Showing posts with label google. Show all posts
Showing posts with label google. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 16, 2015

Why "Googling Yourself" is not an excuse to ignore keyword rank tracking for SEO

I recently was asked my opinion on some SEO advice that had been shared with a client. The advice was essentially: Ignore keyword rank tracking because all Google results are personalized and you can't accurately track rankings by "Googling Yourself". Instead, look to organic traffic in Google Analytics as the sole indicator of SEO success.

First off, "Googling Yourself" seems like a bit of a misnomer for the act of checking Google ranks by Google searching a keyword phrase yourself. I think of Googling my name when I read that but it is evident what they mean when read in context. Ironically, one of the biggest issues I have with this has to do with context itself... read on to see what I mean.

There are a few things right about this:

  1. Keyword rank tracking can be considered unreliable, since search results are personalized.
  2. "Googling Yourself" can provide misleading information on keyword rankings since your results are personalized.
  3. Organic traffic in Analytics is a great indicator of overall SEO success.


Beyond those, this advice falls very short of effective SEO but there are ways to reliably check keyword rankings.

While "Googling Yourself" is not a reliable way to check rankings and Google results are indeed personalized, it doesn't mean keyword rankings don't matter for SEO. This is why we built our own in-house keyword rank checking tool that uses Google's Search API to determine ranks. The Search API doesn't factor any personalization in, but it also isn't an exact mirror of the Google.com search engine. Even so, we believe it to provide an authoritative baseline and the ranks returned are the most reliable ranks we can get.

Keyword rankings and activity are important.

Knowing how users found your website, specific what keyword terms were used, is very beneficial. This lets you know what is working, what isn't working, and sheds light on user perception and intent. In the past, Google Analytics reported on the keywords that people used to reach your website. This has since been all but stopped by Google (which is an entirely separate topic). However, you can get some referral keyword insight through Google Webmaster Tools. It isn't ideal, but it does offer some insight.

That said, knowing what keyword searches led to visits is a passive exercise. Keyword research and targeting is an active exercise. Why discount this just because it is difficult to asses rank? Why accept that overall organic traffic patterns are enough to indicate SEO success?

Being pro-active about SEO is better than watching organic traffic numbers passively.

It is true that the best overall indicator of how well you are doing on SEO is organic traffic. That is the end goal in most every case: more traffic from the search engines, period. The more organic traffic, the better you are doing, but how does this help you to be pro-active about SEO? It simply doesn't. It doesn't even help you to be reactive, because you have no insights into why your organic traffic is what it is. In this scenario, you simply implement some best practices (hopefully), hope for Google's favor, and anxiously wait for your organic traffic to increase. Google is smart enough that this is actually still pretty effective, but it is missing a huge piece of the equation... keyword ranking tracking.

Without keyword research and tracking, you can't know what keywords are competitive or low-hanging fruit, effective or ineffective. With keyword research and tracking, you can come up with a plan to target specific phrases. This is where you can get an edge on rankings and pro-actively increase your organic traffic. Google wants to provide the best results to its users, but it needs the help of websites to make that possible. If your website cooperates by offering up clean and clear indications of context, you are helping Google identify what your website is all about. You are also laser-focusing your content toward that context, which helps build authority in Google's eyes. You can partly accomplish this laser-focus through a natural but focused application of keyword phrases in all the right places (headings, lists, titles, descriptions, etc). Do not mistake this for keyword stuffing, but approach it as naturally editing your copy to provide consistency and focus.

In summary:

Search rankings should not be discounted or ignored. Checking ranks on specific search terms (via a tool like ours) isn't going to provide an accurate view of your overall organic search performance, only a sub-set of specific terms you determine worthy of tracking. However, those specific keyword rankings do effect the personalized search results everyone sees. If you rank high on highly relevant keyword searches, your chances of ranking high in related personalized results is much higher. Rankings also offer invaluable insight into how well Google associates you with what you believe the context of your website to be. If you are going after a specific niche, targeting specific keyword phrases and monitoring their performance is a huge part of reaching that niche. It all helps Google understand context (who you are) and authority (what you know or have to offer).

Client example:

Passive (Keyword targeting strategy NOT in place): 1035 organic visitors (12/2014)
Pro-Active (Keyword targeting strategy in place): 1723 organic visitors. (2/2015)
The December sample, shows how the website was doing on organic traffic without keyword research and targeting, but the February sample shows how the website was doing after keyword research and targeting was in place for only a few weeks.

There is too much potential benefit to ignore keyword rankings simply because Google personalizes results.

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Google 'Flaw' Puts Users' Details on Display

A friend recently shared this article with me, entitled "Google 'flaw' puts users' details on display" which was posted at news.com.au. It basically trashes on Google for sharing your personal info with the app developers from which you purchase apps. First of all, the last time I bought something at +Lowe's Home Improvement and used self-checkout I had a camera staring me in the face the whole time. The last time I ordered something from +Amazon.com, I gave them all my personal contact info. An app market mining your info shouldn't be surprising either.. after all you are still a customer buying a product.
That being said, this may be concerning if Google users weren't already used to giving up privacy in return for services. As soon as you signed up for that first Gmail account, you were on board whether you knew it or not. Nothing privacy related should come as a surprise at this point when it comes to Google or any other company. Every time these types of articles pick up steam the biggest shock to me is that people still think this is news. Ever since you plugged your computer into the internet, you were done...

