Showing posts with label Search engine optimization. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Search engine optimization. Show all posts

Monday, February 13, 2012

6-Steps to Ranking a Website Fast

6-Steps to Ranking a Website Fast

SEO – how to get your site ranked high in Google’s search engine listing results:
  • Get quality, original content (and structure it the way Google wants)
  • Generate a handful of quality links
  • Generate some human activity so Google knows you’re real and not just a spammer

The “Ranking Triad” (PLUS the one element most so-called experts don’t know about):
  • Content (keywords, domain name, title tag, meta-tag, meta descriptions, site structure, etc.)
  • Links (inbound, outbound, authority etc.)
  • Activity (regular updated content, visitors, people interacting, how long people stay on your web page, likes, commenting)

Since the Google Caffeine Update, visitor interaction on your site is part of your ranking score

6-Step system for getting ranked FAST!

1. Write (or have someone else write):
  • 12 original articles
  • Each one optimized for your 12 most valuable keyword phrases and posted on a Wordpress blog
  • Your blog should be a mix of content and the MWR (most-wanted response), with elements of a squeeze page and conversion elements
  • Have your keyword phrase as the title of the article

2. Drive 30-50 QUALITY inbound links to your site:
  • From .gov and .edu sites
  • Stay away from automated tools
  • Find Authority Sites using FireFox Plug-In SEOQuake
  • Enter “Authority Codes” into Google
  • Sort based on PageRank and find relevant blog posts that allow commenting (and include a URL field)
  • Repeat for each “Authority Code”
  • Post a relevant, valuable comment with a link back to one of your article pages on your own blog

3. Activity:
  • Send some paid traffic to your blog
  • Blog at least 4 times a week for first 30 days
  • Dare your visitors to comment (ex. show me you’re alive)
  • Activity loops: drive email traffic back to your blog
  • Encourage RSS subscriptions etc.

4. Linking Phase 2
  • Drive 300-400 links back to your site via blog comments, directory submissions, social media profiles, press releases, article syndication (eZine articles), etc.

5. More Activity. If you’re ranking well, activity will take care of itself. If you start to slip, just send some social media and PPC traffic to your page and you’re back in business.

6. Linking Phase 3. Your content, linking, and activity foundations are all solid, so open the floodgates and get all the inbound links you can get, even if the links are low quality, or done with automatic linking tools.

Link2Link (Advanced Strategy):
  • Set up a bunch of web 2.0 properties that send links back to your site
  • Then with lower quality sites, use those links to point to the Web 2.0 sites (so they have good authority ranking)

Good luck out there.

Awesome SEO Inforgraphic

Awesome SEO Inforgraphic (Visual Representation of SEO)

4 Easy Wordpress Plugins For Great On-Site SEO

Here are a few of the plugins that I've found provide excellent on-site SEO for Wordpress sites.

1.) Of course, All-In-One SEO. This plugin provides really nice control of page titles and meta tags, along with a few other settings.

2.) WP No Category Base. This fixes the required category base in Wordpress blog URLs. If you look at WP blog category URLs, they are structured differently than post URLs (site.com/topic/category vs. site.com/category/post), this is not good for SEO at all. This plugin fixes this (site.com/category & site.com/category/post).

3.) Google Sitemap Generator. This plugin keeps your WP site's sitemap up to date on your site and in search engines. Every time a page is updated or post is made, this plugin updates the sitemap and submits it to Google, Bing, Yahoo and Ask.

4.) Ambrosite Next/Previous Post Link Plus. This plugin fixes a small issue that I found with WP. The next/previous post links on blog posts are not done very well, meaning they are mainly titled "Next post" or something generic. This replaces the text with the post's title with the ability to truncate to a custom number of characters as well as uses the full post title as the link title. The way a link should be formatted for SEO and WP does not allow this.

