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Wednesday, March 11, 2015

SEO: Understanding Pandas, Penguins, and Pigeons

You probably didn’t realize that animals would affect your website and your business. The three Google search algorithms having the biggest impact in the past three years are a bear and two birds: Panda, Penguin, and Pigeon.
Google’s algorithms are designed to emphasize quality websites while pushing down, in search results, low-quality sites. Google’s efforts are admirable, especially since Google is the most-used search engine.
What is harder to deal with is that a small group of people — Google employees who manage search algorithms — often cause a lot of hardship. Changes to search algorithms can greatly reduce business revenue and increase expenses. Revenue is typically reduced when a website’s ranking (and, thus, traffic) is lowered. Expenses can increase when businesses spend money to make corrections, to address the algorithm changes.
Google’s algorithm changes are designed to emphasize quality websites while pushing down, in search results, low-quality sites.
We could spend a lot of time fretting about these changes or we can push forward. Accepting the changes and objectively making corrective decisions is a better use of time. Moreover, web marketing has no endpoint and change is inevitable.
Let’s take a look at each of Google’s pets — i.e., algorithms — to better understand them and their impact on your business. Note that for purposes of this article, I am defining “low rank” as a ranking position in search results of 10 and beyond.

Panda Algorithm

Google released Panda in February 2011. The algorithm was aimed to make low-quality or thin sites less visible in search results and rank them lower.
The Google Panda U.S. patent states there is a ratio with a website’s inbound links and search queries for the website’s brand, products, and services. The ratio is used to create a modification factor affecting the entire website, not just individual pages. If the page fails to meet a certain mathematical threshold, the modification factor is applied and the website would rank lower in the search engine results page.
When we talk about low-quality websites, there are a few important factors to keep in mind.
  • Duplicate content within your website is an important issue that is not only about meta tags, but the visible content as well. Having web pages with the same title tag and meta description will hurt your rankings.
  • The visible content has to be of value to the visitors. Keyword density percentages are important as well as the web page’s readability score. Flesch-Kincaid and Flesch Reading Ease are two methods of determining readability scores. The more the web page can cater to the general public, the more likely it will meet a quality level based on a mathematical equation.
  • Fresh content that is helping to build the overall density of pages of your website is important. This is where “thin websites” that do not have enough content or for that matter websites that do not have fresh pages are negatively impacted.
To meet these requirements, consider using Google’s Webmaster Tools. Unlike Google Analytics, Google Webmaster Tools identifies problems with your website, from Google’s perspective.
Another consideration is to secure the services of writers and or marketers who can interpret the findings and make changes to help your website’s quality. A technical website developer is not necessarily the right discipline you need in this case.
A material update to Panda occurred in May 2014, with Panda 4.0. This algorithm is here to stay and keeps getting updated.

Penguin Algorithm

Google’s Penguin algorithm addresses inbound link quality.
Google implemented Penguin in April 2012. It is aimed at websites that violate Google’s guidelines by using so-called black-hat techniques — artificially increasing the ranking of a web page by manipulating the number of links pointing to it.
To avoid getting caught in the Penguin algorithm trap, you have to know if the websites linking to you are of quality. This means someone has to know how to determine the quality of websites based on metrics such as Google Page Rank, Alexa Traffic Rank, volume of pages indexed, and volume of links on the web. Quality over quantity is the key, which means someone actually has to research the information.
Using Google’s Webmaster Tools you can find out what websites are linking to you. Once you have that information you will be able to research metrics of these websites using publicly available automation tools to provide you their Google PageRank (a weighted average value from 0 to 10; the higher the better) and other information pertinent to determining their value.
Once you know which websites are of low quality you have two options.
  • Send the website a message and ask it to remove the link to yours.
  • Use Google’s Disavow Tool in Google’s Webmaster Tools to ask Google to not put this website into consideration as a link to your website.
Neither option will likely help your rankings right away. They are both time consuming.
The Penguin algorithm will likely be materially updated by the end of 2014, with version 3.0.

