Tag Archives: matt cutts

Spiders, Breadcrumbs & Google – Why All Three Are Important To Your Site

BWMagic’s Internet Marketing News

Spiders, Breadcrumbs & Google – Why All Three Are Important To Your Site’s Success

Spider

Do you see what I see!

It could just be me, but one of the least talked about aspects of Internet
marketing has to do with the pesky little spider. Actually these are the
countless spiders/robots that spider the web continuously and report back
all content and links to the search engines.

It is surprising that this lowly spider is not better known or understood
by webmasters since they play a major role in the success of your website
– at least where the search engines are concerned. How these spiders see
your site and what they report back is crucial to getting your pages and
content listed in the search engines.

What you see is not what you get.

One common mistake many webmasters make (especially those just beginning)
is that they take if for granted all the information and content on your site
can be seen by the spiders/search engines. You can have a spectacular looking
site with all the bells and whistles – full of images, java scripts, flash
banners, widgets… a visitor to your site will come away amazed at the content
and information.

But a spider comes along and spiders the same spectacular page and finds
nothing – no content whatsoever – nothing. That spider then reports this
back to the search engine and your page or content is not indexed since
nothing of importance was found.

This can mean disaster, even for the most spectacularly designed pages.
No content, no listing.

Of course, the whole issue or problem is a simple fact that spiders can’t
read images, banners, java scripts, widgets… and so on. What they see
when they visit your webpage MAY be entirely different from what you or
your visitors see. If they can’t see or read your content it doesn’t exist
for the search engines.

For this reason, it is always a good practice to run your pages through
software programs that tell you exactly what the spider sees. Get your
pages read or displayed through the eyes of these spiders.

http://www.seomastering.com/search-engine-spider-imitator.php

Just type in your page URL and you will see what the spider sees. If any
of your main information or keyword phrases are missing – make sure you
place them as “text” on your page, not text in an image or banner.

One common mistake, which I see all the time, a site has it’s main keyword
phrase in the domain name but then creates an eye-catching logo with the
site’s name displaying the keyword phrase – but the spider cannot read this
logo and that much-needed keyword SEO is lost. Especially if this logo is
displayed on every page of your site, which in most cases, it will be.

It is much better to have this domain name/keyword displayed as text on all
your pages. In this manner, the search engines know exactly what your pages
are about; having it read as “site logo” just doesn’t cut it.

However, many webmasters are smart enough to put your keyword phrase in
the “alt” tags connected with this logo or image – which the spider and
the search engines can read. For SEO reason it is good to place your targeted
keyword in the “alt” tag, but like everything, don’t overdo it or you will
be accused of keyword spamming.

Another whole issue is the matter of site/link hierarchy. Explained simply,
your domain index is level one, links flowing off this main homepage are
usually considered level two, links flowing off these level two pages are
considered level 3 and so on… most web experts suggest you keep all your
content within these three levels. Why? Mainly because it is easier for the
spider to index them. If you go down too deep, some spiders may not spider/index
your deeply linked pages.

Another reason, you want your site and pages to be easily accessed by your
visitor. A simple page structure or layout is best suited for this purpose.
Make sure all your content can be easily found, especially by spiders.

So in conclusion, make sure spiders can read all your content, use the link above
and check your pages. If you are unpleasantly surprised or disappointed by
what these spiders are seeing, then simply fix the problem by making your
important content placed in “text” on your pages. Keep feeding those spiders,
and they won’t come back and bite you in the… well, you get the picture.

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Get Your Breadcrumbs in Google for More Links in Results

This is the title of a really good informative piece on Google and Breadcrumbs
in WebProNews by Chris Crum, no pun intended. Basically, breadcrumbs are same
as the linking structure or levels we talked about above – “the hierarchical display
commonly used in site navigation. For example: Home Page>Product Page>Product A Page.”

Google is starting to list these breadcrumbs/links in its results which means
more of your site’s links will be displayed on that first page. Instead of one
link, you can have three or more links on that first page in Google. If you’re
into search engine marketing like I am, you will know this is a major, major deal.
Getting more links in Google for your site simply means more targeted traffic
and more targeted traffic means more sales and opt-ins.





According to Matt Cutts it’s very early days for “Breadcrumbs” but it is
something you should consider when designing your site as Google will probably
be using some form of them in the future.

Click this link if you want to find out more about this topic:
http://www.webpronews.com/topnews/2010/01/20/how-do-you-get-breadcrumbs-in-google-results

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The Only 3 Steps You Need To Make Tons Of Sales Online In 2010

This is a free PDF article by Marlon Sanders who is one
of my favorite Internet Marketers. Mainly because he produces
“no non-sense” “point & click” marketing products which
are easy to use and apply. He cuts out all the “bull” and
gives you what you need to market online.

I have always recommended Sanders and his products to
anyone who’s interested in finding out “how” all this
online marketing works. Heck, he was marketing on the web
before there even was a “web” as we know it today.

Helping You Succeed Online Since 2002!
Titus

https://www.bizwaremagic.com

The Tricky Issue Of Duplicate Content & What Google Says About It

BWMagic’s Internet Marketing News!



The Tricky Issue Of Duplicate Content & What Google Says About It

Don’t know about you but one of the most worrisome issues has
to be duplicate content. I am mainly worried about my content
being ranked lower because the search engines think
it is duplicate content and penalizes it.

Now, for my major keyword content/pages even a loss of just a few
places in the rankings can mean I lose hundreds of dollars in commissions,
so anything affecting my rankings obviously gets my immediate attention.