I was shocked the first time I setup a years ago and had to provide personal info including address and phone number to register the computer before using it. Remember the iPad/iPhone setup process (assuming some Apple employee didn't do it for you)? You gave your life story standing there in the Apple Store or at the cell provider just to get setup. It is nothing new.
If you want full privacy, throw away your phone and pull the plug on your internet connection. Otherwise, be prepared to have your identity and everything about you mined by every company out there... especially the ones that provide the services you use every day. If you still get squirmy thinking about Google 'spying' on you when you use services like +Gmail, +Google, and +Google Maps I hate to think of your reaction to the news of Intel's new Internet-TV Set-Top Box which is on its way to market. +Intel will be deploying it with a camera that recognizes you and learns everything it can about you... it is a TV that watches you!
In summary, if you still get unsettled over privacy, Google, the internet, and so on, I don't blame you. I am just saying I waved the white flag a long time ago and in return fully embraced the wave of resulting technology. My advice to you: consider waving the white flag or face the fact that you will be left in the dark ages until you get on board. I doubt this culture of personalized technology is going to slow down any time soon!

    

Thursday, December 6, 2012

Google Now Updates for 12/5/2012 with Updated Card List

Google Search aka Google Now has just been updated for Android 4.1+

I am loving this service and it just keeps getting better! Check out some of the features that have just been added:


For Android 4.1+ (Jelly Bean), Google Search keeps getting faster, plus:

New cards:
- Events nearby
- Suggestions to help with your research
- Boarding passes from Gmail (United only, more to come)
- Search by camera when at museums or shops
- Weather at upcoming travel destinations
- Approximate monthly summary of walking and biking activity
- Birthdays

New voice actions:
- Post to Google+
- Say "What's this song?" to find the song you hear
- Say "Scan a barcode" to find product info


This builds on to an already huge list of 'cards' provided by Google Now when you need them:


Activity summary

Shows a rough approximation of how far you walked or cycled during the past month.

Birthdays

Displays an interesting fact about your birthdate on your birthday.

Events

Shown before your favorite artists give concerts near you, or before other popular events are scheduled near you.


Flights

Shown before flights that you've searched for.

Gmail: Event bookings

Shown before an event booking confirmed by Gmail.

Gmail: Flights

Shown before flights confirmed by Gmail.

Gmail: Hotels

Shown when you receive a confirmation email and before your scheduled checkout.

Gmail: Packages

Displayed when you receive a shipping notification for an online purchase.

Gmail: Restaurants

Shown before a restaurant reservation confirmed by Gmail.

Movies

Shows movies playing in your vicinity, and tells you when a movie you're interested in is playing nearby.


News update

Shows updates related to news items you've read recently.

Next appointment

Shown before scheduled meetings.

Photo spot nearby

Shown when you're near a popular spot for taking photos.

Places

Shows nearby businesses and other places of potential interest. If you're at a museum or shop, you can use your camera to look up artwork or get product information.


Public alerts

Gives public advisories for your location from the National Weather Service, U.S. Geological Survey, and similar services.

Public transit

Shown with relevant schedules when you're near a bus station, train station, or other public transit stop.

Research topics

Shown when you've recently used Google Search to research a topic, such as a trip you're planning.

Sports

Shown for teams that interest you before, during, or after a game.

Stocks

Shown periodically for stocks you're tracking. For more details, see About stocks card.

Traffic

Shown before your usual commute times

Travel: Currency

Shows the latest currency conversion information for your location.

Travel: Nearby attractions

Shown when you're near well-known attractions, such as restaurants, museums, and cafes.

Travel: Time back home

Shown periodically when you're in a different time zone than usual.

Travel: Translate

Shown when you'retraveling in a foreign country, to help you translate words and phrases.

Weather

Periodically displays weather for home, work, or your current location.



    

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Google's Disavow Tool: Long awaited and quite ominous

It is no secret that many webmasters and SEOs have long awaited Google's backlink disavow tool. After Panda and Penguin, bad backlinks have become toxic to a website's SEO efforts. Now that Google is allowing webmasters to disavow bad backlinks, the problem is solved right?

Wrong. As typical, as one problem is solved another is created. Let's take a look at an all too real hypothetical example.

Website A has 1,000 backlinks and took a big hit in rankings after the Panda and Penguin updates. The webmaster doesn't know what to do. The webmaster calls the SEO who is in a state of panic and buried with emails and phone calls. Why? Because every one of the SEO's clients is having an SEO meltdown. Giving up on the SEO, the webmaster decides to research why the big drop in rankings occurred... the verdict: bad backlinks. The webmaster now starts hunting down bad backlinks - any links with unnatural anchor text, spammy content, biased one-sided content links, pretty much anything that wasn't generated by an actual fan or customer. What to do with all these links? Well the webmaster spent so long building them, it is now time to start removing them, but the links are on sites out of the webmaster's control. Google finally releases the disavow tool, allowing the webmaster to indicate which links are bad and should not be counted in Google's search ranking algorithm. The webmaster kicks back and starts generating quality content... it is all over. Or is it?

Lets say that 400 of the 1000 backlinks were disavowed by the webmaster. Well now the webmaster has effectively reported around 400 websites to Google as having no value. The webmaster's friends have done the same. Now that the webmaster is generating real quality content, there is no place to put it. All the webmaster's favorite article and blog posting sites have been mass-reported to Google via the disavow tool and hold little value now.

What is the answer? Generate content worth sharing. Share it yourself on social networks (embrace Google+) and encourage your fans and customers to share the content as well. Participate in conversations on social sites and forums and offer real valuable content.

YOUR CONTENT IS YOUR NEW PRODUCT. IT IS YOUR NEW "LINK-JUICE"
Generate good quality content regularly and offer value first and foremost. This can be easier than it may seem once you have established a good methodology for it. Schedules, ordered lists, and brainstorming once a week can provide enough direction for a month of good content. I will be glad to share my tips on content generation, so keep check for that. Be sure to share this content and check back for more updates and tips.