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How Google's Friend Connect works

Posts tagged with "seo"

The Six Laws of Ethical SEO

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My good friend Adam Audette wrote a great post on the 6 principles of ethical SEO. In his article, he explains:

1. Don't do any harm and engage in aggressive techniques. You don't want to hurt their brand.
2. Focus on the community and provide valuable information for them.
3. Fix problems, even if that means to give your clients the cold, hard truth and information they don't want to hear.
4. Internet marketing requires a combination of smaller disciplines to be powerful. Social media alone won't cut it. Neither will SEO.
5. Don't only do SEO. Teach it.
6. We should build scalable solutions so that the client will continue reaping the rewards of our campaigns.

Adam's post is interesting and a great read in itself. The ensuing discussion is also a good read -- it's all about everyone's individual ethics, and Adam has a lot of great points.

FROM: seroundtable.com

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Google launches ‘Site Search’ service

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Google Enterprise has launched 'Site Search', a hosted service which allows website owners to create a self-branded, Google-powered search bar on their website.

Site owners can customize the service to suit their site and their content. The service starts at $100 (approx £50) for searching up to 5,000 pages. It is now available at www.google.com/sitesearch.

"Cloud computing makes powerful search readily accessible to any business on the web," said Dave Girouard, president of Enterprise, Google. "Website owners typically invest in good content, search optimization and advertising to attract customers -- but often lack a quality search experience once customers arrive. With Google Site Search, websites can immediately increase customer satisfaction as they are improving their business results."

The service builds on the Google Custom Search Engine, a hosted search solution introduced in October 2006.

The new tool adds business integration features through an XML API, the option to turn off ads, a more customized look and feel, as well as email and phone support.

Those already using Google Custom Search Business Edition will experience the benefits of Google Site Search automatically with no need to upgrade.

Google Site Search is a member of a portfolio of search offerings from the Google enterprise group that also includes the Google Search Appliance and Google Mini, both of which offer additional control over crawl depth and timing, as well as secure access to internal documents.

From: netimperative

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25 Blog Optimization Tips Even Dear Old Dad Could Ace (Plus 10 More Tips for Mom!)

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by Richard Burckhardt

As fate would have it, my 55 Quick SEO Tips Even Your Mother Would Love post (hint - read on for ten more bonus tips!) came out just in time for Mothers Day, so, in honor of dad and Fathers Day, here are a few tips that even dad could follow to boost the traffic on his golf or fishing blog!

SEO DadAgain, maybe not my dad, but then, I’m nearly 53 myself (old enough to be a grandfather) and I’m writing this stuff! Don’t assume that we old geezers won’t get it!

;-)

A blog is one of the best and easiest ways to generate fresh, up to date content for your site as well as link love. Good, quality content naturally attracts links, but there are ways to optimize your blog to get the biggest bang for your buck.

What is a blog? Short for web log, a blog is a content management system, basically an interactive web site that allows you to create and post content through a web-based control panel. Rather than create a web page and upload it, you just log into your blog control panel and write articles and post them. They are live immediately and readers can post comments so that it is a more interactive experience for the visitor.

For some, a blog can completely replace a traditional web site. With an almost word processor-like interface, even dear old dad can be blogging in no time!

And, one of the great features of a blog is the built-in RSS feed that visitors can subscribe to for keeping up with your new content. An RSS feed is commonly referred to as “Really Simple Syndication” and it does just what the name suggests - it allows your blog articles and news to be automatically retrieved by user feed readers (like Google Reader, MyYahoo, BlogLines, etc.) all over the world as you post them. The distribution potentially drives traffic, deep links and popularity to your blog which can help with your rankings. Pretty cool, huh?

In addition to providing a platform for terrific information (for humans and search engines), a blog is a natural pathway to the world of social media. Blogs are interactive, encouraging posts and information from visitors, and syndicated through RSS feeds, spreading your content (and links) across the web to be found in search engines, dedicated blog searches, news feeds, you name it.
Bottom line - if you don’t have a blog, get one now!

The plugins (small programs that add features to your blog, usually free) mentioned are specifically for the free self-hosted version of WordPress, probably the most popular blog platform currently used, but the concepts apply to all blogs.

