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    Beanstalk's SEO News Blog

    At Beanstalk Search Engine Optimization we know that knowledge is power. That's the reason we started this SEO blog. We know that the better informed our visitors are, the better the decisions they will make for their websites and their online businesses. We hope you enjoy your stay and find the SEO news contained within this blog useful.


    August 18, 2009

    Google Caffeine Update, Paid Links, and Rankings

    Some of you out there may have heard about Google’s major algorithm update called Caffeine, which can currently be tested here (they have already revised it a few times, so don’t be alarmed if it is down for a few hours at some point with a maintenance message). This algorithm update is mainly related to how Google indexes websites, but as we have seen here at Beanstalk it has given even better results to most of our clients. For instance we have a client on Page 3 for the phrase Shade Sails (still mid promotion), but on the sandbox he is in the top 10. Another client on the 7th page for California Health Insurance are on the 1st page on the Sandbox. And lastly one of the largest campaigns we are running for the phrase Web Hosting shows only a variance of 1 position (lower on Caffeine).

    From what I can see not only has the indexing changed but so has the value of higher numbers of links. We are being out ranked by a company called Rankpay for the phrase SEO Service almost purely by paid links (Sample Paid Link), and links from their clients websites (Rankpay uses the anchor text SEO Service and SEO Services) whereas we rank #1 on the current Google search algorithm. Reviewing the major phrases we rank for (SEO Service, SEO Services, and SEO Consulting), there is no more than a one position difference in our rankings. Needless to say in the long run paid links will get you penalized from the rankings, so we aren’t going to change our tactics.

    Below is a video produced by Michael McDonald from WebProNews and Matt Cutts (one of the top Google engineers) discussing the Caffeine update and its affects on rankings.

    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ovbjCsQtfCk]

    SEO news blog post by @ 1:05 pm


     

    February 20, 2009

    Google Violates Google’s Webmaster Guidelines

    Our friends at Google are kind enough to outline on their site the do’s and don’ts of SEO. They call it their Webmaster Guidelines and it’s become the 10 Commandments of SEO.

    When one reads it one can’t help but view it as a best practices list and really – there isn’t much anyone can say about it to claim it’s a bad set of rules. Basically it reads, “Don’t cheat and you’ll be OK.” which can be likened to the seventh commandment, “Thou shalt not commit adultery.”

    But what happens when the one who makes the rules breaks them? A parent who scolds their child for smoking and then is caught with a cigarette in their mouth loses a lot of their fight and a lot of their justifications. Will the same happen to Google.

    At this point you might be saying to yourself, “For goodness sake Dave – get on with it – what rule did Google break?” Alright, I’ll get right to it. They broken the most “sacred”. “Thou shalt not buy links just to improve your rankings.

    As it turns out, old Google Japan has been buying links in the form of blog posts to help increase their rankings. Of course, it wasn’t actually Google – it was a third party (of course) and Google Japan’s PageRank has been dropped to a 5 from the 9 it was at.

    So a black eye for Google. Of course, they have a good explanation but then – who doesn’t. :) All the same, the one person who came out of this looking great – Matt Cutts who once more represents Google well and you just want to trust him to do no evil. :)

    You can watch a video interview with Matt to get a better idea of what went on below.

    SEO news blog post by @ 1:30 am


     

    September 23, 2008

    Google Shuffle?

    When I launch my browser (Firefox) it starts with 4 tabs. The first three are the major engines with “seo services” in the query just so I can keep close tabs on how we’re doing. The 4th is another Google datacenter with the same information. Yes, I’m that obsessed. It also gives me a close watch on what’s going on at Google – I can constantly see any time a minor adjustment is underway.

    When I walked in the door this morning, our Director of SEO Services Daryl Quenet asked me if I’d seen the results and who was up today. He was getting a different set of results than I had gotten just a short while earlier. After searching other phrases it became pretty clear – there’s a minor update underway. If fact, we have one client that in the duration of a call was in position 3, then 22, then 13 and then 6 (and it was about a 5 minute call).

    In the results for the competition for “seo services” I’ve admittedly been a bit disheartened with who we’re competing against lately. As I’ve noted previously on our blog, there was once a time when we were up against WeBuildPages for the #1 spot. That isn’t the case anymore and unfortunately, a lot of the sites now beating WeBuild have what I would consider to be “less that ideal” link strategies. To me, I’d almost rather be #2 in a solid competition against worthy opponents than #1 in a competition against sites that have sloughs of footer links and blogrolls. Basically, I’d rather be up against “real” linking strategies.