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

SEO Tactics

SEO Tactics

01. Keywords:
  1. Search Volume
  2. User Intent
  3. Business Impact
  4. Relevance

02. On-Site:

=>Content
  1. Title & Meta Tags
  2. Relevancy & Quality
  3. code to Content ratio
  4. Keyword Density
  5. Text vs.Images

=>Technical concerns / Crawlability
  1. 404 / 500 Errors
  2. Robots.txt
  3. Site Performance
  4. (Http requests, Inline coding, Server Architecture, Page Size etc...)
  5. Java Script / Flash Use

=> Site Structure & internal linking
  1. Breadcrumbs
  2. canonical URLs
  3. Header / Footer Links
  4. Internal link anchor text
  5. Sitemaps


3. Off-Site: (External Influences)
  1. Directories / Forums
  2. Blog commenting
  3. Rss Feeds
  4. Article promotion & Syndication
  5. Guest blog posts
  6. Social Media Reach
  7. Link Bait campaigns
  8. Video Creation & Submission
  9. Press Releases
  10. Feeder / Micro-sites
  11. website theme creation

4. Reporting & Analytics:

=>Industry Analysis
  1. Market Opportunity
  2. Competitive Analysis
  3. Organic market share

=>External Influences / Off-Site
  1. Social media authority
  2. Ranking
  3. External & Deep Links

=>Engagement & KPI's
  1. Conversions
  2. Traffic Lift
  3. Page Per visit
  4. Bounce Rate
  5. User behavior & Funnels

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Best Sources for SEO Ranking

Best Sources for SEO Ranking

If you are looking for search engine optimization tutorials and/or top SEO factors that affect your website’s ranking, look no further. Below is a list of the web’s best sources for SEO & search engine rankings.

SEOMoz’s The Beginners Guide to SEO – This is a great tutorial series put on by the infamous SEOmoz. Easy to follow chapters, lots of good information and a good place to start for beginners and web designers.

Google’s Official SEO Starter Guide – I always say “If you want to rank on Google, maybe for starters you should make sure you’ve done (at the very least) what Google suggests you do to your website.”

Vaughn’s 1 Pager SEO Factors – A great list of SEO factors to consider. Here you can learn which factors are hot, CURRENTLY.

Google’s Search Engine Algorithm Patent & Factors Addressed – If you want to be a trueSEO expert, understand what set billion dollar Google apart from other search engines by reading up on their patent technology and how it ranks sites according to it.

SEOMoz – SEO Ranking Factors – Widely known as a great SEO Factors Resource. Opinions of various SEO specialists.

Local Search Factors – A mimic of the search engine ranking factors. But for local search.

Mimic for Link Building Factors - Another Google Mimic of the SEO Ranking Factors, but this one is all about Link Building.

Top 10 Link Building Mistakes – If you are building links, make sure you avoid these 10 offpage mistakes.

Bing SEO Tips – If your website isn’t ranking well on Bing, maybe you should consider these tips.

Monday, February 28, 2011

25 SEO Firefox Add-ons

Here are 25 free search engine optimization add-ons that you can add to Firefox. (Note: although all of these tools are available free of charge, some tools do have a suggested donation to cover development costs.)