1. Use full text in your RSS feed. It is common to just include the first paragraph or two (a summary) in what goes out in the feed and then insert a “More” link to get the reader to go to your blog. That diminishes your ability to get back links from services like TechMeMe because any links below the “More” won’t appear. Use the full text. Don’t worry about your feed being duplicate content. According to Rick Klau, formerly of Feedburner and now with Google, a feed in itself will never be considered duplicate content.
2. Optimize the text in the RSS feed just like you should with your posts and web pages. Use descriptive, keyword rich text in your title and description.
3. RSS feeds with podcasts and video enclosures will get you into additional RSS directories and engines. Be sure to use show notes (text transcripts) for your podcasts and videos, though. Remember, search engines love text and can’t yet pull content from multimedia files.
4. Include tag clouds on pages. Tag clouds are basically keywords from posts on your blog that are linked to a search results page on your blog that include all articles related to the keyword. Let’s say the word that shows up in the “cloud” (basically just a list) is “widgets” and you click on it. You’ll get a page showing all posts on your blog that are tagged with the “widgets” tag. To produce tag clouds, Simple Tags, a free plugin for WordPress, can be used.
5. Use a Related Posts plugin. Cross linking to related posts on your blog helps with your internal linking, making keyword rich anchor text more prominent on your blog as well as helping your visitors navigate your site. Use a related posts plugin for WordPress like Contextual Related Posts.
6. Top Ten Posts with links. This can be put on auto pilot with yet another plugin that automates the process of deciding which posts get clicked on the most and placing a list on your blog for visitors (and spiders) to see and follow. Popularity Contest is a good WordPress plugin for this.
7. Add Technorati tags to your posts. Technorati tracks blogs and social media and tagging your posts can help spread the word about your content. Go to Technorati, register for an account (it’s free) and claim your blog as your own. A nice plugin to help automate the placement of Technorati tags on your blog is Simple Tags (different plugin from the “Simple Tags” mentioned above).
8. Optimize your TITLE. Don’t just let your blog software automatically create the TITLE for your post by pulling the text out of your post heading. Customize and optimize it. The SEO TITLE Tag plugin is perfect for WordPress. And, just like with any web page TITLE, put your company name or the name of the blog at the END (if you must include it at all). Unless you are Coca Cola or Microsoft, NOBODY will be searching for it. Sorry…
9. Make posts sticky. By using a “sticky post” plugin, you can create keyword rich content that will stay at the top of a category page, for instance, rather than moving down as additional content is posted. I am currently using WP Sticky.
10. Create Sitemaps. The search engines can follow your RSS feed sitemap just like they can follow one for a normal web site. Create sitemaps for each category RSS feed and tell the search engines about them, either by pointing to them in your robots.txt file or by submitting them to Yahoo Site Explorer or Google Webmaster Central.
11. Use Feedburner. Feedburner offers a ton of free features that can add to your blog’s optimization and marketing efforts, including stats, post e-mail notifications, the ability to include Flickr photo posts and much more. Now owned by Google, features that were previously paid services like MyBrand are now free.
12. Use Optional Excerpts. When you make a post, WordPress will grab some text to display on your category page and in your feed (if you aren’t using a full feed as described above). Unfortunately, it doesn’t always grab good text. Using the Optional Excerpts feature in WordPress, you can type in the exact keyword rich, topical text that you want displayed.
13. Domain name - In a nutshell, if you think having your blog on a separate domain from, say, your business, will give you more authority and street credit, then go for it. It boils down to a choice of mydomain.com/blogname or blogname.com.
14. Use the Update Service built into WordPress. This is in the Options menu and all you do is place a list of URLs to different services like Feedster, Netgator, Technorati, etc. and whenever you make a post, those services will be notified. You can find a list of the services at WordPress Update Service.
15. CEO blogging - priceless! If you are running a business, particularly a consumer driven business, get your CEO (Dad?) blogging! CEO influence on a blog is incredible as this is the VOICE of the company. And, responding to reader comments will cause your credibility to skyrocket! This is especially true for a family business. It just makes visitors feel welcome.
16. Socialize. Interact with your visitors. Don’t just publish your posts and sit back. Answer questions, link out to their sites when they offer good content, respond to their comments in a timely, informative manner, etc.
17. Own a niche. It’s a lot easier to dominate a space if you start out with a smaller, less competitive, narrowly focused subject area. For example, you’re more likely to become a dominant player with a blog about “rechargeable outdoor power tools” than you are for simply “tools’ which is way too broad a term with a lot more competition.
18. Work your titles for both audiences - readers and searchers. Be sure you start out with the title of your post to attract readers. After the post has some history and has fallen into the archive section of your blog, go back and optimize the title for SEO.
19. Keep the post slug the same. Write this yourself, don’t let WordPress generate it. Don’t go back and change it at a later date because this is what determines how your post link is formed. Writing your own post slug allows you to create an easy to read, optimized URL.
20. Optimize for the Google indent. We’ve all seen Google search results where a page from a domain ranks with another page from the same domain just under it, but indented. Focus on getting a post ranking well using standard SEO, anchor text links, etc. Then find another, similar post to optimize. Link the ranking post to the second post to try to pull it up.
21. Re-purpose posts and pages. Let’s say you did a post on social media way back in 2005 and you want to do a similar, updated post. If the 2005 post is just way out of date and not of particular use these days, write over it with your new content. The old post has history and back links that can give you an immediate bump.
22. Use a single category. I know it’s tempting sometimes to place your posts in multiple categories, but get over it. You risk duplicate content issues with multiple categories, so make it easy for Google and concentrate on one.
23. Use a folder. Unless there is a very good reason to put your blog on a separate domain or subdomain (like your site is just a blog or you really believe a separate domain will give you more credibility - see tip #13), put it on your main site as a folder. This keeps link juice targeted to your main domain.
24. Got a Flash or image site that won’t rank? Start a blog on the domain to create the related content and links to the Flash or image pages. Chances are your blog pages will be what rank, but they’ll link back to and guide your visitors to your Flash and image pages.
25. Create your own custom footer. If you’re using WordPress, try the Feed Footer Plugin. With it you can create your own custom footer content, complete with HTML, for your posts that will show up in your RSS feed. This is great for plugging favorite posts and monetizing your feed.
26.