    Unfortunately, it appears that the newer algorithm (and it’s been this way for a while now) is favoring link strategies that go exactly against the best practices. I’m not going to name names here (you can check the backlinks of our competitors (and us too if you like) to find out who’s doing what – on maybe spend your time researching your own industry) but here’s some of what we’re seeing get results that they shouldn’t be:

    Paid Links:
    Ugh. There are numerous competitors out there who have bought links and are reaping the benefits. No matter what Matt and crew might say over at chez Google – they’re just not as good at devaluing them as we’re being told. One of the sites I was looking into has many paid links in obvious locations on irrelevant sites and is doing quite well with them. Now, I’m not saying go out and get yourself some paid links – it’s always a risky venture but this is definitely the area of biggest annoyance to me as we have no paid links simply because we’re not willing to risk our rankings and to watch sites climb into the top 10 with them, even after being reported, is annoying to those of us that have secured legitimate links with great effort and is hurting those that they beat out.

    Links On Client Sites:
    Alright, admittedly this is a tactic that I don’t love but I can’t really argue it. We tend not to put links on client sites. I personally find it to be in poor form to charge a client and then take a link from them HOWEVER there is a legitimate claim that this is advertising and giving credit where it’s due.

    Regardless of what side of the equation you’re on in that debate though, should these really count as backlinks? They’re not links given by the site owner as a vote, they’re default links put there by the party that will benefit. Google needs to find a way to discount these links much better than they are right now.

    Run Of Site Links:
    This is an easy one. If a link appears on every page of a site – it shouldn’t count. If it’s there for traffic, great but I can’t think of a single reason why a run-of-site link, any run-of-site link, should be legitimately counted as a vote. Even if the link is to a parent company – the link is not so much a vote as a disclaimer and should be treated as such.

    Widgets:
    This one might come right after paid links in my list of annoying links that shouldn’t, but do, seem to be working right now. One of the sites I’ve found has that majority of their links coming from a counter that links with an image to their site. From what I can see, they don’t even offer the counter on their site and thus – they likely (though not necessarily) have paid to have their link put in by the counter creator as a “sponsor”.

    In this case we have a paid link combined with a low quality, non-anchor text link (though the images to have alt tags) that it effective. This obviously shouldn’t be the case if what we’re trying to count are real, quality, vote-given links.

    And So …
    So what’s the purpose of this rant? Well, I know that people from Google visit our blog, I can see them in our stats and so my hope is that one of them will read this blog, take a look at how they’re counting backlinks and give credit where it’s due – to links worked for and earned by either providing valuable information, providing a valuable resource, or other such “tactics” that actually reflect a vote from one site to another rather than counting a default link with low value based on Google’s own guidelines and articulated philosophy towards the subject.

    And just to help things along I’m going to give a link to WeBuildPages for SEO services just to give them a boost. Now they just need to get their onsite optimization in place and perhaps we’ll once again be up against companies that should be in the top ten. ;)

    A Warning:
    Now some of you may be thinking, “Hey, these tactics are working so let’s do it !!!” If that’s your mentality then I warn you to do so at your own risk. Google is trying to get a better value system in place for links and eventually they will succeed. If you’re looking to only rank briefly then you might stand a chance but if what you want it to build a quality site that will withstand the ebb-and-flow of the algorithm over time (and I hope you are) then these tactics will eventually get caught and downward your site will tumble.

    We’re starting to see a very little bit of this in some cases (depending on which set of results we’re seeing right now Google settles on) but not enough. My hope is that Google will be able to pick these links up, give them the credit they deserve (none in most cases) and let the true links acquired in mine and other industries count as they should.

    SEO news blog post by @ 12:40 pm


     

    January 23, 2008

    Paid Links

    This will be a very quick post to provide you, our valued readers, with a link. I’ve recently stumbled upon an interesting debate over at Sphinn based on an article by WeBuildPages’ own Jim Boykin. The debate is on paid links and it’s one of the more interesting I’ve seen recently with lines attempting to be drawn and people trying to figure out the different between an unguaranteed review (such as Yahoo!) and a paid review.