  1. SEO Doctor–Allows you to see how any website you visit is optimized in terms of SEO. It offers easy diagnosis of SEO problems and even offers solutions for common problems.
  2. SeoQuake SEO Extension–Extension allows users to obtain and investigate many important SEO parameters of the internet project under study on the fly, save them for future work, compare them with the results, obtained for other, competitive, projects.
  3. SenSEO–Analyzes web pages and tells you how good they fulfill on-page Search Engine Optimization criteria.
  4. Foxy SEO Tool–Toolbar that lets you access many well-known search engine tools like Google Site, Yahoo! Site Explorer, Live Fromlinks. It also includes well-known web traffic analysis sites like Alexa, Compete, Quantcast, as well as popular statistic aggregators like Quarkbase and WebSiteOutlook. Use this tool to check a site’s listing in many important directories.
  5. SEO Workers Web Page SEO Analysis Tool –Lets you to perform a basic analysis of the page in your browser with a single click. The results from the SEO Workers Analysis Tool are structured into useful groups.
  6. SEO Toolbar–This toolbar is fully customizable. There are several different views available, including icons and text, icons only or page ranks only (PageRank, Alexa Rank and PI Rank).
  7. SEO Professional Toolbar–Offers many SEO-related tools in one place. Display PageRank, S-Rank and the number of backlinks for visited pages. This toolbar also stores the history of ranks for selected sites. Highlight words, links, view number of words and more.
  8. SEOpen–Includes tools for Google backlinks, Yahoo backlinks, PageRank checker, and http header viewer.
  9. Swoosty SEO Tools–A tool that automatically shows the Google PageRank and Alexa ranking of all the sites you visit, and provides other essential tools for complete analysis. You can also activate and deactivate it without having to restart Firefox.
  10. KGen (Keyword Generator)–Lets you see what keywords are predominant on the web pages that you visit.
  11. SEO Stats–Provides an analysis of the popularity of your website. From Facebook to Twitter, you’ll know exactly how many links to your site are available through social networks and the number of backlinks and pages indexed in the major search engines.
  12. SEO and Site Analysis–Click on the SEO WooRank icon to generate an SEO report for your website.
  13. Affilorama SEO Toolbar –Provides you with useful information and data to make domain and page analysis of domains easier.
  14. Niche Watch Tool–Gives you the technical information you need to beat your online competition. This tool tracks backlinks number, indexed pages, keyword occurrences on the page, page rank, all in anchor, all in title, and all in text rank.
  15. Search Status–Shows helpful information like the Google PageRank of a page and its Alexa rank. It also includes Compete ranking and the SEOmoz Linkscape moz rank for a page. This tool also displays a fast keyword density analyzer, keyword/nofollow highlighting, backward/related links, and Alexa information.
  16. SEOHand–Keeps a record of a site’s placement on Google and Yahoo for any given keyword. Watch Google PageRank (PR), Backlinks, Saturation over time. The data is presented in graph and table format.
  17. SEO Status Page Rank/Alexa Toolbar–See Google Pagerank (PR) and Alexa rank for each website you visit.
  18. SEO Live YS Rank–Live search rank at the status bar, top searched keywords and search volume data for a specific site. Great for search marketing, keywords research and SEO.
  19. SmartPage Rank Toolbar–Includes the Alexa Rank and Page Rank. The usage of this toolbar will increase the Alexa Rank of the websites you visit.
  20. The KPRMS Toolbar–Website ranking and keyword monitoring service for Google, Yahoo and Bing. (As of this publication, this add-on has not been rated.)
  21. Money Quake–Displays your real-time earning statistics from most popular advertisement systems (like AdSense etc).
  22. SEO Info–Provides some information on the site you visit: indexed pages, backlinks, link report, pages reported on social network, pagerank, alexa rank, whois, and much more. (As of this publication, this add-on has not been rated.)
  23. SEO Status–Shows Google PR and Yandex TYC in status bar. Information can be load automatically or by click. Also highlights rel=nofollow and noindex tags.
  24. SEO Tools–Collection of useful search engine optimization tools.
  25. SEO Monitor –Information for SEO monitor users displayed in status bar.

We’ve shared 25 search engine optimization add-ons to help your freelancing business succeed. Now it’s time to discuss why freelancers should be aware of SEO techniques.

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Comprehensive Tool Sets

Comprehensive Tool Sets

These websites offer a variety of other SEO tools.
  • SEOmoz - over 20 SEO tools designed to help with every aspect of search engine optimization.

  • Link Vendor - 23 tools including; page rank analysis, cloaking detection, and a sitemap generator.

  • Webmaster Tools - keyword density checker, URL redirect checker, page rank prediction and many more.

  • SEO Chat Tools - Many tools including a robots.txt generator and keyword cloud.

  • Free SEO Tools - list of more free SEO tools from SEOBook.com.

Keyword Research

Keyword Research

Determin which keywords and phrases return the best search volume for your website.

Progress Tracking

Progress Tracking

Track the SEO effectiveness of your campaigns as well as look for issues.
  • Google Analytics - Learn about the visitors who come to your site and track your website's progress.