One final thought to consider. Blogs are all about sharing, so if a visitor shares something really good, promote it to the front page of your blog. Do a post all about it (You caught a fish that was HOW big?) and thank them for the great content. Your visitors will love it and come back for more.

Remember, you can turn active users into free SEOs who write content for you.

Of course, if you’re reading this, you’re obviously the family SEO geek, so share the love with dad and help him out with these tips and plugins. The more automated his blog is, the more time he has to spend researching his subject on the golf course or at the fishing hole - great for Fathers Day!

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As promised, for reading this entire article, here are ten bonus tips to add to 55 Quick SEO Tips Even Your Mother Would Love

56. Use Google Alerts to be alerted about back links - http://www.google.com/alerts. Add link:www.yourdomain.com to the Search Terms box to get notified by email when someone links to you.

57. Optimize your press releases just as you would a web page. Use your keywords, keyword anchor text and headlines in a way that will maximize your visibility without being spammy. In addition to possible pickup by major news sites, these releases are archived on the web. And, remember, don’t put out press releases to sites like PRWeb unless you have REAL news to share.

58. Move JavaScript and CSS to external files whenever possible. This will make your code tighter, move your content up higher, the page will load faster and the spiders will have fewer possible roadblocks in their quest to devour all that good content you wrote .

59. Build pages around phrases like Where can I or How can I because there are a TON of searches for variations of these. Just search for one of these phrases using the free WordTracker Keyword Suggestion Tool and you’ll see what I mean.

60. If you write articles for distribution to article sites for mass distribution (a great way to get back links), be sure to publish the article on your own site first and give the spiders a chance to crawl it. That identifies you as the originator of the content. Then push the article out for distribution across the web, making sure you have a link back to your site in the article content.

61. Tweak and test. Make one change at a time and evaluate what effect it had on your ranking, if any. Changing too many things at once can confuse things to the point where you don’t know which change you made did what.

