are a bit thin on unique content.

One of the ways that this can happen is when a publisher gets rights to promote a large new catalogue of products, and posts them to the web all at once. Or a publisher suddenly starts promoting their product or service by creating related pages for every city and town in the United States. These are scenarios where is it hard to add lots of new unique content.

Google used to take sites that experienced such rapid growth and throw them into a sandbox. The basic logic was that sites that grew with sudden rapidity were worth a closer examination. I am not sure if this is still true today, but we have run some tests with sites lately that suggest that this may be less of a factor than it used to be (i.e. tests where we tripled the number of pages on a site to see if it took a step back in traffic as a result of being sandboxed) and there was no apparent problem.

In any event, this phenomenon of throttling sites based on rate of page growth is not my immediate concern. You should not ignore is as a possible factor, but here are some other factors you may want to consider.

Problems

1. The user experience on these pages will probably be poor. Let's face it, if you are adding even thousands of pages at once you have to ask yourself what is the benefit the user will get from these pages. Clearly, there is a challenge of making all these pages engaging and valuable to users.

There are ways to potentially work around this challenge, and we will talk about that a bit later in this column. But, the bottom line is that if you push out a bunch of pages where the user experience is poor, then your users suffer, and you will have the problems identified in the next two points.

2. The pages probably won't attract links. People who read my writings know that I say that publishers link to other web sites (when they are not compensated) because they believe the other site has something of value to offer to their visitors. If you don't offer a good user experience, then you aren't going to get those links.

Bear in mind that one of the fundamental ways that search engines evaluate the quality of a site's content is based on the number of links that the content gets. This is true even in a subsection of a web site. If your block of new content has been out there for many months and has no links directly to at least some part of that block... uh oh.

3. The search engines are not likely to like these pages from a content analysis point of view either. Search engines want to see pages that have some unique content on them. You don't want search engines to conclude that you just uploaded a large number of crappy pages to the web.

Search engines don't like low quality pages any more than your users do. Of course, most sites probably have a few crappy pages. Where it really becomes problematic though is if you have more crappy pages than good ones (or worse still, if you have FAR more crappy pages than good ones).

While I have no direct evidence that search engines maintain a formal quality score for web sites related to organic search, it is quite possible that they do so. After all, they are trying to offer their users the best possible experience.

Solutions

There are a few things you can to minimize your risks when rapidly expanding site size:

1. Roll those pages out a bit more slowly. This will give you more time to beef them up a bit.

2. Enlist some part-time writers (like stay-at-home workers) to produce large quantities of content for you at low cost.

3. Find a way to leverage machine-generated content. This one is a bit tricky because it is easy to do this badly, but here is the bottom line - if you can generate a large number of pages using machine-generated content, and these pages provide real and material value to users - yep, you are all set.

Ultimately, exercise some care. Don't just throw up a bunch of new pages in the search for long tail search traffic. Devise a strategy that will lead to pages that have something to offer users and you will serve the chase for long tail traffic much better that way anyway.

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Biography
Eric Enge is the president of Stone Temple Consulting, an SEO consultancy outside of Boston. Eric is also co-founder of Moving Traffic Inc., the publisher of City Town Info and Custom Search Guide.

Article Archives by Eric Enge:
» Use Caution When Growing Your Site - December 31, 2008
» Buying Links is Hard Work - December 17, 2008
» High-Value Link Building is Hard Work - December 3, 2008
» Marketing Pitches: Don't Strike Out With Your Audience - November 19, 2008
» Social Media Link Building: From Fantasy to Reality - November 5, 2008
» Building a Data-Driven Organization - October 22, 2008
» More Articles by Eric Enge

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