  • goingup web stats - A good alternative to Google Analytics that also offers keyword monitoring.

  • SERP Guard - Get immediately notified if your website has been blacklisted.

  • Google Webmaster Tools - See how Google crawls and indexes your site and diagnose problems.

  • MSN Webmaster Center - sitemap submission and get notified if MSN has problems crawling your site.

  • Yahoo Site Explorer - Submit your sitemap to Yahoo and check your backlinks.

Website Analysis and Graders

Website Analysis and Graders

Review the search engine friendliness of your site learn of areas to improve upon.

Link Building and Research

Link Building and Research

Find free links and learn of new link building opportunities from the competition.

  • Hub Finder - reviews sites that rank for a specific keyword/phrase and finds links that they have in common.

  • Link Harvester - analyze a websites backlinks to learn of new linking opportunities.

  • Solo SEO Link Search - use predefined search operators to identify sites that offer links submissions.

  • Dofollow Diver - search for niche blogs and post quality comments to get free a link.

  • Link Diagnosis - analyze a domains backlink data including the Page Rank and anchor text of the links.

  • Text Link Checker - see if your external links could be harmful to your website reputation.
Other Places to look for links...

directories, social bookmarking, forums, article submissions, Q&A sites, press releases, RSS syndication, etc.

Competitive Analysis

Competitive Analysis

Review competitor traffic, keywords and links as well as analyze industry trends.

  • Compete.com Site Analytics - Compare traffic trends side-by-side for competing websites.

  • quantcast.com Media Measurement - view detailed reports for many different websites.

  • Niche Watch - Compare your site vs other websites that are competing for a specific keyword phrase.

  • SEMRush - Quickly generates a list of keywords a site is currently ranking for.

  • Google Insights - examine search volume trends across specific locations, categories and time frames.

  • perspctv - compare and analyze terms across blogs, news articles, twitters and search volume.

  • Blog Pulse - Review recent buzz and Trends within the blogosphere for specific search terms.

  • IceRocket Trends - a good alternative to Blog Pulse and displays the average posts per day.

  • What's the Buzz - find out the popularity of certain keywords within blogs and search engines.

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

The Screaming Frog SEO Spider Report

What Information Does The Screaming Frog SEO Spider Report?

A quick summary of some of the data collected -

  • Errors – Client & server errors (4XX, 5XX)
  • Redirects – (3XX, permanent or temporary)
  • External Links – All followed links and their subsequent status codes
  • URI Issues – Non ASCII characters, underscores, uppercase characters, dynamic uris, over 115 characters
  • Duplicate Pages – Hash value / MD5checksums lookup for duplicate pages
  • Page Title – Missing, duplicate, over 70 characters, same as h1, multiple
  • Meta Description – Missing, duplicate, over 156 characters, multiple
  • Meta Keyword – Mainly for reference as it’s only (barely) used by Yahoo the last time I checked. Missing, duplicate, multiple
  • H1 – Missing, duplicate, over 70 characters, multiple
  • H2 – Missing, duplicate, over 70 characters, multiple
  • Meta Robots – Index, noindex, follow, nofollow, noarchive, nosnippet, noodp, noydir etc
  • Meta Refresh – Including target page and time delay
  • Canonical link element
  • File Size
  • Page depth level
  • Inlinks – All pages linking to a URI
  • Outlinks – All pages a URI links out to
  • Anchor Text – All link text. Alt text from images with links
  • Follow & Nofollow – At link level (true/false)
  • Images – All URIs with the image link & all images from a given page. Images over 100kb, missing alt text, alt text over 100 characters

Friday, July 16, 2010

Search Engine Optimization Checklist

SEO Checklist

Search Engine Optimization Checklist

Here is a SEO checklist of the factors that affect your page rankings with Google, MSN, Yahoo! and the other major search engines. The list contains positive, negative and neutral factors because all of them exist. Most of the factors in the checklist apply mainly to Google and partially to MSN, Yahoo! and all the other search engines of lesser importance. If you need more information on particular sections of the checklist, you may want to read our SEO tools page, which gives more detailed explanations of Keywords, Links, Metatags, Visual Extras, etc.