62. Local search is getting hot! Create a local listing for all locations if you have more than one. Don’t just create a local listing for the main one. Get them all in there! Start with local listings at Google, Yahoo! and Live. Include photos, videos, links, web pages and coupons if available.

63. Don’t try to fake it. Those 50 domains you bought in 1998 with dummy content all linking back to your main site might have made you #1 last decade, but now they can get you booted from the rankings altogether. The “mini-net” is dead.

64. Want to see what Google has indexed from your domain (or any domain for that matter) during, say, the past seven days? Just point your brower to http://www.google.com/search? q=site:yourdomain.com&as_qdr=d7 .

Simply change the “yourdomain.com” to your actual domain name and alter the “=d7? to be whatever number of days you are looking for (d5, d10, etc.). Or, change the “d” to “w” for weeks or “y” for years.

65. Test domains should be invisible. It you are using a domain simply for testing new designs, functions, etc., be sure it is not accessible to spiders or users, who will both be confused about which domain is the real thing. If the spiders can get to it, you could be in for big duplicate content issues. A simple way to block all spiders is with the robots.txt file.

Richard V. Burckhardt, also known as The Web Optimist, is an SEO based in Palm Springs, CA with over 10 years experience in search engine optimization, web development and marketing.

From: Search Engine Journal

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Help search engines find your site

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Want to increase your odds of people finding your Web site on the Internet?

Well, then you'd better optimize your site so it ranks high in the listings presented by top search engines like Google and Yahoo, say experts.

This "search engine optimization" is critical, considering that more than 150 million people in the United States regularly use search engines to look up information online, according to Tim McAtee of Warren, R.I.-based MarketingSherpa. Of those users, 60 percent to 70 percent look only at the first page of results, he said.

"The goal of search-engine optimization is to get your site as high in the search rankings as you can," explained Julie Gross Gelfand of Harrison Leifer DiMarco, a Rockville Centre, N.Y.-based marketing and public relations firm that assists companies with optimization. "The ones on the first page get the most traffic."

So how do you propel your Web site toward the top of the heap? It certainly isn't easy, but it is doable, say experts.

First you need to understand how search engines work. Search engines use spiders, crawlers and robots to find Web sites, explained Andrew Hazen of Prime Visibility in Melville, N.Y., which specializes in search-engine optimization.

"Using complex algorithms, these spiders, crawlers and robots are able to locate a page on a site and then index its content in their database," said Hazen, author of "Plain & Simple: Search Engine Optimization."

The indexing process allows search engines to then pull up a site in the results when a query is typed, he explains in his book, adding that the more relevant the content is to the query, the higher the ranking will be.

That's why picking the right keywords for your content and HTML code is so critical. You need to place keywords in specific areas that attract search engine spiders, such as your URL or page name, title tags, body content and clickable links, said Hazen. This can get confusing, so you may want to enlist the help of an expert.

The trick is to pick keywords that are relevant to your audience.

"You can guess what keywords are important, but some of the keywords that you might think are very important aren't," said Peter Kent of Peter Kent Consulting, a Denver-based e-commerce consultant and author of "Search Engine Optimization for Dummies". He suggests using a keyword analysis tool such as Wordtracker or Keyword Discovery.

It also pays to check out the keywords that your competitors are using, said Allie Herzog, new media director at HJMT Communications LLC in Westbury, N.Y. Look at the content of their Web sites, she suggested.

The more precise and relevant your keywords, the better, said Frank Dinolfo, director of digital services at Harrison Leifer DiMarco Inc.

Aside from keywords, you should work on building quality inbound links to your site, added Dinolfo.

"Any well-rounded Web site will link to other relevant Web sites, directories and trade associations," said Kevin Carr, search marketing director of IMC Search in Irvine, Calif.

Check out who is linking to your competitors by going to Toolbar.Google.com, installing the toolbar and then clicking on the backward links feature, said Hazen.

From: ChicagoTribune

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Google Sites now open to all

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Hello again.. i think i've read some good news online today... that google open up a site wherein as a group you can make your own site and everyone of you can edit or change things inside your site. This would be great because as a team you can all put together what you have in mind and ask each other if it would be good for the site or not.. So what do you think?