Pigeon Algorithm

Search Engine Land, the online magazine, reportedly first used the name “pigeon” for this new algorithm, which was implemented in July 2014. It designed to provide more useful and accurate local search results. Google stated that this new algorithm improves its distance and location ranking parameters.
The changes are visible in the Google Maps and Google web search results. It impacts local businesses, which may notice an increase or decrease in web site referrals and leads from this change.
Unlike Panda and Penguin, the Pigeon algorithm does not impose penalties. Its purpose is provide more accurate and relevant local search results.
Local business owners should consider these three points.
  • So-called website authority is an issue now because of Google’s search ranking signals. Map listings (i.e., local business listings) are now tied to your website’s authority. This in turn goes back to how Panda and Penguin algorithms are affecting your website.
  • Local business listings should be pin-code verified, updated, and continually maintained. Adding photos and videos and responding to ratings and reviews is important. Positive, legitimate ratings and reviews can only help.
  • Citations are important, which means you need to pin-code verify your listing at other sites beyond Google (such as Bing, YellowPages.com, Yelp, and the like) and be sure they are updated exactly the way your listing is at Google. Use automation services to help get the word out to over 200 other websites, which helps with the citation-building process.

Source URL: http://webmarketingtoday.com/articles/113316-SEO-Understanding-Pandas-Penguins-and-Pigeons/

Monday, June 23, 2014

Google Sandbox and Penalty Check

Deindexed - When your domain is completely removed from Google. Also known as Banned.
Penalized - When your domain or page still exists but none of your pages can be found through very direct search queries.  This penalty can be automatic through the Google algorithm or manually applied by a Google Quality Engineer.
Sandboxed - Your domain or page wasn't Deindexed or Penalized, but the traffic you were getting from Google suddenly drops dramatically.


Some tools for checking goggle penalized sites are given below:
http://pixelgroove.com/serp/sandbox_checker/
http://feinternational.com/website-penalty-indicator/
http://toolbox.gabblet.com/google-penalty-checker-tool-check.aspx

Tuesday, May 20, 2014

Google Begins Rolling Out Panda 4.0 Now

Matt Cutts have announced that Google is rolling out Panda 4.0 update starting today on 21st May 2014.