Keywords

1

Keywords in

This is one of the most important places to have a keyword because what is written inside the

+3

2

Keywords in URL

Keywords in URLs help a lot - e.g. - http://domainname.com/seo-services.html, where “SEO services” is the keyword phrase you attempt to rank well for. But if you don't have the keywords in other parts of the document, don't rely on having them in the URL.

+3

3

Keyword density in document text

Another very important factor you need to check. 3-7 % for major keywords is best, 1-2 for minor. Keyword density of over 10% is suspicious and looks more like keyword stuffing, than a naturally written text.

+3

4

Keywords in anchor text

Also very important, especially for the anchor text of inbound links, because if you have the keyword in the anchor text in a link from another site, this is regarded as getting a vote from this site not only about your site in general, but about the keyword in particular.

+3

5

Keywords in headings (

,

, etc. tags)

One more place where keywords count a lot. But beware that your page has actual text about the particular keyword.

+3

6

Keywords in the beginning of a document

Also counts, though not as much as anchor text, title tag or headings. However, have in mind that the beginning of a document does not necessarily mean the first paragraph – for instance if you use tables, the first paragraph of text might be in the second half of the table.

+2

7

Keywords in tags

Spiders don't read images but they do read their textual descriptions in the tag, so if you have images on your page, fill in the tag with some keywords about them.

+2

8

Keywords in metatags

Less and less important, especially for Google. Yahoo! and MSN still rely on them, so if you are optimizing for Yahoo! or MSN, fill these tags properly. In any case, filling these tags properly will not hurt, so do it.

+1

9

Keyword proximity

Keyword proximity measures how close in the text the keywords are. It is best if they are immediately one after the other (e.g. “dog food”), with no other words between them. For instance, if you have “dog” in the first paragraph and “food” in the third paragraph, this also counts but not as much as having the phrase “dog food” without any other words in between. Keyword proximity is applicable for keyword phrases that consist of 2 or more words.

+1

10

Keyword phrases

In addition to keywords, you can optimize for keyword phrases that consist of several words – e.g. “SEO services”. It is best when the keyword phrases you optimize for are popular ones, so you can get a lot of exact matches of the search string but sometimes it makes sense to optimize for 2 or 3 separate keywords (“SEO” and “services”) than for one phrase that might occasionally get an exact match.

+1

11

Secondary keywords

Optimizing for secondary keywords can be a golden mine because when everybody else is optimizing for the most popular keywords, there will be less competition (and probably more hits) for pages that are optimized for the minor words. For instance, “real estate new jersey” might have thousand times less hits than “real estate” only but if you are operating in New Jersey, you will get less but considerably better targeted traffic.

+1

12

Keyword stemming

For English this is not so much of a factor because words that stem from the same root (e.g. dog, dogs, doggy, etc.) are considered related and if you have “dog” on your page, you will get hits for “dogs” and “doggy” as well, but for other languages keywords stemming could be an issue because different words that stem from the same root are considered as not related and you might need to optimize for all of them.

+1

13

Synonyms

Optimizing for synonyms of the target keywords, in addition to the main keywords. This is good for sites in English, for which search engines are smart enough to use synonyms as well, when ranking sites but for many other languages synonyms are not taken into account, when calculating rankings and relevancy.

+1

14

Keyword Mistypes

Spelling errors are very frequent and if you know that your target keywords have popular misspellings or alternative spellings (i.e. Christmas and Xmas), you might be tempted to optimize for them. Yes, this might get you some more traffic but having spelling mistakes on your site does not make a good impression, so you'd better don't do it, or do it only in the metatags.

0

15

Keyword dilution

When you are optimizing for an excessive amount of keywords, especially unrelated ones, this will affect the performance of all your keywords and even the major ones will be lost (diluted) in the text.

