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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.


    October 29, 2012

    New Webmaster Guidelines Part 3 – Quality Guidelines

    This is my final installment on my overview of the New Webmaster Guidelines. My first post covered Design & Content the second part covered Technical Guidelines.

    quality control image

    While the topic of this post is “quality guidelines” it is perhaps the most misunderstood part of the webmaster guidelines as it is open to interpretation; however, the core of the guideline remains the same:

    “Don’t engage in tactics that are questionable. If you would be hesitant to explain your actions to a competitor or to Google”

    “How would you build and promote you site if there were no search engines?”

    While I could go in to specifics on each point, this is an instance where it is best to get the information directly from the source. Google has not really updated anything here, but do state the following suggestions:

    DOs

    • Make your webpages for your readers; no for Google or other search engines
    • Do not deceive your visitors
    • Avoid tricks/schemes designed to improve you rankings.
    • Focus on what makes your site unique, valuable, or engaging and make it stand apart from others in your field
    • Actively monitor your site for hacking and remove hacked content as soon as it appears
    • Prevent and removed user-generated spam from your site.

    DON’Ts

    The clearest recommendations that Google makes to avoid the following practices:

    • Automatically generated content
    • Link schemes of exchanges
    • Cloaking/hidden text or links
    • Suspicious redirects
    • Doorway pages
    • Scraped content
    • Load pages with irrelevant keywords
    • Abusing rich snippets markup
    • Send automated queries to Google

    Once you have repaired your site and corrected and errors or errors, you can submit a reconsideration request to Google:

    SEO news blog post by @ 12:42 pm


     

    October 17, 2012

    New Webmaster Guidelines Part 2 – Technical Guidelines

    This is part 2 of an in depth look at the newly revised Webmaster Guidelines from Google. Google has recently updated their list of best practices and suggestions for site development. To give your site the best chance of ranking well, and to keep a competitive edge, the Google guidelines should be read like the gospel.

    monkey fixes computer

    • Did you ever wonder how Google processes your site to determine its focus and content? Try using a text-based browser like Lynx to understand what Google is using to interpret your site.

    By displaying the page without dynamic elements such as Flash, JavaScript, cookies, sessions IDs or DHMTL, you will gain a keen insight as to what is actually visible to the Google. If there is not enough content to be read, then Google is going to have a difficult time indexing your site and establishing you value in the SERPs

    • Allow bots to crawl your site without session IDs or arguments that are designed to track a user activity. Disallow specific URLs that you don’t want crawled in your robots.txt file. Sessions IDs are antiquated and should not be used in any new site development. You can use cookies instead for monitoring site traffic.

    • Check to see that your web server supports the “If-Modified-Since” HTTP header. This tells Google if your content has changed since it last crawled your site, saving bandwidth and overhead.

    • Use the robot.txt file to exclude directories that do not need to be crawled from Google. Keep it updated in your Webmaster Tools account and ensure that you are not blocking Google bot from crawling your site by testing it in Webmaster Tools.

    • Keep advertisements (such as Google’s AdSense and DoubleClick) to a minimum and ensure that they are not affecting your rankings by making sure they are excluded in your robots.txt file.

    • If you use a content management system (CMS), makes sure that it support seo friendly URL structure and is easily crawled by bots.

    • Test you site in several browser’s (IE, FireFox, Chrome, Lynx, Opera, Safari) at different resolutions.

    • Use tools to monitor page load speeds. This is becoming an increasingly bigger factor for rankings. Use Google’s Page Speed, or Webmaster Tools Site Performance Tool to gain insights on how to boost you page loads speeds.

    SYNOPSIS:

    • Make use of the robots.txt file to keep your site accessible to the Google bots
    • Block unneeded/irrelevant content from
    • Use SEO friendly urls and move away from parameter-based urls
    • Monitor your page load speed and take steps to improve it.

    SEO news blog post by @ 12:09 pm


     

    October 10, 2012

    New Webmaster Guidelines Part 1 – Design and Content

    Google recently updated their webmaster guidelines following the latest algorithm update. It is easy to feel inundated with the amount of information regarding web design dos & don’ts and the best practices for the internet. As an SEO I am frequently asked, “How can I get my site to rank?” The fact of the matter is that we follow the Google’s Webmaster Guidelines which establishes the best practices for websites to follow. Many are concerned about the Panda/Penguin updates and are worried that there site will be hit; or they have a site that has been hit. Our advice remains consistent: "Drink the Google Kool-Aid".

    magician_rabbit_hat

    At one time, it was exceedingly difficult to get a straight answer from Google in regards to what was considered best practice. This led to a wild-west frontier attitude and many designers and SEOs adopted many bad practices. This is lead to an inundation of webspam in the Google SERPs and made it very difficult to get quality search results.

