Category Archives: Google Visibility

Google Visibility – Tips, tactics and on-site optimization for achieving greater visibility in Google.

Google’s Disavow Link Tool Shows Some Effectiveness With Combating Penguin



BWMagic’s Internet Marketing Newsletter


Google’s Disavow Link Tool Shows Some Effectiveness With Combating Penguin


Penguin Recovery via Google Disavow Link Tool

Tim Grice, the owner and editor for Seowizz has reported
significant evidence/proof that the Google Disavow Link Tool does indeed work.
In a very detailed article he shows how some sites have recovered from
having bad links flowing to their sites and neutralizing those bad links
when it comes to your rankings in Google.

If you have been following the whole Penguin/Panda/Google webspam opera
over the last year and a half, you will be familiar with all the manual
penalties, WMT warnings and rankings upheaval happening in Google search
results.

Now, if you’re like me and following this issue closely, you will immediately
pick up or start questioning the “timeline” of these “recoveries” from Penguin…
the dates simply don’t add up. Google released its Disavow Link Tool on October
16 to the public – yet we have sites recovering in 7 days, 10 days, 3 weeks…
when/before the tool was even released.

However, you have go down to the comment section to discover that Tim (or the
SEO firm he works for) had a beta version of this Disavow tool. They can’t come
out and say it – but Google probably had sites/firms test this tool before it was
released to the general public. Anyone using this version were probably sworn to
secrecy.

If this is indeed the case, then the argument is pretty strong, we will probably
start seeing other sites recover from Penguin and from the influence bad/spammy
links have over their Google rankings. Webmasters who have seen a drop in rankings
from Penguin now have a powerful tool to fight these spammy links.

If you have received a manual penalty from Google, you will need to submit a site
reconsideration after you placed all your spammy links you want disavowed in a simple
txt file and submitted them to Google. This is simple to do but make sure you have
closely examined all your links which you will want disavowed.


And…

Remember to double check your good links – the ones you want to keep and ones
which are giving you your rankings in Google. Obviously, if your previous rankings
in Google were the result of solely “unnatural links” and no good links… then using
the Disavow Link Tool won’t recover your rankings. However, your site will be back at
square one and you can start building links/rankings without being in the Penguin
Penalty box.

Matt Cutts and Google have stated that all the links you have disavowed might not
be dismissed – this tool is just a suggestion for discounting your incoming links
and if Google finds valuable links on this list, they might still count them when
ranking your site and content.

For now, its mainly a waiting game for many webmasters, you have submitted your
list of links you want disavowed via the Google Disavow Tool AND you have submitted your
Site Reconsideration Form to Google. No doubt, there must be a backlog of
thousands of sites/webmasters waiting for this Disavow Tool to kick in and bring
back those all important Google rankings. Maybe even before the lucrative online
holiday shopping season arrives.


For more information on Google’s recent changes and
how they affect your web marketing, try this link:

Panda/Penguin Special Report


Helping People Succeed Online Since 2002!

Kind Regards,
Titus Hoskins

www.bizwaremagic.com

Did you find the above information helpful? If so, why not
help spread the word – recommend this content by using
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Google Has Updated Its Webmaster Guidelines



BWMagic’s Internet Marketing Newsletter


Google Has Updated Its Webmaster Guidelines


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Google has made, in my opinion, a major update to its Webmaster Guidelines. Not
major in the sense that the overall goal of these guidelines have changed, but
major because Google has “fleshed out” or added more information and examples
to exactly explain what webmasters should do to create a quality site in
the eyes of Google.

For any webmaster, struggling with the Panda and Penguin Updates, this new
information or broader explanation can be helpful. For example, in regards
to Penguin and link building, in the new Guidelines Google has gone into much
more detail to what constitutes “link schemes” and how webmasters should avoid them.

Google now gives exact examples of forum comments, low quality text or articles,
links embedded in Widgets… and gives more tactics which webmasters should
avoid if they want to avoid being penalized by Penguin.

Google’s Webmaster Guidelines covers three topics:

– Design and content
– Technical
– Quality

Again, each one of these areas is expanded upon or fleshed out. Webmasters
can now get a better feel for what Google wants and expects in a quality
website.

Google also points out the techniques and tactics webmasters should
avoid at all costs:

“Automatically generated content

Participating in link schemes

Cloaking

Sneaky redirects

Hidden text or links

Doorway pages

Scraped content

Participating in affiliate programs without adding sufficient value

Loading pages with irrelevant keywords

Creating pages with malicious behavior, such as phishing or installing viruses, trojans, or other badware

Abusing rich snippets markup

Sending automated queries to Google”

Each one of those topics has a follow-up article fully explaining
what these tactics are and how one should avoid them. These guidelines
should be the starting point for anyone affected by the Panda or Penguin
Updates.


Find them here:

Google Webmaster Guidelines

For more information on Google’s recent changes and
how they affect your web marketing, try this link:

Panda/Penguin Special Report


Helping People Succeed Online Since 2002!

Kind Regards,
Titus Hoskins

www.bizwaremagic.com

Did you find the above information helpful? If so, why not
help spread the word – recommend this content by using
the social bookmark sites below. The SEO Gods will Thank You!

Panda, Penguin, Google Shopping… What Is Google’s Masterplan?



BWMagic’s Internet Marketing Newsletter


Panda, Penguin, Google Shopping… What Is Google’s Masterplan?


Google Masterplan





Just what is Google’s overall objective – better search results
or total control of all e-commerce on the web?


When you’re a multi-billion dollar company controlling the majority of
the search traffic on the web, nothing happens without extensive planning
and decision making. Google and the people who run it, must have a Masterplan
when it comes to how both its business model and web search will play out in
the coming years. Recent “jarring and jolting” changes to Google search and
Google Product Search could be pointing the way for a web filled with “paid
advertising” and little else.