-2

16

Keyword stuffing

Any artificially inflated keyword density (10% and over) is keyword stuffing and you risk getting banned from search engines.

-3


Links - internal, inbound, outbound

17

Anchor text of inbound links

As discussed in the Keywords section, this is one of the most important factors for good rankings. It is best if you have a keyword in the anchor text but even if you don't, it is still OK.

+3

18

Origin of inbound links

Besides the anchor text, it is important if the site that links to you is a reputable one or not. Generally sites with greater Google PR are considered reputable.

+3

19

Links from similar sites

Having links from similar sites is very, very useful. It indicates that the competition is voting for you and you are popular within your topical community.

+3

20

Links from .edu and .gov sites

These links are precious because .edu and .gov sites are more reputable than .com. .biz, .info, etc. domains. Additionally, such links are hard to obtain.

+3

21

Number of backlinks

Generally the more, the better. But the reputation of the sites that link to you is more important than their number. Also important is their anchor text, is there a keyword in it, how old are they, etc.

+3

22

Anchor text of internal links

This also matters, though not as much as the anchor text of inbound links.

+2

23

Around-the-anchor text

The text that is immediately before and after the anchor text also matters because it further indicates the relevance of the link – i.e. if the link is artificial or it naturally flows in the text.

+2

24

Age of inbound links

The older, the better. Getting many new links in a short time suggests buying them.

+2

25

Links from directories

Great, though it strongly depends on which directories. Being listed in DMOZ, Yahoo Directory and similar directories is a great boost for your ranking but having tons of links from PR0 directories is useless and it can even be regarded as link spamming, if you have hundreds or thousands of such links.

+2

26

Number of outgoing links on the page that links to you

The fewer, the better for you because this way your link looks more important.

+1

27

Named anchors

Named anchors (the target place of internal links) are useful for internal navigation but are also useful for SEO because you stress additionally that a particular page, paragraph or text is important. In the code, named anchors look like this: Read about dogs and “#dogs” is the named anchor.

+1

28

IP address of inbound link

Google denies that they discriminate against links that come from the same IP address or C class of addresses, so for Google the IP address can be considered neutral to the weight of inbound links. However, MSN and Yahoo! may discard links from the same IPs or IP classes, so it is always better to get links from different IPs.

+1

29

Inbound links from link farms and other suspicious sites

This does not affect you in any way, provided that the links are not reciprocal. The idea is that it is beyond your control to define what a link farm links to, so you don't get penalized when such sites link to you because this is not your fault but in any case you'd better stay away from link farms and similar suspicious sites.

0

30

Many outgoing links

Google does not like pages that consists mainly of links, so you'd better keep them under 100 per page. Having many outgoing links does not get you any benefits in terms of ranking and could even make your situation worse.

-1

31

Excessive linking, link spamming

It is bad for your rankings, when you have many links to/from the same sites (even if it is not a cross- linking scheme or links to bad neighbors) because it suggests link buying or at least spamming. In the best case only some of the links are taken into account for SEO rankings.

-1

32

Outbound links to link farms and other suspicious sites

Unlike inbound links from link farms and other suspicious sites, outbound links tobad neighbors can drown you. You need periodically to check the status of the sites you link to because sometimes good sites become bad neighbors and vice versa.

-3

33

Cross-linking

Cross-linking occurs when site A links to site B, site B links to site C and site A links back to site A. This is the simplest example but more complex schemes are possible. Cross-linking looks like disguised reciprocal link trading and is penalized.

-3

34

Single pixel links

when you have a link that is a pixel or so wide it is invisible for humans, so nobody will click on it and it is obvious that this link is an attempt to manipulate search engines.

-3


Metatags

35

metatag

Metatags are becoming less and less important but if there are metatags that still matter, these are the and ones. Use the metatag to write the description of your site. Besides the fact that metatags still rock on MSN and Yahoo!, the metatag has one more advantage – it sometimes pops in the description of your site in search results.