The whole tricky issue of duplicate content has caused me some
concern and I have made an ongoing mental note to myself to find
out everything I can about it.

My situation is compounded by the fact that I am heavily into
article marketing – the same articles are featured on hundreds,
some times thousands of sites across the web. Naturally, I am
worried these articles will dilute or lower my rankings rather
then accomplish the intended purpose of getting higher rankings.

I try to vary the anchor text/keyword link in the resource boxes
of these articles. I don’t use the same keywords over and over
again as I am nearly 99% positive Google has a “keyword use”
quota – repeat the same keyword phrase too often and your highly
linked content will be lowered around 50 or 60 places, basically
taking it out of the search results. Been there, done that!

I even like now submitting unique articles to certain popular
sites so only that site has the article – thus eliminating
the whole duplicate content issue.

Another way I have handled this issue is using a 301 re-direct
so that traffic and PageRank flows to the URL I want ranked.
You can also use your Google Webmaster Tool account to show
which version of your site you want ranked or featured:
with www or without the www.

The whole reason for doing any of this has to do with PageRank
juice – you want to pass along this ranking juice to the appropriate
page or content. This can raise your rankings, especially in
Google.

Thankfully, there is the relatively new “canonical tag” you can use
to tell the search engines this is the page/content you want
featured or ranked. Just add this link tag to your content which
you want ranked or featured:


link rel=”canonical” href=”http://www.example.com/product.php?item=swedish-fish”/


Anyway, this whole duplicate issue has many faces and sides,
so I like going directly to Google for my information. Experience
has shown me that Google doesn’t always give the right information,
but for the most part, you can follow what they say. Lately, over
the last year or so, Google seems to have made a major policy change
and are telling webmasters a lot more information on how they (Google)
rank their index.

So if you’re concerned or interested in finding out more about
duplicate content and what Google says about it try these helpful
links:

Video – Duplicate Content & Multiple Site Issues

This video is presented by Greg Grothaus of Google and
is quite informative on the subject.


Another great link is this page from Google Webmasters Support Answers
by Matt Cutts. It has a lot of helpful information, including a
video on the Canonical Link Element.

It’s located here:

Kind Regards,
Titus

http://www.bizwaremagic.com

If you truly found this article and content to be helpful,
informative or totally entertaining – could you please Bookmark
it in some of the Social Network with the AddThis button.
I will thank you and the SEO Gods will thank you!

Don’t forget to BOOKMARK & SHARE this PAGE –

My Biggest SEO Mistake

BWMagic’s Internet Marketing News!

 

…….
Contents:

o My Biggest SEO Mistake And How You Can Avoid It

…….

 

 

Over the years I have pretty much figured out enough about
Google searches in order to get my major keywords listed on
the first page in their results. Sometimes in the top spot
but mostly in the top 5 listings.

Now we are not talking about very competitive keywords that
get 1000’s of searches each day. Usually, keyword phrases that
get from 10 to 100 daily searches – believe me, all this quality
traffic adds up very quickly.

For the most part, Google has been very stable, that is: my
keywords have remained on the first page for years. Of course,
I am constantly creating new links with article marketing,
unique content on my sites, ebooks, videos, software downloads…
all providing link bait so that webmasters naturally link
to my content because they believe their visitors will benefit
by visiting my sites.

However, recently all is not well in Google Land, for some
puzzling reason or reasons – two of my most popular keywords
have been bouncing like they’re attached to a bungee cord.
Popping in and out of Google’s first page results. One week
they’re on the first page, next week they’re down to around
#50.

At first, this didn’t worry me… Google was probably doing
another one of their endless updates to their Algorithm (whole
set of rules and math stuff they use to rank pages/keywords)
and things usually settle back to normal in a few days or so.

Not this time, those competitive keywords have been erratic
for months – and this after being very stable for over 3 or 4
years. This has totally unsettled me to say the least.

What do you do when Google doesn’t do what you want them to do!

I have been trying to figure out what’s going on with these
bouncing keywords? I have some possible reasons why these keywords
are bouncing but with Google it is extremely hard to pinpoint
what exactly is happening… guess if we knew all of Google’s
secrets we would all be sitting pretty high in the rankings.

Anyway, I have placed my whole investigation and findings in
an article that may or may not be of help to you. Again, until
I firmly pinpoint my mistake and discover exactly what’s happening,
this keyword ranking issue in Google is still open.

I even went so far as to contact Matt Cutts in his blog about
it but of course, I knew I wouldn’t get an answer. And this was
rather foolish of me, but I thought Google’s recent openness with
webmasters would give me some information of what’s going on
in my case. It also shows my sense of frustration with those
bouncing keywords and I will try anything to solve the problem.

Anyway, here’s the keyword situation in more detail and what
I (believe) to be causing this erratic bouncing of my keywords
in Google.

 


……………………
Feature Article
……………………

 

My Biggest SEO Mistake And How You Can Avoid It
Copyright 2009 Titus Hoskins

 

Imagine this: for years you have kept the number one
spot in Google for a very lucrative and profitable
keyword phrase. This keyword alone adds hundreds of
dollars of daily income to your bottom line. Then
suddenly your number one keyword starts bouncing like
it’s attached to a yo-yo with a fifty-foot cord.

One day your keyword is at #1 in Google, next day it
drops to the #50 spot. Ouch!

You’re scrambling to find out the reason for this
disastrous fall from Google’s graces. After you have
exhausted all your cuss words, your limited but very
fine-tuned SEO brain goes into overdrive and starts
dissecting the problem.

Read More Here: SEO Mistake

 

Kind Regards,
Titus

https://www.bizwaremagic.com