Google Sites, an application to help groups create a collaborative website, is now available for anyone to use.


First launched back in February, Google Sites is part of the Google Apps platform and lets teams create a site where editing rights can be shared between people.


"Now we've made it easy for anyone to set up a website to share all types of information - team projects, company intranets, community groups, classrooms, clubs, family updates, you name it - in one place, for a few people, a group or the world," said Google engineering manager Andrew Zaeske.


You don't need complicated programming knowledge or web design skills to create a site, according to Google.


You can also embed content from other Google services such as YouTube, Picasa, Google Docs and Google Calendar, and you can upload files of any type.


Signing up to the standard edition of Google Apps is free though there is a Premier Edition which costs $50 (about £25) per user, per year and offers more storage capacity.


The Google Sites interface is currently only available in English but you can add content in any language you wish.

FROM: WEBuser

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seo tagbilaran city

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Publicis to reveal Google news by summer

Maurice Levy, chairman and chief executive of Publicis (PUBP.PA), said the world's fourth-largest advertising group hoped to give more details about its cooperation with Web search engine Google (GOOG.O) by the summer.

Levy also told the Reuters Technology, Media and Telecoms Summit in Paris on Tuesday that he was "rather optimistic" about growth prospects for Publicis this year.

"It will be a much better year than anticipated by some analysts and much better than last year," he said.

Publicis, owner of the Saatchi & Saatchi and Leo Burnett networks, had seen a "very good trend" in new business in the first quarter and prospects for the second quarter were "quite good," he said.

Levy repeated that the second quarter of 2008 would show much better growth than the year-ago period, which he said was "terrible."

Publicis, which expects 2008 to be boosted by the Beijing Olympics, has not seen any signs yet that its clients were changing their advertising plans amid intense international attention over the human rights situation in China, he said.

In January, Publicis and Google revealed they were combining their expertise to expand in the fast-growing digital advertising market.

However, the pair did not give much detail, only saying that Google would exchange its technological know-how for Publicis's analytical and media planning expertise.

"We will develop new areas of cooperation," Levy said on Tuesday.

When asked when Publicis could provide more details on the planned cooperation, Levy said: "We hope to do that by the summer."

Publicis and Google disclosed they were cooperating in the digital sector one year after Publicis scooped up Internet ad agency Digitas for $1.3 billion.

The news also followed a buying spree last year which saw Internet and technology powerhouses such as Google, Yahoo (YHOO.O) and Microsoft (MSFT.O) snap up several leading Internet ad agencies.

Collaboration with Google also reflects Levy's view of Internet heavyweights as partners.

"We don't see them as enemies but like CBS, TF1 (TFFP.PA) or CNN...," he said.

When Publicis announced it planned to cooperate with Google, the head of British rival WPP (WPP.L), Martin Sorrell, said Publicis was revealing a weakness through the deal.

But earlier this month, Yahoo struck an advertising partnership deal with WPP that will let WPP buy ads on Yahoo's online ad exchange.

Asked to comment on that deal, Levy said: "How weak he (must) be to make that agreement!"

FROM: Yahoo! NEWS

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seo specialist

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Hello to all, this is my first blog. and i want to share something that i think would be useful to some.. i found this while browsing through todays news. this SEO thing is one thing thats "in" today and me myself is quite into this also.. i may not be that good in this thing but i'm geeting there into understanding it. so here it is, read on and enjoy...



How Google's Friend Connect works

Some of the reality behind the controversy that has followed Facebook's blocking of Google's Friend Connect

Google's Code Blog has a very good explanation of what Google's Friend Connect does. Basically, it says:

"1. Google Friend Connect puts users in control over whether they're connected to their data on Facebook.
2. Google Friend Connect only reads a small amount of user data from Facebook, and does so using Facebook's public APIs. We read the Facebook numeric id, friendly name, and public photo URLs of the user and their friends. We read no other information.
3. The only user information that we pass from Facebook to third-party applications is the URL of the user's public photo.
4. Google Friend Connect does not permanently store any user data retrieved from Facebook."

FROM: http://blogs.guardian.co.ukhttp://blogs.guardian.co.uk

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