Too extreme a view?


It all comes down to your own perspective, if you’re a 10 year seasoned affiliate
marketer and have seen most of your lucrative “keyword traffic” from Google wiped
completely off the net, Panda and Penguin are creatures from hell, designed to
annihilate your online business. Google is again the “big bad wolf” gobbling
up affiliate sites and making them invisible on the web.

If you fall into this group, you may even believe Google is directly targeting
SEO and anyone who has optimized their sites to take advantage of keyword marketing…
you may even believe Google is not really interested in achieving better quality
search results but just changing the playing field, so that advertisers and companies
will have to come to Google if they want to continue to sell their wares on the web.

It would be in Google’s best interests to completely wipe out SEO and affiliate
sites/marketers; then these sponsoring companies will have to come to Google for
exposure on the web. These companies will now have to pay for this exposure through
advertising programs, such as Google’s bread and butter cashcow – Adwords.

Then you also have to consider Google’s move to make Google Shopping all paid listings,
where companies simply have to pay to get their products shown. Google Shopping was
formally known as Froogle, then Google Product Search. Regardless of what it was called,
this used to be a free program which companies relied upon to bring in sales and clients
– now businesses have to pay to get their products or services listed.

However, while there may be some underlying grains of truth to this line of reasoning,
one really has to stand back and take a much more critical look at Google’s recent
changes to its SERPs and Rankings, (changes which are ongoing and constant) to grasp
the big picture. Google may have more troubling issues, than worrying about a few thousand
online marketers who have optimized and taken advantage of Google’s easy keyword manipulation,
issues which can really cause the search giant some sleepless nights.


So what does Google have to worry about?


You – dear reader and Internet user!


More precisely, your Internet habits and interactions, which could definitely cause Google
to stand up and take notice. Like everything, the web is evolving and again more precisely,
the way we use the web is evolving. General search engines, like Google, could even become
irrelevant in the web of the future.

Instead of starting their search or Internet day via a search engine, the web user could
enter via a social network like Facebook or go directly to a site like Amazon and start
their search there. Either way, search engines such as Google (unless they change and
reinvent themselves) are cut out of the big picture.


Hogwash you say.


Not really, according to Alexa, Facebook has already knocked Google off the #1 spot, as
the top ranked site on the web. This is in spite of Google coming up with its own social
network called Google Plus, which you may or may not have heard about. Even more importantly,
web users spend twice the amount of time on Facebook than they do on Google. Facebook is
where a large majority of web users spend their day – a very important factor which can’t
be ignored. Once Facebook is totally monetized, a very competing onsite search engine could
give these Facebook users a viable alternative to Google.

Some type of Facebook search engine is even more evident after one considers Zuckerberg’s
recent comments at a TechCrunch session, which included the following statement, “We’re
basically doing 1 billion queries a day and we’re not even trying.”

Just as troublesome, Google has to worry about web users going directly to sites to find
what they’re looking for on the web. Gradually, as the next generations of web savvy users
evolve and change, they will know exactly which sites will give them the results faster
than Google or any search engine for that matter.

“In 2009, nearly a quarter of shoppers started research for an online purchase on a search
engine like Google and 18 percent started on Amazon, according to a Forrester Research study.
By last year, almost a third started on Amazon and just 13 percent on a search engine. Product
searches on Amazon have grown 73 percent over the last year while searches on Google Shopping
have been flat, according to comScore.”



If you need to find a movie, instead of searching Google, why not go directly to sites like
IMDB (Internet Movie Database) or a review site like Rottentomatoes? If you need general
information, forget Google Knowledge Graph – why not go directly to Wikipedia and start your
search there. As you can plainly see, how web surfers use the Internet will play an even
greater role as these users’ habits mature and evolve… which could spell serious trouble
for Google.

Then one has to factor in all the hardware changes in recent years, all those new mobile devices,
apps and gadgets. These mobile devices could dictate how web users access and search the web.
Something like Apple’s Siri, must be giving Google a few headaches, changing how searchers
use the web and shaking up the landscape, especially in light of Apple’s recent victories
regarding Android and patents.

The one certain thing you can say about Google – it takes on its competition with a vengeance.
Facebook – Google Plus, Apple – Android, Wikipedia – Knowledge Graph, Internet Explorer – Google
Chrome, Amazon – Google Shopping… and the list goes on.

Rightly or wrongly, many in the online marketing world would add the following…
Affiliate Sites – Panda, SEO – Penguin. They would put forth the argument that
Google is in direct competition with affiliate marketers and SEOs, if companies can
sell their products and find clients via affiliate marketing and SEO, they don’t need
Google and their costly advertising programs such as Adwords and now Google Shopping.


So what is Google’s overall MasterPlan?


All moral and ethical issues aside, Google is a business and the goal of any business
is to beat the competition and prosper. With such ongoing changes as Panda, Penguin,
Google Shopping… Google’s Masterplan is probably to wipe out as much competition as
they possibly can and of course, to survive well into the future. Providing the best
quality search results is probably still in their plan, but one gets the general impression,
it is being pushed further and further into the background, well down beneath the fold
and constantly being over-ruled by stockholders and the desperate need to keep revenues
flowing.


For more information on Google’s recent changes and
how they affect your web marketing, try this link:

Panda/Penguin Special Report


Helping People Succeed Online Since 2002!

Kind Regards,
Titus Hoskins

www.bizwaremagic.com

Did you find the above information helpful? If so, why not
help spread the word – recommend this content by using
the social bookmark sites below. The SEO Gods will Thank You!