+1

36

metatag

The metatag also matters, though as all metatags it gets almost no attention from Google and some attention from MSN and Yahoo! Keep the metatag reasonably long – 10 to 20 keywords at most. Don't stuff the tag with keywords that you don't have on the page, this is bad for your rankings.

+1

37

metatag

If your site is language-specific, don't leave this tag empty. Search engines have more sophisticated ways of determining the language of a page than relying on the metatag but they still consider it.

+1

38

metatag

The metatag is one way to redirect visitors from your site to another. Only do it if you have recently migrated your site to a new domain and you need to temporarily redirect visitors. When used for a long time, the metatag is regarded as unethical practice and this can hurt your ratings. In any case, redirecting through 301 is much better.

-1


Content

39

Unique content

Having more content (relevant content, which is different from the content on other sites both in wording and topics) is a real boost for your site's rankings.

+3

40

Frequency of content change

Frequent changes are favored. It is great when you constantly add new content but it is not so great when you only make small updates to existing content.

+3

41

Keywords font size

When a keyword in the document text is in a larger font size in comparison to other on-page text, this makes it more noticeable, so therefore it is more important than the rest of the text. The same applies to headings (

,

, etc.), which generally are in larger font size than the rest of the text.

+2

42

Keywords formatting

Bold and italic are another way to emphasize important words and phrases. However, use bold, italic and larger font sizes within reason because otherwise you might achieve just the opposite effect.

+2

43

Age of document

Recent documents (or at least regularly updated ones) are favored.

+2

44

File size

Generally long pages are not favored, or at least you can achieve better rankings if you have 3 short rather than 1 long page on a given topic, so split long pages into multiple smaller ones.

+1

45

Content separation

From a marketing point of view content separation (based on IP, browser type, etc.) might be great but for SEO it is bad because when you have one URL and differing content, search engines get confused what the actual content of the page is.

-2

46

Poor coding and design

Search engines say that they do not want poorly designed and coded sites, though there are hardly sites that are banned because of messy code or ugly images but when the design and/or coding of a site is poor, the site might not be indexable at all, so in this sense poor code and design can harm you a lot.

-2

47

Illegal Content

Using other people's copyrighted content without their permission or using content that promotes legal violations can get you kicked out of search engines.

-3

48

Invisible text

This is a black hat SEO practice and when spiders discover that you have text specially for them but not for humans, don't be surprised by the penalty.

-3

49

Cloaking

Cloaking is another illegal technique, which partially involves content separation because spiders see one page (highly-optimized, of course), and everybody else is presented with another version of the same page.

-3

50

Doorway pages

Creating pages that aim to trick spiders that your site is a highly-relevant one when it is not, is another way to get the kick from search engines.

-3

51

Duplicate content

When you have the same content on several pages on the site, this will not make your site look larger because the duplicate content penalty kicks in. To a lesser degree duplicate content applies to pages that reside on other sites but obviously these cases are not always banned – i.e. article directories or mirror sites do exist and prosper.

-3


Visual Extras and SEO

52

JavaScript

If used wisely, it will not hurt. But if your main content is displayed through JavaScript, this makes it more difficult for spiders to follow and if JavaScript code is a mess and spiders can't follow it, this will definitely hurt your ratings.

0

53

Images in text

Having a text-only site is so boring but having many images and no text is a SEO sin. Always provide in the tag a meaningful description of an image but don't stuff it with keywords or irrelevant information.

0

54

Podcasts and videos

Podcasts and videos are becoming more and more popular but as with all non-textual goodies, search engines can't read them, so if you don't have the tapescript of the podcast or the video, it is as if the podcast or movie is not there because it will not be indexed by search engines.

0

55

Images instead of text links

Using images instead of text links is bad, especially when you don't fill in the tag. But even if you fill in the tag, it is not the same as having a bold, underlined, 16-pt. link, so use images for navigation only if this is really vital for the graphic layout of your site.

-1

56

Frames

Frames are very, very bad for SEO. Avoid using them unless really necessary.

-2

57

Flash

Spiders don't index the content of Flash movies, so if you use Flash on your site, don't forget to give it an alternative textual description.