    It’s an eternal debate and won’t be settled here but good to follow anyways. :)

    You can read the back-and-forth at http://sphinn.com/story/24523.

    SEO news blog post by @ 8:29 pm


     

    December 3, 2007

    SES Chicago, Blogger & Paid Links

    Today’s post is a rushed hodge-podge of topics. A lot is going on and yet – time is short. I’m rushing through last-minute stuff to make sure I’m ready to head to Chicago tomorrow morning for SES. SES Chicago is already underway but I only get to be there for the two days I’m speaking. Fly in Tuesday, fly out after Jim and I host our radio show on Thursday afternoon (it’s going to be a great show so be sure to listen to WebmasterRadio.fm). :)

    If you want to keep posted on my sessions, the session I attend, eta. you can do so on our website at http://www.beanstalk-inc.com/ses/sesch07/.

    Blogger has now stripped links from comments. It appears that Blogger-run blogs no longer accept you to post a link to your site as a comment. As a move to combat blog sp@m this is going to be highly effective. An incidental victim of the move are people who use blogs heavily and comment legitimately. They will lose some of their links and they likely deserve some of them however I’d say that those spanked with just cause will outweight the innocent bystanders.

    And putting their money where their mouth is, Google has dropped paid listings for text link ads. My question to them would be however, why are you advertising them on my site?

    If you look at the add that appears just today on our site:
    Google advertising paid link brokers.
    Now I’ll admit that I’m not particularly offended by displaying the ads. We don’t buy text links but I don’t have any special vendetta against people that do (Google seems to be taking care of that themselves) but if the folks at Google feel it is unethical to advertise paid links on their own site, why are they OK with pushing the ads onto mine?

    SEO news blog post by @ 7:04 pm


     

    SES Chicago, Blogger & Paid Links

    Today’s post is a rushed hodge-podge of topics. A lot is going on and yet – time is short. I’m rushing through last-minute stuff to make sure I’m ready to head to Chicago tomorrow morning for SES. SES Chicago is already underway but I only get to be there for the two days I’m speaking. Fly in Tuesday, fly out after Jim and I host our radio show on Thursday afternoon (it’s going to be a great show so be sure to listen to WebmasterRadio.fm). :)

    If you want to keep posted on my sessions, the session I attend, eta. you can do so on our website at http://www.beanstalk-inc.com/ses/sesch07/.

    Blogger has now stripped links from comments. It appears that Blogger-run blogs no longer accept you to post a link to your site as a comment. As a move to combat blog sp@m this is going to be highly effective. An incidental victim of the move are people who use blogs heavily and comment legitimately. They will lose some of their links and they likely deserve some of them however I’d say that those spanked with just cause will outweight the innocent bystanders.

    And putting their money where their mouth is, Google has dropped paid listings for text link ads. My question to them would be however, why are you advertising them on my site?

    If you look at the add that appears just today on our site:
    Google advertising paid link brokers.
    Now I’ll admit that I’m not particularly offended by displaying the ads. We don’t buy text links but I don’t have any special vendetta against people that do (Google seems to be taking care of that themselves) but if the folks at Google feel it is unethical to advertise paid links on their own site, why are they OK with pushing the ads onto mine?

    SEO news blog post by @ 7:04 pm


     

    October 30, 2007

    Here We Go Again …

    Well is was an enjoyable 12 hours but the folks over at Google are up to it again and the visible PageRank (that green bar) is on the move once again. This latest round appears to be an effort to correct some of the wrongs (basically, to give PageRank back to those that shouldn’t have lost it). This leaves me with a big question, if we didn’t see any change in the rankings and the site’s aren’t selling links then who cares?

    While I don’t put stock in what the green bar tells me, it is of course interesting to monitor what’s going on (and of course to consider what must be happening at the text link brokers). Bought a PR7? Might be a PR3 but is it worth the same $30/mth you were paying? ;)

    So all I can really recommend to our valued visitors is to do the same as I am (and this is coming from a guy who’s site went from a 6 to a 4) … relax, drink some Chai tea and check your rankings. They probably weren’t affected and so in the end … who cares? :)

    And so from there I’m going to meander onto a new topic and one that’s a lot more interesting – branding vs. marketing vs. advertising. Sometimes it can be very difficult to tell the different between one and the other and so I was happy to see that Neil Patel (apparently as funny as he is smart) posted a GREAT post to illustrate the difference. You can read it on his blog here.

