Archive for the ‘Search engines’ Category

Happy Birthday Google

Wednesday, September 10th, 2008

If you find buying birthday presents for your kids a challenge, what do you buy a 10 year old worth over $150 billion! Hmmm, think I’ll just stick with singing happy birthday… google birthday cake Happy Birthday Google

Google you’ve come a long, long way in 10 years.

Given the multi-faceted behemoth Google is today it’s amazing that just 10 years ago it was a fledgling company of 3 people running a search engine with a handful of computers in a Stamford University dorm room.

I first heard about Google in late ’98 and my initial reaction was probably like many & along the lines of…”Goo-what? How do you spell it? Sheesh, another stupid dot-com name.”

At the time Alta Vista was the top dog search engine, but frankly more dog than top as they tried to morph into a ‘portal’ which was all the buzz in the late ’90′s. Anyway I was so fed up with the crappy results Alta Vista was spewing out I reluctantly tried this new search engine with the stupid name. And, like almost everyone else, gob-smacked by the quality of the search results.

I don’t think I ever used Alta Vista again after that.

Of course Google’s much more than a search engine these days (what aren’t they into?) & that concerns some people. Love ‘em or hate ‘em, the next 10 years should be even more interesting.

Mark Sceats

8 Keyword Research Tips for SEO

Monday, September 1st, 2008

Keywords or phrases are the ‘words’ searchers type into the search engine box when they are looking for information regarding a particular topic, products, services or information. Optimising your site for the ‘right’ keywords can be the difference between a few customers and lots of customers. It’s great to rank in the number 1 position for a search phrases but if it’s not the ‘right’ search phrase (ie one people are actually using) there is virtually no benefit for you. Here are 8 tips to get you started on good quality keyword research.

 

blog research1 8 Keyword Research Tips for SEO

1. Think outside the square and leave no stone unturned!

Make use of every source available to you for ideas – start with your own list then ask friends, colleagues and customers for their input, use suggestion tools (eg Google Suggestion Tool), your site web logs for your web traffic and if you have them the logs for the search function on your site itself will give you customized and valuable insight only you will have into exactly what your customers are searching for.

2. Relevancy is the key to success

Never try keywords that are not relevant for your site. Sure you are going to increase the traffic to your site, but will this traffic convert? NO. At best you’ll annoy your customers and at worst you’ll annoy the search engines!

blog language2 8 Keyword Research Tips for SEO3. Talk your target audience’s language

Consider the language your target audience actually uses rather than what you or others in the business might think they should search for. It’s of no benefit ranking for “jandals” if all your customers are searching for “thongs”. Likewise, there it is pointless using industry jargon if your customer does not understand these terms. Consider that most people use natural language when they search and they typically include 2-4 keywords in their search phrases.

4. Check the numbers!

There are a range of tools available online to investigate search volumes (although some are arguably better and more accurate than others). Google, Yahoo! And Microsoft all have excellent free resources for this or for a paid subscription both Keyword Discovery or Word Tracker provide excellent data.

5. Paid Search will give you a helping hand.

If you’re still not happy with the results (or need ‘real’ stats to convince a key stakeholder) a ‘trial’ pay per click campaign can be an excellent way to get real data for your local market about what people are searching on, which results they click through from and most importantly which keywords or phrases convert to paying customers!

blog focus2 8 Keyword Research Tips for SEO6. Focus, focus, focus!

Once you’re at the stage of allocating words to pages remember that a page will only rank well for 1-2 key phrases. If during your research you have identified particular keywords or phrases that could have real value but you can’t seem to fit them anywhere you might want to consider developing additional pages focused specifically on these topics. Just remember to link these pages within your site structure – they should not be stand alone pages otherwise the search engines may not be able to find them or other pages on your site!

7. Revise on a regular basis.

Keyword research is not a do it once and forget it task – you will likely have to fine tune and repeat over time as markets trends emerge, terminology changes, websites are updated, new products are launched etc.

8. Practice makes perfect!

blog results1 8 Keyword Research Tips for SEOIt does not have to be perfect first time – better to have your site improved from no keyword research optimisation to some optimisation rather than doing nothing until you feel you have ‘finished’. Doing the hard work at the start and regular fine-tuning of your keyword strategy will provide you with the best possible chance of driving the right kind of traffic to your website. However, if you don’t have the time available or do not feel you have skills necessary then this job should be outsourced to specialists.

By Charlotte Whiter

Google’s index of unique URLs has reached one trillion.

Sunday, July 27th, 2008

In my previous post “Why You Need To Market Your Website” I mentioned the Web contains literally billions of web pages and millions more are added daily. Just how many is unclear.

Well a couple of days ago Google stated that their systems which process links on the web to find new content hit a milestone, recognising 1 trillion (as in 1,000,000,000,000) unique URLs! Note the word unique.

They go on to say “we found even more than 1 trillion individual links, but not all of them lead to unique web pages. Many pages have multiple URLs with exactly the same content or URLs that are auto-generated copies of each other. Even after removing those exact duplicates, we saw a trillion unique URLs, and the number of individual web pages out there is growing by several billion pages per day.”

What blows me away in particular is Google’s estimate that several billion pages each day are added. That’s just mind boggling & shows the growing level of competition.

counting Googles index of unique URLs has reached one trillion.To put this in context. The first Google index in 1998 had 26 million pages & by 2000 the Google index reached the one billion mark. In my previous post I mentioned a study released in 2000 estimated 7.3 million unique pages were being added daily. I went on to say that given the huge growth of the web since 2000 & boom in blogging it’s likely the figure is now very much higher. Well I was right, but I’m still astounded at Google’s estimate. (I don’t dispute it – I just have difficulty counting that high icon smile Googles index of unique URLs has reached one trillion. ).

So how many unique pages does the web really contain? Google themselves say “we don’t know & strictly speaking, the number of pages out there is infinite with things like web calendars may have a ‘next day’ link, and we could follow that link forever, each time finding a ‘new’ page. We’re not doing that, obviously, since there would be little benefit to you. But this example shows that the size of the web really depends on your definition of what’s a useful page, and there is no exact answer.”

Let’s just agree there’s a lot & the number’s growing. Which means ranking well in search engine results is going to be more important than ever and more challenging to achieve.

Mark Sceats