    The Panda and Penguin algorithm and subsequent updates was a very concerted effort to rid the SERPs of webspam. In the wake of these substantial updates, my advice to customers remains consistent; follow the Google established guidelines. The mantra I repeat to my customers is: "Would I do this if search engines didn’t exist?"

    For many of us this is old news, but I still find myself learning new things to try and better practices to adopt. Much of the messaging from Google has been very consistent regarding what makes good content. This post will looks specifically at Google’s recommended Design and Content Guidelines to help Google find, crawl and index your site.

    Site Hierarchy

    • Give your site a clear hierarchical structure and make it as easy to navigate as possible. Every page should be reachable from at least one static text link.
    • Think of your website as a book with logical sections and headings; each with their own unique and relevant content.
      • The Title of you is your domain URL (eg. www.booktitle.com)
      • Your title tag <title> can be your topic for the page. It defines what content will be on this page (eg. <title>Book Characters</title>).
      • Your heading tag is your chapter title eg. <h1>Book Characters</h1>. Typically this is the same or very close to the page title and must be directly relevant.
      • Have only one topic per page and only one H1 tag on any page.
      • Use subsequent heading tags (h2, h3, h4) to define further related divisions of the chapter.

    Site Map

    • Offer a sitemap for your visitors. Not only does this provide a valuable service to your customers, but it can help improve the indexing of your site by bots.
    • If you have an extensive number of links on your site, you may need to break your sitemap into multiple pages.
    • Remember that a website sitemap is different than the sitemap.xml that you should submit to Google’s Webmaster Tools.

    Internal Linking

    • Keep the number of links on any page to the bare minimum. The guidelines used to state ‘around 100’ but this is one area where less is more.
    • In the most recent iteration of the Webmaster Guidelines, Google has only stated to ‘keep it to a reasonable amount’. Too many links leading to other internal pages or offsite is distracting to the visitor. It lowers conversion rates due to people getting lost and creates frustration.

    Textual Content

    • Google has always stated that ‘content is king’. It is absolutely imperative that you create rich, useful and dynamic content that engages your audience. All textual content needs to be well written and grammatically correct. It should clearly and accurately describe your content and it must be relevant to the page that it is found on.
    • Do not write for what you think Google wants to see. Think about what searchers would type into a search engine to find your page and ensure that your content actually includes those terms.
    • Do not concern yourself with keyword densities. Inevitably the content comes across as spammy and does not read well. Google may regard this as keyword stuffing and see broken/confused grammar as potential spam or scrapped content…exactly what the Panda/Penguin updates are designed to target, and penalize for.

    Page Coding

    • Use a crawler on your site such as XENU’s Link Sleuth, or Google’s Webmaster Tools to check you site for broken links.
    • Check your site with the W3C to ensure that your site has valid HTML.
    • Avoid the use of dynamic pages with cryptic URLs (e.g., the URL contains a "?" character). Try to use keyword focused URLs that reflect the page you are building. If you must use a dynamic URL structure, keep them few and the parameters short.

    Images

    • You can give Google additional details about your images, and provide the URL of images we might not otherwise discover, by adding information to a web sitemap.
    • Do not embed important content into images; always use text links instead of images for links, important names etc, where possible. Google crawlers cannot determine the text displayed in an image. If you must use an image for textual content, ensure that you make use of the image ALT tag to describe the image with a few words.
    • Ensure that all image <title< and ALT attributes are descriptive (but not spammy) and accurate. Follow these guidelines for creating great ALT text for your images.
    • Give your images detailed and informative filenames.

    The following areas (video and rich snippets and their usage are best described by Google themselves:

    Video

    View the full post here: http://support.google.com/webmasters/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=156442

    Rich Snippets

    View the full post here: http://support.google.com/webmasters/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=1093493

    Coming next time, I will review the newly updated Technical Guidelines and then conclude with Google’s Quality Guidelines.

    SEO news blog post by @ 1:15 pm


     

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