-2

58

A Flash home page

Fortunately this epidemic disease seems to have come to an end. Having a Flash home page (and sometimes whole sections of your site) and no HTML version, is a SEO suicide.

-3


Domains, URLs, Web Mastery

59

Keyword-rich URLs and filenames

A very important factor, especially for Yahoo! and MSN.

+3

60

Site Accessibility

Another fundamental issue, which that is often neglected. If the site (or separate pages) is unaccessible because of broken links, 404 errors, password-protected areas and other similar reasons, then the site simply can't be indexed.

+3

61

Sitemap

It is great to have a complete and up-to-date sitemap, spiders love it, no matter if it is a plain old HTML sitemap or the special Google sitemap format.

+2

62

Site size

Spiders love large sites, so generally it is the bigger, the better. However, big sites become user-unfriendly and difficult to navigate, so sometimes it makes sense to separate a big site into a couple of smaller ones. On the other hand, there are hardly sites that are penalized because they are 10,000+ pages, so don't split your size in pieces only because it is getting larger and larger.

+2

63

Site age

Similarly to wine, older sites are respected more. The idea is that an old, established site is more trustworthy (they have been around and are here to stay) than a new site that has just poped up and might soon disappear.

+2

64

Site theme

It is not only keywords in URLs and on page that matter. The site theme is even more important for good ranking because when the site fits into one theme, this boosts the rankings of all its pages that are related to this theme.

+2

65

File Location on Site

File location is important and files that are located in the root directory or near it tend to rank better than files that are buried 5 or more levels below.

+1

66

Domains versus subdomains, separate domains

Having a separate domain is better – i.e. instead of having blablabla.blogspot.com, register a separate blablabla.com domain.

+1

67

Top-level domains (TLDs)

Not all TLDs are equal. There are TLDs that are better than others. For instance, the most popular TLD – .com – is much better than .ws, .biz, or .info domains but (all equal) nothing beats an old .edu or .org domain.

+1

68

Hyphens in URLs

Hyphens between the words in an URL increase readability and help with SEO rankings. This applies both to hyphens in domain names and in the rest of the URL.

+1

69

URL length

Generally doesn't matter but if it is a very long URL-s, this starts to look spammy, so avoid having more than 10 words in the URL (3 or 4 for the domain name itself and 6 or 7 for the rest of address is acceptable).

0

70

IP address

Could matter only for shared hosting or when a site is hosted with a free hosting provider, when the IP or the whole C-class of IP addresses is blacklisted due to spamming or other illegal practices.

0

71

Adsense will boost your ranking

Adsense is not related in any way to SEO ranking. Google will definitely not give you a ranking bonus because of hosting Adsense ads. Adsense might boost your income but this has nothing to do with your search rankings.

0

72

Adwords will boost your ranking

Similarly to Adsense, Adwords has nothing to do with your search rankings. Adwords will bring more traffic to your site but this will not affect your rankings in whatsoever way.

0

73

Hosting downtime

Hosting downtime is directly related to accessibility because if a site is frequently down, it can't be indexed. But in practice this is a factor only if your hosting provider is really unreliable and has less than 97-98% uptime.

-1

74

Dynamic URLs

Spiders prefer static URLs, though you will see many dynamic pages on top positions. Long dynamic URLs (over 100 characters) are really bad and in any case you'd better use a tool to rewrite dynamic URLs in something more human- and SEO-friendly.

-1

75

Session IDs

This is even worse than dynamic URLs. Don't use session IDs for information that you'd like to be indexed by spiders.

-2

76

Bans in robots.txt

If indexing of a considerable portion of the site is banned, this is likely to affect the nonbanned part as well because spiders will come less frequently to a “noindex” site.

-2

77

Redirects (301 and 302)

When not applied properly, redirects can hurt a lot – the target page might not open, or worse – a redirect can be regarded as a black hat technique, when the visitor is immediately taken to a different page.

-3

For more Search Engine Optimization tips check back soon!

Track Back : specificpc.co.za