Google’s Matt Cutts announced on Twitter that they have released version 4.0 of the Google Panda algorithm.
Google’s Panda algorithm is designed to prevent sites with poor quality content from working their way into Google’s top search results.
But didn’t Google stop updating us on Panda refreshes and updates since they are monthly rolling updates? Yes, but this is a bigger update.
Panda 4.0 must be a major update to the actual algorithm versus just a data refresh. Meaning, Google has made changes to how Panda identifies sites and has released a new version of the algorithm today.
Is this the softer and gentler Panda algorithm? From talking to Google, it sounds like this update will be gentler for some sites, and lay the groundwork for future changes in that direction.
Google told us that Panda 4.0 affects different languages to different degrees. In English for example, the impact is ~7.5% of queries that are affected to a degree that a regular user might notice.
Here are the previous confirmed Panda updates, note, that we named them by each refresh and update, but 4.0 is how Google named this specific update:
  1. Panda Update 1, Feb. 24, 2011 (11.8% of queries; announced; English in US only)
  2. Panda Update 2, April 11, 2011 (2% of queries; announced; rolled out in English internationally)
  3. Panda Update 3, May 10, 2011 (no change given; confirmed, not announced)
  4. Panda Update 4, June 16, 2011 (no change given; confirmed, not announced)
  5. Panda Update 5, July 23, 2011 (no change given; confirmed, not announced)
  6. Panda Update 6, Aug. 12, 2011 (6-9% of queries in many non-English languages; announced)
  7. Panda Update 7, Sept. 28, 2011 (no change given; confirmed, not announced)
  8. Panda Update 8, Oct. 19, 2011 (about 2% of queries; belatedly confirmed)
  9. Panda Update 9, Nov. 18, 2011: (less than 1% of queries; announced)
  10. Panda Update 10, Jan. 18, 2012 (no change given; confirmed, not announced)
  11. Panda Update 11, Feb. 27, 2012 (no change given; announced)
  12. Panda Update 12, March 23, 2012 (about 1.6% of queries impacted; announced)
  13. Panda Update 13, April 19, 2012 (no change given; belatedly revealed)
  14. Panda Update 14, April 27, 2012: (no change given; confirmed; first update within days of another)
  15. Panda Update 15, June 9, 2012: (1% of queries; belatedly announced)
  16. Panda Update 16, June 25, 2012: (about 1% of queries; announced)
  17. Panda Update 17, July 24, 2012:(about 1% of queries; announced)
  18. Panda Update 18, Aug. 20, 2012: (about 1% of queries; belatedly announced)
  19. Panda Update 19, Sept. 18, 2012: (less than 0.7% of queries; announced)
  20. Panda Update 20 , Sept. 27, 2012 (2.4% English queries, impacted, belatedly announced
  21. Panda Update 21, Nov. 5, 2012 (1.1% of English-language queries in US; 0.4% worldwide; confirmed, not announced)
  22. Panda Update 22, Nov. 21, 2012 (0.8% of English queries were affected; confirmed, not announced)
  23. Panda Update 23, Dec. 21, 2012 (1.3% of English queries were affected; confirmed, announced)
  24. Panda Update 24, Jan. 22, 2013 (1.2% of English queries were affected; confirmed, announced)
  25. Panda Update 25, March 15, 2013 (confirmed as coming; not confirmed as having happened)

Source URL: http://searchengineland.com/google-begins-rolling-panda-4-0-now-192043

Official: Google Payday Loan Algorithm 2.0 Launched: Targets “Very Spammy Queries”

Google has confirmed they have released a new algorithm update to their Payday Loan Algorithm update over this weekend.
This algorithm specifically targets “very spammy queries” and is unrelated to the Pandaor Penguin algorithms. A Google spokesperson told us:
Over the weekend we began rolling out a new algorithmic update. The update was neither Panda nor Penguin — it was the next generation of an algorithm that originally rolled out last summer for very spammy queries.
This comes with at no surprise to most SEOs and Webmasters who watch the space. There was a tremendous of rumors and signals of a major update over the weekend, intensifying over the past couple days as webmasters began to look at their analytics and the update has continued to roll out through Google.
The original Payday Loan Algorithm launched just about a year ago on June 11, 2013. Back then, Google’s Matt Cutts told us the algorithm impacted roughly 0.3% of the U.S. queries, but Matt said it went as high as 4% for Turkish queries were Web spam is typically higher.
Google told us this specific update is an international rollout and it affects different languages to different degrees, but this impacts English queries by about 0.2% to a noticeable degree. Here is a video back when Matt Cutts of Google announced the update was coming back in 2013:

Wednesday, April 2, 2014

How to Redirect .php to .html via .htaccess?

Please get the 301 redirection code for .php to .html via .htaccess:

RewriteEngine on
RewriteCond %{HTTP_HOST} ^yourwebsite\.com$ [NC]
RewriteRule ^(.*)$ http://www.yourwebsite.com/$1 [R=301,L]

RewriteCond %{THE_REQUEST} \ /(.+)\.php
RewriteRule ^ /%1.html [L,R=301]
RewriteRule ^(.*).html$ $1.php [QSA]

ErrorDocument 404 /404.html

Monday, February 17, 2014

3 Google Updates for AdWords, DoubleClick Advertisers



Google has released a trio of new updates for AdWords and the DoubleClick network that advertisers should be aware of.