    SEO news blog post by @ 12:59 pm


     

    September 21, 2007

    Whiteboard Friday – Rand On Links

    Today on SEOMoz’s Whiteboard Friday Rand Fishkin discusses links. He gives some valuable advice on how to value links. What might have appealed to me more than anything else is the ego of it. Rand advises us to treat links as an entity outside of Google. His basic advice is:

    If the link would be valuable even if the search engines didn’t exist then it’s a good link.

    This matches well with what I discussed in my article “How To Win Links & Influence Engines” when I was discussing paid links. In it I wrote:

    The only advice I will give to those looking to purchase links is this, ask yourself, “Am I expecting to get traffic from this link?” What this will weed out at the very least is small footer links and links on irrelevant sites. Basically, if the link is worth it without the boost in rankings then continue to pay for it and consider any ranking increases a bonus. If you aren’t getting any traffic from the link then it’s likely not worth paying for. If you’re not getting traffic then the site likely isn’t relevant or the link is in a poor location. The engines will likely pick either of these up and you’ll end up paying for a link that isn’t passing on any weight anyways.

    This rule translates well to virtually all types of links.

    I won’t go into all the details of the video, it’s only 6 minutes and that’s 6 minutes well spent. You can watch it below:

    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BRsq5zfXceI]

    And a big thanks to Rand for summarizing this topic so very well. That’s why you’re one of SEO’s “Rock Stars”. :)

    And to our visitors, enjoy the weekend !

    SEO news blog post by @ 3:10 pm


     

    May 8, 2007

    Yahoo! Paid Links Workaround (oh, and it does other stuff too)

    Yahoo! has recently launched the robots-nocontent tag. What this tag allows webmasters to do is specify portions of their pages that are not relevant to the content on that specific page. The biggest effect will likely be in the area of paid links and advertising. At least, I’m guessing that’s what Yahoo! is hoping.

    In their blog post on the subject they note many possible uses for the robots-nocontent tag including using it for universal navigation that may contain terms and links unrelated to the topic of the page, headers (for similar reasons), legal disclaimers, and – of course – advertising.

    As with their launch of the noodp tag I find myself wanting to pat Yahoo! on the back for another good tag developed. This tag allows webmasters to further control how content is read by the search engine without penalizing them for the need to tailor to the human visitor (universal navigation for example). It also allows for webmasters to remove advertising from the calculations thus further increasing the control we have over what types on content are calculated in our onsite factors.

    A note however, Yahoo! has noted that links contained within these sectors that don’t have the rel=”nofollow” tag on them will still be counted so this isn’t a ticket to slap up some poker link ads on your site thinking Yahoo! won’t see them. They will and unless you have a gaming site of your own, it’s not going to end well.

    Down the road I’m betting we’ll see this go further with links within these areas that aren’t pointing to other resources within the same site being devalued. They’re not related to the page content remember?

    SEO news blog post by @ 2:17 pm


     

    April 25, 2007

    Paid Links

    There’s a great article posted earlier today on the SiteProNews.com site. The article, written by Bill Platt, discussed the recent controversy surrounding paid links and some comments on them made by Matt Cutts. While you may not gain great insight into the buying or selling of paid links (it’s not that kind of article) it does lend some interesting analysis of the issue and how the engines (mainly Google) are addressing it.

    The article also provides some great links to forums posts discussions of the topic including forums that Matt himself is commenting in. You can read the article on the SiteProNews.com site here. I’d put this article in the “recommended but not mandatory” category of reading. There aren’t any “how to’s” but if you’re engaging in paid links as a buyer or a seller it’s always good to know what the feelings of the engines are and what they can and cannot do.

    Three hours later …

    Well well well, I just had the great fortune of reading a very interesting article on the WebProNews.com site. It discusses Cutts’ recent silence on t he topic of paid links AND (this is the fun part) the fact that VP of Advertising for Google, Mr. Tim Armstrong himself co-founded the company Associated Content, which pays writers to produce sontent (200,000+ pages and growing at a rate of 2,000 pages/day) for the AdSense ad revenue AND (wait for it, wait for it …) BUYS LINKS. Oh ya gotta love the irony.

    You can read the article on the WebProNews.com site here.

    SEO news blog post by @ 1:33 pm


     

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