1. Changes to AdWords Conversion Tracking

Google AdWords is changing the way conversions are counted. Although Google hasn't publicly mentioned this change, a large number of advertisers received an email from Google regarding the changes. The new conversion changes will take place this month, but it's likely we will see a more detailed update from the Google when it does actually go live.
Google's email said the changes are meant to make it flexible for how advertisers track their conversions, and specify how to count different conversion actions within their account:
For example, you can choose to count all instances of certain conversion actions (such as sales) while counting only unique instances of other conversion actions (such as leads).
Google is also making changes to how the conversions are represented within the account. The Conversions (many-per-click) column will now be replaced by a new "Conversions" column with additional functionality. This column will count the conversions, based on how the advertiser wants each conversion action to be tracked and counted.
Google's email included a detailed description of how the new conversion tracking will work.
Acme Corp uses AdWords to drive two important conversions: sales of their online tax software and leads for their in-person consultation service. They notice that people often make multiple purchases of their tax software – perhaps separate purchases for state and federal taxes. However, people also fill multiple lead forms. While Acme would like to count every sale as a conversion, they would like to count only unique leads.
If a click on their AdWords ad led to two sales and two leads, the previous conversions (many-per-click) would count four conversions whereas conversions (1-per-click) would only count one. Acme would like to see three conversions: one for each sale, and one for the unique lead. Now with flexible conversion counting, Acme can see the right number of conversions for each conversion action they measure in AdWords.

2. New Search Funnels Attribution Modeling Tool

 


Google announced the new Search Funnels Attribution Modeling Tool. Google said this tool is designed to help advertisers identify keywords that may be actually play a significant role in converting, even if they aren't necessarily the last click prior to conversion:
These reports are called Search Funnels. "Search," of course, refers to people searching on Google. "Funnels" refers to the series of steps your customers take before completing a conversion. Think of it as a passage (or funnel) through which your customer reaches the conversion.
Search Funnels can give you more detailed information about ads, clicks, and other elements that are part of your online campaign. This gives you a better sense of your customers and, ultimately, the effectiveness of the ads and keywords you've created.
The tool examines five different common attribution models in AdWords: last click, first click, linear, position based, and time decay.

3. New DoubleClick Search Commerce Suite

DoubleClick has announced its new Search Commerce Suite. This set of tools is designed to help advertisers easily create and update text ad and PLA campaigns. It includes additional functionality to help advertisers create dynamic product listings.
Today, we're excited to introduce the DoubleClick Search Commerce Suite, a robust toolset offering a smarter, faster, product-centric layer to search management. The suite is comprised of solutions that help you automatically create and update text ad and PLA campaigns based on your product catalog, leverage real-time data to optimize against your product or category-level business goals, and measure it all with flexible, product-based reports.
We designed the DoubleClick Search Commerce Suite with products at the core, letting you efficiently build, manage, and optimize campaigns by seamlessly integrating with your existing product investments. As the only platform directly integrated with Google Merchant Center, we make your product inventory visible and accessible within DoubleClick Search – meaning there's no need to navigate a separate interface, manage a manual upload, or wait for a separate team to deliver product feed data. Instead, anyone on your marketing team can act on live updates, as they happen.
This is also the only product that is directly integrated with Google's Merchant Center.

Article Source: http://searchenginewatch.com/article/2328568/3-Google-Updates-for-AdWords-DoubleClick-Advertisers

Monday, February 3, 2014

Google Analytics Updates Remarketing UI & Builds Out List Import Options



Catching up with its segmentation updates from last year, Google Analytics announced today a
refresh to its Remarketing UI and new Remarketing list import options.

Along with the new UI, users can create Remarketing lists based on origin, demographics and behavior.







The Remarketing list builder now allows users to import existing segments, including custom segments previously created or segments imported from the solutions gallery.


According to the announcement, the new features will be rolling out over the next two weeks. For anyone wanting to take advantage of the new updates, the Google Analytics blog post points users to its Remarketing Starter Pack.